CENTRAL INDIANA BASEBALL SECTIONAL SCORES MONDAY

WES DEL 4 COWAN 3

CASCADE 8 RITTER 2

GREENWOOD 5 MARTINSVILLE 3

GREENWOOD CHRISTIAN 6 INDY LUTHERAN 2

BROWNSBURG 13 AVON 9

HERITAGE CHRISTIAN 10 IRVINGTON PREP 0

HERITAGE CHRISTIAN 12 PARK TUDOR 2

FRANKLIN CENTRAL 12 RONCALLI 2

NORTH PUTNAM 6 GREENCASTLE 3

TRI WEST 1 LEBANON 0

BISHOP CHATARD 12 HAMILTON HEIGHTS 1

TERRE HAUTE NORTH 8 DECATUR CENTRAL 7

HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN 3 NOBLESVILLE 1

CATHEDRAL 7 NORTH CENTRAL 3

NEW PALESTINE 2 MT. VERNON 0

BETHESDA CHRISTIAN 12 INDIANA DEAF 2

PARK TUDOR 5 SCECINA 4

CENTER GROVE 4 BLOOMINGTON SOUTH 1

DALEVILLE 12 TRI-CENTRAL 2

HAGERSTOWN 2 SHENANDOAH 1

WINCHESTER 1 LAPEL 0

BEECH GROVE 15 PURDUE POLY 1

BLUE RIVER 2 UNION CITY 1

NEW CASTLE 3 DELTA 2

COVENANT CHRISTIAN 5 CASCADE 1

WES DEL 2 DALEVILLE 1

CONNERSVILLE 7 FRNAKLIN COUNTY 4

BROWNSBURG 12 TERRE HAUTE NORTH 2

CENTER GROVE 16 GREENWOOD 0

FULL SCOREBOARD: https://www.maxpreps.com/in/baseball/scores/?date=5/29/2023

CENTRAL INDIANA SOFTBALL REGIONAL BRACKETS

4A

HTTPS://WWW.MAXPREPS.COM/TOURNAMENT/TLGKE-XPEE2A0WQB9TL3HA/ZLV3ZUXPEE2A0WQB9TL3HA/SOFTBALL-23/2022-23-IHSAA-CLASS-4A-SOFTBALL-STATE-TOURNAMENT-CLASS-4A-STATE-CHAMPIONSHIP.HTM

3A

HTTPS://WWW.MAXPREPS.COM/TOURNAMENT/ZLV4AUXPEE2A0WQB9TL3HA/EF0RUEXPEE2A0WQB9TL3HA/SOFTBALL-23/2022-23-IHSAA-CLASS-3A-SOFTBALL-STATE-TOURNAMENT-CLASS-3A-STATE-CHAMPIONSHIP.HTM

2A

HTTPS://WWW.MAXPREPS.COM/TOURNAMENT/FLVGVEXPEE2A0WQB9TL3HA/KE6T6UXPEE2A0WQB9TL3HA/SOFTBALL-23/2022-23-IHSAA-CLASS-2A-SOFTBALL-STATE-TOURNAMENT-CLASS-2A-STATE-CHAMPIONSHIP.HTM

1A

HTTPS://WWW.MAXPREPS.COM/TOURNAMENT/LKUMW-XPEE2A0WQB9TL3HA/QFWKY-XPEE2A0WQB9TL3HA/SOFTBALL-23/2022-23-IHSAA-CLASS-1A-SOFTBALL-STATE-TOURNAMENT-CLASS-1A-STATE-CHAMPIONSHIP.HTM

INDIANA GIRLS TENNIS STATE QUARTERFINALS

SULLIVAN VS. FISHERS

DELTA VS. CARMEL

FRANKLIN VS. CASTLE

SOUTH BEND ST. JOSEPH VS. JASPER

INDIANA BOYS TRACK STATE FINALS JUNE 2

ORDER OF EVENTS
3:00 P.M. – POLE VAULT, LONG JUMP AND DISCUS
3:30 P.M. – HIGH JUMP; SHOT PUT
4:15 P.M. – 3200 M RELAY FINALS
5:00 P.M. – 100 M DASH TRIALS
5:15 P.M. – 110 M HIGH HURDLE TRIALS
5:40 P.M. – 200 M DASH TRIALS
6:10 P.M. – OPENING CEREMONIES
6:15 P.M. – 110 M HIGH HURDLES
6:25 P.M. – 100 M DASH
6:35 P.M. – 1600 M RUN
6:45 P.M. – 400 M RELAY
7:05 P.M. – 400 M DASH
7:20 P.M. – 300 M INT. HURDLES
7:45 P.M. – 800 M RUN
8:05 P.M. – 200 M DASH
8:15 P.M. – 3200 M RUN
8:30 P.M. – 1600 M RELAY

ADVANCEMENT FROM STATE MEET TRIALS TO FINALS
1.   110 AND 100 HURDLES, 100; 200
      A.   3 HEATS WITH 9
      B.   1ST, 2ND FROM EACH HEAT PLUS NEXT 3 BEST TIMES.
2.   400 RELAY, 1600 RELAY, 400, 300 HURDLES
      A.   NO TRIALS
      B.   3 SECTIONS TIMED; 9 PER SECTION
3.   3200 RELAY, 800
      A.   NO TRIALS
      B.   2 SECTIONS; 1 WITH 13, 1 WITH 14
4.   1600 AND 3200
      A.   NO TRIALS
      B.   1 RACE TIMED
5.   FIELD EVENTS
      A.   TOP 10 QUALIFY PLUS TIES

 PERFORMANCE LISTS: HTTPS://WWW.IHSAA.ORG/SITES/DEFAULT/FILES/DOCUMENTS/2022-23%20BTR%20STATE%20PERFORMANCE.PDF

INDIANA GIRLS TRACK STATE FINALS JUNE 3

ORDER OF EVENTS
3:00 P.M. – POLE VAULT, LONG JUMP AND DISCUS
3:30 P.M. – HIGH JUMP; SHOT PUT
4:15 P.M. – 3200 M RELAY FINALS
5:00 P.M. – 100 M DASH TRIALS
5:15 P.M. – 100 M HIGH HURDLE TRIALS
5:40 P.M. – 200 M DASH TRIALS
6:10 P.M. – OPENING CEREMONIES
6:15 P.M. – 100 M HIGH HURDLES
6:25 P.M. – 100 M DASH
6:35 P.M. – 1600 M RUN
6:45 P.M. – 400 M RELAY
7:05 P.M. – 400 M DASH
7:20 P.M. – 300 M LOW HURDLES
7:45 P.M. – 800 M RUN
8:05 P.M. – 200 M DASH
8:15 P.M. – 3200 M RUN
8:30 P.M. – 1600 M RELAY

ADVANCEMENT FROM STATE MEET TRIALS TO FINALS
1.   110 AND 100 HURDLES, 100; 200
      A.   3 HEATS WITH 9
      B.   1ST, 2ND FROM EACH HEAT PLUS NEXT 3 BEST TIMES.
2.   400 RELAY, 1600 RELAY, 400, 300 HURDLES
      A.   NO TRIALS
      B.   3 SECTIONS TIMED; 9 PER SECTION
3.   3200 RELAY, 800
      A.   NO TRIALS
      B.   2 SECTIONS; 1 WITH 13, 1 WITH 14
4.   1600 AND 3200
      A.   NO TRIALS
      B.   1 RACE TIMED
5.   FIELD EVENTS
      A.   TOP 10 QUALIFY PLUS TIES

PERFORMANCE LIST: HTTPS://WWW.IHSAA.ORG/SITES/DEFAULT/FILES/DOCUMENTS/2022-23%20GTR%20STATE%20PERFORMANCE.PDF

INDIANA BOYS GOLF SECTIONALS, JUNE 2,3,5

1. VALPARAISO (11) | FOREST PARK GOLF COURSE | FRI, 9 AM CT 
BOONE GROVE, CHESTERTON, HAMMOND BISHOP NOLL, HAMMOND CENTRAL, HAMMOND MORTON, HOBART, PORTAGE, VALPARAISO, WHEELER, RIVER FOREST, WHITING

2. LAKE CENTRAL (13) | PALMIRA GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB | FRI, 8 AM CT 
ANDREAN, CALUMET, CROWN POINT, GRIFFITH, HANOVER CENTRAL, HIGHLAND, ILLIANA CHRISTIAN, LAKE CENTRAL, LOWELL, MERRILLVILLE, MUNSTER, KANKAKEE VALLEY, DEMOTTE CHRISTIAN

3. LAPORTE (11) | BEECHWOOD GOLF COURSE | FRI, 8:30 AM CT 
GLENN, KNOX, LAPORTE, MARQUETTE CATHOLIC, MICHIGAN CITY, MORGAN TOWNSHIP, NEW PRAIRIE, NORTH JUDSON-SAN PIERRE, SOUTH CENTRAL (UNION MILLS), TRI-TOWNSHIP, WESTVILLE

4. SOUTH BEND RILEY (12) | ERSKINE GOLF COURSE | MON, 9 AM ET 
ELKHART, JIMTOWN, LAVILLE, MISHAWAKA, MISHAWAKA MARIAN, PENN, SOUTH BEND ADAMS, SOUTH BEND CLAY, SOUTH BEND RILEY, SOUTH BEND SAINT JOSEPH, SOUTH BEND WASHINGTON, TRINITY SCHOOL AT GREENLAWN

