“THE SCOREBOARD” ===================================== INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL SCORES https://www.maxpreps.com/in/baseball/scores/?date=5/30/2026 ===== INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL SECTIONALS CLASS 4A 1. CROWN POINT (5) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CROWN POINT, HAMMOND CENTRAL, HAMMOND MORTON, LAKE CENTRAL, MUNSTER 2. CHESTERTON (5)BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CHESTERTON, HOBART, MERRILLVILLE, PORTAGE, VALPARAISO 3. MISHAWAKA (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: LAPORTE, MICHIGAN CITY, MISHAWAKA, PENN, SOUTH BEND ADAMS, SOUTH BEND RILEY 4. GOSHEN (5) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CONCORD, ELKHART, GOSHEN, NORTHRIDGE, WARSAW COMMUNITY 5. CARROLL (FORT WAYNE) (4) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CARROLL (FORT WAYNE), FORT WAYNE NORTH SIDE, FORT WAYNE NORTHROP, FORT WAYNE SNIDER 6. FORT WAYNE SOUTH SIDE (4) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: FORT WAYNE SOUTH SIDE, FORT WAYNE WAYNE, HOMESTEAD, HUNTINGTON NORTH 7. LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON (4) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE), KOKOMO, LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON, MCCUTCHEON 8. NOBLESVILLE (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CARMEL, FISHERS, HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN, NOBLESVILLE, WESTFIELD, ZIONSVILLE 9. RICHMOND (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: ANDERSON, GREENFIELD-CENTRAL, MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE), MUNCIE CENTRAL, PENDLETON HEIGHTS, RICHMOND 10. NORTH CENTRAL (INDPLS.) (5) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: INDIANAPOLIS ARSENAL TECHNICAL, LAWRENCE CENTRAL, LAWRENCE NORTH, NORTH CENTRAL (INDIANAPOLIS), WARREN CENTRAL 11. BEN DAVIS (5) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: AVON, BEN DAVIS, BROWNSBURG, PIKE, PLAINFIELD 12. CENTER GROVE (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CENTER GROVE, DECATUR CENTRAL, FRANKLIN CENTRAL, MOORESVILLE, PERRY MERIDIAN, SOUTHPORT 13. BLOOMINGTON SOUTH (5) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: BLOOMINGTON NORTH, BLOOMINGTON SOUTH, MARTINSVILLE, TERRE HAUTE NORTH VIGO, TERRE HAUTE SOUTH VIGO 14. COLUMBUS NORTH (5) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: COLUMBUS EAST, COLUMBUS NORTH, EAST CENTRAL, FRANKLIN COMMUNITY, WHITELAND COMMUNITY 15. BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE, FLOYD CENTRAL, JEFFERSONVILLE, NEW ALBANY, SEYMOUR, SILVER CREEK 16. EVANSVILLE F.J. REITZ (4) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CASTLE, EVANSVILLE F.J. REITZ, EVANSVILLE HARRISON, EVANSVILLE NORTH CLASS 3A 17. HIGHLAND (5) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: EAST CHICAGO CENTRAL, GARY WEST SIDE, GRIFFITH, HAMMOND BISHOP NOLL, HIGHLAND 18. LOWELL (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: ANDREAN, HANOVER CENTRAL, ILLIANA CHRISTIAN, KANKAKEE VALLEY, LOWELL, RIVER FOREST 19. PLYMOUTH (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CULVER ACADEMIES, GLENN, MISHAWAKA MARIAN, NEW PRAIRIE, PLYMOUTH, SOUTH BEND SAINT JOSEPH 20. FAIRFIELD (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: COLUMBIA CITY, FAIRFIELD, NORTHWOOD, TIPPECANOE VALLEY, WAWASEE, WEST NOBLE 21. DEKALB (7) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: ANGOLA, DEKALB, EAST NOBLE, FORT WAYNE BISHOP DWENGER, FORT WAYNE CONCORDIA LUTHERAN, GARRETT, LEO 22. BELLMONT (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: BELLMONT, HERITAGE, MARION, MISSISSINEWA, NEW HAVEN, NORWELL 23. LOGANSPORT (7) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: LOGANSPORT, MACONAQUAH, NORTHWESTERN, PERU, TWIN LAKES, WEST LAFAYETTE, WESTERN 24. JAY COUNTY (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CONNERSVILLE, DELTA, HAMILTON HEIGHTS, JAY COUNTY, NEW CASTLE, YORKTOWN 25. CRAWFORDSVILLE (7) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: BREBEUF JESUIT PREPARATORY, CRAWFORDSVILLE, DANVILLE COMMUNITY, FRANKFORT, GUERIN CATHOLIC, LEBANON, TRI-WEST HENDRICKS 26. INDIANAPOLIS CATHEDRAL (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: HERRON, INDIANAPOLIS BISHOP CHATARD, INDIANAPOLIS CATHEDRAL, INDIANAPOLIS CRISPUS ATTUCKS, INDIANAPOLIS SHORTRIDGE, PURDUE POLYTECHNIC – DOWNTOWN 27. NORTHVIEW (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CASCADE, EDGEWOOD, INDIANAPOLIS GEORGE WASHINGTON COMMUNITY, NORTHVIEW, OWEN VALLEY, SPEEDWAY 28. RONCALLI (7) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: BEECH GROVE, GREENWOOD COMMUNITY, INDIAN CREEK, NEW PALESTINE, RONCALLI, RUSHVILLE CONSOLIDATED, SHELBYVILLE 29. BATESVILLE (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: BATESVILLE, FRANKLIN COUNTY, GREENSBURG, JENNINGS COUNTY, LAWRENCEBURG, SOUTH DEARBORN 30. CHARLESTOWN (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CHARLESTOWN, CORYDON CENTRAL, MADISON CONSOLIDATED, NORTH HARRISON, PROVIDENCE, SCOTTSBURG 31. JASPER (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: GIBSON SOUTHERN, JASPER, PRINCETON COMMUNITY, SOUTHRIDGE, VINCENNES LINCOLN, WASHINGTON 32. EVANSVILLE BOSSE (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: BOONVILLE, EVANSVILLE BOSSE, EVANSVILLE CENTRAL, EVANSVILLE REITZ MEMORIAL, HERITAGE HILLS, MT. VERNON CLASS 2A 33. WHITING (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: 21ST CENTURY CHARTER SCHOOL – GARY, BOONE GROVE, HEBRON, LAKE STATION EDISON, WHEELER, WHITING 34. JIMTOWN (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: BREMEN, CAREER ACADEMY, JIMTOWN, KNOX, LAVILLE, WINAMAC COMMUNITY 35. LAKELAND (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CENTRAL NOBLE, CHURUBUSCO, EASTSIDE, LAKELAND, PRAIRIE HEIGHTS, WESTVIEW 36. SOUTH ADAMS (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: ADAMS CENTRAL, BLUFFTON, FORT WAYNE BISHOP LUERS, SOUTH ADAMS, WHITKO, WOODLAN 37. NORTH MONTGOMERY (7) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: BENTON CENTRAL, DELPHI COMMUNITY, LAFAYETTE CENTRAL CATHOLIC, NORTH MONTGOMERY, RENSSELAER CENTRAL, SEEGER, WESTERN BOONE 38. EASTERN (GREENTOWN) (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: EASTERN (GREENTOWN), LEWIS CASS, MANCHESTER, OAK HILL, ROCHESTER COMMUNITY, WABASH 39. SHERIDAN (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: ELWOOD COMMUNITY, FRANKTON, LAPEL, SHERIDAN, TAYLOR, TIPTON 40. BLACKFORD (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: ALEXANDRIA MONROE, BLACKFORD, EASTBROOK, MADISON-GRANT, MUNCIE BURRIS, WAPAHANI 41. GREENCASTLE (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: GREENCASTLE, NORTH PUTNAM, PARKE HERITAGE, SOUTH PUTNAM, SOUTH VERMILLION, SOUTHMONT 42. PARK TUDOR (5) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: COVENANT CHRISTIAN, INDIANAPOLIS CARDINAL RITTER, MONROVIA, PARK TUDOR, UNIVERSITY 43. TRITON CENTRAL (7) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CHRISTEL HOUSE, EASTERN HANCOCK, HERITAGE CHRISTIAN, INDIANAPOLIS LUTHERAN, INDIANAPOLIS SCECINA MEMORIAL, IRVINGTON PREPARATORY ACADEMY, TRITON CENTRAL 44. CENTERVILLE (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CENTERVILLE, HAGERSTOWN, NORTHEASTERN, SHENANDOAH, UNION COUNTY, WINCHESTER COMMUNITY 45. SOUTH RIPLEY (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: AUSTIN, BROWN COUNTY, BROWNSTOWN CENTRAL, SOUTH RIPLEY, SOUTHWESTERN (HANOVER), SWITZERLAND COUNTY 46. MITCHELL (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CLARKSVILLE, CRAWFORD COUNTY, EASTERN (PEKIN), MITCHELL, PAOLI, SALEM 47. LINTON-STOCKTON (7) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: BARR-REEVE, EASTERN GREENE, LINTON-STOCKTON, NORTH KNOX, SOUTH KNOX, SULLIVAN, WEST VIGO 48. SOUTH SPENCER (7) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: EVANSVILLE MATER DEI, FOREST PARK, NORTH POSEY, PERRY CENTRAL, PIKE CENTRAL, SOUTH SPENCER, TELL CITY CLASS 1A 49. WESTVILLE (8) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: BOWMAN LEADERSHIP ACADEMY, HAMMOND ACADEMY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, KOUTS, MARQUETTE CATHOLIC, MORGAN TOWNSHIP, TRI-TOWNSHIP, WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP, WESTVILLE 50. TRI-COUNTY (7) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CASTON, NORTH NEWTON, NORTH WHITE, PIONEER, SOUTH NEWTON, TRI-COUNTY, WEST CENTRAL 51. SOUTH CENTRAL (UNION MILLS) (7) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: ARGOS, CULVER COMMUNITY, ELKHART CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, NORTH JUDSON-SAN PIERRE, OREGON-DAVIS, SOUTH CENTRAL (UNION MILLS), TRITON 52. FREMONT (5) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: FORT WAYNE BLACKHAWK CHRISTIAN, FORT WAYNE CANTERBURY, FREMONT, HAMILTON, LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN 53. RIVERTON PARKE (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: ATTICA, COVINGTON, FAITH CHRISTIAN, FOUNTAIN CENTRAL, NORTH VERMILLION, RIVERTON PARKE 54. CARROLL (FLORA) (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: BETHESDA CHRISTIAN, CARROLL (FLORA), CLINTON CENTRAL, CLINTON PRAIRIE, FRONTIER, ROSSVILLE 55. DALEVILLE (8) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: COWAN, DALEVILLE, NORTH MIAMI, NORTHFIELD, SOUTHERN WELLS, SOUTHWOOD, TRI-CENTRAL, WES-DEL 56. SETON CATHOLIC (7) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: BLUE RIVER VALLEY, CAMBRIDGE CITY LINCOLN, MONROE CENTRAL, RANDOLPH SOUTHERN, SETON CATHOLIC, UNION (MODOC), UNION CITY 57. ANDERSON PREPARATORY ACADEMY (4) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: ANDERSON PREPARATORY ACADEMY, INDIANA SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF, LIBERTY CHRISTIAN, PURDUE POLYTECHNIC – BROAD RIPPLE 58. PROVIDENCE CRISTO REY (3) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: EMINENCE, GREENWOOD CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, PROVIDENCE CRISTO REY 59. MORRISTOWN (7) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: EDINBURGH, KNIGHTSTOWN, MORRISTOWN, NORTH DECATUR, SOUTH DECATUR, TRI, WALDRON 60. SHAWE MEMORIAL (8) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CROTHERSVILLE, HAUSER, JAC-CEN-DEL, MILAN, OLDENBURG ACADEMY, RISING SUN, SHAWE MEMORIAL, TRINITY LUTHERAN 61. SHAKAMAK (7) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: BLOOMFIELD, CLAY CITY, CLOVERDALE, DUGGER UNION, NORTH CENTRAL (FARMERSBURG), SHAKAMAK, WHITE RIVER VALLEY 62. LOOGOOTEE (5) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: LOOGOOTEE, NORTH DAVIESS, ORLEANS, SHOALS, VINCENNES RIVET 63. NEW WASHINGTON (8) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: BORDEN, CHRISTIAN ACADEMY OF INDIANA, HENRYVILLE, LANESVILLE, NEW WASHINGTON, ROCK CREEK ACADEMY, SOUTH CENTRAL (ELIZABETH), WEST WASHINGTON 64. TECUMSEH (6) BRACKET | TICKETS SCHOOLS: CANNELTON, EVANSVILLE CHRISTIAN, NORTHEAST DUBOIS, SPRINGS VALLEY, TECUMSEH, WOOD MEMORIAL ====================================== INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL SCORES https://www.maxpreps.com/in/softball/scores/?date=5/30/2026 ===== INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL SECTIONALS SECTIONAL SCOREBOARD: https://www.maxpreps.com/in/softball/scores/?date=5/30/2026 ===== REGIONALS CLASS 4A HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE) NO. 1 LAKE CENTRAL AT HOBART, 6 P.M. NO. 3 PENN AT ELKHART, 6 P.M. NO. 4 FORT WAYNE CARROLL AT HOMESTEAD, 6 P.M. WESTERN AT NO. 14 WESTFIELD, 6 P.M. BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE