“THE SCOREBOARD” INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL SCORES WEDNESDAY: https://www.maxpreps.com/in/baseball/scores/?date=5/12/2026 ============================================ INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL SCORES WEDNESDAY: https://www.maxpreps.com/in/softball/scores/?date=5/12/2026 =========================================== INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL BOYS VOLLEYBALL SCORES WEDNESDAY: https://www.maxpreps.com/in/volleyball/boys/scores/?date=5/12/2026 ================================================ INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS LAX SCORES WEDNESDAY: https://www.maxpreps.com/in/lacrosse/girls/scores/?date=5/12/2026 ============================================== INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL BOYS LAX SCORES WEDNESDAY: https://www.maxpreps.com/in/lacrosse/scores/?date=5/12/2026 ===================================== COLLEGE BASEBALL SCORES NOTRE DAME 16 DYATON 6 (8) INDIANA STATE 11 LINDENWOOD 6 COMPLETE SCOREBOARD: https://d1baseball.com/scores/?date=20260511 ======================================= COLLEGE SOFTBALL SCORES NO INDIANA GAMES NO GAMES SCHEDULED ====================================== MEN’S COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL SCORES HAWAII 3 UC IRVINE 1 ====================================== DIVISION 1 MEN’S LAX SCORES NO GAMES SCHEDULED ====================================== DIVISION 1 WOMEN’S LAX SCORES NO GAMES SCHEDULED ======================================= NBA SCORES/ NBA PLAYOFF SCHEDULE CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS (1) DETROIT VS. (4) CLEVELAND GAME 1: PISTONS 111, CAVALIERS 101 GAME 2: PISTONS 107, CAVALIERS 97 GAME 3: CAVALIERS 116, PISTONS 109 GAME 4: CAVALIERS 112, PISTONS 103 GAME 5: CLEVELAND AT DETROIT | WEDNESDAY MAY 13 GAME 6: DETROIT AT CLEVELAND | FRIDAY MAY 15* GAME 7: CLEVELAND AT DETROIT | SUNDAY MAY 17* SERIES EVEN 2-2 ==== (2) NEW YORK VS. (7) PHILADELPHIA GAME 1: KNICKS 137, 76ERS 98 GAME 2: KNICKS 108, 76ERS 102 GAME 3: KNICKS 108, 76ERS 94 GAME 4: KNICKS 144 76ERS 114 KNICKS WIN SERIES 4-0 ==== (1) OKLAHOMA CITY VS. (4) LOS ANGELES GAME 1: THUNDER 108, LAKERS 90 GAME 2: THUNDER 125, LAKERS 107 GAME 3: THUNDER 131, LAKERS 108 GAME 4: THUNDER 115, LAKERS 110 THUNDER WIN SERIES 4-0 ==== (2) SAN ANTONIO VS. (6) MINNESOTA GAME 1: TIMBERWOLVES 104, SPURS 102 GAME 2: SPURS 133, TIMBERWOLVES 95 GAME 3: SPURS 115, TIMBERWOLVES 108 GAME 4: TIMBERWOLVES 114, SPURS 109 GAME 5: SPURS 126, TIMBERWOLVES 97 GAME 6: SAN ANTONIO AT MINNESOTA | FRIDAY MAY 15* GAME 7: MINNESOTA AT SAN ANTONIO | SUNDAY MAY 17* SPURS LEAD SERIES 3-2 * = IF NECESSARY ============================================== NHL PLAYOFFS EASTERN CONFERENCE MONTREAL CANADIENS (3A) VS. BUFFALO SABRES (1A) SERIES TIED 2-2 GAME 1: BUFFALO 4, MONTREAL 2 GAME 2: MONTREAL 5, BUFFALO 1 GAME 3: MONTREAL 6, BUFFALO 2 GAME 4: BUFFALO 3, MONTREAL 2 GAME 5: MONTREAL AT BUFFALO — 7 P.M. ET, THURSDAY, MAY 14 (TNT, TRUTV, HBO MAX, SN, CBC, TVAS) GAME 6: BUFFALO AT MONTREAL — 8 P.M. ET, SATURDAY, MAY 16 (ABC, SN, CBC, TVAS) * GAME 7: MONTREAL AT BUFFALO — TBA, MONDAY, MAY 18 (ESPN) * – IF NECESSARY COMPLETE COVERAGE OF CANADIENS-SABRES SERIES PHILADELPHIA FLYERS (3M) VS. CAROLINA HURRICANES (1M) CAROLINA WINS SERIES 4-0 GAME 1: CAROLINA 3, PHILADELPHIA 0 GAME 2: CAROLINA 3, PHILADELPHIA 2 (OT) GAME 3: CAROLINA 4, PHILADELPHIA 1 GAME 4: CAROLINA 3, PHILADELPHIA 2 (OT) COMPLETE COVERAGE OF FLYERS-HURRICANES SERIES WESTERN CONFERENCE MINNESOTA WILD (3C) VS. COLORADO AVALANCHE (1C) COLORADO LEADS SERIES 3-1 GAME 1: COLORADO 9, MINNESOTA 6 GAME 2: COLORADO 5, MINNESOTA 2 GAME 3: MINNESOTA 5, COLORADO 1 GAME 4: COLORADO 5, MINNESOTA 2 GAME 5: MINNESOTA AT COLORADO — 8 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, MAY 13 (TNT, TRUTV, HBO MAX, SN, CBC, TVAS) * GAME 6: COLORADO AT MINNESOTA — 8 P.M. ET, FRIDAY, MAY 15 (ESPN, SN, CBC, TVAS) * GAME 7: MINNESOTA AT COLORADO — TBA, SUNDAY, MAY 17 (TNT, TRUTV, HBO MAX) * – IF NECESSARY COMPLETE COVERAGE OF WILD-AVALANCHE SERIES ANAHEIM DUCKS (3P) VS. VEGAS GOLDEN KNIGHTS (1P) VEGAS LEADS SERIES 3-2 GAME 1: VEGAS 3, ANAHEIM 1 GAME 2: ANAHEIM 3, VEGAS 1 GAME 3: VEGAS 6, ANAHEIM 2 GAME 4: ANAHEIM 4, VEGAS 3 GAME 5: VEGAS 3, ANAHEIM 2 (OT) GAME 6: VEGAS AT ANAHEIM — 9:30 P.M. ET, THURSDAY, MAY 14 (TNT, TRUTV, HBO MAX, SN, SN360, TVAS) * GAME 7: ANAHEIM AT VEGAS — 5 P.M. ET, SATURDAY, MAY 16 (ESPN, SNP, SN1, TVAS) * – IF NECESSARY COMPLETE COVERAGE OF DUCKS-GOLDEN KNIGHTS SERIES ============================================ MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL CLEVELAND 3 LA ANGELS 2 NY YANKEES 6 BALTIMORE 2 WASHINGTON 10 CINCINNATI 4 PITTSBURGH 3 COLORADO 1 PHILADELPHIA 2 BOSTON 1 NY METS 10 DETROIT 2 ATLANTA 5 CHICAGO CUBS 2 MINNESOTA 3 MIAMI 0 MILWAUKEE 6 SAN DIEGO 4 CHICAGO WHITE SOX 6 KANSAS CITY 5 TEXAS 7 ARIZONA 4 SEATTLE 10 HOUSTON 2 ST. LOUIS 6 LAS VEGAS 4 SAN FRANCISCO 6 LA DODGERS 2 ============================================== MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL INDIANAPOLIS 10 LOUISVILLE 8 SOUTH BEND 10 WISCONSIN 1 CEDAR RAPIDS 3 FT. WAYNE 2 ===================================== WNBA DREAM 77 WINGS 72 LYNX 88 MERCURY 84 FIRE 98 LIBERTY 96 ===================================== UFL SCORES NO GAMES SCHEDULED =================================== MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER NO GAMES SCHEDULED =================================== MAJOR NATIONAL HEADLINES/RELEASES NBA VICTOR WEMBANYAMA RETURNS IN BIG WAY, SPURS TAKE SERIES LEAD ON WOLVES Victor Wembanyama scored 27 points — 18 in a rousing first quarter — and grabbed 17 rebounds to lead the host San Antonio Spurs past the Minnesota Timberwolves 126-97 on Tuesday night to take a 3-2 lead in their Western Conference semifinal series. game 6 in the best-of-seven series is Friday in Minneapolis while Game 7 (if necessary) would be back in the Alamo City on Sunday. Wembanyama returned to action after being ejected in the second quarter of an eventual 114-109 loss to the host Timberwolves in Game 4 on Sunday. He connected on an elbow to the face of Naz Reid and was ejected after officials reviewed the incident on replay to a flagrant 2 foul, which is an automatic ejection. “Very, very much,” Wembanyama said when asked how anxious he was to return to the court for Game 5. “I mean, I was fresh, feeling good. But honestly, it’s hard to tell if it’s just, it’s just, it was just getting fired up. Obviously, I’m going to be excited with butterflies, you know. So excitement is not something abnormal.” Games The Spurs led by as many as 18 in the second quarter before going cold late and settling for a 12-point advantage at halftime. After Minnesota rallied to tie the game at 61-all four minutes into the third quarter, San Antonio ran off 30 of the final 42 points of the period to carry a 91-73 lead into the final 12 minutes. “We went away from what was working, and then, you know, defense just cratered,” Timberwolves coach Chris Finch said. “In the last six minutes of the third quarter, lot of it was just ball contain stuff. And, you know, offensively found stuff that was working, then we just started breaking off plays, you know. And that’s my job. I gotta get us back on track. That’s on me.” The Spurs stoked the margin to 20 early in the fourth. Minnesota answered with an 8-0 surge to pull within 93-81 with 9:34 remaining but never got closer than 11 the rest of the way. Keldon Johnson added 21 points off the bench for San Antonio, with De’Aaron Fox scoring 18, Stephon Castle hitting for 17 and Devin Vassell and Dylan Harper tallying 12 points each. Harper also grabbed 10 rebounds. “We played with the appropriate fear, discipline, execution, physicality, poise,” Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said. “And I thought we had it from an array of people tonight, and it was really good to see. We needed everybody, because at different moments of the game, different guys stepped up.” Anthony Edwards led the Timberwolves with 20 points. Jaden McDaniels and Julius Randle had 17 points apiece, Ayo Dosunmu racked up 16 and Reid finished with 12. Wembanyama was on fire in the game’s early moments, scoring 16 of the Spurs’ first 24 points as San Antonio built a 24-9 lead at the 6:17 mark of the first period. The Timberwolves weathered the storm, with Reid’s driving layup with 23 seconds remaining trimming the deficit to 34-30 after 12 minutes of play. “We knew it was going to be physical, so just making that a point of emphasis and trying to keep them off the offensive glass,” Castle said. “I thought we started the game off well, and that’s where our runs came from. But obviously, they’re a good team, you know, they’re going to go on their own run.” The Spurs ripped off the first nine points of the second quarter, capped by a three-point play by Castle, to stoke their advantage to 43-30. San Antonio built its margin to 58-40 after a Wembanyama alley-oop dunk with 3:24 left in the period but then missed its final eight shots of the quarter, allowing Minnesota to pull to within 59-47 at the break. Wembanyama had a double-double in the first half alone, scoring 21 points and collecting 11 boards. Fox contributed 12 points for San Antonio before halftime. “I think one thing, the one word I’d like to use, just ‘mature,’” Mitch Johnson said of Wembanyama. “There’s a lot that’s happened in the last 48 hours, in the last game, and I think how that young man came out tonight and played in a variety of ways, in a variety of situations, not just in terms of his production, was extremely mature and then defensively, start to finish.” Games Dosunmu’s nine points paced the Timberwolves’ offense in the first half while Reid and Edwards added eight points each. Minnesota continued its charge at the start of the third quarter, tying the game at 61-61 at the 7:51 mark when Dosunmu’s layup culminated a 14-2 run. “I don’t see nobody in our locker room that (is) worried at the end of the day,” Edwards said. “Man, it’s another basketball game. So you come out, put your boots on and get ready to go to work.” ===== REPORT: NBA TAKING NO ACTION AFTER BUCKS, GIANNIS INVESTIGATION The NBA will not be taking any action after concluding its investigation into Giannis Antetokounmpo being shut down for the final month of the season, according to a report by ESPN on Tuesday. The two-time MVP hyperextended his left knee on March 15 against the Indiana Pacers and did not play in the final 15 games of the season for the Bucks, who missed the playoffs for the first time since 2016. However, the team and its star player had differing stories on his health and desire to return by the time the team had been eliminated from contention in late March. Antetokounmpo told reporters in early April that he was healthy but being held out by the team. “I’m available to play, but I’m not in the game,” Antetokounmpo said on April 3. “I’m available to play today. Right now. I’m available. NBA game highlights “For somebody to come and tell me to not play or not to compete, it’s like a slap in my face. So I don’t know where the relationship goes from there.” Per the report, the Bucks told investigators that they didn’t believe Antetokounmpo actually wanted to return, citing his refusal to participate in 3-on-3 scrimmage work at practice to show his recovery progress. Antetokounmpo also denied this claim in his exit interview with media members. “From my understanding, coming back to play, which I don’t think I ever had any return-to-play protocol, but to my understanding was I had to play 3-on-3 to be able to be available to play,” Antetokounmpo said. “I did that multiple times. I’ve never in my life denied participation of practice.” ESPN reported Monday that the Bucks are once again exploring a pre-draft trade for Antetokounmpo, 31. Milwaukee also explored this option before the trade deadline before electing to hold onto its star player until at least the summer window. Games Antetokounmpo has one year left on his deal before a player option for the 2027-28 season. The 10-time All-Star and nine-time All-NBA player has averaged 24.1 points, 9.9 rebounds, 5.0 assists, 1.2 blocks and 1.1 steals over 13 seasons and 895 games (830 starts) with the Bucks, leading them to the franchise’s first NBA title in 50 years in 2021. ===== DARYL MOREY OUT AS 76ERS’ HEAD OF BASKETBALL OPS AFTER 6 SEASONS The Philadelphia 76ers are parting ways with president of basketball operations Daryl Morey, they announced Tuesday. Former Golden State Warriors general manager Bob Myers, now the president of sports for the Sixers’ parent company, Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment, will lead the search for a new leader of basketball operations for team owner Josh Harris. Myers will also lead the department in the interim. “I have a tremendous amount of respect for Daryl personally and professionally, and I’m grateful for his contributions over the last six