Sports
Red Sox win 10th straight in first game of doubleheader vs. Rays
Jul 17, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Red Sox designated hitter Masataka Yoshida (7) hits a single during the sixth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Fenway Park. Mandatory Credit: Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images Jake Bennett threw six scoreless innings before a six-run sixth inning allowed the Boston Red Sox to blow open a 10-0 win over the visiting Tampa Bay Rays in the first game of a day-night doubleheader on Friday afternoon.
Masataka Yoshida and Carlos Narvaez each homered as part of three-hit days for the Red Sox, who banged out 15 hits en route to their 10th consecutive victory dating back to July 3.
Yoshida (3-for-5) added a double and finished a triple shy of a cycle, while Narvaez and Caleb Durbin were both 3-for-4.
Bennett (5-3) allowed just one hit and one walk while striking out three. He has won four straight outings.
Alec Gamboa went the rest of the way, allowing just two hits over the final three innings for a save.
The Red Sox quickly bounced back from going down 1-2-3 to start the game against Tampa Bay starter Griffin Jax (5-7), as back-to-back hits by Durbin and Yoshida led to second-inning runs. Jarren Duran drove in the opening run on a sacrifice fly before Narvaez dropped an RBI single into center for a 2-0 lead.
Meanwhile, Bennett threw 3 1/3 no-hit innings before Junior Caminero’s one-out single in the fourth. Jonathan Aranda was Tampa Bay’s lone baserunner before that knock, drawing a one-out walk as the second batter of the game.
In the fourth, Yoshida tucked a leadoff solo homer around Pesky’s Pole in right field to extend the Boston advantage to 3-0.
The first six Red Sox batters reached base and five scored in the sixth. Durbin was hit by a pitch, Yoshida singled to center and Romy Gonzalez walked to load the bases, and then Duran continued the merry-go-round by chopping a two-run single through the right side.
After Chris Roycroft relieved Jax, Narvaez and Tsung-Che Cheng laid down back-to-back bunt singles that produced runs. Catcher Nick Fortes’ throwing error on Narvaez’s chopper plated another.
Roycroft did induce a double play ball, but two more runs came home with two outs, as Ceddanne Rafaela battled through a nine-pitch at-bat for an RBI double off the Green Monster and Durbin knocked another RBI single to right after Wilyer Abreu was intentionally walked.
In the eighth, Gamboa — who was recalled as Boston’s 26th man for the twin bill — worked around a Taylor Walls one-out double as only the second Tampa Bay hit before Narvaez socked a solo homer over everything in left field to move the Boston lead to double digits.
The Red Sox took their last at-bats with position player Ben Williamson pitching for the Rays.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Air quality alerts not yet threat to World Cup final
MetLife Stadium is shown, Thursday, July 16, 2026 during an air quality alert. Whether the air quality will play a part in the World Cup Final on Sunday remains to be seen. Hazy skies and negative air quality drifting from wildfires burning in Canada and the Boundary Waters region into Minnesota do not currently represent a threat to the World Cup final in New Jersey on Sunday afternoon, FIFA confirmed on Friday.
The upper Midwest and parts of the Northeast are being impacted by segments of thick smoke, and air quality was enough of a concern on Thursday night that MLS postponed the Chicago Fire-Vancouver Whitecaps match scheduled to be played at Soldier Field in Chicago.
The World Cup final is set for Sunday afternoon at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J. The air quality was deemed “unhealthy for everyone” on Thursday by the New York Office of Emergency Management.
While conditions were better Friday in the region, an air quality alert was issued by the National Weather Service along with warnings about “potentially worsening” warnings Saturday. The forecast Saturday was for a chance of thunderstorms, high of 80 degrees and winds at 10 to 15 mph.
Very light (5 mph to 8 mph) winds are forecast Sunday with a high of 81.
–Field Level Media
Sports
The Defending Champion Knicks Must Navigate a Delicate Offseason
Next season waits for no one, not even a team that’s waited 53 years to once again call itself a world champion.
Thus, even before the most boisterous parade in New York City history Thursday afternoon, the composition of the defending champion Knicks (it is going to take a while to get used to that three-word phrase) was called into question by none other than owner James Dolan.
“If we could bring back the whole team exactly as it is, why wouldn’t you?” Dolan said on WFAN last month. “But I don’t know if we’re going to be able to.
“We’re willing to stretch, but there’s certain things in the NBA that you have to be suicidal to do. And we’re not going to do those. One of those is called the second apron. Cannot go on to the second apron.”