PENDLETON HEIGHTS AT LAWRENCE NORTH, 6 P.M. NO. 10 TERRE HAUTE NORTH AT FRANKLIN, 6 P.M. NO. 9 BROWNSBURG AT NO. 5 CENTER GROVE, 6 P.M. SEYMOUR AT NO. 13 CASTLE, 6 P.M. CLASS 3A TWIN LAKES NO. 12 GRIFFITH AT NO. 10 HANOVER CENTRAL, 6 P.M. NO. 2 LOGANSPORT AT NO. 1 YORKTOWN, 6 P.M. GLENN AT TIPPECANOE VALLEY, 6 P.M. EAST NOBLE AT MISSISSINEWA, 6 P.M. JASPER JENNINGS COUNTY AT NORTH HARRISON, 6 P.M. NO. 7 EDGEWOOD AT NO. 7 NEW PALESTINE, 7 P.M. NO. 12 DANVILLE AT NO. 3 CATHEDRAL, 6 P.M. GIBSON SOUTHERN AT NO. 14 EVANSVILLE MEMORIAL, 6 P.M. CLASS 2A KOKOMO WESTERN BOONE AT NO. 7 ROCHESTER, 6 P.M. CENTRAL NOBLE AT WOODLAN, 6 P.M. NO. 11 ANDREAN AT JIMTOWN, 6 P.M. NO. 9 FRANKTON AT NO. 1 ALEXANDRIA-MONROE, 6 P.M. FOREST PARK EASTERN HANCOCK AT NORTHEASTERN, 6 P.M. NO. 12 BROWNSTOWN CENTRAL AT SALEM, 6 P.M. NO. 10 SOUTHMONT AT MONROVIA, 6 P.M. NO. 8 SULLIVAN AT NO. 3 TECUMSEH, 6 P.M. CLASS A FRONTIER SOUTHWOOD AT UNION CITY, 6 P.M. NO. 10 RIVERTON PARKE AT CLINTON PRAIRIE, 6 P.M. NO. 8 SOUTH CENTRAL AT FREMONT, 6 P.M. KOUTS AT NO. 12 NORTH NEWTON, 6 P.M. BROWN COUNTY BLOOMFIELD AT NO. 1 BARR-REEVE, 6 P.M. COWAN AT NO. 2 LUTHERAN, 6 P.M. NO. 11 KNIGHTSTOWN AT NO. 3 MILAN, 6 P.M. NO. 5 WEST WASHINGTON AT WOOD MEMORIAL, 6 P.M. ===================================== INDIANA BOYS VOLLEYBALL STATE FINALS RONCALLI 3 CATHEDRAL 0 ===================================== INDIANA BOYS TRACK STATE FINALS-JUNE 6 Order of Events 3:00 p.m. – Pole Vault, Long Jump and Discus 3:30 p.m. – High Jump; Shot Put 4:15 p.m. – 3200 M Relay Finals 5:00 p.m. – 100 M Dash Trials 5:15 p.m. – 110 M High Hurdle Trials 5:40 p.m. – 200 M Dash Trials 6:10 p.m. – Opening Ceremonies 6:15 p.m. – 110 M High Hurdles 6:25 p.m. – 100 M Dash 6:35 p.m. – 1600 M Run 6:45 p.m. – 400 M Relay 7:05 p.m. – 400 M Dash 7:20 p.m. – 300 M Int. Hurdles 7:45 p.m. – 800 M Run 8:05 p.m. – 200 M Dash 8:15 p.m. – 3200 M Run 8:30 p.m. – 1600 M Relay Advancement from State Meet Trials to Finals 1. 110 and 100 Hurdles, 100; 200 a. 3 heats with 10 b. 1st, 2nd from each heat plus next 3 best times. 2. 400 Relay, 1600 Relay, 400, 300 Hurdles a. no trials b. 3 sections timed; 10 per section 3. 3200 Relay, 800 a. no trials b. 2 sections; 1 with 13, 1 with 14 4. 1600 and 3200 a. no trials b. 1 race timed 5. Field Events a. top 10 qualify plus ties =================================== INDIANA GIRLS TRACK STATE FINALS JUNE 5 Order of Events3:00 p.m. – Pole Vault, Long Jump and Discus3:30 p.m. – High Jump; Shot Put4:15 p.m. – 3200 M Relay Finals5:00 p.m. – 100 M Dash Trials5:15 p.m. – 100 M High Hurdle Trials5:40 p.m. – 200 M Dash Trials6:10 p.m. – Opening Ceremonies6:15 p.m. – 100 M High Hurdles6:25 p.m. – 100 M Dash6:35 p.m. – 1600 M Run6:45 p.m. – 400 M Relay7:05 p.m. – 400 M Dash7:20 p.m. – 300 M Low Hurdles7:45 p.m. – 800 M Run8:05 p.m. – 200 M Dash8:15 p.m. – 3200 M Run8:30 p.m. – 1600 M Relay Advancement from State Meet Trials to Finals1. 110 and 100 Hurdles, 100; 200 a. 3 heats with 10 b. 1st, 2nd from each heat plus next 3 best times.2. 400 Relay, 1600 Relay, 400, 300 Hurdles a. no trials b. 3 sections timed; 10 per section3. 3200 Relay, 800 a. no trials b. 2 sections; 1 with 13, 1 with 144. 1600 and 3200 a. no trials b. 1 race timed5. Field Events a. top 10 qualify plus ties =========================================== INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS TENNIS SEMI-STATE MAY 30 1. JASPER BRACKET CHAMPIONSHIP 1: EVANSVILLE BOSSE WINNER VS. JEFFERSONVILLE WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP 2: JASPER WINNER VS. BROWNSBURG WINNER 2. CENTER GROVE BRACKET CHAMPIONSHIP 1: NORTH CENTRAL (INDPLS.) WINNER VS. BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP 2: CENTER GROVE WINNER VS. MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE) WINNER 3. CULVER ACADEMIES BRACKET CHAMPIONSHIP 1: CARMEL WINNER VS. LAPORTE WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP 2: HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE) WINNER VS. CROWN POINT WINNER 4. HOMESTEAD BRACKET CHAMPIONSHIP 1: BLUFFTON WINNER VS. NOBLESVILLE WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP 2: NORTHWOOD WINNER VS. CARROLL (FORT WAYNE) WINNER ===== INDIANA GIRLS TENNIS REGIONALS 1. BROWNSBURG BRACKET MATCH 1: AVON WINNER VS. TERRE HAUTE SOUTH WINNERMATCH 2: BLOOMINGTON SOUTH WINNER VS. GREENCASTLE WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER 2. JASPER BRACKET MATCH 1: LOOGOOTEE WINNER VS. VINCENNES LINCOLN WINNERMATCH 2: JASPER WINNER VS. LINTON-STOCKTON WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER 3. EVANSVILLE BOSSE (HOSTED @ EVANSVILLE NORTH) BRACKETMATCH 1: MT. VERNON WINNER VS. TELL CITY WINNERMATCH 2: GIBSON SOUTHERN WINNER VS. EVANSVILLE BOSSE WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER 4. JEFFERSONVILLE BRACKETMATCH 1: LANESVILLE WINNER VS. JEFFERSONVILLE WINNERMATCH 2: FLOYD CENTRAL WINNER VS. SILVER CREEK WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER 5. BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE BRACKETMATCH 1: BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE WINNER VS. BATESVILLE WINNERMATCH 2: SCOTTSBURG WINNER VS. COLUMBUS NORTH WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER 6. CENTER GROVE BRACKETMATCH 1: PERRY MERIDIAN WINNER VS. CONNERSVILLE WINNERMATCH 2: CENTER GROVE WINNER VS. SHELBYVILLE WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER 7. NORTH CENTRAL (INDIANAPOLIS) BRACKETMATCH 1: NORTH CENTRAL (INDPLS.) WINNER VS. LAWRENCE NORTH WINNERMATCH 2: FRANKLIN CENTRAL WINNER VS. BEN DAVIS WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER 8. MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE) BRACKETMATCH 1: MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE) WINNER VS. RICHMOND WINNERMATCH 2: FISHERS WINNER VS. NEW CASTLE WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER 9. CARMEL BRACKETMATCH 1: CARMEL WINNER VS. CRAWFORDSVILLE WINNERMATCH 2: PARK TUDOR WINNER VS. FOUNTAIN CENTRAL WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER 10. LAPORTE BRACKETMATCH 1: SOUTH BEND SAINT JOSEPH WINNER VS. HOBART WINNERMATCH 2: LAPORTE WINNER VS. VALPARAISO WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER 11. HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE) BRACKETMATCH 1: HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE) WINNER VS. FRANKFORT WINNERMATCH 2: KOKOMO WINNER VS. LOGANSPORT WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER 12. CROWN POINT BRACKETMATCH 1: CROWN POINT WINNER VS. EAST CHICAGO CENTRAL WINNERMATCH 2: CULVER ACADEMIES WINNER VS. HIGHLAND WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER 13. BLUFFTON BRACKETMATCH 1: PERU WINNER VS. BLUFFTON WINNERMATCH 2: MARION WINNER VS. HOMESTEAD WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER 14. NOBLESVILLE BRACKETMATCH 1: DELTA WINNER VS. JAY COUNTY WINNERMATCH 2: ALEXANDRIA MONROE WINNER VS. NOBLESVILLE WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER 15. CARROLL (FORT WAYNE) BRACKETMATCH 1: CARROLL (FORT WAYNE) WINNER VS. ANGOLA WINNERMATCH 2: EAST NOBLE WINNER VS. FORT WAYNE CONCORDIA LUTHERAN WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER 16. NORTHWOOD BRACKETMATCH 1: WARSAW COMMUNITY WINNER VS. CONCORD WINNERMATCH 2: PENN WINNER VS. NORTHWOOD WINNERCHAMPIONSHIP: MATCH 1 WINNER VS. MATCH 2 WINNER ====================================== NBA PLAYOFFS CONFERENCE FINALS EAST FINAL: (3) NEW YORK VS. (4) CLEVELAND GAME 1: NEW YORK 115, CLEVELAND 104 (NEW YORK LEADS SERIES 1-0) GAME 2: NEW YORK 109, CLEVELAND 93 (NEW YORK LEADS SERIES 2-0) GAME 3: NEW YORK 121, CLEVELAND 109 (NEW YORK LEADS SERIES 3-0) GAME 4: NEW YORK 130, CLEVELAND 93 (NEW YORK WINS SERIES 4-0) ===== WEST FINAL: (1) OKLAHOMA CITY VS. (2) SAN ANTONIO GAME 1: SAN ANOTNIO 122, OKLAHOMA CITY 115 (SPURS LEAD SERIES 1-0) GAME 2: OKLAHOMA CITY 122, SAN ANOTNIO 113 (SERIES EVEN 1-1) GAME 3: OKLAHOMA CITY 123 SAN ANTONIO 108 (THUNDER LEADS SERIES 2-1) GAME 4: SAN ANTONIO 103, OKLAHOMA CITY 82 (SERIES EVEN 2-2) GAME 5: OKLAHOMA CITY 127, SAN ANTONIO 114 (THUNDER LEAD SERIES 3-2) GAME 6: SAN ANTONIO 118, OKLAHOMA CITY 91 (SERIES EVEN 3-3) GAME 7: SAN ANTONIO 111, OKLAHOMA CITY 103 (SPURS WINS SERIES 4-3) ===== 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 STANLEY CUP FINAL GAME 1: VEGAS AT CAROLINA, 8 P.M. ET, TUESDAY, JUNE 2 (ABC, SN, CBC, TVAS) GAME 2: VEGAS AT CAROLINA, 8 P.M. ET, THURSDAY, JUNE 4 (ABC, SN, CBC, TVAS) GAME 3: CAROLINA AT VEGAS, 8 P.M. ET, SATURDAY, JUNE 6 (ABC, SN, CBC, TVAS) GAME 4: CAROLINA AT VEGAS, 8 P.M. ET, TUESDAY, JUNE 9 (ABC, SN, CBC, TVAS) *GAME 5: VEGAS AT CAROLINA, 8 P.M. ET, THURSDAY, JUNE 11 (ABC, SN, CBC, TVAS) *GAME 6: CAROLINA AT VEGAS, 8 P.M. ET, SUNDAY, JUNE 14 (ABC, SN, CBC, TVAS) *GAME 7: VEGAS AT CAROLINA, 8 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17 (ABC, SN, CBC, TVAS) * – IF NECESSARY =================================================== MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL CHICAGO WHITE SOX 7 DETROIT 1 PITTSBURGH 10 MINNESOTA 9 WASHINGTON 9 SAN DIEGO 4 BALTIMORE 6 TORONTO 5 TEXAS 7 KANSAS CITY 6 NY METS 6 MIAMI 1 LA ANGELS 14 TAMPA BAY 3 BOSTON 9 CLEVELAND 1 HOUSTON 9 MILWAUKEE 2 CHICAGO CUBS 6 ST. LOUIS 1 ATLANTA 5 CINCINNATI 2 COLORADO 8 SAN FRANCISCO 3 LAS VEGAS 6 NY YANKEES 4 SEATTLE 5 ARIZONA 1 PHILADELPHIA 4 LA DODGERS 3 =================================== MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL INDIANAPOLIS 14 IOWA 5 SOUTH BEND 7 FT. WAYNE 0 =================================== COLLEGE BASEBALL SCOREBOARD: https://d1baseball.com/scores/?date=20260530 ===== SUPER REGIONALS: FRIDAY, JUNE 5 TO MONDAY, JUNE 8 | TBA HOST SITES ===== MEN’S COLLEGE WORLD SERIES: FRIDAY, JUNE 12 – SUNDAY/MONDAY 21/22 | CHARLES SCHWAB FIELD IN OMAHA, NE GAME 1 | 2 P.M. FRIDAY, JUNE 12 ON ESPN GAME 2 | 7 P.M. FRIDAY, JUNE 12 ON ESPN GAME 3 | 3 P.M. SATURDAY, JUNE 13 ON ESPN GAME 4 | 8 P.M. SATURDAY, JUNE 13 ON ESPN GAME 5 | 2 P.M. SUNDAY, JUNE 14 ON ESPN GAME 6 | 7 P.M. SUNDAY, JUNE 14 ON ESPN GAME 7 | 2 P.M. MONDAY, JUNE 15 ON ESPN GAME 8 | 7 P.M. MONDAY, JUNE 15 ON ESPN GAME 9 | 2 P.M. TUESDAY, JUNE 16 ON ESPN GAME 10 | 8 P.M. TUESDAY, JUNE 16 ON ESPN GAME 11 | 2 P.M. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17 ON ESPN GAME 12 | 7 P.M. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 17 ON ESPN BRACKET 1 | TBD THURSDAY, JUNE 18 ON ESPN (IF NECESSARY) BRACKET 2 | TBD THURSDAY, JUNE 18 ON ESPN (IF NECESSARY) CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES GAME 1 | TBD SATURDAY, JUNE 20 ON ESPN CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES GAME 2 | 2:30 P.M. SUNDAY, JUNE 21 ON ABC CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES GAME 3 | 7 P.M. MONDAY, JUNE 22 ON ESPN (IF NECESSARY) =================================== COLLEGE WORLD SERIES SCORES Scores ================================ WNBA TEMPO 93 STORM 72 SUN 84 SPARKS 81 FIRE 100 FEVER 84 =================================== UFL SCORES GAMBLERS 26 STALLIONS 13 =================================== MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER NO GAMES SCHEDULED =================================== MAJOR NATIONAL HEADLINES/RELEASES NBA SPURS END THUNDER’S TITLE DEFENSE, REACH FIRST NBA FINALS SINCE 2014 Luke Kornet returned to the bench a hero. The San Antonio Spurs backup big man had just turned in perhaps the biggest defensive play of game 7 of the Western Conference finals, coming in for a stretch in relief of Spurs star Victor Wembanyama. Wembanyama exited the game with five fouls and the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder had what seemed like a prime chance to seize control. But instead, Kornet blocked Isaiah Hartenstein just seconds after entering, the Spurs came through on the other end, and the Spurs were on their way to an NBA Finals berth with a 111-103 road win over the Thunder on Saturday. “The definition of a winning play,” Wembanyama said. San Antonio will open the NBA Finals against the New York Knicks at home Wednesday. The teams have met in the Finals once before, with San Antonio winning the 1999 NBA Championship in five games. It was the first of five titles for the Spurs. Their last visit was in 2014, when they beat the Miami Heat in five games. In the playoffs for the first time since Wembanyama became the face of the franchise, San Antonio is four wins away from adding to that total. Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said his team’s relative inexperience isn’t a limiting factor by this point. “This team has now been pretty damn consistent for a long time, for over 100 games, for the most part,” Johnson said. “… I don’t know who has as much experience as we do this year in the season of 2025-26.” The Spurs led for much of the game but struggled to put away the pesky Thunder, who continually battled back from double-digit deficits to get back within striking distance. And when Wembanyama, who was San Antonio’s tone-setter throughout the series, left the game with five fouls with 6:48 remaining, the Spurs could have been in trouble. Hartenstein’s steal got the Thunder in transition with a chance to cut the deficit to four. But Kornet blocked Hartenstein’s shot, getting between Hartenstein and the basket, then Stephon Castle drained a pullup jumper for a 99-91 advantage. Kornet headed to the bench just 59 seconds after he entered, and was greeted enthusiastically by the rest of the Spurs — including Wembanyama. Coming out of that stoppage, Julian Champagnie drained his sixth 3-pointer of the game to stretch the lead back to 11. The Thunder pulled back to six with just more than two minutes remaining, but Oklahoma City went 0-for-4 the rest of the way on chances to trim the deficit even further. Wembanyama had 22 points and seven rebounds. “I want to win so bad, it’s like my life depends on it,” Wembanyama said. Wembanyama was named the Most Valuable Player of the Western Conference finals. “He has such a vision, in my opinion, of who he wants to be as a person and as a player,” Johnson said. “And the commitment and investment that he puts into that vision, it’s nothing like I’ve ever seen before.” Champagnie scored 20 and Castle, De’Aaron Fox and Dylan Harper also came up big for San Antonio. “They were just the better team tonight, start to finish,” Thunder star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said. “And then every time we tried to like cut into and take control of the game, it felt like they had an answer.” Gilgeous-Alexander had struggled in the series, shooting just 37.9% from the floor through six games, but looked much more like the back-to-back NBA Most Valuable Player in Game 7. “I was a little bit closer to it, for sure,” Gilgeous-Alexander said. He finished with 35 points on 12-of-21 shooting with nine assists and three steals. “He was brilliant,” Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. But the other two of Oklahoma City’s big three — Chet Holmgren and Jalen Williams — made little impact. Williams missed his fourth game of the series with a hamstring injury, while Holmgren finished with just four points on 1-of-2 shooting. Holmgren didn’t attempt a shot after the first quarter. His two field-goal tries were tied for the fewest of Holmgren’s career. His only other two-shot game came March 27, 2024. Cason Wallace added 17 points, returning to the starting lineup with Williams and Ajay Mitchell out again. Alex Caruso scored 12 off the bench but was just 3 of 14 from the field. Kornet, who won a title with Boston in 2024, was all smiles after the game. “Someone from the bench yelled, ‘Who is it, LeBron James?’” Kornet said of his block and referring to James’ block of an Andre Iguodala shot in game 7 of the 2016 NBA Finals. “We’ll see which one has more staying power in the record books of history.” NBA news updates Gilgeous-Alexander sees plenty more matchups with the young Spurs in the future. “They’re young, talented, well-coached, play the right way, seems like they like each other,” Gilgeous-Alexander said. “They have the makeup. You don’t beat us without the makeup.” =================================== NHL BLACKHAWKS GREAT DENNIS HULL DIES AT 81 Dennis Hull, a five-time All-Star forward for the Chicago Blackhawks and the younger brother of Hockey Hall of Famer Bobby Hull, died on Saturday, the team announced. He was 81. No other details were given with the announcement from Blackhawks owner and CEO Danny Wirtz. “The Chicago Blackhawks are deeply saddened to learn of the passing of Dennis Hull earlier this morning,” Wirtz said. “Dennis enjoyed a distinguished career built on his scoring ability and consistency, leaving lasting contributions not only to the Blackhawks franchise but to the game itself.” Hull played the first 13 of his 14 NHL seasons with Chicago (1964-77) before finishing his career with the Detroit Red Wings in 1977-78 after a trade. He played in five All-Star Games, including four consecutive seasons from the 1970-71 through 1973-74 campaigns, and was selected a second-team NHL All-Star in the 1972-73 season. Hull totaled 654 points (303 goals, 351 assists) and a plus-22 rating in 959 regular-season games. He also recorded 67 points (33 goals, 34 assists) in 104 playoff games. He played for the Blackhawks in three Stanley Cup Finals (1965, 1971, 1973). “Known around the league for his immense skill, toughness and intelligence, Dennis was as dominant on the ice as he was beloved off it,” Wirtz said. “He often drew on his sharp wit and sense of humor to keep the locker room loose, while his warmth and humility made everyone he met feel welcome. “On behalf of the Wirtz family and the entire Blackhawks organization, we extend our heartfelt condolences to Dennis’s family, friends and teammates, and the many fans who adored him.” A native of Point Anne, Ontario, Canada, Hull was nicknamed the “Silver Jet” as his brother Bobby was the “Golden Jet.” Bobby Hull, who died in January 2023 at age 84, was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1983. Dennis Hull played for Canada against the Soviet Union in the 1972 Summit Series and totaled two goals and two assists in four appearances as Canada triumphed. ================================== MLB MLB ROUNDUP: MARINERS SLUG 4 HRS, TOP D-BACKS FOR FIFTH STRAIGHT WIN Seattle slugged four solo home runs and Bryan Woo pitched seven scoreless innings as the host Mariners downed the Arizona Diamondbacks 5-1 on Saturday for their fifth consecutive victory. Julio Rodriguez, Luke Raley, Dominic Canzone and Colt Emerson went deep as the Mariners moved above .500 (30-29) for the first time since they were 3-2 on March 30. Woo (5-3) retired the first 13 batters he faced before Adrian Del Castillo lined a one-out single to center field in the fifth. An out later, Ildemaro Vargas lined a single to center, but Woo caught Jose Fernandez looking at a called third strike to get out of the inning. Those were the only two hits Woo allowed. The right-hander didn’t walk a batter and struck out nine, matching his season high. Diamondbacks starter Ryne Nelson (2-4) gave up five runs (four earned) on seven hits over 5 1/3 innings. The right-hander didn’t walk a batter and struck out three as Arizona lost its second straight game. Braves 5, Reds 2 Ronald Acuna Jr. launched a pair of home runs to help Atlanta down host Cincinnati and take the first two games of the three-game weekend series. Acuna tallied his first multi-homer game of the year, hitting his third and fourth home runs in the last three games after he had just two in his first 42 games. Jorge Mateo and Matt Olson each added a solo homer for the Braves, who won their fourth game in five tries and became the first team in the majors to reach 40 wins. Martin Perez (3-3) allowed two runs on four hits over five innings, striking out a pair and walking three. Raisel Iglesias completed his 10th save in as many tries with a perfect ninth inning. Brady Singer (2-5) yielded three runs on four hits in five innings, walking four and striking out two as the Reds dropped their third straight and fell to 9-17 in May. White Sox 7, Tigers 1 Edgar Quero, Colson Montgomery and Andrew Benintendi hit home runs as host Chicago defeated struggling Detroit. White Sox starter Anthony Kay gave up one run and six hits in five innings. Chicago goes for the three-game sweep Sunday. The Tigers have lost three straight and are just 6-21 in May. Detroit’s Framber Valdez gave up four runs and six hits in 6 2/3 innings. The southpaw struck out four and walked two in 89 pitches. Wenceel Perez homered for the Tigers. Orioles 6, Blue Jays 5 Pete Alonso capped host Baltimore’s five-run ninth inning with a walk-off single to stun Toronto and end a two-game skid. The Orioles, who drew 11 walks in the game, rallied with four hits, three walks and a hit batter in the ninth after being held to three singles through eight innings. Albert Suarez (2-0) pitched the ninth and allowed one run but earned the victory. The Blue Jays’ Kazuma Okamoto doubled in two runs in the eighth, but Toronto’s winning streak was halted at four games. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. racked up four hits, including a double, and scored twice, while Ernie Clement had two singles as part of the Blue Jays’ 11-hit attack. Jeff Hoffman (4-4) gave up ninth-inning runs on Leody Taveras’ triple, Baltimore’s first extra-base hit of the game, and Jackson Holliday’s single. Rangers 7, Royals 6 Ezequiel Duran dropped a walk-off, RBI single into right field, and Texas rallied for three runs in the ninth inning to win over scuffling Kansas City in Arlington, Texas. The Rangers trailed 6-4 entering the ninth, when Joc Pederson led off with an opposite-field homer to right off Lucas Erceg (3-3). Josh Jung and Brandon Nimmo followed with back-to-back infield singles and Jake Burger’s third hit tied the contest. Duran came through with a ball that fell in front of right fielder Jac Caglianone, allowing Nimmo to score. The Royals, who have lost five straight, managed just three hits and could not take advantage of three walks allowed by Texas’ Kumar Rocker, who had a 3-0 lead when he left following the sixth inning. However, Kansas City finally broke through in the seventh and eventually built a 6-3 lead in the eighth. Pirates 10, Twins 9 Jake Mangum and Nick Gonzales each totaled three hits and two RBIs to lead host Pittsburgh to a wild win over Minnesota. Mangum’s second-inning solo home run off Twins starter Bailey Ober (6-3) was his first as a Pirate, and ignited a six-run second inning that gave Pittsburgh a 7-1 lead. Ober allowed three home runs in the first two innings, including a three-run homer to Oneil Cruz in the second and a leadoff solo homer to Spencer Horwitz in the first. Minnesota answered in the third on a Kody Clemens RBI triple, and produced five runs in the fourth off Pirates starter Mitch Keller to tie the game at 7. Mangum’s RBI single in the fifth then put the Pirates ahead for good. After starter Mitch Keller lasted just four innings, Yohan Ramirez (3-2) pitched the first of four scoreless innings by Pirates relievers to get the win. Astros 9, Brewers 2 Jeremy