“THE SCOREBOARD”

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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)
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SCHOOLS: CHESTERTON, HOBART, MERRILLVILLE, PORTAGE, VALPARAISO

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

12. CENTER GROVE (6) 
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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) 
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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) 
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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) 
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SCHOOLS: COLUMBIA CITY, FAIRFIELD, NORTHWOOD, TIPPECANOE VALLEY, WAWASEE, WEST NOBLE

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

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

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

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

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

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

27. NORTHVIEW (6) 
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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) 
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SCHOOLS: BATESVILLE, FRANKLIN COUNTY, GREENSBURG, JENNINGS COUNTY, LAWRENCEBURG, SOUTH DEARBORN

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

31. JASPER (6) 
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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) 
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SCHOOLS: BREMEN, CAREER ACADEMY, JIMTOWN, KNOX, LAVILLE, WINAMAC COMMUNITY

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

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

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

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

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

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

41. GREENCASTLE (6) 
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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) 
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SCHOOLS: CENTERVILLE, HAGERSTOWN, NORTHEASTERN, SHENANDOAH, UNION COUNTY, WINCHESTER COMMUNITY

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

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

47. LINTON-STOCKTON (7) 
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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) 
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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) 
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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) 
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SCHOOLS: LOOGOOTEE, NORTH DAVIESS, ORLEANS, SHOALS, VINCENNES RIVET

63. NEW WASHINGTON (8) 
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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 SECTIONALS

CLASS 4A

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

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

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

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

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

6. HOMESTEAD (4)
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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) 
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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) 
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SCHOOLS: AVON, BEN DAVIS, BROWNSBURG, PIKE, PLAINFIELD, TRI-WEST HENDRICKS

12. DECATUR CENTRAL (6)
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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)
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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)
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SCHOOLS: HANOVER CENTRAL, ILLIANA CHRISTIAN, KANKAKEE VALLEY, LOWELL, RIVER FOREST

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

20. NORTHWOOD (6)
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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)
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SCHOOLS: BREMEN, JIMTOWN, KNOX, LAVILLE, WINAMAC COMMUNITY

35. WESTVIEW (6)
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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)
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SCHOOLS: ALEXANDRIA MONROE, BLACKFORD, EASTBROOK, MADISON-GRANT, WAPAHANI

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

42. MONROVIA (4)
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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)
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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

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 VS. HERITAGE CHRISTIAN

7:30 PM     ST. JOSEPH’S VS. EVANSVILLE MEMORIAL

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

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

COLLEGE BASEBALL SCORES

https://d1baseball.com/scores/?date=20260524

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

COLLEGE SOFTBALL SCORES

https://d1softball.com/scores/?date=20260524

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

DIVISION 1 MEN’S LAX SCORES

FINAL

MONDAY

NOTRE DAME VS. PRINCETON 1:00

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

DIVISION 1 WOMEN’S LAX SCORES

FINALS SUNDAY

NORTHWESTERN 14  NORTH CAROLINA 11

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

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 AT CLEVELAND | MONDAY MAY 25 (8 ET, ESPN)

GAME 5: CLEVELAND AT NEW YORK | WEDNESDAY MAY 27 (8 ET, ESPN)*

GAME 6: NEW YORK AT CLEVELAND | FRIDAY MAY 29 (8 ET, ESPN)*

GAME 7: CLEVELAND AT NEW YORK | SUNDAY MAY 31 (8 ET, ESPN)*

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 TIED 1-1)

GAME 5: SAN ANTONIO AT OKLAHOMA CITY | TUESDAY MAY 26 (8:30 ET, NBC/PEACOCK)*

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: MON, MAY 25 – CAROLINA AT MONTREAL, 8 P.M. ET (TNT, SN, CBC)
  • 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: TUE, MAY 26 – COLORADO AT VEGAS, 9 P.M. ET (ESPN, SN, CBC)
  • GAME 5:* THU, MAY 28 – VEGAS AT COLORADO, 8 P.M. ET (ESPN)
  • GAME 6:* SAT, MAY 30 – COLORADO AT VEGAS, 8 P.M. ET (ABC, SN, CBC)
  • GAME 7:* MON, JUNE 1 – VEGAS AT COLORADO, 8 P.M. ET (ESPN, SN, CBC) 

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

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

PITTSBURGH 4 TORONTO 1

BALTIMORE 5 DETROIT 3

NY YANKEES 2 TAMPA BAY 0

MINNESOTA 6 BOSTON 5

CLEVELAND 3 PHILADELPHIA 1

MIAMI 4 NY METS 0

KANSAS CITY 8 SEATTLE 6

LA DODGERS 5 MILWAUKEE 1

HOUSTON 8 CHICAGO CUBS 5

SAN FRANCISCO 8 CHICAGO WHITE SOX 5

ARIZONA 9 COLORADO 1

WASHINGTON 2 ATLANTA 1

LAS VEGAS 5 SAN DIEGO 2

DETROIT 4 BALTIMORE 1

LA ANGELS 2 TEXAS 1

ST. LOUIS AT CINCINNATI POSTPONED

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

MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

TOLEDO 5 INDIANAPOLIS 3

TOLEDO 8 INDIANAPOLIS 4

FT. WAYNE 6 DAYTON 3

SOUTH BEND 5 WEST MICHIGAN 4

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

WNBA

DREAM 82 MERCURY 80

WINGS 91 LIBERTY 76

STORM 97 MYSTICS 85

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

UFL SCORES

KINGS 37 RENEGADES 23

BATTLEHAWKS 21 GAMBLERS 15

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

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER

COLUMBUS 2 ATLANTA 0

MIAMI 6 PHILADELPHIA 4

LOS ANGELES 1 SEATTLE 0

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

MAJOR NATIONAL HEADLINES/RELEASES

INDY 500

ROSENQVIST WINS 1ST INDIANAPOLIS 500 IN CLOSEST FINISH EVER

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Felix Rosenqvist swung to the outside of David Malukas, then found a way past the Team Penske driver to win the closest Indianapolis 500 in history by a margin of 0.0233 seconds on Sunday.

Malukas looked like he was in position to win when he passed race leader Marcus Armstrong off the final restart with one lap to go while Meyer Shank Racing teammates Rosenqvist and Armstrong battled wheel to wheel down the back straightaway and through the fourth and final turn.

But Rosenqvist had just enough power to pull away from Armstrong and snake behind Malukas before making the decisive outside pass in the final 50 feet.

The closest previous finish came in 1992 when Al Unser Jr. beat Scott Goodyear across the yard of bricks by 0.043 seconds.

“The last five years I’ve been in the front and I’ve had a good enough car to probably win it, but today there was just something more,” said Rosenqvist, who had been fast all month. “It was an absolute rocket this month and year; it was still there in the race.”

It was Rosenqvist’s second career win in 120 IndyCar races and comes after the recent birth of his first child. His last win was on July 12, 2020, at Road America, making this his first win on an oval. Rosenqvist joins Kenny Brack and Marcus Ericsson as the only Swedes to win the race.

The wild finish began with a red flag that came out with seven laps to go because of a scary crash involving Indy 500 rookie Caio Collet. Flames billowed out of the side of his car as it skidded to a stop in the grass.

When racing resumed after a 10-minute delay, Armstrong and Malukas sped past the top two cars — Rosenqvist and Pato O’Ward. But with 3 1/2 laps left, the yellow flag came out again when Mick Schumacher, the son of seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher, brushed the wall in Turn 2.

On the final restart, Lap 200, Malukas sling-shotted his way past Armstrong for the lead and started pulling away from the two Meyer Shank Racing drivers. But Rosenqvist finally caught the Team Penske driver to win the biggest race of his career in the same month he became a father.

Malukas said he couldn’t think of what else he could have done to hang on to the lead.

“I was given two options: either I lift or I crash with Felix,” said Armstrong, who finished fifth. “I chose to lift. I don’t know if I could have done anything different.”

As Rosenqvist celebrated by sipping milk, then dumping it over his head, Malukas, a 24-year-old American, was consoled by his father in pit lane.

Malukas’ teammate Scott McLaughlin was third, and Rosenqvist’s best friend in racing, O’Ward, was fourth. O’Ward had two runner-up finishes and a third place in the past four years.

“I just don’t know what else we could have done,” Malukas said. “We were driving 150% that whole time. We had the fastest car out there, loved that whole race. It was ours to win and I knew that, so I just never pushed like that my whole life.”

It was a strange day on the 2.5-mile Brickyard.

There was a 12-minute rain delay near the midway point of the race and the threat of more rain the rest of the afternoon changed strategies throughout the day. It looked like Rosenqvist and O’Ward had the advantage over the final 25 laps because of pit strategy.

But Malukas and McLaughlin fought their way back into contention as other drivers such as defending Indy champion and pole winner Alex Palou of Chip Ganassi Racing faded to seventh.

Palou led the most laps (59), had the most on-track passes (60) and retained the points lead. Malukas, however, passed Kyle Kirkwood for second in the standings. The Chicago native trails the four-time series champion and 2025 Indy winner by 40 points.

The rain didn’t return until Rosenqvist was celebrating.

Double trouble

Katherine Legge’s attempt to become the first woman to complete “The Double” ended after just 17 laps when she couldn’t avoid Ryan Hunter-Reay’s spinning car. Legge’s car skidded down the track and into the inside wall in Turn 2.

The English driver was checked at the track’s infield medical care center and was released. She was still planning to travel to Charlotte, North Carolia, for Sunday night’s Coca-Cola 600.

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

NBA

VICTOR WEMBANYAMA (33 POINTS), SPURS ROUT THUNDER TO EVEN SERIES

Victor Wembanyama had 33 points to lead the San Antonio Spurs to a 103-82 home win over the Oklahoma City Thunder on Sunday to even the Western Conference finals at two games each.

Wembanyama added eight rebounds, five assists, three blocks and two steals.

The best-of-seven series returns to Oklahoma City for Tuesday’s Game 5.

The Thunder shot just 33% from the field, their worst shooting percentage in any game since March 2022 and worst in a playoff game since 2020. Oklahoma City also shot just 18.2% from 3-point range.