5. LOGANSPORT (12) | DYKEMAN PARK GOLF COURSE | FRI, 9:30 AM ET 
CASTON, FRONTIER, LOGANSPORT, NORTH NEWTON, PIONEER, ROCHESTER COMMUNITY, RENSSELAER CENTRAL, SOUTH NEWTON, TRI-COUNTY, TWIN LAKES, WEST CENTRAL, WINAMAC COMMUNITY

6. NORTHRIDGE (12) | MEADOW VALLEY GOLF CLUB | FRI, 8 AM ET 
BREMEN, BETHANY CHRISTIAN, CONCORD, FAIRFIELD, GOSHEN, LAKELAND, NORTHRIDGE, NORTHWOOD, PRAIRIE HEIGHTS, WEST NOBLE, WESTVIEW, ELKHART CHRISTIAN ACADEMY

7. EAST NOBLE (12) | NOBLE HAWK GOLF LINKS – KENDALLVILLE | FRI, 8:30 AM ET 
ANGOLA, CARROLL (FORT WAYNE), CENTRAL NOBLE, CHURUBUSCO, COLUMBIA CITY, DEKALB, EAST NOBLE, EASTSIDE, FORT WAYNE NORTHROP, FREMONT, GARRETT, LEO

8. WARSAW (12) | ROZELLA FORD GOLF CLUB | FRI, 8 AM ET 
CULVER ACADEMIES, CULVER COMMUNITY, HUNTINGTON NORTH, LAKELAND CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, MANCHESTER, NORTHFIELD, PLYMOUTH, TIPPECANOE VALLEY, TRITON, WARSAW COMMUNITY, WAWASEE, WHITKO

9. FORT WAYNE CANTERBURY (13) | CHESTNUT HILLS GOLF CLUB | FRI, 8:30 AM ET 
FORT WAYNE BISHOP DWENGER, FORT WAYNE BISHOP LUERS, FORT WAYNE BLACKHAWK CHRISTIAN, FORT WAYNE CANTERBURY, FORT WAYNE CONCORDIA LUTHERAN, FORT WAYNE NORTH SIDE, FORT WAYNE SNIDER, FORT WAYNE SOUTH SIDE, FORT WAYNE WAYNE, HERITAGE, HOMESTEAD, NEW HAVEN, WOODLAN

10. PERU (11) | ROCK HOLLOW GOLF CLUB | MON, 9 AM ET 
EASTERN (GREENTOWN), KOKOMO, LEWIS CASS, MACONAQUAH, NORTH MIAMI, NORTHWESTERN, PERU, SOUTHWOOD, TRI-CENTRAL, WABASH, WESTERN

11. LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON (12) | BATTLE GROUND GOLF CLUB | FRI, 9 AM ET 
BENTON CENTRAL, CARROLL (FLORA), CLINTON CENTRAL, CLINTON PRAIRIE, DELPHI COMMUNITY, FAITH CHRISTIAN, HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE), LAFAYETTE CENTRAL CATHOLIC, LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON, MCCUTCHEON, ROSSVILLE, WEST LAFAYETTE

12. WESTFIELD (10) | ULEN GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB | MON, 9 AM ET 
BETHESDA CHRISTIAN, CARMEL, FRANKFORT, GUERIN CATHOLIC, LEBANON, SHERIDAN, UNIVERSITY, WESTERN BOONE, WESTFIELD, ZIONSVILLE

13. ATTICA (11) | HARRISON HILLS GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB | FRI, 9 AM ET 
ATTICA, COVINGTON, CRAWFORDSVILLE, FOUNTAIN CENTRAL, NORTH MONTGOMERY, NORTH PUTNAM, PARKE HERITAGE, SEEGER, SOUTH VERMILLION, SOUTHMONT, TRI-WEST HENDRICKS

14. INDIANAPOLIS CRISPUS ATTUCKS (9) | SOUTH GROVE GOLF COURSE | MON, 9 AM ET 
BEN DAVIS, BREBEUF JESUIT PREPARATORY, COVENANT CHRISTIAN (INDPLS), DECATUR CENTRAL, INDIANAPOLIS CARDINAL RITTER, PIKE, PURDUE POLYTECHNIC, RIVERSIDE, SPEEDWAY

15. MARTINSVILLE (11) | FOXCLIFF GOLF COURSE | MON, 9:30 AM ET 
AVON, BROWNSBURG, CASCADE, CLOVERDALE, DANVILLE COMMUNITY, MARTINSVILLE, MONROVIA, MOORESVILLE, PLAINFIELD, SOUTH PUTNAM, GREENCASTLE

16. NORWELL (12) | TIMBER RIDGE GOLF CLUB | FRI, 9 AM ET 
ADAMS CENTRAL, BELLMONT, BLACKFORD, BLUFFTON, EASTBROOK, MADISON-GRANT, MARION, MISSISSINEWA, NORWELL, OAK HILL, SOUTH ADAMS, SOUTHERN WELLS

17. INDIANAPOLIS CATHEDRAL (11) | MAPLE CREEK GOLF CLUB | FRI, 8 AM ET 
HERITAGE CHRISTIAN, INDIANAPOLIS ARSENAL TECHNICAL, INDIANAPOLIS BISHOP CHATARD, INDIANAPOLIS CATHEDRAL, INDIANAPOLIS SCECINA MEMORIAL, INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL OF INDIANA, LAWRENCE CENTRAL, LAWRENCE NORTH, NORTH CENTRAL (INDIANAPOLIS), PARK TUDOR, WARREN CENTRAL

18. NOBLESVILLE (12) | HARBOUR TREES GOLF CLUB | MON, 9 AM ET 
ALEXANDRIA MONROE, ANDERSON, DALEVILLE, ELWOOD COMMUNITY, FISHERS, FRANKTON, HAMILTON HEIGHTS, HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN, LAPEL, NOBLESVILLE, PENDLETON HEIGHTS, TIPTON

19. MONROE CENTRAL (11) | HICKORY HILLS GOLF COURSE | MON, 9 AM ET 
COWAN, DELTA, JAY COUNTY, MONROE CENTRAL, MUNCIE BURRIS, MUNCIE CENTRAL, UNION CITY, WAPAHANI, WES-DEL, WINCHESTER COMMUNITY, YORKTOWN

20. GREENFIELD-CENTRAL (12) | HAWK’S TAIL OF GREENFIELD | MON, 9 AM ET 
BLUE RIVER VALLEY, EASTERN HANCOCK, GREENFIELD-CENTRAL, KNIGHTSTOWN, MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE), NEW CASTLE, NEW PALESTINE, SHENANDOAH, TRITON CENTRAL, TRI, UNION (MODOC)

21. TERRE HAUTE NORTH (11) | HULMAN LINKS | MON, 9 AM ET 
BLOOMFIELD, EASTERN GREENE, LINTON-STOCKTON, NORTH CENTRAL (FARMERSBURG), NORTHVIEW, SHAKAMAK, SULLIVAN, TERRE HAUTE NORTH VIGO, TERRE HAUTE SOUTH VIGO, WEST VIGO, WHITE RIVER VALLEY

22. VINCENNES LINCOLN (13) | CYPRESS HILLS GOLF CLUB OF VINCENNES | FRI, 9 AM ET 
BARR-REEVE, GIBSON SOUTHERN, NORTH DAVIESS, NORTH KNOX, PIKE CENTRAL, PRINCETON COMMUNITY, SOUTH KNOX, TECUMSEH, VINCENNES LINCOLN, VINCENNES RIVET, WASHINGTON, WASHINGTON CATHOLIC, WOOD MEMORIAL

23. EVANSVILLE MATER DEI (13) | HELFRICH HILLS GOLF COURSE | THURS, 8 AM CT 
BOONVILLE, CASTLE, EVANSVILLE BOSSE, EVANSVILLE CENTRAL, EVANSVILLE CHRISTIAN, EVANSVILLE F.J. REITZ, EVANSVILLE HARRISON, EVANSVILLE MATER DEI, EVANSVILLE NORTH, EVANSVILLE REITZ MEMORIAL, MT. VERNON, NORTH POSEY

24. JASPER (13) | SULTAN’S RUN GOLF CLUB | THURS, 10 AM ET 
CRAWFORD COUNTY, FOREST PARK, HERITAGE HILLS, NORTHEAST DUBOIS, JASPER, LOOGOOTEE, ORLEANS, PAOLI, PERRY CENTRAL, SOUTH SPENCER, SOUTHRIDGE, SPRINGS VALLEY, TELL CITY

25. BLOOMINGTON NORTH (13) | CASCADES GOLF COURSE | MON, 8 AM ET 
BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE, BLOOMINGTON NORTH, BLOOMINGTON SOUTH, BROWN COUNTY, BROWNSTOWN CENTRAL, EDGEWOOD, MEDORA, MITCHELL, OWEN VALLEY, SALEM, SEYMOUR, TRINITY LUTHERAN, WEST WASHINGTON

