“THE SCOREBOARD”

INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL SCORES

MONDAY: https://www.maxpreps.com/in/baseball/scores/?date=5/11/2026

HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL POLLS: https://ihsbca.org/2026/05/11/2024-pre-season-polls-2-2-2-2-2-2-2-2-2/

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INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL SCORES

MONDAY: https://www.maxpreps.com/in/softball/scores/?date=5/11/2026

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INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL BOYS VOLLEYBALL SCORES

MONDAY: https://www.maxpreps.com/in/volleyball/boys/scores/?date=5/11/2026

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INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS LAX SCORES

MONDAY: https://www.maxpreps.com/in/lacrosse/girls/scores/?date=5/11/2026

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INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL BOYS LAX SCORES

MONDAY: https://www.maxpreps.com/in/lacrosse/scores/?date=5/11/2026

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COLLEGE BASEBALL SCORES

NO INDIANA GAMES

SCOREBOARD: https://d1baseball.com/scores/?date=20260511

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COLLEGE SOFTBALL SCORES

NO INDIANA GAMES

NO GAMES SCHEDULED

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MEN’S COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL SCORES

NO GAMES SCHEDULED

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DIVISION 1 MEN’S LAX SCORES

NO GAMES SCHEDULED

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DIVISION 1 WOMEN’S LAX SCORES

NO GAMES SCHEDULED

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NBA SCORES/ NBA PLAYOFF SCHEDULE

CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS

(1) DETROIT VS. (4) CLEVELAND

GAME 1: PISTONS 111, CAVALIERS 101

GAME 2: PISTONS 107, CAVALIERS 97

GAME 3: CAVALIERS 116, PISTONS 109

GAME 4: CAVALIERS 112, PISTONS 103

GAME 5: CLEVELAND AT DETROIT | WEDNESDAY MAY 13

GAME 6: DETROIT AT CLEVELAND | FRIDAY MAY 15*

GAME 7: CLEVELAND AT DETROIT | SUNDAY MAY 17*

SERIES EVEN 2-2

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(2) NEW YORK VS. (7) PHILADELPHIA

GAME 1: KNICKS 137, 76ERS 98

GAME 2: KNICKS 108, 76ERS 102

GAME 3: KNICKS 108, 76ERS 94

GAME 4: KNICKS 144 76ERS 114

KNICKS WIN SERIES 4-0

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(1) OKLAHOMA CITY VS. (4) LOS ANGELES

GAME 1: THUNDER 108, LAKERS 90

GAME 2: THUNDER 125, LAKERS 107

GAME 3: THUNDER 131, LAKERS 108

GAME 4: THUNDER 115, LAKERS 110

THUNDER WIN SERIES 4-0

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(2) SAN ANTONIO VS. (6) MINNESOTA

GAME 1: TIMBERWOLVES 104, SPURS 102

GAME 2: SPURS 133, TIMBERWOLVES 95

GAME 3: SPURS 115, TIMBERWOLVES 108

GAME 4: TIMBERWOLVES 114, SPURS 109

GAME 5: MINNESOTA AT SAN ANTONIO | TUESDAY MAY 12

GAME 6: SAN ANTONIO AT MINNESOTA | FRIDAY MAY 15*

GAME 7: MINNESOTA AT SAN ANTONIO | SUNDAY MAY 17*

SERIES EVEN  2-2

* = IF NECESSARY

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NHL PLAYOFFS

EASTERN CONFERENCE

MONTREAL CANADIENS (3A) VS. BUFFALO SABRES (1A)

MONTREAL LEADS SERIES 2-1

GAME 1: BUFFALO 4, MONTREAL 2

GAME 2: MONTREAL 5, BUFFALO 1

GAME 3: MONTREAL 6 BUFFALO 2

GAME 4: BUFFALO AT MONTREAL — 7 P.M. ET, TUESDAY, MAY 12 (ESPN, SN, CBC, TVAS)

GAME 5: MONTREAL AT BUFFALO — TBA, THURSDAY, MAY 14 (TNT, TRUTV, HBO MAX)

* GAME 6: BUFFALO AT MONTREAL — TBA, SATURDAY, MAY 16 (ABC OR ESPN)

* GAME 7: MONTREAL AT BUFFALO — TBA, MONDAY, MAY 18 (ESPN)

* – IF NECESSARY

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PHILADELPHIA FLYERS (3M) VS. CAROLINA HURRICANES (1M)

CAROLINA WINS SERIES 4-0

GAME 1:  CAROLINA 3, PHILADELPHIA 0

GAME 2: CAROLINA 3, PHILADELPHIA 2 (OT)

GAME 3: CAROLINA 4, PHILADELPHIA 1

GAME 4: CAROLINA 3, PHILADELPHIA 2 (OT)

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WESTERN CONFERENCE

MINNESOTA WILD (3C) VS. COLORADO AVALANCHE (1C)

COLORADO LEADS SERIES 3-1

GAME 1: COLORADO 9, MINNESOTA 6

GAME 2: COLORADO 5, MINNESOTA 2

GAME 3: MINNESOTA 5, COLORADO 1

GAME 4: COLORADO 5, MINNESOTA 2

GAME 5: MINNESOTA AT COLORADO — 8 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, MAY 13 (TNT, TRUTV, HBO MAX, SN, CBC, TVAS)

* GAME 6: COLORADO AT MINNESOTA — 8 P.M. ET, FRIDAY, MAY 15 (ESPN, SN, CBC, TVAS)

* GAME 7: MINNESOTA AT COLORADO — TBA, SUNDAY, MAY 17 (TNT, TRUTV, HBO MAX, SN CBC, TVAS)

* – IF NECESSARY

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ANAHEIM DUCKS (3P) VS. VEGAS GOLDEN KNIGHTS (1P)

SERIES TIED 2-2

GAME 1: VEGAS 3, ANAHEIM 1

GAME 2: ANAHEIM 3, VEGAS 1

GAME 3: VEGAS 6, ANAHEIM 2

GAME 4: DUCKS 4, ANAHEIM 3

GAME 5: ANAHEIM AT VEGAS — 9:30 P.M. ET, TUESDAY, MAY 12 (ESPN, SN, SN360, TVAS)

* GAME 6: VEGAS AT ANAHEIM — TBA, THURSDAY, MAY 14 (TNT, TRUTV, HBO MAX)

* GAME 7: ANAHEIM AT VEGAS — TBA, SATURDAY, MAY 16 (ABC OR ESPN)

* – IF NECESSARY

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MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

CLEVELAND 7 LA ANGELS 2

BALTIMORE 3 NY YANKEES 2

TAMPA BAY 8 TORONTO 5

ARIZONA 1 TEXAS 0

SEATTLE 3 HOUSTON 1

SAN FRANCISCO 3 LA DODGERS 3

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MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

NO GAMES SCHEDULED

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WNBA

NO GAMES SCHEDULED

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UFL SCORES

NO GAMES SCHEDULED

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MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER

NO GAMES SCHEDULED

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MAJOR NATIONAL HEADLINES/RELEASES

NBA

SHAI GILGEOUS-ALEXANDER, THUNDER EKE OUT SWEEP-SEALING WIN OVER LAKERS

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 35 points as the visiting Oklahoma City Thunder advanced to the Western Conference finals with a 115-110 victory over the Lakers on Monday, completing a four-game sweep in what potentially was LeBron James’ final game for Los Angeles.

Ajay Mitchell logged 28 points, Chet Holmgren produced 16 points and nine rebounds and Jared McCain added 13 points as the Thunder improved to 8-0 in the playoffs. Oklahoma City is set to face the Minnesota Timberwolves or the San Antonio Spurs in the next round.

The defending NBA champions shot 51.9% from the floor while the Lakers shot 50.7%. Oklahoma City won all eight games against Los Angeles in 2025-26, including the regular season.

Austin Reaves put up 27 points while Rui Hachimura added 25 points and eight rebounds for the Lakers, who head into the offseason with major changes possibly in store.

NBA news updates

James, 41, amassed 24 points and 12 rebounds. He is now set to become an unrestricted free agent after a record 23 seasons in the league.

Jaxson Hayes added 18 points for Los Angeles, which played without Luka Doncic (hamstring) throughout its playoff run. Doncic was injured during a game at Oklahoma City on April 2.

Gilgeous-Alexander made two free throws with 12.2 seconds remaining for a 113-110 lead, and Reaves missed what would have been a game-tying 3-point attempt with eight seconds left. Mitchell put the game away by sinking two free throws with 6.4 seconds to go.

The Lakers trailed by as many as 12 points in the third quarter before going on a 22-9 run to take a 76-75 lead with 2:03 left in the period after getting seven consecutive points from Reaves. Los Angeles extended its advantage to 84-80 heading into the fourth.

The Lakers led 92-87 before Mitchell capped an 8-0 run with a three-point play to give Oklahoma City a 95-92 lead with 6:14 remaining.

A four-point play from Hachimura, followed by a three-point play from Marcus Smart put the Lakers up 110-109 with 40.9 seconds remaining. A dunk from Holmgren gave the Thunder a 111-100 lead with 32.8 seconds left.

James missed a floater over Isaiah Hartenstein with 20 seconds left before Reaves and Smart missed late 3-point attempts.

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DONOVAN MITCHELL’S 39-POINT HALF LIFTS CAVS LEVEL WITH PISTONS AT 2-2

Donovan Mitchell scored an NBA-playoff-record-tying 39 points in the second half and finished with 43, powering the Cleveland Cavaliers to a 112-103 victory over the visiting Detroit Pistons in Game 4 of the Eastern Conference semifinals on Monday.