The Spurs took control early with a big run for the second consecutive game. In Friday’s Game 3, San Antonio opened with a 15-0 run before losing 123-108.

On Sunday, San Antonio scored 16 consecutive points in four minutes to build another 15-point lead.

The Spurs hit five of six shots during the stretch while Oklahoma City was 0 for 7 with three turnovers.

With about a minute to go in the first half, Oklahoma City trimmed a deficit that was as large as 15 in the first quarter to five.

But the Spurs scored seven points in the final minute to stretch the lead back to 12 at the break. Wembanyama added the exclamation point, hitting a 3-pointer from near midcourt as time expired.

Oklahoma City’s 38 first-half points were its fewest of the season.

The Spurs kept their foot on the gas to start the second half, posting a 20-7 run over nearly seven minutes to start the third quarter.

After playing the entire third quarter and with the game virtually decided, Oklahoma City’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander sat the rest of the way.

The Spurs changed up their defense on Gilgeous-Alexander, mostly defending the two-time reigning MVP one-on-one, but constantly rotating on him.

Gilgeous-Alexander finished with 19 points on 6-of-15 shooting.

No other Thunder player scored more than 12.

Oklahoma City’s bench had been key to grabbing the series lead through three games, with the Thunder reserves outscoring San Antonio’s 183-64.

But without starter Jalen Williams and his recent replacement, Ajay Mitchell, available due to injuries, the Thunder reserves struggled to find footing.

Alex Caruso, who had averaged 21 points per game in the series, was scoreless on just one shot attempt as the Thunder bench outscored San Antonio’s just 34-30.

Stephon Castle, who struggled with turnovers over the first two games, had 13 points and just one turnover. De’Aaron Fox had 12 points, 10 rebounds and five assists with no turnovers as the Spurs shot 38.9% from the field and 27.3% from beyond the arc.

=====

SHAI GILGEOUS-ALEXANDER, NIKOLA JOKIC TOP ALL-NBA FIRST-TEAM PICKS

Most Valuable Player Shai Gilgeous-Alexander of the Oklahoma City Thunder and Nikola Jokic of the Denver Nuggets were unanimous selections to the All-NBA first team, announced Sunday night.

Both players received all 100 first-team votes from a media panel for 500 total points.

Victor Wembanyama (498) of the San Antonio Spurs had one second-place vote to fall short of being a unanimous choice. Luka Doncic (91 first-place votes, 482 points) of the Los Angeles Lakers and Cade Cunningham (60, 414) of the Detroit Pistons also made the first team.

Gilgeous-Alexander, who won his second straight MVP award earlier this month, is part of the All-NBA first team for the fourth straight season. He averaged 31.1 points, a career-best 6.6 assists and 4.3 rebounds while shooting 55.3% from the field this season.

Jokic, a three-time MVP, finished second behind Gilgeous-Alexander. He earned his sixth All-NBA first-team selection after averaging 27.7 points and leading the league in both rebounds (12.9) and assists (career-high 10.7) per  game while joining Russell Westbrook as the only players in NBA history to average a triple-double in multiple seasons.

Wembanyama made first-team All-NBA for the initial time. He finished third in MVP voting and was the unanimous Defensive Player of the Year. Wembanyama averaged a career-best 25.0 points and 11.5 rebounds and led the league with 3.1 blocks per game.

Doncic and Cunningham played in 64 games apiece — one shy of the 65-game threshold for awards eligibility — but won appeals to be considered for awards. Doncic missed two games by returning to Slovenia for the birth of his daughter and injured a hamstring in his 64th game and missed the rest of the regular season, while Cunningham missed 11 games due to a collapsed lung.

Doncic led the NBA in scoring (33.5) for the second time in his career while receiving first-team All-NBA honors for the sixth time and first with the Lakers. His other five selections came with the Dallas Mavericks. He set a Lakers record with 254 3-pointers and also averaged 8.3 assists and 7.7 rebounds.

Cunningham has been the biggest factor in the rise of the Pistons, who had the best record in the Eastern Conference in the regular season. He earned his initial first-team All-NBA selection by averaging 23.9 points, a career-best 9.9 assists and 5.5 rebounds.

Jaylen Brown of the Boston Celtics (384 points) received 44 first-place votes while landing on the second team. Joining him were Kawhi Leonard of the Los Angeles Clippers (four, 277), Donovan Mitchell of the Cleveland Cavaliers (two, 276), Kevin Durant of the Houston Rockets (241 points) and Jalen Brunson of the New York Knicks (197).

The members of the third team are Tyrese Maxey of the Philadelphia 76ers (168 points), Jamal Murray of the Nuggets (149), Jalen Johnson of the Atlanta Hawks (125), Jalen Duren of the Pistons (121) and Chet Holmgren of the Thunder (87).

Among the players who missed out were Deni Avdija of the Portland Trail Blazers (26) and Karl-Anthony Towns of the Knicks (14).

Players who didn’t meet the 65-game requirement for awards eligibility include LeBron James of the Lakers, Giannis Antetokounmpo of the Milwaukee Bucks, Anthony Edwards of the Minnesota Timberwolves and Stephen Curry of the Golden State Warriors.

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

NHL

GOLDEN KNIGHTS RALLY FROM 3 DOWN TO BEAT AVS, TAKE 3-0 SERIES LEAD

Tomas Hertl scored the go-ahead goal midway through the third period and Mark Stone and William Karlsson each had a goal and an assist as the Vegas Golden Knights rallied from an early 3-0 deficit to defeat the Colorado Avalanche, 5-3, on Sunday night in Las Vegas to take a commanding 3-0 lead in the best-of-seven Western Conference finals.

Keegan Kolesar and Brett Howden also scored goals, and Mitch Marner and Kaedan Korczak each had two assists for Vegas, which needs just one more win to clinch its third trip to the Stanley Cup Final in its nine years as a franchise. Game 4 is Tuesday in Las Vegas.

Carter Hart finished with 32 saves for the Golden Knights, who rallied from a three-goal deficit to win a playoff game for the first time in 20 tries in franchise history.

Jack Drury scored a shorthanded goal, Devon Toews had two assists, and Nazem Kadri and Gabriel Landeskog also scored goals for Colorado. Scott Wedgewood made 18 saves.

Colorado, already in a deep hole after losing the first two games of the series at home, jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the opening 7:03 on goals by Landeskog, who tucked in a rebound of a Toews shot inside the right post, and Kadri, who fired in a wrist shot from the high slot past Hart’s blocker side off a pass by Martin Necas.

Pavel Dorofeyev then punched in a rebound on the power play for the Golden Knights but the goal was quickly waived off because officials ruled he used his hand, wrapped around his stick, to guide the puck into the net. After a lengthy video review, the initial ruling was upheld.

Forty-three seconds later, the Avalanche then extended the lead to 3-0 on Drury’s first career playoff short-handed goal when he slipped a backhand shot around Hart’s left pad at the end of a breakaway.

Vegas, outshot 16-7 in the first period, needed only 12:46 into the second period to tie the game at 3.

Stone, back after missing five games with a lower-body injury, made it 3-1 just 19 seconds into the period when he redirected Marner’s pass inside the right post for his fourth playoff goal.

Karlsson followed with his first playoff goal, firing in a rebound from the edge of the right circle over Wedgewood’s glove.

Kolesar then tied it when he deflected a Dylan Coghlan shot off the right post and then tapped the rebound into an open net for his first goal and point of this year’s playoffs.

Things went from bad to worse a few minutes later when Colorado center Nathan MacKinnon, who led the league with 53 regular-season goals, crumbled to the ice after getting hit on his right knee by a Shea Theodore one-timer he was blocking. MacKinnon saw limited time on the ice the rest of the game.

Hertl then gave Vegas its first lead at the 8:21 mark of the third period, breaking down the left wing and then cutting inside defenseman Sam Malinski and snapping a backhand shot past Wedgewood’s blocker side for what became the game-winner.

The Avalanche pulled Wedgewood for an extra attacker with 1:45 to go and Howden sealed the win with an empty-netter with 57.9 seconds left, his 10th goal of the playoffs.

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MLB

MLB ROUNDUP: MARLINS SWEEP METS WITH WALK-OFF GRAND SLAM

Heriberto Hernandez hit a walk-off grand slam Sunday afternoon for the Miami Marlins, who completed a three-game sweep of the visiting New York Mets with a 4-0 win.

After the Mets elected to intentionally walk Xavier Edwards to face Hernandez, he lifted an 0-1 changeup from Devin Williams (3-2) just over the wall in right-center field. It was the first walk-off grand slam to break a 0-0 tie in a major league  game since Justin Maxwell hit one for the Royals on Sept. 22, 2013.

A.J. Ewing had two hits for the Mets, who were limited to two runs on 11 hits in the series and have been outscored 28-14 while losing five of their last six games. The Marlins completed their first sweep since beginning the season with three straight wins over Colorado.

Pete Fairbanks (2-2) allowed one hit and one walk in the top of the ninth, getting an assist from catcher Liam Hicks, who threw out a base-stealer. New York finished 0-for-8 with runners in scoring position, stranding 10 runners.

Orioles 5, Tigers 3 (Game 1)

Colton Cowser hit a game-winning three-run home run with two outs in the bottom of the ninth inning as Baltimore walked off visiting Detroit to open a day-night doubleheader.

Jackson Holliday worked a one-out walk and stole second, and then Leody Taveras walked against Kenley Jansen (1-3). After a flyout, a double steal put both runners in scoring position before Cowser’s second blast of the season. Gunnar Henderson also homered for the Orioles.

Framber Valdez pitched six strong innings for Detroit. Matt Vierling had three hits and drove in the game’s first run for the Tigers.

Tigers 4, Orioles 1 (Game 2)

Troy Melton pitched into the sixth inning in his first outing of the season and Detroit ended an eight-game losing streak by beating host Baltimore to avoid a sweep and earn a split in the doubleheader.

Dillon Dingler smashed a two-run first-inning homer and Kevin McGonigle drove in two runs for the Tigers, who won for only the third time in a 19-game stretch. Melton, who was added to the active roster Sunday after several rehabilitation assignments this spring, worked 5 2/3 innings, allowing one run on two hits. Tyler Holton and Drew Anderson worked in relief for what became a combined three-hitter.

