Author: admin

  • NWSL: Wave lock up defensive star Naomi Girma through 2026

    NWSL: Wave lock up defensive star Naomi Girma through 2026


    Emerging star defender Naomi Girma had her contract extended through the 2026 season, the San Diego Wave announced Wednesday.

    Girma was both the NWSL Rookie of the Year and Defender of the Year last season.

    “Naomi has been an integral piece of the Wave’s success on and off the field since she joined the club,” Wave general manager Molly Downtain said in a statement. “She has proven that she is one of the top players in this league, and we are thrilled to have her continue to lead our club.

    “Securing her long-term future was a priority for the club, and we are pleased that we were able to reach this agreement as we know Naomi will play a crucial role in the Wave for years to come.”

    Girma received the extension on her 23rd birthday. The 2026 season was an option year that the club picked up now.

    “The start to my professional journey has been so rewarding here in San Diego,” Girma said. “Since being drafted, everyone at the Wave has made San Diego feel like home. My goal has always been to win championships for this city and raise the trophies with my team. ”

    Girma is also a rising force on the U.S. Women’s National Team and will likely be a starting defender during the Women’s World Cup, which starts next month in Australia and New Zealand. She has 15 made appearances for the national team.

    Girma was a college star at Stanford and was twice named Pac-12 Defender of the Year.

    –Field Level Media

  • WTA: WTA roundup: Top seed Maria Sakkari falls in Nottingham

    WTA: WTA roundup: Top seed Maria Sakkari falls in Nottingham


    Alize Cornet of France ousted top-seeded Maria Sakkari of Greece 6-1, 6-4 on Wednesday to advance to the quarterfinals of the Rothesay Open in Nottingham, England.

    It was the 25th career win against a top-10 opponent for Cornet, who converted four of a whopping 13 break chances in the 88-minute match.

    Two other seeded players were shown the door in straight sets, as Switzerland’s Viktorija Golubic defeated No. 4 Donna Vekic of Croatia 6-4, 6-1 and Poland’s Magdalena Frech eliminated No. 8 Lin Zhu of China 6-2, 6-4. Britain’s Heather Watson was a 6-4, 6-4 winner against Germany’s Tatjana Maria.

    Libema Open

    Unseeded American teenager Ashlyn Krueger stunned No. 3 seed Victoria Azarenka of Belarus 6-3, 6-2 to reach the quarterfinals in ‘s-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands.

    Krueger, 19, saved four of five break points during her 73-minute upset of the two-time Grand Slam winner.

    No. 1 seed Veronika Kudermetova advanced with a 6-1, 6-3 win against Canada’s Carol Zhao. Younger sister Polina Kudermetova was not as fortunate, falling 6-4, 6-1 to No. 2 seed and fellow Russian Liudmila Samsonova.

    No. 7 seed Aliaksandra Sasnovich of Belarus outlasted Belgium’s Greet Minnen 6-2, 4-6, 6-3.

    –Field Level Media

  • ATP: ATP roundup: Jannik Sinner reaches quarters in Netherlands

    ATP: ATP roundup: Jannik Sinner reaches quarters in Netherlands


    No. 2 seed Jannik Sinner defeated Alexander Bublik of Kazakhstan 6-4, 6-2 on Wednesday to advance to the quarterfinals at the Libema Open in ‘s-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands.

    The Italian was the only seeded player to move out of the Round of 16 on Wednesday, and he did so in just 85 minutes. Sinner, No. 9 in the world, won 84 percent (27 of 32) of the points on his first serve compared to 64 percent for his opponent, didn’t drop a game on serve and won five games in a row to eliminate Bublik.

    Croatia’s Borna Coric, the No. 3 seed, lost to American Mackenzie McDonald 6-4, 6-4, and Emil Ruusuvuori of Finland, defeated No. 7 seed Ugo Humbert of France, 6-2, 6-7 (6), 6-4.

    Rinky Hijikata of Australia ousted Marc-Andrea Huesler of Switzerland 2-6, 7-5, 6-3 in the day’s only other action.

    Boss Open

    Fourth-seeded Hubert Hurkacz of Poland was pushed to the limits by Japan’s Yosuke Watanuki but emerged a 4-6, 7-6 (5), 7-6 (5) winner in Stuttgart, Germany.

    The entertaining two-hour, 21-minute match featured 48 aces, with 27 of them coming from Watanuki, fueling his 51 winners against 14 unforced errors. Still, Hurkacz was able to escape two tiebreaks to move to the quarterfinals.

