“THE SCOREBOARD”

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INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL SCORES

https://www.maxpreps.com/in/baseball/scores/?date=5/26/2026

=====

INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL SECTIONALS

CLASS 4A

1. CROWN POINT (5) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CROWN POINT, HAMMOND CENTRAL, HAMMOND MORTON, LAKE CENTRAL, MUNSTER

2. CHESTERTON (5)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CHESTERTON, HOBART, MERRILLVILLE, PORTAGE, VALPARAISO

3. MISHAWAKA (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: LAPORTE, MICHIGAN CITY, MISHAWAKA, PENN, SOUTH BEND ADAMS, SOUTH BEND RILEY

4. GOSHEN (5) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CONCORD, ELKHART, GOSHEN, NORTHRIDGE, WARSAW COMMUNITY

5. CARROLL (FORT WAYNE) (4) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CARROLL (FORT WAYNE), FORT WAYNE NORTH SIDE, FORT WAYNE NORTHROP, FORT WAYNE SNIDER

6. FORT WAYNE SOUTH SIDE (4) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: FORT WAYNE SOUTH SIDE, FORT WAYNE WAYNE, HOMESTEAD, HUNTINGTON NORTH

7. LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON (4) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE), KOKOMO, LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON, MCCUTCHEON

8. NOBLESVILLE (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CARMEL, FISHERS, HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN, NOBLESVILLE, WESTFIELD, ZIONSVILLE

9. RICHMOND (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ANDERSON, GREENFIELD-CENTRAL, MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE), MUNCIE CENTRAL, PENDLETON HEIGHTS, RICHMOND

10. NORTH CENTRAL (INDPLS.) (5) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: INDIANAPOLIS ARSENAL TECHNICAL, LAWRENCE CENTRAL, LAWRENCE NORTH, NORTH CENTRAL (INDIANAPOLIS), WARREN CENTRAL

11. BEN DAVIS (5) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: AVON, BEN DAVIS, BROWNSBURG, PIKE, PLAINFIELD

12. CENTER GROVE (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CENTER GROVE, DECATUR CENTRAL, FRANKLIN CENTRAL, MOORESVILLE, PERRY MERIDIAN, SOUTHPORT

13. BLOOMINGTON SOUTH (5) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BLOOMINGTON NORTH, BLOOMINGTON SOUTH, MARTINSVILLE, TERRE HAUTE NORTH VIGO, TERRE HAUTE SOUTH VIGO

14. COLUMBUS NORTH (5) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: COLUMBUS EAST, COLUMBUS NORTH, EAST CENTRAL, FRANKLIN COMMUNITY, WHITELAND COMMUNITY

15. BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE, FLOYD CENTRAL, JEFFERSONVILLE, NEW ALBANY, SEYMOUR, SILVER CREEK

16. EVANSVILLE F.J. REITZ (4) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CASTLE, EVANSVILLE F.J. REITZ, EVANSVILLE HARRISON, EVANSVILLE NORTH

CLASS 3A

17. HIGHLAND (5) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: EAST CHICAGO CENTRAL, GARY WEST SIDE, GRIFFITH, HAMMOND BISHOP NOLL, HIGHLAND

18. LOWELL (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ANDREAN, HANOVER CENTRAL, ILLIANA CHRISTIAN, KANKAKEE VALLEY, LOWELL, RIVER FOREST

19. PLYMOUTH (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CULVER ACADEMIES, GLENN, MISHAWAKA MARIAN, NEW PRAIRIE, PLYMOUTH, SOUTH BEND SAINT JOSEPH

20. FAIRFIELD (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: COLUMBIA CITY, FAIRFIELD, NORTHWOOD, TIPPECANOE VALLEY, WAWASEE, WEST NOBLE

21. DEKALB (7) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ANGOLA, DEKALB, EAST NOBLE, FORT WAYNE BISHOP DWENGER, FORT WAYNE CONCORDIA LUTHERAN, GARRETT, LEO

22. BELLMONT (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BELLMONT, HERITAGE, MARION, MISSISSINEWA, NEW HAVEN, NORWELL

23. LOGANSPORT (7) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: LOGANSPORT, MACONAQUAH, NORTHWESTERN, PERU, TWIN LAKES, WEST LAFAYETTE, WESTERN

24. JAY COUNTY (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CONNERSVILLE, DELTA, HAMILTON HEIGHTS, JAY COUNTY, NEW CASTLE, YORKTOWN

25. CRAWFORDSVILLE (7) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BREBEUF JESUIT PREPARATORY, CRAWFORDSVILLE, DANVILLE COMMUNITY, FRANKFORT, GUERIN CATHOLIC, LEBANON, TRI-WEST HENDRICKS

26. INDIANAPOLIS CATHEDRAL (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: HERRON, INDIANAPOLIS BISHOP CHATARD, INDIANAPOLIS CATHEDRAL, INDIANAPOLIS CRISPUS ATTUCKS, INDIANAPOLIS SHORTRIDGE, PURDUE POLYTECHNIC – DOWNTOWN

27. NORTHVIEW (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CASCADE, EDGEWOOD, INDIANAPOLIS GEORGE WASHINGTON COMMUNITY, NORTHVIEW, OWEN VALLEY, SPEEDWAY

28. RONCALLI (7) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BEECH GROVE, GREENWOOD COMMUNITY, INDIAN CREEK, NEW PALESTINE, RONCALLI, RUSHVILLE CONSOLIDATED, SHELBYVILLE

29. BATESVILLE (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BATESVILLE, FRANKLIN COUNTY, GREENSBURG, JENNINGS COUNTY, LAWRENCEBURG, SOUTH DEARBORN

30. CHARLESTOWN (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CHARLESTOWN, CORYDON CENTRAL, MADISON CONSOLIDATED, NORTH HARRISON, PROVIDENCE, SCOTTSBURG

31. JASPER (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: GIBSON SOUTHERN, JASPER, PRINCETON COMMUNITY, SOUTHRIDGE, VINCENNES LINCOLN, WASHINGTON

32. EVANSVILLE BOSSE (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BOONVILLE, EVANSVILLE BOSSE, EVANSVILLE CENTRAL, EVANSVILLE REITZ MEMORIAL, HERITAGE HILLS, MT. VERNON

CLASS 2A

33. WHITING (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: 21ST CENTURY CHARTER SCHOOL – GARY, BOONE GROVE, HEBRON, LAKE STATION EDISON, WHEELER, WHITING

34. JIMTOWN (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BREMEN, CAREER ACADEMY, JIMTOWN, KNOX, LAVILLE, WINAMAC COMMUNITY

35. LAKELAND (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CENTRAL NOBLE, CHURUBUSCO, EASTSIDE, LAKELAND, PRAIRIE HEIGHTS, WESTVIEW

36. SOUTH ADAMS (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ADAMS CENTRAL, BLUFFTON, FORT WAYNE BISHOP LUERS, SOUTH ADAMS, WHITKO, WOODLAN

37. NORTH MONTGOMERY (7) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BENTON CENTRAL, DELPHI COMMUNITY, LAFAYETTE CENTRAL CATHOLIC, NORTH MONTGOMERY, RENSSELAER CENTRAL, SEEGER, WESTERN BOONE

38. EASTERN (GREENTOWN) (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: EASTERN (GREENTOWN), LEWIS CASS, MANCHESTER, OAK HILL, ROCHESTER COMMUNITY, WABASH

39. SHERIDAN (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ELWOOD COMMUNITY, FRANKTON, LAPEL, SHERIDAN, TAYLOR, TIPTON

40. BLACKFORD (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ALEXANDRIA MONROE, BLACKFORD, EASTBROOK, MADISON-GRANT, MUNCIE BURRIS, WAPAHANI

41. GREENCASTLE (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: GREENCASTLE, NORTH PUTNAM, PARKE HERITAGE, SOUTH PUTNAM, SOUTH VERMILLION, SOUTHMONT

42. PARK TUDOR (5) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: COVENANT CHRISTIAN, INDIANAPOLIS CARDINAL RITTER, MONROVIA, PARK TUDOR, UNIVERSITY

43. TRITON CENTRAL (7) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CHRISTEL HOUSE, EASTERN HANCOCK, HERITAGE CHRISTIAN, INDIANAPOLIS LUTHERAN, INDIANAPOLIS SCECINA MEMORIAL, IRVINGTON PREPARATORY ACADEMY, TRITON CENTRAL

44. CENTERVILLE (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CENTERVILLE, HAGERSTOWN, NORTHEASTERN, SHENANDOAH, UNION COUNTY, WINCHESTER COMMUNITY

45. SOUTH RIPLEY (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: AUSTIN, BROWN COUNTY, BROWNSTOWN CENTRAL, SOUTH RIPLEY, SOUTHWESTERN (HANOVER), SWITZERLAND COUNTY

46. MITCHELL (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CLARKSVILLE, CRAWFORD COUNTY, EASTERN (PEKIN), MITCHELL, PAOLI, SALEM

47. LINTON-STOCKTON (7) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BARR-REEVE, EASTERN GREENE, LINTON-STOCKTON, NORTH KNOX, SOUTH KNOX, SULLIVAN, WEST VIGO

48. SOUTH SPENCER (7) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: EVANSVILLE MATER DEI, FOREST PARK, NORTH POSEY, PERRY CENTRAL, PIKE CENTRAL, SOUTH SPENCER, TELL CITY

CLASS 1A

49. WESTVILLE (8) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BOWMAN LEADERSHIP ACADEMY, HAMMOND ACADEMY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, KOUTS, MARQUETTE CATHOLIC, MORGAN TOWNSHIP, TRI-TOWNSHIP, WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP, WESTVILLE

50. TRI-COUNTY (7) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CASTON, NORTH NEWTON, NORTH WHITE, PIONEER, SOUTH NEWTON, TRI-COUNTY, WEST CENTRAL

51. SOUTH CENTRAL (UNION MILLS) (7) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ARGOS, CULVER COMMUNITY, ELKHART CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, NORTH JUDSON-SAN PIERRE, OREGON-DAVIS, SOUTH CENTRAL (UNION MILLS), TRITON

52. FREMONT (5) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: FORT WAYNE BLACKHAWK CHRISTIAN, FORT WAYNE CANTERBURY, FREMONT, HAMILTON, LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN

53. RIVERTON PARKE (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ATTICA, COVINGTON, FAITH CHRISTIAN, FOUNTAIN CENTRAL, NORTH VERMILLION, RIVERTON PARKE

54. CARROLL (FLORA) (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BETHESDA CHRISTIAN, CARROLL (FLORA), CLINTON CENTRAL, CLINTON PRAIRIE, FRONTIER, ROSSVILLE

55. DALEVILLE (8) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: COWAN, DALEVILLE, NORTH MIAMI, NORTHFIELD, SOUTHERN WELLS, SOUTHWOOD, TRI-CENTRAL, WES-DEL

56. SETON CATHOLIC (7) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BLUE RIVER VALLEY, CAMBRIDGE CITY LINCOLN, MONROE CENTRAL, RANDOLPH SOUTHERN, SETON CATHOLIC, UNION (MODOC), UNION CITY

57. ANDERSON PREPARATORY ACADEMY (4) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ANDERSON PREPARATORY ACADEMY, INDIANA SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF, LIBERTY CHRISTIAN, PURDUE POLYTECHNIC – BROAD RIPPLE

58. PROVIDENCE CRISTO REY (3) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: EMINENCE, GREENWOOD CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, PROVIDENCE CRISTO REY

59. MORRISTOWN (7) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: EDINBURGH, KNIGHTSTOWN, MORRISTOWN, NORTH DECATUR, SOUTH DECATUR, TRI, WALDRON

60. SHAWE MEMORIAL (8) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CROTHERSVILLE, HAUSER, JAC-CEN-DEL, MILAN, OLDENBURG ACADEMY, RISING SUN, SHAWE MEMORIAL, TRINITY LUTHERAN

61. SHAKAMAK (7) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BLOOMFIELD, CLAY CITY, CLOVERDALE, DUGGER UNION, NORTH CENTRAL (FARMERSBURG), SHAKAMAK, WHITE RIVER VALLEY

62. LOOGOOTEE (5) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: LOOGOOTEE, NORTH DAVIESS, ORLEANS, SHOALS, VINCENNES RIVET

63. NEW WASHINGTON (8) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BORDEN, CHRISTIAN ACADEMY OF INDIANA, HENRYVILLE, LANESVILLE, NEW WASHINGTON, ROCK CREEK ACADEMY, SOUTH CENTRAL (ELIZABETH), WEST WASHINGTON

64. TECUMSEH (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CANNELTON, EVANSVILLE CHRISTIAN, NORTHEAST DUBOIS, SPRINGS VALLEY, TECUMSEH, WOOD MEMORIAL

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INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL SCORES

https://www.maxpreps.com/in/softball/scores/?date=5/26/2026

=====

INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL SECTIONALS

CLASS 4A

1. LAKE CENTRAL (5) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CROWN POINT, HAMMOND CENTRAL, HAMMOND MORTON, LAKE CENTRAL, MUNSTER

2. VALPARAISO (5)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CHESTERTON, HOBART, MERRILLVILLE, PORTAGE, VALPARAISO

3. PENN (7)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: LAPORTE, MICHIGAN CITY, MISHAWAKA, NEW PRAIRIE, PENN, SOUTH BEND ADAMS, SOUTH BEND RILEY

4. NORTHRIDGE (5)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CONCORD, ELKHART, GOSHEN, NORTHRIDGE, WARSAW COMMUNITY

5. CARROLL (FORT WAYNE) (4)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CARROLL (FORT WAYNE), FORT WAYNE NORTH SIDE, FORT WAYNE NORTHROP, FORT WAYNE SNIDER

6. HOMESTEAD (4)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: FORT WAYNE SOUTH SIDE, FORT WAYNE WAYNE, HOMESTEAD, HUNTINGTON NORTH

7. KOKOMO (5)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE), KOKOMO, LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON, MCCUTCHEON, WESTERN

8. ZIONSVILLE (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CARMEL, FISHERS, HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN, NOBLESVILLE, WESTFIELD, ZIONSVILLE

9. PENDLETON HEIGHTS (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ANDERSON, GREENFIELD-CENTRAL, MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE), MUNCIE CENTRAL, PENDLETON HEIGHTS, RICHMOND

10. WARREN CENTRAL (5) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: INDIANAPOLIS ARSENAL TECHNICAL, LAWRENCE CENTRAL, LAWRENCE NORTH, NORTH CENTRAL (INDIANAPOLIS), WARREN CENTRAL

11. PIKE (6) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: AVON, BEN DAVIS, BROWNSBURG, PIKE, PLAINFIELD, TRI-WEST HENDRICKS

12. DECATUR CENTRAL (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CENTER GROVE, DECATUR CENTRAL, FRANKLIN CENTRAL, MOORESVILLE, PERRY MERIDIAN, SOUTHPORT

13. BLOOMINGTON NORTH (5)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BLOOMINGTON NORTH, BLOOMINGTON SOUTH, MARTINSVILLE, TERRE HAUTE NORTH VIGO, TERRE HAUTE SOUTH VIGO

14. WHITELAND COMMUNITY (5)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: COLUMBUS EAST, COLUMBUS NORTH, EAST CENTRAL, FRANKLIN COMMUNITY, WHITELAND COMMUNITY

15. JEFFERSONVILLE (5)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE, FLOYD CENTRAL, JEFFERSONVILLE, NEW ALBANY, SEYMOUR

16. EVANSVILLE NORTH (4)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CASTLE, EVANSVILLE F.J. REITZ, EVANSVILLE HARRISON, EVANSVILLE NORTH