The Cavaliers, who tied the best-of-seven series 2-2, put together a 24-0 run spanning halftime to stun the top-seeded Pistons. It was the most consecutive points in a playoff game in franchise history.

Mitchell matched the mark for points in a half by Eric “Sleepy” Floyd of the Golden State Warriors against the Los Angeles Lakers on May 10, 1987, in the West semifinals.

After halftime, Mitchell made 12 of 18 field-goal attempts, 3 of 7 3-point tries and 12 of 13 free throws in 17 minutes.

The seven-time All-Star logged 21 points in the third quarter for the fourth-seeded Cavaliers. Game 5 of the series is Wednesday in Detroit.

The Pistons won the first two games at home, while Cleveland was a 116-109 victory on Saturday.

James Harden had 24 points and 11 assists while Evan Mobley added 17 points, eight rebounds and five blocked shots for Cleveland, which is 6-0 at home this postseason.

Caris LeVert scored 24 points off the bench for Detroit, while Cade Cunningham had 19 points, six assists and five turnovers. Tobias Harris recorded 16 points, eight rebounds and five assists, and Paul Reed had 15 points.

The Cavaliers held the Pistons scoreless for 6:34 after Harris made a hoop with 31.1 seconds left in the first half, turning a 56-50 deficit into a 74-56 lead. Mitchell scored the first eight points of the second half, putting his team ahead for good.

Detroit completed a 23-5 run early in the second, fueled by 10 points from LeVert to go up 28-21. There were nine lead changes and three ties in the first half, which ended with the Pistons leading 56-52 despite committing 10 turnovers.

Mitchell had just four points at halftime due to 1-of-8 field-goal shooting.

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LEBRON JAMES: TOO SOON TO DETERMINE FUTURE PLANS

LeBron James wasn’t ready to make a decision about his NBA future in the wake of the Los Angeles Lakers’ season-ending loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder on Monday.

The visiting Thunder prevailed 115-110 to sweep a Western Conference semifinal series despite James registering 24 points and a game-high 12 rebounds.

James, 41, just completed his record-setting 23rd NBA season, and the league’s all-time leading scorer is heading into unrestricted free agency.

“What my future (holds), I don’t know, obviously,” he said after the defeat. “I mean, this is obviously still fresh from obviously losing and I don’t know. I mean, I don’t know what the future holds for me obviously as it stands right now tonight.

NBA news updates

“I got a lot of time to sit back like I think I said last year after we lost, I think to Minnesota, to go back and recalibrate with my family and talk with them and spend some time with them and then when the time comes, I’ll obviously you guys will know what I decide to do.”

James was selected to his 22nd consecutive All-Star Game as he thrived in an unfamiliar role for much of the season. Luka Doncic was the Lakers’ top offensive threat, and he led the league with an average of 33.5 points per game. Austin Reaves ranked second on the team at 23.3 ppg, with James third at 20.9 ppg.

James contributed 7.2 assists and 6.1 rebounds per contest.

Doncic missed all of the Lakers’ playoff games due to a hamstring injury. Reaves sat out the final five regular-season games and first four postseason games because of oblique strains.

In the playoffs, James averaged 23.2 points, 7.3 assists and 6.7 rebounds.

“Obviously we fell a little short, but I’m not looking at my year as a disappointment, that’s for damn sure,” James said. “I was put in some positions I never played in my career before, actually in my life. I’ve never been a third option in my life.

“So, to be able to thrive in that role for that period of time and then have to step back into the role that I’ve been accustomed with over my career or my life playing this sport and be able to thrive under that and then just my teammates allowing me to lead them under extreme circumstances, I thought that was pretty cool for me at this stage of my career.”

Reaves, 27, also has a decision to make about his future. The 27-year-old guard has a $14.9 million player option that he is expected to decline to become an unrestricted free agent.

“It’s been fun. It’s been a joy. It’s been a grind,” Reaves said after the Lakers’ Monday loss. “A lot of things didn’t go our way this season and there were a lot of opportunities for us to quit, and you know, that’s not who we got in the locker room or the organization. Everybody stuck together.

“I’ve been around the NBA for five years now. I know a lot of teams would have given up (due to late-season injuries), and that wasn’t the case with this team.”

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NHL

PARKER KELLY, AVALANCHE PUSH WILD TO BRINK WITH GAME 4 WIN

Parker Kelly scored the go-ahead goal with 8:28 left in the third period and the Colorado Avalanche pulled away for a 5-2 win over the Minnesota Wild in Game 4 of their Western Conference semifinal series on Monday in Saint Paul, Minn.

Nathan MacKinnon and Brock Nelson added empty-net goals in the final minute for the Avalanche, who seized a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven series. Colorado’s Nazem Kadri and Ross Colton also scored, Martin Necas had two assists, and Mackenzie Blackwood made 19 saves.

Danila Yurov and Nico Sturm tallied for the Wild, who will try to stave off elimination when the series shifts back to Denver for Game 5 on Wednesday night.

Minnesota goaltender Jesper Wallstedt allowed three goals on 32 shots.

The score was tied at 2-all when Kelly forced a turnover by the Wild and capitalized on a one-timer from the slot. His rising shot produced his first career playoff goal.

Minnesota pulled Wallstedt for an extra skater with less than two minutes to go, but Blackwood withstood the pressure. Colorado capitalized on an empty-net goal by MacKinnon with 32.6 seconds left and another one by Nelson with 7.3 seconds remaining.

Minnesota opened the scoring on the power play with 10:14 to go in the first period. Brock Faber ripped a one-timer from just inside the blue line in the middle, and Yurov deflected it into the back of the net for his first career playoff goal.

The Avalanche answered with a power-play goal of their own with 13:52 remaining in the second period. Kadri fired an initial shot from the right circle that Wallstedt stopped, but the rebound kicked right back to him and he scored on the second attempt.

Colton gave Colorado a 2-1 lead with 13:04 left in the third period. Nicolas Roy had the puck in the right circle and zipped it across the slot for Colton, who punched in a shot.

The Wild answered to even the score at 2-all with 10:45 left. Quinn Hughes fired a backhand pass to Sturm, who buried a one-timer from the right circle.

MacKinnon left the game late in the second period after taking a puck to the face. He held a towel over his mouth and nose as he left, but he returned to action at the start of the third period.

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MLB

MLB ROUNDUP: YANKEES LOSE NO-HIT BID, FALL TO O’S ON COBY MAYO’S 3-RUN HR

Coby Mayo hit a three-run home run and the Baltimore Orioles, who didn’t have a hit until the seventh inning, beat the visiting New York Yankees 3-2 in the opener of a three-game series on Monday night.

Mayo’s homer came on the third pitch from reliever Brent Headrick after Ryan Weathers had silenced the Orioles for the first six-plus innings.

Baltimore, despite producing only three hits, won its second game in a row by notching just its fourth victory in a 12-game stretch. The Orioles began to make amends after they were four-game sweep victims of the Yankees earlier in the month in New York.

Ben Rice’s two-run home run provided the Yankees’ offense, but New York lost its fourth game in a row. Weathers entered the seventh with a no-hitter until Adley Rutschman’s lead-off single. After a groundout and a walk to Tyler O’Neill, Weathers was replaced.

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Diamondbacks 1, Rangers 0

Michael Soroka pitched 6 1/3 innings, Geraldo Perdomo doubled in the only run in the first inning, and Arizona got a shutout win in Arlington, Texas.

Soroka (5-2) gave up just three hits, all singles. Paul Sewald pitched the ninth inning for his ninth save. Perdomo and Nolan Arenado had two hits apiece for the Diamondbacks, who have won three in a row.

Jakob Junis (0-1) gave up the only run in the first inning while starting in place of Nathan Eovaldi, who was a late scratch due to left side tightness. The Rangers had a two-game winning streak end.

Giants 9, Dodgers 3

Rafael Devers had two hits, two RBIs and three runs, Heliot Ramos and Willy Adames delivered two-run hits and San Francisco spoiled Mookie Betts’ return to the lineup with a win at Los Angeles.

Having missed five weeks with a strained right oblique, Betts went 1-for-5 with a strikeout as the Dodgers lost their third straight.

Giants reliever Matt Gage (3-1) retired all five batters he faced. Max Muncy homered and singled for the Dodgers. Alex Vesia (1-1) permitted three runs and got just one out.

Guardians 7, Angels 2

Daniel Schneemann, Travis Bazzana and Brayan Rocchio each drove in two runs as host Cleveland opened the three-game series by cruising past Los Angeles.

Guardians starter Joey Cantillo (3-1) tossed six shutout innings, scattering five hits. David Fry went 2-for-3 with a double, a run and an RBI and Kyle Manzardo finished 2-for-4 with a double and two runs for Cleveland, which drew 10 walks.

Nolan Schanuel and Jo Adell each had two hits for the Angels. Starting pitcher Brent Suter (1-2) gave up two runs on two hits in 1 2/3 innings.

Rays 8, Blue Jays 5

Jonathan Aranda had a solo homer and three RBIs and Tampa Bay defeated host Toronto to begin a three-game set.

Richie Palacios added three hits and three RBIs for Tampa Bay, which is 4-0 against Toronto. Drew Rasmussen (3-1) completed six innings, allowing three runs and four hits. Bryan Baker pitched a perfect bottom of the ninth to earn his 11th save.

Toronto’s Andres Gimenez had a career-best five RBIs with two home runs. Kevin Gausman (2-3) recorded his 2,000th career strikeout but allowed seven runs (six earned) and 10 hits in 4 2/3 innings.

Mariners 3, Astros 1

George Kirby posted a season-high seven strikeouts while Julio Rodriguez homered as visiting Seattle claimed the opener of a four-game series against Houston.