    There, he’ll face Christopher O’Connell of Australia, who defeated Lorenzo Sonego 7-6 (5), 6-3. Sonego’s fellow Italian, sixth-seeded Lorenzo Musetti, had no trouble against Gregoire Barrere of France in a 6-3, 6-3 win.

    Musetti next faces No. 3 seed Frances Tiafoe, who saved all three break points in a 7-6 (2), 6-4 defeat of Jiri Lehecka of the Czech Republic.

    –Field Level Media

  • NHL: Penguins name Jason Spezza assistant GM

    NHL: Penguins name Jason Spezza assistant GM


    Jason Spezza is following Kyle Dubas to Pittsburgh.

    The Penguins named Spezza assistant general manager on Wednesday, the same role he had in Toronto under Dubas following his retirement in May 2022.

    “After a decorated playing career, Jason fully immersed himself on the management side of the game learning all facets of hockey operations this past season while with Toronto,” Dubas said in a statement. “He showed tremendous work ethic, curiosity, and ability to build relationships throughout all departments at the team facility. His move from the roster to the front office staff also helped make the hockey operations department, coaching staff and playing roster a more cohesive and collaborative unit.”

    Spezza, 40, retired after 19 seasons as a player last year.

    Spezza was the No. 2 overall pick by Ottawa in the 2001 NHL Draft. He spent 11 seasons with the Senators (2002-14), five with the Dallas Stars (2014-19) and the last three with the Maple Leafs.

    Spezza played in 1,248 regular-season games and scored 995 points (363 goals, 632 assists). In 97 playoff games, he added 76 points (28 goals, 48 assists).

    –Field Level Media

  • NHL: Ruthless roster build sets Vegas up for sustained success

    NHL: Ruthless roster build sets Vegas up for sustained success


    Where are the Stanley Cup champion Vegas Golden Knights going from here?

    Yes, they benefited from extremely favorable expansion draft rules when they joined the league in 2017.

    Yes, the Golden Knights maneuvered the salary cap this season by using long-term injury relief, notably with captain Mark Stone, to ice a team that ended up nearly $14 million above the $82.5 million salary cap. It is worth noting that $5 million of that money went to goaltender Robin Lehner, who missed the entire season due to surgeries.

    Along the way to winning the Stanley Cup in just their sixth season of existence, the Golden Knights succeeded because of another factor: no team was more ruthlessly business-like in its decisions.

    How many other teams are willing to follow similar moves will be worth watching.

    En route to their title, the Golden Knights had no qualms about making tough calls on players. They traded the extremely popular Nate Schmidt in October 2020 to free up the money to sign Alex Pietrangelo.

    Face-of-the-franchise goaltender Marc-Andre Fleury was dealt to the Chicago Blackhawks after the 2020-21 season to give the net to Lehner. Max Pacioretty, who was acquired from the Montreal Canadiens in 2018 for Nick Suzuki — arguably the best draft pick made by the Golden Knights and now a cornerstone player for the Canadiens — essentially was given to the Carolina Hurricanes to keep them under the cap.

    They also have not been afraid to make coaches walk the plank. Bruce Cassidy is already their third bench boss.

    Curiously, the Golden Knights will be able to go into next season with essentially the same roster. With or without Lehner returning, Vegas also has enough salary cap space to have no concerns about the bottom line.

    Beyond the next couple of seasons, the Golden Knights are facing more tough calls.

    This is a veteran-heavy team, especially in key positions, and the franchise has a dubious draft record. Only one player selected by Vegas in the draft played any games for the team in this year’s playoffs.

    How they rebuild will be fantastic theater down the road. To their credit, the Golden Knights’ braintrust has shown no fear facing down roster challenges.

    –By Randy Sportak, Field Level Media

  • NHL: Canadiens legend Henri Richard had stage 3 CTE

    NHL: Canadiens legend Henri Richard had stage 3 CTE


    Hockey Hall of Fame member Henri Richard had stage 3 chronic traumatic encephalopathy at the time of his death in 2020, the Concussion Legacy Foundation Canada announced Wednesday.

    Denis Richard, Henri’s son, publicly released the findings of the posthumous brain study through the foundation in an effort to help raise awareness about the risks of head impacts in hockey.

    “I hope my father’s brain donation and diagnosis will lead to more prevention efforts, research, and eventually a CTE treatment,” Denis Richard said. “I want people to understand this is a disease that impacts athletes far beyond football.”

