“THE SCOREBOARD”
INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL WEEK 2
ANDERSON (0-1) AT PENDLETON HEIGHTS (0-1)
ANDREAN (0-1) AT VALPARAISO (0-1)
ARIZONA COLLEGE PREP AT CROWN POINT (1-0)
ATTICA (0-1) AT TRI-COUNTY (0-1)
BATESVILLE (1-0) AT MILAN (1-0)
BEECH GROVE (0-1) AT JENNINGS COUNTY (0-1)
BEN DAVIS (0-1) AT AVON (0-1)
BLACKFORD (0-1) AT FREMONT (0-1)
BLOOMINGTON NORTH (0-1) AT BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE (0-1)
BLOOMINGTON SOUTH (1-0) AT MARTINSVILLE (1-0)
BLUFFTON (1-0) AT MANCHESTER (0-1)
BREBEUF JESUIT (0-1) AT TRI-WEST (1-0)
BRONSON (MICH.) AT PRAIRIE HEIGHTS (1-0)
BROWNSBURG (1-0) AT INDIANAPOLIS CATHEDRAL (1-0)
CALUMET (1-0) AT RIVER FOREST (1-0)
CAMBRIDGE CITY LINCOLN (0-1) AT UNION COUNTY (0-1)
CARMEL (1-0) AT WESTFIELD (1-0)
CARROLL (FLORA) (1-0) AT RIVERTON PARKE (1-0)
CARROLL (FORT WAYNE) (0-1) AT CENTER GROVE (0-1)
CASTLE (1-0) AT EVANSVILLE MATER DEI (1-0)
CHARLESTOWN (0-1) AT BROWNSTOWN CENTRAL (1-0)
CHESTERTON (1-0) AT HAMMOND MORTON (0-1)
CINCINNATI MOELLER (OHIO) AT FORT WAYNE DWENGER (0-1)
CLARKSVILLE (0-1) AT WEST WASHINGTON (0-1)
CLOVERDALE (0-1) AT EDINBURGH (0-1)
COLUMBIA CITY (1-0) AT PLYMOUTH (1-0)
COLUMBUS EAST (0-1) AT COLUMBUS NORTH (1-0)
CONCORD (1-0) AT JIMTOWN (0-1)
CONNERSVILLE (1-0) AT FRANKLIN COUNTY (1-0)
CORYDON CENTRAL (0-1) AT PAOLI (1-0)
COVENANT CHRISTIAN (0-1) AT GREENWOOD CHRISTIAN (0-1)
COVINGTON (1-0) AT SOUTH NEWTON (1-0)
CRAWFORD COUNTY (0-1) AT BROWN COUNTY (1-0)
DECATUR CENTRAL (0-1) AT NEW PALESTINE (1-0)
DELPHI (1-0) AT TWIN LAKES (0-1)
DELTA (1-0) AT NORWELL (0-1)
EAST CENTRAL (1-0) AT HARRISON (OHIO)
EAST CHICAGO CENTRAL (0-1) AT GARY WEST (1-0)
EAST NOBLE (1-0) AT FORT WAYNE SNIDER (0-1)
EASTERN GREENE (0-1) AT NORTH KNOX (0-1)
EASTERN HANCOCK (1-0) AT NORTH DECATUR (1-0)
EASTSIDE (1-0) AT ADAMS CENTRAL (0-1)
EATON (OHIO) AT RICHMOND (0-1)
EDWARDSBURG (MICH.) AT JOHN GLENN (1-0)
EVANSVILLE CENTRAL (0-1) AT EVANSVILLE BOSSE (0-1)
EVANSVILLE HARRISON (0-1) AT JASPER (0-1)
EVANSVILLE MEMORIAL (1-0) AT EVANSVILLE NORTH (0-1)
EVANSVILLE REITZ (1-0) AT VINCENNES LINCOLN (1-0)
FAITH CHRISTIAN (1-0) AT CLINTON CENTRAL (1-0)
FLOYD CENTRAL (0-1) AT TERRE HAUTE SOUTH (0-1)
FOREST PARK (1-0) AT PERRY CENTRAL (0-1)
FORT WAYNE CONCORDIA (1-0) AT EASTBROOK (0-1)
FORT WAYNE LUERS (0-1) AT NEW HAVEN (0-1)
FORT WAYNE NORTHROP (1-0) AT HUNTINGTON NORTH (1-0)
FORT WAYNE SOUTH (0-1) AT SOUTH BEND ST. JOSEPH (0-1)
FOUNTAIN CENTRAL (0-1) AT CRAWFORDSVILLE (1-0)
FRANKFORT (0-1) AT CLINTON PRAIRIE (0-1)
FRANKLIN CENTRAL (1-0) AT INDIANAPOLIS RONCALLI (1-0)
GALLATIN COUNTY (KY.) AT SWITZERLAND COUNTY (1-0)
GARRETT (1-0) AT DEKALB (1-0)
GREENSBURG (0-1) AT GREENFIELD-CENTRAL (1-0)
GRIFFITH (1-0) AT MUNSTER (0-1)
GUERIN CATHOLIC (1-0) AT LEBANON (1-0)
HAGERSTOWN (0-1) AT CENTERVILLE (1-0)
HAMMOND CENTRAL (1-0) AT THORNTON FRACTIONAL SOUTH (ILL.)
HANOVER CENTRAL (1-0) AT INDIANAPOLIS CHATARD (1-0)
HERITAGE (1-0) AT FAIRFIELD (1-0)
HERITAGE HILLS (1-0) AT CHRISTIAN ACADEMY (KY.)
ILLINOIS HOMESCHOOL (ILL.) AT LAKE STATION (0-1)
INDIAN CREEK (0-1) AT GREENWOOD (0-1)
INDIANAPOLIS ATTUCKS (0-1) AT INDIANAPOLIS TECH (0-1)
INDIANAPOLIS LUTHERAN (1-0) AT SOUTH PUTNAM (1-0)
INDIANAPOLIS RITTER (1-0) AT LAFAYETTE CENTRAL CATHOLIC (1-0)
INDIANAPOLIS SCECINA (0-1) AT HERITAGE CHRISTIAN (1-0)
INDIANAPOLIS SHORTRIDGE (1-0) AT MACONAQUAH (1-0)
INDIANAPOLIS TINDLEY (1-0) AT PARK TUDOR (1-0)
JEFFERSONVILLE (0-1) AT SEYMOUR (1-0)
KANKAKEE VALLEY (1-0) AT WHEELER (0-1)
LAFAYETTE JEFF (1-0) AT MICHIGAN CITY (0-1)
LAKE CENTRAL (1-0) AT GRAND RAPIDS CATHOLIC (MICH.)
LAKELAND (1-0) AT CHURUBUSCO (0-1)
LAPEL (1-0) AT FRANKTON (0-1)
LAWRENCE CENTRAL (0-1) AT ZIONSVILLE (0-1)
LAWRENCE NORTH (1-0) AT FORT WAYNE NORTH (1-0)
LEO (1-0) AT ANGOLA (0-1)
LEWIS CASS (0-1) AT NORTHFIELD (0-1)
LOGANSPORT (1-0) AT SOUTH BEND ADAMS (0-1)
LOWELL (0-1) AT LAPORTE (0-1)
MADISON-GRANT (1-0) AT SOUTHERN WELLS (0-1)
MERRILLVILLE (1-0) AT HOBART (0-1)
MISHAWAKA MARIAN (0-1) AT CULVER ACADEMY (1-0)
MISSISSINEWA (1-0) AT MARION (1-0)
MITCHELL (0-1) AT SPRINGS VALLEY (1-0)
MONROE CENTRAL (1-0) AT UNION CITY (0-1)
MONROVIA (1-0) AT LINTON (0-1)
MOORESVILLE (1-0) AT TERRE HAUTE NORTH (0-1)
MOUNT CARMEL (ILL.) AT GIBSON SOUTHERN (1-0)
MOUNT VERNON (FORTVILLE) (0-1) AT FRANKLIN (1-0)
MUNCIE CENTRAL (0-1) AT YORKTOWN (1-0)
NEW CASTLE (0-1) AT JAY COUNTY (1-0)
NEW PRAIRIE (1-0) AT GOSHEN (0-1)
NOBLESVILLE (1-0) AT HOMESTEAD (0-1)
NORTH CENTRAL (FARMERSBURG) (0-1) AT NORTH DAVIESS (0-1)
NORTH CENTRAL (INDIANAPOLIS) (0-1) AT HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN (1-0)
NORTH JUDSON (1-0) AT LAVILLE (0-1)
NORTH MONTGOMERY (0-1) AT CASCADE (1-0)
NORTH NEWTON (0-1) AT RENSSELAER CENTRAL (0-1)
NORTH PUTNAM (1-0) AT SOUTHMONT (1-0)
NORTH WHITE (0-1) AT CASTON (0-1)
NORTHEASTERN (1-0) AT TRI (1-0)
NORTHRIDGE (0-1) AT ELKHART (0-1)
NORTHVIEW (1-0) AT GREENCASTLE (0-1)
NORTHWESTERN (1-0) AT EASTERN (GREENTOWN) (0-1)
OAK HILL (1-0) AT SOUTHWOOD (0-1)
PARIS (ILL.) AT NORTH VERMILLION (1-0)
PENN (1-0) AT MISHAWAKA (1-0)
PERU (0-1) AT WHITKO (0-1)
PHALEN ACADEMY AT CHRISTEL HOUSE (0-1)
PIKE (1-0) AT FISHERS (1-0)
PIKE CENTRAL (1-0) AT TECUMSEH (0-1)
PIONEER (1-0) AT KNOX (0-1)
PLAINFIELD (1-0) AT HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE) (1-0)
PORTAGE (1-0) AT NORTHWOOD (1-0)
PRINCETON (0-1) AT NORTH POSEY (1-0)
PROVIDENCE (1-0) AT LOUISVILLE HOLY CROSS (KY.)
PURDUE POLY ENGLEWOOD (0-1) AT DANVILLE (0-1)
ROCHESTER (1-0) AT TIPPECANOE VALLEY (1-0)
SALEM (1-0) AT SILVER CREEK (1-0)
SCOTTSBURG (0-1) AT NORTH HARRISON (0-1)
SEEGER (0-1) AT BENTON CENTRAL (0-1)
SHELBYVILLE (1-0) AT RUSHVILLE (0-1)
SHERIDAN (0-1) AT NORTH MIAMI (1-0)
SOUTH ADAMS (0-1) AT BELLMONT (0-1)
SOUTH BEND RILEY (1-0) AT FORT WAYNE WAYNE (1-0)
SOUTH CENTRAL (UNION MILLS) (1-0) AT BOONE GROVE (0-1)
SOUTH DEARBORN (1-0) AT MADISON (1-0)
SOUTH DECATUR (0-1) AT SHENANDOAH (1-0)
SOUTH SPENCER (1-0) AT MOUNT VERNON (POSEY) (0-1)
SOUTH VERMILLION (1-0) AT SULLIVAN (1-0)
SOUTHPORT (0-1) AT PERRY MERIDIAN (0-1)
SOUTHRIDGE (0-1) AT BOONVILLE (0-1)
SOUTHSIDE HOMESCHOOL AT INDIANAPOLIS WASHINGTON (0-1)
SPEEDWAY (0-1) AT OWEN VALLEY (0-1)
TAYLOR (1-0) AT FORT WAYNE BLACKHAWK (0-1)
TAYLOR (OHIO) AT LAWRENCEBURG (0-1)
TELL CITY (1-0) AT EASTERN (PEKIN) (1-0)
TIPTON (1-0) AT ELWOOD (1-0)
TRITON (1-0) AT BREMEN (0-1)
TRITON CENTRAL (0-1) AT HAMILTON HEIGHTS (0-1)
WABASH (0-1) AT ALEXANDRIA (1-0)
WARSAW (1-0) AT WARREN CENTRAL (1-0)
WASHINGTON (1-0) AT EDGEWOOD (1-0)
WES-DEL (0-1) AT TRI-CENTRAL (0-1)
WEST CENTRAL (0-1) AT CULVER (1-0)
WEST LAFAYETTE (0-1) AT MCCUTCHEON (0-1)
WEST NOBLE (1-0) AT WAWASEE (0-1)
WEST VIGO (0-1) AT PARKE HERITAGE (0-1)
WESTERN (0-1) AT WESTERN BOONE (1-0)
WHITELAND (1-0) AT KOKOMO (0-1)
WHITING (1-0) AT HIGHLAND (0-1)
WINAMAC (1-0) AT FRONTIER (1-0)
WINCHESTER (0-1) AT KNIGHTSTOWN (1-0)
WOODLAN (0-1) AT CENTRAL NOBLE (0-1)
INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL VOLLEYBALL REPORTED SCORES
INDIAN CREEK 3 W. VIGO 0
DANVILLE 2 LAFAYETTE JEFF 0
EVANSVILLE CHRISTIAN 2 TODD COUNTY CENTRAL 0
PAOLI 2 HENRYVILLE 1
LAPORTE 2 HANOVER CENTRAL 0
NEW PALESTINE 2 SCECINA 0
MUNCIE BURRIS 2 ADAMS CENTRAL 0
FORT WAYNE CARROLL 2 PENN 1
HAMMOND KNOLL 2 MUNSTER 0
GLENN 2 SOUTH BEND CAREER 0
ADAMS CENTRAL 2 MADISON GRANT 0
NEW PRAIRIE 2 KANKAKEE VALLEY 0
FRANKLIN CENTRAL 2 BEECH GROVE 0
PENDLETON HEIGHTS 2 N. DECATUR 0
OAK HILL 2 CASTON 0
FAITH CHRISTIAN 2 SHERIDAN 0
EMINENCE 2 CLOVERDALE 0
LAPORTE 2 HIGHLAND 0
NORTHRIDGE 2 HERITAGE 0
MOORESVILLE 2 CRAWFORDSVILLE 0
NORTHWOOD 2 ELKHART 0
WESTFIELD 3 TRINITY LUTHERAN 2
GREENFIELD-CENTRAL 2 TRITON CENTRAL 0
FISHERS 2 PERRY MERIDIAN 0
WHITING 2 W. CENTRAL 0
GOSHEN 2 PORTAGE 1
WEST NOBLE 2 FORT WAYNE LUERS 1
GLENN 2 TWIN LAKES 0
SHERIDAN 2 FOUNTAIN CENTRAL 0
DANVILLE 2 RIVERTON PARKE 0
TRITON CENTRAL 2 E. CHICAGO CENTRAL 0
FRANKLIN 2 GOSHEN 1
CRAWFORD COUNTY 2 SHOALS 0
SEYMOUR 3 MADISON 0
SOUTHMONT 2 SEEGER 0
WHEELER 2 LOWELL 0
LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN 2 FORT WAYNE LUERS 1
EASTERN HANCOCK 2 IMSAN 0
LAPORTE 2 CONCORDE 1
NORTHRIDGE 2 ARGOS 0
DUGGER UNION 2 EVANSVILLE BOSSE 0
NORTHVIEW 2 LINTON STOCKTON 0
PARK TUDOR 2 RIVERSIDE 0
FORT WAYNE SNIDER 2 GOSHEN HOMESCHOOL 0
YORKTOWN 3 BELLMONT 2
WEST NOBLE 2 LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN 0
SOUTH ADAMS 2 OAK HILL 0
NORTHFIELD 2 NORTHWESTERN 0
GREENSBURG 2 BEECH GROVE 0
GLENN 2 N. JUDSON 0
ADAMS CENTRAL 2 BLUFFTON 1
CENTRAL CHRISTIAN ACADEMY 2 LEGACY CHRISTIAN 1
GREENFIELD-CENTRAL 2 E. CHICAGO CENTRAL 0
HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN 3 BENTON CENTRAL 0
HIGHLAND 2 CONCORD 0
TIPPECANOE VALLEY 2 WABASH 1
NORTHVIEW 2 PERRY MERIDIAN 0
FRANKLIN 2 PORTAGE 0
NORTHWOOD 2 ANDREAN 0
EASTERN 2 BORDEN 0
PROVIDENCE CRISTO REY 2 RIVERSIDE 0
FAITH CHRISTIAN 2 FOUNTAIN CENTRAL 0
GREENSBURG 2 FRANKLIN CENTRAL 0
LAWRENCE NORTH 2 PENDLETON HEIGHTS 1
MOORESVILLE 2 SEEGER 0
NEW PRAIRIE 2 MERRILLVILLE 1
NORTHFIELD 2 PERU 1
MARION 3 CRISPUS ATTUCKS 0
NORTHWOOD 2 HOMESTEAD 1
VICTORY COLLEGE PREP 2 RIVERSIDE 1
SPRINGS VALLEY 3 WOOD MEMORIAL 1
HERRON 2 TRITON CENTRAL 0
HERITAGE 2 LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN 0
LOWELL 2 HAMMOND 0
NORTHVIEW 2 FISHERS 0
EASTERN HANCOCK 2 CAMBRIDGE CITY LINCOLN 0
NORTH JUDSON 2 SOUTH BEND CAREER 0
CONCORDE 2 PRAIRIE HEIGHTS 1
DUGGER UNION 2 EMINENCE 1
CRAWFORDSVILLE 2 SOUTHMONT 0
BORDEN 2 W. WASHINGTON 0
FRANKLIN CENTRAL 2 PENDLETON HEIGHTS 1
FORT WAYNE CARROLL 2 MUNSTER 0
FORT WAYNE LUERS 2 ARGOS 0
WEST NOBLE 2 NORTHRIDGE 0
OAK HILL 2 N. MIAMI 0
SOUTH ADAMS 2 NORTHFIELD 0
LEO 2 NORTHRIDGE 0
LOWELL 2 RIVER FOREST 0
PRAIRIE HEIGHTS 2 PORTAGE 0
TIPPECANOE VALLEY 2 WINAMAC 0
FRANKLIN 2 NEW PRAIRIE 0
NEWPORT CENTRAL CATHOLIC 3 OLDENBURG ACADEMY 0
GREENFIELD-CENTRAL 2 GUERIN CATHOLIC 1
LAPEL 2 EASTERN HANCOCK 0
LAWRENCE NORTH 2 GREENSBURG 0
CHRUBUSCO 2 FORT WAYNE LUERS 0
MORGAN TWP. 2 WHITING 0
TIPPECANOE VALLEY 2 ROCHESTER 1
PLAINFIELD 2 NORTHVIEW 1
SHOALS 2 MITCHELL 0
YORKTOWN 3 AVON 1
PENDLETON HEIGHTS 2 COLUMBUS NORTH 1
EAST NOBLE 2 LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN 1
NEW PRAIRIE 2 HANOVER CENTRAL 0
TERRE HAUTE NORTH 2 PERRY MERIDIAN 1
CRAWFORDSVILLE 2 SEEGER 0
FORT WAYNE CARROLL 2 HAMMOND KNOLL 0
CONCORDE 2 KANKAKEE VALLEY 0
NORTHFIELD 2 ROCHESTER 0
CASCADE 2 MOORESVILLE 1
FRANKLIN CENTRAL 2 COLUMBUS NORTH 0
GREENSBURG 2 MARTINSVILLE 0
CRAWFORDSVILLE 2 N. MONTGOMERY 0
EASTERN HANCOCK 2 SHENANDOAH 0
SOUTH ADAMS 2 TIPPECANOE VALLEY 0
FORT WAYNE CARROLL 2 NORTHWOOD 0
WHEELER 2 RIVER FOREST 0
HAMILTON HEIGHTS 2 MT. VERNON 1
WINCHESTER 3 RANDOLPH SOUTHERN 0
LAPEL 2 CENTERVILLE 1
FW CARROLL 2 NORTHWOOD 0
INDIANA BOYS SOCCER REPORTED SCORES
BISHOP CHATARD 4 HERITAGE CHRISTIAN 0
EAST NOBLE 4 ANGOLA 1
DEMOTTE CHRISTIAN 10 WESTVILLE 1