CLASS 3A

17. GRIFFITH (5)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CALUMET, EAST CHICAGO CENTRAL, GRIFFITH, HAMMOND BISHOP NOLL, HIGHLAND

18. KANKAKEE VALLEY (5)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: HANOVER CENTRAL, ILLIANA CHRISTIAN, KANKAKEE VALLEY, LOWELL, RIVER FOREST

19. PLYMOUTH (5)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CULVER ACADEMIES, GLENN, MISHAWAKA MARIAN, PLYMOUTH, SOUTH BEND SAINT JOSEPH

20. NORTHWOOD (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: COLUMBIA CITY, FAIRFIELD, NORTHWOOD, TIPPECANOE VALLEY, WAWASEE, WEST NOBLE

21. GARRETT (7)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ANGOLA, DEKALB, EAST NOBLE, FORT WAYNE BISHOP DWENGER, FORT WAYNE CONCORDIA LUTHERAN, GARRETT, LEO

22. MISSISSINEWA (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BELLMONT, HERITAGE, MARION, MISSISSINEWA, NEW HAVEN, NORWELL

23. LOGANSPORT (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: LOGANSPORT, MACONAQUAH, NORTHWESTERN, PERU, TWIN LAKES, WEST LAFAYETTE

24. CONNERSVILLE (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CONNERSVILLE, DELTA, HAMILTON HEIGHTS, JAY COUNTY, NEW CASTLE, YORKTOWN

25. LEBANON (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BREBEUF JESUIT PREPARATORY, CRAWFORDSVILLE, DANVILLE COMMUNITY, FRANKFORT, GUERIN CATHOLIC, LEBANON

26. INDIANAPOLIS BISHOP CHATARD (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: HERRON, INDIANAPOLIS BISHOP CHATARD, INDIANAPOLIS CATHEDRAL, INDIANAPOLIS CRISPUS ATTUCKS, INDIANAPOLIS SHORTRIDGE, PURDUE POLYTECHNIC – DOWNTOWN

27. CASCADE (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CASCADE, EDGEWOOD, INDIANAPOLIS GEORGE WASHINGTON COMMUNITY, NORTHVIEW, OWEN VALLEY, SPEEDWAY

28. INDIAN CREEK (7)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BEECH GROVE, GREENWOOD COMMUNITY, INDIAN CREEK, NEW PALESTINE, RONCALLI, RUSHVILLE CONSOLIDATED, SHELBYVILLE

29. FRANKLIN COUNTY (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BATESVILLE, FRANKLIN COUNTY, GREENSBURG, JENNINGS COUNTY, LAWRENCEBURG, SOUTH DEARBORN

30. CORYDON CENTRAL (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CHARLESTOWN, CORYDON CENTRAL, MADISON CONSOLIDATED, NORTH HARRISON, SCOTTSBURG, SILVER CREEK

31. SOUTHRIDGE (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: GIBSON SOUTHERN, JASPER, PRINCETON COMMUNITY, SOUTHRIDGE, VINCENNES LINCOLN, WASHINGTON

32. EVANSVILLE REITZ MEMORIAL (7)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BOONVILLE, EVANSVILLE BOSSE, EVANSVILLE CENTRAL, EVANSVILLE REITZ MEMORIAL, HERITAGE HILLS, MT. VERNON, NORTH POSEY

CLASS 2A

33. WHEELER (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ANDREAN, BOONE GROVE, HEBRON, LAKE STATION EDISON, WHEELER, WHITING

34. BREMEN (5)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BREMEN, JIMTOWN, KNOX, LAVILLE, WINAMAC COMMUNITY

35. WESTVIEW (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CENTRAL NOBLE, CHURUBUSCO, EASTSIDE, LAKELAND, PRAIRIE HEIGHTS, WESTVIEW

36. ADAMS CENTRAL (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ADAMS CENTRAL, BLUFFTON, FORT WAYNE BISHOP LUERS, SOUTH ADAMS, WHITKO, WOODLAN

37. DELPHI COMMUNITY (7)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BENTON CENTRAL, DELPHI COMMUNITY, NORTH MONTGOMERY, RENSSELAER CENTRAL, ROSSVILLE, SEEGER, WESTERN BOONE

38. ROCHESTER COMMUNITY (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: EASTERN (GREENTOWN), LEWIS CASS, MANCHESTER, OAK HILL, ROCHESTER COMMUNITY, WABASH

39. TIPTON (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ELWOOD COMMUNITY, FRANKTON, LAPEL, SHERIDAN, TAYLOR, TIPTON

40. MADISON-GRANT (5)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ALEXANDRIA MONROE, BLACKFORD, EASTBROOK, MADISON-GRANT, WAPAHANI

41. SOUTHMONT (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: GREENCASTLE, NORTH PUTNAM, PARKE HERITAGE, SOUTH PUTNAM, SOUTH VERMILLION, SOUTHMONT

42. MONROVIA (4)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: COVENANT CHRISTIAN, INDIANAPOLIS CARDINAL RITTER, MONROVIA, PARK TUDOR

43. HERITAGE CHRISTIAN (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CHRISTEL HOUSE, EASTERN HANCOCK, HERITAGE CHRISTIAN, INDIANAPOLIS SCECINA MEMORIAL, IRVINGTON PREPARATORY ACADEMY, TRITON CENTRAL

44. WINCHESTER COMMUNITY (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CENTERVILLE, HAGERSTOWN, NORTHEASTERN, SHENANDOAH, UNION COUNTY, WINCHESTER COMMUNITY

45. BROWNSTOWN CENTRAL (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: AUSTIN, BROWN COUNTY, BROWNSTOWN CENTRAL, SOUTH RIPLEY, SOUTHWESTERN (HANOVER), SWITZERLAND COUNTY

46. SALEM (7)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CLARKSVILLE, CRAWFORD COUNTY, EASTERN (PEKIN), MITCHELL, PAOLI, PROVIDENCE, SALEM

47. SULLIVAN (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: EASTERN GREENE, LINTON-STOCKTON, NORTH KNOX, SOUTH KNOX, SULLIVAN, WEST VIGO

48. FOREST PARK (7)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: EVANSVILLE MATER DEI, FOREST PARK, PERRY CENTRAL, PIKE CENTRAL, SOUTH SPENCER, TECUMSEH, TELL CITY

CLASS 1A

49. WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: HAMMOND ACADEMY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, KOUTS, MARQUETTE CATHOLIC, MORGAN TOWNSHIP, WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP, WESTVILLE

50. NORTH WHITE (8)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CASTON, DEMOTTE CHRISTIAN, NORTH NEWTON, NORTH WHITE, PIONEER, SOUTH NEWTON, TRI-COUNTY, WEST CENTRAL

51. SOUTH CENTRAL (UNION MILLS) (7)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ARGOS, CULVER COMMUNITY, ELKHART CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, NORTH JUDSON-SAN PIERRE, OREGON-DAVIS, SOUTH CENTRAL (UNION MILLS), TRITON

52. LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN (3)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: FREMONT, HAMILTON, LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN

53. RIVERTON PARKE (7)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ATTICA, COVINGTON, FAITH CHRISTIAN, FOUNTAIN CENTRAL, LAFAYETTE CENTRAL CATHOLIC, NORTH VERMILLION, RIVERTON PARKE

54. CLINTON PRAIRIE (5)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BETHESDA CHRISTIAN, CARROLL (FLORA), CLINTON CENTRAL, CLINTON PRAIRIE, FRONTIER

55. WES-DEL (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: NORTH MIAMI, NORTHFIELD, SOUTHERN WELLS, SOUTHWOOD, TRI-CENTRAL, WES-DEL

56. MONROE CENTRAL (3)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: MONROE CENTRAL, RANDOLPH SOUTHERN, UNION CITY

57. LIBERTY CHRISTIAN (5)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: ANDERSON PREPARATORY, ACADEMY, COWAN, DALEVILLE, INDIANA SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF, LIBERTY CHRISTIAN

58. INDIANAPOLIS LUTHERAN (4)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: EMINENCE, GREENWOOD CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, INDIANAPOLIS LUTHERAN, PROVIDENCE CRISTO REY

59. TRI (7)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: EDINBURGH, KNIGHTSTOWN, MORRISTOWN, NORTH DECATUR, SOUTH DECATUR, TRI, WALDRON

60. RISING SUN (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: HAUSER, JAC-CEN-DEL, MILAN, OLDENBURG ACADEMY, RISING SUN, TRINITY LUTHERAN

61. CLAY CITY (7)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BLOOMFIELD, CLAY CITY, CLOVERDALE, DUGGER UNION, NORTH CENTRAL (FARMERSBURG), SHAKAMAK, WHITE RIVER VALLEY

62. NORTH DAVIESS (6)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BARR-REEVE, LOOGOOTEE, NORTH DAVIESS, ORLEANS, SHOALS, VINCENNES RIVET 

63. LANESVILLE (7)
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: BORDEN, CHRISTIAN ACADEMY OF INDIANA, HENRYVILLE, LANESVILLE, NEW WASHINGTON, SOUTH CENTRAL (ELIZABETH), WEST WASHINGTON

64. SPRINGS VALLEY (4) 
BRACKET | TICKETS 
SCHOOLS: CANNELTON, NORTHEAST DUBOIS, SPRINGS VALLEY, WOOD MEMORIAL

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

INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS LAX SCORES

STATE FINALS MAY 30 @ ZIONSVILLE (BROADCAST ON INDIANA SRN)

1A

CROWN POINT VS. BROWNSBURG

2A

BISHOP CHATARD VS. GUERIN CATHOLIC

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

INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL BOYS LAX SCORES

SEMI-STATE-GAMES BROADCAST ON INDIANA SRN

TUESDAY MAY 26TH: 1A SEMI-FINALS: 

5:30 PM     GUERIN CATHOLIC 15 HERITAGE CHRISTIAN 13

7:30 PM    EVANSVILLE MEMORIAL DEF SB ST. JOSEPH

WEDNESDAY MAY 27TH: 2A SEMI-FINALS: 

5:30 PM     CARMEL VS. HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN 

7:30 PM     CULVER VS. CATHEDRAL

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

INDIANA BOYS VOLLEYBALL STATE FINALS MAY 30

11 AM ET / 10 CT | STATE SEMIFINAL 1 
CARMEL (28-6) VS. RONCALLI (31-3)

APPROX. 1 PM ET / 12 CT STATE SEMIFINAL 2 
LAKE CENTRAL (25-2) VS. INDIANAPOLIS CATHEDRAL (21-12)  

STATE CHAMPIONSHIP | 6 PM ET / 5 CT

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

INDIANA BOYS TRACK REGIONALS MAY 28

1. VALPARAISO 
5 PM CT 
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: MUNSTER, CROWN POINT, PORTAGE, KANKAKEE VALLEY

2. WARSAW COMMUNITY 
6 PM ET 
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: PENN, PLYMOUTH, GOSHEN, EAST NOBLE

3. CARROLL (FORT WAYNE) 
6 PM ET 
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: FORT WAYNE NORTH SIDE, NEW HAVEN, MARION, MUNCIE CENTRAL

4. LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON 
6 PM ET 
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: KOKOMO, WEST LAFAYETTE, LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON, FISHERS

5. PLAINFIELD 
6 PM ET 
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: TERRE HAUTE NORTH VIGO, PLAINFIELD, SOUTHPORT, WHITELAND COMMUNITY

6. GREENFIELD-CENTRAL
6 PM ET 
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: LAWRENCE CENTRAL, MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE), GREENFIELD-CENTRAL, CONNERSVILLE

7. BLOOMINGTON NORTH 
6 PM ET 
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: COLUMBUS NORTH, BLOOMINGTON SOUTH, BROWNSTOWN CENTRAL, MADISON CONSOLIDATED

8. EVANSVILLE CENTRAL 
5:30 PM CT 
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: FLOYD CENTRAL, JASPER, PRINCETON COMMUNITY, EVANSVILLE CENTRAL

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

INDIANA GIRLS TRACK REGIONALS MAY 26

1. PORTAGE 
5 PM CT 
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: HIGHLAND, HOBART, CHESTERTON, KANKAKEE VALLEY

2. GOSHEN 
6 PM ET  
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: MISHAWKA, BREMEN, WARSAW COMMUNITY, EAST NOBLE

3. CARROLL (FORT WAYNE)
6 PM ET  
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: FORT WAYNE NORTHROP, NEW HAVEN, MARION, DELTA

4. LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON
6 PM ET  
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: KOKOMO, HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE), LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON, HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN

5. BEN DAVIS 
6 PM ET  
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: TERRE HAUTE NORTH VIGO, ZIONSVILLE, PIKE, FRANKLIN COMMUNITY

6. GREENFIELD-CENTRAL 
6 PM ET  
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: LAWRENCE CENTRAL, PENDLETON HEIGHTS, GREENFIELD-CENTRAL, BATESVILLE

7. BLOOMINGTON SOUTH 
6 PM ET 
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: COLUMBUS NORTH, BLOOMINGTON SOUTH, SEYMOUR, MADISON CONSOLIDATED

8. EVANSVILLE CENTRAL
5:30 PM CT 
TICKETS | PERFORMANCE LISTS | RESULTS 
SECTIONAL HOST: CORYDON CENTRAL, PERRY CENTRAL, PRINCETON COMMUNITY, MT. VERNON

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

INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS TENNIS REGIONALS

MAY 27-27

1. BROWNSBURG 
BRACKET 
MATCH 1: AVON WINNER VS. TERRE HAUTE SOUTH WINNER
MATCH 2: BLOOMINGTON SOUTH WINNER VS. GREENCASTLE WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

2. JASPER 
BRACKET 
MATCH 1: LOOGOOTEE WINNER VS. VINCENNES LINCOLN WINNER
MATCH 2: JASPER WINNER VS. LINTON-STOCKTON WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

3. EVANSVILLE BOSSE (HOSTED @ EVANSVILLE NORTH) 
BRACKET
MATCH 1: MT. VERNON WINNER VS. TELL CITY WINNER
MATCH 2: GIBSON SOUTHERN WINNER VS. EVANSVILLE BOSSE WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

4. JEFFERSONVILLE 
BRACKET
MATCH 1: LANESVILLE WINNER VS. JEFFERSONVILLE WINNER
MATCH 2: FLOYD CENTRAL WINNER VS. SILVER CREEK WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

5. BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE 
BRACKET
MATCH 1: BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE WINNER VS. BATESVILLE WINNER
MATCH 2: SCOTTSBURG WINNER VS. COLUMBUS NORTH WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

6. CENTER GROVE 
BRACKET
MATCH 1: PERRY MERIDIAN WINNER VS. CONNERSVILLE WINNER
MATCH 2: CENTER GROVE WINNER VS. SHELBYVILLE WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

7. NORTH CENTRAL (INDIANAPOLIS) 
BRACKET
MATCH 1: NORTH CENTRAL (INDPLS.) WINNER VS. LAWRENCE NORTH WINNER
MATCH 2: FRANKLIN CENTRAL WINNER VS. BEN DAVIS WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

8. MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE) 
BRACKET
MATCH 1: MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE) WINNER VS. RICHMOND WINNER
MATCH 2: FISHERS WINNER VS. NEW CASTLE WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

9. CARMEL 
BRACKET
MATCH 1: CARMEL WINNER VS. CRAWFORDSVILLE WINNER
MATCH 2: PARK TUDOR WINNER VS. FOUNTAIN CENTRAL WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

10. LAPORTE 
BRACKET
MATCH 1: SOUTH BEND SAINT JOSEPH WINNER VS. HOBART WINNER
MATCH 2: LAPORTE WINNER VS. VALPARAISO WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

11. HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE) 
BRACKET
MATCH 1: HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE) WINNER VS. FRANKFORT WINNER
MATCH 2: KOKOMO WINNER VS. LOGANSPORT WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

