Sports
Report: Padres to add 1B Ty France on Opening Day roster
Feb 23, 2026; Peoria, Arizona, USA; San Diego Padres first baseman Ty France (4) gets set in the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at Peoria Sports Complex. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images The Padres are set to add first baseman Ty France to the Opening Day roster, the San Diego Union-Tribune reported Saturday.
France signed a minor league deal before spring training, reuniting with the organization that drafted him in 2015 and brought him to the major leagues for the first time in 2019.
In 17 spring training games with San Diego, France was batting .318 with two home runs and 12 RBIs.
France, 31, split time with the Minnesota Twins and Toronto Blue Jays last season, batting .277 with seven home runs and 52 RBIs in 138 games.
In seven seasons with five different clubs, the Southern California native, and 2022 All-Star as a member of the Seattle Mariners, is a career .262 hitter with 81 home runs and 364 RBIs in 840 career games.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Padres stymie Tigers for first win of season
Mar 28, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; San Diego Padres starting pitcher Randy Vasquez (98) throws a pitch during the first inning against the Detroit Tigers at Petco Park. Mandatory Credit: David Frerker-Imagn Images Randy Vasquez fired six shutout innings Saturday night as the San Diego Padres avoided a season-opening, three-game sweep at the visiting Detroit Tigers’ hands with a 3-0 victory.
Vasquez allowed just two hits, both to third baseman Cole Keith, while walking three and striking out eight, one shy of his career high. Kyle Hart followed with two perfect innings and Mason Miller worked the ninth to earn the save. It was the first win for Craig Stammen, San Diego’s first-year manager.
Jack Flaherty absorbed the loss, allowing four hits and three runs (two earned) over 4 1/3 innings. Flaherty walked four and whiffed two.
The Padres got the only runs they needed in the bottom of the third. Flaherty mowed down the first eight guys he faced before allowing three straight two-out hits to Freddy Fermin, Jake Cronenworth and Fernando Tatis Jr., with Tatis’ hit scoring Fermin.
The second run scored when second baseman Gleyber Torres’ fielding error on Tatis’ steal of second enabled Cronenworth to score.
That was enough for Vasquez, who was only threatened twice. Detroit got men to second and third in the first after Torres walked and Keith doubled but Riley Greene’s grounder to Cronenworth at second forced Torres at the plate. Spencer Torkelson looked at a third strike to end the inning.
In the sixth, Keith singled with two outs and Greene drew a walk. But with Hart warming up in the bullpen, Vasquez escaped when Torkelson’s hard shot to third became a forceout on Manny Machado’s terrific play.
San Diego got its final run in the fifth via Flaherty’s loss of control. He issued one-out walks to Cronenworth, Tatis and Machado, forcing manager A.J. Hinch to bring in Brant Hurter out of the bullpen. Jackson Merrill’s fielder’s choice grounder scored Cronenworth.
Ramon Laureano collected three of the Padres’ seven hits, while Cronenworth went 1 for 3 with two runs in his first game as the team’s leadoff hitter since 2023.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Joe Pyfer stops former champ Israel Adesanya in 2nd round of UFC Seattle
Mar 28, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Israel Adesanya (red gloves) fights Joe Pyfer (blue gloves) during UFC Fight Night at Climate Pledge Arena. Mandatory Credit: Steven Bisig-Imagn Images Joe Pyfer (16-3 MMA) sent former UFC middleweight champion Israel Adesanya (24-6 MMA) back to the drawing board in Saturday night’s UFC Fight Night headliner in Seattle, stopping Adesanya at 4:18 of the second round to cap the night.
Before the TKO finish, both fighters exchanged their best punches in a stand-up battle until a Pyfer takedown signaled the beginning of the end.
“I just have this mentality where I don’t care, I’m going to search and destroy,” Pyfer said following the stoppage, securing the finish in top control.
Adesanya, fighting out of New Zealand, hasn’t won a bout since regaining middleweight gold in April 2023 at UFC 287, and confirmed he has no plans to retire.
“I’m just going to keep going and going and going,” Adesanya said.
A rematch five years in the making commenced at flyweight as former champion Alexa Grasso made short work of Maycee Barber with a TKO stoppage at 2:42 of the opening round. The Mexican used a left hook to down Barber before jumping on top of her immediately as the referee stepped in.