ZIONSVILLE 6 HERRON 0
MOUNT VERNON 4 EVANSVILLE DAY 1
BLOOMINGTON NORTH 6 TERRE HAUTE NORTH 1
LOGANSPORT 7 TWIN LAKES 0
FAITH CHRISTIAN 8 W. VIGO 0
MICHIGAN CITY 3 NEW PRAIRIE 2
LEBANON 3 BENTON CENTRAL 0
NORTHWESTERN 2 CARROLL 1
EVANSVILLE CENTRAL 5 GIBSON SOUTHERN 2
BATESVILLE 5 FRANKLIN COUNTY 1
GREENSBURG 8 UNION COUNTY 0
BREMEN 2 NORTHWOOD 0
ARGOS 7 CASTON 2
NORWELL 5 WOODLAN 1
FOREST PARK 2 TELL CITY 1
MOUNT VERNON 5 NEW CASTLE 0
CENTER GROVE 2 ELKHART 0
FORT WAYNE LUERS 2 CATHEDRAL 1
LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN 7 PRAIRIE HEIGHTS 0
NORTHRIDGE 5 VALPARAISO 3
MITCHELL 5 EASTERN GREENE 3
WHITE RIVER VALLEY 7 CLARKSVILLE 1
DECATUR CENTRAL 3 CHRISTEL HOUSE 0
TIPTON 3 LIBERTY CHRISTIAN 0
HERITAGE HILLS 9 N. HARRISON 0
BLOOMINGTON SOUTH 2 SEYMOUR 0
PARK TUDOR 2 TRI-WEST 1
LAWRENCE NORTH 4 FRANKLIN CENTRAL 2
BOONE GROVE 1 PORTAGE 0
FORT WAYNE CARROLL 4 MISHAWAKA MARIAN 3
BROWNSBURG 4 NEW PALESTINE 0
BREBEUF 1 LAWRENCE CENTRAL 0
BEN DAVIS 3 AVON 0
CONCORDE 1 HOMESTEAD 0
MACONAQUAH 4 WABASH 0
MANCHESTER 0 MERRILLVILLE 0
GOSHEN 2 SOUTH BEND ADAMS 1
WHEELER 2 HEBRON 0
ILLIANA CHRISTIAN 4 HOBART 0
FAITH CHRISTIAN 2 LEBANON 1
MCCUTCHEON 5 N. CENTRAL 2
EVANSVILLE CHRISTIAN 4 N. POSEY 1
KANKAKEE VALLEY 1 KOUTS 1
PIKE CENTRAL 4 MOUNT VERNON 0
SOUTH BEND ST. JOSEPH 2 LAKE CENTRAL 1
RISING SUN 3 TRINITY LUTHERAN 1
SOUTHRIDGE 7 PRINCETON 1
FORT WAYNE BLACKHAWK 3 FORT WAYNE CONCORDIA 0
COLUMBUS NORTH 1 ELKHART 0
ANDERSON 2 LAFAYETTE JEFF 0
ARCHBISHOP MULLER 2 FISHERS 0
HARRISON 3 ROCKFORD 1
EVANSVILLE DAY 9 N. KNOX 0
FORT WAYNE LUERS 5 HERRON 3
BENTON CENTRAL 5 W. VIGO 0
WHITE RIVER VALLEY 9 AUSTIN 0
NORTHWOOD 5 MANCHESTER 3
HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN 5 GUERIN CATHOLIC 0
NOBLESVILLE 1 OKEMOS 0
NORTH PUTNAM 7 BROWN COUNTY 0
EVANSVILLE REITZ 0 TERRE HAUTE NORTH 0
INDIANA GIRLS SOCCER REPORTED SCORES
HERITAGE CHRISTIAN 1 BISHOP CHATARD 1 (HC WINS IN PK’S 5-4)
FAITH CHRISTIAN 5 BENTON CENTRAL 0
NORTH MONTGOMERY 9 S. VERMILLION 0
CULVER 3 N. MIAMI 1
EVANSVILLE MEMORIAL 2 CHESTERTON 0
GREENCASTLE 9 OWEN VALLEY 0
SILVER CREEK 2 MADISON 1
LAWRENCE NORTH 1 NEW PALESTINE 0
MACONAQUAH 3 WABASH 0
LAPEL 9 HAUSER 0
MONROVIA 10 SOUTHMONT 1
PRINCETON 3 SOUTHRIDGE 0
CONNERSVILLE 4 TRITON CENTRAL 3
BREMEN 5 CENTRAL NOBLE 2
SOUTH KNOX 1 NE DUBOIS 0
GREENSBURG 9 UNION COUNTY 0
OLDENBURG ACADEMY 7 SHAW MEMORIAL 0
CASTLE 5 BLOOMINGTON SOUTH 1
EVANSVILLE CHRISTIAN 4 N. POSEY 2
HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN 4 HOMESTEAD 0
AVON 2 DANVILLE 1
SOUTH BEND ST. JOSEPH 2 FORT WAYNE CARROLL 0
WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP 7 N. WHITE 0
LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN 11 W. NOBLE 3
BLOOMINGTON NORTH 4 SEYMOUR 1
HARRISON 7 TRI-WEST 0
PLAINFIELD 4 TERRE HAUTE NORTH 0
MOUNT VERNON 2 FRANKLIN 1
PROVIDENCE 5 EASTERN 2
CARMEL 2 GUERIN CATHOLIC 1
CONCORDE 4 TRINITY 2
EVANSVILLE REITZ 3 JASPER 2
LOWELL 5 HAMMOND NOLL 0
HIGHLAND 10 LAPORTE 0
LAFAYETTE JEFF 9 ANDERSON 0
BETHESDA CHRISTIAN 8 MUNCIE BURRIS 1
PLYMOUTH 2 LOGANSPORT 1
NORTH PUTNAM 2 BROWN COUNTY 1
HOBART 9 KOUTS 0
EVANSVILLE NORTH 7 VINCENNES LINCOLN 0
RONCALLI 9 COLUMBUS EAST 0
NORTHRIDGE 1 CROWN POINT 0
FRANKLIN CENTRAL 1 OLDENBURG ACADEMY 0
MUNSTER 3 SOUTH BEND ADAMS 1
MISHAWAKA MARIAN 3 BELLMONT 0
BROWNSBURG 1 PARK TUDOR 0
INDIANA GIRLS GOLF
CENTER GROVE INVITE
NOBLESVILLE +22
FLOYD CENTRAL +28
WESTFIELD +28
HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN +40
BATESVILLE +45
CENTER GROVE RED +51
FRANKLIN +53
GUERIN CATHOLIC +57
NEW ALBANY +59
PLAINFIELD +60
COLUMBUS NORTH +88
SOUTHPORT +96
CENTER GROVE WHITE +102
FRANKLIN CENTRAL +117
MARTINSVILLE +122
MOUNT VERNON +122
RONCALLI +125
WHITELAND +189
INDIANA BOYS TENNIS SCORES
COLUMBUS EAST 3 TRI-WEST 2
CROSS COUNTRY RESULTS
BOONVILLE PIONEER: https://in.milesplit.com/meets/627534-boonville-pioneer-invitational-2024/result
CORYDON CENTRAL RUMBLE: https://in.milesplit.com/meets/629481-corydon-central-rumble-in-the-jungle-2024/results
DAVE WALKER INVITE: https://in.milesplit.com/meets/631610-dave-walker-invitational-2024/results
FOUNTAIN CENTRAL GRAND PRIX: https://in.milesplit.com/meets/635356-fountain-central-grand-prix-2024/results
HUNTINGTON NORTH INVITE: https://in.milesplit.com/meets/630655-huntington-north-xc-invitational-2024/results
JACOB GRAF MEMORIAL: https://in.milesplit.com/meets/632153-jacob-graf-memorial-invitational-2024/results
JOHN CLELAND INVITE: https://in.milesplit.com/meets/628620-john-cleland-invitational-2024/results
LOU KNOBLE INVITE: https://in.milesplit.com/meets/624274-lou-knoble-invitational-2024/results
NIC STOMP: https://in.milesplit.com/meets/633131-nic-stomp-2024/results
RICHMOND HARE AND HOUND: https://in.milesplit.com/meets/624914-richmond-hare-and-hound-invitational-2024/results
TAYLOR UNIVERSITY OPEN: https://in.milesplit.com/meets/630646-taylor-university-trojan-xc-opener-2024/results
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL SCORES
COLORADO 9 NY YANKEES 2
TORONTO 3 LA ANGELS 1
BALTIMORE 3 HOUSTON 2
MILWAUKEE 9 OAKLAND 5
ARIZONA 4 BOSTON 1
CHICAGO CUBS 14 MIAMI 2
SAN FRANCISCO 10 SEATTLE 3
CINCINNATI 10 PITTSBURGH 2
PHILADELPHIA 11 KANSAS CITY 2
CLEVELAND 13 TEXAS 5
MINNESOTA 6 ST. LOUIS 0
DETROIT 13 CHICAGO WHITE SOX 4
ATLANTA 4 WASHINGTON 2
NY METS 7 SAN DIEGO 1
TAMPA BAY 9 LA DODGERS 8 (10)
MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL SCORES
COLUMBUS 6 INDIANAPOLIS 3
BELOIT 6 SOUTH BEND 4
FORT WAYNE 3 PEORIA 2
WNBA SCORES
CONNECTICUT 72 NEW YORK 64
MINNESOTA 90 INDIANA 80
NFL PRE-SEASON SCORES
CAROLINA 31 BUFFALO 26
GREEN BAY 30 BALTIMORE 7
DETROIT 24 PITTSBURGH 17
HOUSTON 17 LA RAMS 15
MINNESOTA 26 PHILADELPHIA 3
LA CHARGERS 26 DALLAS 19
NY JETS 10 NY GIANTS 6
SEATTLE 37 CLEVELAND 33
SUNDAY, AUGUST 25:
TENNESSEE AT NEW ORLEANS, 2:00 PM
ARIZONA AT DENVER, 4:30 PM
NEW ENGLAND AT WASHINGTON (NBC), 8:00 PM
NFL WEEK ONE SCHEDULE
THURSDAY, SEPT. 5
- BALTIMORE RAVENS AT KANSAS CITY CHIEFS, 8:20 P.M. ET (NBC)
FRIDAY, SEPT. 6
- GREEN BAY PACKERS VS. PHILADELPHIA EAGLES (IN SÃO PAULO, BRAZIL), 8:15 P.M. ET (PEACOCK)
SUNDAY, SEPT. 8
- PITTSBURGH STEELERS AT ATLANTA FALCONS, 1 P.M. ET (FOX)
- ARIZONA CARDINALS AT BUFFALO BILLS, 1 P.M. ET (CBS)
- TENNESSEE TITANS AT CHICAGO BEARS, 1 P.M. ET (FOX)
- NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS AT CINCINNATI BENGALS, 1 P.M. ET (CBS)
- HOUSTON TEXANS AT INDIANAPOLIS COLTS, 1 P.M. ET (CBS)
- JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS AT MIAMI DOLPHINS, 1 P.M. ET (CBS)
- CAROLINA PANTHERS AT NEW ORLEANS SAINTS, 1 P.M. ET (FOX)
- MINNESOTA VIKINGS AT NEW YORK GIANTS, 1 P.M. ET (FOX)
- LAS VEGAS RAIDERS AT LOS ANGELES CHARGERS, 4:05 P.M. ET (CBS)
- DENVER BRONCOS AT SEATTLE SEAHAWKS, 4:05 P.M. ET (CBS)
- DALLAS COWBOYS AT CLEVELAND BROWNS, 4:25 P.M. ET (CBS)
- WASHINGTON COMMANDERS AT TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS, 4:25 P.M. ET (FOX)
- LOS ANGELES RAMS AT DETROIT LIONS, 8:20 P.M. ET (NBC)
MONDAY, SEPT. 9
- NEW YORK JETS AT SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS, 8:15 P.M. ET (ESPN/ABC)
COLLEGE FOOTBALL SCORES/SCHEDULE
SATURDAY, AUG. 24
GEORGIA TECH 24 #10 FLORIDA STATE 21
TARLETON STATE 26, MCNEESE 23
MONTANA STATE 35, NEW MEXICO 31
SOUTHEAST MISSOURI STATE 37, NORTH ALABAMA 15 (IN MONTGOMERY, ALABAMA)
FLORIDA A&M 24, NORFOLK STATE 23 (IN ATLANTA, GEORGIA)
SMU 29, NEVADA 24
SUNDAY, AUG. 25
DELAWARE STATE AT HAWAI’I | 11:59 A.M. | SPECTRUM SPORTS PPV
THURSDAY, AUG. 29
HOWARD AT RUTGERS | 6 P.M. | BIG TEN NETWORK
YOUNGSTOWN STATE AT VILLANOVA | 6 P.M. | FLOSPORTS
CENTRAL STATE (OHIO) AT MOREHEAD STATE | 6 P.M. | ESPN+
NORTH CAROLINA A&T AT WAKE FOREST | 7 P.M. | ESPN+/ACCNX
NEW HAMPSHIRE AT UCF | 7 P.M. | BIG 12/ESPN+
WESTERN CAROLINA AT NO. 24 NC STATE | 7 P.M. | ACC NETWORK
JACKSON STATE AT UL MONROE | 7 P.M. | ESPN+
LAFAYETTE AT BUFFALO | 7 P.M. | ESPN+
FORDHAM AT BOWLING GREEN | 7 P.M. | ESPN+
CENTRAL CONNECTICUT AT CENTRAL MICHIGAN | 7 P.M. | ESPN+
BRYANT AT DELAWARE | 7 P.M. | FLOSPORTS
VMI AT WILLIAM & MARY | 7 P.M. | FLOSPORTS
PRESBYTERIAN AT MERCER | 7 P.M. | ESPN+
WOFFORD AT GARDNER-WEBB | 7 P.M. | ESPN+
ARKANSAS-PINE BLUFF AT ARKANSAS | 7:30 P.M. | ESPNU
DUQUESNE AT TOLEDO | 7:30 P.M. | ESPN+
QUINCY AT DRAKE | 7:30 P.M. | ESPN+
NORTH CAROLINA AT MINNESOTA | 8 P.M. | FOX
MURRAY STATE AT NO. 11 MISSOURI | 8 P.M. | SEC NETWORK
NORTH DAKOTA STATE AT COLORADO | 8 P.M. | ESPN
NO. 22 KANSAS VS. LINDENWOOD (IN KANSAS CITY, KANSAS) | 8 P.M. | BIG 12/ESPN+
COASTAL CAROLINA AT JACKSONVILLE STATE | 8 P.M. | CBSSN
ALCORN STATE AT UAB | 8 P.M. | ESPN+
SE LOUISIANA AT TULANE | 8 P.M. | ESPN+
NORTHWESTERN STATE AT TULSA | 8 P.M. | ESPN+
NORTHERN STATE AT SOUTH DAKOTA | 8 P.M. | ESPN+
NORTH AMERICAN UNIVERSITY AT STEPHEN F. AUSTIN | 8 P.M. | ESPN+
SOUTHERN UTAH AT NO. 12 UTAH | 9 P.M. | BIG 12/ESPN+
EASTERN ILLINOIS AT ILLINOIS | 9 P.M. | BIG TEN NETWORK
MONMOUTH AT EASTERN WASHINGTON | 9 P.M. | ESPN+
SACRAMENTO STATE AT SAN JOSE STATE | 10 P.M. | TRUTV
FRIDAY, AUG. 30
LEHIGH AT ARMY | 6 P.M. | CBSSN
TEMPLE AT NO. 16 OKLAHOMA | 7 P.M. | ESPN
FLORIDA ATLANTIC AT MICHIGAN STATE | 7 P.M. | BIG TEN NETWORK
COLGATE AT MAINE | 7 P.M. | FLOSPORTS
ELON AT DUKE | 7:30 P.M. | ACC NETWORK
WESTERN MICHIGAN AT WISCONSIN | 9 P.M. | BIG TEN NETWORK
TCU AT STANFORD | 10:30 P.M. | ESPN
SATURDAY, AUG. 31
NO. 14 CLEMSON VS. NO. 1 GEORGIA (IN ATLANTA, GEORGIA) | 12 P.M. | ABC
VIRGINIA TECH VS. VANDERBILT (IN NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE) | 12 P.M. | ESPN
ILLINOIS STATE AT NO. 25 IOWA | 12 P.M. | BIG TEN NETWORK
AUSTIN PEAY AT LOUISVILLE | 12 P.M. | ACC NETWORK
INDIANA STATE AT PURDUE | 12 P.M. | BIG TEN NETWORK
KENT STATE AT PITT | 12 P.M. | ESPNU
BUCKNELL AT NAVY | 12 P.M. | CBSSN
UCONN AT MARYLAND | 12 P.M. | FS1
NO. 8 PENN STATE AT WEST VIRGINIA | 12 P.M. | FOX
DAVIDSON AT GEORGETOWN | 12:30 P.M. | ESPN+
CHATTANOOGA AT NO. 15 TENNESSEE | 12:45 P.M. | SEC NETWORK
UPPER IOWA AT BUTLER | 1 P.M. | FLOSPORTS
SOUTH DAKOTA STATE AT NO. 17 OKLAHOMA STATE | 2 P.M. | BIG 12/ESPN+
TOWSON AT CINCINNATI | 2:30 P.M. | BIG 12/ESPN+
PORTLAND STATE AT WASHINGTON STATE | 3 P.M. | CW NETWORK
NO. 19 MIAMI (FLA.) AT FLORIDA | 3:30 P.M. | ABC
COLORADO STATE AT NO. 4 TEXAS | 3:30 P.M. | ESPN
EASTERN MICHIGAN AT UMASS | 3:30 P.M. | ESPN+
FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL AT INDIANA | 3:30 P.M. | BIG TEN NETWORK
EAST TENNESSEE STATE AT APPALACHIAN STATE | 3:30 P.M. | ESPN+
NORTH DAKOTA AT IOWA STATE | 3:30 P.M. | FS1
OHIO AT SYRACUSE | 3:30 P.M. | ACC NETWORK
KENNESAW STATE AT UTSA | 3:30 P.M. | ESPN+
MERRIMACK AT AIR FORCE | 3:30 P.M. | CBSSN
UTEP AT NEBRASKA | 3:30 P.M. | FOX
WESTERN ILLINOIS AT NORTHERN ILLINOIS | 3:30 P.M. | ESPN+
AKRON AT NO. 2 OHIO STATE | 3:30 P.M. | CBS
