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Astros start fast, power past Rangers

MLB: Texas Rangers at Houston AstrosMay 16, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Houston Astros second baseman Jose Altuve (27) crosses home plate after hitting a home run to left field against the Texas Rangers during the first inning at Daikin Park. Mandatory Credit: Erik Williams-Imagn Images

Jose Altuve and Yordan Alvarez slugged first-inning home runs to key a four-homer assault that propelled the Houston Astros to a 4-1 victory over the visiting Texas Rangers on Saturday.

The Astros secured the three-game series and will aim for a sweep on Sunday in the finale. Houston prevented Rangers right-hander Jacob deGrom (3-3) from securing his 100th win by doing something only one other team has accomplished against deGrom in his illustrious career.

Altuve drilled a 2-0 fastball from deGrom 358 feet out to left field in the bottom of the first inning for his 42nd career leadoff home run. Altuve spotted the Astros a 1-0 lead with his fourth homer of the season and, two batters later, Alvarez doubled that margin by taking deGrom out to right.

Alvarez launched a 3-2 fastball 362 feet for his 15th home run this season. Suddenly trailing 2-0, deGrom rallied with strikeouts of Christian Walker and Braden Shewmake to begin a stretch where he retired eight of nine batters. Zach Dezenzo singled with two outs in the second inning.

But the Astros ambushed deGrom again in the fourth. Walker crushed the first pitch of that frame, a fastball, 422 feet to left-center field for his 11th home run and a 3-0 lead. After deGrom retired Shewmake and Brice Matthews, Zach Cole blasted his third homer 361 feet to right.

deGrom allowed four home runs for the second time in 257 career starts. On July 7, 2017, he surrendered four dingers in a 6-5 road win over the St. Louis Cardinals with the New York Mets. deGrom retired the final seven batters he faced following the Cole homer and surrendered four runs on five hits with four strikeouts in six innings. He matched his season high with 94 pitches.

Astros right-hander Kai-Wei Teng (2-3) worked five scoreless innings. He allowed two hits and issued four walks while notching seven strikeouts.

Joc Pederson produced an RBI single against Houston reliever Enyel De Los Santos in the top of the seventh, but the Rangers finished 1-for-10 with runners in scoring position and stranded 13 baserunners overall.

Altuve departed in the eighth, clutching his left side after grounding into a double play.

–Field Level Media

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PGA is widest-open major in years: ‘Never seen anything like it’

PGA: PGA Championship - Third RoundMay 16, 2026; Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, USA; Jon Rahm plays the ball on the sixth hole during the third round of the PGA Championship golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa. — Jon Rahm studied the leaderboard on the digital screen inside the player interview tent at Aronimink Golf Club. Once before he began his first answer, then again when answering a question in Spanish.

“Can we move this? How many of them are at 3 under?” Rahm asked a PGA of America official as he inspected a wall of minus-4s and minus-3s.

Even when his press conference was done, the two-time major champion hung back, asking questions, seemingly mystified that the PGA Championship had gotten this way.

At the time, Rahm was one of five co-leaders at 4 under par, and even though Alex Smalley emerged from the chaos late Saturday afternoon to grab a two-shot lead, the intrigue remained.

Five players are two shots behind Smalley, another four are three off the pace and 12 players are tied at 2 under. That’s 21 players who’ll go to bed Saturday night correctly believing they have a real shot to come from behind and win this major championship.

“I mean, my PGA Tour career isn’t necessarily very long at this point, but I’ve never seen anything like it,” said Ludvig Aberg of Sweden (4 under).

“It’s very tight. I think there’s a lot of good players within striking distance going into (Sunday), and it’s a cool thing, I think, for the viewers. I think it’s cool to see that many guys have a chance to win a tournament.”

It’s as wide-open of a major as men’s golf has seen in recent memory. The five-way tie for second behind an outright leader at the 54-hole mark is just the fifth in major championship history. The 22 players at or within four shots of the lead is a PGA Championship record, per The Athletic.

And though Smalley will have to fend off players with majors on their resume like Northern Ireland’s Rory McIIroy, Xander Schauffele, Patrick Reed (all at 3 under) and Rahm, six of the top 10 (counting Smalley) — and another eight of the 12-way tie at 2 under — are all angling for their first career major wins.

At a time when McIlroy and Scottie Scheffler have collected four of the past five majors, it’s a chance for some new blood.

“I was pretty busy with the conditions out there, but I saw myself on top (of the leaderboard) once, and that was good,” said Germany’s Matti Schmid (4 under), who will play in the final pairing after posting 65 and, like Smalley, has never won on the PGA Tour.

The 2-under group features three players who shot 5-under 65s early in the day when the course was at its easiest: Chris Kirk, Norway’s Kristoffer Reitan and Englishman Justin Rose.

Rose said after his round that he hopes the lead doesn’t get past 6 or 7 under, and he got his wish. He also said carrying the lead into Sunday would come with a burden.

“There’s some chain reaction moments out there. If you don’t do the right thing — and if you’re a leader, you realize everyone is making a run, but if you don’t hit the right shot at the right time, it’s going to feel challenging out there,” said Rose, the 2013 U.S. Open champion.