12. CROWN POINT 
BRACKET
MATCH 1: CROWN POINT WINNER VS. EAST CHICAGO CENTRAL WINNER
MATCH 2: CULVER ACADEMIES WINNER VS. HIGHLAND WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

13. BLUFFTON 
BRACKET
MATCH 1: PERU WINNER VS. BLUFFTON WINNER
MATCH 2: MARION WINNER VS. HOMESTEAD WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

14. NOBLESVILLE 
BRACKET
MATCH 1: DELTA WINNER VS. JAY COUNTY WINNER
MATCH 2: ALEXANDRIA MONROE WINNER VS. NOBLESVILLE WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

15. CARROLL (FORT WAYNE) 
BRACKET
MATCH 1: CARROLL (FORT WAYNE) WINNER VS. ANGOLA WINNER
MATCH 2: EAST NOBLE WINNER VS. FORT WAYNE CONCORDIA LUTHERAN WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

16. NORTHWOOD 
BRACKET
MATCH 1: WARSAW COMMUNITY WINNER VS. CONCORD WINNER
MATCH 2: PENN WINNER VS. NORTHWOOD WINNER
CHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER

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

NBA PLAYOFFS

CONFERENCE FINALS

EAST FINAL: (3) NEW YORK VS. (4) CLEVELAND

GAME 1: NEW YORK 115, CLEVELAND 104 (NEW YORK LEADS SERIES 1-0)

GAME 2: NEW YORK 109, CLEVELAND 93 (NEW YORK LEADS SERIES 2-0)

GAME 3: NEW YORK 121, CLEVELAND 109 (NEW YORK LEADS SERIES 3-0)

GAME 4: NEW YORK 130, CLEVELAND 93 (NEW YORK WINS SERIES 4-0)

=====

WEST FINAL: (1) OKLAHOMA CITY VS. (2) SAN ANTONIO

GAME 1: SAN ANOTNIO 122, OKLAHOMA CITY 115 (SPURS LEAD SERIES 1-0)

GAME 2: OKLAHOMA CITY 122, SAN ANOTNIO 113 (SERIES EVEN 1-1)

GAME 3: OKLAHOMA CITY 123 SAN ANTONIO 108 (THUNDER LEADS SERIES 2-1)

GAME 4: SAN ANTONIO 103, OKLAHOMA CITY 82 (SERIES EVEN 2-2)

GAME 5: OKLAHOMA CITY 127, SAN ANTONIO 114 (THUNDER LEAD SERIES 3-2)

GAME 6: OKLAHOMA CITY AT SAN ANTONIO | THURSDAY MAY 28 (8:30 ET, NBC/PEACOCK)*

GAME 7: SAN ANTONIO AT OKLAHOMA CITY | SATURDAY MAY 30 (8 ET, NBC/PEACOCK)*

* = IF NECESSARY

 =====

2026 NBA FINALS

THE 2026 NBA FINALS WILL BE BEGIN ON JUNE 3, WITH ABC AS THE EXCLUSIVE BROADCASTER.

JUNE 3: NBA FINALS 2026 – GAME 1 ON ABC, 8:30 ET

JUNE 5: NBA FINALS 2026 – GAME 2 ON ABC, 8:30 ET

JUNE 8: NBA FINALS 2026 – GAME 3 ON ABC, 8:30 ET

JUNE 10: NBA FINALS 2026 – GAME 4 ON ABC, 8:30 ET

JUNE 13: NBA FINALS 2026 – GAME 5 ON ABC, 8:30 ET*

JUNE 16: NBA FINALS 2026 – GAME 6 ON ABC, 8:30 ET*

JUNE 19: NBA FINALS 2026 – GAME 7 ON ABC, 8:30 ET*

* = IF NECESSARY

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

NHL PLAYOFF SCHEDULE

EASTERN CONFERENCE FINAL: #1 CAROLINA HURRICANES VS. #3 MONTREAL CANADIENS 

  • GAME 1: MONTREAL 6, CAROLINA 2 (MONTREAL LEADS SERIES 1-0)
  • GAME 2: CAROLINA 3, MONTREAL 2 OT (SERIES EVEN 1-1)
  • GAME 3: CAROLINA 3, MONTREAL 2 (CAROLINA LEADS SERIES 2-1)
  • GAME 4: WED, MAY 27 – CAROLINA AT MONTREAL, 8 P.M. ET (TNT, SN, CBC)
  • GAME 5:* FRI, MAY 29 – MONTREAL AT CAROLINA, 8 P.M. ET (TNT)
  • GAME 6:* SUN, MAY 31 – CAROLINA AT MONTREAL, TBD (TNT)
  • GAME 7:* TUE, JUNE 2 – MONTREAL AT CAROLINA, 8 P.M. ET (TNT) 

WESTERN CONFERENCE FINAL: #1 COLORADO AVALANCHE VS. #1 VEGAS GOLDEN KNIGHTS 

  • GAME 1: VEGAS 4, COLORADO 2 (GOLDEN KNIGHTS LEAD SERIES 1-0)
  • GAME 2: VEGAS 3, COLORADO 1 (GOLDEN KNIGHTS LEAD SERIES 2-0)
  • GAME 3: VEGAS 5, COLORADO 3 (GOLDEN KNIGHTS LEAD SERIES 3-0)
  • GAME 4: VEGAS 2, COLORADO 1 (GOLDEN KNIGHTS WIN SERIES 4-0)

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

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

WASHINGTON 6 CLEVELAND 3

BALTIMORE 6 TAMPA BAY 1

LA ANGELS 10 DETROIT 6

PITTSBURGH 12 CHICAGO CUBS 1

ATLANTA 7 BOSTON 6

TORONTO 8 MIAMI 1

CINCINNATI 7 NY METS 2

MINNESOTA 5 CHICAGO WHITE SOX 3 (11)

MILWAUKEE 6 ST. LOUIS 0

NY YANKEES 15 KANSAS CITY 1

TEXAS 10 HOUSTON 7

PHILADELPHIA 4 SAN DIEGO 3

SEATTLE 4 LAS VEGAS 1

ARIZONA 7 SAN FRANCISCO 5

LA DODGERS 15 COLORADO 6


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

MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

SOUTH BEND 5 FT. WAYNE 2

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

COLLEGE BASEBALL

REGIONALS: FRIDAY, MAY 29 TO MONDAY, JUNE 1

LOS ANGELES REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 1 UCLA VS. NO. 4 SAINT MARY’S (CA) | 3 P.M. | ESPNU

GAME 2: NO. 2 VIRGINIA TECH VS. NO. 3 CAL POLY | 8 P.M. | ESPN+

MORGANTOWN REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 2 WAKE FOREST VS. NO. 3 KENTUCKY | NOON | ESPN2

GAME 2: NO. 1 WEST VIRGINIA VS. NO. 4 BINGHAMTON | 5 P.M. | ESPN+

HATTIESBURG REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 1 SOUTHERN MISS. VS. NO. 4 LITTLE ROCK | 2 P.M. | ESPN+

GAME 2: NO. 2 VIRGINIA VS. NO. 3 JACKSONVILLE ST. | 7 P.M. | ESPN+

GAINESVILLE REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 1 FLORIDA VS. RIDER | 1 P.M. | ESPN+

GAME 2: NO. 2 MIAMI (FL) VS. NO. 3 TROY | 6 P.M. | ACCN

CHAPEL HILL REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 2 TENNESSEE VS. NO. 3 EAST CAROLINA | NOON | ESPNU

GAME 2: NO. 1 NORTH CAROLINA VS. NO. 4 VCU | 5 P.M. | ESPN+

COLLEGE STATION REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 1 TEXAS A&M VS. NO. 4 LAMAR| 4 P.M. | SECN

GAME 2: NO. 2 SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA VS. NO. 3 TEXAS ST. | 9 P.M. | ESPN+

LINCOLN REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 1 NEBRASKA VS. NO. 4 SOUTH DAKOTA ST. | 4 P.M. | ESPN+

GAME 2: NO. 2 OLE MISS VS. NO. 3 ARIZONA ST. | 9 P.M. | ESPNU

AUBURN REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 1 AUBURN VS. NO. 4 MILWAUKEE | 1 P.M. | ESPN+

GAME 2: NO. 2 UCF VS. NO. 3 NC STATE | 6 P.M. | ESPNU

ATLANTA REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 1 GEORGIA TECH VS. NO. 4 UIC | 12 P.M. | ACCN

GAME 2: NO. 2 OKLAHOMA VS. NO. 3 THE CITADEL | 5 P.M. | ESPN+

LAWRENCE REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 1 KANSAS VS. NO. 4 NORTHEASTERN | 1 P.M. | ESPN+

GAME 2: NO. 2 ARKANSAS VS. NO. 3 MISSOURI ST. | 6 P.M. | ESPN+

TALLAHASSEE REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 1 FLORIDA ST. VS. NO. 4 ST. JOHN’S (NY) | 3 P.M. | ACCN

GAME 2: NO. 2 COASTAL CAROLINA VS. NO. 3 NIU | 8 P.M. | ESPN+

TUSCALOOSA REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 2 OKLAHOMA ST. VS. NO. 3 USC UPSTATE | 2 P.M. | ESPN+

GAME 2: NO. 1 ALABAMA VS. NO. 4 ALABAMA ST. | 7 P.M. | ESPN+

AUSTIN REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 1 TEXAS VS. NO. 4 HOLY CROSS | 1 P.M. | SECN

GAME 2: NO. 2 UC SANTA BARBARA VS. NO. 3 TARLETON ST. | 6 P.M. | ESPN+

EUGENE REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 2 OREGON ST. VS. NO. 3 WASHINGTON ST. | 3 P.M. | ESPN+

GAME 2: NO. 1 OREGON VS. NO. 4 YALE | 8 P.M. | ESPN+

STARKVILLE REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 1 MISSISSIPPI ST. VS. NO. 4 LIPSCOMB | 2 P.M. | ESPN+

GAME 2: NO. 2 CINCINNATI VS. NO. 3 LOUISIANA | 7 P.M. | ESPN+

ATHENS REGIONAL

GAME 1: NO. 2 BOSTON COLLEGE VS. NO. 3 LIBERTY | 2 P.M. | ESPN+

GAME 2: NO. 1 GEORGIA VS. NO. 4 LIU | 7 P.M. | SECN

=====

SUPER REGIONALS: FRIDAY, JUNE 5 TO MONDAY, JUNE 8 | TBA HOST SITES

=====

MEN’S COLLEGE WORLD SERIES: FRIDAY, JUNE 12 – SUNDAY/MONDAY 21/22 | CHARLES SCHWAB FIELD IN OMAHA, NE

GAME 1 | 2 P.M. FRIDAY, JUNE 12 ON ESPN

GAME 2 | 7 P.M. FRIDAY, JUNE 12 ON ESPN

GAME 3 | 3 P.M. SATURDAY, JUNE 13 ON ESPN

GAME 4 | 8 P.M. SATURDAY, JUNE 13 ON ESPN

GAME 5 | 2 P.M. SUNDAY, JUNE 14 ON ESPN

GAME 6 | 7 P.M. SUNDAY, JUNE 14 ON ESPN

GAME 7 | 2 P.M. MONDAY, JUNE 15 ON ESPN

GAME 8 | 7 P.M. MONDAY, JUNE 15 ON ESPN

GAME 9 | 2 P.M. TUESDAY, JUNE 16 ON ESPN

GAME 10 | 8 P.M. TUESDAY, JUNE 16 ON ESPN

GAME 11 | 2 P.M. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17 ON ESPN

GAME 12 | 7 P.M. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17 ON ESPN

BRACKET 1 | TBD THURSDAY, JUNE 18 ON ESPN (IF NECESSARY)

BRACKET 2 | TBD THURSDAY, JUNE 18 ON ESPN (IF NECESSARY)

CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES GAME 1 | TBD SATURDAY, JUNE 20 ON ESPN

CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES GAME 2 | 2:30 P.M. SUNDAY, JUNE 21 ON ABC

CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES GAME 3 | 7 P.M. MONDAY, JUNE 22 ON ESPN (IF NECESSARY)

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

COLLEGE WORLD SERIES SCHEDULE

OKLAHOMA CITY, MAY 28 TO JUNE 5

ALL TIMES ET

THURSDAY

GAME 1: MISSISSIPPI STATE VS. NO. 11 TEXAS TECH, NOON, ESPN

GAME 2: NO. 7 TENNESSEE VS. NO. 2 TEXAS, 2:30 P.M., ESPN

GAME 3: NO. 5 ARKANSAS VS. NO. 4 NEBRASKA, 7 P.M., ESPN2

GAME 4: NO. 8 UCLA VS. NO. 1 ALABAMA, 9:30 P.M., ESPN2

FRIDAY

GAME 5: LOSER GAME 1 VS. LOSER GAME 2, 7 P.M., ESPN2

GAME 6: LOSER GAME 3 VS. LOSER GAME 4, 9:30 P.M., ESPN2

SATURDAY

GAME 7: WINNER GAME 1 VS. WINNER GAME 2, 3 P.M., ABC

GAME 8: WINNER GAME 3 VS. WINNER GAME 4, 7 P.M., ESPN

SUNDAY

GAME 9: WINNER GAME 5 VS. LOSER GAME 8, 3 P.M., ABC

GAME 10: WINNER GAME 6 VS. LOSER GAME 7, 7 P.M., ESPN2

MONDAY

GAME 11: WINNER GAME 7 VS. WINNER GAME 9, NOON, ESPN

GAME 12 (IF NECESSARY): WINNER GAME 7 VS. WINNER GAME 9, 2:30 P.M., ESPN

GAME 13: WINNER GAME 8 VS. WINNER GAME 10, 7 P.M., ESPN2

GAME 14 (IF NECESSARY): WINNER GAME 8 VS. WINNER GAME 10, 9:30 P.M., ESPN2

CHAMPIONSHIP FINALS

BEST-OF-THREE SERIES

JUNE 3: 8 P.M., ESPN

JUNE 4: 8 P.M., ESPN

JUNE 5 (IF NECESSARY): 8 P.M., ESPN

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

WNBA

NO GAMES SCHEDULED

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

UFL SCORES

NO GAMES SCHEDULED

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

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER

NO GAMES SCHEDULED

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

MAJOR NATIONAL HEADLINES/RELEASES

NBA

THUNDER TOP SPURS 127-114 IN GAME 5, MOVE A WIN AWAY FROM A RETURN TO NBA FINALS

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 32 points, Alex Caruso led another strong bench effort with 22 and the Oklahoma City Thunder moved one win away from a return trip to the NBA Finals by beating the San Antonio Spurs 127-114 on Tuesday night.

Jared McCain — getting the call with Jalen Williams and Ajay Mitchell both sidelined — scored 20 in his first playoff start for the defending NBA champion Thunder, who lead the Western Conference finals 3-2.

Chet Holmgren had 16 points and 11 rebounds for the Thunder, while Isaiah Hartenstein had a 12-point, 15-rebound night in Oklahoma City.

The Thunder, who were held to 82 points in a Game 4 loss two days earlier, had 82 points on Tuesday before the third quarter was 3 1/2 minutes old.

“We obviously played a lot better, in terms of our process and then also the outcome,” Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. “It’s a playoff series. If you look at any playoff series that goes to six games, at least, there’s going to be some tough games. We had a tough game the other night. This team does a great job of just coming back in the next day in a very neutral way, taking whatever the lessons are, applying them forward and getting into the next opportunity.”

Stephon Castle scored 24 points for San Antonio, which got 22 points from Julian Champagnie and 20 points from Victor Wembanyama — who was held to 4-of-15 shooting.