MIAMI (OHIO) AT NORTHWESTERN | 3:30 P.M. | BIG TEN NETWORK
BOISE STATE AT GEORGIA SOUTHERN | 4 P.M. | ESPNU
LINCOLN (CA) AT NORTHERN ARIZONA | 4 P.M. | ESPN+
OLD DOMINION AT SOUTH CAROLINA | 4:15 P.M. | SEC NETWORK
STONY BROOK AT MARSHALL | 5 P.M. | ESPN+
UC DAVIS AT CAL | 5 P.M. | ESPN+/ACCNX
NORTH TEXAS AT SOUTH ALABAMA | 5 P.M. | ESPN+
VALPARAISO AT UNI | 5 P.M. | ESPN+
EASTERN KENTUCKY AT MISSISSIPPI STATE | 6 P.M. | ESPN+/SECN+
CAMPBELL AT LIBERTY | 6 P.M. | ESPN+
RICHMOND AT VIRGINIA | 6 P.M. | ESPN+/ACCNX
NORFOLK STATE AT EAST CAROLINA | 6 P.M. | ESPN+
SAMFORD AT WEST GEORGIA | 6 P.M. | ESPN+
SOUTH CAROLINA STATE AT FLORIDA A&M | 6 P.M. | ESPN+
DELAWARE STATE AT SACRED HEART | 6 P.M. | ESPN+
MISSISSIPPI VALLEY STATE AT TENNESSEE STATE | 6 P.M. | ESPN+
THE CITADEL AT CHARLESTON SOUTHERN | 6 P.M. | ESPN+
AVE MARIA UNIVERSITY AT STETSON | 6 P.M. | ESPN+
IDAHO STATE AT OREGON STATE | 6:30 P.M. | CW NETWORK
WESTERN KENTUCKY AT NO. 5 ALABAMA | 7 P.M. | ESPN
FURMAN AT NO. 6 OLE MISS | 7 P.M. | ESPN+/SECN+
CENTRAL ARKANSAS AT ARKANSAS STATE | 7 P.M. | ESPN+
BETHUNE-COOKMAN AT SOUTH FLORIDA | 7 P.M. | ESPN+
TARLETON STATE AT BAYLOR | 7 P.M. | BIG 12/ESPN+
UNLV AT HOUSTON | 7 P.M. | FS1
UT MARTIN AT NO. 18 KANSAS STATE | 7 P.M. | BIG 12/ESPN+
TENNESSEE TECH AT MIDDLE TENNESSEE | 7 P.M. | ESPN+
SAM HOUSTON AT RICE | 7 P.M. | ESPN+
NEVADA AT TROY | 7 P.M. | ESPN+
NORTH ALABAMA AT MEMPHIS | 7 P.M. | ESPN+
HOLY CROSS AT RHODE ISLAND | 7 P.M. | FLOSPORTS
NORTHERN COLORADO AT UIW | 7 P.M. | ESPN+
TEXAS SOUTHERN AT PRAIRIE VIEW A&M | 7 P.M. | ESPN+
ALABAMA A&M AT AUBURN | 7:30 P.M. | ESPN+/SECN+
NO. 7 NOTRE DAME AT NO. 20 TEXAS A&M | 7:30 P.M. | ABC
FRESNO STATE AT NO. 9 MICHIGAN | 7:30 P.M. | NBC
IDAHO AT NO. 3 OREGON | 7:30 P.M. | BIG TEN NETWORK
UCLA AT HAWAI’I | 7:30 P.M. | CBS
ABILENE CHRISTIAN AT TEXAS TECH | 7:30 P.M. | BIG 12/ESPN+
SOUTHERN MISS AT KENTUCKY | 7:45 P.M. | SEC NETWORK
SOUTHERN ILLINOIS AT BYU | 8 P.M. | BIG 12/ESPN+
GEORGIA STATE AT GEORGIA TECH | 8 P.M. | ACC NETWORK
HOUSTON CHRISTIAN AT SMU | 8 P.M. | ESPN+/ACCNX
GRAMBLING AT LOUISIANA | 8 P.M. | ESPN+
NICHOLLS AT LOUISIANA TECH | 8 P.M. | ESPN+
JAMES MADISON AT CHARLOTTE | 8 P.M. | ESPNU
LAMAR AT TEXAS STATE | 8 P.M. | ESPN+
TEXAS A&M-COMMERCE AT SAN DIEGO STATE | 8 P.M. | TRUTV
SOUTHERN AT MCNEESE | 8 P.M. | ESPN+
SOUTHEAST MISSOURI STATE AT NEW MEXICO STATE | 9 P.M. | ESPN+
MISSOURI STATE AT MONTANA | 9 P.M. | ESPN+
NEW MEXICO AT NO. 21 ARIZONA | 10:30 P.M. | ESPN
MONTANA STATE AT UTAH TECH | 10 P.M. | ESPN+
WYOMING AT ARIZONA STATE | 10:30 P.M. | FS1
WEBER STATE AT WASHINGTON | 11 P.M. | BIG TEN NETWORK
SUNDAY, SEPT. 1
NORTH CAROLINA CENTRAL VS. ALABAMA STATE (IN MIAMI GARDENS, FLA.) | 3 P.M. | ESPN
NO. 23 USC VS. NO. 13 LSU (IN LAS VEGAS, NEVADA) | 7:30 P.M. | ABC
MONDAY, SEPT. 2
BOSTON COLLEGE AT NO. 10 FLORIDA STATE | 7:30 P.M. | ESPN
INDIANA HOOSIERS FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
AUGUST 31 VS. FLORIDA INTERNATIONAL 3:30
SEPTEMBER 6 VS. WESTERN ILLINOIS 7:00
SEPTEMBER 14 AT UCLA 7:30
SEPTEMBER 21 VS. CHARLOTTE TBA
SEPTEMBER 28 VS. MARYLAND TBA
OCTOBER 5 AT NORTHWESTERN TBA
OCTOBER 19 VS. NEBRASKA TBA
OCTOBER 26 VS. WASHINGTON TBA
NOVEMBER 2 AT MICHIGAN STATE TBA
NOVEMBER 9 VS. MICHIGAN TBA
NOVEMBER 23 AT OHIO STATE TBA
NOVEMBER 30 VS. PURDUE TBA
PURDUE BOILERMAKERS FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
AUGUST 31 VS. INDIANA STATE 12:00
SEPTEMBER 14 VS. NOTRE DAME 3:30
SEPTEMBER 21 AT OREGON STATE 8:30
SEPTEMBER 28 VS. NEBRASKA 12:00
OCTOBER 5 AT WISCONSIN TBA
OCTOBER 12 AT ILLINOIS TBA
OCTOBER 18 VS. OREGON 8:00
NOVEMBER 2 VS. NORTHWESTERN TBA
NOVEMBER 9 AT OHIO STATE TBA
NOVEMBER 16 VS. PENN STATE TBA
NOVEMBER 22 AT MICHIGAN STATE 8:00
NOVEMBER 30 AT INDIANA TBA
NOTRE DAME FIGHTING IRISH FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
AUGUST 21 AT TEXAS A&M 7:30
SEPTEMBER 7 VS. NORTHERN ILLINOIS 3:30
SEPTEMBER 14 AT PURDUE 3:30
SEPTEMBER 21 VS. MIAMI (OH) 3:30
SEPTEMBER 28 VS. LOUISVILLE 3:30
OCTOBER 12 VS. STANFORD 3:30
OCTOBER 19 AT GEORGIA TECH TBA
OCTOBER 26 AT NAVY 12:00
NOVEMBER 9 VS. FLORIDA STATE 7:30
NOVEMBER 16 VS. VIRGINIA 3:30
NOVEMBER 23 AT ARMY 7:00 (YANKEE STADIUM)
NOVEMBER 30 AT USC TBA
BUTLER BULLDOGS FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
AUGUST 31 VS. UPPER IOWA 1:00
SEPTEMBER 7 AT MURRAY STATE 6:00 CT
SEPTEMBER 14 VS. HANOVER 6:00
SEPTEMBER 28 VS. VIRGINIA UNIVERSITY-LYNCHBURG 1:00
OCTOBER 5 VS. MOREHEAD STATE 1:00
OCTOBER 12 AT DRAKE 1:00 CT
OCTOBER 19 VS. DAYTON 1:00
OCTOBER 26 AT DAVIDSON 1:00
NOVEMBER 2 VS. STETSON 1:00
NOVEMBER 9 AT VALPO 1:00 CT
NOVEMBER 16 VS. ST. THOMAS 1:00
NOVEMBER 23 AT PRESBYTERIAN 1:00
BALL STATE CARDINALS FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
SEPTEMBER 7 VS. MISSOURI STATE 2:00
SEPTEMBER 14 AT MIAMI FL 3:30
SEPTEMBER 21 AT CENTRAL MICHIGAN TBA
SEPTEMBER 28 AT JAMES MADISON TBA
OCTOBER 5 VS. WESTERN MICHIGAN TBA
OCTOBER 12 AT KENT STATE TBA
OCTOBER 19 AT VANDERBILT TBA
OCTOBER 26 VS. NORTHERN ILLINOIS TBA
NOVEMBER 5 VS. MIAMI OH TBA
NOVEMBER 12 AT BUFFALO 7:00
NOVEMBER 23 VS. BOWLING GREEN TBA
NOVEMBER 29 AT OHIO TBA
INDIANA STATE SYCAMORES FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
AUGUST 31 AT PURDUE 12:00
SEPTEMBER 7 AT EASTERN ILLINOIS 7:00
SEPTEMBER 14 VS. DAYTON 6:00
SEPTEMBER 28 VS. HOUSTON CHRISTIAN 1:00
OCTOBER 5 AT YOUNGSTOWN STATE 2:00
OCTOBER 12 VS. MURRAY STATE 1:00
OCTOBER 19 AT MISSOURI STATE 3:00
OCTOBER 26 VS. SOUTHERN ILLINOIS 1:00
NOVEMBER 2 VS. NORTH DAKOTA 1:00
NOVEMBER 9 AT SOUTH DAKOTA 2:00
MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER SCORES
SEATTLE 3 MINNESOTA 2
NEW YORK CITY 2 CHICAGO 2
NEW ENGLAND 5 MONTRÉAL 0
DALLAS 4 DC 3
NY RED BULLS 1 CHARLOTTE 1
MIAMI 2 CINCINNATI 0
AUSTIN 2 NASHVILLE 0
KANSAS CITY 3 ORLANDO CITY 0
TORONTO 1 HOUSTON 0
SAN JOSE 2 SALT LAKE 0
PORTLAND 4 ST. LOUIS 4
LOS ANGELES 2 ATLANTA 0
TOP NATIONAL HEADLINES/NEWS RELEASES
COLLEGE FOOTBALL NEWS
GEORGIA TECH STUNS NO. 10 FSU IN IRELAND TO OPEN SEASON
DUBLIN (AP) — Avery Boyd, Chase Lane and Malik Rutherford stepped in front of their Georgia Tech teammates, who were passing around the Aer Lingus College Football Classic trophy, and decided to let loose.
There was one dance fitting for the moment: an Irish jig.
They delivered. It was their second perfect performance of the day at Aviva Stadium.
Aidan Birr made a 44-yard field goal as time expired, and Georgia Tech upset No. 10 Florida State 24-21 on Saturday in the first major college football game of the season.
The win was Georgia Tech’s first over a top-10 opponent since a 22-16 victory over the Seminoles in October 2015.
Jamal Haynes ran for 75 yards and two touchdowns for Georgia Tech, while Haynes King threw for 146 yards and ran for 54 yards. The Yellow Jackets (1-0, 1-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) were able to control the line of scrimmage and accumulate 190 rushing yards and 5.3 yards per carry.
“Really proud of the offensive line,” coach Brent Key said. “Shocking there, right? Really proud of those guys and how they were prepared.”
Coming off an undefeated regular season and with a remade roster, the Seminoles tied the game with 6:33 left in the fourth quarter on a 15-play touchdown drive that included two fourth-down conversions by DJ Uiagalelei.
Florida State (0-1, 0-1), which was favored to win by 10 1/2 points according to BetMGM Sportsbook, never touched the ball again. Birr came on with 5 seconds left to hit the winner that just stayed inside the left upright.
Uiagalelei completed 19 of 27 passes for 193 yards in his Florida State debut, completing mostly shorter passes until the late fourth-down completions.
Ryan Fitzgerald made a 59-yard field goal, a career-long and the second-longest in school history, just before halftime to tie the game at 14. Fitzgerald had a 52-yarder earlier.
The teams had just seven drives apiece. Georgia Tech’s final two drives were among the best, an 11-play, 89-yard touchdown drive and then the 12-play, 49-yard drive to set up Birr’s kick.
“Very limited possessions,” Florida State coach Mike Norvell said. “The importance of every snap in that game was monumental.”
Florida State was able to build four scoring drives, but just one in the second half. While Lawrance Toafili and Roydell Williams had rushing touchdowns, the ground attack stalled as Georgia Tech’s defense held FSU to 98 yards on 31 carries.
“We’re not trying to prove anything to anyone,” Key said. “We’re not trying to go out and impress people. All we’re trying to do is play as hard as we can possibly play — as a team, as a family.”
Coming off a 7-6 season, Georgia Tech certainly impressed, sending quite the message to the rest of the ACC.
Florida State fans packed Aviva Stadium for the Aer Lingus College Football Classic, the third straight Week 0 opener in Dublin.
ON ALERT
GT has been upset-minded in ACC play against Top 25 teams. The Yellow Jackets knocked off two ranked ACC opponents — at Miami and vs. North Carolina — in 2023. In 2022, Georgia Tech won games against ranked opponents at UNC and Pittsburgh.
POLL IMPLICATIONS
Florida State will tumble in the next AP Top 25, which will be released after Week 1’s games wrap up on Sept. 3.
TAKEAWAYS
Florida State: The Seminoles’ defensive line was viewed as one of the ACC’s best but did not record a sack and allowed Tech to run at will.
Georgia Tech: The Yellow Jackets averaged 203 rushing yards per game (13th in the FBS) in 2023 and picked up right where they left off.
UP NEXT
Florida State plays host to Boston College on Sept. 2.
Georgia Tech plays host to Georgia State on Aug. 31.
SMU SCORES 16 POINTS IN FOURTH QUARTER, RALLIES PAST NEVADA
Preston Stone tossed a go-ahead 34-yard touchdown pass to RJ Maryland with 1:18 left as SMU scored 16 unanswered points in the fourth quarter to rally for a 29-24 victory over Nevada in the season opener for both teams on Saturday night at Reno, Nev.
Maryland had career bests of eight catches and 162 receiving yards for the Mustangs, who never led until the late scoring connection. Stone completed 17 of 30 passes for 254 yards, the TD and one interception for SMU.
LJ Johnson Jr. and Brashard Smith each rushed for a score for the Mustangs, who were playing their first game as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference.
Brendon Lewis passed for 132 yards and two touchdowns and rushed for 77 yards for the Wolf Pack, who were 27 1/2-point underdogs after going 2-10 in each of the past two seasons.
Cortez Braham and Jace Henry caught touchdown passes and Savion Red rushed for a score for Nevada, which played its first game under new coach Jeff Choate.
SMU traveled 83 yards on nine plays for the game-winning score. Maryland had three catches for 67 yards on the drive.