    According to the foundation, 16 of 17 NHL players whose brains have been studied have been diagnosed with CTE, including Stan Mikita, another Hall of Fame member.

    Richard played for the Montreal Canadiens from 1955-75 and won 11 Stanley Cup titles — the most by one player in NHL history. He was 84 when he died.

    “Henri Richard was not an enforcer and CTE still ravaged his brain. It is far past time for all of us in the Canadian sports community to acknowledge the long-term effects of repetitive impacts on the brain,” said Tim Fleiszer, executive director of the foundation and a former football player who won four Grey Cup titles. “We are grateful to the Richard family for their decision to share Henri’s diagnosis publicly to help others and are hopeful it will inspire change.”

    Richard, a 5-foot-7 forward, tallied 1,046 points (358 goals, 688 assists) and was the younger brother of Hall of Famer Maurice Richard. They played five seasons together with the Canadiens.

    The NHL did not make helmets mandatory until 1979.

    –Field Level Media

  • NHL: Fractured sternum sidelined Panthers’ Matthew Tkachuk

    NHL: Fractured sternum sidelined Panthers’ Matthew Tkachuk


    The upper-body injury that kept Florida Panthers star Matthew Tkachuk out of Tuesday night’s Stanley Cup finale in Las Vegas is a fractured sternum.

    The 25-year-old forward sustained the injury in Game 3, powered through it in Game 4 but was not available for Game 5 as the Panthers finished the best-of-seven series with a 9-3 loss to the Vegas Golden Knights.

    Florida coach Paul Maurice provided the update following Tuesday night’s season-ending loss.

    “He’ll heal fine from it,” Maurice said. “He got into the next game because he is so smart and can find a way around the ice. I think he had three of our best chances in that game when he couldn’t do things he could do to finish. …

    “The next day (after Game 4) when he came in, he was in significant pain. So, there wasn’t really a question of whether he would be able to play or not. The idea was if we let it calm, maybe we could get him to Game 7.”

    Tkachuk, who recorded a team-leading 24 points (11 goals, 13 assists) in 20 playoff games, likely sustained the injury on a big hit by Vegas forward Keegan Kolesar in Game 3.

    A fractured sternum, or breastbone, typically takes eight to 12 weeks to heal, usually without surgery.

    Tkachuk posted career-high totals in assists (69) and points (109) in his first season with Florida after he was acquired in an offseason trade that sent Jonathan Huberdeau to the Calgary Flames.

    Tkachuk has 491 points (192 goals, 299 assists) in 510 career games with the Panthers and Flames, who drafted him with the No. 6 overall pick in 2016.

    –Field Level Media

  • PGA: Golfers shift focus to course chaos at 123rd U.S. Open

    PGA: Golfers shift focus to course chaos at 123rd U.S. Open


    LIV Golf star Brooks Koepka summed up the state of professional golf with a cheeky comment at the end of his pre-U.S. Open press conference.

    “Thanks. See you guys at the Travelers (Championship) next week,” Koepka said.

    PGA Tour and LIV members alike are still baffled by last week’s shock announcement of a merger between the PGA Tour and the Saudi Public Investment Fund. But for the time being, Koepka isn’t back to playing a PGA Tour schedule, and the only places where players from the rival tours get together are at the four majors.

    Questions about the future of the sport will take a back seat to a difficult test of golf at a new venue when the 2023 U.S. Open tees off Thursday at the Los Angeles Country Club.

    Koepka heads to Los Angeles as a five-time major champion after becoming the first active member of LIV to win a major last month at the PGA Championship in Rochester, N.Y. Only Tiger Woods and Phil Mickelson have won more majors than Koepka since 2000.

    Koepka passed Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland (four) in major titles with that win. The USGA paired them together along with Hideki Matsuyama of Japan for the first two rounds.

    “The more chaotic things get the easier it gets for me,” Koepka said. “Everything starts to slow down and I am able to focus on whatever I need to focus on while everybody else is dealing with distractions, worried about other things.”

    LACC’s North Course will play as a 7,381-yard par-70, with three par-5s and five par-3s. The par-3s range from the 290-yard 11th hole to the 15th, which could play as short as 78 yards but features three curling bunkers and a highly sloped green.

    It’s the course’s first time hosting a major championship, but a few elite golfers have competed there before. World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler and two-time major winner Collin Morikawa played LACC at the 2017 Walker Cup, a junior team event. And as a college golfer, Max Homa set the course record with a 61 during the 2013 Pac-12 Championship.