Pena and Isaac Paredes capped three-run uprisings with two-run, extra-base hits to help Houston down visiting Milwaukee. Pena finished 3-for-5 with a home run and two RBIs while Paredes went 1-for-3 with a double and a walk. Yordan Alvarez and Jake Meyers also produced multi-hit games for the Astros, while Christian Walker clubbed a three-run shot in the eighth. Brewers right-hander Brandon Sproat (1-4) retired seven of the next eight batters after the Pena homer, but the right-hander came undone when Pena led off the fifth with a single. He was lifted after two more batters but was charged with two of the three runs that scored. Red Sox 9, Guardians 1 Jarren Duran had a three-run homer and Connor Wong singled home a pair in a six-run ninth inning, lifting visiting Boston to a victory over Cleveland. Wong gave the Red Sox a 2-1 lead in the sixth with an RBI double off Matt Festa (1-1), scoring pinch hitter Marcelo Mayer, and tacked on two more in the ninth against Will Dion. Boston won for the second time in its last eight games, buoyed by a strong start from Sonny Gray (6-1), who secured his fourth May win by allowing one run on four hits over six innings. Jose Ramirez had a first-inning RBI double for the Guardians, who scored their only run two batters into their half of the first. Starter Parker Messick didn’t factor into the decision but was again effective, giving up one run on five hits over five innings. Angels 14, Rays 3 Rookie Wade Meckler slugged his first career grand slam in the opening inning, and Los Angeles evened its series with Tampa Bay by pummeling the Rays in St. Petersburg, Fla. Meckler went 2-for-4 with two runs and a stolen base and staked his club to a 4-0 lead before the Rays batted as the Angels breezed to their sixth win in eight games. Mike Trout was 2-for-3 with a homer, three runs and two walks. Jo Adell ripped a three-run homer and Oswald Peraza also went deep. Reid Detmers (2-5) allowed three runs on five hits in five innings. Yandy Diaz homered in his two hits and scored twice, and Junior Caminero had two doubles, two walks and an RBI for Tampa Bay. Drew Rasmussen (4-2) surrendered a season-high five runs on four hits to lose for the first time in five May starts. Cubs 6, Cardinals 1 Pete Crow-Armstrong busted out of his slump with a season-high four hits to lead Chicago to a victory over host St. Louis. The Cubs center fielder entered with a modest four-game hitting streak, but he was hitting just .154 (10-for-65) in his last 19 games. His 4-for-5 night included a double and his seventh home run of the season. He scored twice and drove in a pair. Ben Brown (2-2) limited the Cardinals to just three hits and a run over seven innings, which tied his career high. St. Louis struck first in the fourth with Alec Burleson’s one-out single to right scoring JJ Wetherholt, who led off the inning with a single up the middle. Starter Kyle Leahy scattered six hits in 4 1/3 innings for the Cardinals. Rockies 8, Giants 3 Jake McCarthy homered, singled twice and drove in four runs, Ryan Feltner returned to the rotation with six shutout innings and Colorado beat San Francisco in Denver. Kyle Karros also went deep, and TJ Rumfield and Willi Castro had two hits each for Colorado, which has won consecutive games for the first time since May 7-8. Drew Gilbert homered among his two hits, and Jung Hoo Lee and Matt Chapman also had two hits for the Giants, who have lost five in a row. Feltner (2-1) was activated from the injured list (right ulnar nerve inflammation) to make his first start since April 23. The right-hander retired the first five batters he faced before Chapman’s two-out double in the second, and he erased leadoff singles in the third and fifth innings with double-play grounders. Nationals 9, Padres 4 Luis Garcia Jr. hit a two-run single to highlight a six-run seventh inning as host Washington rallied past San Diego. Garcia had two hits and Drew Millas homered for the Nationals, who had lost two straight. Xander Bogaerts, Manny Machado and Fernando Tatis Jr. homered for the Padres, who have lost five of their past six games. Mets 6, Marlins 1 Christian Scott pitched five effective innings for his first career win, and New York supported him with three runs in the fourth inning of their victory over visiting Miami. Mark Vientos hit a two-run double and Marcus Semien hit an RBI single in the fourth, when the Mets went ahead 3-0 against the Marlins’ Tyler Phillips (0-1). Scott (1-0) allowed one run on five hits to lift New York to its second straight win over Miami after getting swept in a three-game series in Florida last weekend. Liam Hicks delivered an RBI single in the fifth for the Marlins, who dropped their fourth straight and lost for the seventh time in 11 games. Miami also set a season high by striking out 15 times. Athletics 6, Yankees 4 Shea Langeliers and Nick Kurtz drilled two-run homers and Tyler Soderstrom hit a solo shot as the Athletics beat visiting New York at West Sacramento, Calif. J.T. Ginn (3-3) pitched six solid innings, yielding just one unearned run and four hits as the Athletics snapped a four-game losing streak. Kurtz went 3-for-4 and scored twice and Soderstrom reached four times on three hits and one walk. The Yankees had just six hits — none producing a run — while seeing a five-game winning streak come to an end. New York’s Ryan Weathers (2-3) served up three homers and allowed five runs and six hits over 6 2/3 innings. The left-hander matched a season-best with 10 strikeouts and walked three. Phillies 4, Dodgers 3 Edmundo Sosa hit a go-ahead two-run home run with two outs in the eighth inning as Philadelphia rallied past Los Angeles to improve to 4-1 on a six-game West Coast road trip. Bryce Harper added an RBI single in a three-run eighth, while Alec Bohm hit a second-inning home run for the Phillies. Orion Kerkering (3-0) gave up a run in the seventh and Jhoan Duran pitched the ninth for his 12th save. Alex Call had an RBI single and a run scored for the Dodgers, who saw their season-best six-game winning streak snapped. Left-hander Tanner Scott (1-2) gave up all three Philadelphia runs in the eighth inning. ======================================== COLLEGE SOFTBALL JOCELYN BRISKI SHUTS DOWN NEBRASKA, LEADS ALABAMA TO WCWS SEMIFINALS Marlie Giles set the tone with a three-run homer to lift Alabama into the Women’s College World Series semifinals with a 5-1 defeat of Nebraska Saturday night in Oklahoma City. That alone proved to be enough for Alabama pitcher Jocelyn Briski, who threw a complete-game one-hitter to move the Crimson Tide (56-7) one win away from the WCWS Championship Series. Giles added a run on a sacrifice fly, finishing with four RBIs. Leadoff hitter Jena Young was 2-for-2 with an RBI single. Lauren Camenzind provided the only hit for Nebraska (52-8), a fourth-inning solo homer. Jordy Frahm allowed three runs over two innings in her start. She was replaced by Alexis Jensen, who struck out six over four innings but allowed two unearned runs on two hits. Despite putting the first two batters of the home first inning on base, the Crimson Tide seemed destined to come up empty after consecutive strikeouts. Giles made sure that wasn’t the case, smashing a first-pitch homer over the wall in center to open a 3-0 lead. Briski retired the first 11 batters of the game before allowing her lone hit and run on Camenzind’s homer. She followed by retiring 10 of the final 12 batters she faced, with the only two baserunners reaching on errors. Briski struck out six and gave up no free passes to improve to 25-3. Nebraska, which had a 27-game win streak snapped, faces Texas Sunday in an elimination game for the right to face Tennessee in the semifinals. Alabama awaits the winner of Sunday’s other elimination game between Texas Tech and UCLA for a Monday semifinal. ====================================== GOLF SOO BIN JOO, UNBOTHERED BY WIND, SURGES 4 STROKES CLEAR AT SHOPRITE LPGA Soo Bin Joo takes a four-stroke lead into the final round of the ShopRite LPGA after another strong showing Saturday in Galloway, N.J. Joo, who was three strokes back after Friday’s opening round, maintained her momentum on a day where the scores were much higher, shooting a 3-under-par 68 to surge out to 8 under for the tournament. After an opening round where the best round was 8 under and five players shot 6 under or better, the Bay Course at Seaview Hotel & Golf Club showed its teeth on Saturday with an assist from some heavy wind. The best score of the second round was 3 under and only 20 of the 139 competitors in action shot under par. Joo didn’t get off to a great start with a bogey on the first hole of the day. But that proved to be her only mishap as she was blemish-free the rest of the way, posting four birdies, including on each of the final two holes. The 22-year-old South Korean is seeking her first career LPGA victory. “Winning (a) LPGA tournament (would be) a dream come true,” Joo said after her round. “I started playing golf because I want to win a tournament on LPGA, so it will be super fun, very exciting.” Joo is twice as far below par as anyone else in the field. Four strokes behind her is a logjam of five players tied at 4 under. That includes twin Japanese sisters Chizzy and Aki Iwai — who both shot 3 under Saturday — South Korea’s Somi Lee (69), France’s Celine Boutier (72) and Israel’s Laetitia Beck (75). Chizzy Iwai appeared destined for a disappointing finish when she spoiled a 3-under score with consecutive bogeys at the par-3 seventh and par-4 eighth. However, she redeemed that with an eagle at the par-5 ninth, finishing with the fewest putts of anyone on the day, 24. “It was so lucky,” Iwai said of her round-closing eagle. “At the second shot when I hit the moment, I felt so good. And then, yeah, chipping, it’s a little bit lucky because a little bit too strong (of a) shot. But, yeah I believe it was (a) good shot.” Beck, who shot a bogey-free 8-under 63 on Friday, fell back to the pack by shooting 4 over in the second round. Starting on the back nine, she had identical results on each half of the course, pairing three bogeys with a birdie on both the front and back. She hit 11 of 14 fairways, but managed to hit just 8 of 18 greens in regulation and needed 30 putts to complete her round. “Today was extremely windy, so (it) definitely was much harder to judge club selections, and putts were also much harder,” Beck said. “That’s where I pretty much struggled today. I didn’t make putts, but I think I misjudged a little bit a few times with the wind being so long leaving it short, and then the chip was pretty tough. Yeah, so I learned a lot from those mistakes.” Beck wasn’t alone in struggling to build off momentum of a strong opening round. Each of the six players who shot 6 under or better in the opening round shot 3 over or worse in the second. Defending champion Jennifer Kupcho followed a disappointing first round with an even worse second round (77) to fall to 9 over and miss the cut at 3-over 145. ===== ERIC COLE FIRES 63, HOLDS ONE-SHOT LEAD AT CHARLES SCHWAB CHALLENGE Eric Cole shot 7-under-par 63 for the best score in the third round of the Charles Schwab Challenge, taking the lead Saturday at Fort Worth, Texas. Cole, aiming for his first victory on the PGA Tour, goes to Sunday’s final round at 12-under 198, holding a one-stroke edge on Ryan Gerard. Gerard birdied the last two holes of the third round to post 68. Mac Meissner (67 on Saturday) and J.J. Spaun (68) are two shots off the lead on the Colonial Country Club