Nevada’s advantage was 24-13 after Red ran into the end zone from the Mustangs 1 with 3:23 left in the third quarter.
SMU moved within 24-21 on Smith’s 4-yard TD run and Johnson’s two-point conversion run with 8:01 left in the game.
The Wolf Pack muffed the ensuing kickoff and were backed up at their own 1. On second down, SMU’s Jahfari Harvey dropped Red in the end zone for a safety to bring the Mustangs within one with 7:19 to play.
Earlier, SMU set up the Wolf Pack’s first touchdown with a high punt snap that ended up being a 30-yard loss. It was eventually fallen on by the Mustangs’ Jaden Milliner-Jones at his own 9-yard line with 2:25 left in the first quarter.
Three plays later, Nevada cashed in with Lewis’ 5-yard scoring pass to Henry with 1:07 remaining.
The Mustangs tied the score on Johnson’s 1-yard TD run with 12:57 left in the second quarter. Matthew Killam kicked a 36-yard field goal to give the Wolf Pack a 10-7 lead with 8:38 left in the first half before SMU’s Collin Rogers booted a career-long 52-yard field goal to knot the score with 4:12 remaining.
Lewis then threw a 10-yard scoring pass to Braham with nine seconds left in the half to give Nevada a 17-10 lead.
SMU moved within 17-13 after a 43-yard field goal by Rogers with 12:18 left in the third quarter.
–Field Level Media
NO. 1 2025 LB JONAH WILLIAMS COMMITS TO TEXAS
Five-star linebacker Jonah Williams, the No. 1 player at his position in the 2025 class, announced a commitment to the University of Texas on Saturday night.
Williams chose the Longhorns over other finalists LSU, Oregon, Texas A&M and Southern California. He cited the coaches, led by head coach Steve Sarkisian, as being a factor in his decision.
“The coaching staff really made me feel comfortable about my decision,” Williams said.
The 6-foot-3, 203-pound Williams is from Texas, playing at Ball High School in Galveston. The 247Sports composite lists him as the No. 1 linebacker and the No. 10 player overall in the class.
Williams, however, also projects well at safety, and he verbalized a desire to play that position in college.
“I feel confident that I’m going to see the field early,” Williams said. “I’m going to work to see the field early because the (Texas) safety room isn’t really deep.”
Williams took an unofficial visit to Texas last month. He made official visits to the other finalists, as well as to Ohio State.
He plans to also play baseball — a sport he also excels at — in Austin as an outfielder and pitcher.
He was one of just three players in the composite top 10 who had yet to commit to a program.
–Field Level Media
COLLEGE ATHLETICS
REPORTS: UCONN EYES MOVE TO BIG 12
The Connecticut Huskies are in discussions with the Big 12 about potentially joining the ever-growing conference in all sports, multiple outlets reported Friday.
According to ESPN, UConn athletic director David Benedict and board chair Daniel Toscano traveled to Dallas last week to meet with Big 12 athletic directors and discuss how the school would be willing to invest in its football program to bring it up to par with the conference’s other teams.
If the conference approves the move, which would require a three-fourths vote or 12 of the 16 members, then the Huskies would join in all sports except football in 2026. The football program would become a member in 2031.
Adding the Huskies’ top-flight basketball programs, which have combined to win 16 national titles since 1999, would burnish the Big 12’s reputation as one of the best basketball conference’s in the country.
UConn, Notre Dame and Massachusetts are the only remaining independent football programs in the country, putting an onus on the Huskies to join an established conference since they currently receive the smallest portion of revenue from the College Football Playoff.
The Athletic reported that a board call with the league’s presidents is being planned for next week and that Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark is expected to make a presentation at that time.
But that doesn’t mean a deal is imminent.
“I think the word is ‘premature,’” a high-ranking Big 12 official told ESPN. “There’s a far distance between conversations and anything that would happen. The presidents haven’t seen the case yet.”
The Big 12 added BYU, Cincinnati, Houston and UCF in 2023 and Arizona, Arizona State, Colorado and Utah are joining this year, increasing the conference to 16 teams.
–Field Level Media
NFL NEWS
CAROLINA PANTHERS 31, BUFFALO BILLS 26
Young looks good in first action. Finally making his preseason debut, quarterback Bryce Young orchestrated a touchdown on his one drive, appearing calm throughout behind generally solid protection — bar one sack after a scramble. He finished 6 for 8 for 70 yards, with highlights including a fourth-down conversion via a 17-yard throw over the middle to Diontae Johnson with plenty of time in the pocket, and then later finding Jordan Matthews in the end zone for an 8-yard score. It was a promising outing for both Young and the starting offense around him, one that the Panthers will hope can translate to the regular season in a couple weeks.
NFL legacy has his moment. Bills running back Frank Gore Jr. is a long shot to make the 53-man roster, but with extended time on Saturday the son of the former 49ers great made a case for why he should earn one of those coveted and limited spots. Gore had by far the most carries of the afternoon, recording 18 totes, while all other players had nine combined, including QB runs. He accumulated 101 yards on the ground, averaging 5.6 per carry, and tacked on a touchdown in the third quarter for good measure, just getting the ball into the end zone on a 5-yard rush. Based on the unofficial depth chart, Gore’s main competition is Darrynton Evans, who had a receiving touchdown Saturday before being ruled out with a hamstring injury.
GREEN BAY PACKERS 30, BALTIMORE RAVENS 7
Backup RB battle down to the wire. The Packers turned to the run early and often in Saturday’s win, with the spotlight on a trio of backs fighting for a roster spot. Emanuel Wilson, who made the 53-man roster last year behind a strong preseason, started the day with 52 yards rushing on 11 attempts, also adding a pair of catches for 26 yards. Ellis Merriweather (16 rushes for 74 yards) and Nate McCrary (11 rushes for 64 yards) followed him for a team total of 193 yards on the ground. A RB spot could still be open for the taking, especially with MarShawn Lloyd and AJ Dillon working through injuries. Multiple players submitted their final portfolio to earn that spot on Saturday.
Mixed results for Ravens WRs. With the starters once again resting, it was the backups’ time to shine. Many of the wide receivers with less solid footing took the field one last time against the Packers, with varying results. Rookie Devontez Walker has had a quiet preseason as he dealt with a rib injury, and finished in much the same way with one catch for four yards. Conversely, Tylan Wallace’s single catch of the day was a monster 48-yard reception, outrunning multiple defenders before diving for the pylon for the score. No player had more than two catches, with the equal spread of targets meaning few chances for bubble players to stand out. Unfortunately what might have been the most impressive play of the day didn’t end up counting, as rookie Dayton Wade appeared to catch a touchdown pass that ricocheted off two defenders, but it was incomplete upon review.
DETROIT LIONS 24, PITTSBURGH STEELERS 17
Steelers finally find a little offensive rhythm. Through two preseason games, Pittsburgh fans had plenty of reason to worry that the combination of their revamped quarterbacks room and a new offensive coordinator might not work out. But again, it is the preseason, and Arthur Smith used the finale to assuage those fears, turning to a familiar face in Cordarrelle Patterson on an inside run (that came right out of their days spent together in Atlanta) for a touchdown. The Steelers also capitalized on a short field provided by a Nick Herbig (who has had an excellent preseason) strip sack, capping that possession with a 1-yard La’Mical Perine touchdown run. The bad news: Neither Russell Wilson nor Justin Fields did anything to separate in their trudge of a preseason quarterback competition, and Mike Tomlin didn’t make any announcements after the game. But it was nice, at least, to see the Steelers do a little something on offense for once, even if it came against the Lions’ backups.
An up-and-down day for Hendon Hooker. The second-year Tennessee product was given most of the game to get in some quality work, and the results were mixed. He worked through his progressions well and found open targets in some instances, but also missed receivers in a number of examples that kept him from getting into a legitimate rhythm. His interception wasn’t his fault — it came off a deflection because his intended target throttled his route down — but Hooker also held onto the ball too long on some occasions, leading to sacks. Hooker broke 200 scrimmage yards and led the Lions in rushing, and overall, it was a passable effort (if not better), but not the type of showing optimists would expect to see.
HOUSTON TEXANS 17, LOS ANGELES RAMS 15
Cam Akers wraps up a solid preseason. Akers has bounced around the NFL and dealt with plenty of adversity in his career, enough that many may hear his name and wonder “is he still in the league?” Well, he is, and the Texans running back has had a quality preseason while playing with the backups and third unit, running hard for decent-sized chunks and demonstrating he can still lower the boom on defenders. Saturday was his best showing of the preseason, finishing with 53 yards on seven attempts. He might not make this roster, but he’ll find a job somewhere this week.
Dresser Winn puts together a nice day. The Rams played zero starters and relied almost exclusively on the bottom third of their roster for this preseason finale, handing the entire game to Winn, a CFL product who is in his second stint with the Rams. The stats won’t suggest he didn’t anything spectacular, but Winn was composed and handled the duties of quarterback with poise, helping the Rams move into scoring range on three possessions before allowing Zach Evans to finish off drives with a pair of touchdown runs. With Jimmy Garoppolo headed toward a suspension and Stetson Bennett locked in as Matthew Stafford’s backup, Winn may have temporarily earned himself the third-string job until Garoppolo returns.
MINNESOTA VIKINGS 26, PHILADELPHIA EAGLES 3
DeJean everywhere in Eagles debut. Cooper DeJean, Philly’s highly touted second-round defensive back, made his first appearance on an NFL field on Saturday after missing time in the preseason with a hamstring injury. The safety played a ton (43 defensive plays, eight special teams plays) and made his presence felt, mostly for better — but it didn’t start that way. On Philly’s first defensive drive, DeJean committed an illegal contact penalty on a third-down interception, a sign of growing pains for a rookie getting his first look at NFL players (and officiating). But DeJean made up for it on two shots to Lucky Jackson, playing the Vikings receiver to the boundary on a deep pass just three plays after his initial error and forcing an out-of-bounds incompletion. On Minnesota’s last first-half drive, DeJean was on Jackson’s tail again, this time in the end zone, as the WR hauled in a pass but out of bounds. To cap off the day, DeJean earned a tackle for loss and took snaps as a punt returner in the second half. It’s too early to tell where in Philly’s secondary or special teams rotation the rookie will slot in come Week 1, but DeJean’s debut (four tackles, one TFL, one pass defensed) was promising.
Hall, Vikings backups close trying preseason on high. This summer hasn’t been easy in Minnesota, as the Vikings have had to face unexpected adversity on and off the field. But if Saturday afternoon was any indication, the kids will be all right. Second-year QB Jaren Hall paced the Vikes to five scoring drives — including two over seven minutes — in two-plus halves of work, throwing for 189 yards and two TDs on 17-of-25 passing. The Receivers Jackson (Trishton Jackson and Lucky) showed out with strong hands — the former on a TD catch, the latter on a helmet catch that was anything but lucky. Not to be outdone, backup tailback Myles Gaskin looked smooth as butter in racking up 61 rushing yards on 13 carries. The awesome afternoon could be big for Hall, who as Minnesota’s QB3 behind Sam Darnold and Nick Mullens is on the bubble to either make the 53-man roster or be relegated to the practice squad. Even though he and the Vikes played against Philly second-teamers, Hall was first-rate.
LOS ANGELES CHARGERS 26, DALLAS COWBOYS 19
Have a day, Tony Jefferson! You might recognize Jefferson’s name, but may not know of the story of his last few years in (and out of) football. At this time last year, Jefferson was retired from playing and was cutting his teeth as a scouting intern with the Ravens. Fast forward one year to Saturday, and Jefferson proved he still has plenty left in his tank. With 10 NFL seasons under his belt, the 32-year-old veteran gave the Chargers plenty of reason to give him an 11th campaign, leading them in tackles and forcing three turnovers. He started by sliding underneath a short-armed throw from Trey Lance, snagging the pass while falling to the ground for an interception. Two Dallas possessions later, Jefferson allowed Lance to throw a perfectly placed ball over him, then recovered in time to clean up the tackle and forced a fumble in the process. Jefferson wasn’t done ruining Lance’s day, either, picking him off in the end zone in the middle of the third quarter and ruining a great scoring opportunity for the Cowboys. By the time the game ended, Jefferson had put on a clinic, finishing with 14 tackles, two interceptions, one sack and one forced fumble. Sure, he was playing against backups, but that’s the beauty of it: A year after hanging it up, Jefferson proved he was still better than the bottom half of most NFL rosters. I’d expect this performance to earn him a spot on Jim Harbaugh’s squad.
Trey Lance closes a journey of a preseason. Lance got a ton of work in this preseason, but almost none of it was consistent enough to make the Cowboys feel great about his outlook. There’s no denying his athleticism, of course, which makes him a threat on every down and, frankly, a frustrating one to defenders who think they have him bottled up, only to watch him dance through traffic for first downs. He did that plenty Saturday, racking up 90 yards and a rushing touchdown on 11 attempts, but the passing game was still a tumultuous experience. He completed 33 of 49 passes for 323 yards, but with that high volume came plenty of forced passes and mistakes in the form of five interceptions. Almost all of them were groan-worthy errors — especially the second pick Lance threw to Jefferson — and they’re even tougher to reckon with when juxtaposed with some of the on-target beauties he let fly in this game. Perhaps Lance will slowly grow over time, but it’s become easier to understand why San Francisco willingly parted with him in favor of Brock Purdy: Lance just isn’t reliable enough at this point in his career.
NEW YORK JETS 10, NEW YORK GIANTS 6
Jets RB rises to the occasion with starters sitting. With Breece Hall and Braelon Allen not playing Saturday night at MetLife Stadium, Israel Abanikanda took advantage of the opportunity to impress his coaches. The 2023 fifth-round pick made a dazzling highlight-play on a 45-yard touchdown run by spinning off multiple Giant defenders en route to pay dirt. Abanikanda’s first-half score was the Jets’ last of the game, and it hopefully was enough to impress his coaches considering he did not take part in the final two quarters. He finished the night with nine carries for 83 yards (9.2 per carry) and the TD. Abanikanda made a strong case to make the 53-man roster, and if not, possibly New York’s practice squad after Saturday’s outing.
Tommy DeVito doesn’t put best foot forward in preseason finale. It was a rough Saturday night for Tommy Cutlets facing Robert Saleh’s defense. As Daniel Jones and Drew Lock sat out, DeVito struggled to find any rhythm. DeVito was sacked eight times throughout the night and completed just 14 of 27 passes for 103 yards. One of the best storylines for Big Blue during the 2023 season, DeVito didn’t manage to carry over his magic to this preseason. In three games, DeVito went 32 of 61 for 270 yards, zero touchdowns and zero interceptions with a 65.2 passer rating. Toward the start of camp, DeVito was confident that he might get scooped up by another team if the Giants neglected to keep three QBs. Tuesday’s 53-man roster deadline will provide a clearer picture on DeVito’s status, namely whether or not he’ll have to put that to the test.
SEATTLE SEAHAWKS 37, CLEVELAND BROWNS 33
Starting Seahawks offense passes with flying colors. Geno Smith took his first preseason snaps — five to be exact — and showcased everything Seattle fans hoped to see from coordinator Ryan Grubb’s new offense. After misfiring on his opening attempt, Smith tossed a 25-yard beauty to Jaxon Smith-Njigba, a throw topped only by the second-year wideout’s fingertip catch. Smith showcased nifty moves evading a rusher his next play, an eventual 9-yard pass to Kenny McIntosh, connected again with JSN to move the chains and ended the drive on a 21-yard TD pass to DK Metcalf, who made an authoritative grab. The possession took five plays, all passes, and went 62 yards for the score. That was it for Smith and Co. Saturday night, but the tremendous aerial display could prove a precursor of much more to come.
Jamari Thrash continues to turn heads. Cleveland’s fifth-round wideout closed out his last preseason game the same way he did his first — leading the team in receiving yards. Thrash didn’t really get started until Jameis Winston left the game (one target and zero catches over two drives), but once he did, it was electric. The rookie collected four receptions for 73 yards working with Dorian Thompson-Robinson. His first catch caused a bit of a scare when Seattle defensive back Coby Bryant forced a fumble, but the ball traveled harmlessly out of bounds. The next drive, he got payback on Bryant by taking advantage of the DB’s blown two-high coverage to reel in a 46-yard score. Thrash finishes the preseason with 10 catches for 141 yards and a TD, plus a résumé befitting a future contributor.
COWBOYS ALL-PRO CB DARON BLAND OUT 6-8 WEEKS WITH BROKEN FOOT
Dallas Cowboys All-Pro cornerback DaRon Bland will miss the first six to eight weeks of the season because of a stress fracture in his left foot that will require surgery, the team announced Saturday.
The Cowboys said Bland experienced discomfort in the foot on Wednesday at training camp in Oxnard, Calif. An imaging test revealed the fracture, with surgery scheduled for Monday, according to an ESPN report.
Bland, 25, led the league with nine interceptions for 209 yards, including an NFL-record five picks returned for touchdowns, in 17 games (15 starts) last season. He was selected to the Pro Bowl and first-team All-Pro.
“The good news is he’ll be here for let’s say the vital games of the year,” owner and general manager Jerry Jones said of Bland on the 105.3 The Fan in Dallas pregame show, according to ESPN.
Jones also said that the defensive back position is one of the strengths of the team.
“Our secondary is outstanding in personnel,” he said on the pregame show, according to ESPN.
Dallas is losing the services of one All-Pro while returning another in cornerback Trevon Diggs, who missed the last 15 games in 2023 with a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee. Diggs has been a full participant for two weeks at training camp.
The Cowboys also have veterans Jourdan Lewis and Andrew Booth as well as rookie Caelen Carson at cornerback.
Dallas selected Bland in the fifth round of the 2022 NFL Draft. Bland has 123 tackles, four tackles for loss, 22 passes defensed, 14 interceptions and five returned for touchdowns in 34 career games (23 starts).