Trevor Rogers (2-6) yielded four runs on four hits in 4 2/3 innings. He hasn’t completed six innings in his last six starts. Baltimore designated hitter Adley Rutschman walked twice and scored the team’s lone run.

Dodgers 5, Brewers 1

Andy Pages homered and Yoshinobu Yamamoto allowed one run over seven innings to pace visiting Los Angeles to a victory over Milwaukee in the deciding game of the series between division leaders.

Yamamoto (4-4) scattered seven hits, striking out three and walking one. Will Klein and Tanner Scott each followed with a scoreless inning as the Dodgers’ bullpen extended its franchise record to 38 consecutive scoreless innings. The streak is the longest in the majors since 2017 when the Cleveland bullpen strung together 38 2/3 scoreless innings.

In the Dodgers’ four-run fourth, Pages’ homer followed Kyle Tucker’s two-run triple. Brewers starter Brandon Sproat (1-3) allowed three runs on four hits in four-plus innings. He struck out seven but had four walks, a hit batter and a wild pitch.

Twins 6, Red Sox 5

Brooks Lee broke a tie with a two-run single in the sixth inning to lift visiting Minnesota to a win and a three-game series sweep over Boston.

Lee (2-for-4 with a double) was one of four Twins to record multiple hits in the game. Orlando Arcia was 3-for-5 with a double and a run. Minnesota starter Bailey Ober (6-2) threw five innings of four-run ball, with seven hits and three strikeouts.

Masataka Yoshida and Willson Contreras both homered and Wilyer Abreu hit two doubles for the Red Sox. Starter Sonny Gray allowed three runs on six hits in four innings, striking out four and walking two.

Pirates 4, Blue Jays 1

Esmerlyn Valdez stroked a two-run homer for his first career major league hit to help visiting Pittsburgh beat Toronto to salvage the finale of the three-game series.

Pirates right-hander Mitch Keller (5-2) pitched a solid six innings, allowing one run, four hits and three walks with five strikeouts. Spencer Horwitz and Oneil Cruz added solo home runs and Gregory Soto worked around a hit-by-pitch and a walk for his fifth save.

Ernie Clement extended his hit streak to seven games when he grounded a RBI single to left in the fourth. Toronto lost starting pitcher Dylan Cease (two runs and four hits over 4 2/3 innings) exited in the top of the fifth with left hamstring discomfort before star Vladimir Guerrero Jr. left in the bottom of the fifth after he was hit on the right elbow by a pitch.

Yankees 2, Rays 0

Aaron Judge hit a game-ending two-run homer with no outs in the ninth inning, lifting New York to a victory over visiting Tampa Bay.

The Yankees stopped a three-game skid and won for the fifth time in 15 games following a 16-3 run. New York also beat Tampa Bay for the first time in five tries this season, while the Rays lost for only the fifth time in their past 27 games and had a five-game winning streak stopped.

New York’s Ryan Weathers allowed four hits in seven innings. The left-hander struck out four and walked three. Tampa Bay starter Drew Rasmussen allowed five hits in seven innings. The right-hander struck out six and walked one.

Guardians 3, Phillies 1

Travis Bazzana belted a solo homer and had three hits, and fellow rookie Parker Messick threw 5 2/3 scoreless innings, lifting Cleveland over Philadelphia.

Steven Kwan had three hits as American League Central Division leader Cleveland won for the eighth time in nine games and improved to 14-4 since May 6. Messick (6-1) struck out six in lowering his ERA to 2.24, allowing five hits and a pair of walks. The left-hander has a 0.60 ERA over 30 career innings of interleague action, the lowest in franchise history.

Andrew Painter (1-5) worked 6 1/3 innings for the Phillies, giving up two runs on six hits. The right-hander struck out three and walked two in his 10th appearance in the majors. Kyle Schwarber went 2-for-4, snapping a 13 at-bat hitless streak that included 11 strikeouts and Bryce Harper drove in the Phillies’ run with a sacrifice fly.

Royals 8, Mariners 6

Salvador Perez went 3-for-4 with three RBIs as Kansas City defeated visiting Seattle.

Seth Lugo pitched 6 1/3 quality innings for the Royals, who won their second  game in a row following a 1-10 stretch. Maikel Garcia and Carter Jensen had two RBIs apiece.

Rookie Colt Emerson went 4-for-4 with three doubles and Julio Rodriguez homered for the Mariners, who have lost six of their past nine. It was an 8-3 game before the Mariners brought in three runs with two outs in the ninth.

Astros 8, Cubs 5

Nick Allen homered, singled twice, drove in two runs and scored twice to help visiting Houston complete a three-game sweep of reeling Chicago.

Christian Walker homered for the third time in two games and Jake Meyers also went deep for Houston, which has won four of five. Astros starter Peter Lambert (3-4) allowed three runs and five hits over five innings. The right-hander struck out five and walked four.

Michael Busch homered and Pedro Ramirez delivered an RBI double for his first MLB hit and later scored in the three-run second inning for the Cubs, who have lost eight in a row and 12 of 14. Chicago left-hander Shota Imanaga (4-5) allowed seven runs and seven hits in six innings, striking out six and walking one.

Nationals 2, Braves 1

Foster Griffin threw six scoreless innings, Nasim Nunez and Luis Garcia Jr. each drove in a run and visiting Washington beat Atlanta.

Griffin (6-2) allowed just three hits, struck out six and walked one for the Nationals, who became the first team this season to take a road series against Atlanta.

Ozzie Albies scored for the Braves in the ninth on Nunez’s fielding error before Orlando Ribalta, the Nationals’ third pitcher of the inning, entered and got two outs for the save.

Diamondbacks 9, Rockies 1

Ketel Marte and Corbin Carroll led a 13-hit attack and Ryne Nelson silenced Colorado’s bats in Phoenix.

Marte went 3-for-4 with three RBIs and three runs and Carroll went 4-for-4 with two RBIs and two triples. Nelson (2-3) went a career-high eight innings, striking out three and walking three, to record his first win since April 8. Arizona’s Tommy Troy went 2-for-4 with two runs in his big-league debut.

Rockies starter Jose Quintana left the game in the second inning with what the Rockies later reported as left elbow discomfort. It was the second time in Quintana’s 15-year career he failed to pitch past the second inning. Jake McCarthy had two hits for the Rockies, who lost for the fifth time in six games.

Giants 8, White Sox 5

Rafael Devers bombed a grand slam, Casey Schmitt hit his third home run in the last four games and San Francisco Giants outslugged visiting Chicago in the deciding game of their three-game interleague series.

Schmitt also doubled, scored three times and drove in three runs while Devers drove in five runs — four of them on his tiebreaking fifth-inning homer for the Giants. Robbie Ray lasted just four innings in his start thanks to seven walks. Keaton Winn (1-1) followed him with two scoreless innings.

Chase Meidroth led off the game with his fourth homer and Miguel Vargas launched his 12th for the White Sox, who completed a 2-4 Western swing. Chicago starter Noah Schultz (2-4) was charged with six runs on six hits in his four-plus innings. 

Games

Athletics 5, Padres 2

Carlos Cortes led off Sunday’s game with a homer and the visiting Athletics salvaged the last game of their weekend series against San Diego.

Athletics star Nick Kurtz reached base three times on two hits and a walk to stretch his on-base streak to 47 games, one off the club’s single-season record held by Mark McGwire (1996).

Ty France homered for the Padres, pulling them within 4-2 in the seventh, but the Athletics added an insurance run in the ninth on an RBI single by Tyler Soderstrom.

Angels 2, Rangers 1

Donovan Walton scored on second baseman Justin Foscue’s throwing error in the bottom of the ninth and Los Angeles completed its first three-game series sweep of the season with a 2-1 win over Texas in Anaheim, Calif.

Walton entered as a pinch runner for Jorge Soler, who singled against Gavin Collyer (1-1) with one out and moved to second when Jo Adell was hit by a pitch. Oswald Peraza then grounded into a potential double play, but Walton scored on Foscue’s errant throw to first baseman Jake Burger.

Starter Reid Detmers turned in a dominant performance for the Angels, who have won three straight for the first time since April 4-6. Detmers allowed one hit — Burger’s leadoff homer in the second — while striking out a career-high 14 batters with zero walks over eight innings. He retired a career-high 21 straight batters after Burger’s homer.

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GOLF

WYNDHAM CLARK SHOOTS 60, WINS CJ CUP BYRON NELSON GOING AWAY

Once Wyndham Clark caught up to the lead Sunday, he didn’t stop.

Clark shot an 11-under-par 60 to tie a course record in the final round and win the CJ Cup Byron Nelson by three strokes in McKinney, Texas.

“Any time you win and any time you do it in the fashion I did is very special,” Clark said.

Clark finished at 30-under 254 for four rounds at TPC Craig Ranch, one shy of the tournament record set last year by World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler.

South Korea’s Si Woo Kim, who was the second- and third-round leader, was the runner-up and Scheffler was third at 25 under. They both shot 65s on Sunday.

Clark notched his fourth PGA Tour victory and his first since the 2024 AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am.

“After the first round, I felt really good on the greens, and I said, ‘OK, this could be a really fun, special week,’” Clark said.

Clark’s bogey-free round included an eagle with a 15 1/2-foot putt on the par-5 12th hole. He had birdies on four of the final five holes.

“I just knew I had to keep birdieing because I knew Si Woo was probably going to do the same thing, or even Scottie,” Clark said.

Clark finished in the second-to-last group ahead of Kim and Scheffler. By the time they hit their final tee shots, Clark was sinking a clinching birdie putt.

Clark birdied four of the first six holes to pull even with Kim at 23 under. He matched Kim again at 24 under by birdieing the par-4 11th before passing him for good with his eagle at the next hole.

Scheffler, the tournament’s hometown favorite, didn’t make a sustained push a year after tying the PGA Tour’s 72-hole scoring record of 253 a year ago.