Keldon Johnson scored 15 off the bench for San Antonio, which missed 29 of its 41 3-point tries.

“It just felt like it was a little bit of everything in terms of we did not put ourselves in position enough to be successful on each possession,” Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said. “And so, to beat a team of this caliber, in their building, with the stakes, we’ll need to be a lot better to give yourself a chance.”

Game 6 is Thursday in San Antonio. If there’s a Game 7, it’ll be back in Oklahoma City on Saturday — and while this series winds down, the New York Knicks are waiting to see who emerges.

The Knicks will visit either the Thunder or Spurs in Game 1 of the NBA Finals on June 3.

Oklahoma City scored 40 points in the second quarter to take control and kept the lead the rest of the way.

“We just played to who we were tonight,” Gilgeous-Alexander said.

It took nearly 10 minutes for the first free throws to be awarded. But when the parade to the foul line started, it didn’t stop.

The teams combined to make 29 free throws in the second quarter alone, the most in the second quarter of any NBA game since the bubble playoffs nearly six years ago. It wasn’t a one-sided thing — the Spurs were 15 for 17 in the quarter, the Thunder 14 for 14.

Oklahoma City went up by 20 in the third, before San Antonio closed within eight. The Spurs might have had some chances to cut even further into the deficit, but were fuming — and rightly so, it seemed — over some missed calls in the final minute of the quarter.

A tip-in try by San Antonio’s Luke Kornet with about 56 seconds left was knocked off the rim by Oklahoma City’s Cason Wallace and should have been goaltending. And on the next Spurs’ possession, an out-of-bounds call that should have gone their way — replays showed the ball went out off of Holmgren — did not. Johnson tried to challenge the call, got ignored, then got a technical foul for arguing.

“They just said they didn’t see me,” Johnson said.

After all that, Oklahoma City’s lead was 101-91 going into the fourth. The Thunder kept a double-digit lead for all but 25 seconds of the final quarter — a huge turnaround from a 21-point loss in San Antonio on Sunday.

“We definitely got better from the last game,” Gilgeous-Alexander said.

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CELTICS’ JOE MAZZULLA NAMED NBA COACH OF THE YEAR

Guiding the Boston Celtics to the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference despite missing superstar Jayson Tatum until March 6, Joe Mazzulla was named NBA Coach of the Year for the first time on Tuesday.

Mazzulla, 37, received 62 first-place votes, 24 second-place votes and 10 third-place votes and finished with 392 points. The Detroit Pistons’ J.B. Bickerstaff finished second with 312 points, followed by the San Antonio Spurs’ Mitch Johnson (133 points).

“At the end of the day, regardless of what happens in the offseason or what moves may be made or what it is, the process towards a championship is the No. 1 goal, and sticking to that process,” Mazzulla told NBC. “That’s a credit to the players and it’s a credit to the entire organization.

“In one of our first meetings this year, we met our entire building and said we are going to stick to the process of winning and not get caught up in the external thing. I thought the commitment from the entire organization to sticking to the process (was laudable). …

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“We obviously fell short of that, but I thought throughout the regular season our guys came in every day with a chip on their shoulders. They came in wanting to stick to that process and getting better every day.”

Mazzulla led the Celtics to a 56-26 record, including a 51-19 mark after they lost seven of their first 12 games. Boston has won at least 56 games in each of Mazzulla’s four seasons at the helm.

Under Mazzulla’s guidance, the Celtics ranked second in offensive rating (120.0) and fourth in defensive rating (111.7) and net rating (8.3).

The Rhode Island native is the first Celtics coach to win the award since Bill Fitch in 1979-80 and the fourth in franchise history, along with Tom Heinsohn (1972-73) and Red Auerbach (1964-65), for whom the award is named.

Mazzulla is also the youngest recipient since Phil Johnson, who was 33 when he won in 1974-75 with the Kansas City-Omaha Kings.

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NHL

GOLDEN KNIGHTS SWEEP AVALANCHE TO ADVANCE TO THIRD STANLEY CUP FINAL IN NINE SEASONS

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Brayden McNabb hit Mark Stone in stride with a lob pass in the first period for a highlight reel of a play, but it was the gritty work of the Golden Knights’ defense that ultimately put Vegas in the Stanley Cup Final.

The Golden Knights limited the Avalanche’s high-powered offense all series and then suffocated it Tuesday night.

That defense, aided by goals from Stone and Cole Smith, led to a 2-1 victory and an unthinkable sweep of Colorado for the Knights’ third final in nine seasons.

“It’s by far our best game,” said Vegas coach John Tortorella, whose team was 30-1 at Caesars Sportsbook at the beginning of the series to sweep. “(Checking is) something we’ve been concentrating on, and I think we’ve gotten better and better through the rounds. But tonight’s game was our best checking effort, and that’s a hell of a hockey team we played over there.”

The Golden Knights will get a break while they watch to see whether Carolina or Montreal emerges from the Eastern Conference Final.

This is a crushing end for an Avalanche team that won the Presidents’ Trophy and had blown through the playoffs with an 8-1 record. Chicago in 2013 was the last team to claim the Presidents’ Trophy and the Stanley Cup in the same season.

“We ran into a buzz saw in Vegas,” Avalanche coach Jared Bednar said. “I think they deserved the credit. It’s not a knock on how hard they played, but they’re a well-oiled machine right now, peaking at the right time. I look at their series and man-to-man they’re playing at the top of their game. We’ll have to regroup and reassess and reflect on our season and the series and go from there.”

With several Las Vegas Raiders players looking on, including quarterbacks Kirk Cousins and Fernando Mendoza, the Golden Knights got on the scoreboard when McNabb delivered a perfect pass to Stone. Not known for elite skating ability, Stone nevertheless got behind the Avalanche, caught the puck and scored.

“I’m not winning a ton of races,” Stone said. “I think I can create angles to get into those positions. That’s probably why I’ve had quite a few breakaways in my career.”

That was the only goal until Smith tipped in Dylan Coghlan’s shot from the point with 5:45 left for a critical two-goal margin.

Carter Hart stopped 20 shots, coming within 2:03 of his first playoff shutout in six years.

Gabriel Landeskog ended that shutout, one of the few highlights of the night for the Avalanche, who went the final 14:23 of the second period without a shot on goal and more than 25 minutes with just one shot.

Hart said he thought the Golden Knights defense “100%” frustrated the Avalanche.

“I think once we scored that first goal, in the second and third period we just kind of locked it down and kept pressure on them,” Hart said. “We did a great job. We had some huge blocks tonight.”

It wasn’t just this night. Colorado center Nathan MacKinnon, who led the NHL with 53 goals in the regular season, failed to hit the back of the net in any of the four games. Martin Necas, who had 100 points, totaled just two in this series.

The Avalanche averaged a league-high 3.63 goals during the regular season and in the first two rounds upped that to 4.11. Against the Golden Knights? It was 1.75.

“I think you look back at the four games, there are definitely times where we found our game,” Landeskog said. “I think the problem was we found ways to lose hockey games. I think over the course of the regular season, in the first two rounds, it was the opposite. Even if we didn’t have our A-game, we were finding different ways to win hockey games, and against this good of a hockey team in the Golden Knights, they’ll make you pay for your mistakes.”

Mackenzie Blackwood, making his first start in the series, gave the Avalanche a chance to win with several dazzling saves en route to 24 saves overall. His best stop came late in the second period when he lunged to glove a power-play shot from Pavel Dorofeyev.

The journey to the final isn’t quite the Cinderella story of the Golden Knights’ first team that made the Stanley Cup Final in 2018 before losing in five games to Washington, but Vegas’ voyage to this point was far from expected.

The Golden Knights faced the possibility of not making the playoffs for just the second time in franchise history when management fired coach Bruce Cassidy, who led the club to the 2023 title, with eight games left in the regular season.

In came Tortorella, who validated the controversial decision by leading Vegas to a 7-0-1 record to close the regular season and then series victories over Utah and Anaheim. Then the Golden Knights faced an Avalanche team on a roll and without any sign of slowing down.

At least until facing Vegas.

Bednar searched for answers against the Golden Knights, even changing goalies on Tuesday. The Avalanche also dealt with injuries to their top two players this series — reigning Norris Trophy winner Cale Makar and MacKinnon, a Hart Trophy finalist.

The Golden Knights had their own injury issues, winning the first two games of the series without Stone.

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NFL

PACKERS RUNNING BACK JOSH JACOBS ARRESTED ON CHARGES RELATED TO DOMESTIC ABUSE

Green Bay Packers running back Josh Jacobs is facing five criminal charges, including strangulation and suffocation, after police responded to a disturbance complaint involving him over the weekend.

Hobart/Lawrence (Wisconsin) Police Chief Michael Renkas said that Jacobs was arrested Tuesday and booked into Brown County Jail on charges of strangulation and suffocation, battery-domestic abuse, criminal damage to property-domestic abuse, disorderly conduct-domestic abuse and intimidation of a victim.

Renkas said police had been dispatched to a complaint involving Jacobs on Saturday at 8:37 a.m.

“This remains an active and ongoing investigation,” Renkas said in a statement. “No further information will be released at this time.”

The strangulation and suffocation charge is a felony and the other four charges are misdemeanors, according to the charge information in the Brown County Jail’s online record of this case.

Jacobs’ lawyers — David Chesnoff, Richard Schonfeld and Clarence Duchac — issued a joint statement on his behalf.

“Josh vehemently denies the allegations, and this matter is in the early stages of investigation with important evidence that has not yet been made public,” they said. “We ask for fairness and restraint while the judicial process takes its course.”

Jacobs is the Packers’ top returning rusher after running for 929 yards and 13 touchdowns last season. That followed a 2024 season in which he ran for 1,329 yards and 15 touchdowns while earning his third Pro Bowl selection.

He’s the only player on Green Bay’s roster who rushed for as many as 200 yards for the Packers last season. Emanuel Wilson, the Packers’ second-leading rusher last year, signed with the Seattle Seahawks in the offseason.

The Packers began their organized team activities Tuesday. Packers coach Matt LaFleur has a scheduled availability with reporters Wednesday.

“We are aware of the matter involving Josh Jacobs,” a Packers spokesman said. “As it is an ongoing legal situation, we will withhold further comment.”

NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said that “we are aware of the report and have been in contact with the club.”

Jacobs spent his first five seasons with the Raiders. He earned All-Pro honors and had an NFL-leading 1,653 yards rushing with Las Vegas in 2022.

He has rushed for 7,803 yards and 74 touchdowns in his seven-year career. The only active players with more career touchdown runs are Baltimore’s Derrick Henry (122) and Buffalo’s Josh Allen (79).

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DERWIN JAMES JR., CHARGERS AGREE TO RECORD-BREAKING EXTENSION

The Los Angeles Chargers and Derwin James Jr. have agreed on a three-year, $75.6 million extension that will make James the league’s highest paid safety for the second time, ESPN reported Tuesday.

James was entering the final season of a four-year, $76.4 million extension he signed in 2022 that made him the highest-paid safety in NFL history.

The latest extension, which includes $57.5 million guaranteed, sets the safety market at $25.2 million per year. The previous record, established when Ravens safety Kyle Hamilton signed a four-year, $100.4 million extension in 2025, averaged $25.1 million per year.

James, 29, had 94 tackles, three interceptions and two sacks last season for the Chargers. He was selected to his fifth Pro Bowl and was named an All-Pro for the fourth time.

A first-round pick in 2018, James has 12 interceptions, 19 sacks and 684 tackles in seven seasons, all with the Chargers. He missed the 2020 season with a knee injury.

“One of my favorite players I’ve ever worked with and coached because of how contagious his energy is, how great he wants to be,” said Chris O’Leary, the Chargers’ first-year defensive coordinator who coached the team’s defensive backs in 2024, per ESPN. “So, I can’t put into words how excited that I am. I’m ready to get started right now.”

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MLB

MLB ROUNDUP: YANKEES SMACK 6 HOMERS, MANHANDLE ROYALS

Amed Rosario hit two of the Yankees’ six home runs as visiting New York beat the Kansas City Royals for a 14th straight time, including the playoffs, 15-1 on Tuesday night.

New York’s Cody Bellinger, Anthony Volpe, Trent Grisham and Jazz Chisholm Jr. also went deep. Rosario had four hits and four RBIs, and the homer-hitting quintet combined for 12 RBIs. Grisham, Volpe, Ben Rice and Austin Wells each had three of the Yankees’ 24 hits.

It was the first time in Yankees history that all nine starters had at least two hits. New York starter Cam Schlittler (7-2) allowed one run over six strong innings, and Ryan Yarbrough got a three-inning save.

Bobby Witt Jr. homered for the Royals, who have lost 12 of their past 15 games. Bailey Falter (0-2) yielded seven runs on nine hits in 2 1/3 innings.

Dodgers 15, Rockies 6

Mookie Betts and Andy Pages combined for three home runs while thriving from new spots in the batting order as Los Angeles rolled over visiting Colorado.

Betts homered twice while Pages, Enrique Hernandez and Will Smith also went deep as Los Angeles extended its winning streak to four games. Hernandez later exited with an oblique injury that will send him back to the injured list, two games after he was activated. Eric Lauer (2-5) threw six innings and gave up one run in his Dodgers debut.

The Dodgers did receive a scare when reigning National League MVP and current Cy Young Award contender Shohei Ohtani was hit on the right (throwing) hand with a pitch in the fourth inning. He remained in the game and scored a run, but was pinch-hit for in his next scheduled at-bat. After the game, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said he expects Ohtani to make his scheduled start on the mound Wednesday.

Pirates 12, Cubs 1

Rookie Esmerlyn Valdez hit his second career home run and Oneil Cruz had the first of his three hits to highlight a five-run first inning, putting host Pittsburgh on course to an easy win over reeling Chicago.

Cruz drove in a run with a single and Valdez finished with three RBIs as the Pirates won their third in a row and handed the Cubs their 10th consecutive defeat. The longest active losing streak in the majors is also Chicago’s longest since June 4-16, 2022.

Pittsburgh had 15 hits as Spencer Horwitz and Bryan Reynolds each had two hits and two RBIs. Brandon Lowe had two hits and scored twice. Pirates starter Braxton Ashcraft (4-2) threw 6 1/3 innings of one-run ball. Cubs starter Jordan Wicks (0-1) yielded eight runs in 4 1/3 innings during his season debut.

Orioles 6, Rays 1

Shane Baz pitched seven splendid innings against his former team, Samuel Basallo drilled a three-run home run and host Baltimore made the most of seven hits in a victory against Tampa Bay.

Baz (2-5) allowed one run on seven hits while striking out nine. Jackson Holliday and Leody Taveras each had two hits for the Orioles, who have won the first two games of the three-game series. All six of Baltimore’s runs were unearned as the Rays, who have lost three in a row, committed three errors and a passed ball.

Tampa Bay starter Griffin Jax (1-3) allowed three unearned runs on three hits in two innings, exiting shortly after he was struck on the back by a line drive. The Rays said he sustained a back contusion and is day-to-day. Jonathan Aranda has three hits and an RBI.

Rangers 10, Astros 7

Joc Pederson capped an eight-run first inning with a three-run homer and Texas, one night after managing no hits, snapped a four-game losing streak with a win over Houston in Arlington, Texas.

Texas recorded its season high for runs in an inning. Evan Carter homered, tripled, doubled and drove in three runs for the Rangers. Jack Leiter (2-4) allowed four runs on four hits over six innings.

Yordan Alvarez homered twice and drove in four runs for the Astros. Cam Smith and Jeremy Pena each hit a solo homer. Jason Alexander (1-1) was tagged for nine runs on six hits in six innings.