seasons,” Harris said in a statement. “After speaking with Daryl, we determined that it was time for a fresh start. Bob Myers will lead the process of identifying a new leader and I believe his experience in constructing four NBA championship teams will be a valuable resource to our organization. “To our fans, your frustration and disappointment are understandable and warranted. We have fallen well short of our own expectations and failed to deliver in the way this city deserves. That bothers me deeply and I have confidence in Bob to establish a path forward for our franchise.” Basketball statistics Morey, 53, joined the 76ers in 2020 following 13 years as the general manager of the Houston Rockets. His boldest move while leading the Sixers was to acquire James Harden in a deal that sent Ben Simmons to the Brooklyn Nets in 2022, at a time when Simmons was holding out and Harden was unhappy in Brooklyn. Simmons’ career fizzled out after brief stays with the Nets and the Los Angeles Clippers, but Harden only spent 1 1/2 seasons in Philadelphia before requesting a trade and being dealt to the Clippers. During an appearance in China before the trade, Harden declared that “Daryl Morey is a liar and I will never be a part of an organization that he’s a part of.” Harden had spent eight-plus seasons in Houston overlapping with Morey’s Rockets tenure. As for the Sixers now, they have failed to advance past the Eastern Conference semifinals since 2001. After missing the playoffs in 2024-25 amid injuries to Joel Embiid and other key players, they rebounded to go 45-37 this past season, earning the seventh seed in the East. They upset the Boston Celtics in a seven-game first-round series before the New York Knicks swept them out of the semis. ESPN reported that Nick Nurse will be retained for a fourth season as Philadelphia’s head coach. His teams have gone 116-130 in his first three seasons on the job. ===== GRIZZLIES F BRANDON CLARKE DIES AT 29 Memphis Grizzlies forward Brandon Clarke has died at the age of 29. Clarke’s death was announced Tuesday by the Grizzlies and his representation, Priority Sports. NBC Los Angeles reported that his death is being investigated as a possible overdose. The Los Angeles Fire Department responded to a 911 call of a medical emergency shortly after 5 p.m. on Monday and paramedics declared Clarke dead after they arrived, per the report. “We are heartbroken by the tragic loss of Brandon Clarke,” the Grizzlies said in a statement. “Brandon was an outstanding teammate and an even better person whose impact on the organization and the greater Memphis community will not be forgotten. We express our deepest condolences to his family and loved ones during this difficult time.” Clarke played in just six games during the 2023-24 season due to a torn Achilles and suited up for just two this campaign. He was out at the start of this season due to a right knee injury. He returned in mid-December and injured his right calf in his second game. Games The Grizzlies ruled Clarke out for the rest of the season on March 24. “We are all beyond devastated by the passing of Brandon Clarke,” Priority Sports said in a statement. “He was so loved by all of us here, and everyone whose life he touched. He was the gentlest soul who was the first to be there for all of his friends and family. Our hearts are so broken as we think about his mom, Whitney, his entire family, and all of his friends and teammates. From high school to San Jose State to Gonzaga to the Grizzlies, Brandon impacted everyone who was part of his life. “Everyone loved BC because he was always there as the most supportive friends you could ever imagine. He was so unique in the joy he brought to all of those in his life. It’s just impossible to put into words how much he’ll be missed.” On April 1, Clarke was arrested on four charges, including possession of and trafficking a controlled substance. He also was charged with two driving offenses — improper passing and fleeing in a vehicle or conveyance with speeding. Clarke had career averages of 10.2 points and 5.5 rebounds in 309 games (50 starts) since he was selected by the Oklahoma City Thunder with the No. 21 overall pick in the 2019 NBA Draft. He was traded to the Grizzlies shortly afterward. “We are devastated to learn of the passing of Brandon Clarke,” NBA commissioner Adam Silver said in a statement. “As one of the longest-tenured members of the Grizzlies, Brandon was a beloved teammate and leader who played the game with enormous passion and grit. Our thoughts and sympathies are with Brandon’s family, friends and the Grizzlies organization.” ====================================== NHL PAVEL DOROFEYEV’S OT GOAL GIVES KNIGHTS 3-2 SERIES LEAD OVER DUCKS Pavel Dorofeyev scored two goals, including the game-winner 4:10 into overtime, as the Vegas Golden Knights took a 3-2 lead in their best-of-seven Western Conference second-round series against the Anaheim Ducks with a 3-2 victory on Tuesday night in Las Vegas. Dorofeyev, stationed alone on the backdoor by the left post, roofed a crossing pass from Jack Eichel for his first career playoff overtime winner. “To be honest with you, I can’t tell you what happened there,” Dorofeyev said. “I just saw the puck, got my stick on it and thankfully it got in the net. “To score first OT goal in the playoffs, it’s awesome. … It feels special.” Tomas Hertl had a goal and an assist, Eichel had two assists and Carter Hart finished with 34 saves for Vegas, which can advance to the Western Conference finals for the fourth time in the team’s nine-year history with a victory in game 6 on Thursday in Anaheim. Beckett Sennecke extended his goal streak to four games and Olen Zellweger also scored for Anaheim. Cutter Gauthier and Mason McTavish each added two assists and Lukas Dostal made 29 saves for the Ducks. “It’s definitely a big letdown,” Ducks coach Joel Quenneville said. “Tomorrow you wake up and it’s a new day. Certainly, there will be games in the playoffs that at the end of the game, your stomach feels like it’s rotten, and at the same time, it can happen just the opposite.” Anaheim took a 1-0 lead at the 12:36 mark of the first period on Sennecke’s fifth goal of the playoffs, a rebound of a Gauthier shot from near the right boards. The score came during a power play after Vegas defenseman Brayden McNabb was called for a five-minute major and a game misconduct for interference on a hard late check of Ryan Poehling along the boards. Poehling, who has dealt with concussions in the past, had to be helped off the ice with an upper-body injury after the back of his head whiplashed into the glass. A couple minutes after Dostal poke-checked the puck away from Mitch Marner on a breakaway near the end of the period, the Golden Knights tied it on a power-play goal by Dorofeyev. Ducks forward Chris Kreider was trying to exit the Vegas offensive zone along the left boards when Dorofeyev stole the puck from behind, skated to the top of the slot and roofed a wrist shot into the top-left corner past Dostal’s blocker side. Hertl, who snapped a 29-game goal drought with a score near the end of Sunday’s 4-3 loss, put the Golden Knights ahead, 2-1, early in the third period when he backhanded a rebound through Dostal’s pads. Zellweger tied it with 3:05 remaining in regulation with a wrist shot from the middle of the left circle past Hart’s glove side for his first career playoff goal. Sennecke’s five goals this postseason tie the Ducks’ rookie postseason record set by Bobby Ryan in 2009. ===== ZACH BENSON’S 3RD-PERIOD GOAL HELPS SABRES LEVEL SERIES VS. CANADIENS Zach Benson scored the go-ahead goal early in the third period of a 3-2 win for the visiting Buffalo Sabres against the Montreal Canadiens in game 4 of their Eastern Conference second-round series on Tuesday. Tage Thompson had a goal and an assist and Josh Doan had two assists for the Sabres, who tied the series 2-2. Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen made 28 saves. Alex Newhook and Cole Caufield scored for the Canadiens, who got 19 saves from Jakub Dobes. Game 5 is Thursday in Buffalo. Benson, celebrating his 21st birthday, put Buffalo ahead 3-2 on the power play at 4:41 of the third period. Doan put a pass into the fringe of the crease for Benson, who shook off his defender to gather the puck and lift past Dobes’ glove. Games “We’ve talked about our power play being good in key moments,” Benson said. “That’s what we did. We went out there, we executed. Heck of a slip pass by Doaner and my job was pretty easy from there, just putting it in the net.” Mattias Samuelsson gave Buffalo a 1-0 lead at 6:32 of the first period. Josh Norris dished a cross-ice pass to a crashing Samuelsson, who one-timed a snap shot inside the right post. “I thought we got off to a tremendous start to the game,” Sabres coach Lindy Ruff said. “We talked about getting off to a fast start and trying to quiet the building. The first eight minutes I thought might’ve been some of the best hockey we’ve played.” The Sabres appeared to double their lead midway through the frame when Jack Quinn put a rebound into Dobes’ glove, which was in the net. The referees ruled it a goal after reviewing the play to determine if the puck completely crossed the goal line. But then Montreal challenged for goaltender interference, and the goal was overturned, deeming Sabres forward Konsta Helenius impaired Dobes’ ability to play his position. Newhook tied it 1-1 at 10:08 of the opening period. Ivan Demidov got the puck along the wall and sent it to Jake Evans, who was alone in front. Evans clanked it off the crossbar, then recovered the puck behind the net before feeding it to Newhook in front. Caufield put the Canadiens ahead 2-1 with a power-play goal with 13 seconds left in the first. He received the puck along the goal line and took it toward Luukkonen before sliding it under the goalie’s left pad. “Special teams played a huge part,” Canadiens coach Martin St. Louis said. “It’s hard to believe that we only got one goal on the power play because I felt like we had a lot of chances. You’ve got to tip your cap to the goalie (Luukkonen); he played a good game.” Canadiens forward Nick Suzuki added: “We battled our way back to get the lead in the first, and then I thought the second period we controlled it pretty well. We just couldn’t find that next goal.” Thompson pulled Buffalo even seven minutes into the second period. He dumped the puck into the left corner from center ice. It hit the top of the boards before bouncing towards the net, going off the side of Dobes’ right pad and into the net to make it 2-2 in stunning fashion. “Off the stanchion? No, not like that, but I’ll take it,” Thompson said of scoring a goal in that way. “We didn’t get in the first couple break-ins on the power play, and (when) you do that, sometimes you want to just keep it simple, rim it and try to get on the forecheck,” he said. “I rimmed it and obviously saw it hit the glass and saw, kind of just scanning around looking for it. And a few guys put their hands up. So, it’s a nice feeling when you see that.” ===== ===================================== MLB MLB ROUNDUP: PIRATES’ PAUL SKENES TAKES NO-HITTER INTO 7TH VS. ROCKIES Paul Skenes flirted with a no-hitter for the second consecutive start, striking out 10 and allowing two hits over eight scoreless innings to lead the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 3-1 win over the visiting Colorado Rockies on Tuesday. Skenes (6-2), the reigning National League Cy Young Award winner, held the Rockies hitless for 6 1/3 innings until Mickey Moniak looped a ball that dropped just out of the reach of a diving Oneil Cruz in center field. Skenes has delivered back-to-back starts of eight scoreless innings with only two hits allowed. He has not allowed a run in four of his past five starts, lowered his ERA to 1.98 and did not walk a batter for the fifth consecutive start. His counterpart, Colorado starter Michael Lorenzen (2-5), gave up two runs on five hits and two walks and struck out five over five innings. Pittsburgh’s Nick Gonzales had two hits and an RBI and Spencer Horwitz also had two hits. Brandon Lowe and Bryan Reynolds each drove in a run to give Skenes the minimal run support he required. MLB team merchandise Rays 7, Blue Jays 6 (10 innings) Jonathan Aranda’s sacrifice fly proved to be the difference as Tampa Bay improved to 5-0 this season against host Toronto. Taylor Walls’ single to right against Braydon Fisher (2-1) scored automatic runner Cedric Mullins to give Tampa Bay a 6-5 lead. Yandy Diaz walked before Walls took third on a wild pitch and scored on Aranda’s sacrifice fly on Daulton Varsho’s superb catch at the wall in center. Ian Seymour (2-0) pitched a perfect ninth for the Rays, who blew a five-run lead by surrendering five two-out runs to the Blue Jays in the seventh inning. Braves 5, Cubs 2 Mike Yastrzemski homered and drove in three runs, Austin Riley also homered and Dominic Smith went 4-for-4 on