26. FRANKLIN COMMUNITY (13) | THE LEGENDS GOLF CLUB | MON, 8 AM ET 
CENTER GROVE, EDINBURGH, FRANKLIN CENTRAL, FRANKLIN COMMUNITY, GREENWOOD CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, GREENWOOD COMMUNITY, INDIAN CREEK, INDIANAPOLIS LUTHERAN, PERRY MERIDIAN, RONCALLI, SOUTHPORT, WHITELAND COMMUNITY, BEECH GROVE

27. RICHMOND (10) | ELKS COUNTRY CLUB | MON, 8 AM ET 
CAMBRIDGE CITY LINCOLN, CENTERVILLE, CONNERSVILLE, FRANKLIN COUNTY, HAGERSTOWN, NORTHEASTERN, RICHMOND, RUSHVILLE CONSOLIDATED, UNION COUNTY, OLDENBURG ACADEMY

28. GREENSBURG (14) | GREENSBURG COUNTRY CLUB | FRI, 8:30 AM ET 
BATESVILLE, COLUMBUS EAST, COLUMBUS NORTH, EAST CENTRAL, GREENSBURG, HAUSER, JAC-CEN-DEL, MILAN, NORTH DECATUR, SHELBYVILLE, SOUTH DECATUR, SOUTH RIPLEY, SOUTHWESTERN (SHELBYVILLE), WALDRON

29. MADISON CONSOLIDATED (13) | SUNRISE GOLF COURSE | MON, 11 AM ET 
AUSTIN, CHARLESTOWN, HENRYVILLE, JENNINGS COUNTY, MADISON CONSOLIDATED, NEW WASHINGTON, RISING SUN, SCOTTSBURG, SHAWE MEMORIAL, SOUTHWESTERN (HANOVER), SWITZERLAND COUNTY, LAWRENCEBURG, SOUTH DEARBORN

30. PROVIDENCE (14) | COVERED BRIDGE GOLF CLUB | MON, 8 AM ET 
BORDEN, CHRISTIAN ACADEMY OF INDIANA, CLARKSVILLE, CORYDON CENTRAL, EASTERN (PEKIN), FLOYD CENTRAL, JEFFERSONVILLE, LANESVILLE, NEW ALBANY, NORTH HARRISON, PROVIDENCE, SILVER CREEK, SOUTH CENTRAL (ELIZABETH), CROTHERSVILLE

NBA PLAYOFFS

MIAMI 103 BOSTON 84

NHL PLAYOFFS

VEGAS 6 DALLAS 0

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

KANSAS CITY 7 ST. LOUIS 0

CHICAGO CUBS 1 TAMPA BAY 0

OAKLAND 7 ATLANTA 2

CLEVELAND 5 BALTIMORE 0

MINNESOTA 7 HOUSTON 5 (10)

LA ANGELS 6 CHICAGO WHITE SOX 4

NY YANKEES 10 SEATTLE 4

ARIZONA 7 COLORADO 5

SAN FRANCISCO 14 PITTSBURGH 4

LA DODGERS 6 WASHINGTON 1

FINAL STAT LINES: HTTP://HOSTED.STATS.COM/MLB/SCOREBOARD.ASP

MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL SCORES

INDIANAPOLIS 12 TOLEDO 6

BOX SCORE: HTTPS://WWW.MILB.COM/GAMEDAY/MUD-HENS-VS-INDIANS/2023/05/29/723588#GAME_STATE=FINAL,LOCK_STATE=FINAL,GAME_TAB=BOX,GAME=723588

COLLEGE BASEBALL TOURNEY MATCH-UPS

WHO ARE THE TOP 16 SEEDS?

  1. WAKE FOREST (47-10)
  2. FLORIDA (44-14)
  3. ARKANSAS (41-16)
  4. CLEMSON (43-17)
  5. LSU (43-15)
  6. VANDERBILT (41-18)
  7. VIRGINIA (45-12)
  8. STANFORD (38-16)
  9. MIAMI (FLORIDA) (40-19)
  10. COASTAL CAROLINA (39-19)
  11. OKLAHOMA STATE (41-18)
  12. KENTUCKY (36-18)
  13. AUBURN (34-21-1)
  14. INDIANA STATE (42-15)
  15. SOUTH CAROLINA (39-19)
  16. ALABAMA (40-19)

WINSTON-SALEM REGIONAL

FRIDAY

MARYLAND VS. NORTHEASTERN, 1 P.M. (ESPN+)

NO. 1 WAKE FOREST VS. GEORGE MASON, 7 P.M. (ESPN+)

GAINESVILLE REGIONAL

FRIDAY

UCONN VS. TEXAS TECH, 12 P.M. (ESPNU)

NO. 2 FLORIDA VS. FLORIDA A&M, 5:30 P.M. (ESPN+)

FAYETTEVILLE REGIONAL

FRIDAY

NO. 3 ARKANSAS VS. SANTA CLARA, 3 P.M. (ESPN+)

TCU VS. ARIZONA, 9 P.M. (ESPNU)

CLEMSON REGIONAL

FRIDAY

NO. 4 CLEMSON VS. LIPSCOMB, 1 P.M. (ESPN+)

TENNESSEE VS. CHARLOTTE, 6 P.M., (ESPNU)

BATON ROUGE REGIONAL

FRIDAY

NO. 5 LSU VS. TULANE 3 P.M. (ESPNU)

OREGON STATE VS. SAM HOUSTON 8 P.M. (ESPN+)

NASHVILLE REGIONAL

FRIDAY

OREGON VS. XAVIER, 1 P.M. (ESPN+)

NO. 6 VANDERBILT VS. EASTERN ILLINOIS, 8 P.M. (SEC NETWORK)

CHARLOTTESVILLE REGIONAL

FRIDAY

NO. 7 VIRGINIA VS. ARMY WEST POINT, 12 P.M. (ESPN+)

EAST CAROLINA VS. OKLAHOMA, 7 P.M. (ESPN2)

STANFORD REGIONAL

FRIDAY

NO. 8 STANFORD VS. SAN JOSE STATE, 5 P.M. (ESPN+)

TEXAS A&M VS. CAL STATE FULLERTON, 10 P.M. (ESPN2)

CORAL GABLES REGIONAL

FRIDAY

TEXAS VS. LOUISIANA, 2 P.M. (LONGHORN NETWORK)

NO. 9 MIAMI VS. MAINE, 7 P.M. (ESPN+)

CONWAY REGIONAL

FRIDAY

DUKE VS. UNC WILMINGTON, 1 P.M. (ESPN+)

NO. 10 COASTAL CAROLINA VS. RIDER ,7 P.M. (ESPN+)

STILLWATER REGIONAL

FRIDAY

DALLAS BAPTIST VS. WASHINGTON, 1 P.M. (ESPN+)

NO. 11 OKLAHOMA STATE VS. ORAL ROBERTS, 7 P.M. (ESPN+)

LEXINGTON REGIONAL

FRIDAY

NO. 12 KENTUCKY VS. BALL STATE, 12 P.M. (SEC NETWORK)

WEST VIRGINIA VS. INDIANA, 7 P.M. (ESPN+)

AUBURN REGIONAL

FRIDAY

SOUTHERN MISS VS. SAMFORD, 2 P.M. (ESPN+)

NO. 13 AUBURN VS. PENN, 7 P.M. (ESPN+)

TERRE HAUTE REGIONAL

FRIDAY

NO. 14 INDIANA STATE VS. WRIGHT STATE, 1 P.M. (ESPN+)

IOWA VS. NORTH CAROLINA, 7 P.M. (ACC NETWORK)

COLUMBIA REGIONAL

FRIDAY

CAMPBELL VS. NC STATE, 1 P.M. (ACC NETWORK)

NO. 15 SOUTH CAROLINA VS. CENTRAL CONNECTICUT STATE, 7 P.M. (ESPN+)

TUSCALOOSA REGIONAL

FRIDAY

BOSTON COLLEGE VS. TROY, 3 P.M. (ESPN+)

NO. 16 ALABAMA VS. NICHOLLS, 7 P.M. (ESPN+)

COLLEGE SOFTBALL WORLD SERIES MATCH-UPS

ALL TIMES ET

THURSDAY:

GAME 1: NO. 5 ALABAMA VS NO. 4 TENNESSEE, NOON, ESPN
GAME 2: NO. 9 STANFORD VS. NO. 1 OKLAHOMA 2:30 P.M., ESPN
GAME 3: NO. 6 OKLAHOMA STATE VS. NO. 3 FLORIDA STATE, 7 P.M., ESPN
GAME 4: NO. 15 UTAH VS. NO. 7 WASHINGTON, 9:30 P.M., ESPN

FRIDAY:

GAME 5: LOSER GAME 1 VS. LOSER GAME 2, 7 P.M., ESPN
GAME 6: LOSER GAME 3 VS. LOSER GAME 4, 9:30 P.M., ESPN

SATURDAY:

GAME 7: WINNER GAME 1 VS. WINNER GAME 2, 3 P.M., ABC
GAME 8: WINNER GAME 3 VS. WINNER GAME 4, 7 P.M., ESPN

JUNE 4:

GAME 9: WINNER GAME 5 VS. LOSER GAME 8, 3 P.M.
GAME 10: WINNER GAME 6 VS. LOSER GAME 7, 7 P.M.