The Cowboys open their season on Sept. 8 against the host Cleveland Browns.
–Field Level Media
BASEBALL NEWS
MLB ROUNDUP: JAYS’ BOWDEN FRANCIS FLIRTS WITH NO-NO, BEATS ANGELS
Toronto right-hander Bowden Francis took a no-hitter into the ninth inning Saturday afternoon as the Blue Jays defeated the visiting Los Angeles Angels 3-1.
Taylor Ward led off the ninth for Los Angeles with his 17th home run of the season to end the no-hit bid. Dave Stieb has Toronto’s lone no-hitter, which came on Sept. 2, 1990, in Cleveland.
Francis (7-3) struck out a career-best 12 and walked three in eight-plus innings. Chad Green replaced Francis after the home run and earned his 14th save.
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. hit a solo home run for the Blue Jays, who have won the first three games of the four-game series and are 6-0 against the Angels this season. Angels right-hander Carson Fulmer (0-5) went six innings, allowing two runs on seven hits and two walks (one intentional) with eight strikeouts.
Rockies 9, Yankees 2
Jake Cave had four hits and drove in three runs, leading visiting Colorado past New York.
Cave doubled in his first at-bat and hit an RBI single in a four-run third. He lifted a two-run homer in the seventh. Nolan Jones also drove in three runs, including a two-run double in the third.
Colorado rookie starter Bradley Blalock (1-0) allowed two runs on five hits in 5 1/3 innings for his first major win. Jazz Chisholm Jr. hit an RBI double and Alex Verdugo homered for the Yankees.
Diamondbacks 4, Red Sox 1
Zac Gallen tossed six scoreless innings to lead visiting Arizona past Boston.
Gallen (10-6) limited the Red Sox to two hits (both singles), struck out nine and walked four. Offensively, Eugenio Suarez, who had three hits — including a grand slam — Friday night, hit a two-run double with two outs in the fourth. The Diamondbacks have won five games in a row and 11 of their last 14.
Boston starter Kutter Crawford (8-11) took the loss, giving up two runs on three hits in five innings. The defeat dropped Boston’s home record to 29-34 this season; the Red Sox are 2-6 at Fenway Park in their last eight games.
Orioles 3, Astros 2
Jackson Holliday hit a three-run, pinch-hit double in the sixth inning to lift Baltimore to its second straight comeback victory, beating visiting Houston.
In a matchup of AL contenders, the Orioles loaded the bases with two outs off Astros starter Framber Valdez, who was working on a shutout. Taylor Scott was summoned from the Houston bullpen, prompting Baltimore to send Holliday to the plate. The rookie drilled Scott’s first pitch to center for a double, giving the Orioles a lead after they had trailed since the first inning.
Houston has lost just five of its last 17 games. Jose Altuve led off the game with a homer, his 18th, and Jeremy Pena added a sixth-inning solo shot, his 14th, off Orioles starter Albert Suarez.
Phillies 11, Royals 2
J.T. Realmuto belted a pair of three-run homers to highlight a career-high seven-RBI performance, lifting visiting Philadelphia over Kansas City.
Realmuto’s RBI total tied a franchise record for the most by a catcher in a single game. Carlos Ruiz had seven in a game against the Atlanta Braves on May 2, 2012.
Freddy Fermin had an RBI single in the fifth inning and a sacrifice fly in the seventh for the Royals, who lost for just the second time in their past nine games.
Brewers 9, Athletics 5
Jake Bauers hit a two-run homer and scored three runs, leading Milwaukee to a road victory over Oakland.
Willy Adames had two hits and scored twice and Garrett Mitchell chipped in with a double, single and two RBIs in Milwaukee’s second straight win in the three-game interleague series.
JJ Bleday hit his 18th homer of the season, a solo shot in the first, and Brent Rooker belted his 30th homer, a two-run shot, in the sixth for the A’s, who lost for the fourth time in their last five games.
Guardians 13, Rangers 5
Jhonkensy Noel had three hits, including a three-run homer, and scored three times to help Cleveland hammer visiting Texas.
Jose Ramirez, Josh Naylor and Bo Naylor also homered, and Will Brennan and Daniel Schneemann each had two hits and an RBI for the Guardians, who ended a three-game skid in the second game of the three-game series.
Wyatt Langford had three hits and scored two runs, and Marcus Semien had two hits and two RBIs for the Rangers, who had won four of five.
Braves 4, Nationals 2
Travis d’Arnaud celebrated his return to the lineup with a single that drove in the go-ahead run to propel Atlanta to a win over visiting Washington.
d’Arnaud had not played since being hit by a pitch on the right wrist on Aug. 17. His RBI in the sixth inning capped a two-run rally and sent the Braves to their third straight win and sixth in the past seven games. Relievers Aaron Bummer, Dylan Lee, Grant Holmes and Pierce Johnson combined to allow no runs in the final 3 1/3 innings.
The Nationals’ only runs came in the second inning on Jose Tena’s first career home run. Tena, acquired from the Cleveland Guardians at the trade deadline, went 3-for-4.
Giants 4, Mariners 3
Mike Yastrzemski had three hits, including a double and a homer, as San Francisco defeated host Seattle, handing new manager Dan Wilson his first loss.
Five Giants pitchers were effectively wild, combining on a four-hitter despite issuing nine walks. Blake Snell didn’t allow a hit over the first three innings but was lifted after throwing 74 pitches. The Seattle native gave up two runs as he walked six and struck out five. Spencer Bivens (3-1) pitched three scoreless innings to earn the victory.
The Giants scored in each of the first two innings against right-hander George Kirby (9-10), who gave up three runs on nine hits in 4 2/3 innings. Tyler Fitzgerald led off the game with a bunt single and scored, then had an RBI single an inning later.
Cubs 14, Marlins 2
Seiya Suzuki homered twice, tripled and drove in four runs, leading Chicago to a win over host Miami.
Rookie Shota Imanaga (10-3) earned the win, pitching seven innings and allowing four hits, two walks and two runs. Chicago also got three hits and two RBIs from Michael Busch, two hits and three RBIs from Pete Crow-Armstrong and three hits and two runs scored by Miguel Amaya.
Miami, which has the worst record in the National League, got solo homers from Connor Norby and David Hensley, both acquired by the Marlins in late July. It was the first homer in a Marlins uniform for each player.
Reds 10, Pirates 2
Elly De La Cruz went 3-for-4 with two RBIs and three runs and Julian Aguiar delivered a quality start to help visiting Cincinnati beat Pittsburgh.
Aguiar (1-0) allowed two runs on three hits and struck out four in six innings for his first major league win in his second career appearance. He walked two for the Reds.
Rowdy Tellez drove in both runs for the Pirates with a two-run shot in the second.
Twins 6, Cardinals 0
Trevor Larnach went 3-for-4 with two homers and four RBIs as Minnesota cruised past St. Louis in Minneapolis.
Matt Wallner added a solo home run for the Twins, who evened the series at a win apiece entering Sunday’s rubber match. Right-hander Pablo Lopez (12-8) scattered four hits in seven innings. He walked one and struck out nine to earn his fourth victory in his past six starts.
Victor Scott II went 1-for-2 with a double for the Cardinals, whose three-game win streak ended. Cardinals right-hander Sonny Gray (11-9) allowed five runs on seven hits in six innings against his former team. He walked two and fanned seven.
Tigers 13, White Sox 4
Jake Rogers had three hits and three RBIs and Matt Vierling, Colt Keith and Zach McKinstry homered as visiting Detroit thumped Chicago.
Parker Meadows, Vierling, Keith and McKinstry each had two hits for the Tigers. Keith drove in three runs and McKinstry knocked in two. Tigers left-hander Tarik Skubal overcame occasional struggles to improve to 15-4 and win for the third time in four starts.
The White Sox have lost seven of eight meetings with the Tigers this season. Corey Julks went 3-for-5 while Lenyn Sosa, Dominic Fletcher, Luis Robert Jr. and Andrew Vaughn contributed two hits each. Vaughn had two RBIs.
Mets 7, Padres 1
Francisco Lindor homered from both sides of the plate, a performance that included a grand slam, and David Peterson fired 7 1/3 strong innings as visiting New York took advantage of San Diego’s mistakes.
Peterson (8-1) allowed just five hits and a run. Michael King (11-7) took the loss, undone by some spotty control and a key error in the fourth inning. He gave up three hits and five runs, just one earned, in five innings.
The Mets led 1-0 with two outs and none on in the fourth when Starling Marte singled. Francisco Alvarez chopped a bouncer to third, but Manny Machado booted it for an error. After King plunked Jeff McNeil, Lindor launched a hanging sweeper to right-center field for his grand slam.
Rays 9, Dodgers 8
Jose Caballero hit a go-ahead home run in the 10th inning after Junior Caminero’s game-tying solo shot in the ninth as visiting Tampa Bay rallied to beat Los Angeles.
Former Dodger Jonny DeLuca had a two-run single in a four-run first inning as Tampa Bay improved to 3-3 on its 10-game West Coast road trip. Caminero had three hits in his 11th game of the season and hit a home run for the second consecutive night.
Shohei Ohtani hit a home run for the Dodgers, one game after he joined the 40-40 club with a game-ending grand slam in a victory over the Rays. Teoscar Hernandez and Miguel Rojas also hit home runs as the Dodgers saw their five-game winning streak come to an end.
–Field Level Media
WNBA NEWS
RESERVES HELP SUN BEAT LIBERTY FOR FIRST TIME THIS SEASON
In a battle of the WNBA’s top two teams, two reserve players made the difference as the Connecticut Sun knocked off the New York Liberty 72-64 in Brooklyn on Saturday night.
Marina Mabrey scored a team-high 15 points and Olivia Nelson-Ododa added another 12 for the second-place Sun (22-7), who won their straight game overall and first in three meetings with the Liberty.
With Connecticut playing the second night of a back-to-back, its bench outscored New York’s 29-6.
DiJonai Carrington finished with 13 points, and DeWanna Bonner registered 10 points and 12 rebounds for the Sun, who scored 10 straight points to take a six-point lead with 5:44 left in the second quarter. They never trailed again and led by as many 13 points in the fourth quarter.
Reigning MVP Breanna Stewart racked up 15 points, 15 rebounds, four assists, three blocks and two steals for New York. Rookie Leonie Fiebich added 14 points on 5-of-7 shooting, including nailing both of her 3-point attempts, and Sabrina Ionescu chipped in 12 points.
The first-place Liberty (25-5) had 19 turnovers, which the Sun converted into 21 points.
New York started out hot, leading by eight points several times in the first quarter.
Nelson-Ododa turned two layups into three-point plays in the game’s first 11 minutes, creating momentum for the Sun.
New York tried to rally in the third quarter, going on a seven-point run. Fiebich did all of the scoring in the burst, which started with a 3-pointer.
The All-Star Ionescu was back after missing two games with a neck injury and scored seven points short of her season average.
–Field Level Media
NASCAR NEWS
HARRISON BURTON WINS AT DAYTONA FOR FIRST VICTORY IN CUP SERIES
Harrison Burton passed Kyle Busch in overtime during a wild Saturday night at Daytona International Speedway, earning his first career victory in the NASCAR Cup Series’ Coke Zero Sugar 400 in Daytona Beach, Fla.
After side-by-side leaders Austin Cindric and Josh Berry wrecked with two laps to go — with Berry’s No. 4 Ford going airborne on the backstretch — for the seventh caution, Burton scored the legendary Wood Brothers their 100th career win by passing Busch on the backstretch, blocking his No. 8 off Turn 4 and edging him by 0.047 seconds.
It was Burton’s first win in 98 starts. It was announced recently that the 23-year-old, the son of former driver Jeff Burton, will not return to the iconic No. 21 in 2025.
Christopher Bell, Cody Ware and Ty Gibbs rounded out the top five in the 66th running of the summer race.
After posting the organization’s first time sweeping the top two qualifying spots, Front Row Motorsports’ Michael McDowell and Todd Gilliland led the field to the green for the 160-lap race.
In addition to the Front Row drivers, Joey Logano, Brad Keselowski, Berry, William Byron and Cindric took turns in front before Berry led late in the 35-lap Stage 1.
Chris Buescher, last year’s 400 winner, made a strong push and shoved Berry out front on the final lap, and Berry hung on around the 2.5-mile superspeedway for his first segment win.
After pit service, Daniel Suarez’s No. 99 Trackhouse Racing Chevrolet was engulfed in flames. That sent the Mexican driver back to the pits where he climbed out to safety while the team inspected melted pieces of his Camaro.
At least 18 cars were involved in the first of two Stage 2 wrecks on Lap 60 when Corey LaJoie, Noah Gragson and Ross Chastain triggered the race’s biggest crash on the famous Superstretch.
Two incidents occurred simultaneously when Erik Jones’ No. 43 lost a tire at the same time Shane van Gisbergen’s No. 16 engine expired, with the explosive motor sending smoke billowing above the flat backstretch.
Shortly after as the Fords flexed their muscle, Logano beat Team Penske teammate Ryan Blaney to claim the second segment with Keselowski in third.
With 21 laps left and pit stops about to start, John Hunter Nemechek’s No. 42 spun after contact with Justin Haley in the No. 51 Ford. McDowell’s No. 34 was sent airborne in Turn 1 after a push from Cindric in the night’s biggest wreck, a 14-car melee, with nine laps to go.
–Field Level Media
GOLF NEWS
STEWART CINK GRABS 3-STROKE LEAD AT ALLY CHALLENGE IN MICHIGAN
Stewart Cink got his Saturday off to a rousing start with an eagle on the par-5 first, then put together a flawless rest of his round to shoot a 6-under-par 66 and grab the lead by three strokes at the Ally Challenge in Grand Blanc, Mich.
The 51-year-old has four top-10 finishes this season but no career wins on the PGA Tour Champions. This is his first start at the Ally Challenge, though he did finish fifth at Warwick Hills for the Buick Open on the PGA Tour 20 years prior in 2004.
“Golf is just a funny game, and it can just leave you in a hurry,” Cink said. “I’m aware of that. It’s going to take a lot of discipline, a lot of patience and really just being true to who I am and how I play tomorrow to get this thing done. But I’m looking forward to the challenge.”
Cink followed up his three-shot opener (featuring an 80-foot putt) with par-level golf over the rest of his front half, then closed with four birdies over his final nine holes, including birdies on Nos. 11, 13, 14 and 16.
He was a perfect 18-for-18 hitting greens in his second round while getting to 11-under 133 for the tournament.
“Sometimes moments like (the eagle) can kind of send shock waves through your system,” Cink said. “While it didn’t really shock me, I just played really good golf after that and just didn’t show any results.
“I hit a lot of fairways and had a lot of birdie putts and just grazed the edges for like nine straight holes, and meanwhile the scoring was moving past me. It could have been a moment to get a little frustrated and start trying a little too hard, but I knew that the really scorable part of the course was coming. Some of the early holes on the back nine are very gettable if you keep it in play. I was proud of myself for being patient.”
South Korea’s K.J. Choi followed up a bogey-free, 6-under 66 on Friday with a 2-under 70 on Saturday, falling into a three-way tie for second.
Choi suffered a bogey on the seventh, but he rallied for birdies on holes 10 and 12.
He’s tied with David Branshaw (69) and Australia’s Steve Allan (66) at 8 under after two rounds.
Branshaw, who was a stroke behind Choi on Friday, remained in second place by balancing three bogeys with six birdies.
Allan had seven birdies against a single bogey (on the par-4 15th) to stay within striking distance. He was asked about his strategy going into Sunday.
“You’ve just got to play well,” Allan said. “If I go out and try too hard for birdies early, it ends up in disaster, so I just try to let the round play out. We don’t need to birdie the first few holes to have a good round. You can build into the round and have a hot finish, too. I’m just going to go out there and try and play well.”
Bob Estes (69) and Australia’s Rod Pampling (70) are a stroke behind that trio, tied for fifth at 7 under.
Kirk Triplett (67) and Brett Quigley (71) are tied for seventh at 6 under.
Charles Schwab Cup money leader Ernie Els of South Africa remains behind the leaders at 2 under (T31).
–Field Level Media
KEEGAN BRADLEY HOLDS 1-SHOT LEAD AT BMW CHAMPIONSHIP
CASTLE ROCK, Colo. — A hot finish has Keegan Bradley in the lead by one stroke after the third round of the BMW Championship at Castle Pines Golf Club.
The 2025 Ryder Cup captain birdied the last two holes to post a round of 2-under-par 70 and stand at 12-under 204 going into Sunday. The last man into the 50-player field, Bradley had led after the first round of the FedEx Cup playoffs’ penultimate event.
It was a wild, up-and-down round on Saturday for Bradley, who had eight birdies and six bogeys as he hit only 50 percent of greens in regulation. But Bradley’s putter bailed him out as he ranked No. 1 on the day with 1.11 putts per greens in regulation.
Second-round leader Adam Scott (74 on Saturday) is in second, one shot back at 11 under. The 44-year old Aussie was 4-over par through the first four holes and shot a front-nine 40, then bounced back with a 2 under on the back nine.
Ludvig Aberg (71) is in the hunt for his second PGA Tour win, tied for third with fellow Swede Alex Noren (70) at 10 under. Noren fired off a bogey-free back nine and birdied his last three holes.
Noren’s tee shot on the 193-yard, par-3 16th was almost an ace, as it settled 9 inches from the hole for a tap-in birdie.
Xander Schauffele (67) posted the second-lowest round of the day and was second with 129 feet of made putts. He is tied for fifth place with Windham Clark (69) at 7 under.
A two-time major winner, Schauffele rode a hot putter to a bogey-free back nine that featured four birdies. His run started with birdies on Nos. 7, 8 and 9.
Clark, a native of nearby Denver, made a late move into the top five when he eagled the 524-yard, par-5 17th.
Si Woo Kim (71) of South Korea and Taylor Pendrith (73) of Canada are tied for seventh at 6 under.