Tuesday night to help Atlanta post a victory over visiting Chicago to improve its major-league-leading record to 29-13. Yastrzemski’s first homer with the Braves broke a 2-2 tie as part of the team’s four-run sixth inning. Didier Fuentes (2-0) tossed three hitless innings in relief before Raisel Iglesias capped off a combined one-hitter with a perfect ninth. Starter Colin Rea (4-2) yielded five runs on seven hits across 4 1/3 innings for the Cubs, who dropped their third straight game. Alex Bregman homered for Chicago, which has mustered just two runs across its last three games. Games Twins 3, Marlins 0 Bailey Ober struck out seven in a complete-game shutout to lead Minnesota to a win over Miami in Minneapolis. Byron Buxton stole home and Ryan Jeffers clubbed a two-run home run to lead Minnesota at the plate. The Twins have won three in a row after losing 16 of their previous 21. Ober (4-2) recorded his first complete-game shutout in his 124th start. The big right-hander walked none and threw 64 of his 89 pitches for strikes. Kyle Stowers and Jakob Marsee had one single apiece for Miami’s only hits in its fourth shutout this season. Marlins right-hander Eury Perez (2-5) allowed three runs on three hits in six innings. He struck out eight and walked three. Guardians 3, Angels 2 Angel Martinez hit a solo homer and Patrick Bailey drove in his first run since being acquired in a trade to help host Cleveland continue its dominance over Los Angeles. Vaughn Grissom homered in the eighth for the Angels, who are 4-29 in Cleveland since 2015 — the most lopsided series in the majors at one team’s ballpark during the period — and have not won consecutive games in the city in 13 years. Hunter Gaddis (1-1) allowed one hit over 1 1/3 scoreless innings. Cade Smith picked up his 12th save in 14 opportunities by retiring all four batters he faced. Nationals 10, Reds 4 Daylen Lile and Luis Garcia Jr. each hit a pair of home runs as Washington hit six long balls to blast past host Cincinnati. Lile, from nearby Louisville, Ky., hit a solo home run in the fourth and a three-run shot in the fifth for his first career multi-homer game. Garcia hit two solo home runs as both players collected three base hits. James Wood and Brady House also homered for the Nationals. Lile and Garcia are the sixth pair of Nationals (2005-present) to have multi-homer performances in the same game and the first since Brian Dozier and Juan Soto (Aug. 18, 2019, in a 16-8 home win over the Brewers). Yankees 6, Orioles 2 Paul Goldschmidt and Trent Grisham homered as New York built an early lead to halt a four-game losing streak by beating host Baltimore. Grisham’s three-run blast came with two outs during the Yankees’ five-run third inning. Aaron Judge joined Goldschmidt with two hits. Will Warren (5-1) took a shutout into the sixth inning, giving up two runs on four hits. The Orioles had a two-game winning streak snapped despite two hits apiece from Samuel Basallo and Taylor Ward. They’ve won only four of their last 13 games. Mets 10, Tigers 2 A.J. Ewing scored two runs and drove in a pair in his major league debut, sparking host New York to a win over Detroit. Ewing had an RBI triple and drew three walks. Carson Benge and Juan Soto each had two hits, a run scored and an RBI for the Mets to supplement Freddy Peralta (3-3), who gave up two runs and struck out seven in six innings. Dillon Dingler had a solo homer for Detroit, which has lost six of its last seven. Jack Flaherty (0-4) gave up three runs in 3 2/3 innings. Phillies 2, Red Sox 1 Kyle Schwarber matched a franchise record by hitting a home run for the fifth consecutive game and Zack Wheeler pitched into the eighth inning to help Philadelphia edge host Boston in the opener of a three-game series. Schwarber homered against Jovani Moran (0-1) in the top of the first. Schwarber has six home runs in his last five games and leads the majors with 17 home runs this season. According to the Philadelphia Inquirer, Schwarber is one of eight Phillies to homer in five straight games, including shortstop Trea Turner from Aug. 28 to Sept. 2, 2023. Wheeler (2-0) was pulled with one out in the eighth. He allowed a run on six hits and struck out four. White Sox 6, Royals 5 Derek Hill delivered a pinch-hit, tiebreaking solo home run in the eighth inning and Chase Meidroth and Drew Romo also homered to lift host Chicago to a victory against Kansas City. Chicago was outhit 11-7 but rallied to stretch its winning streak to three games. Sam Antonacci and Miguel Vargas both had two hits for the White Sox. Bryan Hudson worked a perfect ninth for the save. Kansas City reached White Sox starter Erick Fedde for a pair of solo homers in the first inning. Bobby Witt Jr., the reigning American League Player of the Week, opened the scoring two batters into the game with a blast to right. Salvador Perez added to the advantage two batters later with a drive to right-center. Brewers 6, Padres 4 Brandon Sproat pitched effectively into the sixth inning to earn his first career victory and Joey Ortiz homered for the first time since last July to lead Milwaukee past visiting San Diego in the opener of the three-game series. Milwaukee extended its winning streak to five games to move a season-high seven games above .500 by erasing a 2-1 deficit with five runs in the fourth off knuckleballer Matt Waldron (1-2). Sproat (1-2) allowed three runs on six hits in 5 1/3 innings in his sixth start and eighth appearance this season. He struck out six and walked two. Sproat was 0-2 last season in four September starts with the Mets as a rookie. Abner Uribe finished with a scoreless ninth for his fourth save in five opportunities. Rangers 7, Diamondbacks 4 MacKenzie Gore allowed just one run on three hits over a season-high eight innings as Texas downed Arizona in Arlington, Texas. Joc Pederson and Ezequiel Duran homered and Brandon Nimmo and Jake Burger each had three hits for the Rangers. Nimmo left the game in the bottom of the sixth when his left ankle got twisted in a close play at first base which turned out to be an infield hit. Texas manager Skip Schumaker said later that Nimmo is considered day-to-day with a sprain after X-rays were clear on the left ankle. Ildemaro Vargas’ solo home run in the top of the first inning was all the Diamondbacks could muster against the left-handed Gore (3-3), who had been 0-3 with a 6.85 ERA since April 8. Arizona right-hander Zac Gallen (1-4) could not get out of the fifth and lost his third consecutive start. Mariners 10, Astros 2 Dominic Canzone clubbed his first career grand slam and Randy Arozarena produced a four-hit, three-RBI game in support of Bryan Woo as visiting Seattle ran away with a victory over slumping Houston. Canzone’s fourth-inning slam broke a 2-2 deadlock after Houston starter Tatsuya Imai (1-1) loaded the bases with no outs. Woo (3-2) tied his season high with nine strikeouts, allowing two runs on four hits and retiring the final 11 batters he faced. Imai allowed six runs on five hits over four innings in his first start since April 10. Braden Shewmake had an RBI single and Christian Walker snapped an 0-for-17 skid with an RBI double for the Astros. Cardinals 6, Athletics 4 JJ Wetherholt smacked a two-run homer and Jose Fermin added a two-run double to lead St. Louis to a victory over the Athletics at West Sacramento, Calif. Ivan Herrera joined Wetherholt with two hits as St. Louis ended a two-game slide and won for the 10th time in the past 14 games. Andre Pallante (4-3) gave up three runs and four hits over five innings for the Cardinals. Shea Langeliers hit his 100th career homer and also had a two-run double for the Athletics, who lost their second straight game. Giants 6, Dodgers 2 Eric Haase hit two home runs, Harrison Bader added another and San Francisco improved to 4-1 against Los Angeles this season with a road win. Adrian Houser (1-4) gave up two runs on three hits and three walks with four strikeouts over 5 2/3 innings to pick up his first win as a member of the Giants. Jung Hoo Lee added a two-run double in a three-run seventh inning. Shohei Ohtani hit a home run and had two hits for the Dodgers, while Yoshinobu Yamamoto (3-3) gave up a season-high five runs on six hits over 6 1/3 innings. Los Angeles saw its losing streak extended to four games to match a season high. ==================================== WNBA SARAH ASHLEE BARKER’S BASKET AT BUZZER GIVES FIRE FIRST WNBA WIN Sarah Ashlee Barker made a layup off an offensive rebound at the final buzzer as the expansion Portland Fire earned their first WNBA victory, defeating the visiting New York Liberty 98-96 Tuesday night. Barker was all alone underneath and grabbed Bridget Carleton’s 3-point miss and banked in the winning shot. It gave the Fire their first lead since midway through the third quarter. Carleton, the first pick in the WNBA expansion draft, scored a game-high 26 points for Portland. Carla Leite added 21 points and six assists, returning in the fourth quarter after having to be helped off the court with 20 seconds left in the third after twisting an ankle. Kamiah Smalls and Luisa Geiselsoder each added 13 points. Rookie Pauline Astier led New York with 24 points, shooting 10 of 14 from the field. But Astier was called for three seconds in the key on the offensive end with 13.8 seconds left as the Liberty held the ball for a potential final shot. Marine Johannes added 18 points, Jonquel Jones scored 17 and two-time MVP Breanna Stewart had 16 points — despite 4-of-12 shooting — and 10 rebounds for the Liberty, which suffered their first loss after winning their first two games of the season. Games New York shot 53.2% from the field (33 of 62), including 13 of 28 from 3-point range. Portland made half of its attempts (34 of 68) and was 15 of 33 from distance. New York took a 77-70 advantage into the fourth quarter. The Liberty led 54-47 at the intermission as Astier had 16 points on 7-for-9 shooting. The Liberty led by as many as 13 points before the Fire closed the half on a 9-3 run, with Emily Engstler making a 3-pointer with 2 seconds left in the half to ignite the crowd. Former University of Oregon standouts Sabrina Ionescu (left foot) and Satou Sabally (cyst) were both inactive for the Liberty. ===== NIA COFFEY, LYNX NOTCH FIRST WIN OF SEASON AT MERCURY’S EXPENSE Nia Coffey scored eight of her 13 points in the fourth quarter in a critical stretch for the Minnesota Lynx in their 88-84 victory over the host Phoenix Mercury on Tuesday night. Minnesota (1-1) rebounded after losing its opener 91-90 against the visiting Atlanta Dream on Saturday. Phoenix (1-2), playing its home opener, has lost consecutive games against the Golden State Valkyries and Lynx after routing the defending WNBA champion Las Vegas Aces 96-66 on the road Saturday. Minnesota had six scorers in double figures, all close in scoring against Phoenix. Kayla McBride and Natasha Howard had 14 points apiece, Coffey and Olivia Miles 13 each and Courtney Williams and reserve Emma Cechova 11. Howard pulled down 11 rebounds and Coffey 10 as each recorded a double-double. The Mercury’s Kahleah Copper led all scorers with 30 points on 9-of-21 shooting from the field, including 2 of 7 from 3-point range. She was 10 of 13 from the free-throw line. DeWanna Bonner added 16 for Phoenix, while Alyssa Thomas had 10 and Natasha Mack nearly had a double-double with nine points and 10 boards. Neither team could forge a double-digit advantage. The game had 15 ties and 17 lead changes. The largest lead by either team in the second half was five points. Copper made a 3-pointer with 4:39 left to put Phoenix ahead 81-77. She had the opportunity to increase the lead on the next possession but missed a jumper. Coffey’s 3-pointer cut the lead to 81-80 with 3:41 left. After a layup by Copper with 2:54 remaining, Howard answered with a close-range shot. Coffey’s layup with 1:57 left put Minnesota ahead 84-83. Phoenix’s Thomas missed two free throws, then the teams failed to convert on their next two possessions. Coffey drilled a 3-pointer with 27 seconds left to give the Lynx an 87-83 lead. Phoenix’s Bonner missed a 3-pointer and Minnesota’s Olivia Miles was fouled. She made one of two of her free-throw attempts to increase the lead to 88-83 with 13 seconds remaining. Thomas made one of two free throws with 7 seconds left to close the scoring. Phoenix held the biggest lead of the game, 29-21 with 7:57 left in the second quarter. The Mercury held the advantage for the rest of the quarter and led 45-41 at halftime. Copper had 13 points and Bonner 12 at halftime. ===== ALLISHA GRAY, DREAM HOLD OFF WINGS Allisha Gray poured in a game-high 26 points and the Atlanta Dream pulled away early in the fourth quarter to claim a 77-72 win over the host Dallas Wings on Tuesday night. Center Angel Reese, in her second game for the Dream (2-0) tallied her second double-double with 12 points and 16 rebounds, eight of those on the offensive end. Arike Ogunbowale scored 20 points on 7-for-15 