“I’m proud of this week for myself, but I wish I could have gotten a few more shots out of it,” Scheffler said. “Overall, Wyndham played great golf.”

Scheffler went 3 under on each nine.

“A golf course like this, you’ve got to make a ton of birdies,” Scheffler said. “You’ve got to either hit it pretty amazing and hole a few putts or hit it good and hole a bunch of putts. I hit it decent to good and I holed a few putts. I didn’t hole a bunch of putts or hit it incredible.”

Kim, aiming for his fifth victory on the PGA Tour and his first since the 2023 Sony Open, had seven birdies and one bogey Sunday. He carded pars on the last four holes.

“I think it’s a lot of experience in contention this year,” Kim said. “So everything gets comfortable, especially with Scottie on Sunday, last group. That’s really positive. So, yeah, I’m just going to keep trying hard and trying to win.”

Jackson Suber (63) was fourth at 23 under and Keith Mitchell (64) ended up fifth at 22 under. Tony Finau (65), Zach Bauchou (67) and Tom Hoge (68) tied for sixth at 20 under.

“I was just playing golf, and putts were going in,” Suber said. “I was hitting great approach shots. Just felt like everything else I was working on kind of had been working out.”

Blades Brown, 19, shot 67 and finished tied for 14th place at 18 under. That was enough for him to earn a PGA Tour special temporary membership. He has appeared in 16 career events, including seven this year.

“I know my route to the PGA Tour is a very uncommon route,” said Brown, who skipped college to pursue professional golf.

Now, he’ll have to carve out the next stretch of his schedule.

“I think I’m going to play next week in Raleigh on the Korn Ferry Tour,” Brown said. “Then we’ll see what we’re going to do after that.”

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INDIANA SPORTS NEWS AND HEADLINES

INDIANAPOLIS INDIANS

TOLEDO, Ohio – Enmanuel Valdez hit a game-tying two-run home run in the sixth inning, but the comeback fell short as the Indianapolis Indians lost to the Toledo Mud Hens, 8-4, on Sunday night at Fifth Third Field. The clubs spit this week’s six-game series 3-3.

With two outs in the sixth, Billy Cook drew a walk and stole second base before Valdez launched his fourth homer of the campaign to tie the game, 3-3.

Toledo (25-26) scored first on an opening-frame home run by Max Clark and added two more runs in the second inning on a long ball from Corey Julks. Cook hit an RBI single to score Ronny Simon in the fourth inning to get the Indians (21-30) on the board, 3-1. Valdez then left the yard in the sixth to even the score.

A five-run bottom of the seventh from the Mud Hens proved to be the difference as five straight batters reached to begin the inning off Carson Fulmer (L, 2-1), capped by Jace Jung’s sixth home run of the season. Indy scored one run in the bottom of the ninth on a throwing error following an infield single from Dominic Fletcher.

Mud Hens starter Dylan File allowed just one run across 5.0 innings and Woo-Suk Go (W, 2-1) fanned five of the seven batters he faced across 2.0 frames.

Indianapolis is back in action for Memorial Day on Monday, May 25, beginning a six-game series with the Iowa Cubs at 6:35 PM from Victory Field. RHP José Urquidy (1-3, 5.47) will throw for the Indians and RHP Noah Davis (1-3, 3.23) will follow him in a tandem start. LHP Doug Nikhazy (0-2, 9.24) is scheduled to start for the I-Cubs. With an off day on Tuesday, the remainder of the series will be played Wednesday through Sunday in Indianapolis.

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NOTRE DAME MEN’S LAX

SOUTH BEND, Ind. – The No. 2-seed Notre Dame Fighting Irish will take on No. 1-seed Princeton with the national title on the line on Memorial Day with the Irish trying to win their third in the last four seasons. Opening faceoff is scheduled for 1 p.m. ET and the game will air on ESPN.

GAME DETAILS
Location: Charlottesville, Virginia | Scott Stadium
Schedule: May 25 — 1 p.m. ET
Tickets: Click Here
TV: ESPN
Live Stats: FightingIrish.com
Twitter Updates: @NDlacrosse
For a more in-depth look at the matchup – Game Notes: Notre Dame

POSTSEASON SUCCESS

  • The Irish have won two of the last three NCAA Championships, capturing the titles in 2023 and 2024.
  • Notre Dame owns a 33-26 record in its 29 trips to the NCAA Championship.
  • The Irish have made eight trips to Championship Weekends, seven coming since the 2010 season.
  • Notre Dame is 12-1 over its last four NCAA Tournament appearances with nine of the wins coming by five or more goals.
  • Notre Dame has reached the title game on Memorial Day five times in program history, including three in the last four seasons.
  • Notre Dame has advanced to the quarterfinals of the NCAA Championship in 14 of the last 16 NCAA Tournaments. The Irish are tied for the longest active quarterfinal streak with four straight appearances.
  • Notre Dame has made the NCAA Championship field in 19 of the last 20 tournaments.
  • This is the 16th time overall and 15th time in the last 18 seasons that the Irish have earned one of the eight national seeds for the NCAA Championship.
  • Notre Dame advanced to the NCAA Championship final weekend in 2001, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2015, 2023, 2024 and 2026 and played in the title game in 2010,  2014, 2023, 2024 and 2026.
  • The Fighting Irish have an all-time record of 18-11 in first round NCAA Tournament games, including a mark of 14-1 in their last 15 appearances.

THE PRINCETON SERIES

  • Monday will be the third meeting all-time between Notre Dame and Princeton.
  • The Irish and Tigers are deadlocked at 1-1heading into the title game.
  • The most recent meeting came in the first round of the 2010 NCAA Tournament, with the Irish earning an 8-5 victory at Princeton.

RESUME BUILDING

  • Notre Dame has never shied away from playing the top teams in the country and has racked up wins, especially over the last few seasons.
  • The Fighting Irish are 33-9 against ranked teams since the beginning of the 2023 season.
  • Twenty of the 33 wins have come in blowout fashion with the Irish winning by five or more goals.
  • Furthermore, Notre Dame has faired just as well against the best of the best, posting a record of 24-6 against teams ranked in the top 10 of the USILA poll at the time of the matchup since the beginning of the 2023 season.
  • The Irish are 10-1 against ranked opposition this season and 7-1 against top-10 teams (Johns Hopkins, Syracuse (2x), UNC, Richmond, Georgetown and Ohio State).

THE BEST PLAY HERE

  • Notre Dame has produced more Tewaaraton finalists over the past six seasons than any other program, totaling six during the time frame.
  • Shawn Lyght is the latest, being selected as a 2026 finalist as a defenseman.
  • Lyght is the first defenseman in a decade to earn the honor, the most recent was another Notre Dame standout in Matt Landis (2016).
  • Pat Kavanagh was named a finalist three times (2021, 2023, 2024) while Chris Kavanagh (2025) and Liam Entenmann (2024) were also finalists for the most prestigious individual award in college lacrosse.
  • Pat Kavanagh became the first Notre Dame player to win the honor following the 2024 season.

LOCKDOWN DEFENSE

  • Notre Dame enters the final allowing just 8.46 goals per game, ranking fifth in the country.
  • The Irish have held Syracuse (7), Michigan (4), Richmond (8), UNC (5), Duke (6) and Jacksonville (5) to season lows in goals scored this season.
  • Notre Dame handcuffed a top-10 Jacksonville attack in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, holding the Dolphins to just five goals, two coming in the fourth quarter against Irish reserves.
  • The Fighting Irish turned in arguably the best defensive performance of the season, holding UNC to a season-low five goals in the 10-5 victory. Only two of the five goals were scored in settled six-on-six possessions.
  • Notre Dame held Maryland to eight goals in College Park, which is tied for the Terps lowest scoring output in a home game since the advent of the shot clock in 2019.
  • Schwitzenberg has earned ACC Defensive Player of the Week honors twice this season following wins over Maryland and UNC.
  • Notre Dame held Richmond to just eight goals, tying its mark for the lowest they have scored in a game this season.
  • The Irish had their most disruptive performance of the season in the win over No. 3 Georgetown, limiting the Hoyas to just nine goals while recording a season-high 19 caused turnovers.
  • Lyght finished the contest against Georgetown with a season-high three caused turnovers and two ground balls.
  • Donovan has been a menace to opposing attacks, recording 16 caused turnovers and 42 ground balls.
  • The short-stick defensive midfield unit that consists of Christian Alacqua, Chris Reinhardt, Kyle Bergen and Miguel Iglesias has impressed this season as well.

LYGHTS OUT

  • Shawn Lyght has been named a Tewaaraton Award finalist, marking the first time a defenseman has achieved the feat since 2016 when Notre Dame great Matt Landis was a finalist for the most prestigious individual award in college lacrosse.
  • Lyght becomes the sixth defenseman to ever be named a finalist for the Tewaaraton Award.
  • For the second-straight season, Lyght was named the ACC Co-Defensive Player of the Year, becoming just the third player in league history to earn the honor multiple times.
  • Lyght joins Notre Dame legends Matt Landis and Liam Entenmann as the only three to accomplish the feat.
  • The junior was selected as the Schmeisser Award winner following an incredible 2026 regular season.
  • Lyght has been selected as a first team All-American by all major outlets over each of the last two seasons.
  • In a heavyweight clash of Tewaaraton finalists in the NCAA semifinals, Lyght held Syracuse’s Joey Spallina scoreless to help the Irish defense suffocate the Orange attack in the victory.
  • In the win over UNC last season, Lyght held UNC’s prolific attackman Owen Duffy to just one assist on the day, matching his career low for points in a game.
  • This season’s matchup against Duffy he limited the junior to two points off a goal and assist and the assist came off a man-down situation in which Lyght was not on the field.
  • Lyght consistently draws the No. 1 option for the opposing attack throughout the season.