Kirby (5-2) continued his stellar pitching against the Astros. He entered his 11th career regular-season start against Houston with a 5-1 record and 2.17 ERA, and while he logged a season-low five innings, Kirby maintained his previous standard of success.

Astros right-hander Peter Lambert (2-3) matched his career high of seven innings for a second consecutive start.

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NFL

CRAIG MORTON, BRONCOS’ RING OF HONOR QB, DIES AT 83

Former Broncos quarterback Craig Morton, who led Denver to its first Super Bowl appearance and is a member of the franchise’s Ring of Honor, died at home at 83 on Saturday, the team announced.

Joining the Broncos in 1977, the former Cal star guided the team to Super Bowl XII, a 27-10 loss to the Dallas Cowboys. Morton was named the PFWA Comeback Player of the Year after posting a 12-2 record and 1,929 passing yards with 14 touchdowns that season. Finishing his career with the Broncos in 1981, he was inducted into the team’s Ring of Fame in 1988.

Morton spent nine-plus seasons (1965-74) with the Dallas Cowboys, who drafted him No. 5 overall in the 1965 NFL Draft, then played parts of three seasons with the New York Giants (1974-76) before joining the Broncos.

Morton trails only Hall of Famers Peyton Manning and John Elway in Broncos’ passing yards with 11,895. Morton ranks third with 74 passing touchdowns and second in game-winning drives to Elway with 14.

Over his 18-year NFL career, Morton finished 81-62-1 with 2,053 completions for 27,908 yards and 183 touchdown passes. He also rushed for 627 yards and 12 scores.

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GOLF

RANKING ALL 11 LIV GOLF ENTRANTS AT 2026 PGA CHAMPIONSHIP

It has been nearly two years since a LIV Golf member won a major, when Bryson DeChambeau hoisted the 2024 U.S. Open trophy.

Eleven LIV players are set to compete at the 2026 PGA Championship at Aronimink outside of Philadelphia this week. One of them claiming the Wanamaker Trophy would provide a much-need lift for the fledgling league, and there are two among the top five betting favorites.

We rank all 11 players in this week’s field and analyze their chances of snapping LIV’s major drought.

MARTIN KAYMER (+450000 at DraftKings)
Qualified By: Past Champion (2010)

Sitting at 1,160th in the Official World Golf Ranking, Kaymer’s only major last year was a missed cut at the PGA. He has played in six LIV events this year with a best showing of T25 in Mexico City. The Cleeks Golf Club captain hasn’t been relevant on the worldwide stage in several years and currently sits 52nd in LIV’s individual standings.

ELVIS SMYLIE (+130000)
Qualified By: Special Invite

Smylie, 24, won his LIV Golf debut in Riyadh in February, but it has been mostly tough sledding since. He did finish T8 in Hong Kong but hasn’t fared better than T28 in his past six worldwide events and is coming off a T46 at LIV Golf Virginia. The Australian has made the cut in one of three previous major starts — a T72 at last year’s PGA.

DUSTIN JOHNSON (+23000)
Qualified By: Special Invite

The two-time major champion narrowly ran his streak to 69 consecutive majors in which he’s eligible to play when he was extended an invite last week. A two-time PGA runner-up, he has six top-10 finishes in this major. But there is little to suggest that Johnson will be a factor this week. He did manage a T33 at the Masters after missing the cut in three of four 2025 majors. He also has a lone top-10 result through seven LIV events this year.

CAMERON SMITH (+35000)
Qualified By: The Open Champion (2022)

The former World No. 2 insists his competitive fire continues to burn strongly, but his game has mostly flamed out over the past two years against elite fields. That includes six consecutive missed cuts at majors. He has a pair of top-10s on LIV this year following a runner-up at the Australian Open to close out 2025, but has gone T39 and T26 on LIV after failing to make the cut at the Masters last month.

TOM McKIBBIN (+34000)
Qualified By: Special Invite

The 23-year-old will make his sixth major start and second consecutive at the PGA Championship. A former mentee of Rory McIlroy, McKibbin is considered one of the most talented young players on LIV. He is still quite raw on the major stage, however, and also missed the cut at Augusta last month. He did rebound to finish T5 at LIV Golf Mexico City before a missed cut on the DP World Tour and a T21 in Virginia last week.

DAVID PUIG (+12000)
Qualified By: Special Invite

Puig, 24, placed second to Jon Rahm at LIV Golf Mexico City for his best finish to date in the league. His T60 at last year’s PGA was one of one three times Puig has reached the weekend at a major. He does have four top-10s on LIV this year and won the 2025 BMW Australian PGA Championship for his most notable victory to date.

THOMAS DETRY (+14500)
Qualified By: Special Invite

Detry has made a big impact in his debut LIV season as he sits fourth in the individual standings. The 33-year-old’s best previous finish in a major was T4 at the PGA at Valhalla two years ago, and he’s working to secure a spot in next month’s U.S. Open. Ranked 61st in the world, Detry did win the 2025 WM Phoenix Open by seven shots, so he has proven the talent to pull away from quality fields.

JOAQUIN NIEMANN (+10000)
Qualified By: Top 15 at 2025 PGA Championship

The Chilean star has struggled so far in 2026 to find the form that saw him win five individual LIV titles last year. Niemann does have a solo fourth in Singapore and a T8 at Virginia, and he tied for eighth at the 2025 PGA before missing the cut at the final two majors of the year. Last year’s PGA was the only top-10 major finish to date for the 27-year-old.

TYRRELL HATTON (+5900)
Qualified By: Ryder Cup participant (2025)

Hatton’s 66 tied for the low round on Sunday at the Masters, which helped him rocket up to a T3 and took a bit of the sting away from an otherwise very poor showing by LIV at Augusta. He remains 26th in the world rankings and has a trio of top-10 finishes on LIV in 2025, although he is coming off a modest 17th at Virginia. The 34-year-old has a reputation for playing well on some of the world’s most difficult courses, and he has at least one top-10 result at each of the four majors, highlighted by a T4 at last year’s U.S. Open.

BRYSON DeCHAMBEAU (+1850)
Qualified By: U.S. Open Winner (2020), Top 15 at 2024 PGA Championship, Top 70 PGA Championship points

DeChambeau rallied to finish third in Virginia after being 12 shots off the pace of eventual winner Lucas Herbert entering the weekend. He appears to be over the wrist injury that forced him to withdraw from Mexico City following a missed cut at the Masters. DeChambeau has finished runner-up at each of the past two PGAs, including a dramatic one-shot deficit to Xander Schauffele in 2024 and tying for second-place honors five shots behind Scottie Scheffler last year.

JON RAHM (+1375)
Qualified By: U.S. Open Winner (2021), Masters Champion (2023), Ryder Cup participant (2023, ‘25)

Rahm admitted at the Masters that he has been tinkering with a few things with his swing in search of more consistency. After a T38 at Augusta, the Spaniard went on to win LIV Golf Mexico City and finished T8 at Virginia. Rahm also finished T8 at the 2025 PGA before a T7 at the U.S. Open, so he’s one of the few LIV Golf stars who have managed to stay consistently relevant on the major stage.

Rahm, 31, has never appeared particularly concerned about critics or the current noise around LIV’s future. However, he also has a spotty track record at the PGA Championship, with his best finish to date being a T4 at Bellerive back in 2018. He does lead the current individual LIV standings by a wide margin.

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INDIANA HEADLINES/RELEASES

PREP BASEBALL INDIANA NEWS: https://www.prepbaseballreport.com/indiana

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INDIANA FEVER

 INDIANAPOLIS (May 11, 2026) — The Indiana Fever have signed guard Bree Hall to the team’s final Player Development roster spot, it was announced today. Hall returns to Indiana, who drafted her No. 20 overall in the 2025 WNBA Draft, after signing a hardship contact for the team last season.  

 In her first year in the WNBA, Hall made her professional debut under the Golden State Valkyries before returning to the Fever on a hardship contact on Sept. 4, 2025, to help the team during its 2025 end-of-year run. Hall made five total appearances for Indiana, with four coming in postseason play.  

 A two-time NCAA national champion, Hall becomes the fourth University of South Carolina product on the Fever roster.  

 She will wear No. 23 for the Fever.  

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INDIANA SOFTBALL

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. ––– Indiana Softball earned an NCAA Tournament bid for the fourth consecutive season Sunday night as announced on ESPN’s NCAA Softball Tournament Selection Show.

The Hoosiers will compete in the NCAA’s Knoxville Regional. The University of Tennessee Knoxville will host the regional at Sherri Parker Lee Stadium from May 15-17. Tennessee is the No. 7 overall national seed in the tournament.

Indiana will play against Virginia in their first game of the regional on Friday, May 15 at 8 p.m. (ET) on ESPN2. Tennessee and Northern Kentucky will open regional play with a 5:30 p.m. game on SEC Network.

The regional round is a four team, double-elimination tournament played over the three days.

Indiana enters the postseason with a 42-14 record and reached the semifinals of the Big Ten Tournament.

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PURDUE SOFTBALL

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Sophomore Samantha Brown carded an even-par 72 to lead Purdue Women’s Golf in the opening round of the NCAA Tallahassee Regional. As a team, it was not the Boilermakers’ day, as the Old Gold and Black sit in 10th place at 10-over par after the first 18 holes.

Despite the Boilers not playing to their strong form from the end of the regular season, there is plenty of golf left for them to rally and earn a third straight trip to the NCAA Championships. Purdue is 11 shots back of the Top 5 that qualify for the national stage, which can be made up quickly with two rounds remaining.

