Sports
Court OKs this weekend's UFC event at White House
Jun 11, 2026; Washington, D.C., USA; The UFC octagon ”The Claw” on the White House South Lawn during a press tour for the UFC Freedom 250 at White House. Mandatory Credit: Per Haljestam-Imagn Images This weekend’s UFC Freedom 250 event at the White House will proceed as planned after a federal judge denied a legal challenge to the festivities on Friday.
Judge Amit P. Mehta of the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., denied an emergency injunction application filed last weekend by the Public Integrity Project, which argued that the Trump administration had unlawfully organized a private sporting event on public property in violation of National Park Service rules.
Mehta’s ruling said the plaintiffs failed to establish that they would suffer any irreparable harm or aesthetic injury if the defendants — the Department of Interior and National Park Service — allowed the UFC fights to happen.
Mehta noted that the UFC event had been public knowledge for nearly a year, but the plaintiffs did not file “until June 7, 2026 — more than two weeks after visible preparations commenced at the White House — to seek emergency relief.” The late filing “undercuts their claims of irreparable harm,” the judge wrote.
Mehta said the large claw-shaped stadium set up on the South Lawn is a temporary structure and “the risk of any significant environmental damage is doubtful.”
The weekend’s schedule includes a press conference Friday at the Lincoln Memorial, weigh-ins on Saturday at The Ellipse, and the fight card on the South Lawn on Sunday, which is also President Donald Trump’s 80th birthday.
The card is headlined by lightweight champion Ilia Topuria taking on interim champion Justin Gaethje in a belt unification fight. An interim heavyweight title bout between Ciryl Gane and Alex Pereira is billed as the co-main event.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Four World Cup Teams Who Have No Real Chance of Winning It All
Pretty much everyone knows France and Argentina are serious World Cup contenders. We also feel pretty confident that Cape Verde and Curacao aren’t.
But some sides are coming to the 2026 tournament with vibes higher than their true chances.
Here’s four teams who definitely aren’t winning the World Cup, even though they probably think they can.
Croatia
What legendary midfielder Luka Modric and manager Zlatko Dalic engineered in helping a nation of fewer than four million people finish second at the 2018 World Cup and third in 2022 is nothing short of extraordinary.
But 2026 is where it ends.
Modric is 40. And while he is still playing the overwhelming majority of minutes for AC Milan,it was for a
Rossinieri side that failed again to reach the UEFA Champions League despite not having any European commitments in 2025-206.
But Croatia still rely on him, as they do on the 37-year-old Ivan Perisic. Their options at striker are underwhelming, their draw is tough and their schedule is brutal. They’d have to play eight matches to win the title in just 33 days, and that’s too much for a team that skews this old.
Portugal
Roberto Martinez’s Portuguese squad is not nearly as reliant on older players across the pitch, but the 41-year-old Cristiano Ronaldo is still the man relied on to produce goals, leading his side with five in World Cup qualifying.
That might be sustainable if Ronaldo played in more of the Lionel Messi model, where he’s guaranteed to make others on the pitch better even if he isn’t finding the net. But that’s hardly been the case with
CR7, particularly later in his career.
He’s already on the defensive with the media after two underwhelming performances in tune-up friendlies. And if circumstances force Martinez to opt for someone else on the pitch, Ronaldo’s history of not always taking such news in stride is well documented.
Germany
Yes, the Germans are tied with Italy as Europe’s most-decorated World Cup nation. But Italy has shown us how little that means. And as for the present-day Der Mannschaft, while the team is balanced with good players across the formation, it’s hard to identify anyone who is truly great in the role the national team is asking of them.
That includes Arsenal’s Kai Havertz, who perhaps qualifies among the best in the world at his natural position as a second forward or attacking midfielder, but not as much when he’s asked to lead the line as a No. 9. Until proven otherwise, it also includes Florian Wirtz, who moved to Liverpool last summer for a reported Premier League transfer fee of $117.5 million but hasn’t yet lived up to the pricetag.
This is still a strong enough team that a deep-ish run (think semifinals) is possible. But capturing the title takes a little more quality than this version of Germany has.
Uruguay
La Celeste have historically been a South American answer to what Croatia have done in recent years, but this World Cup finds the first-ever champions amid their own generational transition.
Luis Suarez retired from international play and has now been engaged in a war of words with polarizing Argentine manager Marcelo Bielsa. Darwin Nunez made the puzzling decision to head to the Saudi Pro League last summer instead of finding a way out of Liverpool that kept him in Europe.
Real Madrid’s Federico Valverde is as exceptional as he is versatile. But the rest of Uruguay’s strength is in the back half of the pitch. That’s an OK formula for getting out of the group, but it’s hard to know where
La Celeste’s moment of magic may come from when they need it.
Sports
WTA roundup: Donna Vekic sweeps Emma Raducanu in London final
Jan 19, 2026; Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Donna Vekic of Croatia in action against Mirra Andreeva in the first round of the women’s singles at the Australian Open at Margaret Court Arena in Melbourne Park. Mandatory Credit: Mike Frey-Imagn Images Donna Vekic swept local favorite Emma Raducanu 6-0, 7-6 (6) to become the first lucky loser to ever win a WTA 500-level title at the HSBC Championships on Sunday in London.
