Sports
Brittney Griner, Sun finding their footing while Mercury has gone cold
Jul 6, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Connecticut Sun center Brittney Griner (42) jumps for a rebound in front of Minnesota Lynx forward Natasha Howard (1) in the second half at Target Center. Mandatory Credit: Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images Brittney Griner will return to Phoenix for only the second time following her 11-year career with the Mercury when the Connecticut Sun visit for consecutive games, beginning with a contest on Friday night.
Connecticut (6-18) will then play Phoenix (8-17) on Sunday in a two-game set between two struggling teams, although the Sun have won four of their last seven games after a 2-15 start to the season.
Phoenix has lost four consecutive games after winning four of five outings.
Following the Mercury’s tribute video for Griner last season, when the nine-time All-Star center visited as a member of the Atlanta Dream, she had 17 points and eight rebounds in a 90-79 victory on July 24, 2025.
She signed with Connecticut as a free agent last offseason and leads the Sun with 13.9 points and 1.8 blocked shots per game in 14 contests (all starts).
The 6-foot-9 Griner has missed 10 games because of rib, foot and quad injuries but is coming off scoring 20 points with six assists and four rebounds in Connecticut’s 90-87 win at home Tuesday over the Portland Fire.
That performance followed a 29-point, 10-rebound effort in Connecticut’s 90-89 win at the Minnesota Lynx on July 6.
“A lot of people are counting me out, want to call me old, want to set me to retire,” said Griner, 35. “I got a lot to go, and this team is bringing a lot out of me.”
The Sun have a young roster, fueled by rookie point guard Charlisse Leger-Walker, following a major overhaul that included current Mercury forward Alyssa Thomas and the entire Connecticut starting lineup leaving before last season.
Thomas played 11 seasons for the Sun. She went 2-1 against her former team in 2025 while averaging 13.7 points, 11 assists and 9.3 rebounds in those games.
“The biggest thing is staying together; nobody’s going to feel sorry for us,” Thomas said after Phoenix lost 104-100 at Minnesota on Monday.
Phoenix has struggled in its four-game losing streak, mostly because of a lack of offensive execution. The Mercury are averaging 15.5 turnovers per game in their skid.
They showed signs of promise against Minnesota, making 55.6% of their field-goal attempts (35 of 63) while compiling 28 assists with 14 turnovers.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Twins, Cubs enter series hoping All-Star break didn't cool them off
Jul 1, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago Cubs pitcher Colin Rea (53) delivers the ball during the first inning against the San Diego Padres at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: Matt Marton-Imagn Images The Chicago Cubs entered the All-Star break on a red-hot streak.
After a few days off, they will hit the play button and try to pick up from where they paused the action.
The Cubs will welcome the Minnesota Twins to open a three-game interleague series beginning Friday night at Wrigley Field. Chicago was 34-34 on June 10 but finished the final month before the break on a 20-8 run to jump 12 games above .500.
Now comes the more intense part of the season as the Cubs eye a postseason run.
“We’re OK with where we’re at,” outfielder Michael Conforto said. “We’re still hungry to play better. … We feel like we haven’t played up to our potential yet.”
Chicago sits five games behind the first-place Milwaukee Brewers in the National League Central. The Cubs are counting on a big second half to reach the playoffs for the second consecutive year.
“The way I look at it is we’re in such a good place and I feel like we haven’t played that well yet,” shortstop Dansby Swanson said. “There’s been a lot of guys, offensively, underperforming from what they’re used to. You could even say that about the pitching side.
“There’s so much room for this team to continue to grow and get better and play better, and it’ll be a fun second half.”
Minnesota will look to spoil the Cubs’ fun this weekend.
The Twins also entered the All-Star break on a high note after winning nine of their final 13. They won back-to-back games against the Los Angeles Angels just before the break to climb within one game of .500. Minnesota sits three games back of the American League Central lead and is in the thick of the AL wild-card chase.
That might not seem like a big deal for some teams, but it’s great news for Minnesota, which entered the season with low expectations. A strong resumption of the season after the All-Star break could help management decide to be a buyer at the trade deadline instead of trading away veterans as it did a season ago.
For the moment, general manager Jeremy Zoll is watching and waiting.
“There’s still a lot of games left to unfold and teams aren’t really making those declarations (about who is available) until the last possible minute,” Zoll said. “And in turn, you need the full market to develop to be able to have things happen.
“So we’re continuing to evaluate things. The team is on a nice run here. … So we’re really excited about that to continue to progress and hopefully have a good showing … and go from there.”