    But U.S. Opens are notoriously the most difficult of the majors, and no one expects to see a 61 this week.

    “It’s going to be pretty hard,” Homa said. “Yeah, I think the sun being out is real helpful. A little bit of wind is going to make it spicy. I hope it’s carnage. I hope it’s a typical U.S. Open.”

    Homa (Los Angeles), Patrick Cantlay (Long Beach) and Xander Schauffele (San Diego) are all Southern California natives who enter the week ranked top-10 in the world but still after their elusive first major title. Any one of them could receive a hometown hero’s welcome with a victory.

    Scheffler, meanwhile, has been consistent in every way: He’s made 18 straight cuts, finished in the top 12 or better at 15 straight events, he leads the PGA Tour in strokes gained tee to green, and he’s been consistently poor at putting.

    Asked if he was changing putters this week, Scheffler said, “You guys can find out Thursday.

    “I don’t ever take decisions on switching equipment lightly,” he said. “… The PGA I actually felt like I rolled it pretty good. Few putts here or there that lipped out that should have gone in.”

    Matt Fitzpatrick of England is the defending champion, having won last year at The Country Club outside Boston. World No. 2 Jon Rahm of Spain, winner of the 2021 U.S. Open and this year’s Masters, is also a safe bet to contend on the weekend.

    “There’s not really a part of your game in any major championship, let alone a U.S. Open, that can really be in doubt. You’re going to need to access every single aspect of your game to win a championship like this,” Rahm said. “I think it becomes more of a mental factor, not overdoing it at home (in practice). You can never really replicate U.S. Open conditions.”

    –By Adam Zielonka, Field Level Media

  • PGA: 123rd U.S. Open: Preview, Prop Picks, Best Bets

    PGA: 123rd U.S. Open: Preview, Prop Picks, Best Bets


    The seclusive Los Angeles Country Club is opening its doors for the first time for the U.S. Open, which begins Thursday in Los Angeles.

    The venue adds intrigue to the 123rd playing of the country’s national major golf tournament. Our betting experts preview the event and provide their favorite prop picks along with trends emerging on the best bets to win this week.

    123rd U.S. OPEN
    Location: Los Angeles, June 15-18
    Course: The Los Angeles Country Club, North Course (Par 70, 7,421 yards)
    Purse: TBA (Winner: TBA)
    Defending Champion: Matt Fitzpatrick
    FedEx Cup leader: Jon Rahm

    HOW TO FOLLOW
    TV: Thursday-Friday, 9:40 a.m.-1 p.m. (Peacock); 1-8 p.m. ET (USA), 8-11 p.m. (NBC); Saturday, 1-11 p.m. (NBC); Sunday, 12-1 p.m. (Peacock), 1-10 p.m. (NBC)
    Twitter: @USOpenGolf

    PROP PICKS
    –Justin Thomas to Miss Cut (+170 at BetMGM, DraftKings): Thomas would be the first to admit that 2023 is not going as expected. His lone top-15 was a fourth at the Phoenix Open four months ago, and Thomas has missed the cut at big tournaments including the Masters and his last start at the Memorial. He also has a T60 at The Players and a T65 at the PGA Championship. While the LACC’s fairways are generally wider than a typical U.S. Open, Thomas’ 127th ranking in driving accuracy this season doesn’t bode well.

    –Cameron Smith, Top Australian (+200 at BetRivers): The reigning Open champion quietly rallied for a T9 at the PGA Championship after a T34 at the Masters. He has drawn 3.9 percent of both the outright winner tickets and money at the book, placing Smith just behind the favorites. He does face worthy competition from his countrymen, including former major champions Jason Day (+275) and Adam Scott (+350), who are both enjoying a resurgence this year. The market also includes Cameron Davis (+700), Min Woo Lee (+700), Lucas Herbert (+800) and Karl Vilips (+8000).

    –Jon Rahm to Beat Scottie Scheffler (+100 at DraftKings): Scheffler’s incredible consistency dating back to last fall is daunting. So, too, has been Rahm’s, despite a T16 at the Memorial following a T50 at the PGA. The 2021 U.S. Open champion at Torrey Pines loves playing in California. This year alone, he destroyed the PGA Tour’s “California Swing” with wins at the Genesis and the American Express along with a T7 at Torrey Pines.