shooting for the Wings (1-1). Paige Bueckers had 15 points on 5-for-12 shooting and Jessica Shepard tallied 12 points and eight rebounds. Top overall draft pick Azzi Fudd did not play due to a knee injury. The teams, which had won their openers over the weekend, played an ultra-competitive first three quarters before Atlanta opened up a lead early in the final stanza and held on for the win. The Dream trailed 59-58 entering the fourth period but opened the fourth-quarter scoring with Gray 3-pointer to claim a lead they would not surrender. Gray bombed a long trey a few seconds later, and Jordin Canada followed with a floater in the lane to open a 66-59 advantage with 8:05 to play. Dallas pulled within three points on two occasions, lastly at 68-65 on a Bueckers jumper with 5:33 to play, but Canada answered with a driving layup on the ensuing possession and the Wings never pulled within a single score again. The Dream stretched their advantage to as many as 10 points before coasting to the finish. Gray, a three-time All-Star, shot 9-for-20, including 4-for-9 from 3-point range. Canada added 19 points for the Dream on 8-for-15 shooting, as well as seven rebounds and five assists. Rhyne Howard contributed 14 points. Atlanta’s bench totaled five points. Dallas’ best moments came in the second quarter when it opened a nine-point edge, but a 4-for-26 night (15.4%) from 3-point range helped doom the Wings. =================================== INDIANA HEADLINES/RELEASES PREP BASEBALL INDIANA NEWS: https://www.prepbaseballreport.com/indiana ==================================== INDYCAR With about one hour, 45 minutes to go in the opening practice for the 110th Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge, Alex Palou pulled into pit lane and thought there was a mechanical gremlin in his car. Ninety minutes later, there were no problems whatsoever. Reigning “500” winner and NTT INDYCAR SERIES champion Palou led the first day of track activity for this year’s edition of “The Greatest Spectacle in Racing,” turning a top lap of 225.937 mph with less than 15 minutes remaining in the six-hour session Tuesday. The fast lap came on the first run Palou made on the 2.5-mile oval after his crew evaluated his No. 10 DHL Chip Ganassi Racing Honda for nearly 90 minutes, as he pulled into the pits around 4:15 p.m. ET because he sensed a problem with the right rear of the car. SEE: Practice Results “Yeah, it’s good; it’s good now,” Palou said. “We had a couple of issues, but we fixed them. It wasn’t a mechanical issue or anything. It was just balance, not being super happy with it. We found something that explained what I was feeling, and it was good to go back out today before we go to sleep so we can be a bit happier.” Four-time series champion Palou is driving a different car this month than he used in the Indy 500 Open Test on April 28-29 at IMS and a different machine than the one he drove to his first career oval victory in last year’s Indy 500. He turned just 28 laps, tied for the third fewest among the 33 drivers on track today. “You always want to do a lot more,” Palou said. “We didn’t do a many laps today, but still we understood a lot of stuff. Feeling much better than (earlier this afternoon).” Marcus Armstrong was fastest for most of the day until Palou’s late dash but ended up second at 225.895 in the No. 66 Acura Honda fielded by Meyer Shank Racing w/Curb Agajanian. Indianapolis-area native Conor Daly was third at 225.838 in the No. 23 DRR KINGSPAN Chevrolet of Dreyer & Reinbold Racing. Two-time Indianapolis 500 winner Josef Newgarden ended up fourth at 225.121 in the No. 2 Shell Fuel Rewards Team Penske Chevrolet, while 2008 “500” winner Scott Dixon rounded out the top five as the last driver faster than 225 mph with his best lap of 225.087 in the No. 9 PNC Bank Chip Ganassi Racing Honda. All top speeds were produced with the benefit of an aerodynamic “tow” from leading cars. Kyle Kirkwood was the fastest driver running alone, turning a top solo lap of 222.062 in the No. 27 Sam’s Club Honda of Andretti Global. His teammate and 2018 Indy 500 winner Will Power was second on the “no-tow” list at 221.455 in the No. 26 TWG AI Honda. Jack Harvey was third fastest without a tow at 220.853 in the No. 24 DRR INVST Chevrolet of Dreyer & Reinbold Racing. That validated Harvey’s performance without aerodynamic help in the Open Test, when he was fastest both days on the “no-tow” list. All 33 cars entered in the event this year were on track today under sunny skies and air temperatures in the mid- to upper 70s, combining to turn 1,996 laps. 2016 Indy 500 winner Alexander Rossi was the busiest driver, the only competitor with more than 100 laps after turning 116 circuits in the No. 20 Java House Chevrolet of Ed Carpenter Racing. Practice resumes from noon-6 p.m. ET Wednesday (noon-4 p.m., FS2; 4-6 p.m., FS1; FOX One, INDYCAR Radio powered by OnlyBulls). The 110th Indianapolis 500 presented by Gainbridge is scheduled for Sunday, May 24 (10 a.m. ET, FOX, FOX Deportes, FOX One, INDYCAR Radio powered by OnlyBulls). ===================================== INDIANS BASEBALL Jhostynxon Garcia tied the Indianapolis Indians franchise record with three home runs and Victory Field era record with five hits in the team’s 10-8 win over the Louisville Bats on Tuesday night at Louisville Slugger Field. The game featured 10 total home runs, five hit by each team, tying the most in a Triple-A game this season (Iowa at St. Paul, April 28). Garcia, who today returned from the injured list in his first Indians (16-24) game since April 14, opened the scoring with a solo shot in the first inning. Tyler Callihan and Garcia each homered in the third frame, extending the lead to 3-0. Rafael Flores Jr. tallied an RBI single in the fourth inning for a 4-0 advantage. The Bats (23-17) launched their first homer in the fourth inning, a solo shot from Edwin Arroyo. In a five-run frame to take the lead, Michael Toglia and Michael Chavis went back-to-back with home runs to cap the inning. Garcia tied the game, 5-5, with his third home run in as many at-bats in the fifth frame. At 113.5 mph, it marked the hardest-hit ball of his professional career. Louisville’s Héctor Rodríguez punched back in the bottom half of the inning with his seventh homer of the season. Davis Wendzel then counterpunched in the top of the sixth with his fifth home run of the campaign. Leading, 7-6, Indy was not finished as they tallied three runs in the seventh inning for a 10-6 advantage. For Louisville, Rece Hinds hit an RBI single in the eighth inning and Michael Chavis left the yard again for the game’s 10th home run. Antwone Kelly tossed 5.2 innings for the Indians, allowing six runs (5er) with six strikeouts and four home runs. Nick Dombkowski (W, 1-2) tossed 1.1 scoreless to follow him. Michael Darrell-Hicks and Beau Burrows (S, 2) each tossed 1.0 innings to close out the game. Brandon Leibrandt for Louisville allowed five earned runs and four home runs across 5.0 innings. Caleb Ferguson (L, 0-1) allowed seven hits and five runs across 1.0 innings. Indianapolis and Louisville meet again on Wednesday morning at 11:05 AM ET, with RHP Noah Davis (1-3, 3.44) taking the mound for Indy. LHP Nate Peterson (0-1, 13.50) will be on the hill for the Bats. ==================================== INDIANA FEVER Indiana Fever at Los Angeles SparksWednesday, May 13, 2026Crypto.com Arena | 10:30 p.m. ET Broadcast InformationTV: USA NetworkRadio: 93.5/107.5 The Fan – John Nolan (play-by-play), Bria Goss (analyst) Probable Starters Indiana Fever (0-1) Guard – Caitlin ClarkGuard – Kelsey MitchellForward – Sophie CunninghamForward – Monique BillingsCenter – Aliyah Boston Los Angeles Sparks (0-1) Guard – Kelsey PlumGuard – Ariel AtkinsForward – Rae BurrellForward – Nneka OgwumikeCenter – Dearica Hamby GAME PREVIEW: The Indiana Fever return to action on Wednesday as they travel to Los Angeles in pursuit of their first win of the season. Indiana carries fresh motivation out west following a close loss to the Dallas Wings in the home opener on Saturday, 107-104. The Fever continue to navigate injuries to Lexie Hull and Monique Billings. Hull participated in Saturday’s contest, but was on a minutes restriction as she rejoined the lineup. Billings was out, and continues to rehab an ankle injury she suffered in Indiana’s preseason finale against Nigeria. Despite the injury hiccups early in the season, Indiana scored 104 points against the Wings. The Fever offense was humming with the return of Caitlin Clark and her subsequent pairing with Kelsey Mitchell and Aliyah Boston. The trio of stars contributed 73 points to Indiana’s total, and looks to be a problem for opponent defenses. Kelsey Plum led the Sparks offense in their home opener against the Las Vegas Aces on Sunday as she scored a game-high 27 points. Nneka Ogwumike recorded a double-double in her first game back with Los Angeles, where she spent the first 12 years of her career, notching 19 points and 10 rebounds. The Sparks fell to the Aces, 105-78. Both teams struggled on the defensive side of the ball in their respective home openers. The Fever – who have emphasized defense throughout training camp – will look to tighten up their defense as they seek a win in Los Angeles. The Fever will return to Indianapolis on Friday, May 15, following their clash with the Sparks to host the Washington Mystics in the first game of a four-game homestand. ================================ INDIANA SOFTBALL BLOOMINGTON, Ind. ––– Indiana will play in its fourth-straight NCAA Tournament this weekend in the NCAA Knoxville Regional at Sherri Parker Lee Stadium. Regional host and No. 1 Seed Tennessee is the No. 7 overall national seed of the entire tournament. The Hoosiers are the No. 3 Seed of the region, alongside No. 2 Seed Virginia, No. 4 Seed Northern Kentucky. Indiana will open regional play against Virginia on Friday at 8 p.m. on ESPN2. The start of Indiana’s current NCAA Tournament streak began with a 2023 Regional appearance in Knoxville where Indiana reached the regional final. WEEKEND SCHEDULE: Friday, May 15 Gates open at 4:30 p.m. 5:30 p.m. – Game 1 (Northern Kentucky vs. Tennessee) 8:00 p.m. – Game 2 (Indiana vs. Virginia) Saturday, May 16 Gates open at 2:00 p.m. 3:00 p.m. – Game 3 5:30 p.m. – Game 4 8:00 p.m. – Game 5 Sunday, May 17 Gates open at 1:00 p.m. 2:00 p.m. – Game 6 4:30 p.m. – Game 7 (if necessary) QUICK HITTERS: IU’s offense ranks top-15 nationally in many statistical categories: No. 12 Batting Average (.349), No. 4 On Base Percentage (.454), No. 7 RBI (410), No. 5 Scoring (8.00), No. 1 Hit By Pitch (72), No. 4 Total Runs (448), No. 4 Stolen Bases (128), No. 4 Triples (25). At the Big Ten Tournament, Indiana defeated Washington 9-2 to reach the semifinals for the third time in the last four years. The Hoosiers then heard their name called for the fourth-straight season on Selection Sunday. Avery Parker became the program’s career home run leader last weekend when she hit home run No. 46 at Iowa on April 19 and since then has hit seven home runs to bring her career total to 53. Of Indiana’s 42 wins this year, 21 of them have been by run rule. Against Portland State in the Littlewood Invitational (Feb. 12), VanBrandt hit for the cycle as part of a 5-for-5 day where she also totaled two home runs. LAST TIME OUT: Indiana had a good showing at the Big Ten Tournament. After having a bye in the first round as the No. 4 Seed, Indiana routed No. 5 Seed Washington in a 9-2 win in the quarterfinals before reaching the tournament’s semifinals. No. 1 Seed Nebraska won that game 5-0. In the win over Washington, both Aly VanBrandt and Alex Cooper each hit a home run. VanBrandt’s came in the third inning while Cooper’s sealed the win in the bottom of the sixth. In that game, Parker became the career RBI leader with her hit to shortstop, scoring two Hoosiers and putting her career total at 206 RBI. Ella Troutt was excellent in the circle as she went 5.0 innings and only allowed four hits and two runs in the win. Indiana’s Alex Cooper, Madalyn Strader and Aly VanBrandt all earned All-Big Ten Second Team honors. SCOUTING THE OPPONENT: Virginia enters the regional with a 38-13 record and a 13-10 mark in ACC play. The Cavaliers are in the NCAA Tournament for the third-straight year and the fourth time in its program’s history. They won their first ACC Tournament against Pittsburgh before losing to Virginia Tech in the quarterfinal. Tennessee is making its 23rd overall and 22nd straight NCAA Tournament appearance this weekend. They have hosted 21 straight regional rounds in Knoxville. The Lady Vols have a 42-10 record and were 16-8 in the SEC. They dropped their first game in the SEC Tournament in a 4-1 loss to Ole Miss. Tennessee’s Karlyn Pickens was drafted No. 1 overall by the Carolina Blaze in the 2026 AUSL College Draft on Monday, May 3. Northern Kentucky is 26-23 and won the Horizon League Championship to clinch their NCAA bid. SERIES HISTORY: Indiana owns an