Mariners 4, Athletics 1

Emerson Hancock allowed one hit over six scoreless innings and Victor Robles had a season-high three hits to help Seattle post a victory over the Athletics at West Sacramento, Calif.

Mitch Garver had two hits and an RBI and Josh Naylor had two hits and a run for the Mariners. Jose A. Ferrer, Gabe Speier and Andres Munoz combined for three innings of one-run relief.

Athletics star Nick Kurtz went 0-for-4 and struck out three times to halt his streak of reaching base at 48 games. That leaves him tied with Mark McGwire (1996) for the franchise single-season record. Tyler Soderstrom homered for the A’s, who lost for the fourth time in five games.

Reds 7, Mets 2

Eugenio Suarez, Elly De La Cruz and Tyler Stephenson had two RBIs each for visiting Cincinnati, which rolled past sinking New York.

Every starter except Spencer Steer had at least one hit for the Reds, who have won three straight and five of their past six. Juan Soto hit a two-run homer while Luis Torrens finished with two hits for the Mets, who have lost five in a row and seven of their past eight.

Chase Burns (7-1) won his sixth straight decision after giving up two runs while striking out eight over 5 1/3 innings. Mets starter David Peterson (3-5) allowed six runs on 11 hits in five-plus innings.

Blue Jays 8, Marlins 1

Jesus Sanchez hit his first career grand slam to key a six-run sixth inning as host Toronto defeated his former team, Miami.

Ernie Clement and Yohendrick Pinango also homered for the Blue Jays, who have split the first two of a three-game series with the Marlins. George Springer had three hits and an RBI and was hit by a pitch. Spencer Miles (2-0) allowed one run and three hits in 4 1/3 innings.

Marlins starter Sandy Alcantara (3-4) allowed eight runs on 10 hits in 5 2/3 innings.

Braves 7, Red Sox 6

Michael Harris II collected four hits, including a two-run homer, and drove in three runs as visiting Atlanta ended a two-game skid by beating Boston.

Matt Olson also went deep for the Braves. Spencer Strider (3-0) pitched five-plus innings, allowing three runs on three hits. Raisel Iglesias gave up a two-run single to Isiah Kiner-Falefa in the ninth but stranded runners on second and third for his ninth save.

Jarren Duran, Ceddanne Rafaela and Kiner-Falefa each hit a solo home run for the Red Sox, who have lost four in a row. Ranger Suarez (2-3) permitted five runs on six hits in five-plus innings.

Brewers 6, Cardinals 0

Garrett Mitchell and Jake Bauers homered while Kyle Harrison delivered six strong innings to lead Milwaukee to a shutout win over visiting St. Louis.

Harrison (5-1) allowed four hits over six innings. He earned a fifth win in his past six starts and made his third straight scoreless start, running his shutout streak to 18 innings. Acquired in a February trade with Boston, Harrison owns a 1.57 ERA through his first 10 starts with the Brewers.

Grant Anderson, Abner Uribe and Trevor Megill finished with a scoreless inning apiece to cap off Milwaukee’s fourth shutout win of the season, two of which have come in the past week.

Phillies 4, Padres 3

Bryce Harper, J.T. Realmuto and Trea Turner blasted solo homers in the first three innings, and visiting Philadelphia held on for a win over San Diego.

Aaron Nola (3-4) cruised through six innings, allowing three hits and two runs for the Phillies, who will aim for a three-game sweep on Wednesday. Jhoan Duran tossed a perfect ninth inning to earn his 11th save.

Manny Machado and Ramon Laureano went deep for the Padres, who have lost three in a row. Randy Vasquez (5-3) surrendered four runs on eight hits in 5 2/3 innings.

Nationals 6, Guardians 3

James Wood had a two-run homer in a four-run second inning and Cade Cavalli pitched six strong innings as Washington never trailed in taking its second straight at Cleveland.

Wood went 3-for-4 and Keibert Ruiz had a two-run single in the second to help the Nationals secure a series victory. The Nationals matched their season high by winning a fourth game in a row.

Cavalli (3-3) allowed one run on five hits. Mitchell Parker gave up two runs over the final three frames for his first save of the season. Jose Ramirez drove in two runs for the Guardians. Joey Cantillo (4-2) permitted four runs in two innings.

Angels 10, Tigers 6

Vaughn Grissom hit an eighth-inning grand slam and drove in six runs, powering Los Angeles to a win at Detroit.

Grissom hit a homer off Will Vest (1-4) to erase a 6-5 deficit and give the Angels their fourth consecutive victory. Zach Neto had three hits, scored two runs and knocked in another, while Logan O’Hoppe had two hits, scored twice and added an RBI.

Kevin McGonigle led the Detroit offense with three hits, including a two-run triple, and scored a run. Wenceel Perez had a solo homer, while Colt Keith had two hits and scored twice for the Tigers, who have lost nine of their past 10  games.

Twins 5, White Sox 3 (11 innings)

Brooks Lee delivered a go-ahead, bases-clearing double in the 11th inning among his two hits, boosting visiting Minnesota past Chicago, ending the Twins’ seven-game losing streak against the White Sox.

Kody Clemens and Austin Martin also drove in runs for Minnesota, which won for the fifth time in six games. Minnesota starter Joe Ryan worked 7 2/3 sharp innings. Taylor Rogers (1-1) pitched a scoreless 10th, and Yoendrys Gomez notched his third save despite permitting Chase Meidroth’s RBI single in the bottom of the 11th.

Munetaka Murakami hit his American League-leading 19th homer for the White Sox, who have lost three of the past four. Colson Montgomery and Meidroth each had two hits.

Diamondbacks 7, Giants 5

Ketel Marte smacked a two-run homer, Ildemaro Vargas also drove two runs and visiting Arizona made it five straight wins over San Francisco.

Adrian Del Castillo chipped in with a homer and Eduardo Rodriguez (5-1) threw six effective innings for the Diamondbacks, who swept a three-game home series from the Giants last week and have now won the past two days in San Francisco. Rodriguez allowed two runs and six hits.

Casey Schmitt, Eric Haase and Willy Adames homered for the Giants, who lost for the sixth time in eight games. Tyler Mahle (1-7) worked five innings, allowing three runs and three hits.

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FORMER BRAVES SLUGGER BOB HORNER DEAD AT 68

Bob Horner, a former No.1 overall pick who went straight to the big leagues and once hit four home runs in a game, died Tuesday at the age of 68.

A Kansas native, Horner was drafted first overall by the Atlanta Braves in the 1978 amateur draft out of Arizona State and made his big-league debut about a week later on June 16 at the age of 20 against the Pittsburgh Pirates. Horner homered that day off future Hall of Famer Bert Blyleven.

Horner hit .266 in 89 games with 23 home runs and 63 RBIs that year and was named the National League Rookie of the Year, beating out of future Hall-of-Fame shortstop Ozzie Smith.

On July 6, 1986, Horner blasted four home runs at Atlanta Fulton-County Stadium during the Braves’ 11-8 loss to the Montreal Expos. Horner is one of 21 players to accomplish that feat and only Brave to do so other than Joe Adcock, who hit four against the Brooklyn Dodgers on July 31, 1954, while with the Milwaukee Braves.

Plagued by injuries throughout his career — he appeared in 120 games or more in just five of 10 big-league seasons — Horner, who played most of his career at third base, still managed to hit 218 home runs and slug .499. He was an All-Star in 1982, when he hit 32 home runs with 97 RBIs to help lead the Braves to the National League West Division title.

Horner spent nine seasons with the Braves (1978-86) and one year with the St. Louis Cardinals (1988) after playing 1987 with the Yakult Swallows of the Japan Central League, where he hit 31 home runs and batted .327 in 93 games.

Horner’s passing comes weeks after the loss of former Braves manager Bobby Cox, Horner’s first manager, and former owner Ted Turner.

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GOLF

PGA TOUR SHUFFLES FLORIDA EVENTS IN ‘27 SCHEDULE REVAMP

The Arnold Palmer Invitational will move from the week before The Players Championship to the week after, and the Valspar Championship will be kicked from March to May as part of the changing 2027 PGA Tour schedule.

The changes set up a three-week span of top-tier events in Florida: the Cadillac Championship March 4-7 at Trump National Doral outside Miami, the flagship Players Championship at TPC Sawgrass March 11-14 and the Palmer at Bay Hill in Orlando March 18-21.

The Valspar, a standard (non-signature) event in the Tampa area, will be contested May 6-9.

Sports Business Journal first reported the changes, citing a memo the PGA Tour sent members on Tuesday. The Cadillac, the Palmer and the Valspar have all since announced their 2027 dates.

The PGA Tour gave Doral a new $20 million signature event this year, returning to the course after a decade away. However, the Cadillac Championship was held the same week as Formula One’s Miami Grand Prix, splitting potential fans between the two events. An early March date will also help the tour avoid steamy weather and potential storms that are common in Miami in early May.

Furthermore, and perhaps most welcome to elite players, moving the Cadillac Championship out of May unclogs a six-week stretch on the calendar that featured two majors and three signature events.

It was announced last week that the CJ Cup Byron Nelson, originally played in the latter half of May, will be bumped up to April 29-May 2 in 2027.

New PGA Tour CEO Brian Rolapp is endeavoring to make key changes to the  sport’s calendar; the first was an end to the two-week Hawaii swing that traditionally opened the season in January. The tour is expected to move away from smaller fields with no 36-hole cuts for the signature events and install a new format in 2028 that introduces a two-track system for determining the best events.

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INDIANA SPORTS NEWS AND HEADLINES

PURDUE TRACK

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Purdue Track & Field’s 27 qualifications to the NCAA East First Round prepares for the road to nationals in Lexington, Kentucky (May 27-30). Each day of the meet will begin streaming on ESPN+ at the start of the running events.

Seamus Malaski and Marissa Palmer lead the Boilers’ entry total with three events scheduled. Praise Aniamaka holds the highest regional ranking overall with his second-ranked spot in the triple jump, while Amarianna Lofton leads the women’s side tied for fifth in the high jump.

The top 48 individuals and top 24 relays qualified for the east and west first round competitions. The top 12 individuals and top 12 relays will all qualify for the NCAA Outdoor Championships.

Men’s Notes

• Aniamaka holds Purdue’s highest NCAA East ranking at No. 2 in the triple jump after his Big Ten-winning 16.73m (54-10.75w). It marked his third Big Ten title outdoors and raised his national ranking to No. 5. He aims to qualify for his third outdoor NCAAs.

• Malaski qualified in all three of his events (discus, hammer throw and shot put). He is ninth regionally in the hammer and 10th in the shot put. He is top 25 nationally in both events.

• Samuel Vessat ranks No. 7 in the east in the 400m after his 44.94 earlier this season that was the No. 3 all-time performance by a French runner and is No. 1 in 2026 by a European runner. He is No. 9 in the NCAA and helps Purdue’s 4x400m rank No. 7 in the country.

• The 4x400m of Victory Achakpoekri, Vessat, Zach Mylenek and Zyan Greene ran 3:02.15 back in April for its No. 7 national ranking. Jax Coleman ran in place of Greene at the Big Ten Championships to help Purdue earn silver in 3:04.84.

• Chidozie Kalu is coming off a Big Ten bronze in the triple jump after he went 16.30m (53-05.75). With the wind at +4.1, the mark does not count for his regional ranking and Kalu sits 30th. He will look to qualify for his first NCAA Championships since 2024 while he was at Virginia Tech.

• Hugh Jacobsmeyer, Purdue’s 800m and 1500m record holder, leads the program’s distance group with his No. 36 regional ranking in the 800m.

Women’s Notes

• Lofton is tied for fifth in the NCAA East and 21st in the high jump (1.83m / 6-00.00). She joined Purdue after she was a two-time NCAA Division II All-American at Central State.

• Alexia Smith is Purdue’s highest individual NCAA East track rank with her No. 11 performance in the 400m (51.22). The time was set in the Big Ten prelims to lead the field before she took silver in the finals. She also headlines Purdue’s No. 10 ranked 4x400m.

• The 4x400m of Smith, Taiye Ayenuro, Palmer and Gia Clay is 10th with their 3:29.57 in April. The group, with Smith and Ayenuro flipped in the order during Big Tens, took silver in 3:30.30.

• Palmer is set to compete in the 200m and 4x100m in addition to her spot on the 4x400m. She holds the No. 16 ranking in the 200m and runs the second leg on the 4x100m. She was 17th at last season’s NCAA East in the 100m as a freshman at Georgia State.

• Britannie Johnson is 14th in the NCAA East in the shot put (16.72m / 54-10.25) and is 27th nationally. Her sister Britannia Johnson leads the twins in discus ranking at 22nd (55.06m / 180-08), while Britannie Johnson follows in 27th (54.60m / 179-02). 

• Blessing Gideon qualified for the NCAA East in both the long and triple jump and her triple jump ranks 14th (13.20m / 43-03.75). She reached the podium in both events at the Big Ten Championships. 

Next Up

Boilers who are in the top 12 of their respective events will conclude the season at the NCAA Outdoor Championships from June 10-13 in Eugene, Oregon.

Purdue Men’s First Round Qualifiers (Regional Ranking)

400m: Samuel Vessat (7th)

800m: Hugh Jacobsmeyer (36th)

10,000m: Nathan Walker (45th)

3000mSC: Douglas Buckeridge (44th)

4x400m (5th)

Triple Jump: Praise Aniamaka (2nd), Chidozie Kalu (30th)

High Jump: Elliot Ryba (19th)

Discus: Seamus Malaski (33rd), Joel Gates (47th)

Hammer Throw: Seamus Malaski (9th), Leo Maxwell (33rd)

Shot Put: Seamus Malaski (10th), Joel Gates (29th)

Purdue Women’s First Round Qualifiers (Regional Ranking)

200m: Marissa Palmer (16th), Ashley Odiase (32nd)

400m: Alexia Smith (11th), Gia Clay (36th)

4x100m (17th)

4x400m (10th)

Long Jump: Blessing Gideon (42nd)

Triple Jump: Blessing Gideon (14th)

High Jump: Amarianna Lofton (5th), Jubilee Felder (24th)

Discus: Britannia Johnson (22nd), Britannie Johnson (27th)

Shot Put: Britannie Johnson (15th)

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NOTRE DAME MEN’S BASKETBALL

SOUTH BEND, Ind. – Glenn & Stacey Murphy Head Coach Micah Shrewsberry and the Notre Dame men’s basketball program added more depth to the 2026-27 roster with the addition of Yoro Diallo on Tuesday evening.

The 6-9 forward from Cincinnati, Ohio, spent three years (played two) at Winthrop, where he was teammates with now Irish center Logan Duncomb; they also attended the same high school, Archbishop Moeller, where Diallo played both basketball and soccer. 

“We’re excited to welcome Yoro to our program,” Coach Shrewsberry said. “Yoro can impact the game in a lot of different ways with his scoring, rebounding, & playmaking ability. At 6’9 with a 7’0 wingspan, he has the size, length, & athleticism to be able to affect the game defensively as well.”

Diallo averaged 1.8 points and 1.9 boards in 7.5 minutes over his two playing seasons at Winthrop, but really came into his own last year at UVA Wise, a Division II school. There, Diallo averaged a team-best 14.5 points and 8.0 rebounds with the Cavaliers, shooting 48.5 percent from the floor. He also led the team in assists with 95.

Diallo started the season with five straight double-double performances before finishing the year with eight. He also produced three 20-point games for a 20-11 UVA Wise squad, earning Second Team All-SAC honors.

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INDIANA STATE TRACK

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. – Indiana State track and field begins competition at the 2026 NCAA East First Round Wednesday evening, with 12 Sycamore entries set to compete over the course of four days at the UK Track and Field Complex in Lexington, Kentucky.