layout. Cole has never had a top-five finish on the PGA Tour, but he had back-to-back outings this spring when he tied for sixth place (Zurich Classic of New Orleans and Myrtle Beach Classic). Meissner is also without a top-five result. Cole played the first 11 holes Saturday in 6 under and later followed his lone bogey on No. 15 with a birdie on the next hole. Meissner finished his first 11 holes at 5 under for the round. Alex Smalley (69), Russell Henley (69) and Japan’s Hideki Matsuyama (70) are tied for fifth place at 9 under. There’s an eighth-place tie at 8 under with Michael Thorbjornsen (71), Michael Brennan (69), Canada’s Mackenzie Hughes (69) and Colombia’s Nico Echavarria (65). Second-round leader Jordan Smith of England shot 74 to plummet to a tie for 19th place at 6 under. He didn’t have a birdie and he was dinged with three consecutive bogeys on the front side. Defending champion Ben Griffin shot 68 to pull to 6 under for the tournament. ================================ AUTO RACING RAIN WASHES OUT QUALIFYING, DENNY HAMLIN TO START ON NASHVILLE POLE LEBANON, Tenn. — Intermittent light rain showers forced the cancellation of Saturday’s NASCAR Cup Series Busch Light Pole Qualifying at Nashville Superspeedway, resulting in Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin starting from pole position in Sunday night’s Cracker Barrel 400 (7 p.m. ET, Amazon Prime, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio). Championship points leader Tyler Reddick will start his No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota alongside Hamlin’s No. 11 JGR Toyota on the front row as Toyota hopes to earn its first ever series win at the 1.33-mile concrete oval. Last week’s Charlotte race winner Daniel Suarez will start third in the No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet with JGR’s Christopher Bell (No. 20 Toyota) and two-time and reigning series champion Kyle Larson (Hendrick Motorsports No. 5 Chevrolet) rounding out the top five on the 38-car grid. Defending race winner, Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney, will start his No. 12 Ford seventh. Bell, who was fastest in the practice session, said he didn’t expect the cancelled time trials to make a big difference in either the run of the 400-miler or ultimately the outcome of the race. Especially with the field getting some time on track with practice. “Well, it’s good for me today, because I have a good metric, so I’m okay with that,’ Bell said smiling of the formulation NASCAR used to set the field in lieu of qualifying. His competitors were not overly concerned with the cancellation of qualifying, either — instead just glad to turn some laps and dial in their cars. “They put a lot of resin down in both corners, more than they’ve done in the past and we’re really curious how the cars are going to drive,” said Roush Fenway Keselowski owner-driver Brad Keselowski. “So it’s semi-important (to qualify) although we’ve been racing here for the last three or four years, so we all have a pretty good feel for it.” =============================== INDIANA SPORTS NEWS AND HEADLINES INDIANA FEVER The Indiana Fever fell to the Portland Fire 100-84 at the Moda Center on Saturday night. The Fever return home to Gainbridge Fieldhouse on Thursday, June 4, at 7 p.m. ET for the first game of the 2026 WNBA Commissioner’s Cup. Despite jumping out to an early 8-2 lead in the first two minutes, Indiana struggled to score for the remainder of the first quarter, trailing the Fire 29-15. The Fire maintained their lead throughout the second quarter, a 50-37 advantage, with the Fever unable to overcome the deficit in the second half. POSTGAME NOTESBOX SCORE Indiana Fever Notes: The game itself marked the first time Indiana has played in Portland since 2002, when the Fire previously played in the WNBA. The Fever are now 1-1 against the 2026 WNBA expansion side, with each team winning in their respective home venues. With five rebounds on the night, Aliyah Boston passed Erlana Larkins for the second most defensive rebounds on Fever franchise history, behind only Tamika Catchings. Boston now has 746 defensive rebounds across her career, doing so in 131 games played. With four assists on the night, Kelsey Mitchell’s career total now sits at 819, moving into sole possession of No. 2 all-time in Fever history in the assists and passing former guard Erica Wheeler. Forward Grace VanSlooten scored her first points in a Fever uniform with 9.7 seconds remaining in the fourth quarter. ===================================== INDIANAPOLIS INDIANS The Indianapolis Indians erupted for a season-high 14 runs as they defeated the Iowa Cubs, 14-5, on Saturday night at Victory Field. Termarr Johnson crushed his first Triple-A home run, Ronny Simon had a career-high four stolen bases and Billy Cook hit a game-tying three-run home run in the fifth inning. After trailing Iowa (24-31), 5-1, the Indians (23-33) mounted their comeback with one run in fourth inning on a triple from Enmanuel Valdez and a five-run fifth frame to take the lead. Cook tied the game, 5-5, with his three-run blast in the and Enmanuel Valdez added his second and third RBI of the game on a double to the right field corner. The outburst continued in the sixth with an RBI groundout from Simon and a two-run, opposite-field double down the right field line by Esmerlyn Valdez. Johnson then hit a moonshot in the eighth that bounced into oncoming traffic on West Street. Indy added three more insurance runs in the eighth to conclude the scoring. Noah Davis started and gave up three runs across 3.0 innings, followed by 3.0 innings of two-run ball from Nick Dombkowski (W, 2-2). Michael Darrell-Hicks (2.0ip) and Justin Meis (1,0ip) blanked the I-Cubs over the final three frames. Connor Noland started for Iowa and allowed one run over 4.0 innings, with Zac Leigh (L, 2-1) allowing five runs and retiring just one batter. This week’s six-game series between Indianapolis and Iowa concludes on Sunday afternoon at 1:35 PM. RHP José Urquidy (1-3, 5.87) will take the mound for the Indians while LHP Matthew Boyd (0-0, 7.36) is reportedly scheduled to make a major league rehab start for the I-Cubs. ================================ INDY ELEVEN Indianapolis – Bruno Rendón scored a goal for the fourth straight match, Eric Dick made six saves while recording his 33rd career clean sheet, and the Boys in Blue vaulted themselves up to second place in the Eastern Conference with a 1-0 win over Rhode Island FC at Carroll Stadium, extending their home unbeaten streak to nine (8-0-1). Captain Aodhan Quinn made his 300th USL Championship regular season appearance and midway through the first half became the first USL Championship player to log 25,000 minutes. In the 55th minute, Quinn assisted Rendón’s winner on a well-placed cross, bringing him just two assists shy of Kenardo Forbes’ USL Championship regular-season record of 66. Taking a corner kick from the right side, Quinn clipped a ball in towards the top of a crowded penalty area. Rendón drifted away from the masses in front of the goal and tracked down the pass just left of the penalty spot, hitting a masterful right-footed volley into the top-left corner of the goal. Dick was extraordinary, repeatedly claiming crosses and making comfortable saves on long-range shots. Indy Eleven’s goalkeeper never appeared troubled by any of Rhode Island’s six shots on target, and held down the fort in front of the Brickyard Battalion for a second half that saw the visitors take 12 shots. The Boys in Blue had their first big chance in the 26th minute when Quinn lifted a perfectly timed through ball to Rendón, who was making a run into the box. Indy Eleven’s leading goal-scorer in all competitions took a touch off his chest at the penalty spot before steering a left-footed shot just right of the goal. After Rendón’s goal, Edward Kizza had a great chance to double the hosts’ lead in the 65th minute. Logan Neidlinger played a beautiful ball from outside the box on the right side to the far post at the six-yard line. Kizza’s one-time shot rolled just left of the post, though, and both players came off shortly afterwards as coach Sean McAuley looked for fresh legs. Cam Lindley made history for the second straight week, breaking the franchise record for starts in all competitions with his 107th. Lindley already holds the club mark for appearances in all comps with 128, a record that he broke last week. He also surpassed 15,000 career minutes tonight (15,042). In the final half hour, Rhode Island peppered the hosts’ goal with attacks in search of an equalizer. Repeatedly, though, Indy Eleven’s back line and goalkeeper stayed strong. In the 87th minute, the visitors quickly pushed up field off a drop ball and recorded their final shot on target with a half-volley from just outside the box sent toward the bottom left corner. Dick dove to his left and made the save, securing the victory. A third of the way through the season, the Boys in Blue finished Saturday night in second place in the Eastern Conference after starting the night it in fifth. Indy Eleven has won three straight league games since losing 1-0 to still-undefeated Tampa Bay Rowdies. Next Saturday, June 6 is Racing Indy Night at Carroll Stadium when the Boys in Blue host USL League One side Forward Madison FC in Prinx Tires USL Cup action at 7 p.m. Tickets start at just $7 online and fans can add an Indy Eleven Racing Milk Bottle at checkout for $4. Ticket options include the new Desnuda Tequila Deck, Family Four-Packs, and Flex Mini-Plans. Located on the East Deck, the Desnuda Tequila Deck has an exclusive full-service bar and high-top seating providing panoramic pitch-side views for 50 people. It’s a social experience offering a wonderful place to hang out and take in the game! Desnuda Tequila Deck seats start at $59 and include one FREE cocktail and bottomless chips, salsa, and guac. The Family Four-Pack is available for all 2026 home games and can be purchased online only. Priced at just $49, the Family Four-Pack includes four tickets, FREE parking, $20 in Concession Vouchers, and a 20% Merchandise Discount, along with access to the Fun Zone/Kids Activation Area. Flex Mini Plans include vouchers to be redeemed for any 2026 regular season home match. For questions, call (317) 685-1100 during business hours or email tickets@indyeleven.com. USL ChampionshipIndy Eleven 1:0 Rhode Island FCSat., May 30, 2026 – 7:00 p.m.Carroll Stadium | IndianapolisWeather: Sunny, 75 degreesAttendance: 8,188 2026 USL Championship Records (W-T-L)Indy Eleven: 5-3-2 (5), 18 pts, #2 in Eastern Conference Rhode Island FC: 3-3-4 (3), 12 pts, #9 in Eastern Conference Scoring Summary IND – Bruno Rendón (Aodhan Quinn) 55’ Discipline SummaryRI – Amos Shapiro-Thompson (caution) 8’IND – Noble Okello (caution) 15’IND – Bruno Rendón (caution) 36’ RI – Clay Holstad (caution) 56’ Indy Eleven Line-Up: Eric Dick, Aodhan Quinn (captain), Makel Rasheed, Paco Craig, Logan Neidlinger (Dylan Sing 67’), Jack Blake (Kian Williams 90+3’), Cam Lindley, Noble Okello (Mohamed Omar 80’), Josh O’Brien, Edward Kizza (Hesron Barry 67’), Bruno Rendón (Alejandro Mitrano 90+4’). Indy Eleven Subs Not Used: Reice Charles-Cook, Tyler Lowden. Rhode Island FC Line-Up: Koke Vegas (captain), Aldair Sanchez (Frank Nodarse 73’), Grant Stoneman, Karifa Yao, Nick Scardina (Logan Dorsey 73’), Hugo Bacharach (Dwayne Atkinson 83’), Clay Holstad, Leo Afonso (Agustín Rodríguez 58’), Amos Shapiro-Thompson (Noah Fuson 58’), Jojea Kwizera, JJ Williams. Rhode Island FC Subs Not