all-time record of 2-1 against Virginia with the last meeting being in 2019. Indiana and Tennessee have met six times in their program histories with Tennessee having a 6-0 record in the series. Indiana and Northern Kentucky have never faced one another in softball. ================================== INDIANA MEN’S BASKETBALL ROSEMONT, Ill. – The Big Ten Conference has announced men’s basketball league opponents for the 2026-27 season. The conference enters its ninth year playing a 20-game schedule. With an 18-team league, each team will play three opponents twice, seven opponents only at home, and seven opponents only on the road. Dates, times, and television designations will be announced later this summer. INDIANA 2026-27 BIG TEN CONFERENCE OPPONENTS Home Only Illinois Michigan Michigan State Ohio State Rutgers UCLA USC Away Only Iowa Minnesota Nebraska Oregon Penn State Washington Wisconsin Home and Away Maryland Northwestern Purdue ================================== PURDUE WOMEN’S GOLF TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Battling through three weather delays as heavy rainfall poured down upon Seminole Legacy Golf Club throughout the day Tuesday, Purdue Women’s Golf moved up one spot during the second round of the NCAA Tallahassee Regional. The Boilermakers (+20) carded a 298 (+10) for the second day in a row, matching their opening round score despite playing in tougher conditions. The start of the second round was delayed by two hours due to more than an inch of rain peppering the golf course overnight. After the round got underway, another storm rolled through that caused a delay that lasted nearly three hours. As all 12 teams were on the back nine of their second round, more heavy rain led to a 45-minute stoppage before play resumed. Lauren Timpf led the Boilermakers on Tuesday, shaving three strokes off her opening round score for a 73 (+1). The sophomore eagled the par-5 11th, and she made a team-high 12 pars throughout the day. While the course continued to get drenched as the round went on, Timpf remained steady and carded an even-par 36 on her final nine. Freshman Luana Valero also improved despite the heavy rain, firing a 2-over 74 that featured a bogey-free 35 (-1) on her opening nine. Ashley Kim added a 75 (+3), which included a tap-in eagle on No. 11 that was almost an albatross. The junior ended her round by dropping a long birdie putt on the par-4 ninth, securing a one-stroke improvement from her first round. Samantha Brown contributed to the team score with a 76 (+4), her round featuring a pair of birdies on par 5s. As a team, Purdue has played the par 5s 11-under par through two rounds, ranking third in the field. The Boilermakers find themselves in ninth place, 15 shots off the cutline, with only 18 holes remaining in the tournament. Purdue tees off in the final round Wednesday morning beginning at 8:55 a.m. ET alongside Kentucky (+15) and North Florida (+18) for one last effort at trying to qualify for the 2026 NCAA Championships. For updates throughout the final round, follow Purdue Women’s Golf on X and Instagram @PurdueWGolf. BOILERMAKERS T-24. Samantha Brown: 72-76—148 (+4) T-30. Lauren Timpf: 76-73—149 (+5) T-42. Ashley Kim: 76-75—151 (+7) T-47. Michaela Headlee: 74-78—152 (+8) 49. Luana Valero: 79-74—153 (+9) TEAM LEADERBOARD 1. #3 Florida: 283-288—571 (-5) 2. #25 Florida State: 285-287—572 (-4) 3. #9 Wake Forest: 285-293—578 (+2) 4. Eastern Michigan: 287-293—580 (+4) 5: ULM: 287-294—581 (+5) 6. #15 UCLA: 290-294—584 (+8) 7. Kentucky: 291-300—591 (+15) 8. North Florida: 296-298—594 (+18) 9. Purdue: 298-298—596 (+20) 10. Clemson: 291-307—598 (+22) 11. UTRGV: 301-337—638 (+62) 12. Little Rock: 315-327—642 (+66) ================================= PURDUE MEN’S BASKETBALL WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – The Big Ten Conference has announced the single-play and home-and-away conference opponents for the 2026-27 men’s basketball season. For the ninth straight season, the league will play a 20-game league schedule with the Midwest and East Coast squads making one trip to the West Coast to face either UCLA and USC or Oregon and Washington. In the previous eight years with the 20-game schedule (since 2018-19), Purdue owns the league’s best record with an 110-49 (.692) mark, the Big Ten’s best mark by seven games (Michigan State; 103-56). Finalized dates, times and television assignments will come at a later date. Purdue will welcome back every available scholarship player for the 2026-27 season from last year’s team that went 30-9 and reached the Elite Eight. In addition, Purdue will bring in one of the most sought-after transfers in the country, Caden Pierce, as well as a highly-regarded incoming freshman class that ranks in the top 10 nationally. BIG TEN SCHEDULE NOTES • Purdue will be looking for its third Big Ten title in the last five years and its fifth regular-season title in the last 11 years. • Purdue and Illinois will play a home-and-home series for the third time in the last six years (2022, 2024, 2027). • Purdue and Rutgers will play a home-and-home series for the third time in the last four years (2024, 2025, 2027). • Purdue and Indiana are one of three “protected” home-and-home rivalries, joined by Northwestern vs. Illinois and Michigan vs. Michigan State. • A year ago, four coaches were coaching in their first seasons in Big Ten play. There are no new coaches in the Big Ten Conference this season, the first time since the 2022-23 season there has not been a coaching change in the league. • Purdue enters the 2026-27 season having sold out 106 consecutive games in Mackey Arena, dating to the 2018-19 season. ================================= NOTRE DAME BASEBALL MASON, Ohio – The Notre Dame baseball team took a 16-6 (8 innings) win over Dayton at Prasco Park in Ohio on Tuesday evening. The Flyers got on the scoreboard with a lead-off home run in the top of the first inning, but the Irish responded quickly in the bottom half of the inning. Drew Berkland used a lead-off homer of his own to tie the score. Bino Watters was hit by a pitch, Mark Quatrani drew a walk and Jayce Lee was hit by a pitch with two outs to load the bases. Dylan Passo delivered a double to drive in Watters and Quatrani for a 3-1 lead. Shane Miranda added a double two batters later, and Lee and Passo both scored on the play for a 5-1 advantage. Notre Dame added to the lead in the bottom of the second. Drew Berkland reached on an error and moved up on a wild pitch. Bino Watters singled through the right side, driving in Berkland for a 6-1 lead. The Flyers posted two runs in the top of the third to make it 6-3. The Irish had the answer yet again in the bottom half of the inning. Mason Barth drew a walk, and Jamie Zee singled before Andrew Graham came in to run. Drew Berkland then blasted his second home run of the game for a 9-3 Irish lead. Mark Quatrani led off the bottom of the fourth with a single before Noah Coy made it safely to first after an error. Jayce Lee walked to load the bases, and Mason Barth was hit by a pitch two batters later to bring in Quatrani. Shane Miranda then singled through the right side to drive Lee and Coy for a 12-3 score in favor of the Irish. Dylan Singleton posted back-to-back three-up, three-down innings on the mound in the fifth and sixth. The Flyers put three runs on the scoreboard in the top of the seventh inning to make it a 12-6 score. Once again, the Irish had the response in the bottom half of the inning. Mark Quatrani had a single and Noah Coy Walked before Jayce Lee drilled a home run to left field to put the Irish up 15-6. In the bottom of the eighth, Andrew Graham reached on an error, Brandon Logan walked and Caleb Ricks was hit by a pitch to load the bases. Noah Coy then used a sacrifice fly to drive in Graham with the game-ending run in the 16-6 final. Drew Berkland was 2-for-4 with two home runs, four RBI and three runs on the night. Jayce Lee added a home run, three RBI and three runs with a pair of walks. Mark Quatrani went 2-for-4 and scored three times. Dylan Passo added two doubles, two RBI and a run. Shane Miranda posted a pair of hits with a double and four RBI. Bino Watters had a hit, drove one in and scored a run. Noah Coy scored twice and drove in a run, and Mason Barth scored once and had an RBI. Jamie Zee had a hit, and Andrew Graham posted a pair of runs in the win. Aiden Zerr went 2.0 with a strikeout in the start, and Caden Crowell picked up the win in relief with 2.0 shutout innings and three strikeouts. Dylan Singleton posted 2.0 and faced just six batters with two strikeouts. Radek Birkholz went two-thirds of an inning with a strikeout, and Eli Thurmond added 1.1 innings of work with a strikeout. The Irish (28-20) close out the regular season with a three-game ACC series at Pittsburgh starting on Thursday at 6:00 p.m. ET. =================================== IU INDY WOMEN’S GOLF ROCHESTER, Mich. – IU Indianapolis women’s golf senior Yanah Rolston posted a second round score of 82 at the NCAA Ann Arbor Regional on Tuesday (May 12) at the University of Michigan Golf Course. Rolston finished strong, playing her final six holes of the round to 1-under, including a birdie on No. 6. Playing conditions were remarkably tougher on Tuesday as winds picked up during the morning and scores were roughly two shots higher across the field. Rolston got off to a sluggish start, finding trouble on her second and third holes of the round. She stemmed the tide with a par on the short No. 13 before making bogey on her next three holes. However, after the turn, Rolston got in a groove, beginning with pars on Nos. 4 and 5 before making birdie on No. 6. She closed with three straight pars, including avenging a bogey from yesterday on the par 4 No. 9. No. 29 Ohio State leads the team scoring at 1-over 569 while No. 32 Northwestern and No. 2 USC at tied for second at 2-over 570. Northwestern’s Ashley Yun continues to sit atop the leaderboard at 7-under 135 and holds a four shot lead over a trio of players. Rolston is slated to tee off for her final round at 9:50 a.m. on Wednesday (May 13). ==================================== INDIANA STATE BASEBALL TERRE HAUTE, Ind. – Indiana State scored early and often on Tuesday night as the Sycamores jumped ahead early and then rallied late to hold off Lindenwood at Bob Warn Field, 11-6, in nonconference action. Indiana State (29-23) took the early 3-0 lead in the bottom of the first inning thanks in part to Carter Beck’s two-run home run for his 13th blast of the 2026 season. The Sycamores added to the lead in the fourth on Mason Roell’s first RBI double of the evening, and then responded to a four-run Lindenwood (28-24) rally in the seventh with four runs of their own thanks to another Roell RBI double. The Sycamore pitching staff was solid through the staff day on the mound led by Aaron Moss’ (2-1) 3.0 inning effort in his second collegiate start. The senior allowed just two hits and an unearned run while striking out one, before turning the ball over to the bullpen with a 4-1 lead. Trevor Fenters, Brady Banker, Breyllin Suriel, and Hunter Small combined to go the rest of the way allowing just four hits while striking out 10 batters over the final 6.0 innings in closing out the midweek win. Nomar Garcia had a team-high three hits on the day as the Sycamores posted 12 hits overall in the contest. Mason Roell doubled twice and drove in a game-high four RBIs, while Carter Beck homered and Weston Fulk doubled in the win. Nomar Garcia, Mason Roell, Carter Beck, Emil Estrella, and Jeremy Martinez all posted multi-hit games on Tuesday night. How They Scored Indiana State took the early 3-0 lead in the bottom of the first inning as Carter Beck connected on a two-run home run over the right field wall scoring Mason Roell, while Emil Estrella singled and advanced to third on a Lindenwood error, before scoring on Caden Miller’s RBI sacrifice fly. Lindenwood took one back in the top of the second as Sam Driscoll scored on Tyler Ellis’ sacrifice fly to right field to make it a 3-1 game. The Sycamores added to the lead in the bottom of the second as Mason Roell doubled to right center allowing Colin Sander to score from first on the play to make it a 4-1 game. Indiana State added three more runs in the bottom of the sixth as Weston Fulk doubled and scored on Colin Sander’s fielder’s choice, before Mason Roell went 107 MPH off the bat for a double off the left field wall scoring both Sander and Nomar Garcia to make it a 7-1 game. Lindenwood scored four in the top of the seventh inning highlighted by Will Geary’s three-run home run in the inning to make it a 7-5 contest. Indiana State responded with four runs in the bottom of the seventh to swing the game back to an 11-5 lead. Nomar Garcia sparked the inning with an RBI single, Mason Roell added a sacrifice fly scoring Jeremy Martinez, and Emil Estrella brought home two more with an RBI single to answer the Lindenwood rally. Lindenwood scored the final run of