Men’s competition days are Wednesday and Friday, with women’s competition days set for Thursday and Saturday.

Postseason Bound

Indiana State has double-digit entries at the NCAA East First Round for the fifth straight season, with the Blue and White having 12 entries and 10 athletes set to appear in the 2026 NCAA East First Round. The Trees had 16 entries at the 2025 NCAA East First Round (14 athletes), 14 entries at the 2024 NCAA East First Round (17 athletes), 14 entries at the 2023 NCAA East First Round (15 athletes) and 15 entries at the 2022 NCAA East First Round (12 athletes).

The Sycamores are in the midst of their best stretch in over a decade from a regional standpoint, with the current five-year stretch of double-digit entries being the program’s best since a 10-year stretch from 2006-15.

Rooted To The Top

Indiana State’s reign atop the Missouri Valley Conference will carry on, as the Sycamores won the MVC Women’s Outdoor Track and Field Championships for a third straight year on Sunday.

The Sycamores scored a program record 183.5 points to claim the conference hardware on their home turf. Indiana State finished third on the men’s side with 148.5 points, a significant increase from its pre-championship projection.

Indiana State athletes accounted for four individual titles on Championship Sunday, those coming from blistering performances in the hurdles from Rachel Mehringer and Collin Forrest, and strong performances from Jahnel Bowman in the triple jump and Aliseonna Garnett in the discus. The Blue and White also had a banner start to the championships, as Brittney Burak closed the opening day on the track with Indiana State’s first women’s 10,000m champion in nearly 20 years, while a quartet of Sycamores – Lincoln Hulsey, Amy Luttrell, Janiya Bowman and Emma Yoder – claimed conference hardware in the field events on the first day of competition.

Sycamore athletes also racked up a plethora of specialty awards following their standout performances over the weekend. Mehringer was named MVC Most Outstanding Women’s Track Athlete, while Yoder was selected as the MVC Most Outstanding Women’s Field Athlete. Aaron Massiah was named the MVC Freshman of the Year, while Olivia Marshall earned the MVC’s Elite 18 Award, which goes to the medalist with the highest GPA.

Since the start of the 2021-22 season, Indiana State has won 14 out of a possible 20 MVC Track and Field Championships (2022-24 men’s indoor, 2022 women’s indoor, 2022-25 men’s outdoor, 2024-26 women’s indoor, 2024-26 women’s outdoor). The vast majority of those conference titles have seen the Sycamores clinch the title before the 4x400m relay, the final event of the championships.

Back For More

Half of Indiana State’s 10-athlete delegation for the 2026 NCAA East First Round will be repeat qualifiers, with five Sycamores set to make at least their second straight postseason appearance.

Terrance O’Bannon (2023-DNC, 2024-26) will be making his fourth NCAA East First Round appearance, the most on the team. Collin Forrest (2024-DNC, 2025-26) and Rachel Mehringer (2024-26) will each be making their third appearance at the NCAA East First Round, while Sloan Cox (2025-26) and Aliseonna Garnett (2025-26) are both set to make their second straight NCAA East First Round appearance. Garnett will pull double-duty in Lexington after qualifying in both the shot put and discus, marking the first time in her career that she qualified for the NCAA East First Round in multiple events.

Welcome To The Show

Indiana State has five athletes who will be making their NCAA East First Round debut during the week in Lexington, with three men and two women representing the Sycamores at the regional round for the first time in their careers.

Three of the five Sycamore debutants come in throws events, with Theo Thurmond (discus), Cora Williams (discus) and Emma Yoder (hammer throw) all reaching the NCAA East First Round for the first time in their respective careers. Janiya Bowman (100m and long jump) and Kieran Barnewall (110m hurdles) are also making their NCAA East First Round debut in 2026, with Bowman being one of two Indiana State athletes to qualify for the postseason in multiple events this season.

Not included in the totals is Jahnel Bowman, who qualified for the postseason in the triple jump but is unable to compete in Lexington. Bowman would have been making her first NCAA East First Round appearance.

Meet The Sycamores

Indiana State’s 10 athletes in the 2026 NCAA East First Round are scheduled to compete in 12 events over the course of the four-day regional meet. Below is a summary of each qualified Sycamore, along with their event schedule for the week and season highlights.

Kieran Barnewall | 110m Hurdles

Wednesday, May 27 | 6 p.m. (First Round)

Friday, May 29 | 6:15 p.m. (Quarterfinals)

One of three Indiana State freshmen to qualify for the NCAA East First Round, Barnewall has been one of the top hurdlers in the MVC in 2026. He owns four of the top six 110m hurdles times in the conference this season, including a season-best 13.80 to place second at the MVC Championships. Barnewall has also qualified for the Canada U20 Championships, which take place in mid-June in Ottawa. He is in lane two of heat three, and will need to either finish in the top three of his heat or be one of the six fastest times among those who don’t automatically qualify to advance to Friday’s quarterfinals.

Janiya Bowman | 100m and Long Jump

Thursday, May 28 | 6 p.m. (Long Jump)

Thursday, May 28 | 7 p.m. (100m First Round)

Saturday, May 30 | 6:35 p.m. (100m Quarterfinals)

Bowman is one of two Indiana State athletes who qualified for the NCAA East First Round in multiple events, as she will take part in both the 100m and long jump in Lexington. Indiana State’s indoor (6.15m/20-2.25) and outdoor (6.27m/20-7) record holder in the long jump, she also ran a career-best 11.29 in the 100m to earn all-conference honors in both events. Bowman also ranked among the top 200m sprinters this season, finishing second at the MVC Championships. She is in lane three of heat six for the 100m, and will need to either finish in the top three of her heat or be one of the six fastest times among those who don’t automatically qualify to advance to Saturday’s quarterfinals. Bowman is also in the second flight of the long jump and will jump 10th in that flight.

Sloan Cox | Shot Put

Wednesday, May 27 | 6:30 p.m.

Cox has a penchant for putting together his best performances in pressure-packed moments, with his season best in the shot put coming at the MVC Championships for the second straight year. His mark of 18.42m (60-5.25) earned him all-conference accolades for a second consecutive season and he currently ranks second in program history in the event. He is in the third flight of the shot put and will throw second in that flight.

Collin Forrest | 110m Hurdles

Wednesday, May 27 | 6 p.m. (first round)

Friday, May 29 | 6:15 p.m. (quarterfinals)

Forrest won his third straight MVC title in the 110m hurdles with a career-best 13.75, leading an Indiana State squad which occupied the top four spots in the conference in the event. He will be making his third NCAA East First Round appearance after being an alternate for the 4x100m relay in 2024 and competing in the 110m hurdles in 2025. Forrest is in lane nine of heat five, and will need to either finish in the top three of his heat or be one of the six fastest times among those who don’t automatically qualify to advance to Friday’s quarterfinals.

Aliseonna Garnett | Shot Put

Thursday, May 28 | 6:30 p.m. (Shot Put)

Saturday, May 30 | 1 p.m. (Discus)

Garnett recorded program top-five marks in the shot put (16.13m/52-11) and discus (53.71m/176-2) this season to qualify for the NCAA First Round in both events. She also added a program top-10 mark in the hammer throw (57.51m/188-8), earning all-conference accolades in all three events in one of the best seasons a Sycamore thrower has produced. Garnett, who is making her second NCAA East First Round appearance, is in the second flight of both the shot put and discus. She will throw 10th in her flight of the shot put and fourth in her flight of the discus.

Rachel Mehringer | 100m Hurdles

Thursday, May 28 | 6 p.m. (First Round)

Saturday, May 30 | 6:15 p.m. (Quarterfinals)

The most decorated 100m hurdles athlete in MVC history, Mehringer won her third straight conference title in the event with a wind-aided 12.64 which ranks in the top five among all-conditions times in the world this season. Mehringer owns 16 of the 17 fastest all-conditions 100m hurdles times in conference history and has broken the 13-second barrier five times in 2026, including multiple wind-legal marks under that time. She is in lane five of heat two to start her third NCAA East First Round, and will need to either finish in the top three of her heat or be one of the six fastest times among those who don’t automatically qualify to advance to Saturday’s quarterfinals..

Terrance O’Bannon | 100m

Wednesday, May 27 | 7 p.m. (First Round)

Friday, May 29 | 6:35 p.m. (Quarterfinals)

O’Bannon saved his best performance for the end of the season, running a career-best 10.19 to place second at the MVC Championships and secure his fourth consecutive NCAA East First Round appearance. O’Bannon, who will compete in the 100m in the postseason for the second straight year, is in lane two of heat four, and will need to either finish in the top three of his heat or be one of the six fastest times among those who don’t automatically qualify to advance to Friday’s quarterfinals.

Theo Thurmond | Discus

Friday, May 29 | 1 p.m.

Thurmond produced a career-best performance at the MVC Championships to secure his spot in the NCAA East First Round, placing second in the discus at the conference championships with his mark of 54.39m (178-5). One of three Indiana State freshmen to qualify for the postseason, Thurmond also owns the top hammer throw mark by a Sycamore this season. He will be in the first flight of the discus, and will throw sixth in that flight.

Cora Williams | Hammer Throw

Thursday, May 28 | 10 a.m.

Williams has been one of the top hammer throwers in the conference this season, cracking the top 10 in program history as a freshman with her top mark of 58.81m (192-11). One of three Indiana State freshmen to qualify for the NCAA East First Round this season, Williams scored for the Sycamores in both the shot put and hammer throw at the MVC Championships. She is in the first flight of the hammer throw, and will throw seventh in that flight.

Emma Yoder | Hammer Throw

Friday, May 28 | 10 a.m.

Yoder was the MVC hammer throw champion in 2026, a year after winning a conference title in the discus on her way to Freshman of the Year honors. She already owns a top-three mark in program history in the hammer at 61.84m (202-11) and has three meets this season with a mark over 60 meters. Yoder, who scored in three different events at the MVC Championships, will be in the third flight of the hammer for her first NCAA East First Round appearance. She will throw seventh in that flight.

Where The Sycamores Are Seeded

Below is a list of where each of Indiana State’s athletes are seeded in the NCAA East First Round field.

Rachel Mehringer – 100m hurdles (third, 12.71)

Sloan Cox – shot put (22nd, 18.42m/60-5.25)

Emma Yoder – hammer throw (23rd, 61.84/202-11)

Collin Forrest – 110m hurdles (25th, 13.75)

Janiya Bowman – long jump (27th, 6.27m/20-7), 100m (34th, 11.29)

Kieran Barnewall – 110m hurdles (29th, 13.80)

Aliseonna Garnett – shot put (29th, 16.13m/52-11), discus (32nd, 53.71m/176-2)

Terrance O’Bannon – 100m (34th, 10.19)

Theo Thurmond – discus (45th, 54.39m/178-5)

Cora Williams – hammer throw (45th, 58.81m/192-11)

What’s At Stake

The top 12 finishers in each event will advance to the NCAA Outdoor National Championships June 10-13 in Eugene, Oregon.

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SOUTHERN INDIANA MEN’S BASKETBALL

EVANSVILLE, Ind.—University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball is adding 6-foot-1 sophomore point guard Yesan Warren for the 2026-27 season in an announcement by Screaming Eagles’ Head Coach Stan Gouard.

Warren joins a list of newcomers that includes 6-foot-2 junior guard Ari Gooch, 6-foot-6 senior guard LA Hayes, 6-foot-8 senior forward Donovan Hunter, 6-foot-9 sophomore guard Ebrahim Kaba, 6-foot-10 junior forward/center Johann Pautsch and 6-foot-2 junior point guard Josh Smith.

A native of Capital Heights, Maryland, Warren spent the 2025-26 season at Cal State Fullerton, where he did not see any action.

Prior to Cal State Fullerton, Warren began his collegiate career at Frank Phillips College in Borger, Texas. He averaged 3.6 points, 2.5 rebounds and a blistering 5.8 assists per game during the 2024-25 campaign and racked up a 4.5 assist-to-turnover ratio.

During the 2024-25 season, Warren was a teammate of fellow newcomer LA Hayes as well as returning guard Alem Fejzic.

Warren played three varsity seasons at Knoxville Catholic High School in Knoxville, Tennessee, where he led the team in points as a freshman and a team runner-up finish in the Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association Division II Tournament in 2022.

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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

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“SPORTS EXTRA”

TODAY IN BASEBALL HISTORY

1880 – Fred Goldsmith of the Chicago White Stockings shuts out the Buffalo Bisons, 11 – 0, on two hits. Chicago extends its winning streak to 13 games, to set a new National League record.

1896 – The Cleveland Spiders takes advantage of 13 bases on balls and three wild pitches by a severely discontrolled Jouett Meekin, to beat the New York Giants, 11 – 5.

1897 – The Cincinnati Reds acquire slick first baseman and good hitter Jake Beckley from the New York Giants.

1904 – Dan McGann of the New York Giants collects five stolen bases in one game against the Brooklyn Superbas to set a major league record, a feat not duplicated until August 24, 1974, by Davey Lopes. Otis Nixon eventually will set a new mark with six stolen bases on June 16, 1991.

1909 – In an American League game featuring a major league record-setting 44 assists by both teams, the Cleveland Naps defeat the St. Louis Browns, 5 – 2. The National League-high assist marks of April 23, 1903 and May 15, 1909 (both between the New York Giants and Cincinnati Reds) fall short of today’s record. Addie Joss for Cleveland and Barney Pelty for St. Louis are the pitchers as each team records 22 assists.

1911 – Art Fromme allow just one hit – a double by Honus Wagner in the 2nd inning – in pitching the Cincinnati Reds to a 1 – 0 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates.

1912 – New York Giants pitcher Red Ames steals home in the 5th inning of a 6 – 2 victory over the Brooklyn Dodgers.

1922 – Bibb Falk singles with one out in the 8th to break Urban Shocker’s bid for a perfect game. Falk comes in to score on Ray Schalk’s double, and the White Sox win the game, 2 – 1, in ten innings as Shocker gets tagged with the loss for the Browns.

1923 – At the Polo Grounds, Philadelphia Phillies slugger Cy Williams hits his 18th home run of the season, and his 15th of May, to set a new major league record for the month. The homer comes off New York Giants pitcher Rosy Ryan.

1937 – Carl Hubbell earns his 24th consecutive victory over two seasons and Mel Ott hits a 9th-inning home run as the New York Giants defeat the Cincinnati Reds, 3 – 2. Hubbell wins the game in relief. His 24-win string started on July 17, 1936.

1939 – For the first time in his career, Charlie Gehringer of the Detroit Tigers hits for the cycle, in a 12 – 5 win against the St. Louis Browns. Gehringer does it in order – single, double, triple, home run.

1946 – The outlaw Mexican League scuttles its competition, Mexico’s only league entry in organized baseball. There are now 43 minor leagues for 1946. No other minor leagues will fold this year.

1955 – Norm Zauchin of the Boston Red Sox hits three home runs with a double and ten RBI in the first five innings of a 16 – 0 victory over the Washington Senators.

1958 – Kokutetsu Swallows ace Masaichi Kaneda has his Nippon Pro Baseball-record consecutive shutout streak end at 64 1/3 IP. Hiromu Fujii of the Hiroshima Carp takes him deep to end the streak.

1960 – Baltimore Orioles catcher Clint Courtney uses an oversized mitt in an effort to handle the pitches of knuckleballer Hoyt Wilhelm. The mitt, designed by Baltimore manager Paul Richards, is 50 percent larger than the standard. Courtney handles Wilhelm’s pitches flawlessly in a 3 – 2 win over the Yankees. The oversized mitt will later be banned.