JUNE 5:

GAME 11: WINNER GAME 9 VS. WINNER GAME 7, NOON
GAME 12: REMATCH GAME 11 (IF NECESSARY), 2:30 P.M.
GAME 13: WINNER GAME 10 VS. WINNER GAME 8, 7 P.M.
GAME 14: REMATCH GAME 13 (IF NECESSARY), 9:30 P.M.

CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES:

GAME 1: JUNE 7, 8 P.M.
GAME 2: JUNE 8, 7:30 P.M.
GAME 3: JUNE 9 (IF NECESSARY), 8 P.M.

TOP NATIONAL HEADLINES

HEAT HAMMER CELTICS IN GAME 7 TO THWART COMEBACK, HEAD TO FINALS

Jimmy Butler scored 28 points, Caleb Martin added 26, and the Miami Heat foiled the Boston Celtics’ hopes of a 3-0 series comeback on their own floor to win Game 7, 103-84.

The Heat advance to the NBA Finals where they will travel to face the Nuggets in Denver on Thursday for Game 1. It’s Miami’s second trip to the Finals in the last four years, following its 2020 run in the Orlando bubble when the club fell short against the Los Angeles Lakers.

Butler, who also contributed seven rebounds, six assists, and three steals in the win, was awarded the Larry Bird Trophy as the Most Valuable Player of the Eastern Conference finals. He beat out Martin by a single vote among the nine-person panel.

“Nobody’s satisfied,” Butler said postgame. “We haven’t done anything. We don’t play just to win the Eastern Conference, we play to win the whole thing.”

Boston was attempting to become the first team in 151 tries to win an NBA playoff series after losing the first three games. The Celtics managed to force Monday’s winner-take-all contest but failed to find their offensive rhythm all game. Joe Mazzulla’s squad shot just 32-of-82 (39%) from the field, including 9-of-42 from distance after going 4-of-21 in the first half.

Jaylen Brown led the Celtics on a quiet night offensively, filling in with 19 points, eight rebounds, and five assists but shooting 1-of-9 from deep. Derrick White, whose last-gasp tip-in won Game 6 for Boston, had 18 points on 5-of-12 shooting.

Celtics star Jayson Tatum rolled his ankle on his team’s first possession of the game and appeared hobbled by the ailment all contest, grimacing and limping throughout. He finished with 14 points, 11 rebounds, and four assists but struggled to find his stroke, shooting 1-of-4 from three and 5-of-13 overall.

Brown, who will be eligible for a super-max extension this summer, shouldered the blame after trying to lead his team following Tatum’s early injury.

“Just a terrible game when my team needed me most,” Brown said, according to MassLive’s Souichi Terada. “JT hurt his ankle first play of the game. You could see it swelling up. He couldn’t move out there, it was tough for him.

“My team turned to me to make plays, etc., and I came up short. I failed. It’s tough.”

Miami is just the second 8-seed to reach the Finals, joining the 1999 New York Knicks, who did so after a lockout-shortened 50-game regular season. The Heat, however, needed to progress through the play-in tournament to make the first round.

REPORT: 76ERS HIRING NICK NURSE AS NEW HEAD COACH

The Philadelphia 76ers are hiring former Toronto Raptors head coach Nick Nurse as the team’s new bench boss, sources told ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski on Monday.

Nurse, an NBA champion in 2019, will take over from former lead man Doc Rivers, who was let go after Philadelphia blew a 3-2 second-round lead to the Boston Celtics earlier in May.

The 55-year-old was fired by the Toronto Raptors in April after the team failed to make it out of the play-in tournament. Nurse went 227-163 with Toronto in his first NBA head coaching gig but won just one playoff series outside of the title run in his debut season.

The 76ers and 2023 Most Valuable Player Joel Embiid have won at least 51 games in each of the last four 82-game seasons but have failed to make it past the second round.

Nurse and Embiid’s pairing could prove slightly awkward at first thanks to their recent history. With Toronto, Nurse eliminated Embiid and the 76ers in the East semifinals during the teams’ 2019 championship playoff run before Philadelphia returned the favor in the 2022 first round.

The 76ers star center has criticized Nurse on multiple occasions for complaining to officials. This postseason, he unexpectedly namedropped him by saying the Brooklyn Nets and Jacque Vaughn “took the Nick Nurse route of begging for free throws.” Nurse has never publicly addressed the remark.

Philadelphia has multiple offseason questions to answer as it aims to remain a title competitor around Embiid. That mainly includes the status of James Harden, who can decline his player option and become an unrestricted free agent this summer.

Nurse reportedly pulled out of the running for the Milwaukee Bucks’ coaching job Saturday, according to The Athletic’s Shams Charania. Milwaukee instead picked Nurse’s former Raptors assistant Adrian Griffin.

MLB NEWS

MLB ROUNDUP: CUBS COOL RAYS WITH MARCUS STROMAN’S ONE-HITTER

Marcus Stroman tossed a one-hitter for his fourth career complete game to dominate the Tampa Bay Rays, and the host Chicago Cubs snapped a four-game losing streak with a 1-0 victory Monday afternoon.

Wander Franco ended Stroman’s no-hit bid in the seventh with a flared single to left field. Brandon Lowe followed with the Rays’ only walk of the game, but Stroman got Randy Arozarena to fly out and Josh Lowe to ground into an inning-ending double play. Stroman (5-4) threw 105 pitches and struck out eight.

The Cubs scored their lone run in the fourth inning. Seiya Suzuki hit an infield single and reached second on third baseman Taylor Walls’ throwing error on the play. He eventually scored on Mike Tauchman’s sacrifice fly to right field.

Stroman’s gem overshadowed the performance of Tampa Bay rookie Taj Bradley (3-2). Making his sixth major league start since debuting April 12, Bradley allowed the unearned run, plus Chicago’s only three hits and a walk, while striking out eight in 5 2/3 innings.

Royals 7, Cardinals 0

Mike Mayers, Josh Staumont, Taylor Clarke and Amir Garrett combined to throw a two-hitter as visiting Kansas City blanked St. Louis.

The Royals used Staumont as the opener in a bullpen game. He set the Cardinals down in order in the first inning, then Mayers (1-0) came on to retire the next 18 batters to take a perfect game into the eighth inning. The Cardinals finally broke through against Mayers when Nolan Arenado and Willson Contreras hit singles to open the eighth.

Vinnie Pasquantino and Michael Massey each drove in two runs for the Royals, who won their second straight game after losing seven of their previous eight.

Guardians 5, Orioles 0

Rookie Logan Allen threw seven shutout innings with 10 strikeouts as Cleveland defeated host Baltimore.

Allen (2-2), a left-hander, threw 103 pitches, allowing three hits and issuing two walks. He notched his first victory in more than a month since winning against Miami in his major league debut. Enyel De Los Santos and Trevor Stephan each pitched an inning of relief to complete the combined five-hitter.

Cam Gallagher drove in two runs and Will Brennan went 3-for-4 as Cleveland won for the third time in its last four games. Steven Kwan added two hits, including a run-scoring double. Baltimore righty Tyler Wells (3-2) took the loss despite giving up only one run in six innings. The Orioles have lost three of their last four games.

Rangers 5, Tigers 0

Corey Seager homered and drove in four runs and four pitchers combined on a shutout as visiting Texas blanked Detroit.

Texas starter Nathan Eovaldi (7-2), who has won six of his last eight starts, gave up four hits and three walks in five innings. Brock Burke pitched one inning of relief, Jonathan Hernandez took care of the seventh and eighth, and Jose Leclerc finished it off against Detroit, which totaled five hits.

Marcus Semien extended his hitting streak to 18 games with a ninth-inning single. Leody Taveras added three hits and scored a run. Detroit starter Matthew Boyd (3-4) was charged with five runs and five hits in six-plus innings.

Giants 14, Pirates 4

Patrick Bailey homered and Mitch Haniger doubled twice in a 13-batter, eight-run seventh inning, helping San Francisco separate from visiting Pittsburgh in the opener of a three-game series.

Austin Slater hit his first home run of the year and joined Bailey with four RBIs for the Giants, who have won 11 of their last 14 games. Bailey, Haniger, Slater, Brandon Crawford and Casey Schmitt had three hits apiece for the Giants, who totaled 18, including eight for extra bases.

The first of Jack Suwinski’s two home runs on the day opened a two-run top of the seventh for the Pirates, trimming a five-run deficit to 6-3 before the San Francisco onslaught.

Twins 7, Astros 5 (10 innings)

Ryan Jeffers lined the first pitch of the 10th inning into the Crawford Boxes in left field and Minnesota won the opener of its three-game series with host Houston.

Jeffers’ third home run of the season came against Astros reliever Bryan Abreu (2-1) and plated Max Kepler, who began the frame on second base. The Twins scored three runs off the Houston bullpen over the final two innings. Jhoan Duran (1-1) worked two scoreless innings for the Twins.

Astros second baseman Jose Altuve socked his second home run of the season — and second in as many days — with two outs and two strikes in the seventh, delivering a grand slam off Twins reliever Brock Stewart that erased a three-run deficit.

Diamondbacks 7, Rockies 5

Pavin Smith belted a three-run homer to cap a five-run second inning and help Arizona beat Colorado in the opener of their four-game series in Phoenix.