After a double bogey on the par-4 second hole, Sepp Straka (69) had four straight birdies on holes 7 through 10 to move up the leaderboard.
The Austrian is tied for ninth at 5 under with 2021 FedEx Cup winner Patrick Cantlay (72), Nick Dunlap (70), Tommy Fleetwood (70) of England, Rory McIlroy (70) of Northern Ireland, Russell Henley (70), Tom Hoge (71), Corey Conners (73) of Canada and Sungjae Im (73) of South Korea.
–James Nokes, Field Level Media
JIYAI SHIN ASCENDS INTO LEAD, NELLY KORDA FALTERS AT WOMEN’S OPEN
Jiyai Shin carded a 5-under-par 67 on Saturday to claim a one-stroke lead heading into the final round at the AIG Women’s Open in Fife, Scotland.
A former World No. 1 and two-time winner in this tournament (2008, 2012), Shin collected seven birdies against two bogeys on Saturday under breezy conditions at the St. Andrews Links (Old Course).
“I have a lot of experience with Links course, and with not like this tough wind, but pretty much I have a lot of good experience,” Shin said.
” … Really, the wind is nice to me today, and also, I made … two bogeys today, but I think everyone can make one or two bogeys. So this is nothing. I just keep focused forward.”
Shin, 36, has a three-round total of 7-under 209 and is bidding for her 12th victory on the LPGA Tour.
She resides one shot ahead of defending champion Lilia Vu (71 on Saturday), who notched her fifth birdie on the 18th hole to inch closer to Shin.
All told, Vu totaled five birdies to offset two bogeys and a double-bogey on the 13th hole.
“The wheels were falling off in the middle of it,” Vu said. “I was getting anxious, but caddie (Cole Pensanti) was able to give me words of encouragement that I’m playing well. It’s just a couple bad breaks.”
Second-round leader Nelly Korda (75) plummeted into third place at 5-under after carding five bogeys and a double-bogey on the 16th hole. Korda, who salvaged her day with a birdie on the 18th hole, entered Saturday with a three-stroke lead over both Vu and England’s Charley Hull.
“It’s nice to finish with a birdie, but it wasn’t the best of days,” Korda said. “But it’s okay.”
Bidding for her seventh title this season, Korda rests one stroke ahead of South Korean Jenny Shin (70) and New Zealand Olympic gold medalist Lydia Ko (71).
“I think it’s going to be a tough day (Sunday),” Korda said. “I think the winds are going to be high. There could be rain, as well. I’m going to keep a positive attitude. Take it one shot at a time. I played really well the first two days, so I’m going to take that momentum into tomorrow.”
China’s Ruoning Yin (73) carded four bogeys against three birdies to drop into a four-golfer logjam at 3-under.
Hull (75) recorded a double-bogey on the par-5 fifth hole during a disastrous round. She sits tied for 10th place with top-ranked amateur Lottie Woad of England and three others.
Woad, who recorded her second round of 72 for the tournament, attends Florida State and is making her Women’s Open debut and playing in her fourth major.
–Field Level Media
TOP INDIANA SPORTS/NEWS RELEASES
INDIANAPOLIS INDIANS
LONG BALL PROPELS CLIPPERS OVER INDIANS IN SATURDAY MATCHUP, 6-3
COLUMBUS, Ohio – The Columbus Clippers slugged three home runs against the Indianapolis Indians to take the series lead on Saturday night at Huntington Park, 6-3.
All three home runs for the Clippers (32-17, 64-59) came against Indians starter Aaron Shortridge (L, 1-3). George Valera hit his third home run of the series in the bottom of the fourth, but back-to-back home runs from Johnathan Rodriguez and Gabriel Arias opened a three-run sixth inning. The rest of the Clippers’ run production came on sacrifice flies from Myles Straw and Angel Martinez and an RBI double from Juan Brito.
The Indians (26-22, 59-62) mustered just one run against Clippers starter Ryan Webb (W, 2-0), but it came on a solo home run to straight-away center field by Jack Suwinski for his third long ball on the year. After logging a 2.87 ERA in 106.2 innings with Double-A Akron, Webb has allowed just two runs in his first 16.0 innings with Columbus at the Triple-A level. Indianapolis mustered their other runs on an RBI fielder’s choice from Henry Davis in the seventh against reliever Tanner Burns and an RBI groundout from Davis against Peter Strzelecki in the ninth.
With an infield single in the first against Webb, Davis extended his on-base streak to 12 games, dating back to Aug. 9 at Nashville. Davis has now reached base safely in 27 of his last 29 games, hitting over .320 during that stretch. With a 2-for-5 night, Indians second baseman Nick Yorke logged his third straight multi-hit game. Since being acquired via trade from the Boston Red Sox, Yorke has hit .370 (30-for-81) in his first 22 games in an Indians uniform.
The Indians and Clippers wrap up their six-game series on Sunday afternoon, with first pitch scheduled for 1:05 PM ET. Right-hander Luis Cessa (4-4, 4.34) gets the ball for the Indians, opposing southpaw Doug Nikhazy (4-2, 3.74) for Columbus.
INDIANA FEVER
GAME RECAP: FEVER UNABLE TO STOP LYNX WINNING STREAK
MINNEAPOLIS – The Indiana Fever (13-16) fell, 90-80, to the Minnesota Lynx at Target Center on Saturday night. Indiana and Minnesota will meet for the final time during the regular season on Friday, September 6 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.
Fever guards Caitlin Clark and Kelsey Mitchell led Indiana in scoring on Saturday night as they both recorded their third-consecutive games scoring at least 20 points. Clark recorded 23 points, eight assists and five rebounds in the loss, marking her 11th game of the season recording at least 20 points, five rebounds and five assists. Clark joined Aliyah Boston and Tamika Catchings as the only players in franchise history to score at least 500 points in a rookie season. Mitchell followed with 21 points, four rebounds, three assists and two steals, marking her 10th game this season scoring at least 20 points.
Fever center Aliyah Boston recorded her 10th double-double of the season as she pulled down a game-high 15 rebounds and 10 points. Saturday was also Boston’s 11th game this season grabbing 10 or more rebounds. Off the bench, all Fever reserves who appeared in the game, led by guard Lexie Hull with 10 points and two rebounds. Forward Damiris Dantas followed with eight points, four rebounds and two assists.
Despite a slower start for Indiana in the first quarter, the Fever shot 9-of-9 to open up the second quarter and went on a 21-9 run for more than six minutes as halftime approached. Indiana outscored Minnesota, 28-16, and cut a 13-point deficit down to one, 45-44, to end the second quarter. Indiana outscored Minnesota in paint points, 44-30, bench points, 24-14, and outrebounded the Lynx, 40-27, to end the game. Saturday was Indiana’s fourth-consecutive game outrebounding its opponents.
Minnesota (22-8) was led by forward Napheesa Collier’s season-high 31-point performance to clinch a playoff spot and win its sixth consecutive game. Collier shot 12-of-18 from the field and added five rebounds, too. Four other Lynx players scored in double figures as well, as guard Kayla McBride and forward Bridget Carleton followed Collier with 19 points and 16 points, respectively. McBride and Carleton combined for eight assists and seven rebounds. Lynx guard Courtney Williams and reserve guard Natisha Hiedeman both scored 10 points each.
UP NEXT
The Fever head to Atlanta to take on the Dream on Monday at 7:30 p.m. ET. Monday’s game will be broadcast on WTHR Channel 13.
INDY ELEVEN
MATCH RE-CAP
Las Vegas – The host Las Vegas Lights FC scored last in an exciting first half which saw five goals and preserved the lead in a scoreless second half to edge the Indy Eleven, 3-2.
Vegas took a quick lead in the second minute, but the Eleven evened it in the 26th minute on a beautiful left-footed strike from forward Sebastian Guenzatti off an assist from Jack Blake on a deft feed into the box. It was Guenzatti’s fifth goal of the season and the 75th in his USL career (fifth on the all-time list).
Las Vegas countered in the 43rd minute to take a 2-1 lead, but the Eleven responded with an impressive turn and fire from Elliott Collier in tight space in the third minute of first-half stoppage time. Blake delivered a quick pass to record his second assist in the first half.
But the hosts answered with the game-winner just one minute later for what proved to be the game-winning goal.
Neither team scored in the final half.
Indy Eleven are in fifth place in the Eastern Conference with 35 points. Their next match is Tuesday in the Lamar Hunt US Open Cup Semifinals at Sporting Kansas City at 8 pm ET on 93.5/107.5 the fan radio and MLS Season Pass on Apple TV. Their next USL match is Saturday, August 31 at 7 pm vs. the Pittsburgh Riverhounds SC on “Pups at the Pitch” Night at Carroll Stadium.
Single-game tickets for home matches are available at Ticketmaster. For information on all ticket options visit the Indy Eleven Ticket Central. For questions, please email tickets@indyeleven.com or call (317) 685-1100.
Las Vegas Lights 3:2 Indy Eleven
Saturday, August 24, 2024 – 10:30 p.m. ET
Cashman Field | Las Vegas
2024 USL Championship Records
Indy Eleven: 10-9-5 (-4), 35 pts, 5th in Eastern Conference
Las Vegas Lights: 9-8-8 (-1), 35 pts, 5th in Western Conference
Weather: Sunny, 92 degrees
Score | 1 | 2 | F |
Indy Eleven | 2 | 0 | 2 |
Las Vegas Lights | 3 | 0 | 3 |
Scoring Summary
LV – Jean-Claude Ngando (Christian Pinzón) 2’
IND – Sebastian Guenzatti (Jack Blake) 26’
LV – Valentin Noël (Christian Pinzón) 43’
IND – Elliot Collier (Jack Blake) 45’+3
LV – Khori Bennett (Grayson Doody) 45’+4
Discipline Summary
LV – Raiko Arozarena (caution) 21’
LV – Jean-Claude Ngando (caution) 33’
LV – Gennaro Nigro (caution) 54’
IND – Ben Mines (caution) 56’
Indy Eleven line-up: Yannik Oettl, Logan Neidlinger (Karsen Henderlong 84’), James Musa, Josh O’Brien (Benjamin Ofeimu 45’), Ben Mines, Jack Blake (Maalique Foster 45’), Laurence Wootton (Cam Lindley 72’), Tyler Gibson (captain), Elliot Collier (Ethan O’Brien 63’), Sebastian Guenzatti, Romario Williams.
Indy Eleven Subs Not Used: Hunter Sulte, Maverick McCoy.
Las Vegas Lights line-up: Raiko Arozarena, Gennaro Nigro, Maliek Howell, Emrah Klimenta (Ousman Jabang 45’), Grayson Doody, Christian Pinzón (Coleman Gannon 79’), Jean-Claude Ngando, Andre Fortune II (Charlie Adams 79’), Joe Gyau (Solomon Asante 79’), Khori Bennett (Vaughn Covil 89’), Valentin Noël.
Las Vegas Lights Subs Not Used: Elias Gartig, Austin Wormell, All Gue.
INDIANA SMALL COLLEGE WEBSITES
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/
HOY CROSS ATHLETICS: https://www.hcsaints.com/index.php
TAYLOR ATHLETICS: https://www.taylortrojans.com/
VINCENNES ATHLETICS: https://govutrailblazers.com/landing/index
NUMBERS IN SPORTS
29 – 16 – 7 – 2 – 3 – 16 – 24 – 25 – 27
August 25, 1921 – Was he losing Control? New York Yankee pitcher Harry Harper nailed three different batters in an inning tying record
August 25, 1922 – The Chicago Cubs defeated the Philadelphia Phillies 26-23 in highest scoring major-league game
August 25, 1924 – MLB Washington Senator Walter Johnson 2nd no-hitter beats Browns, 2-0 in 7 inn
August 25, 1968 – New York Yankee outfield player Rocky Colavito, Number 29 pitched 2/3 innings and beat the Detroit Tigers 6-5. It was a twinbill that day and Rocky played right field in the second game and even homered. Not bad for a guy that started the season as an LA Dodger wearing Number 16.
August 25, 1977 – Canadian NHL player Tim Horton ( who wore Number 7 with the Toronto Maple Leafs and Number 2 with the Buffalo Sabres) was posthumously inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame. Note he did wear 16, 24, and 3 jerseys as well during his career
August 25, 1985 – New York Mets hurler Number 16, Dwight Gooden becomes the youngest pitcher to win 20 games (20y 9m 9d)
August 25, 1986 – Oakland A’s Mark McGwire, wearing Number 25 hit his 1st major league home run
August 25, 2020 – Chicago White Sox pitcher Lucas Giolito, Number 27 no-hits the Pittsburgh Pirates, 4-0 at Guaranteed Rate Field, Chicago
FOOTBALL HISTORY
Football History for August 25
August 25, 1943 – The 10th Annual Chicago Charities College All-Star game is played in the Windy City as over 48,000 fans watched the College All-Stars dismantle the defending champion Washington squad 27-7! The MVP for the college team was University of Wisconsin running back Pat Harder.
August 25, 1960 – One of the AFL’s teams on this date started putting a player’s name on the back of their jerseys. The LA Chargers had a sewn name block above the numbers to clearly identify the player by name. Our friends at Gridiron Uniform Database have this covered very well in an article found here.
August 25, 1969 – In Montreal, the NFL’s Detroit Lions defeated the Boston Patriots by a score of 22-9 in a preseason exhibition to entertain our friends north of the border.
Hall of Fame Birthdays for August 25
August 25, 1900 – Chuck Carney was a former end from the University of Illinois. After playing for the Illini from 1918 through the 1921 seasons he was enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame in 1966. Carney also excelled on the hardwoods as he became the first Big 10 conference athlete to be named as an All-American in both football and basketball. He played pro football for one season with the AFPA’s Columbus Panhandles. After he was done playing he coached at several schools and then worked as a NY Stock Exchange financial representative.
August 25, 1946 – Charlie Sanders was a former tight end of the University of Minnesota who ended up being a third-round draft pick of the Detroit Lions. As a rookie he caught 40 passes for over 500 yards, stunning opponents who in that era were not expecting much offensive production from a TE. He was voted into the Pro Bowl 7 times in his 10-year NFL career and even made the NFL all 1970’s team! Sanders was selected to enter the Pro Football Hall of Fame in the induction class of 2007.
August 25, 1953 – Doug English was a defensive tackle from the University of Texas. He is remembered in the great museum called the College Football Hall of Fame since 2011 when he was enshrined there. He also went on to play in the NFL as part of the “Silver Rush” of the Detroit Lions and in 1979 was named as the Motor City team’s Defensive MVP. The 1983 season was special for English as he registered 13 sacks and scored two safeties! He registered four safeties in his career tying with several others throughout NFL history with the most.
August 25, 1965 – Cornelius Bennett was a former linebacker from Alabama. This prolific LB remarkably is one of only two Bama players to have ever been names as an All-American three times (LB Woodrow Lowe being the other.) He is remembered in the College Football Hall of Fame, where he entered as part of the induction class of 2005. Bennett went on to play professionally for the Buffalo Bills, Atlanta Falcons, and the Indianapolis Colts at LB. He also was selected to 5 Pro Bowls and was the AFC Defensive Player of the Year two times in 1988 and 1991. Bennett played in all four of Buffalo’s Super Bowl appearances in the 1990s and then he played in a fifth SB with the Falcons.
August 25, 1972 – Marvin Harrison was a wide receiver that came out of Syracuse University. The Indianapolis Colts drafted the speedster with the 19th pick in the 1996 NFL draft after dealing QB Jeff George to the Atlanta Falcons for it. Harrison soon became Colt’s QB Peyton Manning’s favorite target as he played for 13 seasons. The eight-time Pro Bowler was voted on to the 2000’s All-Decade team and when he hung up his cleats after the 2008 season he finished second in career receptions for the great Jerry Rice. Harrison was enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame
TODAY IN BASEBALL HISTORY
Aug. 25
1922 — In one of the wildest games ever played, the Cubs beat the Phillies 26-23. The Cubs led 25-6 in the fourth inning, but held on as the game ended with the Phillies leaving the bases loaded.
1934 — Detroit’s Schoolboy Rowe won his 16th consecutive game with a 4-2 triumph over the Washington Senators. Rowe singled in the winning run in the ninth inning.
1952 — Detroit’s Virgil Trucks pitched his second no-hitter of the season, a 1-0 gem over New York at Yankee Stadium. The Tigers committed two errors and Trucks walked one batter and struck out eight. It was the last victory of the season for Trucks, who finished with a 5-19 record.
1967 — Dean Chance of Minnesota pitched his second no-hitter of the month, defeating the Indians 2-1. Chance pitched an abbreviated five perfect innings against Boston on Aug. 6 for a 2-0 victory.
1972 — Philadelphia Ken Reynolds tied a National League record with his 12th consecutive loss, 6-1 to Cincinnati, from the beginning of the season.
1979 — California’s Don Baylor tied a club record by driving in eight runs during a 24-2 rout of the Toronto Blue Jays. The 24 runs and 26 hits set Angel records.
1985 — New York’s Dwight Gooden became the youngest pitcher ever to win 20 games with a 9-3 triumph over the San Diego Padres. Gooden at age 20 years, nine months, and nine days was one month younger that Bob Feller who won 20 games in 1939.
1998 — Toronto’s Roger Clemens struck out 18 and won his 11th straight decision as he pitched a 3-0 three-hit victory over the Kansas City Royals.
2004 — Jeff DaVanon became the first Angels player in 13 years to hit for the cycle in Anaheim’s 21-6 rout of Kansas City.
2008 — Brett Myers, J.C. Romero and Clay Condrey combined on a 13-hit shutout in Philadelphia’s 5-0 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
2010 — The Colorado Rockies overcame a nine-run deficit, matching the biggest rally in team history and stunning the Atlanta Braves 12-10 on Troy Tulowitzki’s go-ahead single in the eighth inning. Down 10-1 in the third inning, the Rockies chipped away against the NL East leader before taking the lead with four runs in the eighth.