Used: Zachary Herivaux, Jacob Castro. ================================== PURDUE MEN’S GOLF CARLSBAD, Calif. – The Purdue men’s golf team had its chances in round two at the NCAA Championships, but some big numbers hurt the Boilermakers’ chances to move up the leaderboard at the Omni La Costa Resort and Spa. Purdue finished round two with a 36-hole total of 15-over par 591 (296-295) to sit in 24th place entering Sunday’s third round. The Boilermakers are 12 shots out of fifth place, needing a big round on Sunday to advance to Monday’s fourth round. Auburn leads the tournament at 20-under par, followed by Texas and Vanderbilt at 12-under par. Purdue entered the tournament as the 27th seed, trailing only Chattanooga and San Diego among teams it was seeded above. The Boilermakers recorded 15 birdies on the day, one more than yesterday, but big numbers did in Purdue. The Boilermakers had a double-bogey, two triple-bogeys and a quadruple-bogey during the day that killed any momentum for the Boilermakers. Three of them came on the front nine (Purdue’s second nine after it appeared the Boilermakers were ready to make a charge. Ten of Purdue’s 15 birdies came on the front nine. Aside from the four bad holes, Purdue’s five players were 1-over par. Jenson Forrester continues to lead the Boilermakers and will have a chance on Sunday to qualify for the fourth round on Monday. Forrester is currently tied for 33rd at 1-under par 143 (72-71), but is currently tied for eighth among players currently not among the top-15 teams. Individuals that are in the top nine not on advancing teams will advance to Monday’s round. Forrester entered the NCAA Championships having just three even- or under-par rounds in his last four events (11 rounds), two of which came in the Big Ten Championships. Sam Easterbrook also has a chance to advance to Monday’s fourth round, currently in a 53rd-place tie at 1-over par 145 (72-73). Easterbrook posted 14 more pars, but a double-bogey on the fourth hole cost him a spot among the top 35. Easterbrook’s 28 pars through two rounds is tied for the tournament lead. Supapon Amornchaichan is tied for 116th at 7-over par 151 (76-75), Kentaro Nanayama is tied for 126th at 8-over par 152 (76-76) and Will Harvey is tied for 141st at 10-over par 154 (76-78). Purdue will tee off round three on Sunday from 3:45 to 4:29 p.m. ET, off hole one, while paired with Texas A&M and Louisville. Purdue is looking for its first top-20 finish at the NCAA Championships since 2004 (T-16th). The Boilermakers are five shots out of 20th place. =============================== PURDUE TRACK LEXINGTON, Ky. – Purdue Track & Field’s NCAA East First Round concluded with tickets punched in the 400m by Alexia Smith, in record-breaking fashion, and in the high jump by Amarianna Lofton. Purdue totaled six men’s qualifications and three women’s after only qualifying two men’s athletes out of the NCAA East last season. Purdue also had two combined event athletes at nationals last season, but those are not competing at regionals. Day Four Notes • Smith ran 50.51 to finish fourth in the NCAA East and break Brionna Thomas’ previous school record of 50.78 set in 2018. The impressive run by Smith was a 0.71-second personal best. She punched her first ticket to an NCAA Championships after she finished 15th in the east last season and 18th in 2024 as a freshman. • Lofton earned her spot at the NCAA Championships after she cleared 1.82m (5-11.50) and finished tied for fifth in the NCAA East First Round. She was a two-time NCAA Division II First Team All-American indoors at Central State before joining the Boilermakers. • Britannia Johnson fell just one spot shy of qualifying for nationals in the discus after she threw 54.07m (177-04) to finish 13th. She finishes her season 16 spots higher at the NCAA East this season than last. • The 4x400m of Gia Clay, Jayla Cooper, Smith and Taiye Ayenuro finished 16th in 3:33.44. The new group, with Cooper running for the first time this season, entered the program rankings at No. 8. • Blessing Gideon wrapped up her season 22nd in the triple jump (12.82m / 42-00.25). She ended a successful 2026 campaign at the NCAA East First Round in the long and triple jump and scored in both events at Big Tens. • Britannie Johnson finished 24th in the discus after she threw (51.39m / 168-07). She heads to the NCAA Outdoor Championships in the shot put after she finished ninth on Thursday. • Jubilee Felder finished tied for 35th in the high jump after she cleared 1.71m (5-07.25). She was one of 10 freshmen to qualify for the NCAA East First Round. Next Up Purdue’s nine qualifiers gear up for the NCAA Outdoor Championships in Eugene, Oregon (June 10-13). ============================== BALL STATE TRACK LEXINGTON, Ky. — Malina Miller needed just two attempts to clear the high jump bar at 1.76 meters on Saturday in NCAA First Round competition, but the next height at 1.79 meters remained elusive. Miller, the Mid-American Conference champion in the high jump, entered the competition alongside freshman teammate Nina Garner, both who had 1.76 meters as personal bests prior to the MAC Championships, two weeks ago. Miller emerged as the MAC champ in the league meet on May 16, with Garner placing fourth. Miller had eclipsed 1.76 meters once during the indoor season, then got over the bar at 1.77 meters for the MAC title. Saturday, after Garner was eliminated from competition at a beginning height of 1.71 meters, Miller missed on her first attempt at 1.76, then cleared the bar on her second. In flight No. 2 at the University of Kentucky Track and Field Complex, Miller approached the third height as one of 12 remaining jumpers. Twenty-four jumped in each of two flights, with the top 12 jumpers from the East advancing to the NCAA Championships, June 10-13, in Eugene, Oregon. With the new height set at what would be a personal record at 1.79, Miller missed on each of three attempts, leaving her tied for 10th in the second flight and tied for 24th overall. She entered the regional track meet seeded 25th. Miller’s final attempt marked the end of four Ball State competitions in this week’s NCAA East First Round. Thursday, Laya’Lapri Ratney finished 33rd in the 100-meter hurdles and Kenli Nettles finished 35th in the 400-meter hurdles. Saturday, Garner failed to record a height in the high jump, and Miller slotted 24th. The Cardinals’ track season continues with Nettle’s entry in the NCAA heptathlon finals, to be conducted at historic Hayward Field in Eugene on June 12 and 13. =============================== INDIANA STATE TRACK LEXINGTON, Ky. – Indiana State junior hurdler Rachel Mehringer’s storybook 2025-26 season will carry on, a the Sycamore standout qualified for the 2026 NCAA Outdoor National Championships in the 100m hurdles Saturday evening. Mehringer, who owns the Indiana State and MVC record in the event, ran a time of 12.75 to win her heat and earn an automatic qualifying spot. The Schnellville, Indiana, native will make her second career national championships appearance after finishing 13th in the 100m hurdles in 2025. Mehringer joins a decorated group of Sycamore athletes to reach multiple national championships in hurdles events after previously earning Second Team All-America honors in 2025. Aubrey Herring, Chris Lancaster, Greggmar Swift and Adarius Washington are the four others in program history to reach multiple national championships in the hurdles events. Mehringer wasn’t the only Sycamore to have a big day at the NCAA East First Round, as Aliseonna Garnett registered a career-best mark in the discus to place in the top 15 in the event. Garnett, who won the MVC title in the discus this season and also recorded a top-25 finish in the shot put earlier at the NCAA East First Round, beat her previous career best with two of her three attempts Saturday. Garnett’s top mark of 54.02m (177-3) placed her 14th in the field, just over a foot shy of qualifying for the national championships. She also had a throw of 53.88m (176-9) in her series, with her top mark of the day also ranking fifth in program history. SATURDAY RESULTS Women’s 100m Hurdles 3. Rachel Mehringer – 12.75 (qualified for NCAA Outdoor National Championships) Women’s Discus 14. Aliseonna Garnett – 54.02m (177-3) (fifth in program history) Up Next Rachel Mehringer will represent the Blue and White in the NCAA Outdoor National Championships, which take place June 10-13 in Eugene, Oregon. ================================ 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 1869 – The first rainout in professional baseball occurs as heavy rain postpones the Red Stockings game against the Antioch Nine. 1909 – In the first game of a scheduled Memorial Day doubleheader in the Three-I League, the Decatur Commodores defeat the Bloomington Bloomers, 2 – 1, in 26 innings. It is the longest professional game played until that time, and won’t be topped until 1960. Both pitchers, Ed Clarke for Bloomington, and Otto Burns, making his first professional pitching appearance for Decatur, go all the way. SS Mark Purtell, a .130 hitter for the year, drives in the winning run. The second game of the twinbill is postponed by darkness. 1914 – Joe Benz of the Chicago White Sox pitches a no-hitter against the Cleveland Naps for a 6 – 1 victory. 1922 – Leading off the top of the 5th in a game in Philadelphia, Bill Cunningham hits a ball into the left field bleachers which bounces off a seat back onto the field. He is allowed a double and the Giants protest to no avail. The hit comes off Lee Meadows. 1925 – Ty Cobb’s 275th triple makes him the first player ever with 1,000 extra-base hits. He will finish his career with 1,136 extra-base hits, the all-time record until Babe Ruth passes him on June 21, 1931. 1927: There is an unassisted triple play for the second consecutive day in the major leagues. During the 9th inning of a game at Tiger Stadium, Detroit first baseman Johnny Neun completes the rare play by catching a Homer Summa line drive, tagging Charlie Jamieson between first and second, and then touching second before Glenn Myatt can return. Detroit beats the Indians, 1 – 0. Jimmie Foxx hits his first career home run, off Urban Shocker of the Yankees in an 18 – 5 A’s loss in the second game of a doubleheader. He will hit 533 more by the time his career ends in 1945. 1937 – Carl Hubbell of the New York Giants ends his 24-game win streak with a 10 – 3 loss to the Brooklyn Dodgers. His last defeat came on July 13, 1936, 1 – 0 to the Chicago Cubs. 1938 – Lou Gehrig plays in his 2,000th consecutive game and collects a RBI single, helping the Yankees defeat the Boston Red Sox, 12 – 5. 1944 – Al Unser hits his only home run of the season, a pinch-hit grand slam with two outs in the bottom of the 9th inning, helping the Detroit Tigers beat the New York Yankees, 6 – 2. 1948 – Pitching for the Schenectady Blue Jays of the Can-Am League, Tommy Lasorda strikes out 25 batters and collects the game-winning hit in the 15th inning in a 6 – 5 win over the Amsterdam Rugmakers. 1950 – Tokyu Flyers pitcher Makizo Itoh gives up a Nippon Pro Baseball record 18 runs in a game against the Mainichi Orions. 1958 – Masayuki Dobashi of the Toei Flyers sets a Nippon Pro Baseball record with 16 strikeouts (later broken); he also becomes the second NPB hurler to fan nine in a row, following Takao Kajimoto. 