Sports
Astros send OFs Jake Meyers, Joey Loperfido to Triple-A Sugar Land
Jun 22, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Houston Astros center fielder Jake Meyers (6) tries to catch a fly ball against the Toronto Blue Jays during the eighth inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images The Houston Astros demoted outfielders Jake Meyers and Joey Loperfido to Triple-A Sugar Land prior to Saturday night’s contest against the Tampa Bay Rays.
Houston recalled utility player Zach Dezenzo and activated first baseman/outfielder LaMonte Wade Jr. from the injured list.
Meyers, 30, has batted just .206 with three homers and 11 RBIs in 52 games. He is in his sixth season with the Astros.
“He’s helped us to win a lot of games, helped us win a lot of postseason games,” Houston manager Joe Espada told reporters. “He’s part of this organization’s success, but he understood it. We’re going to help him. We’ve pinpointed some things that he’s going to be working on in Triple-A.”
Meyers has a .240 career average in 517 games. He has 36 homers, 172 RBIs and 38 stolen bases.
Loperfido, 27, is batting .216 with one homer and 12 RBIs in 39 games this season. He is in his second stint with Houston.
Dezenzo, 26, batted .191 with one homer and two RBIs in 21 games with the Astros earlier this season.
Wade, 32, was signed in early June and went 4-for-12 with a homer and four RBIs in four games before sustaining a right hamstring injury. He last played for Houston on June 8.
Wade received regular playing time earlier in his career with the San Francisco Giants (2021-25). He owns a .236 batting average with 56 homers and 189 RBIs in 564 games with four big league teams.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Jonas Vingegaard takes Tour de France lead at Stage 1 team time trial
UAE Team Emirates XRG’s Tadej Pogacar in action during Stage 12 – Cycling – Tour de France – Stage 12 – Auch to Hautacam – Hautacam, France – July 17, 2025
Jonas Vingegaard leaned into his Team Visma/Lease a Bike teammates and grabbed the yellow jersey after Stage 1 of the Tour de France on Saturday at Barcelona, Spain.
The stage marked the return of a team trial to the Tour de France, with a new format as each rider was timed individually, instead of receiving a collective team time. A team time trial was last contested in the 2019 event and was last used as the opening stage in 1971.
Denmark’s Vingegaard broke from his teammates during a pair of 1.1-kilometer climbs before the finish line and completed the 19.6-kilometer course in 21 minutes, 47 seconds. He was eight seconds faster that Italy’s Filippo Ganna of Netcompany INEOS, while two-time defending champion and Slovenian native Tadej Pogacar of UAE Team Emirates was in third, 12 seconds off the lead.
Spain’s Juan Ayuso was fourth, 16 seconds behind Vingegaard.
“I would say it’s a perfect start,” said Vingegaard, who won the Giro d’Italia stage race in May. “It’s still a long tour, but it’s a perfect start. My teammates did an amazing job today. They were so strong. I didn’t have to do too much, to be honest. They just drove me to the finish.”
Vingegaard won consecutive Tour de France titles in 2022 and 2023, but was removed from cycling’s throne by Pogacar, who won the event in 2024 and 2025. That made Pogacar a four-time champion after also winning in 2020 and 2021.
Despite his third-place finish in the opening stage, Pogacar is well within striking distance to win his record-tying fifth title. Pogacar rallied on the late uphill section of the course with the fastest time over the final 3.3 kilometers to earn the polka-dot jersey, given to the top climber.
Sunday’s Stage 2 is a hilly 168.5-kilometer course that travels through Spain from Tarragona and along the Mediterranean Sea before heading inland and finishing at Barcelona’s Olympic Stadium.
The race will enter France during Stage 3 on Monday.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Rangers activate RHP Chris Martin, place RHP Jakob Junis on IL
Apr 8, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers pitcher Chris Martin (31) throws to the plate during the seventh inning against the Seattle Mariners at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images The Texas Rangers activated right-hander Chris Martin from the injured list on Saturday and placed right-hander Jakob Junis on the IL retroactive to Wednesday.
Martin, 40, has been out for just over a month with a right shoulder impingement. He was 1-1 with a 7.84 ERA over 12 relief appearances this season and is 19-25 with a 3.45 ERA over 430 relief appearances in 11 seasons for seven different clubs.
Junis, 33, is dealing with a right hip impingement. He is 1-1 with a 2.80 ERA in 31 appearances (one start) for the Rangers this season, and in 10 career seasons, he is 47-47 with a 4.29 ERA in 280 appearances (117 starts) for six different clubs.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Alexander Zverev through to 4th round at Wimbledon
Germany’s Alexander Zverev in action against the United States’ Marcos Giron at Wimbledon on July 4, 2026. Alexander Zverev is showing no hangover effects after capturing his first-ever Grand Slam event.
The French Open champion, who has typically struggled on the grass at Wimbledon, reached the fourth round with a convincing 6-2, 7-6 (4), 6-4 victory over Marcos Giron on Saturday.
The German served brilliantly, smashing 17 aces to only three double-faults and won 54-of-70 first-serve points.
After a routine first set, neither player flinched in the second, leading to a tie-breaker. Zverev sprinted to a 6-2 lead in the breaker, but Giron held off three consecutive set points before succumbing on the second seed’s forehand volley winner.
“He (Giron) is somebody who plays fantastic on grass and he shows it every time he steps out on the surface,” Zverev said. “He has won tour-level events on the surface, I knew that I had to be a hundred per cent ready from the first point onwards and I am very happy to be through in straight sets.”
Zverev has never been past the fourth round in London. To do so, he will have to take out No. 13 Jiri Lehecka of the Czech Republic, who edged Spain’s Jaume Munar, 6-4, 6-4, 4-6, 6-4.
Lehecka blasted 52 winners in the four-set win and staved off six of Munar’s eight break point opportunities.
Zverev is 1-1 versus Lehecka, but the two have not played since 2023.
In the other quarter of the bracket, fifth-seeded Alex de Minaur outlasted Zachary Svajda, 6-2, 5-7, 6-2, 6-4 and No. 9 Flavio Cobolli of Italy rallied to knock off Russia’s Karen Khachanov, 0-6, 7-6 (4), 6-7 (5), 6-2, 6-2.
The Australian took advantage of Svajda’s second serve, winning 35-of-50 points and converting eight break point chances. He also was efficient at the net, winning 22-of-27 while moving forward in the two-hour, 40-minute match.
“I feel great. I’m happy to get through the first week. This is the first goal of the tournament, obviously,” De Minaur said. “It’s getting down to crunch time, I guess. I’m happy with the way I have been playing. The body is feeling great. I thought today was probably the best I moved around the court.”
Cobolli, the French Open runner-up to Zverev, won only nine points in the first set. But after splitting a pair of tie-breakers, he flipped the early script, recording 22 winners and only 10 unforced errors.
de Minaur has won both matches against Cobolli, but the two hard-hitting baseliners have not played since 2024.
–Field Level Media