Brown was one of three Boilermakers to make four birdies at Seminole Legacy Golf Club. She parred the first eight holes before getting a birdie to fall at the ninth, completing a bogey-free front side. After giving the shot back on No. 10, the sophomore answered with a two-putt birdie at the par-5 11th hole. Brown added two more birdies on her way in, including a deuce on No. 13. She played the par 3s 1-under throughout the day, ranking third in the field.

Making her NCAA Regional debut, sophomore Michaela Headlee put together a strong round of 74 (+2). The Carmel, Indiana, native shook off nerves that resulted in bogeys on two of her first three holes, as she drained a 10-footer for birdie at the par-3 fifth to start her rally. Headlee rattled off four straight pars before beginning the back nine with birdies on Nos. 10 and 11. Her fourth and final birdie came on another par 3, No. 15, knocking in a 7-foot birdie putt following a great tee shot.

Ashley Kim and Lauren Timpf contributed 76s (+4) to the team score. Kim got off to a hot start with birdies on two of her first four holes, nearly making an eagle on the par-5 fourth that led to an easy tap-in birdie. Both Boilermakers made back-to-back birdies on No. 14 and No. 15 before playing the final three holes 2-over par.

The Boilermakers look to soar up the leaderboard on moving day tomorrow, teeing off alongside UTRGV (+13) and Little Rock (+27).

For updates throughout the rest of the tournament, follow Purdue Women’s Golf on X and Instagram @PurdueWGolf.

BOILERMAKERS

T-18. Samantha Brown: 72 (E)

T-32. Michaela Headlee: 74 (+2)

T-50. Ashley Kim: 76 (+4)

T-50. Lauren Timpf: 76 (+4)

T-60. Luana Valero: 79 (+7)

TEAM LEADERBOARD

1. #3 Florida: 283 (-5)

T-2. #9 Wake Forest: 285 (-3)

T-2. #25 Florida State: 285 (-3)

T-4. Eastern Michigan: 287 (-1)

T-4: ULM: 287 (-1)

6. #15 UCLA: 290 (+2)

T-7. Kentucky: 291 (+3)

T-7. Clemson: 291 (+3)

9. North Florida: 296 (+8)

10. Purdue: 298 (+10)

11. UTRGV: 301 (+13)

12. Little Rock: 315 (+27)

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NOTRE DAME BASEBALL

SOUTH BEND, Ind. – The Notre Dame baseball team travel to Prasco Park in Mason, Ohio to face Dayton in a midweek contest on Tuesday, May 12 at 6:00 p.m. ET.

THE MATCHUP

  • The Irish lead the all-time series 46-12.
  • The two teams last met on February 28, 2009 as the Irish prevailed 14-5 in a neutral site game in Tempe, Arizona.
  • The squads have not faced off on either program’s campus since 2001.

LAST TIME OUT

Notre Dame swept a non-conference series against Oakland to post their eighth consecutive win while capping off an 11-game homestand.

  • Jack Radel went 5.0 innings and struck out six en route to the win on the mound in game one. The Irish plated a run in the first and added another on an Andrew Graham solo homer in the fourth in the 2-0 win. Noah Rooney earned his fifth save of the year.
  • An eight-run fifth inning by the Irish helped lift Notre Dame to a 15-5 (8 inn.) win in game two against the Golden Grizzlies. Shane Miranda went 4-for-4 with two doubles, three runs and an RBI. Ty Uber went 3.0 on the mound and struck out one. Eli Thurmond went 2.2 in relief and earned the win after striking out two.
  • Notre Dame secured the series sweep with a 9-3 win over Oakland in the team’s final home series of the regular season. Bino Watters went 3-for-4 at the plate with three doubles, three RBI and a run. Drew Berkland was 2-for-2 with a home run, a double, three walks, an RBI and four runs. DJ Helwig went 2.0 in his third start of the year with a strikeout. Caden Crowell went 2.0 and did not allow a hit or a walk while striking out four and earning the win in relief.
100John P. and Catherine Murphy Head Baseball Coach Shawn Stiffler is the seventh coach in program history to amass 100+ wins at the helm of the program.
38Jack Radel retired 38 consecutive batters spanning from the third inning against FAU to the sixth inning against Alabama A&M.
16The team features 16 returners from the 2025 Notre Dame squad that put together a 16-2 record to close out the regular season last spring.
13Jack Radel’s 103 Ks on the season ranks 13th nationally.
12The Irish collected 12 two-out RBIs in their series win at Duke.
12The squad features 12 true freshmen. Six of those 12 were ranked among the top two recruits in the Class of 2025 at their respective positions in their states.
10Notre Dame scored 10 runs with two grand slams before recording an out in the 14-11 Friday win at Louisville.
9Caden Crowell was ranked as No. 9 on the D1Baseball Freshman Impact List for 2026.
7Seven transfer student-athletes joined the Irish for the 2026 season, including five graduate student-athletes.
6.0Jack Radel threw 6.0 perfect innings with nine strikeouts on just 68 pitches against UCF.
5The Irish posted a season-best five home runs in their 18-13 Sunday win over Stanford.
2The Irish have posted two 10-run innings in the 2026 season in wins over Louisville and No. 22 Boston College.

TOP TALENT

The Irish have six players listed in the D1baseball.com Preseason rankings by position.

  • Sophomore Bino Watters was the 17th ranked first baseman.
  • Junior Jack Radel was 29th on the  starting pitchers list.
  • Junior Mark Quatrani was 49th on the catchers list.
  • Graduate student Drew Berkland was 63rd on the outfielders report.
  • Sophomore Oisin Lee came in at 74th on the relief pitchers list.
  • Junior Davis Johnson was listed at 132nd in the outfielder rankings.

Additionally, Notre Dame had representation on the D1Baseball Impact Freshman List as Caden Crowell came in at No. 9 on the ranking.

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IU INDY WOMEN’S GOLF

ANN ARBOR, Mich. – IU Indianapolis women’s golf senior Yanah Rolston carded an opening round 77 at the NCAA Ann Arbor Regional on Monday (May 11), opening the three-day tournament at the University of Michigan Golf Course. Rolston opened her round with a brilliant birdie and ultimately avoided big numbers throughout the round in her first career postseason appearance.

Starting on No. 10 in the final group of the day, Rolston knocked her initial approach shot of the day within a foot for a tap-in birdie on her first hole of the day. 

She gave back a shot with a bogey on the par 3, No. 12 to begin a stretch of three straight bogeys. She closed her opening nine with four straight pars, including a nifty chip on No. 18 to setup an easy putt.

She made a fifth straight par on the long, par 5 No. 1 before making bogey on the tough No. 2. Rolston continued to avoid trouble down the homestretch of her round, including multiple tough recoveries that resulted in bogeys.

No. 32 Northwestern and No. 29 Ohio State are tied atop the team leaderboard at 5-under 279 and No. 2 USC is third at 2-under 282. Northwestern’s Ashley Yun and USC’s Elise Lee are tied atop the individual leaderboard after shooting 5-under 66 on Monday.

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INDIANA STATE BASEBALL

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. – Indiana State opens up a four-game home stand on Tuesday night as the Sycamores close out the non-conference portion of the regular season schedule against Lindenwood. First pitch at Bob Warn Field is set for 6:30 p.m. ET.

The game is a make-up date for the previously rained out contest scheduled back on March 4 but was unable to be completed due to freezing temperatures in the Wabash Valley area. Tuesday’s contest will be carried live on 105.5 The Legend.

Season Spotlight

The Indiana State offense features a variety of players sitting among the tops in the Missouri Valley in multiple offensive categories heading into the week.

Mason Roell (.367) is currently second in the Valley in batting average and second in on-base percentage (.483), while sitting third overall in slugging percentage at .655. He has posted 19 extra-base hits over the 2026 season including picking up his 10th home run this past Saturday at Murray State.

Carter Beck continues to lead the Valley in RBIs with 52 and runs scored with 56, while sitting fourth in the conference in home runs (12) and second in total extra-base hits (31).

The Sycamores have three athletes in the top six in runs batted in with Carter Beck (52, 1st), Nick Sutherlin (51, 2nd), and Caden Miller (44, 6th) among the Valley leaders.

Emil Estrella is also among the tops in the conference sitting second overall with 18 stolen bases to go with a .298 batting average and nine home runs.

The Sycamores lead the Missouri Valley in a number of team offensive categories including doubles (111), scoring (7378), on-base percentage (0.388), home runs (64), extra-base hits (189), walks (241), and defensive double plays (45)

Overall, the Sycamores’ pitching staff have pitched a Valley-high 452.1 innings on the year resulting in a 6.07 ERA with a 391:267 strikeout-to-walk ratio.

Seven different Sycamore pitchers have made at least 15 appearances on the mound this season.

Series History Against Lindenwood

Indiana State and Lindenwood have never faced off against each other in their respective program histories.

Lindenwood joined the NCAA Division I on August 1, 2025, as a full member of the Ohio Valley Conference.

About Lindenwood

Lindenwood were selected sixth overall in the Ohio Valley Conference’s preseason poll receiving 86 total points.

Two Lindenwood players, Jake Radosevich (C/DH) and Charlie Isom-McCall (INF) were both recognized on the 2026 Ohio Valley Players to Watch List prior to the start of the season.

Lindenwood enters the week with a 28-23 record on the year with a 12-12 mark in Ohio Valley play. The Lions have posted an 8-12 record away from St. Charles, Mo. on the season.

Lindenwood is 4-1 against Missouri Valley teams in 2026 with a pair of wins against both Southern Illinois and Bradley, while falling to Evansville.

Will Geary currently paces the Lindenwood offense with a .330 batting average with team-highs in hits (65), runs (37), triples (5), and stolen bases (25).