2010 — The Reds blew a nine-run lead, then regrouped and rallied past the Giants, 12-11, on Joey Votto’s tiebreaking single in the 12th inning. The NL Central-leading Reds took a 10-1 lead into the bottom of the fifth before San Francisco came back with a six-run burst in the eighth to take an 11-10 lead.
2011 — The New York Yankees became the first team in major league history to hit three grand slams in a game, with Robinson Cano, Russell Martin and Curtis Granderson connecting in a 22-9 romp over the Oakland Athletics.
2017 — Rhys Hoskins hit another homer and Cesar Hernandez ripped a three-run triple to help Philadelphia to a 7-1 victory over the Chicago Cubs. Hoskins has put on a tremendous power display. He has nine homers and 21 RBIs in 16 games. No player in major league history had reached nine homers that quickly.
2020 Chicago White Sox pitcher Lucas Giolito no-hits the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-0.
2021 — In the longest major league game since the introduction of the tiebreaker rule before the 2020 season, the Dodgers need 16 innings to defeat the Padres, 5 – 3, after almost six hours of playing time. After five scoreless extra frames in spite of the presence of a designated runner on second base every time, the Dodgers finally take a 3 – 1 lead in the top of the 15th, only to see Fernando Tatis Jr. tie it with his 35th homer of the year off Corey Knebel in the bottom of the inning, necessitating yet another inning. A.J. Pollock finally provides the margin of victory with a two-run homer off Daniel Camarena and the Padres fail to score against Shane Greene.
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Aug. 26
1916 — Philadelphia’s Joe Bush pitched a no-hitter, to beat Cleveland 5-0.
1939 — The first major league baseball game was televised as WXBS brought their cameras to Brooklyn’s Ebbets Field for a doubleheader between the Cincinnati Reds and the Dodgers.
1947 — Brooklyn’s Dan Bankhead became the first black pitcher in the majors. He homered in his first major-league plate appearance, but didn’t fare well on the mound. In 3 1-3 innings of relief, he gave up 10 hits and six earned runs to the Pirates. Pittsburgh won 16-3.
1962 — Minnesota’s Jack Kralick pitched a 1-0 no-hitter against the Kansas City Athletics at Metropolitan Stadium. Lenny Green drove in the Twins’ run with a sacrifice fly off Bill Fischer in the seventh inning.
1987 — Milwaukee’s Paul Molitor went 0-for-4, ending his 39-game hitting streak, and the Brewers beat the Cleveland Indians 1-0 in 10 innings on pinch-hitter Rick Manning’s RBI single. With Molitor waiting in the on-deck circle for a possible fifth at-bat, Manning singled in the game-winner.
1991 — Kansas City’s Brett Saberhagen pitched a no-hitter to lead the Royals to a 7-0 win over the Chicago White Sox. Saberhagen, who struck out five and walked two.
1999 — Randy Johnson reached 300 strikeouts in record time, notching nine in seven innings to help the Arizona Diamondbacks beat the Florida Marlins 12-2. Johnson achieved the milestone in his 29th start.
2004 — Ichiro Suzuki homered in the ninth inning for his 200th hit of the season, but Seattle fell to Kansas City 7-3. Suzuki became the first player to reach 200 hits in each of his first four major league seasons.
2007 — Dalton Carriker’s home run in the bottom of the eighth gave Warner Robins, Georgia, a thrilling 3-2 victory over Tokyo to win the Little League World Series title.
2007 — Boston defeated the Chicago White Sox 11-1 to complete a four-game sweep. For the series, the Red Sox outscored Chicago 46-7. Boston scored at least 10 runs in every game of the series, which is only the fourth time that has happened in a four-game series since 1900 and the first time in the American League in 85 years.
2008 — Major League Baseball announced umpires will be allowed to check video on home run calls starting Aug. 27. Video will be used only on so-called “boundary calls,” such as determining whether fly balls went over the fence, whether potential home runs were fair or foul and whether there was fan interference on potential home runs.
2010 — Albert Pujols of St. Louis hits the 400th homer of his career, off Jordan Zimmermann of the Nationals in the 4th inning. Pujols becomes the 47th major leaguer to hit that many and is the third-youngest to do so after Alex Rodriguez and Ken Griffey Jr.
2018 — Mana Lau Kong homered to center field on the first pitch his team saw and Ka’olu Holt pitched a complete game to lead Hawaii to a 3-0 victory over South Korea in the Little League World Series championship.
2018 — Toronto’s Kendrys Morales became the seventh player in major league history to homer in at least seven consecutive games, going deep in the third inning of the Blue Jays’ 8-3 loss to the Philadelphia Phillies.
2018 — Matt Carpenter tied a St. Louis record with four doubles, pitcher Austin Gomber had a two-run infield single in a six-run first inning, and the Cardinals routed Colorado 12-3.
Aug. 27
1897 — Roger Bresnahan, later a Hall of Fame catcher, made his major-league debut as a pitcher for the Washington Senators by shutting out the St. Louis Browns 3-0.
1911 — Ed Walsh of the Chicago White Sox pitched a 5-0 no-hitter against the Boston Red Sox. Walsh struck out eight and walked one.
1937 — Brooklyn’s Fred Frankhouse pitched a rain-shortened no-hitter against the Cincinnati Reds. The game was stopped with two out in the eighth inning with the Dodgers leading 5-0.
1977 — Toby Harrah and Bump Wills of the Texas Rangers hit back-to-back inside-the-park home runs on consecutive pitches in the seventh inning in an 8-2 victory over New York at Yankee Stadium.
1978 — Joe Morgan of the Cincinnati Reds hit his 200th career home run to become the first player in major league history to have 200 homers and 500 stolen bases.
1982 — Rickey Henderson of Oakland broke Lou Brock’s 1974 record of 118 stolen bases in a season and stole three more bases in the Athletics’ 5-4 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers. It gave Henderson 122 thefts in 127 games.
1999 — Vladimir Guerrero’s hitting streak was halted at 31 games by Cincinnati’s Ron Villone in the Reds’ 4-1 win over Montreal. Guerrero went 0-for-2 with an intentional walk against Villone, ending the majors’ longest hitting streak since 1987.
2005 — Jeff Kent became the first player to hit 300 home runs as a second baseman in the Los Angeles Dodgers’ 8-3 win over Houston. The homer was the 325th of his career.
2010 — Florida led off a game with back-to-back homers for the first time in franchise history in a 7-1 victory over Atlanta. Cameron Maybin hit the first pitch of the game into the left-field seats. Logan Morrison then connected off Tommy Hanson for his first major league home run.
2011 — Justin Verlander became the majors’ first 20-game winner, grinding through six innings in the Detroit Tigers’ 6-4 victory over the Minnesota Twins. Verlander (20-5) became the first pitcher to win 20 games before the end of August since Arizona’s Curt Schilling in 2002.
2017 — Giancarlo Stanton hit his 50th home run to break an eighth-inning tie, helping the Miami Marlins sweep the San Diego Padres with a 6-2 victory. Stanton became the first NL player to reach 50 homers since Prince Fielder hit 50 for Milwaukee in 2007.
2017 — Rookie Rhys Hoskins homered for the fifth straight game and made a diving catch to start a game-changing triple play in the fifth inning, leading Philadelphia to a 6-3 victory over the Chicago Cubs. Hoskins led off the eighth with a drive to left-center to give him 11 home runs in his first 18 games, becoming the fastest in major league history to reach 11 homers. Hoskins was called up from Triple-A Lehigh Valley on Aug. 10.
2018 — Kendrys Morales’ home run streak was ended at seven games by the Baltimore Orioles, who halted an eight-game skid by defeating the Toronto Blue Jays 7-0. Morales went 0 for 3 with a walk and did not hit the ball out of the infield.
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Aug. 28
1918 – Tris Speaker was suspended for the rest of the season because of his assault on umpire Tom Connolly following a dispute at home plate in Philadelphia.
1926 — Emil Levsen of the Cleveland Indians pitched two complete-game victories over the Boston Red Sox, 6-1 and 5-1. He did not strike out a batter in either game. The Indians used the identical lineup in both games.
1951 — The Pittsburgh Pirates defeated the New York Giants 2-0, snapping the Giants’ 16-game winning streak. The streak enabled the Giants to cut the Dodgers 13½-game lead to six.
1971 — In the nightcap of a doubleheader, Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Rick Wise hit two home runs to help himself to a 7-3 victory over the San Francisco Giants.
1977 — Steve Garvey of Los Angeles hit three doubles and two home runs in five at-bats, leading the Los Angeles Dodgers to an 11-0 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals. One of Garvey’s homers was a grand slam.
1977 — In a 6-1 loss to the Baltimore Orioles, Nolan Ryan of the California Angles struck out 11 batters to pass the 300-strikeout plateau for the fifth time in his career.
1987 — Mike Schmidt passes Ted Williams and Willie McCovey with 522 home runs
1990 — Ryne Sandberg became the first second baseman in history to have consecutive 30-homer seasons, leading the Cubs to a 5-2 victory over the Houston Astros.
1992 — The Milwaukee Brewers set an American League record with 31 hits and 26 singles in a 22-2 rout of the Toronto Blue Jays.
2003 — Eric Gagne set a major league record with his 44th straight save this season as Los Angeles beat Houston 6-3. Gagne eclipsed Tom Gordon’s 1998 record of 43 in a row to begin a season.
2008 — Cristian Guzman of the Nationals became the second player to hit for the cycle since the franchise moved to Washington, driving in three in an 11-2 rout of the Los Angeles Dodgers.
2014 — San Francisco’s Yusmeiro Petit set a major league record when he retired his 46th batter in a row, and the Giants beat Colorado 3-1. Petit got the first eight Colorado hitters, establishing the mark by striking out Charlie Culberson. That broke Mark Buehrle’s record of 45 straight with the Chicago White Sox in 2009. Petit’s streak covered eight games, six of them in relief.
2016 — Ryan Harlost led Endwell, N.Y., to the Little League World Series title, striking out eight and limiting South Korea to five hits in six innings in a 2-1 victory. Endwell gave New York its first championship since 1964.
2021 — Los Angeles Angels pitcher Shohei Otani becomes the first player in team history to reach 20 stolen bases and hit 40 home runs in a season.
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Aug. 29
1918 — The Chicago Cubs, behind the pitching of Lefty Tyler, clinched the National League pennant with a 1-0 victory over the Cincinnati Reds.
1934 — The Philadelphia A’s ended Schoolboy Rowe’s 16-game winning streak with a 13-5 victory over the Detroit Tigers.
1948 — Jackie Robinson of the Brooklyn Dodgers hit for the cycle in a 12-7 win over the St. Louis Cardinals. Robinson drove in two runs, scored three runs and stole a base.
1965 — San Francisco’s Willie Mays broke Ralph Kiner’s National League record with his 17th home run of the month in an 8-3 triumph over the New York Mets. Kiner had 16 homers in September of 1949. Mays hit a tape measure shot off Jack Fisher.
1967 — Bert Campaneris of the Kansas City A’s hit three triples in a 9-8, 10-inning loss to the Cleveland Indians. Campaneris was the first to have three triples in a game since Ben Chapman in 1939.
1971 — Hank Aaron of the Atlanta Braves knocked in his 100th run of the season, giving him the National League record of 11 seasons with 100 or more RBIs.
1977 — Lou Brock of St. Louis stole base No. 893, breaking Ty Cobb’s modern record for career stolen bases. The Cardinals lost to the San Diego Padres 4-3.
1977— Cleveland’s Duane Kuiper hit a one-out solo home run in the first inning off Chicago’s Steve Stone at Municipal Stadium. It was Kuiper’s only homer in 3,379 career at-bats — the fewest homers in most at-bats for any player in MLB history.
1985 — Don Baylor of the New York Yankees set an American League record when he was hit by a pitch for the 190th time in his career. Baylor was struck by California Angels pitcher Kirk McCaskill in the first inning, breaking the old mark of 189 set by Minnie Minoso.
1991 — Carlton Fisk of the Chicago White Sox hit two homers to become the oldest player in the 20th century to accomplish the mark. He’ll top this by hitting two homers on October 3. Jack McDowell went the distance to beat Cleveland 7-2.
1993 — George Brett recorded his 200th stolen base in Kansas City’s 5-4, 12-inning victory over Boston to join Willie Mays and Hank Aaron as the only players with 3,000 hits, 300 homers and 200 steals.
2000 — Anaheim’s Darin Erstad went 3-for-5 to reach 200 hits faster than any player in 65 years as the Angels defeated Toronto 9-4. Ducky Medwick of the St. Louis Cardinals did it in 131 games in 1935.
2002 — Mark Bellhorn became the first player in NL history to hit a home run in the same inning from both sides of the plate, in the fourth of the Chicago Cubs’ 13-10 win over Milwaukee.
2004 — Albert Pujols hit his 40th home run and reached 100 RBIs for the fourth straight season to help St. Louis beat Pittsburgh 4-0. He’s the fourth player to start his major league career with four straight seasons with at least 100 RBIs, joining Hall of Famers Al Simmons, Joe DiMaggio and Ted Williams.
2010 — Brian McCann hit a game-winning homer with help from video replay, giving the Atlanta Braves a stunning 7-6 victory over the Florida Marlins. It was the first time a game ended using a video review.
2018 — Milwaukee’s Christian Yelich went 6 for 6 and hit for the cycle and Jesus Aguilar homered in the 10th inning, powering the Brewers to a 13-12 victory over the Cincinnati Reds. The Brewers had a season-high 22 hits and rallied to take the lead four different times, and Jesus Aguilar hit the go-ahead homer in the 10th inning.
2021 — Taylor, Michigan wins the Little League World Series with a win over Hamilton, Ohio.
2022 — Aaron Judge of the Yankees hit home run #50 of the season, to stay just ahead of the pace set by Roger Maris when he hit 61 homers to set the team and American League record in 1961.
TODAY IN SPORTS HISTORY
Aug. 25
1804 — Alice Meynell becomes the first woman jockey as she rides in a four-mile race in York, England.
1888 — Henry Slocum becomes the first man to win the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association singles title besides Richard Sears.
1904 — Jim Jeffries knocks out Jack Munroe in the second round in San Francisco to retain the world heavyweight title.
1908 — The first $50,000 trotting race in the United States, the American Trotting Derby, is won by Allen Winter with Lon McDonald driving.
1922 — In one of the wildest games ever played, the Cubs beat the Phillies 26-23. The Cubs led 25-6 in the fourth inning, but held on as the game ended with the Phillies leaving the bases loaded.
1946 — Ben Hogan wins the PGA championship with a 6 and 4 win over Ed Oliver.
1950 — Sugar Ray Robinson knocks out Jose Basora at 52 seconds of the first round to retain world middleweight boxing title.
1968 — Arthur Ashe becomes 1st African American to win the US singles championship.
1973 — The NASL championship is won by the Philadelphia Atoms with a 2-0 victory over the Dallas Tornadoes.
1974 — The Los Angeles Aztecs edge the Miami Toros 4-3 to win the NASL Championship.
1984 — France’s Lutin D’Isigny wins the $250,000 International Trot by seven lengths, the largest margin of victory in this race. Jean-Paul Andre drives Lutin D’Isigny to a world record trot for the 1¼-mile in 2:30, smashing the record of 2:31.2 shared by Speedy Scot and Noble Victory.
1991 — Carl Lewis reclaims his title of world’s fastest human by setting a world record of 9.86 seconds in the 100-meter final in the world championships in Tokyo. Lewis clips four-hundredths of a second off the previous mark of 9.90 set by Leroy Burrell in the U.S. Championships two months earlier.
1996 — Tiger Woods wins an unprecedented third U.S. Amateur Championship, beating Steve Scott on the 38th hole after coming back from 5-down with 16 to play and 2-down with three to go.
2006 — Japan’s Yusaku Miyazato becomes the first golfer to make two holes-in-one in the same round of a PGA Tour tournament when he aces a pair of par 3s at the Reno-Tahoe Open.
2011 — The New York Yankees become the first team in major league history to hit three grand slams in a game, with Robinson Cano, Russell Martin and Curtis Granderson connecting in a 22-9 romp over the Oakland Athletics.
2012 — Alpha and longshot Golden Ticket finish in a historic dead heat in the $1 million Travers Stakes at Saratoga Race Course. Golden Ticket leads the field of 11 3-year-olds in the stretch, but 2-1 favorite Alpha closes strongly and the two hit the finish line in tandem. It’s the first dead heat in the 143 runnings of the Travers, and a rare finish for any Grade 1 race. Alpha pays $4.10 and 33-1 shot Golden Ticket returns $26.80 to win.
2013 — Teen star Lydia Ko runs away with the Canadian Women’s Open with a five-stroke victory over Karine Icher. The 16-year-old New Zealand amateur successfully defends her title, closing with a 6-under 64 for her fourth win in 14 professional events.
2020 — Chicago White Sox pitcher Lucas Giolito throws a no-hitter against the Pittsburgh Pirates, 4-0 at Guaranteed Rate Field, Chicago.
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Aug. 26
1933 — Helen Hull Jacobs captures the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association singles title when Helen Wills Moody defaults in the third set because of back and hip pain.
1939 — The first major league baseball game is televised. NBC broadcasts a doubleheader at Brooklyn’s Ebbets Field between the Cincinnati Reds and the Dodgers.
1950 — Australia wins its third straight Davis Cup by beating the U.S. 4-1.
1961 — The International Hockey Hall of Fame opens in Toronto.
1972 — The New York Cosmos win the NASL championship by defeating the St. Louis Stars 2-1.
1989 — Chris Drury pitches a five-hitter and Trumbull, Conn., becomes the first American team since 1983 to capture the Little League World Series, defeating Kaohsiung, Taiwan, 5-2.
1993 — Sean Burroughs, the son of former major leaguer Jeff Burroughs, pitches his second no-hitter of the Little League World Series and hits two home runs, sending defending champion Long Beach, Calif., past Bedford, N.H., 11-0 in the final of the U.S. bracket.