1964 – Roberto Clemente’s longest clout? Not nearly. His longest out? Could be. In the 8th inning, with a runner on second and two men out, with the Pirates down by two, Clemente tees off and delivers what is quite possibly the longest out of his career, a missile headed for the deepest reaches of Forbes Field but one that is collared by the Phillies’ Tony Gonzalez near the flag pole, some 450 feet away.

1968:

Major League Baseball expands outside the confines of the United States as the National League announces expansion for the first time in seven years, awarding franchises to Montreal as well as San Diego, to begin play next season.

Today is the only day on which two Hall of Famers are born: Jeff Bagwell in Boston, MA and Frank Thomas in Columbus, GA. Both will rank among the best sluggers and all-around hitters of the 1990s and 2000s and they will be their league’s respective MVP in 1994.

1974 – Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher Ken Brett no-hits the San Diego Padres until the 9th inning, settling for a two-hit, 6 – 0 shutout in the first game of the doubleheader. In the second game, Brett’s two-run pinch-triple gives Pittsburgh an 8 – 7 victory.

1988 – Dwight Evans of the Boston Red Sox collects his 2,000th career hit in a 3 – 2 loss to the Oakland Athletics.

1993 – Former Atlanta Braves All-Star Dale Murphy announces his retirement from baseball. The two-time National League MVP retires with a .265 batting average, 398 home runs and 1,266 runs batted in.

1997 – Ken Griffey, Jr. of the Seattle Mariners breaks his own major league record for home runs hit through May by connecting for his 23rd of the season in an 11 – 10 loss to Minnesota. Griffey breaks the mark he set in 1994 with 22 homers. In the same game, Mariners second baseman Joey Cora extends his hitting streak to 22 games, to set a team record and tie the American League mark for switch-hitters.

2000:

The St. Louis Cardinals pay tribute to Dizzy Dean by dedicating a statue of the Hall of Fame pitcher by sculptor Harry Weber outside Busch Stadium. Dean joins Stan Musial, Red Schoendienst, Enos Slaughter, Bob Gibson, and Lou Brock who have also been honored in such a manner.

The Cincinnati Reds retire the Number 24 jersey worn by Hall of Famer Tony Perez, making it just the sixth to be retired by the oldest professional baseball organization. The former first baseman joins Fred Hutchinson (1), Johnny Bench (5), Joe Morgan (8), Ted Kluszewski (18) and Frank Robinson (20) in this hallowed club. Ken Griffey, Jr., after being acquired by the Reds in the off-season, agrees to switch his uniform number from 24 to 30, the number worn by his father, Ken Griffey Sr., as a member of the Big Red Machine.

2001 – Barry Bonds of the San Francisco Giants hits the 12,000th home run in Giants history. The home run comes off Colorado Rockies pitcher Denny Neagle in the 1st inning of a Giants 5 – 4 victory at Pacific Bell Park.

2003 – In Atlanta, Georgia, the U.S. 11th Circuit Court of Appeals upholds a decision preventing the Florida attorney general from investigating Major League Baseball’s 2001 attempt to eliminate two teams. The 11th circuit decision, by Judges Gerald B. Tjoflat, Susan H. Black and Richard W. Goldberg, is based on the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and state law rather than the sport’s antitrust exemption and is considered to be a major victory by the commissioner’s office.

2004 – Carlos Peña of the Detroit Tigers goes 6 for 6 with two home runs, five RBI and four runs in a 17 – 7 victory over Kansas City.

2006 – At Fenway Park, Curt Schilling becomes the 104th pitcher in major league history to reach 200 wins in the 6 – 4 triumph over Tampa Bay. Trot Nixon has three RBI, Mark Loretta goes 3 for 5 with an RBI, and Jonathan Papelbon notches his 18th save in as many opportunities from the start of his career, extending his major league record. Schilling becomes only the fourth pitcher to earn his 200th win while in a Red Sox uniform, joining Lefty Grove (1934), Ferguson Jenkins (1976) and Luis Tiant (1978).

2008 – The Indians complete a triple steal during a 8 – 2 win over the ChiSox. It is the first in the majors in 21 years. With a 5 – 2 score in the 6th and the bases loaded, Ehren Wassermann tries to pick Jamey Carroll off first base. While Carroll is in a rundown, David Dellucci dashes for home and beats Paul Konerko’s throw to Toby Hall. Grady Sizemore swipes third on the play while Carroll successfully makes it to second.

2009 – The Twins beat the Red Sox, 4 – 2, taking advantage of Boston wildness. The Red Sox throw six wild pitches, tying the modern major league record. Daisuke Matsuzaka throws four, the first Red Sox hurler to do so since Milt Gaston in 1929.

2010:

Mike Pelfrey pitches the Mets’ third consecutive shutout over the Phillies, 3 – 0 at Citi Field. The Phillies’ hitting woes started even before coming to New York, when they were shut out for eight innings by veteran knuckleballer Tim Wakefield two days before facing the Mets. The Mets’ own knuckleballer, R.A. Dickey, baffled the Phils in the first game of the series, followed by Japanese rookie Hisanori Takahashi in the second game. The Mets have only swept a series with three shutouts one other time in their history, during their Amazin’ year of 1969, also against Philadelphia.

Jason Hammel of the Rockies sets a personal best with eight strikeouts before he runs into trouble in the 6th inning of a game against the Diamondbacks. He departs with a 3 – 2 lead, but the Rockies’ hitters go on a late-game power surge, with Seth Smith, Carlos Gonzalez and Ryan Spilborghs hitting consecutive 7th-inning home runs to seal an 8 – 2 win. The Rockies have won seven of eight, keeping pace in the surprisingly competitive NL West with the San Diego Padres, who have been making headlines with a sub-3.00 team ERA, and the surging Los Angeles Dodgers, who are 17-7 in May.

2011:

The Red Sox win their 12th game in their last 14 to move into first place in the AL East. Today, they roll for a 6 – 3 win over Detroit behind ageless pitcher Tim Wakefield and homers by Jacoby Ellsbury and Carl Crawford.

SS Brandon Crawford hits a grand slam in his first major league game to lead the Giants to a 5 – 4 win over Milwaukee. Tim Lincecum is the winner over Shaun Marcum. The Giants get a scare in the 8th when Prince Fielder bowls over C Eli Whiteside in a collision at the plate; the play comes only two days after starting catcher Buster Posey was lost for the season with a broken ankle as the result of a similar collision, but Whiteside is okay and can complete the game.

2012:

The Rockies and Reds combine for nine home runs, the most ever hit in a single game at Great American Ballpark, as the Reds prevail, 7 – 5. Mat Latos allows five hits in 7 1/3 innings – all of them solo homers – to pick up the win; Jamie Moyer who has surrendered more long balls than anyone in major league history, adds another four to his total. Eight different players go deep, with Colorado’s Carlos Gonzalez the only man to do so twice.

Paul Konerko hits his 400th homer in a White Sox uniform, a three-run shot off Ubaldo Jimenez in the 4th, to lead Chicago to a 12 – 6 win over Cleveland, completing a three-game sweep. Konerko is now batting .399 for the year and the Sox have moved to within half a game of the AL Central-leading Indians.

2013 – Yu Darvish adds to his major league-leading strikeout total by fanning 14 batters, matching a career high, but he gives up a two-run game-tying homer to Didi Gregorius in the 8th, and the Rangers surrender another run in the 9th, as Arizona completes a doubleheader sweep, 5 – 3 and 5 – 4. The D-Backs’ Tyler Skaggs strikes out nine and picks up the win in the opener in a one-day call-up from the minors.

2014 – Things have not been going so well on the mound for Brewers pitcher Yovani Gallardo this year, but today it’s with his bat that he gives his team a win. Called upon as a pinch-hitter in the 10th inning against the Orioles, he hits a double off T.J. McFarland to drive in Mark Reynolds from first base for a 7 – 6 win. The Orioles had walked Reynolds intentionally with two outs and the bases empty, knowing P Francisco Rodriguez was due up next and that Milwaukee had used all of its position players already. However, Gallardo, who boasts a lifetime .202 batting average and 12 homers, makes them pay for their presumption that pitchers cannot hit.

2015:

The Dodgers and Braves complete a six-player trade, with 3B Juan Uribe and P Chris Withrow headed to Atlanta in return for IF Alberto Callaspo and Ps Eric Stults, Ian Thomas and Juan Jaime. Callaspo originally blocked the trade, as is his right as a player who was signed as a free agent before the season, but changes his mind after thinking about it for a day.

Cubs pitcher Jon Lester sets a new record for most hitless at bats from the start of a career by going 0 for 2 in a game against the Nationals. Coming into the game, he had been tied with Joey Hamilton with 57 fruitless at-bats.

SUNY Cortland wins the 2015 Division III College World Series for their first national title. Trailing the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, 2 – 1, in the 9th, Cortland scores five times in the inning to avoid a Game 3. Nick Hart singles in Matthew Michalski with the tying run and Justin Teague with the winning run. Seth Lamando gets the win and Conrad Ziemendorf is named Most Outstanding Player.

2018 – A game between between the Astros and Indians begins as a pitcher’s duel between Gerrit Cole and Trevor Bauer, former college teammates and rivals at UCLA, but ends with a 10 – 9 Indians win in 14 innings. Bauer strikes out 13 in 7 1/3 innings for Cleveland, while Cole has eight in seven innings. Both bullpens falter however, as Houston scores six runs in the 8th, but Cleveland comes back with five in the bottom of the 9th to force extra innings. Evan Gattis hits a three-run homer off Ben Taylor for the Astros, before three relievers allow seven hits to the Indians in the 9th, with a two-out, two-run single by Michael Brantley being the key blow. The two teams exchange solo home runs in the 13th, with Gattis going deep again and Yonder Alonso replying, before Greg Allen homers off Brad Peacock’s first pitch of the bottom of the 14th to end the game.

2019 – Cody Bellinger of the Dodgers continues to have a superlative season. Today, in a 9 – 5 win over the Mets, he hits his 19th homer of the year and also throws out two baserunners. He nabs Michael Conforto at home in the 1st, and then gets Carlos Gomez at third base in the 8th, completing a double play on a throw from just in front of the warning track in right field.

2021:

The Cubs’ Javier Baez is at the center of one of the wildest baserunning plays anyone has ever seen. With two outs in the 3rd inning and Willson Contreras on second base, he hits what looks like a routine inning-ending grounder to third base. However, Pirates 3B Erik Gonzalez throws wildly to first base, pulling 1B Will Craig off the bag, towards home. Baez abruptly stops running, and retreats towards home, and Craig, instead of simply touching the nearby bag to end the inning, begins to chase him. Meanwhile, Contreras has never stopped running and is about to cross home plate. Craig sees him and relays to C Michael Perez, but his throw is high and Contreras slides safely under the tag. Seeing this, Baez, who has practically returned to home plate by that point, turns around again and dashes back towards first base. Had 2B Adam Frazier thought to cover the bag, Baez would have been put out easily and Contreras’ run would have been erased, but Frazier is still dashing to reach the base as well, and Perez’s throw ends up in right field. Not only is Baez not put out, he makes it all the way to second base on a play that brings back fond memories of Little League baseball mayhem to everyone who witnesses it.

Curaçao Neptunus beats the Hoofddorp Pioniers, 3 – 2. Diegomar Markwell wins his 150th Hoofdklasse game, tying Bart Volkerijk for second all-time behind former teammate Rob Cordemans. Kevin Kelly saves Markwell’s historic win, while Dudley Leonora gets three hits and Stijn van der Meer drives in a pair for the offensive support.

2022 – Down 8 – 2 heading into the top of the 7th against the Red Sox, the Orioles score ten unanswered runs over the last three innings to win the game, 12 – 8. The comeback includes a three-run homer by Jorge Mateo off Jake Diekman in the 7th, a two-run shot by Austin Hays off John Schreiber when the Birds tie the score in the 8th, and a four-run outburst against Matt Strahm and Hirokazu Sawamura in the 9th, with Anthony Santander, who collects three RBIs in the game, driving in the go-ahead run. It had been six years since the Orioles had last erased a six-run deficit.

Births[edit]

1843 – John Rogers, owner (d. 1910)

1849 – Jimmy Hallinan, infielder (d. 1879)

1851 – George Walton, umpire (d. 1927)

1862 – Ed Crane, pitcher (d. 1896)

1874 – Lefty Hopper, pitcher (d. 1959)

1882 – Bill Ludwig, catcher (d. 1947)

1890 – Johnny Miller, infielder (d. 1972)

1894 – Frank Snyder, catcher (d. 1962)

1895 – Manuel Oliveros, minor league manager; Salón de la Fama (d. 1983)

1903 – Ted Stockard, infielder (d. 1962)

1908 – Euel Moore, pitcher (d. 1989)

1908 – Samuel Thompson, pitcher (d. 1978)

1909 – Pinky Higgins, infielder, manager; All-Star (d. 1969)

1912 – Terry Moore, outfielder, manager; All-Star (d. 1995)

1913 – Hal Spindel, catcher (d. 2002)

1914 – Tsuna Oishi, NPB pitcher (d. ????)

1914 – Johnny Welaj, outfielder (d. 2003)

1916 – John Dudra, infielder (d. 1965)

1916 – Yoshitake Tsutsui, NPB catcher

1923 – Juzo Sanada, NPB pitcher ;Japanese Baseball Hall of Fame (d. 1994)

1924 – Tom Hurd, pitcher (d. 1982)

1926 – Harvey Gentry, pinch hitter (d. 2018)

1929 – George O’Donnell, pitcher (d. 2012)

1933 – Ted Rogers, owner (d. 2008)

1934 – Ray Daviault, pitcher (d. 2020)

1935 – Jerry Kindall, infielder (d. 2017)

1937 – Seiji Yamabe, NPB pitcher

1938 – Fred Bruckbauer, pitcher (d. 2007)

1941 – Dan Ardell, infielder

1944 – Jim Holt, outfielder (d. 2019)

1947 – Bill Marchant, college coach (d. 2016)

1948 – Gary Nolan, pitcher; All-Star

1949 – Terry Collins, , manager

1949 – Mark Connor, coach

1951 – Melissa Ludtke, writer

1954 – Mike Ondina, minor league outfielder

1954 – Nobuhiro Takashiro, NPB infielder (d. 2025)