BACK BETWEEN THE PIPES

  • Goalie Thomas Ricciardelli was named the ACC Goalie of the Year following his impressive 2026 regular season, leading the Irish to the ACC regular season title.
  • The senior is 13-2 on the season, making 166 saves while allowing 8.27 goals per game, ranking fifth in the country.
  • His save percentage of 58.2 is the best mark in the ACC and ranks fifth in the country.
  • Ricciardelli has recorded a save percentage of .500 or better in 11 of 15 games this season.
  • The goalie was masterful in the NCAA Tournament semifinal win over Syracuse, making 14 saves while allowing just seven goals.
  • Ricciardelli opened the 2026 NCAA Tournament in dominant fashion, making 16 saves while allowing just three goals in the win over Jacksonville.
  • The senior was named ACC Defensive Player of the Week for the second time this season following the win over Duke, as he finished with 17 saves while allowing just six goals in the victory in Durham.
  • The shot stopper turned in a remarkable performance in the win over No. 1 UNC, making 16 saves while allowing just five goals while adding three ground balls and a caused turnover.
  • The New Canaan, Connecticut, native allowed a season-low four goals while making 11 saves in the win over Michigan on March 14.
  • In the win over No. 1 Richmond, the senior was masterful, making 14 saves while allowing just eight goals to help the Irish knock off the top-ranked Spiders.
  • Ricciardelli impressed in his debut season, leading the ACC and ranking sixth in the country goals against average (9.14).
  • The goalie saved at least 50 percent of shots he faced in 10 of 14 games last season.

EVERYBODY EATS

  • The Irish can beat you in a number of ways, as the attack has been very balanced this season.
  • The Fighting Irish have four attackmen that have recorded at least 24 points through 15 games.
  • Josh Yago (31G, 23A) leads the team in points with 54 followed by Luke Miller (33G, 11A) and Brock Behrman (20G, 16A). Teddy Lally (15G, 9A) has excelled off the bench, adding 24 points to bolster the unit.
  • Will Maheras has paced the midfield with 35 points (18G, 17A). Matt Jeffery (18G, 12A) has added 30 points. Will Angrick (14G, 6A)  has recorded 20 while Jalen Seymour (12G, 6A) has 18 on the season.
  • Twenty-two different players have registered a goal this season and 29 have tallied at least one point during the 2026 season, including 19 with multiple points.

DOMINATE THE DOT

  • Tyler Spano and Aiden Diaz-Matos have excelled at the faceoff dot as a tandem this season.
  • Spano enters Monday with a win percentage of .571 (116-of-203) while Diaz-Matos has a percentage of .544 (80-of-147) this season.
  • The Irish have finished 50 percent or better at the dot in 7 of the last 8 games and 11-of-15 games on the season.
  • Facing Brady Wambach of UNC, who entered the matchup with the best percentage in the country, Spano won 10-of-17 faceoffs against the Tar Heels along with six ground balls to help the Irish win the possession battle.
  • Spano has won a team-high 72 ground balls while Diaz-Matos has collected 47 on the year.

FROM THE GRIDIRON TO THE LACROSSE FIELD

  • Two Notre Dame lacrosse players on the 2026 squad also are on the football roster, as Matt Jeffery and Dylan Faison are both dual-sport athletes.
  • Jeffery was the ACC Freshman of the Year in 2025 after making an impact in the midfield.
  • Faison was the No. 1 ranked incoming player in the class of 2026 before he reclassified and joined the Irish for this spring semester.
  • Jeffery has been productive in his sophomore campaign, posting 30 points off 18 goals and 12 assists despite drawing a pole in the majority of matchups.
  • The sophomore had a breakout performance in the win over Duke, scoring three goals for his first career hat trick.
  • Faison has broken into the rotation as of late, playing on the second-midfield line and scoring his first career goal in the win over No. 1 Richmond.
  • The freshman then scored two goals and added an assist in the win over Duke.
  • Faison has seven goals and an assist on the season for seven points in 10 games played.

CORRIGAN ALL-TIME DI PROGRAM WINS LEADER

  • With the win over No. 1 Duke on April 10, 2021, Baumer Family Head Men’s Lacrosse Coach Kevin Corrigan broke the NCAA record for most wins at a DI program with 311, passing Bob Shillinglaw (Delaware).
  • Corrigan became just the third coach in NCAA Division I men’s lacrosse history to reach the 300-win mark at a single school with the win over Marquette on April 10, 2019.
  • Corrigan is one of just four active Division I coaches to reach the 300-win mark in his career.
  • Corrigan has an overall record of 383-182 in his 40 seasons of coaching.
  • The head coach is 373-167 in his 38 seasons at Notre Dame.
  • Corrigan is the longest tenured men’s lacrosse coach at the DI level.

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INDIANA COLLEGE SPORTS WEB SITES

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

MARIAN ATHLETICS: https://muknights.com/

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

EARLHAM ATHLETICS: https://goearlham.com/

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

FRANKLIN ATHLETICS: https://franklingrizzlies.com/

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

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

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

BETHEL ATHLETICS: https://bupilots.com/

DEPAUW ATHLETICS: https://depauwtigers.com/

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

MANCHESTER ATHLETICS: https://muspartans.com/

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

“SPORTS EXTRA”

TODAY IN BASEBALL HISTORY

871 – The heavily favored Mutuals are soundly defeated by the Haymakers of Troy‚ in Brooklyn‚ 25 – 10. Lipman Pike‚ the Troy second baseman‚ collects six hits.

1876 – Philadelphia and Louisville play to a 2 – 2 tie in 14 innings. It is the first tie in National League history.

1899:

Deacon Phillippe of the Louisville Colonels throws a no-hitter against the New York Giants, walking two and striking out one in a 7 – 0 win over Ed Doheny.

St. Louis hosts Brooklyn with a batting order that is different than the usual one employed by the team. Cupid Childs hits fourth, making an out to end the 1st inning. It was Lou Criger’s spot, but nothing is said about the mistake. Bobby Wallace, the proper next batter, starts the 2nd with a hit and then it should be Patsy Tebeau’s turn at the plate. However, Criger hits and singles. Criger is called out for hitting out of turn and Tebeau is sent to the plate. Brooklyn beats St. Louis, 8 – 1, as the home team makes five errors.

1906 – Martin Dihigo is born in Matanzas, Cuba. Over the course of his career, Dihigo will make seamless transitions between all nine positions and play in several countries. As a hitter he will lead the Negro Leagues in home runs in 1926 and 1935; as a pitcher he will win more than 300 games and defeat Satchel Paige while touring Cuba. He will be elected to the American Hall of Fame in 1977, becoming the only player in history to be inducted to the American, Cuban, Dominican, Mexican and Venezuelan Halls of Fame. He will later add yet another honor as one of the inaugural inductees in the Latin American Baseball Hall of Fame in 2010.

1908 – The Cubs hit out of turn in the 1st inning against the Giants in Chicago. Pat Moran is listed seventh and Joe Tinker eighth in the lineup. However, when the seventh spot comes up with two out in the bottom of the 1st, Tinker strides to the plate and makes the third out. Moran then leads off the bottom of the 2nd with a single to center and eventually scores. In the 3rd inning, the batters hit in the correct order and the Giants object. However, umpire Bob Emslie shows manager John McGraw the lineup sheet and that is the end of that. The Cubs win the contest in ten innings, 8 – 7.

1910 – In the nightcap of a twin bill in Chicago, Jack Coombs’ scoreless streak ends at 53 innings during a 5 – 2 loss in a game shortened by darkness. The A’s right-hander will throw 13 shutouts in the 38 games he starts this season and will finish the season with a 31-9 record and an ERA of 1.30.

1919 – Casey Stengel, after being traded by the Brooklyn Robins to the Pirates before the previous season, makes a visit to Ebbets Field a memorable one. Coming to the plate, he calls time, steps out of the batter’s box and doffs his cap. A bird flies out and the fans break into laughter.

1922 – After being thrown out at second base trying to stretch a single, New York’s Babe Ruth throws dirt in the face of umpire George Hildebrand and then goes after a fan. Ruth is ejected, and eventually fined $500 and suspended one game by American League president Ban Johnson. The Babe is also stripped of his captaincy, a title he has held for barely a week.

1923:

Red Faber of the White Sox beats the Tigers in Detroit, 5 – 3. In the bottom of the 7th, Johnny Bassler pinch hits for pitcher Herm Pillette and walks. Les Burke then runs for Bassler and remains in the game in the ninth spot in the order at second base. The new pitcher enters the game in the seventh spot previously occupied by the second baseman. With two out in the bottom of the 9th inning, Burke bats out of turn in seventh place in the order, but he grounds out to end the game.

A second team bats out of order today. The Pirates confuse their lineup the first time though the order in a game at home against the Cardinals. The fifth-place hitter, Pie Traynor, ends the 1st inning. Johnny Rawlings should have started the 2nd inning but Charlie Grimm (listed seventh) bats and singles to center. Then Rawlings comes to the plate and singles to right, advancing Grimm to second base. The Cardinals speak with Umpire Bill Klem and he calls Grimm out and removes him from the basepaths. Rawlings is allowed to stay on first base. Pirates manager Bill McKechnie disagrees with the ruling and tells Klem that he intends to protest the game as Klem called the wrong player out, and allowed the wrong batter to hit. The Redbirds had scored an unearned run in the top of the 1st inning, but in the 9th, the Pirates score two runs to win the game and make McKechnie’s protest unnecessary.

Crossing the plate for the 1,741st time, Ty Cobb surpasses Honus Wagner’s record for most runs scored in a career. The “Georgia Peach” will tally 2,245 runs during his 24-year tenure in the major leagues, a mark which will not be equaled until 2001, when Rickey Henderson breaks the record.

1929 – Pitcher Dizzy Dean signs a contract with the Houston Buffaloes of the Texas League, a St. Louis Cardinals farm team.

1935 – Babe Ruth shows flashes of his past glory by hitting the final three home runs of his career in the Boston Braves’ 11 – 7 loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates. In addition to a 5th-inning single, Ruth hits homers in the 1st inning against Red Lucas, 3rd inning against Guy Bush and 7th inning off Bush again. In addition, his final homer is the first in Forbes Field’s history to clear its right field roof.

1937 – Mickey Cochrane’s playing career comes to an end when he is hit in the right temple by a Bump Hadley fastball.

1941 – Ted Williams raises his batting average to .400 for the first time this season. He will finish at .406 – the last .400 hitter in major league history.