Jake Radosevich is the team’s power threat with nine home runs and 40 RBIs.

The Lions’ pitching staff has posted a 3.97 team ERA on the year with a 333:153 strikeout-to-walk ratio.

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EVANSVILLE MEN’S BASKETBALL

EVANSVILLE, Ind. – In its latest addition to the 2026-27 squad, the University of Evansville men’s basketball program has announced the signing of Gustav Winther. The 6-10 forward was a freshman at Northern Illinois in 2025-26.

Winther saw the floor in all 34 games for the Huskies while starting 21 contests. He wrapped up the season with an average of 8.1 points and 4.2 rebounds per game. His top performance came against ULM where he recorded 18 points. WInther set his rebounding mark with 11 versus Central Michigan.

“Gustav is a high IQ big that has a ton of on-court Division 1 experience in a competitive conference. Gus is a high-level competitor that is motivated to help our program win a conference championship,” Purple Aces Head Men’s Basketball Coach David Ragland said. “Gus is a team-first player that can defend the post, switch onto guards and keep them in front, score with his back to the basket and get us into dribble handoffs and dribble keeps within our offense.”

Originally from Roskilde, Denmark, Winther played for Basketball Club Copenhagen in the Danish BasketLigen in 2024-25 where he averaged 12.3 points and 5.7 rebounds. He was a 57% shooter from the field. Before that, he played with Holbaek-Senhus in Denmark avertaging 9.1 PPG and 6.5 RPG in 2023-24.

“I chose Evansville because I thought there was a great atmosphere here,” Winther said. “I really believe in the coaching staff and I think this is the spot where I can improve my abilities on the court the most.”

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VALPO MEN’S BASKETBALL

The Valparaiso University men’s basketball program has announced the addition of George Richardson (Chicago, Ill. / Evanston [Link Academy]), a 6-foot-7 forward who joins the program for the 2026-2027 season.

Richardson helped DePaul Prep to a state championship as a junior in high school before transferring to Evanston, where he helped his team to a third-place finish at state. He was an All-American at Link Academy during his prep school season in 2025-26.

“I really like all of the Valpo coaches,” Richardson said. “Coach Powell being a believer was a big factor in my decision. My coach at Link Academy was a huge believer, and that was the first time I played for someone with such strong faith. Coach Powell resembles a lot of the good things that my last coach did. I’ve dreamed about this opportunity and I’ve always been a little under-looked. Betting on myself and playing that fifth year helped develop my game. That paid off.”

Richardson continues a well-established pipeline between Link and Valpo, and Link has produced some of Valpo’s brightest stars during the Roger Powell Jr. head coaching era.

“George is another Link product who is a great kid,” Powell said. “He has good size and can really shoot. I’m excited about his future and the continuance of the Link Academy tradition here at Valpo.”

Richardson credits his parents, his older brother and Link Academy coach Adam Donyes for helping him get to this point. Richardson was recruited to Link to be on the “regional” team before working his way up to starting on the “national” team.

“I’m really versatile and hard working,” Richardson said. “I can fit on any kind of roster and any kind of team. If you need me to score the ball, I can score the ball. I can play good defense. I’m excited to get to campus and get to work.”

Off the court, Richardson is getting into golf and enjoys watching sports. He is an Ohio State football fan. He intends to pursue a business degree.

Richardson joins a Valpo program that will meld a strong returning core with an exciting incoming class.

“The team is really glued together and I could feel that all of the returning players are bought into the program,” Richardson said. “They are really good players who could have played at a higher level. In today’s college basketball world, a lot of people are just leaving, so having a team that likes each other is huge. That is how you win. Coach Powell’s trajectory has been going up, and I feel like that will keep going.”

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INDIANA COLLEGE SPORTS WEB SITES

UINDY ATHLETICS: https://athletics.uindy.edu/

MARIAN ATHLETICS: https://muknights.com/

INDIANA WESLEYAN ATHLETICS: https://iwuwildcats.com/

EARLHAM ATHLETICS: https://goearlham.com/

WABASH ATHLETICS: https://sports.wabash.edu/

FRANKLIN ATHLETICS: https://franklingrizzlies.com/

ROSE-HULMAN ATHLETICS: https://athletics.rose-hulman.edu/

ANDERSON ATHLETICS: https://athletics.anderson.edu/landing/index

TRINE ATHLETICS: https://trinethunder.com/landing/index

BETHEL ATHLETICS: https://bupilots.com/

DEPAUW ATHLETICS: https://depauwtigers.com/

HANOVER ATHLETICS: https://athletics.hanover.edu/

MANCHESTER ATHLETICS: https://muspartans.com/

HUNTINGTON ATHLETICS: https://www.huathletics.com/

OAKLAND CITY ATHLETICS: https://gomightyoaks.com/index.aspx

ST. FRANCIS ATHLETICS: https://www.saintfranciscougars.com/landing/index

IU KOKOMO ATHLETICS: https://iukcougars.com/

IU EAST ATHLETICS: https://www.iueredwolves.com/

IU SOUTH BEND ATHLETICS: https://iusbtitans.com/

PURDUE NORTHWEST ATHLETICS: https://pnwathletics.com/

INDIANA TECH ATHLETICS: https://indianatechwarriors.com/index.aspx

GRACE COLLEGE ATHLETICS: https://gclancers.com/

ST. MARY OF THE WOODS ATHLETICS: https://smwcathletics.com/

GOSHEN COLLEGE ATHLETICS: https://goleafs.net/

HOLY CROSS ATHLETICS: https://www.hcsaints.com/index.php

TAYLOR ATHLETICS: https://www.taylortrojans.com/

VINCENNES ATHLETICS: https://govutrailblazers.com/landing/index

=========================================================

“SPORTS EXTRA”

TODAY IN BASEBALL HISTORY

1910 – Charles Bender of the Philadelphia Athletics pitches a 4 – 0 no-hitter against the Cleveland Naps. Bender, who misses a perfect game by issuing a walk, will compile a 23-5 record during the season.

1915 – Using just 67 pitches, Red Faber of the Chicago White Sox throws a complete game victory, beating the Washington Senators on three hits, 4 – 1.

1926 – Walter Johnson of the Washington Senators records his 400th career win when he defeats the St. Louis Browns, 7 – 4, to reach the rarely-achieved milestone.

1932 – Carey Selph of the Chicago White Sox collects his ninth strikeout of the season. But it won’t happen again. Selph will go another 89 games without striking out, to set a major league record, hitting .283 in 396 at-bats in his second and last season. Selph’s record will last until 1958, when Nellie Fox sets a new mark with 98 consecutive games whitout striking out.

1937 – Joe Medwick hits two home runs and two doubles to lead the St. Louis Cardinals to a 15 – 3 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies.

1941 – After five years of being called the Bees, the National League franchise in Boston is once again known as the Braves.

1955 – Toothpick Sam Jones of the Chicago Cubs becomes the first black pitcher in major league history to throw a no-hitter and he does it in the hardest way. In the 9th inning against the Pittsburgh Pirates, Jones walks the bases full and then strikes out Dick Groat, Roberto Clemente and Frank Thomas in a row to preserve his 4 – 0 victory. It is also the first no-hitter at Wrigley Field in the last 38 years. Unfortunately only 2,918 fans are on hand to witness the double milestone.

1956 – Carl Erskine of the Brooklyn Dodgers pitches a 3 – 0 no-hitter against the New York Giants. Erskine strikes out three and walks two. His masterpiece at Ebbets Field is the second no-hitter of his career. His first came in 1952 against the Chicago Cubs.

1958 – Willie Mays hits the first grand slam in the history of the San Francisco Giants. Mays also belts another home run in a 12 – 3 victory over the rival Los Angeles Dodgers. The Giants moved from New York to San Francisco prior to the season.

1959 – At Yankee Stadium, Yogi Berra commits an error as his errorless streak of 148 games for a catcher comes to an end in a New York 7 – 6 loss to Cleveland.

1962 – New York Mets relief pitcher Craig Anderson wins both ends of a doubleheader. Success will soon turn to failure, however: Anderson will lose his next 16 decisions on the season and 19 decisions overall. In fact, he will never win another game in the major leagues.

1966 – Lou Brock hits a RBI single in the 12th inning and gives the St. Louis Cardinals a 4 – 3 victory over the Atlanta Braves in the opening of Busch Memorial Stadium. Felipe Alou hits two home runs for Atlanta.

1969 – Bob Gibson of the St. Louis Cardinals becomes the seventh pitcher in National League history to strike out the side on nine pitches. Gibson enjoys his feat against the Los Angeles Dodgers, as part of a 6 – 2 win for St. Louis.

1970 – Ernie Banks hits his 500th career home run off Pat Jarvis in the Cubs’ 4 – 3 victory over Atlanta at Wrigley Field. It is also his 1,600th career RBI. The ball, after it bounces back onto the field, is retrieved by Braves left fielder Rico Carty, who gives it to Banks. Carty, meanwhile, hits safely in his 30th consecutive game.

1971 – Heinie Manush dies in Sarasota, Florida, at the age of 69. Manush won the American League batting championship in 1926, and twice led the league in hits. A lifetime .330 hitter, Manush gained induction to the Hall of Fame in 1964.

1978 – At Royals Stadium, a potential game-ending routine fly ball becomes an Amos Otis walk-off inside-the-park home run as Reggie Jackson and Mickey Rivers collide in the outfield. The misplay turns a sure Goose Gossage save into a sour loss for the current World Champion New York Yankees.

1984 – Cincinnati Reds pitcher Mario Soto is one out away from a no-hitter when the Cardinals’ George Hendrick hits a home run to tie the game, 1 – 1. Cincinnati then rallies for a run in the bottom of the 9th inning to give Soto a one-hit, 2 – 1 victory.