1995 — Greg Norman sinks a 66-foot chip on the first playoff hole, to capture the World Series of Golf and become the leading money winner in PGA Tour history. Norman wins $360,000 in his third tour victory this year to raise lifetime earnings to $9.49 million and overtake Tom Kite.
1997 — Carl Lewis finishes his track-and-field career anchoring star-studded team to victory in the 400-meter relay to cap the ISTAF Grand Prix meet in Berlin. The team of Olympic 100-meter champion Donovan Bailey, former world record-holder Leroy Burrell and Namibian sprint champion Frankie Fredericks, win in 38.24 seconds.
1999 — Michael Johnson shatters another world record at the world championships — this time, breaking the 400-meter mark with a time of 43.18. He cuts 0.11 seconds off the record of 43.29 set by Butch Reynolds in 1988 and ties Carl Lewis for the most gold medals at the championships with eight.
2004 — Lindsay Tarpley and Abby Wambach score as the U.S. beats Brazil 2-1, maintaining an undefeated record to win the women’s football gold medal at the Athens Olympics.
2011 — The Tulsa Shock snap the longest losing streak in WNBA history with a 77-75 win over the Los Angeles Sparks. The Shock (2-25) had 20 straight losses before Sheryl Swoopes hit a jumper with 2.9 seconds left.
2011 — Kyle Busch records his record-breaking 50th NASCAR Busch Series victory, edging teammate Joey Logano in the Food City 250 at the Bristol Motor Speedway. Busch breaks a tie with Mark Martin for the record in NASCAR’s second-tier series.
2012 — Lydia Ko wins the Canadian Women’s Open to become the youngest winner in LPGA Tour history and only the fifth amateur champion. The 15-year-old South Korean-born New Zealander closes with a 5-under 67 for a three-stroke victory over Inbee Park.
2016 — San Francisco 49ers Colin Kaepernick kneels in protest during the U.S. national anthem at San Diego’s Qualcomm Stadium while playing against the San Diego Chargers, objecting to racial injustice and police brutality in the U.S.
2016 — Dan Raudabaugh throws six touchdown passes and the Philadelphia Soul win their second ArenaBowl title, beating the Arizona Rattlers 56-42.
2017 — Kyle Snyder scores a late takedown of Olympic gold medalist Abdusalim Sadulaev in the deciding match, and the U.S. wins the world freestyle wrestling title for the first time in 22 years.
2017 — Floyd Mayweather Jr. stops UFC champion Conor McGregor on his feet in the 10th round in Las Vegas. The much-hyped 154-pound fight is more competitive than many expected when an unbeaten, five-division world champion boxer takes on a mixed martial artist making his pro boxing debut.
2020 — Milwaukee Bucks forfeit their NBA playoff game after the shooting of Jacob Blake, leading to the NBA postponing more games.
Aug. 27
1884 — Richard Sears beats Howard Taylor 6-0, 1-6, 6-0, 6-2 to win his fourth straight U.S. national tennis championship.
1903 — Britain’s Hugh Doherty is the first non-American to win the men’s singles title in the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association championships with a 6-0, 6-3, 10-8 victory over the William Larned.
1909 — William Larned wins his fifth U.S. singles tennis title with a five-set victory over William Clothier in Newport, R.I.
1928 — Helen Wills beats Helen Hull Jacobs to take the fifth women’s singles title in the U.S. Lawn Tennis Association championships. Wills needs only 33 minutes, defeating Jacobs 6-2, 6-1.
1957 — Hickory Smoke, driven by John Simpson, Jr., wins the Hambletonian Stakes after capturing the fifth and deciding heat.
1969 — Lindy’s Pride, driven by Howard Beissinger, wins the Hambletonian Stakes in straight heats.
1975 — Onny Parun of New Zealand defeats Stan Smith 6-4, 6-2 in the first night match at the U.S. Open before a crowd of 4,949 at the West Side Tennis Club.
1976 — Transsexual Renee Richards, formerly Richard Raskind, is barred from competing at the U.S. Open tennis championships after refusing to submit to a chromosome qualification test.
1978 — Reds Joe Morgan is 1st to hit 200 HRs & have 500 stolen bases.
1978 — The Cosmos defeat the Tampa Bay Rowdies 3-1 to win the NASL Championship.
1982 — Rickey Henderson steals 119th base of season, breaks Lou Brock’s mark.
1985 — Mary Joe Fernandez, 14, becomes the youngest player to win a match at the U.S. Open. Fernandez beats Sara Gomer 6-1, 6-4.
1996 — Stefan Edberg stuns Wimbledon champion Richard Krajicek at the U.S. Open, winning 6-3, 6-3, 6-3 in his record 54th straight and final Grand Slam event.
1999 — Maurice Greene and Inger Miller win at 200 meters at the world championships, giving the U.S. a sprint sweep. Greene is the first to win the 100 and 200 at a major global meet since Carl Lewis at the 1984 Olympics.
2006 — Marco Andretti, 19, becomes the youngest winner of a major open-wheel event, beating Dario Franchitti by 0.66 seconds to take the Indy Grand Prix of Sonoma.
2015 — Usain Bolt wins his fourth straight 200-meter title at the world championships, finishing in 19.55 seconds in Beijing.
2018 — Simona Halep becomes the first No. 1-seeded woman to lose her opening match at the U.S. Open in the half-century of the professional era. Halep is overwhelmed by 44th-ranked Kaia Kanepi of Estonia 6-2, 6-4.
2023 — Gymnast Simone Biles (26) wins her record 8th U.S. Championship in San Jose, California.
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Aug. 28
1886 — Richard Sears beats R. Livingston Beeckman 4-6, 6-1, 6-3, 6-4 to win his sixth straight U.S. national tennis championship.
1888 — Henry Slocum defeats Howard Taylor 6-4, 6-1, 6-0 to win the eighth U.S. men’s national tennis championship. Slocum, last year’s runner-up, is the first men’s champion other than Richard Sears. Sears, the U.S. champion from 1881-1887, retired last year.
1908 — Fred McLeod wins the U.S. Open golf title with a one-stroke victory over Willie Smith in a playoff.
1922 — The oldest American international team golf match, the Walker Cup, is established with the U.S. beating Britain 8-4.
1949 — The U.S. takes the Davis Cup, topping Australia 4-1.
1950 — Althea Gibson becomes the first black player to compete in the U.S. Open. Gibson wins her first round match, defeating Barbara Knapp of Britain 6-2, 6-2 at Forest Hills in New York.
1977 — The Cosmos beat the Seattle Sounders 2-1 at Portland, Ore., to win their second NASL title. Giorgio Chinaglia’s header in the 77th minute is the winning goal.
1977 — Nolan Ryan strikes out 300 batters for 5th straight year.
1989 — Pete Sampras, 18, wins his first U.S. Open singles match in four sets over Agustin Moreno of Mexico.
1990 — Stefan Edberg becomes the first top-seeded player since John Newcombe in 1971 to lose in the first round of the U.S. Open. Edberg loses to Alexander Volkov of the Soviet Union, 6-3, 7-6, 6-2.
1993 — Pinch-hitter Jeremy Hess’ bases-loaded single with two outs in the sixth inning gives Long Beach, Calif. a 3-2 victory over Panama in the championship game of the Little League World Series.
1994 — Tiger Woods, 18, becomes the youngest winner in the history of the U.S. Amateur Golf Championship, capturing the last three holes of his 36-hole title match against Trip Kuehne.
1995 — Monica Seles, plays in her first Grand Slam tournament in more than 2 1-2 years and beats Ruxandra Dragomir 6-3, 6-1 in first round of the U.S. Open.
2004 — The U.S. women’s basketball team goes through the Athens Olympics undefeated to win its 5th Olympic gold medal, beating Australia 74-63 in the final.
2004 — Led by San Antonio Spurs shooting guard Manu Ginóbili Argentina beats Italy 84-69 for the Olympic basketball gold medal in Athens; star-studded U.S. team takes bronze.
2005 — Michael Memea’s home run in the bottom of the seventh gives West Oahu of Ewa Beach, Hawaii, the Little League World Series title.
2008 — Top-seeded Ana Ivanovic is ousted from the U.S. Open, beaten by 188th-ranked Julie Coin 6-3, 4-6, 6-3 in the second round. Never before in the Open era that began in 1968 had the No. 1 woman lost this early in the tournament.
2011 — California returns the Little League World Series title to the U.S. with a 2-1 victory over Hamamatsu City, Japan.
2014 — Acknowledging he “didn’t get it right” with a two-game suspension for Ravens running back Ray Rice, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell announces tougher penalties for players accused of domestic violence, including six weeks for a first offense and at least a year for a second.
2016 — Ryan Harlost leads Endwell, New York, to the Little League World Series title, striking out eight and limiting South Korea to five hits in six innings in a 2-1 victory.
2021 — Los Angeles Angels pitcher/DH Shohei Otani becomes the first player in team history to have 20 stolen bases and 40 home runs.
2022 — Tour Championship, Men’s Golf, East Lake GC: Irishman Rory McIlroy wins $18m with 1 stroke win over Scottie Scheffler & Im Sung-jae; becomes first 3-time winner of the FedEx Cup.
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Aug. 29
1885 — John L. Sullivan wins the first world heavyweight title under the Marquess of Queensbury rules when he beats Dominic McCaffrey in six rounds. The fight features 3-ounce gloves and 3-minute rounds.
1952 — Dr. Reginald Weir becomes the first black man to compete in the U.S. Tennis Championships, Weir appears two years after Althea Gibson breaks the color barrier in the tournament and loses in four sets to William Stucki.
1962 — A.C.’s Viking, driven by Sanders Russell, wins the Hambletonian Stakes in straight heats.
1968 — Open tennis begins at the U.S. Tennis Championships. Billie Jean King wins the first stadium match at the U.S. Open and amateurs Ray Moore and Jim Osborne have upset wins over professionals. Moore beats No. 10 Andres Gimeno and Osborne defeats Barry MacKay, each in four sets.
1974 — Nineteen-year-old high school basketball star Moses Malone, signs a contract with the Utah Stars of the ABA to become the first player to go directly from high school into major professional basketball.
1978 — The USTA National Tennis Center in Flushing, N.Y. opens. Bjorn Borg beats Bob Hewitt in the first match 6-0, 6-2 in the best-of-three sets.
1987 — Nolan Ryan passes the 200-strikeout barrier for record 11th time.
1987 — Charlie Whittingham becomes the first trainer to surpass 500 stakes wins when he sent Ferdinand to victory in the Cabrillo Handicap at Del Mar Racetrack.
1993 — Laffit Pincay Jr. wins the 8,000th race of his career aboard El Toreo in the seventh race at Del Mar racetrack to become the second thoroughbred jockey to ride 8,000 winners.
1993 — Brandie Burton’s 20-foot birdie putt on the first hole of a sudden-death playoff edges Betsy King for the du Maurier Classic title, the LPGA tour’s final major of the season.
1998 — Toms River, N.J., wins its first Little League World Series with a 12-9 victory over Kashima, Japan. Chris Cardone hits home runs in consecutive at-bats — including the game-deciding two-run shot.
2005 — Russian Svetlana Kuznetsova becomes the first U.S. Open defending women’s champion to fall in the first round, losing 6-3, 6-2 to fellow Russian Ekaterina Bychkova on the first day of the U.S. Open.
2011 — Petra Kvitova becomes the first defending Wimbledon champion to lose in the first round at the U.S. Open, 7-6, 6-3 to Alexandra Dulgheru.
2012 — The USADA claims to have stripped Lance Armstrong of his seven Tour de France titles.
2013 — The NFL agrees to pay $765 million to settle lawsuits from thousands of former players who developed dementia or other concussion-related health problems they say were caused by the on-field violence. The settlement, unprecedented in sports, applies to all past NFL players and spouses of those who are deceased.
2015 — Usain Bolt anchors Jamaica to a fourth successive men’s 4×100-meter title and adds to his record-breaking personal haul of IAAF World Championships gold medals to 11.
2018 — Star quarterback Aaron Rodgers signs NFL record contract extension with the Green Bay Packers; 4 years worth $134m rising to a possible $180m with a record $103m in guarantees.
2018 — Wanheng Menayothin surpasses Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s 50-0 record, beating Pedro Taduran in a unanimous decision to improve to 51-0. The 32-year-old Menayothin (51-0, 18 KOs) won his 10th successful title defense of his WBC minimumweight belt that he won in November 2014.
2022 — St. Louis Cardinals slugger Albert Pujols hits career home run 694 off of major league record 450th different pitcher in 13-4 win over Reds in Cincinnati.
TV SPORTS SUNDAY
NFL PRESEASON | TIME ET | TV |
Tennessee at New Orleans | 2:00pm | NFLN |
Arizona at Denver | 4:30pm | CBS |
New England at Washington | 8:00pm | NBC |
MLB REGULAR SEASON | TIME ET | TV |
Washington at Atlanta | 12:05pm | Roku MASN Bally Sports Southeast |
Colorado at NY Yankees | 1:35pm | Rockies.TV YES |
Houston at Baltimore | 1:35pm | MASN2 SCHN |
Arizona at Boston | 1:35pm | MLBN YurView NESN |
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh | 1:35pm | Bally Sports Ohio ATTSN-PIT |
LA Angels at Toronto | 1:37pm | Bally Sports West Sportsnet |
Chi. Cubs at Miami | 1:40pm | MARQ Bally Sports Florida |
Texas at Cleveland | 1:40pm | MLBN Bally Sports Southwest Bally Sports Great Lakes |
Detroit at Chi. White Sox | 2:10pm | Bally Sports Detroit NBC Sports Chicago |
Philadelphia at Kansas City | 2:10pm | NBC Sports Philadelphia Bally Sports Kansas City |
St. Louis at Minnesota | 2:10pm | Bally Sports Midwest Bally Sports North |
Milwaukee at Oakland | 4:07pm | Bally Sports Wisconsin NBC Sports California |
San Francisco at Seattle | 4:10pm | MLBN NBC Sports Bay ROOT |
NY Mets at San Diego | 4:10pm | SNY Padres.TV |
Tampa Bay at LA Dodgers | 4:10pm | MLBN Bally Sports Sun SNLA |
WNBA | TIME ET | TV |
Las Vegas at Chicago | 12:00pm | CBS |
Los Angeles at Dallas | 4:00pm | NBATV Bally Sports SW Extra |
MOTORSPORTS | TIME ET | TV |
Formula One: Dutch Grand Prix | 9:00am | ESPN |
IMSA Weathertech SportsCar Championship | 12:00pm | USA |
NASCAR Truck: LiUNA 175 | 4:00pm | USA |
IndyCar: BitNile.com Grand Prix of Portland | 5:30pm | USA |
GOLF | TIME ET | TV |
DP World: Danish Championship | 6:00am | GOLF |
LPGA: Women’s British Open | 7:00am | USA |
LPGA: Women’s British Open | 12:00pm | NBC |
PGA: BMW Championship | 12:00pm | GOLF |
SOCCER | TIME ET | TV |
Scottish Premiership: St. Mirren vs Celtic | 7:00am | CBSSN Paramount+ Fubo |
EPL: Wolverhampton Wanderers vs Chelsea | 9:00am | Peacock Fubo |
EPL: AFC Bournemouth vs Newcastle United | 9:00am | Peacock Fubo |
Ligue 1: Lens vs Brest | 9:00am | Fanatiz beIN Sports Fubo |
Bundesliga: Wolfsburg vs Bayern München | 9:30am | ESPN+ Fubo |
La Liga: Real Madrid vs Real Valladolid | 11:00am | ESPN+ Fubo |
Ligue 1: Nice vs Toulouse | 11:00am | Fanatiz beIN Sports Fubo |
Ligue 1: Nantes vs Auxerre | 11:00am | Fanatiz beIN Sports Fubo |
Ligue 1: Strasbourg vs Rennes | 11:00am | Fanatiz beIN Sports Fubo |
EPL: Liverpool vs Brentford | 11:30am | Peacock Fubo |
Bundesliga: St. Pauli vs Heidenheim | 11:30am | ESPN+ Fubo |
Serie A: Fiorentina vs Venezia | 12:30pm | Paramount+ Fubo |
Serie A: Torino vs Atalanta | 12:30pm | Paramount+ Fubo |
NWSL: Washington Spirit vs Kansas City Current | 12:30pm | CBSSN Paramount+ Fubo |
La Liga: Leganés vs Las Palmas | 1:00pm | ESPN+ Fubo |
La Liga: Deportivo Alavés vs Real Betis | 1:15pm | ESPN+ Fubo |
Argentina Primera División: San Lorenzo vs Talleres Córdoba | 1:30pm | Fanatiz Fubo |
Argentina Primera División: Lanús vs Godoy Cruz | 1:30pm | Fanatiz Fubo |
Liga MX: Toluca vs Atlético San Luis | 2:00pm | VIX TUDN |
Serie A: Napoli vs Bologna | 2:45pm | CBSSN Paramount+ Fubo |
Serie A: Roma vs Empoli | 2:45pm | Paramount+ Fubo |
Ligue 1: Olympique Marseille vs Reims | 2:45pm | Fanatiz beIN Sports Fubo |
Canadian Premier League: Valour vs Vancouver FC | 3:00pm | FOX Soccer Plus Fubo |
La Liga: Atlético Madrid vs Girona | 3:30pm | ESPN+ Fubo |
Argentina Primera División: Racing Club vs Independiente | 4:00pm | Fanatiz Paramount+ Fubo |
Argentina Primera División: River Plate vs Newell’s Old Boys | 7:30pm | Fanatiz Paramount+ Fubo |
NWSL: Seattle Reign vs North Carolina Courage | 10:00pm | ESPN2 ESPN+ Fubo |
TENNIS | TIME ET | TV |
US Open | 1:00pm | ESPN2 |