1950 – Bob Miller of the Phillies shuts out the Pittsburgh Pirates on eight hits for his third straight victory.

1951 – Willie Mays debuts for the New York Giants, striking out in the 1st inning against Bubba Church. Mays goes 0 for 5, but makes three good plays in the field.

1953:

Ralph Kiner hits the 300th home run of his career, off Al Corwin of the New York Giants at Forbes Field. Kiner is the 12th player to reach the mark.

Max Surkont of the Braves strikes out a record eight batters in a row against the Reds in a game nearly wiped out by rain. After striking out the last batter in the 2nd inning and setting down the side on strikes in both the 3rd and 4th, the rains come, forcing a 33-minute delay. The modern-day major league mark of seven in a row, jointly held by Hooks Wiltse (1908), Dazzy Vance (1924) and Van Lingle Mungo (1936) is now equaled. When play resumes, Surkont strikes out Andy Seminick to establish a new record, but another 40-minute delay nearly wipes out the game and the record. Play eventually resumes and the game is completed, with Max finishing with 13 strikeouts in the 10 – 3 victory. Tom Seaver will break the record in 1970.

1956 – 3B Tommy Brown of the Nashville Vols sets a probable Organized Baseball record when he reaches base for the 20th consecutive time. He has ten hits and ten walks during the streak.

1958 – In a doubleheader sweep by the Pirates at Forbes Field, the Giants’ Willie Mays acts as a peace-maker, preventing a berserk Orlando Cepeda from causing havoc with a bat during a bench-clearing brawl in the opener. The melee results from lingering bad feelings between the two teams after an exchange of beanballs in an earlier game on May 7th, and breaks out with P Ruben Gomez batting for the Giants. Mays tackles the bigger Cepeda, rushing to the defense of his countryman, and pins him down until things calm down.

1960 – George Crowe sets a major league record by hitting his 11th career pinch-hit home run.

1964 – Ground is broken for a new park for the St. Louis Cardinals. The stadium is expected to be ready in time for the 1966 season.

1965 – The National Brewery Co. buys 64,000 shares of stock in the Baltimore Orioles from Joe Iglehart. Jerry Hoffberger assumes the position of chairman of the board.

1966 – Dave Nicholson goes 4-for-4 with a home run while John Bateman goes 3-for-3 with a homer and a triple as the Astros club the Mets, 7 – 1. Larry Dierker strikes out eight and hurls a complete-game five-hitter. Houston moves to 2 1/2 games back of the Giants in second place, the closest they will be to the top of the standings this deep into a season until 1972.

1971 – Two homers are lost due to rain in Baltimore. Frank Robinson homers off Cleveland’s Alan Foster with two out and no one on in the bottom of the 1st inning. Ken Harrelson hits one in the 2nd with one out and no one on off the Orioles’ Pat Dobson, but the game is called before it becomes official.

1973 – Lee May swats two homers to pace a 7 – 2 victory in Pittsburgh. Jerry Reuss goes the distance, scattering five hits for the win, pushing Houston back into a tie for the division lead.

1975:

Dennis Eckersley of the Indians shuts out the world champion A’s in his first major-league start, 2 – 0.

Coming back from an early 6 – 0 deficit, the Astros tie the Expos in the 9th on Cesar Cedeno’s leadoff blast into the center field tunnel. Montreal’s Mike Jorgensen doubles off Joe Niekro in the 12th to snap the tie. Doug Rader cracks his third double and fifth hit of the game before Enos Cabell doubles to tie it again. Milt May’s bloop eludes three Expos for the game-winner to give Houston an 8 – 7 triumph.

1977 – Art Howe slams a Charlie Hough knuckler for his second homer of the day to upend the Dodgers, 7 – 6. Julio Gonzalez contributes four hits. Joaquin Andujar gets the win in relief.

1979 – When Pirates left fielder Bill Robinson loses Joel Youngblood’s ball in the Shea Stadium outfield mist, the umpires stop play. Due to the fog, the 11-inning contest ends after a 73-minute delay in a 3 – 3 tie.

1981:

Bill Stein of the Texas Rangers hits a pinch-hit single off Doug Corbett to beat the Minnesota Twins. It is the seventh consecutive pinch-hit for Stein, breaking the American League record set by Bob Johnson in 1964.

Carl Yastrzemski becomes just the fourth player ever to appear in 3,000 games.

1982 – Ferguson Jenkins of the Chicago Cubs fans Garry Templeton of the Padres for the 3,000th strikeout of his career. Jenkins is the seventh player to reach the plateau, but loses the game, 2 – 1.

1983 – Pittsburgh Pirates pitchers Jim Bibby and Jim Winn combine to walk seven straight batters, tying a 74-year-old record.

1984 – The Boston Red Sox trade Dennis Eckersley and Mike Brumley to the Chicago Cubs in exchange for Bill Buckner.

1989 – The Montreal Expos, hoping to add the last piece to a playoff contender, trade three young pitchers, Brian Holman, Gene Harris, and 6′ 10″ Randy Johnson, to the Seattle Mariners for Mark Langston. Mike Campbell will go to Montreal in July to complete the trade, but he will never appear in a game for them. Langston will win 12 games for the Expos, Johnson 130 for Seattle on his way to the Hall of Fame.

1993 – Milt Harper hits for the cycle, the first player to do so in the Chinese Professional Baseball League. The CPBL is in its fourth year of existence.

1999:

The Diamondbacks tie a 68-year-old major league record when their catcher, Damian Miller, starts three double plays. Arizona’s 3 – 2 victory over San Diego at Bank One Ballpark also features two 100-mph pitches thrown by southpaw Randy Johnson – still a rarity at the time.

Carl Everett singles home Bill Spiers with the winning run for a 2 – 1, twelve-inning victory over the Rockies. Everett also doubles home Jeff Bagwell in the 8th for the only other Houston run. Scott Elarton wins in relief as he, Mike Hampton and Billy Wagner limit Colorado to five hits.

2002 – With four homers on May 23rd, one on May 24th, and two more today, Shawn Green becomes the first major leaguer to hit seven round-trippers in three games. The Dodgers outfielder’s nine big flies in a week also breaks a National League record, established by Ralph Kiner with eight and tied by Ted Kluszewski and Nate Colbert. In this game, Diamondbacks southpaw Randy Johnson passes Walter Johnson to become seventh on the all-time career strikeout list with his 3,509th. After fanning Green in the 1st to catch the “Big Train”, Dodgers outfielder Brian Jordan swings and misses a 2-2 pitch in the 2nd inning to become the “Big Unit’s” historic victim.

2003 – Buddy Groom throws two-thirds of a scoreless 8th inning in the Orioles’ 13 – 10 victory over Texas at The Ballpark in Arlington. The outing is the 38-year-old southpaw’s 638th major league contest with zero plate appearances, surpassing Bob Stanley’s mark for the most games pitched without coming to bat.

2005 – The St. Louis Cardinals beat the Pittsburgh Pirates, 2 – 1, in 12 innings, as manager Tony La Russa wins his 823rd game with the Cardinals, passing Whitey Herzog for second place on the franchise list. La Russa is 218 victories behind Cardinals leader Red Schoendienst.

2006:

The Houston Astros steal seven bases, the most by any team in the majors in nearly four years, in an 8 – 5 loss to the Washington Nationals. The Astros, whose club record is eight stolen bases, last stole seven on April 13, 1999, against San Francisco. Florida was the last team in the majors to steal that many, on May 27, 2002, against the Mets. Washington third-string catcher Matt LeCroy is benched during the 7th inning after allowing the seven stolen bases and committing two errors. “If my daddy was managing this team, I’m sure he would have done the same thing”, LeCroy said.

The Kansas City Royals blow an early 6 – 0 lead and drop their 13th straight game with a 13 – 8 loss to the Detroit Tigers. The skid is the second-longest ever for the Royals, who lost 19 straight the previous season and are a major league-worst 10-35.

Rick Guttormson of the Tokyo Yakult Swallows flings a no-hitter against the Rakuten Golden Eagles, winning 6 – 0. It is the first no-hitter in Japan during interleague play.

2007 – Jamie Moyer beats the Braves. It marks his first win against Atlanta in 20 years and two days, the longest stretch between victories against a team in major league history. Mike Morgan had been the previous record-holder.

2008 – In a doubleheader loss to the Marlins, Giants shortstop Omar Vizquel ties (in the first game) and then breaks (in the second) the major league record for career games played at the position. By reaching 2,584 games played, Vizquel passes a fellow Venezuelan, Luís Aparicio.

2009:

The Pirates beat the Cubs, 10 – 8. Freddy Sanchez goes 6 for 6 with four runs, three RBI, a double and a homer, the first Pirate in 19 years to have six hits in a game. Jason Jaramillo and Andy LaRoche each go 3 for 5. The Bucs, fresh off an interleague series with the White Sox, become the first team in major league history to play consecutive series against the Cubs and White Sox in Chicago.

Jim Thome passes Mike Schmidt for 13th on the all-time home run list, as the White Sox thump the Angels, 17 – 3.

2010:

The old Vladimir Guerrero seems to be back, albeit in a new uniform. In a game against the Royals, the Rangers’ DH hits two homers and a double on an inside pitch that almost hits him to lead Texas to an 8 – 7 win. Vlad is batting .347 with 12 homers and 42 RBI in 45 games after an injury-plagued season in 2009 with the Angels.

The Padres continue to surprise. Sporting the best record in the National League, their starting pitchers have been outstanding. Today, Jon Garland throws seven shutout innings before the bullpen takes over from there to defeat the Cardinals, 1 – 0. It is already San Diego’s ninth shutout of the year.

2011:

It takes 6 hours and 10 minutes for the Phillies to beat the Reds, 5 – 4, in 19 innings. By the time the winning run scores with two outs in the bottom of the 19th, the Phils have been forced to use back-up infielder Wilson Valdez on the mound, in his first professional pitching appearance. He throws a scoreless inning, then picks up the win when Raul Ibanez hits a bases-loaded sacrifice fly in the bottom of the 19th. Wilson is the first position player to earn a win since Brent Mayne in 2000. Losing pitcher Carlos Fisher does yeoman work himself, pitching 5 1/3 scoreless innings before giving up the game-ending run; for the Phils, Danys Baez had earlier pitched five scoreless innings in relief. The Reds almost end the contest in the 10th, when Jay Bruce hits a solo homer, but Ryan Howard replies with a long ball of his own, and nine more frames are necessary to determine a winner.