1955 – Ross Baumgarten, pitcher

1956 – Bud Anderson, pitcher

1956 – Mark Clear, pitcher; All-Star

1958 – Hua-Wei Lin, Taiwan national team infielder and manager

1959 – Ron Tingley, catcher

1961 – Atsushi Okajima, NPB catcher

1961 – Tsuyoshi Uchida, NPB catcher

1962 – Takahiro Shirahata, NPB infielder

1963 – Scott Jordan, outfielder

1963 – Edwin Nunez, pitcher

1964 – Ray Young, NPB pitcher

1965 – Jacob Brumfield, outfielder

1966 – Akishigo Hosaka, Japanese national team pitcher

1966 – John Jaha, infielder; All-Star

1966 – Jaime Roseboro, minor league outfielder

1966 – Jim Vatcher, outfielder

1968 – Jeff Bagwell, infielder; All-Star

1968 – Ota Kaňok, Extraliga outfielder; Czech Baseball Hall of Fame

1968 – Udo Kirschner, Bundesliga pitcher

1968 – Frank Thomas, infielder; All-Star; Hall of Fame

1969 – Todd Hundley, catcher; All-Star

1969 – Dennis McCaffery, minor league outfielder

1970 – Daigo Matsuoka, NPB pitcher

1972 – Hirotoshi Kitagawa, NPB infielder

1972 – Min-kuk Kim, KBO pitcher

1972 – Jean-Baptiste Meunier, Division Elite infielder

1973 – Atsushi Fukaya, NPB umpire

1974 – Kazuhiko Shiotani, NPB catcher

1976 – Joel Fuentes, minor league infielder and manager

1976 – Jung-jin Park, KBO pitcher

1977 – Mike Caruso, infielder

1979 – Alejandro Chavez, minor league pitcher

1979 – Hsing-Chang Chen, CPBL pitcher

1980 – Shih-Hua Wang, CPBL infielder

1981 – Danny Betancourt, Cuban League pitcher

1982 – Brad Knox, minor league pitcher

1983 – Justin Orenduff, minor league pitcher

1983 – Takayuki Terauchi, NPB infielder

1984 – Miguel Gonzalez, pitcher

1984 – Justin Vaclavik, minor league pitcher

1985 – Chien-Ming Chiang, NPB pitcher

1985 – Takehiro Donoue, NPB outfielder

1986 – Brendan Lafferty, minor league pitcher

1988 – Brad Boxberger, pitcher; All-Star

1988 – Adnan Jaber, Palestinian national team infielder

1989 – Kyle Hald, minor league pitcher

1990 – Shingo Ito, NPB outfielder

1990 – Saliya Wijesinghe, Sri Lankan national team pitcher

1991 – Jairo Diaz, pitcher

1991 – Matt Soren, minor league pitcher

1992 – Tariq Suboh, Palestinian national team catcher

1993 – Tanner Anderson, pitcher

1993 – Philipp Brenner, Austrian national team infielder

1993 – Toshitake Yokoo, NPB infielder

1994 – Jose Berrios, pitcher; All-Star

1994 – Josh Guyer, minor league pitcher

1994 – Grayson Long, minor league pitcher

1994 – Danny Young, pitcher

1995 – Yoan Moncada, infielder

1995 – Wo-Sau Pun, Hong Kong national team outfielder

1995 – Frankie Rios, minor league infielder

1995 – Fabián Vizcaino, minor league catcher

1996 – Isan Diaz, infielder

1996 – Shota Suekane, NPB outfielder

1999 – Nick Gonzales, infielder

1999 – Estamy Ureña, NPB infielder

2000 – Ignacio Castro, Peruvian national team catcher

2000 – Brandyn Garcia, pitcher

2004 – Yuta Saitoh, NPB pitcher

Deaths[edit]

1917 – Tom Ford, pitcher (b. 1866)

1921 – Gil Hatfield, infielder (b. 1855)

1937 – Frank Grant, Negro League infielder; Hall of Famer (b. 1865)

1945 – Walter Carlisle, outfielder (b. 1883)

1947 – Ed Konetchy, infielder (b. 1885)

1947 – Harry Sage, catcher (b. 1864)

1949 – Jim Canavan, infielder (b. 1866)

1952 – Lew Ritter, catcher (b. 1875)

1953 – Jesse Burkett, outfielder; Hall of Famer (b. 1868)

1954 – Manuel Stewart, infielder (b. 1922)

1956 – Freddy Sale, pitcher (b. 1902)

1963 – Dave Jolly, pitcher (b. 1924)

1964 – Lou Jorda, umpire (b. 1893)

1966 – Red Rowe, minor league catcher and manager (b. 1887)

1968 – Herman Bronkie, infielder (b. 1885)

1968 – Rip Collins, pitcher (b. 1896)

1968 – Charlie Jackson, outfielder (b. 1894)

1969 – Lou Jackson, outfielder (b. 1935)

1971 – Jack Doscher, pitcher (b. 1880)

1979 – Norm Glaser, pitcher (b. 1894)

1981 – Elmer Leonard, pitcher (b. 1888)

1990 – José Del Vecchio, promoter (b. 1917)

1992 – Akira Takahashi, NPB pitcher (b. 1931)

1993 – Tomás Arroyo, minor league pitcher; Salon de la Fama (b. 1926)

1993 – Rex Carr, scout (b. 1915)

1998 – Yoshimi Ebara, NPB pitcher (b. 1924)

2000 – Maurice Richard, minor league infielder (b. 1921)

2002 – Luís Fiuza, Cuban national team pitcher (b. 1928)

2006 – Paul Gleason, minor league player (b. 1939)

2010 – Lou Arnold, AAGPBL pitcher (b. 1923)

2011 – Bill Harris, pitcher (b. 1930)

2014 – Charlie Senger, minor league pitcher (b. approx 1931)

2014 – Roberto Vargas, pitcher (b. 1929)

2015 – Jack Baker, college coach (b. 1936)

2015 – Luis DeLeon, minor league pitcher (b. 1932)

2016 – Jack Allen, minor league manager (b. 1935)

2016 – Louise Sauer, AAGPBL pitcher (b. 1929)

2018 – Russell Buhite, minor league infielder (b. 1938)

2019 – Bill Buckner, infielder; All-Star (b. 1949)

2019 – Kelly Paris, infielder (b. 1957)

2025 – Dick Jackson, umpire (b. 1946)

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

TV SPORTS TODAY

(All times Eastern)

Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts

Wednesday, May 27

COLLEGE GOLF (WOMEN’S)

6 p.m.

GOLF — NCAA Tournament: Championships, Omni La Costa Resort & Spa, Carlsbad, Calif.

MLB BASEBALL

1 p.m.

MLBN — Washington at Cleveland (1:10 p.m.)

4 p.m.

MLBN — Arizona at San Francisco (joined in progress) (3:45 p.m.)

6:30 p.m.

FS1 — Tampa Bay at Baltimore (6:35 p.m.)

7:40 p.m.

PRIME VIDEO — N.Y. Yankees at Kansas City

10 p.m.

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

NBA BASKETBALL

8:10 p.m.

ESPN — Eastern Conference Final: Cleveland at New York, Game 5 (if necessary)

NHL HOCKEY

8 p.m.

TNT — Eastern Conference Final: Carolina at Montreal, Game 4

TRUTV — Eastern Conference Final: Carolina at Montreal, Game 4

TENNIS

6 a.m.

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

2 p.m.

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

6 a.m. (Thursday)

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

WNBA BASKETBALL

7 p.m.

USA — Phoenix at New York

9 p.m.

USA — Atlanta at Minnesota

_____

Thursday, May 28

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

Noon

ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Game 1, Oklahoma City, Okla.

2:30 p.m.

ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Game 2, Oklahoma City, Okla.

7 p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Game 3, Oklahoma City, Okla.

9:30 p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Game 4, Oklahoma City, Okla.

GOLF

7 a.m.

GOLF — DP World Tour: Austrian Alpine Open presented by Kitzbühel Tirol, First Round, Golfclub Kitzbühel-Schwarzsee-Reith, Kitzbühel, Austria

4 p.m.

GOLF — PGA Tour: Charles Schwab Challenge, First Round, Colonial Country Club, Fort Worth, Texas

MLB BASEBALL

1 p.m.

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

4 p.m.

MLBN — Atlanta at Boston (4:10 p.m.)

7 p.m.

MLBN — Toronto at Baltimore (joined in progress) (6:35 p.m.)

NBA BASKETBALL

8:30 p.m.

NBC — Western Conference Final: Oklahoma City at San Antonio, Game 6 (if necessary)

PEACOCK — Western Conference Final: San Antonio at Oklahoma City, Game 6 (if necessary)

NHL HOCKEY

8 p.m.

ESPN — Western Conference Final: Vegas at Colorado, Game 5 (if necessary)

TENNIS

6 a.m.

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

2 p.m.

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

6 a.m. (Friday)

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

WNBA BASKETBALL

8 p.m.

PRIME VIDEO — Las Vegas at Dallas

10 p.m.

PRIME VIDEO — Indiana at Golden State

_____

Friday, May 29

AUTO RACING

3 p.m.

FS2 — NTT IndyCar Series: Practice, Streets of Detroit, Detroit

7 p.m.

PRIME VIDEO — NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series: Flote 200, Nashville Superspeedway, Lebanon, Tenn.

COLLEGE BASEBALL

Noon

ACCN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPN2 — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

SECN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

3 p.m.

ACCN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

SECN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

6 p.m.

ACCN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

SECN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

9 p.m.

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

7 p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Game 5, Oklahoma City, Okla.

9:30 p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Game 6, Oklahoma City, Okla.

GOLF

7 a.m.

GOLF — DP World Tour: Austrian Alpine Open presented by Kitzbühel Tirol, Second Round, Golfclub Kitzbühel-Schwarzsee-Reith, Kitzbühel, Austria

Noon

GOLF — LPGA Tour: ShopRite LPGA powered by Wakefern, First Round, Seaview Hotel & Golf Club (Bay Course), Galloway, N.J.

4 p.m.

GOLF — PGA Tour: Charles Schwab Challenge, Second Round, Colonial Country Club, Fort Worth, Texas

MLB BASEBALL

6:30 p.m.

MLBN — Regional Coverage: Atlanta at Cincinnati (6:40 p.m.) OR San Diego at Washington (6:45 p.m.)

6:40 p.m.

APPLE TV — Minnesota at Pittsburgh

9:30 p.m.

MLBN — Regional Coverage: N.Y. Yankees at Athletics (9:40 p.m.) OR Arizona at Seattle (joined in progress) (10:10 p.m.)

10:10 p.m.

APPLE TV — Philadelphia at L.A. Dodgers

NBA BASKETBALL

8:10 p.m.

ESPN — Eastern Conference Final: New York at Cleveland, Game 6 (if necessary)

NHL HOCKEY

8 p.m.

TNT — Eastern Conference Final: Montreal at Carolina, Game 5 (if necessary)

TRUTV — Eastern Conference Final: Montreal at Carolina, Game 5 (if necessary)

TENNIS

6 a.m.

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

2 p.m.

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

6 a.m. (Saturday)

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

UFL FOOTBALL

8 p.m.

FOX — Dallas at St. Louis

WNBA BASKETBALL

7:30 p.m.

ION — TBA

10 p.m.

ION — Atlanta at Portland

_____

Saturday, May 30

AUTO RACING

9 a.m.

FS1 — NTT IndyCar Series: Practice, Streets of Detroit, Detroit

1 p.m.

FS1 — NTT IndyCar Series: Qualifying, Streets of Detroit, Detroit

4 p.m.

NBC — IMSA WeatherTech SportsCar Championship: Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix Presented By Lear, Detroit Street Circuit, Detroit

7:30 p.m.

CW — NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series: Sports Illustrated Resorts 250, Nashville Superspeedway, Lebanon, Tenn.

BOXING

9 p.m.

ESPN — MVPW-03: Main Card, El Paso, Texas

COLLEGE BASEBALL

Noon

ACCN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPN2 — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

1 p.m.

SECN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

3 p.m.

ACCN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

4 p.m.

SECN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

6 p.m.

ACCN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPN2 — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

7 p.m.

SECN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

9 p.m.

ESPN2 — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

3 p.m.

ABC — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Game 7, Oklahoma City, Okla.

7 p.m.

ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Game 8, Oklahoma City, Okla.

GOLF

7 a.m.

GOLF — DP World Tour: Austrian Alpine Open presented by Kitzbühel Tirol, Third Round, Golfclub Kitzbühel-Schwarzsee-Reith, Kitzbühel, Austria

1:30 p.m.

GOLF — PGA Tour: Charles Schwab Challenge, Third Round, Colonial Country Club, Fort Worth, Texas

3:30 p.m.

CBS — PGA Tour: Charles Schwab Challenge, Third Round, Colonial Country Club, Fort Worth, Texas

GOLF — LPGA Tour: ShopRite LPGA powered by Wakefern, Second Round, Seaview Hotel & Golf Club (Bay Course), Galloway, N.J.

6 a.m. (Sunday)

GOLF — DP World Tour: Austrian Alpine Open presented by Kitzbühel Tirol, Final Round, Golfclub Kitzbühel-Schwarzsee-Reith, Kitzbühel, Austria

LACROSSE (MEN’S)

1 p.m.

ABC — PLL: New York at Denver

MLB BASEBALL

4 p.m.

FS1 — Kansas City at Texas (4:05 p.m.)

7 p.m.

FOX — Regional Coverage: Atlanta at Cincinnati (7:15 p.m.) OR Chicago Cubs at St. Louis (7:15 p.m.)

10 p.m.

MLBN — Regional Coverage: Philadelphia at L.A. Dodgers (10:10 p.m.) OR Arizona at Seattle (10:10 p.m.)

NBA BASKETBALL

8 p.m.

NBC — Western Conference Final: San Antonio at Oklahoma City, Game 7 (if necessary)

PEACOCK — Western Conference Final: San Antonio at Oklahoma City, Game 7 (if necessary)

NHL HOCKEY

8 p.m.

ABC — Western Conference Final: Colorado at Vegas, Game 6 (if necessary)

SOCCER (MEN’S)

Noon

CBS — UEFA Champions League: Paris Saint-Germain vs. Arsenal, Final, Budapest, Hungary

TENNIS

6 a.m.

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

2 p.m.

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

6 a.m. (Sunday)

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

UFL FOOTBALL

3 p.m.

ESPN2 — Houston at Birmingham

WNBA BASKETBALL

8 p.m.

CBS — Indiana at Portland

_____

Sunday, May 31

AUTO RACING

9:30 a.m.

FS1 — NTT IndyCar Series: Warmup, Streets of Detroit, Detroit

12:30 p.m.

FOX — NTT IndyCar Series: Chevrolet Detroit Grand Prix, Streets of Detroit, Detroit

3 p.m.

FOX — NHRA: NHRA Potomac Nationals presented by JEGS, Maryland International Raceway, Mechanicsville, Md.

7 p.m.

PRIME VIDEO — NASCAR Cup Series: Cracker Barrel 400, Nashville Superspeedway, Lebanon, Tenn.

COLLEGE BASEBALL

Noon

ACCN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPN2 — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

SECN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

3 p.m.

ACCN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPN2 — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

SECN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

6 p.m.

ACCN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

SECN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

9 p.m.

ESPN2 — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Regional

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

3 p.m.

ABC — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Game 9, Oklahoma City, Okla.

7 p.m.

ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Game 10, Oklahoma City, Okla.

GOLF

7 a.m.

GOLF — DP World Tour: Austrian Alpine Open presented by Kitzbühel Tirol, Final Round, Golfclub Kitzbühel-Schwarzsee-Reith, Kitzbühel, Austria

1 p.m.

GOLF — PGA Tour: Charles Schwab Challenge, Final Round, Colonial Country Club, Fort Worth, Texas

3 p.m.

CBS — PGA Tour: Charles Schwab Challenge, Final Round, Colonial Country Club, Fort Worth, Texas

GOLF — LPGA Tour: ShopRite LPGA powered by Wakefern, Final Round, Seaview Hotel & Golf Club (Bay Course), Galloway, N.J.

MLB BASEBALL

Noon

PEACOCK — Toronto at Baltimore (12:15 p.m.)

4 p.m.

MLBN — N.Y. Yankees at Athletics (4:05 p.m.)

7 p.m.

NBC — Chicago Cubs at St. Louis (7:20 p.m.)

PEACOCK — Chicago Cubs at St. Louis (7:20 p.m.)

NBA BASKETBALL

8:10 p.m.

ESPN — Eastern Conference Final: Cleveland at New York, Game 7 (if necessary)

NHL HOCKEY

TBA

TNT — Eastern Conference Final: Carolina at Montreal, Game 6 (if necessary)

TRUTV — Eastern Conference Final: Carolina at Montreal, Game 6 (if necessary)

TENNIS

6 a.m.

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

2 p.m.

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

6 a.m. (Monday)

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

UFL FOOTBALL

Noon

ABC — Orlando at DC

6 p.m.

FOX — Louisville at Columbus

WNBA BASKETBALL

3:30 p.m.

NBC — Las Vegas at Golden State PEACOCK — Las Vegas at Golden State

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