On one hand, it was classic Dolan, raining on the parade before it even began and reminding us all every time he speaks publicly why he so rarely speaks publicly.
On the other, again, the calendar isn’t pausing for the Knicks even as they enjoy long-awaited and much-deserved victory laps. So Dolan may as well have said the quiet part out loud, because the reality of constructing next year’s team must be confronted at some point sooner than later.
If ever a team earned the opportunity to try and run it back, future costs be damned, it’s these Knicks, fresh off a generational championship. And they are as well-positioned as possible to become the NBA’s first repeat winner since the 2017-18 Golden State Warriors.
No matter what Vegas thinks, nobody should be betting against the team that authored two of the most incredible single-game comebacks in NBA playoff history on its way to the most dominant postseason run of all-time in terms of point differential.
All five starters are under contract through next year while Karl-Anthony Towns and Josh Hart have player and team options, respectively, for 2027-28.
Things are far less clear when it comes to keeping together the rest of the Knicks’ rotation. Two of their top three reserves — guards Jose Alvarado and Landry Shamet — were free agents who opted to return. The one rotation piece that needed to be replaced after he left in free agency was center Mitchell Robinson.
It was asking a lot to bring all three back, even if team president Leon Rose can convince Dolan to forget about the second apron. (For the record, the lack of a mid-level exemption or the ability to include cash in trades are real impediments, but let’s all have a laugh at the idea of the “**** them picks” Knicks being put off by the idea they can’t trade a 2034 first-round pick at next year’s deadline)
Robinson helped. But he’s injury-prone and a liability at the free throw line while Alvarado and Shamet combined to average 15.9 points over 39.9 minutes per game — solid numbers for sure, but even they weren’t must-have returnees.
Rose, who saw a franchise-altering superstar in Jalen Brunson when everyone else saw a run-of-the-mill former second-round draft pick, has also earned the right to find Knicks-worthy supplemental players.
Contributions from all — Robinson, Alvarado and Shamet included — during the NBA Finals embodied the sum-is-better-than-the-parts nature of the Knicks.
Alvarado had eight points in the fourth quarter of Game 4, when the Knicks completed their historic comeback from a 29-point deficit. And of the 34 points Shamet scored in the Finals, 13 came in the fourth quarter.
Rose traded back twice, from picks 24 and 31 overall, and came away with players nobody had on the team needs list. But the Knicks look ready to give Jack Kayil a shot given his summer league showing and 47th overall pick Tyler Nickel could be an extra shooter off the bench.
The Knicks have spent most of the previous 52 offseasons trying to perform facelifts upon one of the league’s most downtrodden franchises. Trying to figure out a way to replicate championship success, even if it requites a slightly different formula, is a far better task — and, as Rose is surely getting to know, far more delicate and challenging.
Sports
5-star WR Moshun Sales highest-rated Indiana recruit ever
Lawrence North’s Monshun Sales poses for a photo Thursday, July 24, 2025, at Decatur Central High School in Indianapolis. Five-star wide receiver Monshun Sales made a verbal commitment to Indiana on Friday.
If Sales signs with the defending champions, he’ll supplant Class of 2022 linebacker Dasan McCullough as the highest-ranked recruit in Indiana history.
Sales, a 6-foot-5, 200-pound rising senior at Indianapolis’ Lawrence North High School, announced his commitment on “The Pat McAfee Show.” He chose the Hoosiers over Texas, Alabama, Ohio State and LSU. According to ESPN, Texas was the most serious challenger as Sales considered his future.
“My decision to commit to Indiana was not an easy one,” Sales said. “The relationships that I made with the coaches and staff at Indiana throughout the process is what made it feel like home. Coach Cignetti has built a winning program, and I can’t wait to be a part of it.”
Sales, originally from Alabama, is a two-way star at Lawrence North. In his junior season, he had 37 catches for 794 yards and nine touchdowns along with 56 tackles on defense. In his sophomore year, he caught 34 passes for 568 yards and seven touchdowns. The team finished 11-1 and was ranked No. 1 in the state in Class 6A that year.
The Hoosiers’ 17-player class includes Brownsburg four-star receiver Branden Sharpe, Noblesville three-star offensive tackle Mason McDermott and Michigan City three-star offensive lineman Jeremiah Jones. Three-star quarterback Jameson Purcell (Maine South HS; Park Ridge, Ill.) has been committed to the program since July 2025; running back Da’Jon Talley Rhodes (St. John’s College; Washington, D.C.) rounds out the skill position talent bound for Indiana in the 2027 cycle.
–Field Level Media