1989 – Rick Reuschel of the San Francisco Giants records his 200th major league win, beating Montreal, 2 – 1.

1999:

Boston Red Sox pitcher Pedro Martinez strikes out 15 batters for the second consecutive game in a 9 – 2 victory over the Seattle Mariners.

The Angels shut out the Yankees, 1 – 0, behind the combined three-hit pitching of Chuck Finley and Troy Percival. Finley strikes out 11 Yankees in his eight innings of work, including four in the 3rd inning, to become the 33rd pitcher in history to strike out four in a single frame.

2000:

Boston Red Sox pitcher Pedro Martinez, who posted 17 strikeouts in his last start on May 6th against Tampa Bay, strikes out 15 in a 9 – 0 shutout over the Orioles, to tie an American League record set by the Indians’ Luis Tiant in 1968 for most strikeouts over two games.

2001:

A.J. Burnett pitches an unlikely no-hitter, overcoming nine bases on balls to lead the Marlins over San Diego, 3 – 0.

Ramón Arano plays in a Mexican League game for the sixth different decade, the only player to do so. The 62-year-old pitcher allows one run in 3 1/3 innings for the Veracruz Eagle and leaves with a 1-1 score against the Nuevo Laredo Owls.

Gary Sheffield of the Los Angeles Dodgers becomes the first player in major league history to win three 1 – 0 games in a season with a home run, when he hits a solo shot to beat Atlanta, 1 – 0. Previously, Sheffield also supplied the only scoring by homering against Milwaukee on April 2nd and Florida on May 7th.

Major League Baseball is ordered by arbitrator Alan Symonette to reinstate nine of the 22 “resigning” umpires let go two years before, and to grant back-pay for the time missed. The order also states that veteran umpires Frank Pulli and Terry Tata do not need to retire after the season, as previously planned.

Carlos Delgado hits his 204th home run in a Toronto Blue Jays uniform, surpassing Joe Carter in the all-time Blue Jays career leader in homers.

2004 – In one of the most remarkable at-bats in major league history, Alex Cora fouls off 14 consecutive pitches and then hits the 18th pitch over the right field fence for a two-run home run off Cubs pitcher Matt Clement. The homer extends Los Angeles’s lead to 4 – 0. The Dodger Stadium crowd cheers each foul ball as the total starts to be displayed on the scoreboard.

2008 – In the second game of a doubleheader, the Indians lose, 3 – 0, to the Blue Jays against Shaun Marcum and two relievers. The historic note goes to Cleveland, which is involved in the sixth unassisted triple play in franchise history (three for them, three against them) and the 14th overall in major league annals. In the 5th, Cliff Lee lets the first two men reach. Lyle Overbay hits a liner that is caught by a diving Asdrubal Cabrera at second. Cabrera steps on the bag to force Kevin Mench, then tags out Marco Scutaro to complete the trifecta. Also of note is that Ron Hansen, involved in a 1968 unassisted triple play against Cleveland, is at the game as a Phillies scout.

2010:

Major League Baseball issues a warning to the Phillies after investigating allegations made by the Colorado Rockies that bullpen coach Mick Billmeyer used binoculars to steal signs from the centerfield bullpen in the game between the teams on May 10th. In today’s game, Colorado wins, 4 – 3, as Miguel Olivo goes 5 for 5, capping his perfect day with a walk-off home run off Chad Durbin in the 10th inning.

The Nationals continue to surprise, beating the Mets, 6 – 4, at Citi Field, thanks to Roger Bernadina’s first two homers this year. The second is a two-run shot off closer Francisco Rodriguez in the 9th inning and comes moments after Bernadina makes a diving game-saving catch to rob Jeff Francoeur with the bases loaded. Nats starter Craig Stammen contributes the other three RBI but does not figure in the decision; instead, reliever Tyler Clippard picks up his major-league leading seventh win, followed by Matt Capps’s 14th save, which is also a major league high so far this season.

2011 – Carlos Beltran belts three homers and drives in six runs as the Mets beat the Rockies, 9 – 5, after a two-hour rain delay. Beltran homers from both sides of the plate and to all three fields in his power display. Ubaldo Jimenez, who set a Rockies season-record for wins in 2010, falls to 0-3.

2013:

Chris Sale of the White Sox throws the third major league one-hitter in three days in beating the Angels­, 3 – 0. Sale takes a perfect game into the 7th before Mike Trout singles with one out; he needs only 98 pitches to record his first career shutout.

Dè Flanegin sets a new Hoofdklasse record for games played all for a single team. He passes Jurjan Koenen with his 692nd game for the Pioniers, but his club loses, 3 – 1, to The Hawks behind a pitching gem from fellow veteran Elton Koeiman.

2015 – The Mariners tie a team record by hitting six homers in an 11 – 4 win over the Padres at Safeco Field. Nelson Cruz hits his major league-leading 15th home run, while Mike Zunino hits two, and Kyle Seager, Justin Ruggiano and Logan Morrison complete the barrage.

2016 – The Red Sox’s bats are red hot as they score 11 or more runs for the fourth straight game in defeating Houston, 11 – 1. They are the first team to score in double figures in four straight games since 2007, and by also collecting 14 or more hits in all four games, match a feat last performed by the 1930 Philadelphia Athletics. Jackie Bradley extends his hitting streak to 18 games, longest in the majors so far this year. Boston has now won 14 of its last 18 games.

2017 – Buster Posey homers in the 17th inning to send the Giants to a 3 – 2 win over the Reds, in a game that takes 5 hours and 28 minutes. Posey’s shot off Robert Stephenson is the latest walk-off homer in San Francisco’s history, bettering a 16th-inning blast by Willie Mays in 1963. Umpire Tony Randazzo has to leave the game in the 13th, feeling the after-effects of having been hit in the face by a Johnny Cueto fastball back in the 5th.

2019 – George Springer has a great day, going 5 for 5 with two homers as Houston defeats Texas, 15 – 5, completing a four-game sweep. He starts his day with a leadoff homer off Adrian Sampson and caps it off with a two-run shot off Brett Martin in the 6th, also scoring five times. For his part, teammate Alex Bregman also homers twice and drives in five while Corbin Martin is a winner in his big league debut.

2022 – It’s a game for lovers of the three true outcomes at Guaranteed Rate Field, as Dylan Cease starts the game for the White Sox by recording 11 strikeouts in four innings against the Yankees. But he also gives up two walks and six hits, five of them for extra bases, including a pair of homers by Giancarlo Stanton, and departs trailing, 6 – 3. The Sox manage to tie the game at 7-all in the 7th, thanks to a three-run homer by Yoan Moncada, but the Yanks come back with seven runs in the top of the 8th against Joe Kelly and Tanner Banks, with Aaron Judge and Josh Donaldson both contributing homers. In all, the Yankees walk seven times and strike out 14 times, in addition to the four long balls.

2023:

Cedric Mullins hits the 12th cycle in franchise history, including their days as the St. Louis Browns, in the Orioles’ 6 – 3 win over the Pirates.

Chris Bassitt becomes the first Blue Jays pitcher to throw a nine-inning complete game since Marcus Stroman in 2017 when he hurls a two-hit shutout to defeat the Braves, 3 – 0. To find another Jays pitcher to have pitched a shutout by himself, one has to go back to Mark Buehrle, on June 3, 2015! The gaps between two full-length complete games and shutouts, of 889 and 1,176 games respectively, are both the longest in major league history.

2025 – The Yankees’ Oswaldo Cabrera suffers a gruesome injury in trying to score on a routine sacrifice fly in the 9th inning of their game against Seattle. After missing the plate in avoiding catcher Cal Raleigh’s tag, he breaks suddenly in order to turn back, but his ankle snaps and he falls to the ground in excruciating pain. While he does manage to touch the dish, an ambulance has to drive onto the field to remove him and his season is likely over.

Births[edit]

1860 – E.A. Griffith, umpire (d. 1914)

1862 – Jimmy Wolf, outfielder, manager (d. 1903)

1864 – Ed Creighton, umpire (d. 1928)

1864 – Doc Oberlander, pitcher (d. 1922)

1866 – Lave Cross, infielder, manager (d. 1927)

1868 – Harry Truby, infielder (d. 1953)

1877 – Knotty Lee, minor league pitcher and manager (d. 1962)

1887 – Casey Hageman, pitcher (d. 1964)

1887 – Gene Krapp, pitcher (d. 1923)

1887 – Milo Netzel, infielder (d. 1938)

1889 – Al Schulz, pitcher (d. 1931)

1889 – Alex McCarthy, infielder (d. 1978)

1893 – Hob Hiller, infielder (d. 1956)

1893 – George Kaiserling, pitcher (d. 1918)

1895 – Jim Poole, infielder (d. 1975)

1897 – Joe Dugan, infielder (d. 1982)

1898 – Earl McNeely, outfielder (d. 1971)

1899 – Tod Dennehey, outfielder (d. 1977)

1900 – Phil Voyles, outfielder (d. 1972)

1902 – Dutch Henry, pitcher (d. 1968)

1906 – Charlie Butler, pitcher (d. 1964)

1907 – Hans Pung, Hawai’ian national team outfielder (d. 1965)

1910 – Lefty Mills, pitcher (d. 1982)

1911 – Archie McKain, pitcher (d. 1985)

1915 – Doc Bracken, pitcher (d. 1994)

1915 – Harry Dean, pitcher (d. 1960)

1916 – Hank Borowy, pitcher; All-Star (d. 2004)

1916 – Gerves Fagan, infielder (d. 1973)