Lourdes Gurriel Jr. also homered, Emmanuel Rivera had two hits and two runs and Jake McCarthy added two hits and two RBIs for Arizona, which has won six of its past nine. Ryan McMahon tied his career high with four hits for Colorado. He homered, tripled, singled twice and drove in three runs.

Diamondbacks starter Ryne Nelson (2-2) allowed five runs and eight hits in five innings. He struck out one and walked three. Drey Jameson followed with 3 2/3 innings of scoreless relief before Andrew Chafin got the final out with a runner aboard for his eighth save of the season.

NASCAR NEWS

BLANEY WINS COCA-COLA 600 AT CHARLOTTE TO END WINLESS DROUGHT

CONCORD, N.C. (AP) — Jumping into the crowd to celebrate a big race victory appears to have become a Team Penske thing.

Ryan Blaney held off William Byron to win the rescheduled Coca-Cola 600 on Monday at Charlotte Speedway, giving team owner Roger Penske a sweep of the Memorial Day weekend’s top races in the United States.

Josef Newgarden won a record-extending 19th Indianapolis 500 on Sunday for Team Penske. Like Newgarden, Blaney jumped out of his car and climbed into the crowd to celebrate the win with fans.

A few moments later, he tried to hold back tears with the weight of 59-race winless streak lifted from his shoulders.

“You start to get to feel like you can’t win anymore,” Blaney said. “We hadn’t won in awhile and that can get hard. I want to thank the 12 (team) for believing in me.”

Blaney took the lead from Byron on a restart and led the final 26 laps to win his first Cup Series race since the Coke Zero Sugar 400 at Daytona in August of 2021.

Byron finished second, followed by Martin Truex Jr., Bubba Wallace and Tyler Reddick.

Truex said Blaney’s emotions are understandable.

“He’s under a lot of pressure to perform,” Truex said. “They’ve won a lot of races since his last race. I’m sure he questioned himself through some point during that streak that he was on. He’s had many opportunities to win and they’ve slipped away. Those are the hardest to think about so he’s probably thinking, ‘we finally did it.’”

It is the first time Team Penske has swept the Indianapolis-Charlotte doubleheader.

Blaney’s win came just days before Penske hosts a weekend of racing on the downtown streets of Detroit. The return of racing in downtown Detroit is Penske’s gift to the city he calls home. Then, the 86-year-old heads to the 24 Hours of Le Mans, one of the very few events he’s yet to win.

The 5 1/2-hour race included five wrecks in the final 50 laps, including one with 26 to go when last week’s All-Star race winner Kyle Larson spun and took out defending Cup champion Joey Logano, Kyle Busch and Christopher Bell.

Blaney had passed Byron on the previous restart, and then got the jump on him again on the final restart and ran away with the checkered flag.

It was a rain-soaked weekend at Charlotte, which washed out practice and qualifying and postponed the race to Monday. That meant drivers began the race without ever having turned a lap in the NextGen cars at the 1.5-mile oval for the first time in Coca-Cola 600 history.

More rain caused the race to be red-flagged for nearly an hour after 158 laps, making the longest Cup race of the year even longer.

Defending race champion Denny Hamlin was left fuming after his day ended with a wreck on lap 186, prompting him to call for NASCAR to suspend its most popular driver Chase Elliott.

Hamlin claimed the Hendrick Motorsports driver intentionally wrecked him by hooking his right rear bumper following a dust-up earlier in the race.

“It’s a tantrum and he shouldn’t be racing next week,” Hamlin said of Elliott. “Right rear hooks are absolutely unacceptable. I don’t care.”

Elliott denied intentionally wrecking Hamlin in retaliation.

Hamlin wasn’t the only one fired up.

During the rain delay television cameras caught Aric Almirola throwing punches at Wallace after the two exchanged words. Wallace refused to say what sparked the altercation, and said he wasn’t surprised at what unfolded.

“When you walk around with two faces, that’s what you get,” Wallace said.

JOHNSON’S TEAM STRUGGLES

It was a rough night for Jimmie Johnson and his new Legacy Motor Club team.

After saying he has never been more ill-prepared for a race due to his inexperience in the NextGen car, Johnson spun out on lap 78 in a single-car crash. He took his No. 84 Chevy behind the wall a few laps later and was joined by there by Legacy teammates Erik Jones and Noah Gragson, who suffered radiator damage.

After Johnson returned, he crashed into Gragson and spun out a second time and went behind the wall again. He finished last.

“I think I learned a lesson with this aero package that I didn’t know about,” Johnson said. “Much different than the car I have driven in the past.”

HARVICK’S LAST RUN

Kevin Harvick finished 11th in his final Coca-Cola 600.

Harvick, who is retiring after the season, won the race in 2011 and 2013. He started Monday’s race on the front row, but quickly fell back to the mid-20s and was never a major factor in the race.

BOWMAN’S BACK

Alex Bowman returned to the No. 48 Chevy after missing a month with a fractured vertebra and managed to complete all 400 laps. Bowman finished 12th.

STAGE WINNERS

Polesitter William Byron won the first stage after leading 44 laps. Chris Buescher won the second stage and Ryan Blaney won the third.

UP NEXT

The Cup Series heads to Madison, Illinois, on Sunday, where 2022 Cup champion Joey Logano outdueled Kyle Busch in overtime to win the inaugural race at World Wide Technology Raceway.

TOP INDIANA RELEASES

INDIANS BASEBALL

INDIANAPOLIS – Endy Rodríguez notched his first four-hit performance in Triple-A and the Indianapolis Indians exploded for 15 hits in a 12-6 defeat over the Toledo Mud Hens at Victory Field on Monday night.

Trailing 3-0 in the bottom half of the third, the Indians (24-27) brought nine batters to the plate and scored five to capture the lead. Chavez Young smacked a one-out single and Nick Gonzales doubled him in for the team’s first run. Following a run scored via a throwing error by Mud Hens starter Brenan Hanifee (L, 0-5), Cal Mitchell roped a two-run double into right field. The five-run inning was capped by a throwing error by third baseman Justyn-Henry Malloy that plated Mitchell.

The Mud Hens (23-28) scored a run in each of their first three plate appearances to build an early lead. An RBI double by Donny Sands in the first put Toledo in front, Malloy had an RBI single in the second and Parker Meadows hit a solo homer in the third inning.

Indy padded its lead with a pair of three-run frames in the fourth and sixth innings, respectively. Canaan Smith-Njigba went to the left-center gap for an RBI triple and scored on an RBI single by Rodríguez. Rodríguez advanced to third on a single by Miguel Andújar and later scored on a wild pitch. In the sixth, Jared Triolo and Mark Mathias each notched RBI singles. Shackelford then grounded out to plate Triolo.

Toledo showed signs of life in the eighth when Michael Papierski hit a three-run homer off Indians’ reliever John O’Reilly. The Indians got one back in the bottom half of the frame, with Gonzales’ second RBI double of the night to cap the scoring.

Kent Emanuel (W, 3-1) earned his third win of the season with 5.0 one-run innings in relief and five strikeouts.

Eight of the Indians nine hitters hit safely and five had multi-hit nights. Rodríguez went 4-for-5 with three runs and an RBI for his first game with four-plus hits since tallying a career-high five on Aug. 3, 2022, with High-A Greensboro at Bowling Green.

Tonight marked the Indians’ 22nd game on Memorial Day in the Victory Field era, with the win moving the club back to .500 at 11-11. The victory was also Indy’s first on the holiday at home since a 7-4 triumph over Durham on May 28, 2012.

Following a day off tomorrow, the Indians and Mud Hens will continue their six-game set on Wednesday at 6:35 PM ET at Victory Field. Southpaw Caleb Smith (2-4, 6.70) will take the mound for the Indians. The Mud Hens have yet to name a starter.

INDIANA BASEBALL

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – After the sixth 40-win regular season in program history, the Indiana baseball program earned an at-large selection to the 2023 NCAA Baseball Championships as a part of the Lexington Regional. It is the 10th all-time appearance in the NCAA postseason for the Hoosiers.

The sixth at-large berth in program history is the first since head coach Jeff Mercer’s first season in 2019. It also marks the second trip on the Road to Omaha for Mercer since he arrived in 2019. Overall, Indiana is 13-15 in NCAA Regional play with at least one win in six of its previous nine appearances.

The No. 3 seed Hoosiers (41-18) will open play against No. 2 seed West Virginia (39-18) at Kentucky Proud Park on Friday (June 2) at 7 p.m. Host and No. 12 national seed Kentucky and No. 4 seed Ball State will play the first game of the day on Friday at 1 p.m.

All-session tickets will go on sale to the general public on Tuesday, May 30 at 9 a.m. ET. All-session tickets include admission for all six/seven games of the regional tournament. Each session consists of a single game, and the stadium will be cleared between each game. Fans are encouraged to purchase all-session tickets to secure the best seat locations, as all chairbacks will be reserved. Based on availability, single game tickets will go on sale Thursday, June 1 at 9 a.m. ET.

Tickets may be purchased online at UKBaseballTix.com or by calling the UK Ticket Office at (800) 928-2287, option 4. The Joe Craft Center ticket office will be open this week Tuesday through Thursday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. ET. If tickets remain, they will also be sold on-site at Kentucky Proud Park beginning two hours prior to the first game each day.