    2023 Prop Picks Record: 24-35-2

    BEST BETS
    –Scottie Scheffler (+600 at BetMGM) has 16 consecutive finishes of T12 or better, including a win at this year’s The Players and T2 at the Masters. He finished T2 to Matt Fitzpatrick in last year’s U.S. Open and Scheffler’s odds continue to shorten. Since opening at +1200, he has been backed by the second most money to win (11.0 percent) and the third most total bets (6.6 percent).
    –Jon Rahm (+1000) won the 2021 U.S. Open and captured his second major at this year’s Masters. However, action on the Spaniard has been relatively modest, as Rahm has drawn the fifth most total bets (5.9 percent) and the fourth most money (7.4 percent). He has been backed by only 3.8 percent of both markets at BetRivers.
    –Brooks Koepka (+1100) is already a two-time U.S. Champion. In this year’s first two majors, he finished T2 at the Masters and won his third PGA Championship. Koepka is BetMGM’s second-biggest liability this week. Since opening at +3300, he has been the most popular pick in the field with the most total bets (9.4 percent) and money (13.2 percent) backing him among the entire field.
    –Viktor Hovland (+1600) battled Koepka down the stretch on Sunday at the PGA and followed it up with a win at the Memorial. He’s the only player to finish in the top 10 in each of the past three majors. Hovland’s odds have shortened from +3000 at BetMGM. At the same odds at BetRivers, the Norwegian has been supported by the fourth most tickets (5.5 percent) and money (6.0 percent).
    –Max Homa (+2800) set the course record at the Los Angeles Country Club with a 61 in the first round of the 2013 Pac-12 Championship. He’s a popular “darkhorse” this week, and Homa is BetMGM’s biggest liability to win as he has drawn the second most bets (6.9 percent) and third most money (8.1 percent).
    –One bettor at BetMGM placed a $5,000 wager on Justin Thomas to win at +5000 that would pay $250,000.

    NOTES
    –The 156-player field will be cut to the low 60 players and ties following 36 holes.
    –This is the first major championship to be held at The Los Angeles Country Club, and it will be contested on the North Course. The first edition of the Los Angeles Open (now The Genesis Invitational) was played on the North Course in 1926 and was held there four additional times.
    –Rahm will make another attempt to become the first player to win five times in a season since Justin Thomas in 2016-17. He’s also attempting to be the first winner of multiple majors in a year since Jordan Spieth in 2015.
    –Fitzpatrick (+3300) is trying to become the first player to successfully defend a U.S. Open title since Koepka in 2018.
    –Rory McIlroy (+1200 at BetMGM) has 18 top-10s in majors since claiming the most recent of his four career majors at the 2014 PGA Championship. This will be his 33rd start in a major since that victory.
    –No. 4 Patrick Cantlay (+1600), a Los Angeles-area native, is the highest-ranked player in this week’s field who has yet to win a major title.

    –Field Level Media

  • PGA: Report: Senators flag antitrust violations to AG in PGA-Saudi deal

    PGA: Report: Senators flag antitrust violations to AG in PGA-Saudi deal


    A pair of U.S. senators want the attorney general to look into the PGA Tour agreement to join with the DP World Tour and Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia to determine whether it violates federal antitrust laws, ESPN reported Wednesday.

    Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) sent a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland and to Jonathan Kanter, assistant attorney general, asking them to oppose the agreement if laws are broken, ESPN reported citing a copy of the letter.

    The two senators said that the PIF’s investment into professional golf under the alliance allows the Saudi Arabian government to further “sportswash” its record on human rights but also “raises an array of potential legal and regulatory issues, including relating to the PGA Tour’s non-profit tax status and antitrust law,” ESPN reported.

    Already, the proposed alliance between the PIF and the golf tours has raised the concern of the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. Its chairman, Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), has asked for documentation of events that led up to last week’s announcement that the PGA Tour, DP World Tour and Saudi-funded LIV Golf would work together under one umbrella.

    In their letter to Garland, Warren and Wyden argue that the alliance could be flagged under the Clayton Act and the Sherman Antitrust Act and result in a monopoly.

    “The PGA-LIV deal, as described in the June 6 announcement, would be a clear violation if it is a joint venture,” Warren and Wyden wrote, per ESPN. “It would give the PGA Tour and PIF control over all significant aspects of U.S. commercial golf operations, including contracts with U.S. golfers and their opportunities to compete, television rights, cost of attendance to elite golf events, and merchandise.”

    They continued: “The PGA-LIV deal would make a U.S. organization complicit — and force American golfers and their fans to join this complicity — in the Saudi regime’s latest attempt to sanitize its abuses by pouring funds into major sports leagues.”

    –Field Level Media