1916 – Dixie Parsons, catcher (d. 1991)

1918 – Ed Runge, umpire (d. 2002)

1921 – Carl Thompson, minor league pitcher and owner (d. 2006)

1922 – Johnny Hetki, pitcher (d. 2019)

1923 – Ed Lyons, infielder (d. 2009)

1925 – Yogi Berra, catcher, manager; All-Star, Hall of Famer (d. 2015)

1925 – John Whalen, college coach (d. 1998)

1928 – James Pomykala, minor league pitcher (d. 2008)

1928 – Dave Tarapacki, minor league player (d. 2019)

1930 – Len Riccio, umpire (d. 1991)

1931 – Tom Umphlett, outfielder (d. 2012)

1935 – Felipe Alou, outfielder, manager; All-Star

1938 – Norm Gigon, infielder (d. 2013)

1940 – Germán Águila, Cuban league infielder

1940 – Tom Timmermann, pitcher (d. 2025)

1941 – Floyd Weaver, pitcher (d. 2008)

1942 – Kazuo Hatano, NPB outfielder

1942 – Ted Kubiak, infielder

1945 – Mitsumasa Funawatari, NPB outfielder

1945 – Masao Sunouchi, NPB pitcher

1947 – Vic Albury, pitcher (d. 2017)

1947 – Bob Heise, infielder

1950 – Pat Darcy, pitcher

1950 – Shiro Maeda, NPB pitcher

1951 – Joe Nolan, catcher

1951 – Hiroshi Sato, NPB pitcher

1951 – Dutch Weems, minor league pitcher (d. 1974)

1953 – Taylor Duncan, infielder (d. 2004)

1955 – Ralph Botting, pitcher

1955 – Akira Sakamaki, NPB pitcher

1957 – Lou Whitaker, infielder; All-Star

1958 – Atsuyoshi Otake, college coach

1959 – Kevin Bass, outfielder; All-Star

1959 – Fernando Diaz, Guam national team player (d. 2012)

1959 – Willie Lozado, infielder

1959 – Katsura Yamamoto, NPB outfielder

1964 – Paul Davis, coach

1965 – Angel Escobar, infielder

1965 – Julio Franco, scout

1966 – Rafael Bournigal, infielder

1966 – Jim Hvizda, minor league pitcher

1967 – Kenny Greer, pitcher

1967 – Germán Mesa, Cuban leagues infielder and manager

1968 – Mark Clark, pitcher

1968 – Fabio Gomez, minor league player

1968 – Jutaro Kimura, Japanese national team pitcher

1969 – Pete Yarasavich, Hoofdklasse player and coach

1971 – Tom Nanne, Hoofdklasse pitcher

1971 – Dave Sinnes, minor league pitcher

1972 – Benji Simonton, minor league infielder

1974 – Glen Buckley, Bundesliga infielder

1974 – Jung-Hsing Chen, TML pitcher

1974 – Alvie Shepherd, minor league pitcher

1975 – Hirokazu Ibata, NPB infielder

1976 – Keiji Fukui, NPB infielder

1976 – Dan Guillory, minor league pitcher

1976 – Wes Helms, infielder

1977 – Osvaldo Arias, Cuban Serie Nacional catcher

1977 – Shugo Fujii, NPB pitcher

1978 – Masahiro Abe, NPB infielder

1978 – Ching-He Chuang, CPBL player

1978 – Ben Foster, minor league infielder

1978 – Ian Holness, South African national team outfielder

1978 – Edison Lora, minor league pitcher

1978 – Josh Phelps, infielder

1979 – Travis Dawkins, infielder

1980 – Justin Hatcher, minor league catcher

1980 – Felipe Lopez, infielder; All-Star

1980 – Roberto Miniel, minor league pitcher

1981 – Naoki Hosomi, NPB catcher

1982 – Jamie D’Antona, infielder

1982 – Hoon-rak Choi, KBO infielder

1983 – Evan Meek, pitcher; All-Star

1983 – Jack Egbert, pitcher

1983 – Blake Lalli, catcher

1984 – Chris Robinson, catcher

1984 – Jose Sanchez, minor league pitcher

1985 – C.J. Bressoud, minor league catcher-pitcher

1986 – Matt Gaski, minor league infielder

1987 – Adam Liberatore, pitcher

1987 – Lance Lynn, pitcher; All-Star

1987 – Nick Stanley, minor league infielder and manager

1988 – Usman Ali, Pakistani national team pitcher

1988 – Shaydron Buckridge, minor league catcher

1988 – Adam Gaylord, minor league infielder

1988 – Marleen Gómez, Puerto Rican women’s national team outfielder

1988 – Shota Ishimine, NPB outfielder

1988 – Wan-Lin Tsai, CPBL pitcher

1988 – Jeong-woo Yoon, KBO outfielder

1989 – Bradin Hagens, pitcher

1989 – Yuki Kawabata, Japanese women’s national team infielder

1990 – Torai Fushimi, NPB catcher

1992 – Jonathan Davis, outfielder

1992 – Michael Fagan, minor league pitcher

1992 – Wilce Nieves, minor league pitcher

1992 – Hein Robb, minor league pitcher

1993 – Taylor Guilbeau, pitcher

1993 – Tomoya Kakinuma, NPB catcher

1994 – Jesmuel Valentin, infielder

1995 – Camille Foucher, French women’s national team pitcher

1995 – Callum Murphy, Bundesliga infielder

1995 – Mitch Plassmeyer, minor league coach

1996 – Tyler Ivey, pitcher

1997 – Jonathan Stiever, pitcher

1997 – Terrin Vavra, minor league infielder

1998 – Matt Brash, pitcher

1999 – Liu Xiangpeng, minor league pitcher

2000 – Andre Granillo, pitcher

2001 – Yu-Hung Chen, CPBL pitcher

2001 – Gavin Collyer, pitcher

2002 – Kana Onodera, Japanese women’s national team pitcher

2002 – Kaito Yuki, signed pitcher

2004 – Robert Ogg, Hungarian national team pitcher

2004 – Andrius Stravinskas, Lithuanian national team outfielder

2006 – Bálint Piros, Hungarian national team infielder

Deaths[edit]

1913 – John O’Brien, infielder (b. 1866)

1936 – Frank Zinn, catcher (b. 1865)

1944 – John Pappalau, pitcher (b. 1875)

1952 – Charlie Young, pitcher (b. 1893)

1953 – Ed Summers, pitcher (b. 1884)

1957 – Fred Bennett, outfielder (b. 1902)

1960 – Gus Felix, outfielder (b. 1895)

1971 – Atsushi Aramaki, NPB pitcher; Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame (b. 1926)

1971 – Heinie Manush, outfielder; All-Star, Hall of Famer (b. 1901)

1979 – Clyde Kluttz, catcher (b. 1917)

1985 – Ryoichi Ishifuro, NPB pitcher (b. 1923)

1987 – Den Yamada, NPB outfielder (b. 1914)

1988 – Hank Schenz, infielder (b. 1919)

1992 – Joe Burke, general manager (b. 1923)

1994 – Si Johnson, pitcher (b. 1906)

1999 – Douglas Dean, minor league infielder (b. 1915)

2006 – Takashi Tanaka, NPB catcher

2007 – Horacio Veras, Dominican national team coach (b. ????)

2011 – Carlos Pascual, pitcher (b. 1931)

2013 – J.R. McKee, coach (b. 1914)

2013 – Chang-Gun Xiao, Taiwan Baseball Hall of Fame (b. 1919)

2015 – Darrell Rodgers, minor league pitcher (b. 1962)

2016 – John Angelus, college coach (b. 1933)

2021 – Higinio Vélez, Cuban league manager (b. 1927)

2022 – Reiichi Matsunaga, college coach; Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame (b. 1931)

2023 – Don Denkinger, umpire (b. 1936)

2024 – Cuno Barragan, catcher (b. 1932)

2024 – Ric Lessmann, minor league pitcher and college coach (b. 1937)

2025 – Adam Burton, minor league infielder (b. 1972)

2025 – Jack Curtis, pitcher (b. 1937)

2025 – Mark Esser, pitcher (b. 1956)

==============================================

TV SPORTS TODAY

Tuesday, May 12

COLLEGE BASEBALL

7 p.m.

SECN — UT-Martin at Mississippi

MLB BASEBALL

7 p.m.

TBS — Chicago Cubs at Atlanta (7:15 p.m.)

10 p.m.

MLBN — San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers (10:10 p.m.)

NBA BASKETBALL

2 p.m.

ESPN2 — 2026 NBA Combine: From Chicago

TBA

TBA — Eastern Conference Semifinal: Philadelphia at New York, Game 5 (If Necessary)

TBA — Western Conference Semifinal: Minnesota at San Antonio, Game 5 (If Necessary)

NHL HOCKEY

7 p.m.

ESPN — Eastern Conference Second Round: Buffalo at Montreal, Game 4

9:30 p.m.

ESPN — Western Conference Second Round: Anaheim at Vegas, Game 5 (If Necessary)

_____

Wednesday, May 13

MLB BASEBALL

1 p.m.

MLBN — L.A. Angels at Cleveland (1:10 p.m.)

6:30 p.m.

MLBN — Regional Coverage: Philadelphia at Boston (6:45 p.m.) OR Colorado at Pittsburgh (6:40 p.m.)

6:35 p.m.

PRIME VIDEO — N.Y. Yankees at Baltimore

10 p.m.

MLBN — San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers (10:10 p.m.)

NBA BASKETBALL

2 p.m.

ESPNU — 2026 NBA Combine: From Chicago

7:40 p.m.

ESPN — Eastern Conference Semifinal: Cleveland at Detroit, Game 5 (If Necessary)

10 p.m.