the contest on a wild pitch in the top of the ninth as Preston Wright came across the plate to provide the final 11-6 margin. News and Notes Carter Beck extended his on-base streak to 36 consecutive games following his two-run home run in the first inning. He finished the day 2-for-4 with a home run, a walk, two RBIs, and a run scored. Carter Beck’s two hits in the contest marked his team-leading 26th multi-hit game and the 50th multi-hit game of his Indiana State career. Carter Beck has reached base in 50 of the 51 games played in the 2026 season. Weston Fulk extended his on-base streak to 11 consecutive games after going 1-for-3 with a double, walk, and run scored. Caden Miller was hit by his team-leading 18th pitch in the 2026 season. Mason Roell’s four RBI game marked his fourth game this season with four or more RBIs. Aaron Moss recorded his second collegiate start on the mound on Tuesday night as the senior right-hander took the start against Lindenwood. His first start came last season against Illinois State on May 17, 2025. Andrew Ortiz made his first appearance back on the field in a pinch-running role in the seventh inning. Ortiz has been out of action since April 2, 2026, after getting hit by a pitch in the series opener against UIC. Indiana State improved to 3-1 against first-time opponents in program history following Tuesday’s win over Lindenwood. Up Next Indiana State welcomes Belmont for a three-game Missouri Valley series weekend starting on Thursday, May 14, with first pitch at Bob Warn Field set for 6:30 p.m. ET. All three games will be carried live on ESPN+ and 105.5 The Legend. ================================== EVANSVILLE MEN’S BASKETBALL EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Bringing a wealth of experience from the Division I and junior college levels, Makuei Riek has signed with the University of Evansville men’s basketball program. A 6-foot-6 guard, Riek played for Salt Lake Community College last season where he averaged 13.5 points and 4.5 rebounds per game. An 87.5% free throw shooter, Riek was an efficient shooter from all areas of the floor finishing at 43.6% overall and 41.7% from long range. “Makuei is a very talented guard that can score at all three levels. He has the ability to create shots for himself both off the bounce and from off-ball actions/cuts. His strengths are perimeter shooting, driving undisciplined closeouts, keeping off-ball defenders honest and playing off his pivots,” UE Head Men’s Basketball Coach David Ragland exclaimed. “Riek can score with the best of them but also has a high basketball IQ and can create offensive opportunities for his teammates. With his height and length, we expect him to defend multiple guard scorers of our opponents.” Riek posted a season-high 26 points against Casper College where he converted 10 of his 16 field goal tries. Prior to joining SLCC, Riek played in 20 games as a freshman at Fairfield in 2024-25. He scored a season-high 13 points versus Yale and earned Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Rookie of the Week honors. “I chose Evansville because of the coaching staff and the culture, felt like a place where I can call home and continue to grow on and off the court,” Riek said. ===================================== SOUTHERN INDIANA MEN’S BASKETBALL EVANSVILLE, Ind.—University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball Coach Stan Gouard announced the signing of 6-foot-9 sophomore guard Ebrahim Kaba for the 2026-27 season. Kaba comes to the Screaming Eagles from Purdue Fort Wayne, where he played in 20 games, averaging 4.0 points and 2.9 rebounds per contest, as a red-shirt freshman in 2025-26. A native of East Orange, New Jersey, Kaba reach double-figures in a pair of games, including a season-high 20 points in the Mastodons’ victory over Dominican last November. Kaba, who averaged 12.8 minutes of playing time per outing, appeared in two games against Power 4 competition. He posted a five-point, six rebound-effort in PFW’s 85-77 loss at Utah after racking up a season-high seven rebounds in the Mastodons’ win over Boyce. Prior to his 2025-26 season, Kaba spent a red-shirt season at St. Bonaventure University in 2024-25. During his prep career, Kaba played his senior season at The Peddie School in New Jersey. He previously played for Gill St. Bernard’s in New Jersey. ================================== 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 1903 – Paris Parasites left fielder Clyde Bateman becomes the second player in Texas League history to hit four home runs in a game. 1911: Ty Cobb of the Detroit Tigers hits his first grand slam. After six innings, Detroit leads the Boston Red Sox, 10 – 1. Boston comes back to win the game, 13 – 11, in ten innings. The New York Giants score a major league record ten runs before the St. Louis Cardinals retire the first batter in the 1st inning. Fred Merkle drives in six of the Giants’ 13 runs in the 1st en route to a 19 – 5 victory. When Giants manager John McGraw decides to save starting pitcher Christy Mathewson for another day, Rube Marquard enters the game in the 2nd inning and sets a record for relievers (since broken) with 14 strikeouts in his eight-inning appearance. 1923 – Joe Sewell of the Cleveland Indians strikes out twice in one game for the first time in his career. Washington Senators rookie Cy Warmoth is the pitcher. In a 14-year career, Sewell will have only one other multiple strikeout game. 1929 – At Cleveland’s League Park, the Indians defeat the Yankees, 4 – 3, in the first game in major league history in which players from both teams wear numbers on the back of their jerseys. 1942 – Jim Tobin of the Boston Braves almost single-handedly beats the Chicago Cubs at Braves Field, 6 – 5, by pitching a five-hitter and hitting three consecutive home runs. Tobin, who hit a pinch homer the day before, becomes the only pitcher in modern history to collect three home runs in a game. His fourth at-bat results in a fly ball caught against the fence in left field. 1947 – A barrage of racial slurs is directed at Jackie Robinson by the Cincinnati fans at Crosley Field. Brooklyn shortstop Pee Wee Reese, a Southerner from Kentucky, puts his arm around his teammate’s shoulder in supoort. 1952: In an Appalachian League game, Ron Necciai of the Bristol Twins strikes out 27 batters while pitching a 7 – 0 no-hitter against the Welch Miners. Four of the Welch hitters reach base on a walk, an error, a hit by pitch and a passed ball charged to Twins’ catcher Harry Dunlop on a swinging third strike. But 27 strikeouts are recorded on the night, including four in the 9th inning, as a result of Dunlop’s miscue; one batter is retired on a grounder in the 2nd inning. Larry Miggins hits the first of his two major league home runs, going deep off Preacher Roe in the 4th inning of the Cardinals’ 14 – 8 loss to the Dodgers at Ebbets Field. The round-tripper hit by the Bronx-born outfielder, who had once shared his dream of playing in the big leagues during a prep school assembly with a buddy with aspirations to be a baseball broadcaster, is called by an overwhelmed Vin Scully, Brooklyn’s play-by-play announcer who had wondered that day with his friend “what the odds against that would be.” 1955 – At Yankee Stadium, Mickey Mantle hits home runs from both sides of the plate for the first time in his major league career. The New York Yankees slugger finishes the game with three home runs – two left-handed and one right-handed – and drives in all of his team’s runs in a 5 – 2 victory over the Detroit Tigers. Whitey Ford is the winning pitcher and Steve Gromek the loser. 1958: Teammates Willie Mays and Daryl Spencer each have four extra-base hits as San Francisco beats the Dodgers in Los Angeles, 16 – 9. Mays hits two home runs, two triples, a single and drives in four runs, and Spencer has two home runs, a triple, a double and six RBI for a combined 28 total bases. The Ginats set a record with a total of 50 total bases in the game. Stan Musial of the St. Louis Cardinals collects his 3,000th career hit with a pinch double off Chicago Cubs pitcher Moe Drabowsky at Wrigley Field. The Cardinals win, 5 – 3. 1965 – Los Angeles Angels pitcher Dick Wantz dies following surgery for brain cancer. The 25-year-old Wantz had made his debut only one month earlier, pitching one inning in relief in his only major league appearance. 1966 – Dick Farrell and Claude Raymond combine for a one-hitter in Philadelphia. The Astros only manage three hits themselves but the last is a 9th-inning blast by Jim Wynn off Chris Short that hits the roof of Connie Mack Stadium for a 1 -0 victory. 1969 – Ernie Banks of the Chicago Cubs reaches the 1,500 runs batted in milestone with seven RBI in a 19 – 0 shellacking of the expansion San Diego Padres. Hard-throwing right-hander Dick Selma earns the win as the Cubs tie a modern-day record for the most one-sided shutout in National League history. 1972 – Buzz Capra is the winning pitcher in a 1 – 0 Mets victory over the San Francisco Giants. Capra’s first major league RBI – a 2nd-inning single scoring Cleon Jones – is the only run of the game. 1976 – For the sixth consecutive game, George Brett of the Kansas City Royals collects at least three hits. 1980: Ray Knight of the Cincinnati Reds hits two home runs in the 5th inning – including a grand slam – to lead the Reds to a 15 – 4 rout of the New York Mets. Fred Lynn becomes 13th Red Sox player to hit for the cycle in a 10 – 5 win over the Twins. 1981 – Don Sutton twirls a five-hit shutout to blank St. Louis, 3 – 0. It is the 53rd whitewash of the Astros hurler’s career. 1982 – The Chicago Cubs win game No. 8,000 in their history with a 5 – 0 shutout of Houston at the Astrodome. Allen Ripley and Lee Smith combine on the blanking. 1985 – After trailing by eight runs going into the bottom of the 6th inning, the Yankees rally to beat the Twins, 9 – 8. Don Mattingly’s 9th inning two-out, three-run walk-off home run in Yankee Stadium is the finishing touch. 1988 – Glenn Davis drives in four and Gerald Young provides four hits as Houston pounds the Cubs, 8 – 2. Nolan Ryan tosses his first complete game in over two years, fanning eleven. Davis leads the league in RBIs (33) while Young leads in stolen bases (22). 1989 – Kirby Puckett of the Minnesota Twins ties a major league record with four doubles against the Toronto Blue Jays. He becomes the 35th player to hit four doubles in a game, the first since Toronto’s Damaso Garcia in 1986. 1993 – George Brett of the Kansas City Royals hits his 300th career home run in the 6th inning of a 7 – 3 victory over the Cleveland Indians. Brett is only the sixth major league player with at least 3,000 hits and 300 home runs. 1994 – Tim Salmon of the California Angels ties an American League record with his 13th consecutive hit. 1995 – As of today, Tony Gwynn has hit .402 in his last 162-game stretch. 1998 – The Atlanta Braves set a National League record and tie a major league mark by hitting home runs in 25 straight games, doing it when Ryan Klesko hits a two-run shot in the 6th inning against St. Louis. 1999 – The Mexico City Tigers crack three grand slams in a 16 – 5 rout. Luis Garcia hits two of them and Julio Franco adds one. 2000 – Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Todd Stottlemyre earns his seventh victory of the season as the Diamondbacks beat the San Diego Padres, 6 – 2. It is also Stottlemyre’s 136th career win. He and father Mel Stottlemyre become the first father-son combination to record 300 wins. 2001 – Alex Rodriguez becomes the fifth-youngest big leaguer to hit his 200th career home run, at 25 years and 289 days. Mel Ott accomplished the feat in 1934 at the youngest age (25 years, 144 days). 2002 – 38 home runs shy of the exclusive 500 home run club, Jose Canseco retires at 37 age due to injuries sustained in recent years. The former American League MVP, who was cut by the Expos during spring training, had his best years in Oakland, forming with Mark McGwire one of the most feared one-two punches of the late 1980s and early 1990s. 2007 – In the comeback which will become known as the “Mother’s Day Miracle”, the Red Sox rally for six runs in the bottom of the 9th inning to beat Baltimore at Fenway Park, 6 – 5. Prior to the final frame, Orioles starter Jeremy Guthrie had blanked his opponents on three hits before Boston crosses the plate six times, thanks to two singles, two doubles, three walks, and two errors. 