Ticket Prices

All-Session Reserved Seats (Sections 101-111) – $90

All-Session General Admission* – $60

Single-Session Reserved Seats – $15, based on availability

Single-Session General Admission* – $10, based on availability

*For the regional, General Admission areas will include the right and left field terraces, grass berms, and outfield standing room areas. These spaces are first-come, first-serve and do not contain any fixed seats. Fans are welcome to bring their own lawn chairs and/or blankets into the stadium for these areas. Gates will open 90 minutes prior to first pitch.

All tickets for the tournament will be mobile. UK Employee IDs, Junior Wildcat Club Passes and K Fund Sports Passes are not valid for admission to postseason events. Children ages one and under will not require a ticket for entry.

BALL STATE BASEBALL

MUNCIE, Ind.  – The NCAA announced the 64-team field along with the regional matchups for the NCAA baseball tournament on Monday. The Ball State Cardinals are headed to Lexington, Kentucky.

For the first time since 2006, the Cardinals will be making an NCAA Regional appearance. This will be the fourth time BSU has made a trip to an NCAA Regional. Head Coach Rich Maloney will be making his first NCAA Regional appearance with the Cardinals, and it will be his fifth appearance overall.

Ball State will be joined by host Kentucky, Indiana, and West Virginia. The Cardinals are no strangers to Lexington, as Ball State faced Kentucky in the 2006 regional.

Ball State will take on Kentucky on Friday, June 2. First pitch between the Cardinals and Wildcats will be at noon on the SEC Network.

INDIANA STATE BASEBALL

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. – Indiana State will start the NCAA Tournament this weekend in the Terre Haute Regional as the No. 14 overall seeded Sycamores welcome Iowa, North Carolina, and Wright State to Bob Warn Field over the June 2-5 weekend.

The Sycamores are hosting a regional for the first time in program history following a dominant run that resulted in both the Missouri Valley Conference Regular Season and Postseason Championships. Indiana State won 34 of their last 38 games including four of five this past week at Bob Warn Field to clinch ISU’s eighth MVC Tournament Championship in program history.

Indiana State and Wright State (39-21) will open the Terre Haute Regional on Friday afternoon with first pitch for the Sycamores and Raiders set for 1 p.m. ET. The game will be carried live on ESPN+ and 105.5 The Legend.

Iowa (42-14) and North Carolina (35-22) will wrap up the first day of the Regional at 6 p.m. ET at Bob Warn Field. The Friday evening contest will be carried live on the ACC Network.

Terre Haute Regional tickets will go on sale to the general public starting Tuesday, May 30, at 4 p.m. ET.

Indiana State becomes just the fourth Missouri Valley Conference program selected to host a regional in its current format and first since 2015. ISU joins Dallas Baptist (2015), Missouri State (2015), and Wichita State (2002 & 2007) as the lone regional hosts in the MVC since 2000.

The Sycamores have consistently been ranked or receiving votes in five of the six major national collegiate baseball polls in 2023 reaching as high as No. 9 in the Collegiate Baseball News poll prior to the start of the MVC Tournament. ISU has also been in the top-10 in the NCAA RPI Rankings in four of the last five weeks finishing at No. 9 following their MVC Tournament win.

With a mantra of facing anyone, any time, any place, Indiana State sat as the only team in the NCAA top-15 in the RPI with 20-plus true road wins in the 2023 season. Expanding further, the Sycamores were one of just three teams in the top-50 to achieve the mark. ISU’s non-conference strength of schedule was ranked fourth overall in the NCAA.

The start of Missouri Valley play pushed Indiana State to new heights as the Sycamores went on a 30-3 tear to finish the regular season. Over the 33-game stretch, the Sycamore offense hit .293 as a team with 47 home runs, 116 extra-base hits, and a .477 slugging percentage. The pitching staff proved the offense’s equal with a 2.65 team ERA and a 262:80 strikeout-to-walk ratio while allowing opponents to hit just .221.

The 33-game stretch included a 16-1 record in April as Indiana State nearly pulled off the perfect month. The Sycamores recorded a 14-game winning streak to open the month with key non-conference wins against Indiana and then No. 4 Vanderbilt over the stretch.

Indiana State enters the NCAA Tournament sitting in the 10 in six different team statistical categories. ISU is the NCAA leader in fielding percentage (0.984), third in WHIP (1.23), fifth in ERA (3.80), fifth in shutouts (7), eighth in hit by pitch (114), and seventh in walks allowed per nine innings (3.15). ISU is also top-20 in hits allowed per nine innings (791), and 16th in strikeout-to-walk ratio (2.73).

Indiana State secured the Missouri Valley Conference’s automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament following a dominant display at the conference tournament this past week in Terre Haute. The Sycamores outscored their opponents 39-12 over five games and the pitching staff combined to put together two shutouts in ISU’s eighth MVC Tournament in program history.

The Sycamores’ tournament win followed up a historic regular season for ISU as the team set new program records for MVC wins (24) and conference series wins (nine). Indiana State’s six-game margin in winning conference’s regular season title was the largest in the MVC since 1998.

NOTRE DAME MEN’S LAX

No. 3 Notre Dame ended the 2023 DI men’s lacrosse national championship game on a 6-2 scoring run to beat No. 1 Duke, 13-9.

This title is the first in program history for Notre Dame. They had lost their previous two trips to the championship game in 2010 and 2014.

The defense and goaltending was the story for the Fighting Irish. They allowed a Duke goal 35 seconds into the first quarter, and didn’t allow another Blue Devil score until the third quarter. Then, in the championship-deciding fourth quarter, the Notre Dame defense held Duke’s prolific offense to just two goals. Liam Entenmann was outstanding for Notre Dame. He made 18 saves in goal for the Fighting Irish, a season-high tally for the senior netminder.

Six players scored exactly two goals for Notre Dame in the win, not including Pat Kavanagh, who was held scoreless but did manage an assist.

Notre Dame held Duke’s two leading scorers, Brennan O’Neill and Dyson Williams, to just one goal each. A fitting end to the season for Notre dame’s top-ten scoring defense.

SMALL COLLEGE ATHLETIC SITES:

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

EARLHAM ATHLETICS: https://goearlham.com/

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

FRANKLIN ATHLETICS: https://franklingrizzlies.com/

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

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

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

BETHEL ATHLETICS: https://bupilots.com/

DEPAUW ATHLETICS: https://depauwtigers.com/

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

MANCHESTER ATHLETICS: https://muspartans.com/

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

SPORTS EXTRA

MLB STANDINGS

American League
East
TeamWLPctGBHomeRoadEastCentralWestLast 10Streak
Tampa Bay3917.69626 – 613 – 1113 – 89 – 14 – 26 – 4L 1
Baltimore3420.630416 – 1118 – 911 – 710 – 48 – 66 – 4L 1
NY Yankees3323.589619 – 1314 – 1010 – 107 – 67 – 47 – 3W 3
Boston2825.5289.515 – 1113 – 147 – 77 – 25 – 55 – 5L 1
Toronto2826.5191013 – 915 – 176 – 1510 – 35 – 43 – 7W 1
Central
TeamWLPctGBHomeRoadEastCentralWestLast 10Streak
Minnesota2826.51916 – 1212 – 146 – 710 – 64 – 34 – 6W 1
Detroit2527.481213 – 1212 – 152 – 149 – 43 – 45 – 5L 1
Cleveland2429.4533.512 – 1512 – 144 – 66 – 98 – 54 – 6W 2
Chi White Sox2234.393712 – 1410 – 202 – 1112 – 113 – 55 – 5L 3
Kansas City1738.30911.58 – 219 – 172 – 55 – 123 – 93 – 7W 2
West
TeamWLPctGBHomeRoadEastCentralWestLast 10Streak
Texas3419.64216 – 818 – 116 – 46 – 111 – 58 – 2W 1
Houston3122.585314 – 1217 – 104 – 26 – 810 – 57 – 3L 1
LA Angels2926.527615 – 1314 – 138 – 96 – 49 – 76 – 4W 1
Seattle2826.5196.516 – 1412 – 122 – 55 – 511 – 57 – 3L 1
Oakland1145.19624.56 – 235 – 221 – 93 – 34 – 231 – 9W 1
National League
East
TeamWLPctGBHomeRoadEastCentralWestLast 10Streak
Atlanta3222.59315 – 1417 – 812 – 56 – 04 – 64 – 6L 1
Miami2826.519414 – 1114 – 158 – 125 – 48 – 85 – 5W 3
NY Mets2727.500512 – 915 – 189 – 82 – 78 – 86 – 4L 2
Philadelphia2528.4726.514 – 1011 – 183 – 46 – 46 – 105 – 5L 1
Washington2331.426911 – 1712 – 145 – 84 – 36 – 85 – 5L 2
Central
TeamWLPctGBHomeRoadEastCentralWestLast 10Streak
Milwaukee2825.52816 – 1212 – 133 – 05 – 47 – 134 – 6W 1
Pittsburgh2627.491212 – 1314 – 142 – 17 – 47 – 63 – 7L 3
Cincinnati2429.453414 – 1410 – 157 – 98 – 82 – 45 – 5W 3
Chi Cubs2330.434514 – 159 – 156 – 103 – 85 – 54 – 6W 1
St. Louis2432.4295.511 – 1613 – 160 – 39 – 87 – 105 – 5L 2
West
TeamWLPctGBHomeRoadEastCentralWestLast 10Streak
LA Dodgers3322.60018 – 715 – 157 – 311 – 912 – 75 – 5W 1
Arizona3123.5741.516 – 1215 – 116 – 66 – 313 – 96 – 4W 2
San Francisco2826.5194.516 – 1112 – 159 – 79 – 32 – 77 – 3W 1
San Diego2429.453812 – 1512 – 147 – 64 – 69 – 94 – 6L 2
Colorado2431.436915 – 149 – 1711 – 108 – 73 – 75 – 5L 1

TODAY IN BASEBALL HISTORY

1894      After going 0-for-6 in the first game of a doubleheader, Beaneater Bob Lowe becomes the first major leaguer to hit four home runs in one game, helping Boston beat Cincinnati and Elton ‘Icebox’ Chamberlain, 20-11.