1961: A bunt single by Dick Groat and a pair of tape measure two-baggers from Roberto Clemente and Dick Stuart provide all the support Pittsburgh starter Joe Gibbon needs in his complete game victory over the Milwaukee Braves. The Bucs batter the Braves, 9 – 1, and nine doubles to none. Batting for Carl Yastrzemski, Boston Red Sox pinch hitter Carroll Hardy bunts for a single in the 8th inning of 7 – 6 loss to the Yankees. Hardy will be the only player to pinch-hit for both Yastrzemski and Ted Williams. 1964: At Shea Stadium, the New York Mets and the San Francisco Giants play the longest doubleheader in major league history – 9 hours, 52 minutes – with the help of a 23-inning game in the nightcap that is won by the visiting Giants, 8 – 6, on run-scoring hits by Del Crandall and Felipe Alou against Galen Cisco. The game takes 7:23 to play. In the opener, Juan Marichal pitches a complete game and Orlando Cepeda goes 3 for 4 with two runs and one RBI for a Giants 5 – 3 victory. Roberto Clemente hits one of the longest home runs in Forbes Field annals, off a light tower some 450 feet from the plate; had it missed the tower, it certainly would have sailed at least 500 feet. The blast off Sandy Koufax of the Dodgers ties the score at 4 – 4 in the 3rd, but L.A. goes on to defeat the Pirates, 6 – 4. 1965: Chuck Dressen returns to manage the Detroit Tigers after suffering a heart attack in spring training; Bob Swift had managed the team in the interim. The Astros score six times in the 8th inning to stun Milwaukee, 7 – 2. Four walks, a throwing error and a “hit” that falls out of Rico Carty’s glove doom the Braves. Bob Bruce is the winning pitcher. 1966 – Ron Santo establishes a National League record when he appears in his 364th consecutive game at third base. 1968 – Don Drysdale’s streak of hitless innings appears to end when he hits Dick Dietz of the Giants with a bases-loaded pitch in the 9th inning. However, home plate umpire Harry Wendelstedt calls Dietz back, ruling he did not attempt to evade the pitch. Giants manager herman Franks strongly disagrees and is ejected. Drysdale then gets Dietz to fly out and retires the next two batters as well, completing the Dodgers’ 3 – 0 shutout as his scoreless streak remains intact. 1970 – Luis Aparicio and Walt Williams of the Chicago White Sox each collect five hits in a 22 – 13 rout of the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park. Williams also scores five times. Chicago (24) and Boston (16) collect 40 hits, one short of the American League record for two teams in a regular game set in 1950. 1975 – César Tovar of Texas becomes the second player to collect the only hit in five one-hitters, doing so in a 6 – 0 loss to Catfish Hunter of the Yankees. Tovar also had the only hit while playing for the Minnesota Twins on April 30, 1967; May 15 and August 10, 1969; and August 13, 1970. Billy Williams preceded Tovar in setting this record a month earlier, and Eddie Milner will tie it in 1986. 1979 – In his major league debut, Pat Underwood blanks the Blue Jays for 8 1/3 innings, earning the victory when the Tigers beat Toronto, 1 – 0, thanks to Jerry Morales’ 8th-inning solo home run. The 22-year-old rookie’s mound opponent is his older brother Tom Underwood, now winless in seven decisions, who goes the distance in the Exhibition Stadium contest. 1980 – Ken Landreaux of the Minnesota Twins goes 0 for 4 in an 11 – 1 loss to the Baltimore Orioles, ending his hitting streak at 31 consecutive games, the longest streak in the American League since Dom DiMaggio hit safely in 34 games in a row in 1949. 1983 – American League President Lee MacPhail suspends Yankees owner George Steinbrenner for one week, citing “repeated problems” with the outspoken owner’s public criticism of umpires. Steinbrenner, who was fined $50,000 by Commissioner Bowie Kuhn during spring training for berating some National League umpires, cannot attend games or be in his Yankee Stadium office during the suspension. 1994 – Eduardo Perez of the Angels hits a two-run home run to cap off a four-run 1st inning against the Indians in Cleveland. Julian Tavarez starts the game for the Tribe before the game is called with two out in the bottom of that same inning. The start of the game had been delayed by rain for 40 minutes, and the game is halted by a delay of 1 hour and 42 minutes before being canceled. 1997 – Ila Borders becomes the first woman to play in a minor league game. The St. Paul Saints reliever gives up three runs to the Sioux Falls Canaries without recording an out, but will redeem herself the next day by striking out the side. 1999 – Umpire Frank Pulli uses a television replay to take away a home run from Cliff Floyd of the Florida Marlins in the 5th inning of a 5 – 2 loss to the St. Louis Cardinals. After the game, National League officials make it clear technology should not have been used to reverse the call. 2001: At Safeco Field, Seattle Mariners ace Aaron Sele trims the Baltimore Orioles, 2 – 1. Sele is now 8-0 and the Mariners are 40-12. The Orioles’ only run is Cal Ripken, Jr.’s 420th career home run. Nelson Barrera launches his 454th Mexican League homer, taking Gaudencio Aguirre deep. He breaks Hector Espino’s home run record; earlier this year, Espino had lost his career run record to Daniel Fernandez. Tragically, Barrera will be electrocuted in a freak accident in a year’s time. 2002 – Carlos Beltran hits a grand slam and adds a solo home run in the 11th inning to pace the Royals to a 10 – 7 victory over Texas. His solo shot is the first of three consecutive home runs in the 11th, as Mike Sweeney and Joe Randa follow suit. The Royals become just the second major league team to hit at least three consecutive home runs in extra innings. Back on May 2, 1964, also in the 11th inning, the Minnesota Twins hit four consecutive home runs, by Tony Oliva, Bob Allison, Jimmie Hall and Harmon Killebrew. Getting back to tonight, Kansas City’s one remaining home run comes with the bases empty, courtesy of Neifi Perez, while Texas gets a pair of two-run blasts from Alex Rodriguez. 2005 – The Kansas City Royals hire Buddy Bell as their new manager, three weeks after Tony Peña resigned. Bell, the bench coach for the Indians, has previously managed Detroit and Colorado. 2006: Roger Clemens agrees to terms on a one-year deal with the Houston Astros to come back for a 23rd season, or at least the remaining four months of the current season. The seven-time Cy Young Award winner ends his seven-month retirement by accepting a deal that will pay him approximately $12.8 million – the pro-rated value of his $22,000,022 seasonal contract – to pitch for the Astros for the balance of the current season. Jose Castillo hits a home run in his fifth straight game as Pittsburgh beats Milwaukee for the third consecutive time, 6 – 1, at PNC Park. Sean Casey and Jason Bay hit back-to-back homers while Freddy Sanchez goes 3 for 4 with three runs. Pittsburgh has outscored Milwaukee 32 – 5 through the first three games of this four-game series. The Kansas City Royals replace general manager Allard Baird with Dayton Moore of the Atlanta Braves organization. Holding the worst record in the majors at 13-37, the floundering Royals are on pace to lose 100 or more games for the fourth time in five seasons. 2008: The Red Sox win 6 – 3 over the Orioles. In the 7th inning, Manny Ramirez homers off Chad Bradford to become the 24th player in major league history to have hit 500 career circuit clouts. The Pirates top the Cards, 14 – 4, thanks to a grand slam by Luis Rivas and fine pitching from Paul Maholm. It is Tony LaRussa’s 2,000th game as manager of the St. Louis Cardinals, passing Red Schoendienst for first in franchise history. For the first time in 100 years, the Chicago Cubs have the best record in Major League Baseball entering June. The Cubs are 36-21. 2009 – Florida State University defeats Ohio State University, 37 – 6, in regional tournament action in Tallahassee, FL. Florida State clubs 38 hits, including 15 doubles, and 66 total bases. 2010: Ubaldo Jimenez of the Rockies throws his second career shutout – his first was his no-hitter on April 17th – in beating San Francisco, 4 – 0. He is the first pitcher to reach ten wins in the majors this year, defeating defending Cy Young Award winner Tim Lincecum. Alex Rodriguez may not be his usual superhuman self this season, but it’s still a bad idea to issue an intentional walk to face him with the bases loaded. The Indians find this out the hard way, as A-Rod connects for a grand slam in the 7th inning, turning a 2 – 1 Yankees lead into an 11 – 2 rout. The slam is the 20th of his career, placing him third on the all-time list, behind Lou Gehrig (23) and Manny Ramirez (21). San Diego score their most runs at home since moving to PETCO Park in 2004, routing New York, 18 – 6. The last two runs are scored against Oliver Perez, who has pitched so poorly that manager Jerry Manuel has relegated him to the deepest reaches of the bullpen. Jerry Hairston hits a grand slam for the Padres, who remain two games ahead in the NL West. The Tigers designate pitcher Dontrelle Willis for assignment. He seemed to have turned a corner in his comeback bid when he made the Tigers’ starting rotation out of spring training, but has only won one game all season. This may not yet be the end of the line for the gregarious lefthander, though, as both the Diamondbacks and Marlins have shown interest in acquiring his services. On June 1st, Willis will be traded to Arizona for P Billy Buckner. 2011: The Orioles’ Jeremy Guthrie is cruising along to a win over the Mariners when Justin Smoak blasts a three-run home run in the bottom of the 8th to turn a 2 – 0 lead for the O’s into a 3 – 2 loss. With two outs, Ichiro Suzuki had reached on an error by Guthrie and Brendan Ryan on an infield single prior to the blast, thus none of the runs are earned. Seattle has won 11 of its last 14 games to get back in the middle of the race in the AL West. Anibal Sanchez pitches eight innings and drives in two runs as Florida stops Arizona’s seven-game winning streak, 5 – 2. Leo Nunez picks up his 19th save in 20 chances in relief of Sanchez. The Astros pound out six runs on five hits in the 9th inning to keep Jordan Lyles from losing his major league debut against the Cubs. Trailing 3 – 1 against hard-throwing Carlos Marmol at Wrigley Field, Houston starts the inning with a single by Brett Wallace; Chris Johnson, Matt Downs and Michael Bourn also get hits, and after a walk, Hunter Pence puts the game out of reach with a three-run homer. Lyles, the youngest player in the majors, keeps the Cubs scoreless through seven before coughing up a pair of runs – one of them unearned – to start the 8th. Reliever Fernando Rodriguez gets credit for his first career win. Marietta College routs Chapman University, 18 – 5, to win the Division III College World Series. It is their fifth Division III title, breaking a tie with Eastern Connecticut State for the most. Austin Blaski gets his second win of the Series to win Most Outstanding Player of the tournament honors. 2012 – With a 1st-inning three-run homer off Bud Norris of the Astros, Colorado’s Carlos Gonzalez sets a franchise record with his fourth consecutive long ball. He had hit homers in his last three at-bats in the Rockies’ 13 – 5 win over Houston the previous day. The shaken Astros walk him intentionally the next time he comes to the plate in the 2nd inning. Colorado goes on to to win, 11 – 5, completing a four-game sweep. 2013 – Jacob Turner beats the Mets, 5 – 1, in his season debut to end the Marlins’ nine-game losing streak. Shaun Marcum falls to 0-6. 