2009: Ryan Zimmerman’s hitting streak ends at 30 games when he goes 0 for 3 with two walks, but Washington beats San Francisco, 6 – 3, behind the pitching of Shairon Martis. Zimmerman falls one game short of the franchise record of 31 games set by Vladimir Guerrero in 1999, when the Nationals were still the Montreal Expos. Alfonso Soriano hits his 53rd leadoff homer as the Chicago Cubs defeat the Padres, 6 – 4, in a rain-shortened game. Soriano’s blast ties Craig Biggio for second on the all-time list, still well behind record holder Rickey Henderson at 81; it also breaks the Cubs record held by Jimmy Ryan, as it is Soriano’s 21st such homer since joining the team in 2006. For the Padres, Adrian Gonzalez hits two long balls off winner Ted Lilly. The Pirates down the Cardinals, 5 – 2. Adam LaRoche has a home run reversed on an instant replay review; it marks the first time in 14 reviews that a home run call has been reversed since instant replay was instituted in 2008. The Reds beat the Diamondbacks, 10 – 3. Arizona rookie Gerardo Parra homers off Johnny Cueto in his first major league at-bat, the 100th player to homer in his first trip up in the Show. 2010: Mat Latos comes extremely close to pitching a no-hitter, but has to settle for a one-hit shutout, the first complete game of his career, as San Diego beats the Giants, 1 – 0. The only hit he allows is a ground ball by Eli Whiteside in the 6th that glances off him towards third baseman Chase Headley, whose throw to first base is a fraction of a second too late to retire Whiteside. For good measure, Latos also drives in the only run of the game. Zack Greinke finally earns his first win of the year, but it comes too late to save Trey Hillman’s job. The Royals announce after the 6 – 4 win over the Indians that their manager has been fired and will be replaced by former Milwaukee Brewers manager Ned Yost. The Royals are 12-23 and in a familiar last place in the AL Central. 2011: Justin Verlander does his best Johnny Vander Meer imitation but comes up short in his first start since pitching the second no-hitter of his career on May 8th. The Tigers ace is still masterful, though, keeping the Royals hitless until Melky Cabrera’s two-out triple in the 6th. He ends up allowing two hits in eight innings in a 3 – 1 win. His losing opponent in last week’s no-hitter, Toronto’s Ricky Romero, also has a low-hit game, giving up the first of his four hits with two outs in the 6th. He comes up one out short of a complete game shutout, leaving Frank Francisco to get the final out of a 2 – 0 victory over the Twins. Jeremy Hellickson also shines on a night of great pitching performances. The Rays rookie pitches a four-hitter for the first complete game and shutout of his career in Tampa Bay’s 3 – 0 win over the Orioles, on his way to winning the Rookie of the Year Award. Matt Joyce and Johnny Damon hit homers that account for all of the Rays’ runs. Coco Crisp gambles and loses: in the 8th inning, with the A’s trailing the White Sox, 4 – 3, he attempts a straight steal of home with left-handed reliever Matt Thornton on the mound, but C A.J. Pierzynski manages to tag him out as he slides. The Sox hold on for the win. 2012: The Mariners beat the Yankees, 6 – 2, in Andy Pettitte’s return to pinstripes after a one-year retirement. Justin Smoak and Casper Wells hit homers against Pettitte; Kevin Millwood picks up his first win for the M’s. Wells is a dutiful son on Mother’s Day, hitting his long ball after his mom, who drove all the way from Schenectady, NY to the Big Apple to attend the game, asked him to hit a home run to make it memorable. Another Mother’s Day hero is the Marlins’ Giancarlo Stanton, swinging a pink bat in support of breast cancer research, who belts a walk-off grand slam off Manny Acosta of the Mets, capping a six-run 9th-inning rally as Miami wins, 8 – 4. And he is not the only player to accomplish the feat, as the Reds’ Joey Votto also ends his team’s game with a slam, completing a three-homer game as Cincinnati defeats the Nationals, 9 – 6. It the first time that two games end on a grand slam on the same day since April 10, 1988, when Mo Vaughn and Steve Finley were the hitters. 2013: Jordan Zimmermann is the first major league pitcher to seven wins as he also drives in three runs in Washington’s 6 – 2 victory over the Dodgers. His opponent, Josh Beckett, falls to 0-5. For Washington, Bryce Harper runs at full speed into the outfield fence in the 5th inning as he attempts to catch a fly ball hit by A.J. Ellis; he has to leave the game and while he will return to action quickly, the nagging injuries resulting from the collision will affect his production significantly for the rest of the season. In his return to Arizona after his off-season trade, Justin Upton has a huge night, banging out four hits including a homer in a 10 – 1 Braves win over the Diamondbacks. 2014 – Two pitchers with long winless streaks face off in tonight’s game between the Dodgers and Marlins. Josh Beckett records his first win since the 2012 season as he gives up a run in 6 2/3 innings in a 7 – 1 Dodgers win. His opponent, Jacob Turner, extends his streak to 16 starts and is 0-10 on the road for his career, in spite of an ERA under 4.00. 2015: Last year’s AL Cy Young Award winner, Corey Kluber of the Indians, finally gets his first win of the year after starting off 0-5. He strikes out 18 Cardinals batters and allows only one hit over eight innings to lead Cleveland to a 2 – 0 win. The 18 strikeouts tie a club record set by Bob Feller in 1938 and are the most by any American League pitcher since Roger Clemens also struck out 18 in 1998. Jonathan Singleton of the Fresno Grizzlies drives in ten runs in a 17 – 6 beating of the Albuquerque Isotopes in the Pacific Coast League. He goes 4 for 6 with two homers, including a grand slam, in setting a new club record for RBIs. 2016 – Major League Baseball announces its decision in the case of SS Jose Reyes, who has been on administrative leave since spring training following an off-season domestic violence incident. While prosecutors decided to drop criminal charges, MLB comes down hard, extending Reyes’ suspension until May 31st, a total of 51 games, costing Reyes $7 million in salary. 2017 – Bryce Harper signs a contract extension that will pay him $21.6 million in 2018, his final year before he becomes eligible for free agency, an amount which is a record for a player in his arbitration years. He then celebrates by hitting a walk-off homer off Edubray Ramos with two outs in the 9th to lead Washington to a 6 – 4 win over the Phillies. 2018 – Called up from AAA earlier in the day, Joey Rickard has a great game for the Orioles against the Rays as he homers twice and drives in four runs in a 17 – 1 rout. Danny Valencia and Trey Mancini also homer for the last-place Birds and Dylan Bundy pitches seven scoreless innings in his first start since allowing seven runs and four homers without retiring anyone in a start against the Royals on May 8th. 2021 – Back from a short stint on the injured list, Milwaukee’s Corbin Burnes picks up right where he left off as he racks up nine strikeouts before issuing his first walk of the season, to the Cardinals’ Tommy Edman in the 5th inning. With this, he sets a couple of records, as he reaches 58 strikeouts before issuing his first free pass. The previous record from the start of a season was 51, by Kenley Jansen in 2017, while the record for most consecutive strikeouts without a walk at any point was 56, set by Curt Schilling in 2002 and tied by Gerrit Cole of the Yankees earlier this week. Burnes may not hold that second record very long, as Cole’s streak is still active. 2023 – By striking out Brice Turang and Joey Wiemer of the Brewers in the 5th inning, Zack Greinke becomes only the fifth pitcher in major league history to have struck out 1,000 different batters in his career. The veteran Royals hurler, who is in his 20th season, joins Nolan Ryan, Randy Johnson, Greg Maddux and Roger Clemens in the exclusive club. 2024 – In a first, women are the lead television announcers for both teams in today’s game between the Athletics and Astros. Jenny Cavnar was named the A’s lead broadcaster before the start of the season, and for the occasion the Astros have announcer Todd Kalas and in-game reporter Julia Morales switch roles, with Morales, a long-time friend of Cavnar’s, taking over in the broadcast booth. 2025: Commissioner Rob Manfred issues a ruling that a permanent ban from baseball does not extend past a person’s death. This has the result of making banned players like Pete Rose, players caught up in the Black Sox scandal, and few others eligible for consideration by the Hall of Fame. In recent weeks, Manfred had received pressure from President Donald Trump to lift the ban on Rose specifically. Jeong Choi of the SSG Landers becomes the first player to homer 500 times in Korea Baseball Organization history, taking Riley Thompson of the NC Dinos deep for his record-setting blast. He already holds KBO careers for plate appearances, homers, runs, total bases, hit-by-pitches and strikeouts. Births[edit] 1851 – Frank Buttery, outfielder (d. 1902) 1853 – Felix Moses, manager (d. 1889) 1859 – Leo Smith, infielder (d. 1935) 1870 – George Bristow, outfielder (d. 1939) 1878 – Jack Burns, infielder (d. 1957) 1878 – Frank Hemphill, outfielder (d. 1950) 1883 – Jimmy Archer, catcher (d. 1958) 1884 – John Halla, pitcher (d. 1947) 1884 – Alex Main, pitcher (d. 1965) 1884 – Bert Niehoff, infielder (d. 1974) 1886 – Larry Gardner, infielder (d. 1976) 1886 – Fred Hutchinson, infielder (d. 1954) 1886 – Frank Miller, pitcher (d. 1974) 1890 – Otis Lambeth, pitcher (d. 1976) 1895 – Red Lanning, outfielder (d. 1962) 1895 – Frank Mills, catcher (d. 1983) 1897 – Hugh Canavan, pitcher (d. 1967) 1898 – Babe Dye, minor league outfielder (d. 1962) 1901 – Pat Burke, infielder (d. 1965) 1901 – Red Haley, infielder (d. 1976) 1901 – John Jones, outfielder (d. 1956) 1901 – Leo Taylor, pinch runner (d. 1982) 1902 – Hal Neubauer, pitcher (d. 1949) 1904 – Pen Gilliard, outfielder (d. 1981) 1909 – Leroy Morney, infielder; All-Star (d. 1980) 1910 – Boze Berger, infielder (d. 1992) 1910 – Bill McKinley, umpire (d. 1980) 1911 – Dynamite Dunn, minor league infielder (d. 1981) 1916 – Lefty Nelson, negro league pitcher (d. 1984) 1917 – Lou Stringer, infielder (d. 2008) 1918 – Carden Gillenwater, outfielder (d. 2000) 1918 – Lonnie Goldstein, infielder (d. 2013) 1919 – Bill Kinnamon, umpire (d. 2011) 1920 – Takeo Ishii, NPB catcher (d. ????) 1920 – Sam Segraves, outfielder (d. 1994) 1924 – Fredrick Ballantine, minor league catcher (d. 2013) 1924 – Cliff Fannin, pitcher (d. 1966) 1927 – Dusty Rhodes, outfielder (d. 2009) 1927 – Bob Smith, pitcher (d. 2003) 1929 – J.W. Wingate, minor league infielder 1932 – Jack Shepard, catcher (d. 1994) 1933 – Johnny Roseboro, catcher; All-Star (d. 2002) 1934 – Don LeJohn, infielder (d. 2005) 1934 – Leon Wagner, outfielder; All-Star (d. 2004) 1935 – Bill Dailey, pitcher (d. 2025) 1935 – Merl Eberly, minor league catcher (d. 2011) 1937 – Hidetoshi Ikeda, NPB pitcher (d. 2023) 1939 – J. Con Maloney, minor league executive 1942 – Billy MacLeod, pitcher (d. 2018) 1942 – Jim Speight, college coach (d. 2018) 1945 – Hidekazu Yoshizawa, NPB pitcher (d. 2025) 1946 – Yoshifumi Fukashiro, NPB pitcher 1947 – Steve Kealey, pitcher 1949 – Sumio Hirota, NPB outfielder 1949 – Terry Hughes, infielder 1950 – Juan Beniquez, outfielder 1950 – Omar Carrero, Cuban league pitcher (d. 2012) 1950 – Keiji Nagasaki, NPB outfielder 1950 – Bobby Valentine, infielder, manager 1951 – Pete Peckham, minor league pitcher (d. 2013) 1960 – Lenny Faedo, infielder 1961 – Rick Vanderhook, college coach 1962 – Sean McDonough, announcer 1963 – David Sheldon, minor league infielder 1965 – Greg Duce, Canadian national team infielder 1965 – Jose Rijo, pitcher; All-Star 1965 – Glenn Sullivan, minor league infielder 1966 – Chris Nichting, pitcher 1967 – Tetsuya Shimata, NPB pitcher and umpire 1968 – Braulio Castillo, outfielder 1968 – Masanori Yamamoto, NPB pitcher 1969 – Lyle Mouton, outfielder 1970 – Ariel Benavides, Cuban league outfielder 1970 – Kenny Marrero, minor league pitcher 1971 – Pete Hartmann, minor league pitcher 1971 – Mike Sirotka, pitcher 1974 – Young-pil Choi, KBO pitcher 1974 – Shigeki Noguchi, NPB pitcher 1975 – Mickey Callaway, pitcher, manager 1975 – Jack Cressend, pitcher 1975 – Mingquan Zhu, China Baseball League pitcher 1976 – Mel Gregory, Australian women’s national team outfielder 1976 – Trajan Langdon, minor league infielder 1977 – Robby Hammock, catcher 1977 – Chris Oxspring, pitcher 1978 – Ryan Bukvich, pitcher 1978 – Dorian Castro, minor league pitcher 1978 – Barry Zito, pitcher; All-Star 1979 – Ryan Larson, minor league pitcher 1980 – Jonathan Estes, college coach 1980 – Brad Purcell, CPBL pitcher 1982 – Jon Shehan, minor league catcher 1983 – Zach Jackson, pitcher 1983 – Rawell Rivera, Puerto Rican national team pitcher 1983 – Clay Timpner, outfielder 1984 – J. Brent Cox, minor league pitcher 1986 – John Ely, pitcher 1986 – Gustavo González, Panamanian national team pitcher 1986 – James Leverton, minor league pitcher 1986 – Jason Rice, minor league pitcher 1987 – Jin-woo Im, KBO pitcher 1987 – D.J. Mitchell, pitcher 1987 – Humberto Querales, minor league outfielder 1987 – Jung-rak Shin, KBO pitcher 1988 – Jonathan Laygo, Philippines national team outfielder 1989 – Sean McCauley, minor league catcher 1989 – Daniel Pereira, Brazilian national team pitcher 1990 – Mychal Givens, pitcher 1990 – Meng-Hsiu Tsai, minor league catcher 1990 – Oscar Vejkdahl-Thorsberg, Elitserien infielder 1991 – Jason Leblebijian, minor league infielder 1991 – Tzu-Chieh Lin, CPBL infielder 1991 – Austin Maddox, pitcher 1991 – John Ryan Murphy, catcher 1992 – Willson Contreras, catcher; All-Star 1992 – Takuma Hasegawa, Japanese national team outfielder 1993 – Taylor Clarke, pitcher 1993 – Max Moroff, infielder 1993 – Gerardo Reyes, pitcher 1994 – Tatsuhiro Tamura, NPB catcher 1996 – Zheng Kang Chia, Singaporean national team infielder 1996 – Eli Morgan, pitcher 1996 – Takeru Sasaki, NPB pitcher 1996 – Justus Sheffield, pitcher 1997 – Nico Hoerner, infielder 1997 – DaShawn Keirsey, outfielder 1998 – Mathew Diedericks, South African national team infielder 1998 – Mickey Moniak, outfielder 2000 – Bruno Takenaka, Peruvian national team designated hitter 2001 – Haruto Inoue, NPB pitcher 2001 – José Rodríguez, infielder 2004 – Roman Anthony, outfielder 2004 – Cole LeClair, Great Britain national team outfielder Deaths[edit] 1881 – Mort Rogers, umpire (b. ????) 