ESPN — Western Conference Semifinal: Oklahoma L.A. Lakers at Oklahoma City, Game 5 (if Necessary)

NHL HOCKEY

TBA

TNT — Eastern Conference Second Round: Carolina at Philadelphia, Game 6 (If Necessary)

TRUTV — Eastern Conference Second Round: Carolina at Philadelphia, Game 6 (If Necessary)

TNT — Western Conference Second Round: Minnesota at Colorado, Game 5 (If Necessary)

TRUTV — Western Conference Second Round: Minnesota at Colorado, Game 5 (If Necessary)

WNBA BASKETBALL

8 p.m.

USA — Las Vegas at Connecticut

10:30 p.m.

USA — Indiana at Los Angeles

_____

Thursday, May 14

COLLEGE BASEBALL

6 p.m.

BTN — TBA

7 p.m.

ACCN — North Carolina at NC State

8 p.m.

SECN — Georgia at Auburn

9 p.m.

BTN — UCLA at Washington

COLLEGE LACROSSE (WOMEN’S)

Noon

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal

2:30 p.m.

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal

5 p.m.

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal

7:30 p.m.

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal

GOLF

Noon

ESPN — PGA Tour: PGA Championship, First Round, Arominik Golf Club, Newton Square, Pa.

3 p.m.

GOLF — LPGA Tour: Kroger Queen City Championship presented by P&G, First Round, Maketewah Country Club, Cincinnati

MLB BASEBALL

12:30 p.m.

MLBN — Regional Coverage: Colorado at Pittsburgh (12:35 p.m.) OR Washington at Cincinnati (12:40 p.m.)

3:30 p.m.

MLBN — St. Louis at Athletics (3:05 p.m.)

10 p.m.

MLBN — San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers (10:10 p.m.)

NBA BASKETBALL

8:10 p.m.

ESPN — Eastern Conference Semifinal: New York at Philadelphia, Game 6 (If Necessary)

NHL HOCKEY

TBA

TNT — Eastern Conference Second Round: Montreal at Buffalo, Game 5 (If Necessary)

TRUTV — Eastern Conference Second Round: Montreal at Buffalo, Game 5 (If Necessary)

TNT — Western Conference Second Round: Vegas at Anaheim, Game 6 (If Necessary)

TRUTV — Western Conference Second Round: Vegas at Anaheim, Game 6 (If Necessary)

WNBA BASKETBALL

8 p.m.

PRIME VIDEO — Minnesota at Dallas

10 p.m.

PRIME VIDEO — New York at Portland

_____

Friday, May 15

AUTO RACING

5 p.m.

FS1 — NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series: ECOSAVE 200, Dover Motor Speedway, Dover, Del.

COLLEGE BASEBALL

6 p.m.

BTN — TBA

7 p.m.

ACCN — TBA

8 p.m.

SECN — Georgia at Auburn

9 p.m.

BTN — UCLA at Washington

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

Noon

ACCN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

1 p.m.

SECN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

2 p.m.

ACCN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

4 p.m.

ACCN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

SECN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

6 p.m.

ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

SECN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

8 p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

10 p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

GOLF

Noon

ESPN — PGA Tour: PGA Championship, Second Round, Arominik Golf Club, Newton Square, Pa.

3 p.m.

GOLF — LPGA Tour: Kroger Queen City Championship presented by P&G, Second Round, Maketewah Country Club, Cincinnati

MLB BASEBALL

6:40 p.m.

APPLE TV — Toronto at Detroit

7 p.m.

MLBN — Regional Coverage: Boston at Atlanta (7:15 p.m.) OR Cincinnati at Cleveland (7:10 p.m.)

7:10 p.m.

APPLE TV — N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets

10 p.m.

MLBN — Regional Coverage: San Diego at Seattle (joined in progress) (9:40 p.m.) OR L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels (joined in progress) (9:38 p.m.)

NBA BASKETBALL

TBA

TBA — Eastern Conference Semifinal: Detroit at Cleveland, Game 6 (If Necessary)

TBA — Western Conference Semifinal: San Antonio at Minnesota, Game 6 (If Necessary)

NHL HOCKEY

TBA

ESPN — Western Conference Second Round: Colorado at Minnesota, Game 6 (If Necessary)

UFL FOOTBALL

8 p.m.

FOX — Orlando at Dallas

WNBA BASKETBALL

7:30 p.m.

ION — Washington at Indiana

10 p.m.

ION — TBA

_____

Saturday, May 16

AUTO RACING

4 p.m.

CW — NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series: BetRivers 200, Dover Motor Speedway, Dover, Del.

COLLEGE BASEBALL

Noon

ACCN — TBA

SECN — Mississippi St. at Texas A&M

3 p.m.

ACCN — TBA

BTN — UCLA at Washington

SECN — Mississippi at Alabama

6 p.m.

BTN — Southern Cal at Oregon

COLLEGE LACROSSE (MEN’S)

Noon

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal

2:30 p.m.

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

1 p.m.

ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

3 p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

5 p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

7 p.m.

ACCN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

8 p.m.

ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

9 p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

10 p.m.

ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

11 p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

COLLEGE TRACK AND FIELD

6 p.m.

SECN — Southeastern Tournament: Championship, Auburn, Ala.

GOLF

10 a.m.

ESPN — PGA Tour: PGA Championship, Third Round, Arominik Golf Club, Newton Square, Pa.

1 p.m.

CBS — PGA Tour: PGA Championship, Third Round, Arominik Golf Club, Newton Square, Pa.

3 p.m.

GOLF — LPGA Tour: Kroger Queen City Championship presented by P&G, Third Round, Maketewah Country Club, Cincinnati

HORSE RACING

4 p.m.

NBC — 151st Preakness Stakes: From Laurel Park, Laurel, Md.

MLB BASEBALL

4 p.m.

FS1 — Baltimore at Washington (4:05 p.m.)

7 p.m.

FOX — Regional Coverage: N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets (7:15 p.m.) OR San Diego at Seattle (7:15 p.m.)

9:30 p.m.

MLBN — Regional Coverage: L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels (9:38 p.m.) OR San Francisco at Athletics (9:40 p.m.)

NBA BASKETBALL

TBA

TBA — Western Conference Semifinal: Oklahoma City at L.A. Lakers, Game 6 (If Necessary)

NHL HOCKEY

TBA

TBA — Eastern Conference Second Round: Buffalo at Montreal, Game 6 (If Necessary)

TNT — Eastern Conference Second Round: Philadelphia at Carolina, Game 7 (If Necessary)

TRUTV — Eastern Conference Second Round: Philadelphia at Carolina, Game 7 (If Necessary)

TBA — Western Conference Second Round: Anaheim at Vegas, Game 7 (If Necessary)

SOCCER (MEN’S)

9:55 p.m.

ESPN2 — English FA Cup: Chelsea vs. Manchester City, Final, London

UFL FOOTBALL

Noon

ABC — DC at Louisville

3 p.m.

ABC — Houston at St. Louis

_____

Sunday, May 17

AUTO RACING

1 p.m.

FS1 — NASCAR Cup Series: NASCAR All-Star Race, Dover Motor Speedway, Dover, Del.

COLLEGE LACROSSE (MEN’S)

Noon

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal

2:30 p.m.

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal

COLLEGE ROWING

9 a.m.

BTN — Big Ten Tournament: Championship, Indianapolis

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

Noon

ACCN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

1 p.m.

ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

SECN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

2 p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

2:30 p.m.

ACCN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

3 p.m.

ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

SECN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

4 p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

5 p.m.

ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

SECN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

5:30 p.m.

ACCN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

7 p.m.

ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

SECN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

8 p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

9 p.m.

ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

10 p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional

COLLEGE TRACK AND FIELD

1:30 p.m.

BTN — Big Ten Tournament: Championships, Lincoln, Neb.

GOLF

10 a.m.

ESPN — PGA Tour: PGA Championship, Final Round, Arominik Golf Club, Newton Square, Pa.

1 p.m.

CBS — PGA Tour: PGA Championship, Final Round, Arominik Golf Club, Newton Square, Pa.

3 p.m.

GOLF — LPGA Tour: Kroger Queen City Championship presented by P&G, Final Round, Maketewah Country Club, Cincinnati

MLB BASEBALL

Noon

NBCSN — Miami at Tampa Bay (12:15 p.m.)

PEACOCK — Miami at Tampa Bay (12:15 p.m.)

4 p.m.

MLBN — San Francisco at Athletics (4:05 p.m.)

7 p.m.

NBCSN — San Diego at Seattle (7:20 p.m.)

PEACOCK — San Diego at Seattle (7:20 p.m.)

NBA BASKETBALL

TBA

TBA — Eastern Conference Semifinal: Cleveland at Detroit, Game 7 (If Necessary)

TBA — Eastern Conference Semifinal: Philadelphia at New York, Game 7 (If Necessary)

TBA — Western Conference Semifinal: Minnesota at San Antonio, Game 7 (If Necessary)

NHL HOCKEY

TBA

TNT — Western Conference Second Round: Minnesota at Colorado, Game 7 (If Necessary)

TRUTV — Western Conference Second Round: Minnesota at Colorado, Game 7 (If Necessary)

SOCCER (WOMEN’S)

6 p.m.

ESPN2 — NWSL: Angel City at Portland

UFL FOOTBALL

1 p.m.

FOX — Columbus at Birmingham

WNBA BASKETBALL

1:30 p.m.

NBC — Las Vegas at Atlanta

PEACOCK — Las Vegas at Atlanta

6 p.m.

NBCSN — Seattle at Indiana PEACOCK — Seattle at Indiana

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