The two first met in Feb. 2021, with Grasso earning a decision. Grasso (17-5-1 MMA) snapped a two-fight losing skid, whereas Barber (15-3 MMA) had not lost since the first meeting with Grasso, having won her previous seven fights.
In his final MMA fight, welterweight Michael Chiesa (20-7 MMA) had a hometown send-off as he submitted Niko Price (16-11 MMA) with a first-round rear-naked choke. Chiesa needed just 63 seconds to put a bow on his UFC career, one that spanned a decade-plus and included winning the 15th season of The Ultimate Fighter in June 2012.
Chiesa ended his UFC career at 15-7, while Price, who has been in the promotion for over a decade himself, now sits at 8-11, with two no contests in the Octagon and has dropped four straight fights.
The finishes were a theme on the night, as featherweight Lerryan Douglas (14-5 MMA) of Brazil needed 3:33 of the opening round to deliver a devastating TKO against Julian Erosa (31-13 MMA). Douglas has now won his last six in a row while Erosa continues to struggle at 9-9 in the UFC.
At middleweight, Yousri Belgaroui of the Netherlands scored a third-round TKO stoppage against Mansur Abdul-Malik by landing a perfectly timed knee to end the fight in a back-and-forth battle. Belgaroui (10-3 MMA) has won five straight and remains undefeated in the UFC. Conversely, it was Abdul-Malik’s (9-1-1 MMA) first professional loss, as he had won seven of his 11 outings by KO/TKO.
The main card got underway in emphatic fashion in the opener, with lightweight Terrance McKinney needing just 24 seconds to dispatch Canadian Kyle Nelson with a series of punches following a head kick. McKinney (18-8 MMA) has won three of his last four, while Nelson (17-7-1 MMA) has lost two of his last three.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Alexander Kerfoot, Logan Cooley score twice as Mammoth rout Kings
Mar 28, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Utah Mammoth center Logan Cooley (92) and Los Angeles Kings right wing Mathieu Joseph (17) battle for the puck during the first period at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Griffin Hooper-Imagn Images
Alexander Kerfoot and Logan Cooley each scored twice as the visiting Utah Mammoth thumped the Los Angeles Kings 6-2 on Saturday night.
With the win, Utah (38-30-6, 82 points), currently in the first wild-card spot in the Western Conference, holds a five-point lead over the Nashville Predators, owners of the second wild-card position.
Los Angeles (29-25-18, 76 points) remains on the outside looking in, a point back of Nashville in the wild-card race.
Nick Schmaltz and Jack McBain also scored for Utah, while Mikhail Sergachev had four assists and Clayton Keller chipped in a pair of helpers for the Mammoth, who won for just the second time in five games (2-3-0).
Karel Vejmelka made 29 saves for Utah.
Adrian Kempe had a goal and an assist, and Anze Kopitar also scored for the Kings, who have dropped five of six (1-2-3).
Darcy Kuemper stopped 11 shots through two periods and was replaced by Anton Forsberg to start the third. Forsberg made 11 saves.
The Mammoth outshot the Kings 12-9 in the first period and led 3-1 after 20 minutes.
Utah opened the scoring 2:31 into the period as Kerfoot redirected a John Marino cross-ice feed past Kuemper.
Cooley doubled the Mammoth lead at 16:33, beating out the icing call and snapping a shot five-hole past Kuemper.
Los Angeles cut the lead in half 1:18 later as Kopitar tipped a Kempe shot from the point past Vejmelka.
Utah restored the two-goal lead on the power play at 19:51 as Cooley dangled around Mikey Anderson and snapped a shot high blocker-side past Kuemper.
The Mammoth took a 4-1 lead at 12:37 of the middle frame as Kerfoot showed patience, outwaited Kuemper, and put a shot over the shoulder of the Kings’ goaltender. Kerfoot has points in four straight games (three goals, two assists).
Schmaltz made it 5-1 at 16:17 of the second on a power play, taking a Keller pass, skate-to-stick and snapping a shot past Kuemper.
Kempe pulled the Kings to 5-2, putting a shot past a screened Vejmelka at 4:34 of the third.
McBain added an empty-netter at 13:53.
–Field Level Media