1903 – Tom Lynch, pitcher/infielder (b. 1863) 1905 – Sam Gillen, infielder (b. 1867) 1921 – John Farrell, infielder (b. 1876) 1929 – George Stallings, catcher, manager (b. 1867) 1935 – Art Lizzette, minor league catcher/infielder and manager (b. 1880) 1938 – Bert Noblett, college coach (b. 1878) 1943 – Jack Hendricks, outfielder, manager (b. 1875) 1943 – Pat Malone, pitcher (b. 1902) 1953 – Jim Field, infielder (b. 1863) 1955 – Lefty George, pitcher (b. 1886) 1961 – Al Humphrey, outfielder (b. 1886) 1961 – Binky Jones, infielder (b. 1899) 1962 – Jake Plummer, minor league outfielder (b. 1909) 1965 – Bill Brown, outfielder (b. 1893) 1965 – Dick Wantz, pitcher (b. 1940) 1967 – Eddie Pick, infielder (b. 1899) 1967 – Jim Walsh, pitcher (b. 1894) 1970 – Urbane Pickering, infielder (b. 1899) 1970 – Johnny Stuart, pitcher (b. 1901) 1973 – Peanuts Davis, pitcher (b. 1917) 1977 – Adam DeBus, infielder (b. 1892) 1983 – Lerton Pinto, pitcher (b. 1899) 1984 – Vet Barnes, pitcher (b. 1911) 1984 – Walter French, outfielder (b. 1899) 1984 – Russ Young, catcher (b. 1902) 1989 – Al Reiss, infielder (b. 1909) 1991 – Hal Gregg, pitcher; All-Star (b. 1921) 1993 – Milt Jordan, pitcher (b. 1927) 1995 – Roland LeBlanc, scout (b. 1921) 2000 – Melzar Williams, outfielder (b. 1913) 2002 – Bill Rodgers, outfielder (b. 1922) 2003 – León Kellman, infielder; All-Star (b. 1921) 2007 – Gomer Hodge, infielder (b. 1944) 2010 – Jay Schlueter, outfielder (b. 1949) 2011 – Masaaki Kudo, NPB infielder (b. 1936) 2014 – Daniel Espitia, scout (b. ~1944) 2014 – Tadashi Furuta, NPB outfielder (b. 1946) 2015 – Earl Averill, catcher (b. 1931) 2015 – Harold Thompson, college coach (b. 1916) 2016 – Sammy Ellis, pitcher; All-Star (b. 1941) 2016 – Mikio Kudo, NPB pitcher (b. 1960) 2016 – Dick McAuliffe, infielder; All-Star (b. 1939) 2020 – Garland Shifflett, pitcher (b. 1935) 2021 – Paul Susce, minor league pitcher (b. ~1935) 2022 – Maurice Fisher, pitcher (b. 1931) 2022 – Katsuhiko Kumazaki, NPB commissioner (b. 1942) 2023 – Bob Garibaldi, pitcher (b. 1942) 2024 – Bill Murphy, outfielder (b. 1944) 2025 – Rich Rollins, infielder; All-Star (b. 1938) ============================================== TV SPORTS TODAY Wednesday, May 13 MLB BASEBALL 1 p.m. MLBN — L.A. Angels at Cleveland (1:10 p.m.) 6:30 p.m. MLBN — Regional Coverage: Philadelphia at Boston (6:45 p.m.) OR Colorado at Pittsburgh (6:40 p.m.) 6:35 p.m. PRIME VIDEO — N.Y. Yankees at Baltimore 10 p.m. MLBN — San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers (10:10 p.m.) NBA BASKETBALL 2 p.m. ESPNU — 2026 NBA Combine: From Chicago 7:40 p.m. ESPN — Eastern Conference Semifinal: Cleveland at Detroit, Game 5 (If Necessary) 10 p.m. ESPN — Western Conference Semifinal: Oklahoma L.A. Lakers at Oklahoma City, Game 5 (if Necessary) NHL HOCKEY TBA TNT — Eastern Conference Second Round: Carolina at Philadelphia, Game 6 (If Necessary) TRUTV — Eastern Conference Second Round: Carolina at Philadelphia, Game 6 (If Necessary) TNT — Western Conference Second Round: Minnesota at Colorado, Game 5 (If Necessary) TRUTV — Western Conference Second Round: Minnesota at Colorado, Game 5 (If Necessary) WNBA BASKETBALL 8 p.m. USA — Las Vegas at Connecticut 10:30 p.m. USA — Indiana at Los Angeles _____ Thursday, May 14 COLLEGE BASEBALL 6 p.m. BTN — TBA 7 p.m. ACCN — North Carolina at NC State 8 p.m. SECN — Georgia at Auburn 9 p.m. BTN — UCLA at Washington COLLEGE LACROSSE (WOMEN’S) Noon ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal 2:30 p.m. ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal 5 p.m. ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal 7:30 p.m. ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal GOLF Noon ESPN — PGA Tour: PGA Championship, First Round, Arominik Golf Club, Newton Square, Pa. 3 p.m. GOLF — LPGA Tour: Kroger Queen City Championship presented by P&G, First Round, Maketewah Country Club, Cincinnati MLB BASEBALL 12:30 p.m. MLBN — Regional Coverage: Colorado at Pittsburgh (12:35 p.m.) OR Washington at Cincinnati (12:40 p.m.) 3:30 p.m. MLBN — St. Louis at Athletics (3:05 p.m.) 10 p.m. MLBN — San Francisco at L.A. Dodgers (10:10 p.m.) NBA BASKETBALL 8:10 p.m. ESPN — Eastern Conference Semifinal: New York at Philadelphia, Game 6 (If Necessary) NHL HOCKEY TBA TNT — Eastern Conference Second Round: Montreal at Buffalo, Game 5 (If Necessary) TRUTV — Eastern Conference Second Round: Montreal at Buffalo, Game 5 (If Necessary) TNT — Western Conference Second Round: Vegas at Anaheim, Game 6 (If Necessary) TRUTV — Western Conference Second Round: Vegas at Anaheim, Game 6 (If Necessary) WNBA BASKETBALL 8 p.m. PRIME VIDEO — Minnesota at Dallas 10 p.m. PRIME VIDEO — New York at Portland _____ Friday, May 15 AUTO RACING 5 p.m. FS1 — NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series: ECOSAVE 200, Dover Motor Speedway, Dover, Del. COLLEGE BASEBALL 6 p.m. BTN — TBA 7 p.m. ACCN — TBA 8 p.m. SECN — Georgia at Auburn 9 p.m. BTN — UCLA at Washington COLLEGE SOFTBALL Noon ACCN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 1 p.m. SECN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 2 p.m. ACCN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 4 p.m. ACCN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional SECN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 6 p.m. ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional SECN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 8 p.m. ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 10 p.m. ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional GOLF Noon ESPN — PGA Tour: PGA Championship, Second Round, Arominik Golf Club, Newton Square, Pa. 3 p.m. GOLF — LPGA Tour: Kroger Queen City Championship presented by P&G, Second Round, Maketewah Country Club, Cincinnati MLB BASEBALL 6:40 p.m. APPLE TV — Toronto at Detroit 7 p.m. MLBN — Regional Coverage: Boston at Atlanta (7:15 p.m.) OR Cincinnati at Cleveland (7:10 p.m.) 7:10 p.m. APPLE TV — N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets 10 p.m. MLBN — Regional Coverage: San Diego at Seattle (joined in progress) (9:40 p.m.) OR L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels (joined in progress) (9:38 p.m.) NBA BASKETBALL TBA TBA — Eastern Conference Semifinal: Detroit at Cleveland, Game 6 (If Necessary) TBA — Western Conference Semifinal: San Antonio at Minnesota, Game 6 (If Necessary) NHL HOCKEY TBA ESPN — Western Conference Second Round: Colorado at Minnesota, Game 6 (If Necessary) UFL FOOTBALL 8 p.m. FOX — Orlando at Dallas WNBA BASKETBALL 7:30 p.m. ION — Washington at Indiana 10 p.m. ION — TBA _____ Saturday, May 16 AUTO RACING 4 p.m. CW — NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series: BetRivers 200, Dover Motor Speedway, Dover, Del. COLLEGE BASEBALL Noon ACCN — TBA SECN — Mississippi St. at Texas A&M 3 p.m. ACCN — TBA BTN — UCLA at Washington SECN — Mississippi at Alabama 6 p.m. BTN — Southern Cal at Oregon COLLEGE LACROSSE (MEN’S) Noon ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal 2:30 p.m. ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal COLLEGE SOFTBALL 1 p.m. ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 3 p.m. ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 5 p.m. ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 7 p.m. ACCN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 8 p.m. ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 9 p.m. ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 10 p.m. ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 11 p.m. ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional COLLEGE TRACK AND FIELD 6 p.m. SECN — Southeastern Tournament: Championship, Auburn, Ala. GOLF 10 a.m. ESPN — PGA Tour: PGA Championship, Third Round, Arominik Golf Club, Newton Square, Pa. 1 p.m. CBS — PGA Tour: PGA Championship, Third Round, Arominik Golf Club, Newton Square, Pa. 3 p.m. GOLF — LPGA Tour: Kroger Queen City Championship presented by P&G, Third Round, Maketewah Country Club, Cincinnati HORSE RACING 4 p.m. NBC — 151st Preakness Stakes: From Laurel Park, Laurel, Md. MLB BASEBALL 4 p.m. FS1 — Baltimore at Washington (4:05 p.m.) 7 p.m. FOX — Regional Coverage: N.Y. Yankees at N.Y. Mets (7:15 p.m.) OR San Diego at Seattle (7:15 p.m.) 9:30 p.m. MLBN — Regional Coverage: L.A. Dodgers at L.A. Angels (9:38 p.m.) OR San Francisco at Athletics (9:40 p.m.) NBA BASKETBALL TBA TBA — Western Conference Semifinal: Oklahoma City at L.A. Lakers, Game 6 (If Necessary) NHL HOCKEY TBA TBA — Eastern Conference Second Round: Buffalo at Montreal, Game 6 (If Necessary) TNT — Eastern Conference Second Round: Philadelphia at Carolina, Game 7 (If Necessary) TRUTV — Eastern Conference Second Round: Philadelphia at Carolina, Game 7 (If Necessary) TBA — Western Conference Second Round: Anaheim at Vegas, Game 7 (If Necessary) SOCCER (MEN’S) 9:55 p.m. ESPN2 — English FA Cup: Chelsea vs. Manchester City, Final, London UFL FOOTBALL Noon ABC — DC at Louisville 3 p.m. ABC — Houston at St. Louis _____ Sunday, May 17 AUTO RACING 1 p.m. FS1 — NASCAR Cup Series: NASCAR All-Star Race, Dover Motor Speedway, Dover, Del. COLLEGE LACROSSE (MEN’S) Noon ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal 2:30 p.m. ESPNU — NCAA Tournament: TBD, Quarterfinal COLLEGE ROWING 9 a.m. BTN — Big Ten Tournament: Championship, Indianapolis COLLEGE SOFTBALL Noon ACCN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 1 p.m. ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional SECN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 2 p.m. ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 2:30 p.m. ACCN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 3 p.m. ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional SECN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 4 p.m. ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 5 p.m. ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional SECN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 5:30 p.m. ACCN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 7 p.m. ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional SECN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 8 p.m. ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 9 p.m. ESPN — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional ESPNU — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional 10 p.m. ESPN2 — Women’s College World Series: TBD, Regional COLLEGE TRACK AND FIELD 1:30 p.m. BTN — Big Ten Tournament: Championships, Lincoln, Neb. GOLF 10 a.m. ESPN — PGA Tour: PGA Championship, Final Round, Arominik Golf Club, Newton Square, Pa. 1 p.m. CBS — PGA Tour: PGA Championship, Final Round, Arominik Golf Club, Newton Square, Pa. 3 p.m. GOLF — LPGA Tour: Kroger Queen City Championship presented by P&G, Final Round, Maketewah Country Club, Cincinnati MLB BASEBALL Noon NBCSN — Miami at Tampa Bay (12:15 p.m.) PEACOCK — Miami at Tampa Bay (12:15 p.m.) 4 p.m. MLBN — San Francisco at Athletics (4:05 p.m.) 7 p.m. NBCSN — San Diego at Seattle (7:20 p.m.) PEACOCK — San Diego at Seattle (7:20 p.m.) NBA BASKETBALL TBA TBA — Eastern Conference Semifinal: Cleveland at Detroit, Game 7 (If Necessary) TBA — Eastern Conference Semifinal: Philadelphia at New York, Game 7 (If Necessary) TBA — Western Conference Semifinal: Minnesota at San Antonio, Game 7 (If Necessary) NHL HOCKEY TBA TNT — Western Conference Second Round: Minnesota at Colorado, Game 7 (If Necessary) TRUTV — Western Conference Second Round: Minnesota at Colorado, Game 7 (If Necessary) SOCCER (WOMEN’S) 6 p.m. ESPN2 — NWSL: Angel City at Portland UFL FOOTBALL 1 p.m. FOX — Columbus at Birmingham WNBA BASKETBALL 1:30 p.m. NBC — Las Vegas at Atlanta PEACOCK — Las Vegas at Atlanta 6 p.m. NBCSN — Seattle at Indiana PEACOCK — Seattle at Indiana About The Author troyderengowski61@gmail.com See author's posts Post navigation THE INDIANA SRN “SPORTSPAGE” TUESDAY MAY 12, 2026 THE INDIANA SRN “SPORTSPAGE” THURSDAY MAY 14, 2026