2015 – Martin Maldonado ends a 17-inning marathon with a solo walk-off homer off Vidal Nuno to give the Brewers a 7 – 6 win over the Diamondbacks. Maldonado goes 4-for-6 with three runs and two RBIs while catching all 17 innings. Matt Garza throws five scoreless innings in his first relief appearance since 2010 to earn the win. At 5 hours and 49 minutes, it is the longest game by time in the history of Miller Park. 2016 The Rockies tie a team record by hitting seven homers in a 17 – 4 drubbing of the Reds. Nolan Arenado and Charlie Blackmon hit two homers each. Losing pitcher Jon Moscot surrenders four of the long balls in his return from the disabled list, including one by Blackmon to lead off the bottom of the 1st. The Red Sox continue to pound the ball as Mookie Betts hits three homers and drives in five runs in a 6 – 2 win over the Orioles. Xander Bogaerts extends his hitting streak to 24 games with a 7th-inning single. The Red Sox start off with a blast as Betts and Dustin Pedroia go deep back-to-back against Kevin Gausman to open the game. 2017 – The Astros continue their torrid pace with a 17 – 5 beatdown of the Twins at Target Field, their seventh straight win. They hit a season-high six homers, including a pair by George Springer, and now have 38 wins, five more than any other major league team. Their lead in the AL West is already 11 games. 2021: The Venezuelan national team beats Cuba in a world-level event for the first time since the 1953 Amateur World Series. In the opener of the 2021 Americas Olympic Qualifier, Carlos Pérez hits a three-run homer off Lázaro Blanco in the 1st and Hernán Pérez falls a double shy of a cycle. Moisés Gómez saves the 6 – 5 win for Jhonathan Diaz. Canada also starts strong, as Andrew Albers, Brendan McGuigan and Ben Onyshko combine on a no-hitter (walking one and hitting one batter) in a 7 – 0 win over Colombia. Jacob Robson has three hits, two runs and three RBI. In other action, Team USA beats Nicaragua, 7 – 1, behind the pitching of Matthew Liberatore and three hits apiece from Luke Williams and Jarren Duran, and the Dominican national team tops Puerto Rico, 5 – 2, with 43-year-old Cuban defector Raúl Valdés getting the victory. 2022 – The Reds win their first game at Fenway Park since Game 7 of the 1975 World Series when they defeat the Red Sox, 2 – 1, beind a ten-strikeout performance by Luis Castillo, who allows just one hit in six innings. The Reds had played six games at Fenway since their last win, and had lost them all. 2023: Major League Baseball takes over production and distribution of local San Diego Padres television broadcasts, due to the failure of the local affiliate of Bally Sports, which is teetering on the verge of bankruptcy. MLB had made contingency plans for such an eventuality when Bally’s financial troubles became public in February, and it is likely that many or all of the network’s other regional cable networks will collapse in short order as well, leading to similar takeovers in those markets. The 2023 Women’s Baseball Asian Cup is a repeat of the first two Women’s Baseball Asian Cups in terms of the title game, as Japan again beats Taiwan, this time by an 8 – 3 score. MVP Akino Tanaka allows three hits in five shutout innings and Mizuki Bando saves it while Ayaka Deguchi leads the offense today. In other women’s baseball news, the first all-female umpiring crew works a game in a Cuban Serie Nacional contest. Janet Moreno, Yalili Acosta, Miroslawa Cumba and Milagros Quinones work a contest between the Industriales and Pinar del Río. 2024 – In his first ever game at Oracle Park in San Francisco, Aaron Judge, who grew up a Giants fan in Fresno, CA, homers twice to lead the Yankees to a 6 – 2 win. It completes a remarkable month of May for the slugger, during which he batted .371 with 12 doubles, 14 homers, and 27 RBIs in 28 games. 2025 – The Nationals tie a National League mark dating back to the 1948 Phillies when they score nine runs before recording a first out in an 11 – 7 win over the Diamondbacks. Brandon Pfaadt allows all eight batters he faces to reach base, and all eight score as reliever Scott McGough only gets the first out, a strikeout of Nathaniel Lowe, after the first 11 men have reached. Washington scores ten runs in the inning. Births[edit] 1819 – Walt Whitman, writer (d. 1892) 1844 – Jim Lovett, umpire (d. 1935) 1859 – Dupee Shaw, pitcher (d. 1938) 1873 – Bill Leith, pitcher (d. 1940) 1884 – Bill Foxen, pitcher (d. 1937) 1892 – George Smith, pitcher (d. 1965) 1894 – John Sullivan, pitcher (d. 1958) 1896 – Socks Seibold, pitcher (d. 1965) 1903 – John Russell, scout (d. 1973) 1905 – Peaches Davis, pitcher (d. 1995) 1912 – Dutch Fehring, catcher (d. 2006) 1913 – Johnnie Cowan, infielder (d. 1993) 1920 – Edward Bennett Williams, owner (d. 1988) 1923 – Ike Jackson, minor league catcher (d. 1964) 1924 – Paul Fauks, minor league executive (d. 2012) 1930 – Russ Goetz, umpire (d. 2017) 1938 – Ray Washburn, pitcher 1939 – Pat Angers, Canadian national team infielder 1940 – Tatsuo Nagao, NPB catcher 1943 – Jackie Brown, pitcher (d. 2017) 1948 – Don Koonce, minor league pitcher (d. 2019) 1949 – Katsumi Kaneko, NPB outfielder 1950 – Tippy Martinez, pitcher; All-Star 1952 – Dwight Bernard, pitcher 1952 – Gordie Clark, Canadian national team infielder 1952 – Masao Funada, NPB outfielder 1952 – Tom Wise, minor league infielder 1954 – Greg Erardi, pitcher 1955 – Larry Owen, catcher (d. 2018) 1956 – Tim Costello, minor league pitcher (d. 2011) 1956 – Fujio Sumi, NPB infielder 1958 – Miguel Ibarra, scout 1960 – Jeff Schaefer, infielder 1960 – Chuichi Takahashi, NPB outfielder 1962 – Joe Orsulak, outfielder 1963 – Malcolm Gregg, Australian national team pitcher 1965 – Kazuhiko Daimon, NPB pitcher 1966 – Jim Andrychuk, Canadian national team infielder 1966 – Takayuki Shirai, NPB pitcher 1967 – Joe Logan, minor league pitcher 1967 – Kenny Lofton, outfielder; All-Star 1967 – Bill Miller, umpire 1968 – Koichi Saka, NPB infielder 1969 – Rikkert Faneyte, outfielder 1969 – Michael Nind, Australian national team infielder 1969 – Iwao Omura, NPB outfielder 1969 – Tim Van Egmond, pitcher 1970 – Seiichi Murakami, NPB pitcher 1970 – Dilson Torres, pitcher 1970 – Yukitoshi Oka, NPB pitcher 1970 – Kenichi Yamanouchi, NPB infielder 1971 – Takahiro Funao, Japanese national team outfielder 1971 – Jose Malave, outfielder 1972 – Roger Etheridge, minor league pitcher 1972 – Pil-sun Kang, KBO infielder 1972 – Dave Roberts, outfielder; manager 1973 – Dale Alvarez, Guam national team outfielder 1973 – Scott Demetral, minor league infielder 1973 – Marty Janzen, pitcher 1973 – Soo-min Lim, KBO infielder 1974 – Mariano Cádiz, Argentinian national team infielder 1974 – Miguel Gómez, minor league pitcher 1975 – Mac Suzuki, pitcher 1977 – Phil Devey, minor league pitcher 1978 – Jae-goo Kim, KBO outfielder 1978 – Casey Kopitzke, minor league catcher and manager 1980 – Gustavo Ortiz, Spanish national team pitcher 1981 – Herman Alfonso, Palauan national team outfielder 1981 – Ray Olmedo, infielder 1981 – Jake Peavy, pitcher; All-Star 1982 – Alexandre Couton, Division Elite infielder 1982 – Ryota Kato, NPB catcher 1983 – Takahiko Nomaguchi, NPB pitcher 1984 – Andrew Bailey, pitcher; All-Star 1984 – Jesus Castillo, minor league pitcher 1984 – Jong-ho Kim, KBO outfielder 1984 – Mario Lissón, minor league infielder and manager 1984 – Norbert Semanaka, Brazilian national team pitcher 1984 – Robert Verschuren, South African national team pitcher 1985 – Dennis De Quint, Hoofdklasse infielder 1985 – Yo Sugihara, NPB pitcher 1985 – Ryan Wehrle, minor league infielder 1986 – C.J. Henry, minor league infielder 1986 – Drew Naylor, NPB pitcher 1986 – Michael Valadez, minor league player 1987 – Woo-chan Cha, KBO pitcher 1988 – Jonathan Cornelius, minor league pitcher 1988 – Lukas Rigele, Austrian national team utility man 1988 – Sammie Starr, minor league infielder 1989 – Edgar Ibarra, pitcher 1989 – Johan Jansson, Elitserien infielder 1989 – Weiqiang Meng, China Baseball League catcher 1989 – Jordan Stouffer, minor league infielder 1990 – Ciska Welboren, Dutch women’s national team pitcher 1991 – Matt Bowman, pitcher 1992 – Simon Vicente, French Division I infielder 1993 – John Mora, minor league outfielder 1993 – Juan Urbina, minor league pitcher 1994 – Dylan Cozens, outfielder 1994 – David Fletcher, infielder 1994 – Seishu Hatake, NPB pitcher 1994 – Rintaro Hirama, minor league pitcher 1995 – Gerson Bautista, pitcher 1995 – Shane Bieber, pitcher; All-Star 1995 – Greg Deichmann, outfielder 1995 – Kwon Ju, KBO pitcher 1995 – Dexter Stewart, Great Britain national team catcher 1996 – Trey Supak, minor league pitcher 1998 – AJ Lewis, minor league utility player 1999 – Robert Gasser, pitcher 1999 – Emerson Hancock, pitcher 1999 – Elián Miranda, Nicaraguan national team infielder 1999 – Jess Williams, minor league outfielder 2000 – Grant Holman, pitcher 2000 – Anderson Melendez, minor league outfielder 2000 – Luis Mieses, minor league outfielder 2000 – Ren Sawai, NPB outfielder 2000 – Spencer Schwellenbach, pitcher 2001 – Shohei Mizutani, Japanese national team outfielder 2002 – Denny Larrondo, minor league pitcher 2002 – Yoshiyasu Sasagawa, NPB outfielder 2003 – Jurrangelo Cijntje, minor league pitcher 2004 – Seo-hyeon Kim, KBO pitcher 2005 – Jun-won Kim, South Korean national team pitcher Deaths[edit] 1900 – Tom Patterson, outfielder (b. 1845) 1908 – Robert Maloney, outfielder (b. 1856) 1916 – Bud Sharpe, infielder (b. 1881) 1922 – John Coleman, outfielder (b. 1863) 1925 – Harry Deane, outfielder, manager (b. 1846) 1928 – Grant Briggs, catcher (b. 1865) 1935 – Case Patten, pitcher (b. 1874) 1937 – John Reilly, infielder (b. 1858) 1944 – John McKelvey, outfielder (b. 1847) 1945 – Dom Malchiodi, minor league catcher (b. 1920) 1947 – Jimmie Wilson, catcher, manager; All-Star (b. 1900) 1955 – Henry Jones, infielder (b. 1857) 1963 – Ernie Sulik, outfielder (b. 1910) 1964 – Rabbit Warstler, infielder (b. 1903) 1970 – Zip Zabel, pitcher (b. 1891) 1972 – Willie Jefferson, pitcher (b. 1904) 1981 – Mike Smith, outfielder (b. 1904) 1985 – Jake Early, catcher; All-Star (b. 1915) 1986 – Dixie McArthur, pitcher (b. 1892) 1987 – Jerry Adair, infielder (b. 1936) 1990 – Charlie Shoemaker, infielder (b. 1939) 1992 – Karl Schnell, pitcher (b. 1899) 1993 – Jimmy Hill, pitcher; All-Star (b. 1918) 1995 – Norm Brown, pitcher (b. 1919) 1996 – Dan Morgan, minor league pitcher (b. 1956) 1999 – Tadao Yamada, NPB catcher (b. 1942) 2000 – Hank Ruszkowski, catcher (b. 1925) 2001 – Santos Amaro, minor league outfielder; Salon de la Fama (b. 1908) 2001 – Jim Whatley, minor league first baseman and college coach (b. 1913) 2008 – Joe Lewis Sr., scout (b. 1906) 2009 – James Tillman, Negro League player (b. 1919) 2012 – Edmund Keehan, minor league outfielder (b. 1921) 2013 – Richie Phillips, MLUA official (b. 1940) 2014 – Jack Dittmer, infielder (b. 1928) 2015 – Gil Carter, minor league outfielder (b. 1932) 2017 – Jessie Huggins, minor league pitcher (b. 1944) 2020 – Bob Bennett, college coach (b. 1933) 2020 – Frank Layana, minor league outfielder (b. 1934) 2021 – Mike Marshall, pitcher; All-Star (b. 1943) 2022 – Teun Gaartman, Hoofdklasse outfielder (b. 1928) 2024 – Takashi Suzuki, NPB pitcher (b. 1933) 2025 – Betsy Jochum, AAGPBL outfielder and pitcher (b. 1921) ============================================== TV SPORTS TODAY (All times Eastern) Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts 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 About The Author troyderengowski61@gmail.com See author's posts Post navigation THE INDIANA SRN “SPORTSPAGE” SATURDAY MAY 30, 2026