1904      At Cincinnati’s Palace of the Fans, 32-year-old Cubs’ first baseman Frank Chance is plunked by a pitch five times during a doubleheader. In the first game of the twin bill, the future Hall of Famer loses consciousness briefly when one of the misguided pitches hits the Peerless Leader’s head.

1913      Red Sox outfielder and future Hall of Famer Harry Hooper becomes the first major leaguer to start both games of a doubleheader with a home run. The feat will not occur again until 1993 when A’s leadoff hitter Rickey Henderson opens each game of a twin bill against Cleveland with a homer.

1921      During an impressive Memorial Day ceremony at the Polo Grounds, the Eddie Grant Memorial, erected in memory of a former Giants player killed in World War I, is dedicated. Under the watchful eye of Baseball commissioner Kenesaw Mountain Landis, the five-foot-high monument, located at the base of the clubhouse wall in center field, 465 feet from home plate, is unveiled by the Harvard-educated third baseman’s sisters Florence Grant Robinson and Louise Grant Winters.

1922      Chicago outfielder Cliff Heathcote and Redbird right fielder Max Flack exchange their Cardinal and Cub uniforms after being traded for one another between games of a doubleheader. The fly chasers will both get hits for their new teams in the nightcap of the Cubs Park twin bill, in a sweep by the home team, 4-1 and 3-1.

1925      Between games of a doubleheader against the Pirates at Forbes Field, second baseman Rogers Hornsby, who will continue to be an active player, replaces Branch Rickey as the Cardinals manager. Rickey will continue as the team’s general manager until 1942.

1927      Cubs’ shortstop Jimmy Cooney completes an unassisted triple play as he snares Paul Waner’s liner, steps on second to double up Paul’s brother, Lloyd, and then tags Clyde Barnhart coming from first for the third out.

1930      Rogers Hornsby receives his MVP award and is given a thousand gold coins by National League president John Heydler at a ceremony at home plate before the Cubs’ contest against St. Louis. Ironically, the ‘Rajah’ will break his ankle while advancing to third base during the Wrigley Field contest and will not play again until the middle of August.

1932      After dropping a twin bill, some White Sox players accuse George Moriarty of deliberately blowing calls against their team. The umpire, a former Pale Hose player, challenges his accusers to a fight when he knocks down pitcher Milt Gaston with one punch, skipper Lew Fonseca and backstops Charlie Berry and Frank Grube even the score by thrashing the aggressive arbitrator.

1932      In a pregame ceremony, the Yankees dedicate a plaque in memory of skipper Miller Huggins. Their former manager, who died near the end of last season, would be delighted with today’s doubleheader sweep of the Red Sox, 7-5 and 13-3.

1934      Ben Chapman breaks up Earl Whitehill’s no-hitter at Yankee Stadium at the bottom of the ninth inning. Last season, after being provoked, the Bronx Bomber left fielder hit the right-hander with a punch in the passageway, causing a melee between the two teams, resulting in a 20-minute delay of the game before the police could restore order.

1934      Burleigh Grimes notches the last victory by a pitcher legally allowed to throw a doctored pitch, tossing four innings of shutout ball in relief in the Yankees’ 5-4 extra-inning triumph over the Senators in the Bronx. The 40-year-old spitballer, who records his 270th and final career win, is the last of the 17 hurlers who received permission to throw the banned pitches altered by a foreign substance after being outlawed in 1920.

1935      At the Baker Bowl, Babe Ruth of the Boston Braves plays his final major league game, going hitless in a first-inning at-bat against the Phillies. On June 2, the former Yankees superstar will announce his retirement from baseball.

1938      A new Yankee Stadium attendance record is set as 81,841 fans attend a Memorial Day doubleheader against the Red Sox. The Bronx Bombers sweep the twin bill, 10-0 and 5-4, with the nightcap ending on a wild throw by Boston’s third baseman Pinky Higgins.

1943      With contests played in Rockford (Illinois) and Racine (Wisconsin), the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League begins the first season of its 12-year existence. The original AAGPBL four-team circuit, which includes the war-production cities of Kenosha (Wisconsin) and South Bend (Indiana), will attract 176,612 baseball enthusiasts during the league’s inaugural season.

1946      In Boston’s 10-8 victory over the Dodgers, Bama Rowell’s long drive hits the Bulova clock above the right-field scoreboard, marking the first time a major leaguer reaches the famous Ebbets Field landmark. The crushing blow that shatters the face of the clock, causing the glass to cascade onto Dodgers’ Dixie Walker, becomes the inspiration for Bernard Malamud to having Roy Hobbs, the hero of his 1952 novel, The Natural, belt a similar home run, which also rains glass over the diamond.

1956      Mickey Mantle comes within 18 inches of becoming the first player to hit a home run out of Yankee Stadium. The prodigious poke off Senators’ right-hander Pedro Ramos was still climbing when the ball struck the facade in the upper stands in right field.

1956      At Yankee Stadium, Billy and his brothers attend their first big-league game with their dad, Jack Crystal. The future show biz superstar, who will write and perform a one-man play about his father and develop a movie script about the 1961 Yankees, tremendously enjoys watching his beloved Bronx Bombers sweep a mid-week doubleheader from the Senators, 4-3 and 12-5.

1962      The Mets complete their first-ever triple play when shortstop Elio Chacon snags Willie Davis’s liner and flips the ball to Charlie Neal to double off Maury Wills at second, with the third out coming on a ball thrown to Gil Hodges to catch Jim Gilliam off first base. New York will be the victim of the only other triple killing this season when Joe Pignatano, in his final major league at-bat, pops out to Cubs second baseman Ken Hubbs, who starts a 4-3-6 play in the eighth in the season finale played a Wrigley Field.

1962      Frank Thomas strokes a double off Sandy Koufax in the Mets’ 13-6 loss to Los Angeles, extending his franchise mark of consecutive games with a hit to 18 for the expansion team. The streak, which will be only one shy of Maury Wills’ league-leading total for the season, is halted when the New York left fielder goes 0-for-4 in the nightcap of the Dodgers’ sweep at the Polo Grounds.

1967      After retiring the first 21 batters he faces, Cardinal starter Dick Hughes gives up two runs in the eighth inning in an eventual 2-1 loss to the Reds at Crosley Field. After the Redbirds mount a rally in the top of the ninth when Orlando Cepeda and Tim McCarver open the frame with singles, the game ends abruptly when Phil Gagliano hits into a 6-4-3-2 triple play, with the last out being recorded at the plate when Cepeda attempts to score from third base.

1969      The A’s name their 25-year-old third baseman Sal Bando, playing in only his second full major league season as the team’s captain. The last captain of the club was Dick Green, a second baseman who held the job when the franchise played in Kansas City.

1970      The fans, using new computerized punch cards as ballots, will again select the All-Star squads. For the past twelve seasons, managers, coaches, and players decided on the rosters after the Reds rooters stuffed the ballot box in 1957, electing all but one of their starting position players to the Midsummer Classic.

1974      Sadaharu Oh becomes the first Japanese player to hit 600 career homers, joining American big-leaguers Babe Ruth, Hank Aaron, and Willie Mays in reaching the milestone. The 34-year-old Yomiuri Giants’ first baseman will hit 868 round-trippers during his 22-year career, a world record.

1976      The Astros collect 25 hits, a franchise high, beating the Braves in the nightcap of an Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium twin bill, 16-5. Twenty-three of Houston’s safeties are singles, a National League record.

1977      Twenty-two-year-old Indian right-hander Dennis Eckersley throws a 12-strikeout no-hitter, beating the Angels at Cleveland Stadium, 1-0. In the first inning, the lone run scores when Duane Kuiper, who had tripled thanks to the ball skipping under Gil Flores’ glove in center field, is squeezed in by Jim Morris.

1982      Cal Ripken’s 2,632 record consecutive game streak, which will span 17 seasons, begins with the Oriole rookie going 0-for-2, batting eighth in a 6-0 loss to Toronto at Memorial Stadium. The 21-year-old infielder plays third base, his position for the first 27 games of the streak, before becoming the team’s everyday shortstop, en route to surpassing Lou Gehrig’s remarkable feat in 1995.

1986      In a 6-4 loss to the Dodgers at Three Rivers Stadium, future home run king Barry Bonds goes 0-for-5 in his major league debut. The Pirates center fielder, batting leadoff, strikes out three times.

