Sports
Aaron Rai rises to No. 15 in world rankings, Jon Rahm to No. 12
May 17, 2026; Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, USA; Aaron Rai poses with the trophy after winning the final round of the PGA Championship golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images Aaron Rai vaulted 29 spots to a career-high No. 15 in the latest edition of the Official World Golf Rankings thanks to his first major championship
Rai won the PGA Championship on Sunday at Aronimink Golf Club, the first Englishman to do so since 1919. Rai previously had never finished better than tied for 19th at a major.
Rai, who previously had one PGA Tour win to go with three on the DP World Tour, passed the likes of Justin Thomas, who shot 65 Sunday to tie for fourth and remained No. 16 in the world; Hideki Matsuyama of Japan, now No. 19; and Viktor Hovland of Norway, whose missed cut cost him three ranking spots and pushed him down to No. 30.
It was a banner day for Europeans, as Englishman Justin Rose climbed into the top five while Jon Rahm of Spain moved up eight spots to No. 12 in the world.
Rose, who spent 13 weeks at No. 1 in 2018, has enjoyed a career resurgence during his 40s as he leapt to No. 3 in the rankings as recently as February for winning the Farmers Insurance Open. He tied for 10th at the PGA Championship, his second straight top-10 at majors this year after tying for third at the Masters.
Rose passed Collin Morikawa and Englishman Tommy Fleetwood, the latter of whom missed the cut at the PGA.
As for Rahm, he has experienced one of the largest rises in the OWGR this year because of his status on LIV Golf. Players are receiving world ranking points from LIV events for the first time, but only for finishing top-10 in an event. Rahm has placed top-10 in all seven events so far, with two wins and three runner-up finishes.
Rahm began the season No. 84 in the world rankings. By tying for second at the PGA Championship — his best showing at a major in three years — he ascended to his highest world ranking since he was No. 10 in the summer of 2024.
Before the PGA Championship, he said he felt he was playing better than his ranking would suggest, but he didn’t pay it much mind.
“When it comes to the rankings, obviously it’s a little trickier nowadays, even though we’re getting some points in LIV,” Rahm said. “Still, I think as players, we know we usually have a fairly good assessment of where we stand. I don’t really necessarily need a ranking to tell me where I’m at or where I feel like I’m at.”
The top four in the OWGR remained Scottie Scheffler, Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland, Cameron Young and Matt Fitzpatrick of England. Four Englishmen occupy the top 15: Fitzpatrick, Rose, Fleetwood and Rai.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Reports: Suns agree to 4-year, $48M deal with G Collin Gillespie
Apr 19, 2026; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; Phoenix Suns guard Collin Gillespie (12) shoots as Oklahoma City Thunder center Chet Holmgren (7) defends in the first quarter during game one of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images Versatile guard Collin Gillespie is reportedly passing on free agency and has agreed to a four-year, $48 million contract to remain with the Phoenix Suns, according to reports on Saturday.
Gillespie emerged as a long-range shooting threat last season and set a franchise record with 232 3-point baskets. Quentin Richardson (226 in 2004-05) held the old mark.
Gillespie also recorded career highs of 12.7 points, 4.6 assists, 4.1 rebounds and 1.2 steals in 80 games (58 starts). He shot 40.1% from 3-point range.
Gillespie meshed well with Suns star Devin Booker in the backcourt, another factor in the push to keep him with a team that surprisingly posted a 45-37 record last season. Phoenix lost to the Oklahoma City Thunder in the first round of the Western Conference playoffs.
After earning third-team All-American honors in each of his final two college seasons at Villanova, Gillespie wasn’t selected in the 2022 NBA Draft. He played 24 games for the Denver Nuggets in 2023-24 before joining Phoenix and playing in 33 games (nine starts) in 2024-25.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Spain seek reset vs. Saudi Arabia after opening draw
June 15, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.; Spain’s Marc Cucurella in action. Mandatory Credit: Jordan Godfree-Imagn Images Spain extended their unbeaten streak in competitive fixtures to 32 matches during their World Cup opener last week.
And yet, it was hard not to see La Roja’s scoreless draw against debutant Cape Verde — the third-least-populated country to ever qualify for the World Cup — as a disastrous start for Spain, who entered ranked second in the FIFA/Coca-Cola world rankings.
The Spaniards will look to reestablish themselves as threats when they continue Group H play against Saudi Arabia on Sunday afternoon in Atlanta.
