Sports
Kayla McBride, Olivia Miles power Lynx to comeback win vs. Mercury
Jul 13, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Lynx guard Olivia Miles (5) dribbles the ball past Phoenix Mercury guard Lexi Held (10) in the first half at Target Center. Mandatory Credit: Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images Kayla McBride scored 37 points on 11-for-17 shooting, and the Minnesota Lynx rallied for a 104-100 win over the Phoenix Mercury on Monday night in Minneapolis.
Olivia Miles added 33 points and a team-high eight assists for Minnesota (18-6), which won its third game in a row. Natasha Howard finished with 13 points.
Kahleah Copper scored 26 points on 9-for-14 shooting to lead Phoenix (8-17), which dropped its fourth straight game. Alyssa Thomas tallied a double-double with 19 points and 12 assists, and DeWanna Bonner and Monique Akoa Makani scored 17 apiece.
Minnesota outscored Phoenix 35-25 in the fourth quarter to rally for the victory.
The Suns pulled ahead 77-69 when Thomas banked in a basket with 9:40 remaining.
The Lynx closed the game on a 35-23 run.
Miles put Minnesota on top 80-79 with 7:14 to go when she buried a 3-pointer from 28 feet with 7:14 left. Howard assisted on the basket.
Phoenix kept the score close in the back-and-forth battle. Copper hit a pull-up jumper to put the Mercury ahead 85-84 with 5:05 left.
Both teams battled until the final minute as Bonner made a jump shot to even the score at 98-all with 1:05 remaining.
McBride knocked down a 3-pointer to give the Lynx a 101-98 lead with 45.1 seconds left.
Akoa Makani made a shot from 17 feet to cut Phoenix’s deficit to 101-100 with 33.1 seconds to go. That proved to be the final basket for the Mercury, whose final deficit increased to four points after a layup by Howard and a free throw by Miles.
The Mercury opened a 27-21 advantage at the end of the first quarter. After the Lynx pulled within 19-18 on a three-point play by McBride, the Mercury finished the quarter on an 8-3 run that included 3-pointers by Copper and Sami Whitcomb.
Minnesota outscored Phoenix 29-22 in the second quarter to lead 50-49 at the half.
Phoenix regained a 75-69 lead at the end of the third quarter. Bonner made a driving layup with 6.0 seconds left to increase the Mercury’s lead to six points.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Sun hold off furious rally from Fire, win as buzzer-beater fails
Jul 14, 2026; Uncasville, Connecticut, USA; Connecticut Sun forward Aaliyah Edwards (8) shoots the ball against Portland Fire forward Emily Engstler (21) in the first half at Mohegan Sun Arena. Mandatory Credit: David Butler II-Imagn Images Reserve Aaliyah Edwards scored 21 points as the Connecticut Sun withstood a comeback try by the Portland Fire and hung on for a 90-87 victory in Uncasville, Conn., on Tuesday afternoon.
Edwards scored 15 points in the first half and made 9-of-13 shots overall as the Sun (6-18) avoided a third straight loss.
Britney Griner added 20 in her return from a groin injury as the Sun survived being outscored 24-18 in the final 10 minutes.
Olivia Nelson-Ododa added 16 and Leila Lacan contributed 14 for the Sun, who shot 52.2% and survived a missed 3-point try at the buzzer by Portland’s Bridget Carleton that would have forced overtime.
Carla Leite led the Fire (10-14) with 18 points and Megan Gustafson contributed 15. Emily Engstler chipped in 14 and Carleton finished with 12 as the Fire shot 48.3% but finished 9-of-26 on 3-point tries.
The Sun outscored the Fire 11-4 in the final 3:36 of the first quarter to take a 32-23 lead. Nelson-Odoba sank a 16-footer for a 13-point lead two minutes into the second, Griner’s layup opened a 46-32 lead with 5:37 left and the Sun held a 50-40 lead at halftime.
The Sun took a 15-point lead with 1:42 remaining in the third on a free throw by Raegan Beers and settled for a 72-63 lead into the fourth after allowing the final five points.
Portland scored the first eight points of the fourth and forced a timeout when Gustafson’s layup cut the deficit to 72-71 with 7:52 remaining.
The Sun let the lead slip to one with 7:19 left and held an 84-79 lead on a short jumper by Lacan with 3:23 remaining. After Engstler’s six-footer made it 84-83 with 2:27 left, Edwards sank a 16-footer and a pair of three throws to help the Sun get a 90-83 lead with 73 seconds left.