The Red Sox make it a no-contest in the battle of baseball’s two hottest teams. They crush the Indians, 14 – 2, while banging out a season-high 20 hits. Jon Lester earns his seventh win, tops in the majors, while Mitch Talbot is roughed up in his return from the disabled list.

Jo-Jo Reyes puts his name in the record books with his 28th consecutive winless start, tying Cliff Curtis and Matt Keough, when the Blue Jays lose to the Yankees, 7 – 3. Reyes is 0-4 this season, but has pitched well: his ERA was 3.06 over his last six starts prior to last night’s effort, yet wins have proved elusive. His last victory came on June 13, 2008 while a member of the Atlanta Braves and his record since is 0-13. Also in the game, Mariano Rivera makes his 1,000th pitching appearance for the Yankees; he is the 15th to reach the mark, and the first pitcher to do it with only one team.

2012 – Nelson Cruz goes 4 for 5 with a grand slam and eight RBI to lead the Rangers to a 14 – 3 win over the Blue Jays. Josh Hamilton hits his 19th home run as Derek Holland is the winner.

2013 – Angel Pagan gives the Giants a 6 – 5 win over the Rockies with an inside-the-park walk-off home run in the 10th inning. The hit comes off Rafael Betancourt with Brandon Crawford on second base, after Troy Tulowitzki had hit a solo homer in the top of the inning to give Colorado a 5 – 4 lead. It is the first game won on a walk-off inside-the-parker in Giants history, and the first in the majors since Rey Sanchez had such a hit on June 11, 2004.

2014 – Josh Beckett of the Dodgers records the first no-hitter of the year by blanking the Phillies, 6 – 0. It is the first no-hitter by a Dodgers pitcher since Hideo Nomo pitched one in 1996, and the first nine-inning no-hitter by an opposing pitcher in Philadelphia since Bill Stoneman of the Montreal Expos back in 1969.

2017 – On a rainy night at Fenway Park, five Red Sox pitchers combine their efforts to tie the major league record of 20 strikeouts in a nine-inning game in a 6 – 2 win over the Rangers. Drew Pomeranz starts things off with 11 Ks in six innings; relievers Heath Hembree and Robby Scott notch two each and Matt Barnes one before Craig Kimbrel registers four in a wild 9th inning that features Nomar Mazara being awarded first base after striking out on a pitch that hits him on the back foot. Umpire Chad Fairchild misses that, calling a wild pitch instead of a dead ball. Of the six 20-K games, the Red Sox have recorded three, Roger Clemens being responsible for two of them; it is the second time the feat has been recorded by multiple pitchers.

2018 – The Mariners obtain CF Denard Span and P Alex Colome from the Rays in return for Ps Andrew Moore and Tommy Romero. Span will help out a line-up hollowed by the 80-game suspension handed out to 2B Robinson Canó and an injury to CF Dee Gordon over the past couple of weeks, while the Rays continue the youth movement started during the spring.

2019 – The Padres set a franchise record with seven homers in a 19 – 4 win over the Blue Jays at the Rogers Centre. Wil Myers and Hunter Renfroe hit two each while Austin Hedges blasts a grand slam off Edwin Jackson. Cal Quantrill is the beneficiary of this power display as he records his first career victory a short distance from his hometown of Port Hope, ON, while another local boy, Josh Naylor from Mississauga, ON, collects his first three big league hits for the Padres in the game.

2021:

By working home plate in a game between the Cardinals and White Sox, Joe West sets a new career record with 5,376 games as an umpire, passing Bill Klem, whose last game was in 1941. Country Joe already held the record for most seasons worked, as this year is his 44th (Klem and Bruce Froemming had 37), but Klem’s record of having been the home plate umpire for 3,548 games is untouchable.

With almost their entire starting nine from Opening Day on the injured list, the Mets swing a deal with the Brewers, acquiring OF Billy McKinney in return for P Pedro Quintana, who has yet to make his professional debut.

2022 – Anaheim City Council votes unanimously to cancel the sale of Angel Stadium and surrounding land to Los Angeles Angels owner Arte Moreno, following the resignation of Mayor Bill Sidhu on corruption charges a few days earlier. The $350 million sale had been agreed in December 2019 but not yet finalized, and was at the center of an FBI investigation that led to accusations that Sidhu had provided insider information to the team and in return demanded kickbacks in the form of campaign contributions. The city councillors are now no longer convinced that the proposed deal reflects the city’s best interests, and are willing to risk a breach of contract lawsuit from Moreno in order to examine a potential deal again, starting from scratch.

2023 – Austin Riley is just the fourth player of the Statcast era to hit two homers over 450 feet in the same game in the Braves’ 8 – 5 win over the Phillies – and two of his predecessors had accomplished the feat in the favorable environment that is Coors Field. Riley connects both times off Aaron Nola, with a 459-foot shot in the 1st and another one estimated at 458 feet in the 5th. Marcell Ozuna adds a solo shot off Nola, and Travis d’Arnaud drives in the go-ahead run with a two-run pinch single off Gregory Soto in the bottom of the 8th.

2025 – Before starting today’s game, Tarik Skubal had already won a Cy Young Award, but had never thrown a complete game. The Tigers’ ace gets this milestone out of the way with a 5 – 0 shutout of the Guardians, and makes it a Maddux too as he needs just 94 pitches to accomplish the feat.

Births[edit]

1840 – Al Reach, outfielder, manager (d. 1928)

1845 – Lip Pike, outfielder, manager (d. 1893)

1850 – Charlie Cushman, manager; umpire (d. 1909)

1863 – John Hofford, pitcher (d. 1915)

1877 – Bob Wicker, pitcher (d. 1955)

1883 – Heinie Heitmuller, outfielder (d. 1912)

1884 – Bill Kellogg, infielder (d. 1971)

1884 – Bill Lattimore, pitcher (d. 1919)

1887 – John Daley, infielder (d. 1988)

1892 – Doug Smith, pitcher (d. 1973)

1893 – Everett Bankston, outfielder (d. 1970)

1894 – Joe Judge, infielder (d. 1963)

1895 – Jim Riley, infielder (d. 1969)

1898 – Jimmie Keenan, pitcher (d. 1980)

1901 – Bud Connolly, infielder (d. 1964)

1901 – Horace Ozmer, pitcher (d. 1970)

1904 – Buz Phillips, pitcher (d. 1964)

1905 – Martin Dihigo, player, manager; All-Star, Hall of Fame (d. 1971)

1906 – Chester Williams, infielder; All-Star (d. 1952)

1908 – Howard Craghead, pitcher (d. 1962)

1914 – Sungo Carrera, infielder (d. 1989)

1916 – Frank Drews, infielder (d. 1972)

1917 – Bert Hodges, infielder (d. 2001)

1917 – Kinji Uno, NPB infielder (d. 1997)

1918 – Johnny Beazley, pitcher (d. 1990)

1919 – Fred Blaylock, pitcher (d. 1967)

1919 – Charley Carter, pitcher (d. 1969)

1919 – Lindsey Nelson, announcer (d. 1995)

1922 – Hajime Shirakawa, NPB outfielder (d. 1982)

1922 – Heiji Torii, NPB outfielder (d. 2000)

1923 – José Bache, minor league infielder; Salon de la Fama (d. 2016)

1924 – Tokugoro Kasaishi, NPB infielder (d. ????)

1925 – Don Liddle, pitcher (d. 2000)

1925 – Walter Snider, minor league infielder and manager (d. 2004)

1925 – Curley Williams, infielder (d. 2011)

1926 – Bill Sharman, minor league outfielder (d. 2013)

1926 – Bob Wuesthoff, minor league outfielder and college coach (d. 2013)

1927 – Dan Ramer, minor league pitcher (d. 2014)

1927 – John Schumann, minor league player (d. 2017)

1929 – Don Kohler, scout (d. 2022)

1930 – Rafael Avila, scout (d. 2023)

1931 – Dolf de Zwart, Hoofdklasse catcher (d. 2019)

1931 – Gonzalo Garcia, minor league outfielder (d. 2010)

1931 – Jim Marshall, infielder, manager (d. 2025)

1932 – Jim Archer, pitcher (d. 2019)

1933 – Buddy Leake, minor league player (d. 2014)

1935 – W.P. Kinsella, writer (d. 2016)

1936 – Marshall Renfroe, pitcher (d. 1970)

1939 – Gene Budig, executive (d. 2020)

1939 – Urbano González, Cuban league infielder (d. 2021)

1940 – Darrel Bunge, minor league pitcher (d. 2018)

1945 – Bill Dillman, pitcher

1945 – Hironori Shogaki, NPB outfielder

1946 – Mike Corkins, pitcher (d. 2023)

1950 – Glenn Borgmann, catcher

1950 – Jim Eschen, minor league infielder and manager

1950 – John Montefusco, pitcher; All-Star

1952 – Masahiro Hayashi, NPB infielder

1953 – Scott Grinder, umpire (d. 2021)

1954 – Bob Knepper, pitcher; All-Star

1955 – Suguru Egawa, NPB pitcher

1955 – Andres Mora, outfielder; Salon de la Fama (d. 2015)

1955 – Takuya Odaka, NPB pitcher

1957 – Frank Hardies, First Division outfielder-pitcher

1958 – Shuji Ishihara, NPB outfielder

1959 – Akihiko Hirose, NPB pitcher

1961 – Chris Baker, minor league outfielder

1961 – Kerwin Danley, umpire

1962 – Clay Daniel, scout (d. 2021)