1987      Eric Davis becomes the first National League player to hit three grand slams in a month. The 25-year-old outfielder’s 19th homer of the season proves to be the difference in the Reds’ 6-2 victory over Pittsburgh.

1992      Yankees right-hander Scott Sanderson beats the Brewers, 8-1, to become the ninth pitcher to defeat all 26 major league teams. Nolan Ryan, Tommy John, Don Sutton, Mike Torrez, Rick Wise, Gaylord Perry, Doyle Alexander, and Goose Gossage accomplished the feat previously.

1998      In an emotional on-the-field ceremony, Dan Quisenberry becomes the sixteenth member of the Royals Hall of Fame. In January, the sinkerball pitcher with a submarine delivery was diagnosed with a Grade IV malignant astrocytoma and underwent brain surgery to remove the tumor.

1998      Mark McGwire hits his 27th home run to establish a major league record for the most homers hit before June. Last season, Ken Griffey Jr. set the previous mark with 24 round-trippers in the first two months of the season.

2001      After ending a streak of five straight losses to the Yankees, Red Sox ace Pedro Martinez makes light of the Curse of the Bambino by suggesting someone should wake up the Babe so he could drill him with a pitch. Boston will not beat the Bronx Bombers again during their final seven meetings of the season.

2001      At Pac Bell, the game lasts five hours, 53 minutes, and 18 innings before the Diamondbacks defeat the Giants, 1-0. Erubiel Durazo’s double plating Steve Finley accounts for the game’s only run.

2001      Barry Bonds hits career homer No. 522, passing Willie McCovey and Ted Williams to #11 on the all-time list and making him the number one lefty home run hitter in National League history. The round-tripper is the 17th hit by the Giant outfielder in May, breaking the record set by Mickey Mantle (1956) and Mark McGwire (1998).

2003      At Shea Stadium, the Braves go deep four times off former teammate Tom Glavine to tie a National League record by hitting 55 home runs in a calendar month. The New York Giants (July, 1947) and the Cardinals (April, 2000) are the other teams to accomplish the feat.

2007      Toronto’s third baseman Howie Clark, believing he hears teammate John McDonald calling to make the play, allows Jorge Posada’s ninth-inning pop fly to land on the ground untouched for an RBI single. Convinced it was baserunner Alex Rodriguez’s voice that caused the infielder to back off the play, the Blue Jays become incensed, describing the Yankee superstar’s behavior as bush league.

2010      Max Scherzer becomes the first hurler since 1900 to strike out 14 batters in less than six innings. The Tigers right-hander reaches the total in five and two-thirds shutout frames en route to a Detroit 10-2 victory over Oakland at Comerica Park.

2013      Jacoby Ellsbury sets a single-game franchise record when he swipes five bases in the Red Sox’ 9-2 victory over Philadelphia. The 29-year-old center fielder led the American League in stolen bases in his first two seasons in the majors, but injuries during the recent years have slowed down the Boston speedy leadoff hitter.

2014      The Mets become the first team to have three players appear in a game whose last name begins with a lower case letter d when Travis d’Arnaud, Jacob deGrom, and Matt den Dekker play in the Mets’ 6-5 walk-off loss to Philadelphia at Citizens Bank Park. After using an upside-down capital ‘P’ on d’Arnaud’s jersey, equipment manager Kevin Kierst asked Majestic, MLB’s uniform supplier, to make ‘small’ letters available, knowing there be even more of a need this season.

FOOTBALL HISTORY

FOOT-BALL

It is reporting about the May 30, 1879 instance where the first game ever to be played “West of the Alleghenies” took place on May 30th in Chicago. The article starts by saying, “At the White-Stockings Grounds yesterday afternoon an interesting game of foot-ball was played between Racine College and the Michigan University teams. The attendance was good, and enthusiastically cheered the contestants wherever opportunity occurred.”

The report goes on to say that the game lasted nearly two hours and was played by what was described as a modified rule of rugby. We can see that the influence of the 1874 Harvard vs. McGill games influence was spreading across the country. This is only about a year away from Walter Camp suggesting major revisions to the game that would make it a much more recognizable form of American football.

 As for the game, the University Michigan defeated Racine College 1-0. The reported in 1879 tells us that; “No bones were broken, but (C.) Tolbert was stretched on the turf once. A bucket of water, however, revived him.”

A fun fact about Racine’s football team was that in 1903 the program ended for what we would look at today as the oddest of circumstances! A November 6, 1903 article in the Champagne, Illinois Daily Gazette posts the headline of:

Bounced for Eating Fudges: Football team of Racine Gets its Walking Papers

Yes the entire football team was discharged allegedly because the players were caught eating fudge which in the eyes of the school administration was thought to make them poor students and athletes. Thank God that same criteria isn’t used for your friendly blog writer!

FOOTBALL BIRTHDAY’S

May 30, 1891 – Lockhaven, Pennsylvania – Bob Peck, the University of Pittsburgh’s center from 1913 to 1916 arrived to claim his date of birth. Peck, according to the NFF,  was a leader of the Panthers during one of their finest eras. He would motivate the rest of the men before and during games when he thought their fire was going out.  The 5 foot-9 inch snapper would raise his voice above all others and cry out, “When Peck fights, the team fights!” There was a renewed vigor in their play, for the Panthers would find new spirit within their hearts, new strength in their weary bodies. It was not long before the Pitt cheering section took up the call to arms. “When Peck fights, the team fights!” It became the battle cry. In just his first varsity season, the Panthers lost only one game in nine. Then Glenn “Pop” Warner took over as head coach and Pitt immediately ran off two unbeaten and untied seasons, going 8-0-0 in 1915 and 8-0-0 once again in 1916, and winning the National Championship in the last of those two campaigns. Peck was the Panther captain that year and repeated as an All-America selection, the first Pitt player to receive such national recognition. Bob Peck was honored with induction into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1954 after the National Football Foundation tabulated their votes.

May 30, 1915 – Conneaut, Ohio – Yale’s great end from 1934 through the 1936 season, Larry Kelley was born. Good enough that in 1936 he won the Heisman Trophy, the second year of the award and the first time it was called the Heisman. The National Football Foundation selected Larry Kelley for entrance into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1969.    

May 30, 1943 – Wichita, Kansas – Gale Sayers the top notch Kansas Halfback, also known as the “Kansas Comet” was born. The University retired his number 48 jersey soon after he wore it last. The Chicago Bears drafted Sayers in the first round of the 1965 NFL Draft.  The Pro Football Hall of Fame honored Gale Sayers with enshrinement in 1977 to become one of a very few that entered both Football Hall’s in the same year.

May 30, 1949 – Salem, New Jersey –  Lydell Mitchell 3 time Pro- Bowl NFL Running back played for the Colts, Chargers & Rams.   Lydell Mitchell entered the College Football Hall of Fame in 2004.

NUMBERS IN SPORTS

3 – 4

May 30, 1890 – The first ever recorded home run of the Dodgers organization too place when first baseman Dave Foutz of the Brooklyn Bridegrooms’, the early name of the Dodgers, hit a ball that cleard the fence during doubleheader to help the Grooms overcome the Chicago Colts at Washington Park, Brooklyn.

May 30, 1994 – Boston Beaneaters baseball second baseman Bobby Lowe became the very first player to hit 4 home runs in an MLB game. Lowe’s production aided in a 20-11 win against Cincinnati.

May 30, 1927 – Walter Johnson posted the 110th and final shutout of his Baseball career, the most in MLB history. Johnson and the Washington Senators earned a 3-0 win over Boston Red Sox with the performance.

May 30, 1930 – Walking is great exercise right? Well Philadelphia Athletics player Max Bishop, Number 4 got plenty of aerobic health then as he was walked in 8 different at-bats in a doubleheader to set an MLB record.

May 30, 1931 – Philadelphia Phillies hitter Chuck Klein, Number 3 hit home runs off  of pitcher Ben Cantwell  of the Boston Braves in both games of a single day’s double header.

TV TUESDAY

MLB REGULAR SEASON GAMESTIME ETTV
San Diego at Miami6:40pmBally Sports
Texas at Detroit6:40pmBally Sports
Cleveland at Baltimore7:05pmBally Sports
MASN/2
Milwaukee at Toronto7:07pmBally Sports
Sportsnet
Philadelphia at NY Mets7:10pmTBS
NBCS-PHI
SNY
Cincinnati at Boston7:10pmBally Sports
NESN
Kansas City at St. Louis7:45pmBally Sports
Tampa Bay at Chi. Cubs8:05pmMARQ
Bally Sports
LA Angels at Chi. White Sox8:10pmNBCS-BAY
Bally Sports
Minnesota at Houston8:10pmBally Sports
ATTSN-SW
Colorado at Arizona9:40pmATTSN-RM
Bally Sports
Atlanta at Oakland9:40pmNBCS-CA
Bally Sports
NY Yankees at Seattle9:40pmMLBN
YES
Root Sports
Pittsburgh at San Francisco9:45pmMLBN
NBCS-BAY
ATTSN-PIT
Washington at LA Dodgers10:10pmMASN/2
Spectrum
SOCCERTIME ETTV
Super Lig: Ankaragücü vs Galatasaray1:00pmbeIN Sports
Super Lig: Fenerbahçe vs Antalyaspor1:00pmbeIN Sports
WNBATIME ETTV
New York at Seattle9:00pmESPN2