Carleton sank a 10-footer with 40.9 seconds left to make it 90-87 and blocked a Lacan shot with 20.8.8 seconds left. Following a Portland timeout, the game ended when Carleton shot an airball on a well-contested corner 25-foot attempt.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Red-hot rookie Olivia Miles leads Lynx into clash with Sparks
Jun 17, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Minnesota Lynx guard Olivia Miles (5) drives to the basket against LA Sparks guard Ariel Atkins (7) in the first half at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images While pursuing their second winning streak of at least four games this season, the Minnesota Lynx have had a knack for keeping things interesting.
Owner of the league’s best record, Minnesota (18-6) seeks a more comfortable showing on Wednesday afternoon when it hosts the Los Angeles Sparks (10-12) in Minneapolis.
The Lynx have had to mount fourth-quarter rallies in each of their last three wins. On Monday, they trailed by eight in the opening minute of the final quarter before an offensive outburst lifted the club to a 104-100 victory over the Phoenix Mercury.
Kayla McBride and rookie Olivia Miles combined for 70 points in Monday’s win, helping the highest-scoring offense in the Western Conference (90.6 points per game) reach triple digits for the fifth time this year.
Miles, in particular, has turned heads just two months into her pro career. With her 33-point, eight-assist outing, the No. 2 overall pick out of TCU became the fastest player in league history to reach 400 points, 100 rebounds and 100 assists (22 games).
“There have been tremendous players in the league, so I just can’t say enough,” Minnesota coach Cheryl Reeve said. “Her impact on our team, just the magnitude of it, shouldn’t be understated. … The success of the team is on her shoulders and it’s impressive how she’s handled it.”
Miles’ 19.4 points per game lead the Lynx, while McBride adds 17.0 per night and Natasha Howard averages 16.8.
Los Angeles enters the difficult matchup having dropped six of its last nine games. The Sparks also have gone 1-12 against the Lynx since the beginning of the 2023 season, which includes a 99-83 loss on June 17 in Los Angeles.
Coach Lynne Roberts’ team has been dealt bad luck on the injury front throughout the year. Kelsey Plum (team-high 23.9 points per game) hasn’t played since June 21 with a lower leg injury. Former No. 2 overall pick Cameron Brink has appeared in just 14 games — none after June 15 due to a sprained ankle.
“We can’t be entirely outcome-driven. We haven’t been healthy all year,” Roberts said. “The roster that we had on paper has not been the roster that we’ve played with. That’s hard on the players. It’s tough to gain consistency. But that’s what it is. We have to just keep chopping wood.”
Fifteen-year veteran Nneka Ogwumike leads the healthy Sparks with 17.0 points and 8.6 rebounds per game while Dearica Hamby averages 14.6 points and 7.6 rebounds.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Inter Miami acquire Ecuadorian D Fricio Caicedo
Apr 4, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Fans wait to enter the stadium prior to the game between the Inter Miami CF and the Austin FC at Nu Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images Inter Miami acquired Ecuadorian defender Fricio Caicedo on loan from Costa Rica’s FC Moravia FCM.
The deal announced Tuesday runs through the 2027 season and includes a purchase option.
Caicedo, 18, is also eligible to occupy a U22 Initiative roster slot with the defending MLS Cup champions.
“Fricio is a young player with tremendous potential and a bright future,” Inter Miami sporting director Alberto Marrero said. “We’re very pleased to welcome him to the project. We believe this is the ideal environment for him to continue developing, grow as a player, and gradually showcase his full potential. He stands out for his physicality, his strength in the air, and his pace when competing for loose balls.”
The ink is dry. Caicedo is officially a Heron ?? pic.twitter.com/gi4Jclf46R
— Inter Miami CF (@InterMiamiCF) July 14, 2026
The 6-foot-4 center-back acknowledged that playing alongside eight-time Ballon d’Or winner Lionel Messi is a dream come true.
“My goals are to play, earn minutes, become a starter and win many trophies,” Caicedo said. “I came to Miami because my dream was to play alongside (Lionel) Messi, who is without a doubt the best player in the world. I’m here to make history and show what I can do.”
Inter Miami will return from the FIFA World Cup break on July 22 against the visiting Chicago Fire.
–Field Level Media