The 29-year-old Croatian won her fifth career singles title — her first at the 500 level — with a dominant opening set and a resilient second set. Vekic was broken twice in the second, falling into a 5-2 hole before winning four straight games. She then survived blowing a 4-1 lead in the tiebreaker to complete the sweep.
Vekic, whose last title came at the 2023 Monterrey Open, lost in the second round of qualifying. She’s the sixth loser to win a WTA event, the first since 2023. She overcame a 64% first-serve percentage and winning just 35% of her second serves by winning 49% of her return points and converting 5 of 11 break-point chances.
Raducanu, a London native from Bromley, came up just short of winning her first title since the 2021 US Open.
Libema Open
American Robin Montgomery won her first career WTA title in anticlimactic fashion after Czech competitor Barbora Krejcikova withdrew from the final due to illness at ‘s-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands.
Montgomery, a 21-year-old Washington, D.C. native, largely dominated her run to the final in a field laden with upsets. After dropping the opening set of her opening match, she won her final eight sets of the event, sweeping Greet Minnen, Daria Snigur and Ajla Tomljanovic.
The eighth-seeded Krejcikova, the only seed to make the quarterfinals, was kept without a title since her 2024 Wimbledon title due to the withdrawal.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Knicks Title Run Cements Jalen Brunson’s Place in New York Sports History
For most of Jalen Brunson’s four years with the New York Knicks, one of the more entertaining Twitter arguments (sports division) has been his place within the all-time Big Apple free agent signings.
Move over, Reggie Jackson. There is no more argument regarding the top spot.
Brunson cemented himself as the greatest free agent signing in New York history Saturday night, when he scored 45 points in Game 5 of the NBA Finals as the Knicks clinched their first title since 1973 with a 94-90 win over the San Antonio Spurs.
But this is not just about Brunson authoring the most iconic performance by a New York athlete in a championship-clinching victory since Oct, 18, 1977, when Jackson hit three homers on three pitches in Game 6 of the World Series as the Yankees won their first title in 15 years with an 8-4 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Accounting for the second-highest percentage of his team’s points in an NBA championship-clinching victory — some guy named Michael Jordan scored 45 points for the Chicago Bulls in their 87-86 win over the Utah Jazz in Game 6 in 1998 — is just the crowning achievement in a methodical climb for a player whose arrival was greeted with something less than the fanfare Jackson received in following the 1976 season.
Jackson was the second overall pick in baseball’s second amateur draft in 1966 by the then-Kansas City Athletics and was already a two-time World Series champion and one-time American League MVP when he signed with the Yankees following the 1976 season.
Brunson was the national player of the year and a two-time NCAA champion at Villanova — and then the third pick in the second round of the 2018 draft who started just 127 of 277 games with the Dallas Mavericks before signing with the Knicks in July 2022.
Newsday described Brunson as “…a solid NBA guard.” SI.com gave the signing a C while noting his undersized nature (6-foot-1) and struggles to get to the free throw line. A New York Post story quoted a personnel director declaring Brunson’s “…best role is fourth-, fifth-best player on a top-eight team.”
Most stories about the signing noted Brunson’s relationship with Knicks team president Leon Rose, who used to be Brunson’s agent, and the presence of his father Rick, who was hired as a New York assistant coach weeks before Jalen arrived.
Jackson was also joining the defending American League champs and a franchise renowned for its 20 World Series crowns. The Knicks had the worst record in the NBA in the 22 seasons prior to Brunson’s arrival and were a picture of organization-wide dysfunction.
Rose’s transformation of the Knicks is borderline miraculous — and none of it happens if he doesn’t hit on Brunson as the centerpiece of the rebuilding efforts and the leader who can instill in everyone else his toughness and unquenchable thirst for victory.
The Brunson effect was omnipresent during the NBA Finals, when the Knicks led for just 56 minutes and 44 seconds. They overcame double-digit deficits in all four victories, which they recorded by a combined 16 points.
Brunson recorded the points that put the Knicks ahead for good in three of their victories (and hoisted the 3-pointer that OG Anunoby tapped in to win Game 4, when the Knicks trailed by 29 points in the third quarter).
On Saturday night, Brunson carried the Knicks across the finish line when his teammates were mired in their worst shooting night of the postseason. Brunson was 14-of-27 from the field, including 4-of-7 from 3-point land. The rest of the roster was 17-of-60 from the field and 8-of-30 from beyond the arc.
This is not to discredit Jackson’s three-homer game, but he hit them with the Yankees down 3-2, ahead 5-3 and ahead 7-3. Without Brunson, there is no end in sight to the Knicks’ title drought.
Instead, come Thursday, the only endless sight will be the throngs of people gathered in Manhattan for the parade New York never thought it’d see.
“You know, people say he’s too small,” Knicks head coach Mike Brown said late Saturday night. “People say he’s a 1B or a 2B or whatever. He is a freaking 1A. He is an MVP candidate.”
And now, unquestionably, the greatest free agent signing in New York history.