Spain (0-0-1, 1 point) controlled their opening match, holding 65% of the possession, a 27-6 edge in shots and 7-1 in shots on net.
Defender Marc Cucurella chose to focus on the upside of starting with a performance like this.
“I think it’s good that it happened to us in the first match,” Cucurella said. “Because maybe it happens to you in another round and you go home.”
The addition of teenage star Lamine Yamal off the bench in the 71st minute, returning from a hamstring injury, transformed the attack. But even he couldn’t break through for Spain, who failed to win their World Cup opener for the fourth time in the last five trips.
It sounds like Yamal will once again be limited on Sunday as the team is playing the long game for what they hope will be a stretch of eight games this summer.
“I feel good physically, I’m ready for whatever the boss wants,” Yamal said Friday in a Spanish television interview. “It’s very early, it’s unnecessary (to play 90 minutes). I have a process of adaptation. It isn’t the moment to play a full game but I’ll play the minutes the boss wants.”
Saudi Arabia (0-0-1, 1 point) enter this match ahead of Spain via the goals scored tiebreaker. The Green Falcons did not have the same problem scoring in their opener against Uruguay, leading for nearly 40 minutes after Abdulelah Al-Amri’s late-first-half goal.
But a late equalizer from Uruguay kept Saudi Arabia from taking early command of the group with their second straight upset to begin a World Cup after the 2022 Argentina stunner.
In the end, Saudi Arabia, who trailed Uruguay 1.72-0.66 in expected goals, were likely satisfied with the draw, even though they blew a lead.
“When we’re faced with certain opponents, getting one point is a positive event and this is a booster for our psychology,” Saudi Arabia manager Georgios Donis said after the match. “Currently I’m trying to learn my team. I’m trying to learn my players and get to know them.”
Both draws leave all four Group H teams on one point entering a critical second matchday.
A win in either of the next two matches would likely be enough for Saudi Arabia to advance to the knockout stage for the first time since their World Cup debut in 1994. However, that may not be an easy task for a team that has won only two total matches in their six World Cup appearances since 1994.
–Group G, Belgium vs. Iran in Inglewood, Calif.: Belgium, looking to return to the knockout stage after missing it in 2022, opened with a somewhat surprising 1-1 draw with Egypt. Iran, who rallied twice for an opening 2-2 draw against New Zealand, are seeking their first-ever knockout stage appearance.
–Group H, Uruguay vs. Cape Verde in Miami Gardens, Fla.: Likely the top storyline from the opening set of matches, Cape Verde have another tough test as they seek their first World Cup victory. Uruguay look to do what Spain couldn’t and take care of business against an overmatched team on paper.
–Group G, New Zealand vs. Egypt in Vancouver: Neither New Zealand nor Egypt have ever won a match at the World Cup, let alone advance out of a single group stage. A win by either would move them to the brink of clinching a spot.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Brewers manager Pat Murphy to have back surgery Thursday
Jun 7, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Milwaukee Brewers manager Pat Murphy (49) walks to the mound for a pitching change in the seventh inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images Milwaukee Brewers manager Pat Murphy said Saturday that he will undergo back surgery on the team’s Thursday off-day, one day before the start of a three-game series with the visiting Chicago Cubs.
Murphy also is slated to undergo hip surgery on July 13 at the start of the All-Star break. He said he doesn’t expect either procedure to cause him to miss any games.
Murphy said the back being severely acting up earlier this month when the team was playing the Athletics in Las Vegas. He underwent an MRI exam last Sunday and was diagnosed with a ruptured disc.
Murphy, 67, said the pain is intense. He recently described it as shooting pain through his leg and back when trying to stand up.
“I can’t live like that,” Murphy told reporters. “… I’m having the surgery so it works out good.”
The two-time National League Manager of the Year jokingly said, “So I’ll have that on Thursday. And I’ll be fine by Friday. Jumping jacks by Saturday.”
Murphy said the back pain is related to the hip issue. He was dealing with hip pain during the 2025 season as well.
Murphy is in his third season as Brewers manager and guided the club into the postseason in each of the two first campaigns while winning the top manager award both seasons.
Milwaukee leads the National League Central with a 45-29 record despite falling 4-3 to the host Atlanta Braves on Saturday. Ozzie Albies of the Braves hit a walk-off two-run homer.
Murphy is 235-163 with the Brewers. He also served as interim manager for the San Diego Padres in 2015 and went 42-54.
–Field Level Media