1962 – Masayoshi Kanai, NPB pitcher

1963 – François Colombier, Division Elite player and manager

1966 – Bill Haselman, catcher

1966 – Dave Hollins, infielder; All-Star

1967 – Patrice Baudin, French national team pitcher-infielder

1968 – Will Pennyfeather, outfielder

1968 – Atsushi Taki, NPB pitcher

1969 – Dave Tokheim, minor league outfielder

1970 – Joey Eischen, pitcher

1970 – Toshio Haru, NPB outfielder

1970 – Luis Ortiz, infielder

1971 – Doug Drumm, minor league pitcher

1971 – Angel Echevarria, outfielder (d. 2020)

1971 – Yoshiteru Hirosawa, NPB infielder

1971 – Byeong-hun Kam, KBO pitcher

1971 – Sean Maloney, pitcher

1971 – Yoshiya Takeuchi, NPB pitcher

1971 – Ji-hyun Yoo, KBO infielder

1972 – Jae-myung Jang, KBO infielder

1973 – Diego Esteban, Spanish national team pitcher

1973 – Melvin Rosario, catcher

1973 – Todd Walker, infielder

1974 – Mark Nussbeck, minor league pitcher

1974 – Miguel Tejada, infielder; All-Star

1975 – Sarfraz Ahmed, Pakistani national team infielder

1975 – In-sung Cho, KBO catcher

1975 – Adrian Johnson, umpire

1975 – Randall Simon, infielder

1975 – Mike Vento, outfielder

1976 – Lariel Gonzalez, pitcher

1976 – Tim Bishop, minor league outfielder (d. 1997)

1977 – Albert Garza, minor league pitcher

1977 – Fernando Lunar, catcher

1978 – Alvin Alcantara, minor league pitcher

1978 – Travis Hughes, pitcher

1978 – Mike Vento, outfielder

1978 – Phil Warren, minor league player and manager

1979 – Atif Dar, Pakistani national team player

1979 – Trey Lunsford, catcher

1979 – Denise Ramos, Venezuelan women’s national team catcher

1979 – Chris Young, pitcher; All-Star

1980 – Scott Hairston, infielder

1980 – Yi-Min Wang, CPBL infielder

1982 – Jason Kubel, outfielder

1982 – Rodney Rodriguez, minor league pitcher

1982 – Brad Snyder, outfielder

1983 – Roke Alcantara Jr., Guam national team pitcher

1983 – Adam Hamari, umpire

1984 – Nestor Corredor, coach

1984 – Ben Lasater, minor league infielder

1984 – Graham Taylor, pitcher

1984 – Chao-Kuan Wu, minor league catcher

1985 – Jared Goedert, minor league infielder and manager

1985 – Brad Lincoln, pitcher

1985 – Heath Rollins, minor league pitcher

1985 – Eric Young Jr., outfielder

1986 – Cory Riordan, minor league pitcher

1987 – Katsuya Kakunaka, NPB outfielder

1988 – Nateshon Thomas, Bundesliga infielder

1989 – Pat Dean, pitcher

1989 – Michael Kramer, Hoofdklasse outfielder

1989 – Brent Powers, minor league pitcher

1989 – Neil Ramirez, pitcher

1990 – Baasandorj Batsukh, Mongolian national team infielder

1990 – Joshua Corrales, NPB pitcher

1990 – Jarred Cosart, pitcher

1990 – Xiaolei Du, China Baseball League infielder

1990 – Joey Pavlovich, college coach

1990 – Ryan Sherriff, pitcher

1990 – Julius Uelschen, Bundesliga outfielder

1991 – Soo-young Bae, South Korean women’s national team pitcher

1991 – Jake Eliopoulos, drafted pitcher (d. 2013)

1992 – Ryota Ishioka, NPB infielder

1992 – Duncan Izaaks, Bundesliga infielder

1992 – Shota Morimoto, NPB pitcher

1993 – Vadim Balan, minor league pitcher

1993 – Alex Gounaris, Greek national team pitcher-infielder

1994 – Pedro Fernandez, minor league pitcher

1994 – Kyle Holder, minor league infielder

1994 – Donnie Walton, infielder

1995 – Jake Fraley, outfielder

1995 – Michael King, pitcher

1996 – Jesus Canizales, minor league pitcher

1996 – Kodi Medeiros, minor league pitcher

1996 – Haruki Miyauchi, NPB pitcher

1997 – Chan-yeol Yang, KBO outfielder

1998 – Masumi Hamachi, NPB pitcher

1998 – Junnosuke Imai, NPB infielder

1998 – Hiroto Mori, NPB pitcher

1998 – Carson Ragsdale, pitcher

1999 – Kotaro Kiyomiya, NPB infielder

2000 – Kamren James, minor league infielder

2000 – Ji-su Jang, KBO pitcher

2000 – Shota Masui, NPB pitcher

2001 – Erasmo Caballero, Panamanian national team catcher

2001 – Mohamed Afi Idraki Bin Mohamed Niza, Singaporean national team player

2002 – Ilya Sulaiman Dali, Malaysian national team pitcher

2004 – Andrew Fischer, minor league infielder

2004 – Yudai Furukawa, NPB outfielder

2004 – Gabriel Gilbert, Ecuadorian national team pitcher

Deaths[edit]

1890 – T.E. Mosely, umpire (b. 1823)

1904 – John Hayes, outfielder (b. 1855)

1905 – Paul Cook, catcher (b. 1863)

1917 – Willie Sudhoff, pitcher (b. 1874)

1919 – Harry Miller, pitcher (b. 1860)

1922 – Charlie Gessner, pitcher (b. 1863)

1924 – Carl Weilman, pitcher (b. 1889)

1928 – Max Fiske, pitcher (b. 1884)

1929 – Henry Blauvelt, pitcher (b. 1867)

1932 – Henry Boyle, pitcher (b. 1860)

1938 – Barney Joy, minor league pitcher (b. 1882)

1941 – Bob Higgins, catcher (b. 1886)

1942 – Bill James, pitcher (b. 1887)

1945 – Charlie Frye, pitcher (b. 1913)

1946 – Branch Bocock, college coach (b. 1884)

1952 – Oscar Delotelle, minor league pitcher (b. 1894)

1953 – Ray Grimes, infielder (b. 1893)

1959 – Dave Brain, infielder (b. 1879)

1961 – Norman Patterson, US national team outfielder (b. 1886)

1963 – Leo Mackey, minor league catcher and manager (b. 1894)

1963 – Hi West, pitcher (b. 1884)

1964 – Joe Martin, utility player (b. 1876)

1965 – Harry Biemiller, pitcher (b. 1897)

1969 – Joe McCarthy, minor league infielder (b. 1947)

1969 – Jim Riley, infielder (b. 1895)

1972 – Charlie Henry, pitcher (b. 1900)

1975 – Bruce Hartford, infielder (b. 1892)

1975 – Hisashi Kondo, NPB pitcher (b. 1918)

1976 – Al Lakeman, catcher (b. 1918)

1980 – Jesse Brown, pitcher (b. 1914)

1983 – George Wolfman, college coach (b. 1911)

1988 – Charlie Perkins, pitcher (b. 1905)

1991 – Esther Lyman, AAGPBL catcher (b. 1927)

1992 – Otto Denning, catcher (b. 1912)

2002 – Adolph Matulis, minor league pitcher and manager (b. 1920)

2007 – Elaine Roth, AAGPBL pitcher (b. 1929)

2008 – Geremi Gonzalez, pitcher (b. 1975)

2010 – Morrie Martin, pitcher (b. 1922)

2011 – Fred Aug, minor league infielder (b. 1931)

2011 – Dana Brand, author (b. 1954)

2011 – Eugene Smith, pitcher (b. 1916)

2011 – Paul Splittorff, pitcher (b. 1946)

2013 – Jason Ellis, minor league catcher (b. 1979)

2013 – Lewis Yocum, orthopedic surgeon (b. 1948)

2019 – Gerry Fraley, writer (b. 1954)

2020 – Yoshitaka Shinya, NPB outfielder (b. 1954)

2021 – Toon Verzijlberg, Hoofdklasse infielder (b. 1927)

2022 – Jack Kaiser, college coach (b. 1926)

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

TV SPORTS TODAY

(All times Eastern)

Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts

Monday, May 25

COLLEGE BASEBALL

Noon

ESPN2 — NCAA Baseball Championship Selection Special

COLLEGE GOLF (WOMEN’S)

5:30 p.m.

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

COLLEGE LACROSSE (MEN’S)

1 p.m.

ESPN — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Championship, Charlottesville, Va.

MLB BASEBALL

3:30 p.m.

ESPN — N.Y. Yankees at Kansas City

7 p.m.

MLBN — Regional Coverage: Miami at Toronto (7:07 p.m.) OR Colorado at L.A. Dodgers (9:10 p.m.)

10 p.m.

MLBN — Regional Coverage: Seattle at Athletics (joined in progress) (9:40 p.m.) OR Colorado at L.A. Dodgers (joined in progress) (9:10 p.m.)

NBA BASKETBALL

8:10 p.m.

ESPN — Eastern Conference Final: New York at Cleveland, Game 4

NHL HOCKEY

8 p.m.

TNT — Eastern Conference Final: Carolina at Montreal, Game 3

TRUTV — Eastern Conference Final: Carolina at Montreal, Game 3

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. (Tuesday)

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

WNBA BASKETBALL

8 p.m.

NBCSN — Portland at New York

PEACOCK — Portland at New York

_____

Tuesday, May 26

COLLEGE GOLF (WOMEN’S)

6 p.m.

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

MLB BASEBALL

6:30 p.m.

TBS — Atlanta at Boston (6:45 p.m.)

TRUTV — Atlanta at Boston (6:45 p.m.)

9:30 p.m.

MLBN — Regional Coverage: Arizona at San Francisco (9:45 p.m.) OR Colorado at L.A. Dodgers (10:10 p.m.)

NBA BASKETBALL

8:30 p.m.

NBC — Western Conference Final: San Antonio at Oklahoma City, Game 5 (if necessary)

PEACOCK — Western Conference Final: San Antonio at Oklahoma City, Game 5 (if necessary)

NHL HOCKEY

8 p.m.

ESPN — Western Conference Final: Colorado at Vegas, 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. (Wednesday)

TNT — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

TRUTV — ATP/WTA: French Open, Paris

_____

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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