McIlroy and others had posited that some of the PGA of America’s uber-difficult pin locations Thursday and Friday led to the bunched leaderboard, as nobody was taking chances, leading to a smaller variety of outcomes and scores.

A more lenient setup Saturday did little to spread players out. And that means high potential for a photo finish on Sunday evening.

“As hard as it is to play, the challenge can also be kind of fun if you do well,” Rahm said. “That’s probably the reason why the leaderboard is so bunched up and it’s going to be such a good Sunday tomorrow. So in that sense, showmanship-wise, they’ve done a great job.”

–Adam Zielonka, Field Level Media

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Rockies square series with D-backs in rare homer-less game

MLB: Arizona Diamondbacks at Colorado RockiesMay 16, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Colorado Rockies outfielder Jake McCarthy (31) steals second in the seventh inning ahead of a tag by Arizona Diamondbacks infielder Geraldo Perdomo (2) at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images

Mickey Moniak drove in two runs and the host Colorado Rockies held on to defeat the Arizona Diamondbacks 4-2 on Saturday afternoon.

Jake McCarthy was 2-for-3 with an RBI, Brenton Doyle went 2-for-4 with two runs and Willi Castro added two hits and one run for the Rockies, who evened the three-game series and won for only the second time in seven games.

Lourdes Gurriel Jr. stole home as he and Ketel Marte each went 2-for-4 with a run for the Diamondbacks, who won Friday’s series opener 9-1.

It was only the third game this season at Coors Field without a home run.

Arizona had runners on second and third, the potential tying and go-ahead runs, with two outs in the seventh when reliever Jaden Hill retired Geraldo Perdomo on a grounder to first.

The Diamondbacks recorded nine hits and drew five walks, but went 2-for-11 with runners in scoring position.

Moniak was hit by a pitch with the bases loaded in the eighth by reliever Brandyn Garcia to stretch the lead to 4-2.

Antonio Senzatela pitched the ninth to earn his third save, despite allowing two baserunners.

Rockies starter Tomoyuki Sugano (4-3) gave up two runs on seven hits in five innings with two walks and a strikeout.

Diamondbacks starter Eduardo Rodriguez (4-1) allowed three runs and nine hits in 5 1/3 innings, did not walk a batter and struck out six.

The Rockies jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the first on RBI singles by T.J. Rumfield and Moniak as the first three batters all reached with base hits.

Arizona made it 2-1 in the second as Gurriel Jr. stole home while Jose Fernandez swiped second.

Colorado upped its lead to 3-1 in the bottom of the second on McCarthy’s run-scoring single that scored Kyle Karros. McCarthy was thrown out by left fielder Gurriel Jr., trying to stretch the liner into a double.

Back-to-back one-out doubles by Marte and Corbin Carroll in the fifth brought Arizona within 3-2.

–Field Level Media

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Cavaliers Facing Elimination Again in Game 7 Against Pistons

After winning three games in a row and their first road game of the playoffs, it looked like Cleveland was going to roll their way into the Eastern Conference Finals. Unfortunately for them, Detroit is a team that will never quit, and they answered every question on Friday night with a dominating 115-94 win, the largest victory for either team this series.

Before Friday’s no-show, prediction markets gave the Cavs nearly an 80% chance to advance; that number has fallen to 37% with a massive Game 7 on the horizon.

Obviously, every game 7 is a must-win, but it means far more for Cleveland. Since LeBron left in 2018, the media have not respected the Cavs. They’ve been painted as a soft team that cannot win in the postseason. Now, they expedited their contention window by trading for James Harden, a move that needs to result in at least an Eastern Conference Finals appearance.

Cleveland is the most expensive roster in the sport, and if they spin out again in the Eastern Conference Semifinals, I’m not sure Dan Gilbert will be willing to keep eating the exorbitant tax bill he’s been taking on. If the Cavs lose, we might be watching the end of the Donovan Mitchell and company era in Cleveland.

Now, this isn’t to take anything away from Detroit, but this whole season has felt like it’s arrived one season early. I think if you ask even the most biased of Pistons fans, they would admit this team is not ready to contend for a championship.

Cade Cunningham looks like a future face of the NBA, but he desperately needs more help, something he finally received in Game 6. Seven Pistons not named Cunningham scored at least 8 points, and role players were a very solid 42% from behind the arc.

Paul Reed continued to be a spark plug off the bench for Detroit, but more importantly, Jalen Duren finally had a very solid performance. He dropped 15 points and 11 rebounds, which were the most points and second-most rebounds he’s had in a game this series.

He’s simply the biggest X-Factor going into Game 7. Duren is likely to be awarded with All-NBA honors this year, and he needs to perform like an All-NBA player to help Cunningham.

Game 7 opens with Detroit as 4.5-point favorites, and I think that’s a little bit high. This game comes down to one thing for me: will Cleveland’s guards show up?

Outside of too many turnovers, James Harden didn’t have a horrible Game 6, but Donovan Mitchell absolutely no-showed and was a net negative every time he stepped on the court. It has been a horrific postseason for Mitchell, but all could be forgotten with a legendary Game 7 performance. In the playoffs, nobody remembers how they got there; they only remember who the victor is.

Against my better judgment, I would lean Cleveland +4.5 in Game 7.

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