Cubs right-hander Colin Rea (7-5, 4.75 ERA) will take the mound to start the series. He is 5 1/3 innings shy of reaching the 100-inning milestone for the fourth straight year.
In two career starts against Minnesota, Rea is 1-1 with a 3.75 ERA.
The Twins will counter with right-hander Bailey Ober (6-3, 4.40), who will make his second start since returning from the injured list. He allowed one run on three hits in five innings of a 5-2 loss against the Cleveland Guardians on July 9.
Ober, who was on the IL with right elbow inflammation and a mild flexor strain, has never faced the Cubs in his career.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Whitecaps-Fire match postponed due to air quality conditions
Jul 16, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Soldier Field and the Chicago skyline are obscured by wildfire smoke. A planned soccer match between the Chicago Fire and Vancouver Whitecaps FC was rescheduled due to poor air quality conditions in the Chicago area. Mandatory Credit: Talia Sprague-Imagn Images Thursday’s match between the Vancouver Whitecaps and host Chicago Fire was postponed until Oct. 6. The local air quality was deemed to be too dangerous for players and fans to attend the outdoor event at Soldier Field, as Chicago and much of the Great Lakes area has been impacted by wildfire smoke.
The match is the only scheduled meeting between the Whitecaps and Fire this season. The rescheduled Oct. 6 date sits between a bye week for the two clubs, as Vancouver and Chicago each weren’t slated to play between Sept. 26 and Oct. 10.
“We share our fans’ disappointment, especially given the excitement surrounding our first match back following the FIFA World Cup break and the anticipation of welcoming more than 40,000 fans to Soldier Field,” said Chicago president of business operations Dave Baldwin.
“While we know this decision is disappointing, health and safety must come first,” Baldwin added. “We appreciate our fans’ understanding and look forward to welcoming them back soon.”
The delay means that MLS hiatus for the World Cup will extend a bit longer for the two clubs. The Whitecaps and Fire each had their last regular-season match on May 23. Vancouver will now return to action on July 22 in a road match with FC Cincinnati, while the Fire visit Inter Miami on the same day.
–Field Level Media
Sports
MLS-leading Nashville out to extend Atlanta United's struggles
May 17, 2026; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Nashville SC midfielder Hany Mukhtar (10) celebrates with forward Warren Madrigal (41), midfielder Bryan Acosta (6) and midfielder Ahmed Qasem (37) after scoring a goal against Los Angeles Football Club during the second half at Geodis Park. Mandatory Credit: Alan Poizner-Imagn Images With the best record in MLS as the season resumes, Nashville SC is in go-for-it mode.
Ahead of its home match Friday night against Atlanta United, Nashville has added to an already formidable roster by signing Tunisian winger Elias Saad and 21-year-old midfielder Famara Camara of Senegal.
Already stocked with four All-Star selections — the most of any team — Nashville (10-1-3, 33 points) beefed up its attacking arsenal by acquiring Saad from FC Augsburg of the German Bundesliga.
Nashville owns a plus-20 goal differential, second only to Vancouver (22), and is top five in MLS in goals scored (31), fewest goals against (11) and possession (55%).
“We are an exciting team,” coach BJ Callaghan said. “We are a team that wants to attack. We play exciting games.”
Hany Mukhtar (six goals, five assists), Sam Surridge (nine goals), Andy Najar (five assists) and goalkeeper Brian Schwake (35 saves, six clean sheets) are the team’s All-Stars. It’s the fifth selection for Mukhtar, the second apiece for Surridge and Najar and the first for Schwake.
While Nashville is riding high into the second half, Atlanta (3-9-2, 11 points) is stuck in 14th in the East, seven points out of the final playoff spot. There’s time for Atlanta to make a push but not a lot to indicate that it can.
Its 14 goals are tied for last in the 30-team league and goalkeeper Lucas Hoyos has conceded 23 goals while making 34 saves. Outside of Aleksey Miranchuk’s five goals, no one else has tallied more than two.
Like Nashville, Atlanta has added to its roster after the break. Chilean defender Paulo Diaz and Paraguayan defender Junior Alonso figure to shore up weaknesses on the backline. Alonso helped his country shock Germany in the round of 32 at the World Cup.
Atlanta chief soccer officer and sporting director Chris Henderson said Alonso is a hard-working defender.
“He’ll add solidarity and stability to our backline,” Henderson said. “He’s a natural leader.”
–Field Level Media
