Sports
Defending champion Alex Palou on pole for Indy 500
Chip Ganassi Racing driver Alex Palou (10) prepares to get in his car Thursday, May 14, 2026, during practice for the 110th running of the Indianapolis 500 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Alex Palou put himself in prime position to defend his Indianapolis 500 title by winning the pole in qualifying Sunday for the May 24 race.
The Spaniard earned his second career pole with a four-lap average speed of 232.248 mph at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
The four-time and reigning IndyCar Series champion, Palou also won the pole for the race in 2023 and finished fourth. Helio Castroneves, a four-time Indy 500 winner, was the last defending champion to be on the pole for the following year’s race in 2010.
“I have no words,” said Palou, 29, of being on the pole for the 110th running of the Indianapolis 500. “That was incredible. It just feels incredible. Great start to the month of May.
“Did not expect it. You could see the celebration was really high (after winning the pole) because this morning when we woke up, we did not expect this speed.”
Palou’s No. 10 Honda for Chip Ganassi Racing is on the front row with Chevrolets driven by Alexander Rossi of Ed Carpenter Racing and David Malukas of Team Penske. Rossi, the 2016 champion, averaged a career-best 231.990 mph, while Malukas was third in 231.877.
Palou’s wife, Esther, drew the 31st of 33 driver positions for him in the qualifying order in a blind draw on Friday night. Then qualifying was washed out by rain on Saturday, making Sunday the entire process for one round of qualifying runs and knockout rounds from 33 to 12 to six to determine the starting grid.
Palou was 11th in the first round with a four-lap average of 231.155, then was second-fastest in the next round (231.665) behind Felix Rosenqvist of Meyer Shank Racing. Palou’s crew was able to make adjustments for warmer temperatures on a sunny Sunday at the hottest time of the day.
“I have to say being on the 31st — thanks to my wife, by the way, for drawing that number — I think being there allowed us to work on those conditions,” Palou said. “It’s not easy to do everything the way this team is executing.”
Rosenqvist’s Honda was fourth-fastest (231.375) to make Row 2 with the Chevrolets of Santino Ferrucci (230.846) of A.J. Foyt Racing and Pato O’Ward (230.442) of Arrow McLaren.
Katherine Legge qualified 27th in the No. 11 Chevrolet to start on Row 9. Legge plans to race in the Indianapolis 500 and Coca-Cola 600, which would make her the first female driver to complete the “Double” if successful on May 24.
The Double calls for a driver to compete in two premiere races, covering 1,100 miles with barely a moment to spare between the Indy and NASCAR Cup Series races. Five drivers previously have attempted the double since John Andretti hatched the idea and completed it in 1994 for A.J. Foyt Racing.
Legge, 45, is competing in the Indy 500 for A.J. Foyt Racing and plans to fly directly to the No. 78 car for Live Fast Motorsports in the Coca-Cola 600 in Charlotte, N.C., which starts a few hours later. She has entered and qualified for four previous Indy 500 starts and is the only woman in the field in 2026.
2026 Indianapolis 500 starting lineup
With starting position, car number, engine, team and qualifying speed (4-lap average) on Sunday:
Row 1
1. (10) Alex Palou, Honda, Chip Ganassi Racing, 232.248
2. (20) Alexander Rossi, Chevrolet, Ed Carpenter Racing, 231.990
3. (12) David Malukas, Chevrolet, Team Penske, 231.877
Row 2
4. (60), Felix Rosenqvist, Honda, Meyer Shank Racing, 231.375
5. (14) Santino Ferrucci, Chevrolet, A.J. Foyt Racing, 230.846
6. (5) Pato O’Ward, Chevrolet, Arrow McLaren, 230.442
Row 3
7. (8) Kyffin Simpson, Honda, Chip Ganassi Racing, 230.883
8. (23) Conor Daly, Chevrolet, Dreyer & Reinbold Racing, 230.712
9. (3) Scott McLaughlin, Chevrolet, Team Penske, 230.577
Row 4
10. (4) Caio Collet, Chevrolet, A.J. Foyt Racing, 230.539
11. (9) Scott Dixon, Honda, Chip Ganassi Racing, 230.347
12. (76) Rinus VeeKay, Chevrolet, Juncos Hollinger, 229.585
Row 5
13. (75) Takuma Sato, Honda, Rahal Letterman Lanigan, 230.995
14. (33) Ed Carpenter, Chevrolet, Ed Carpenter Racing, 230.829
15. (06) Helio Castroneves, Honda, Meyer Shank Racing, 230.811
Row 6
16. (21) Christian Rasmussen, Chevrolet, Ed Carpenter Racing, 230.705
17. (66) Marcus Armstrong, Honda, Meyer Shank Racing, 230.701
18. (28) Marcus Ericsson, Honda, Andretti Global, 230.667
Row 7
19. (7) Christian Lundgaard, Chevrolet, Arrow McLaren, 230.661
20. (26) Will Power, Honda, Andretti Global, 230.279
21. (6) Nolan Siegel, Chevrolet, Arrow McLaren, 230.213
Row 8
22. (45) Louis Foster, Honda, Rahal Letterman Lanigan, 230.212
23. (31) Ryan Hunter-Reay, Chevrolet, Arrow McLaren, 230.202
24. (2) Josef Newgarden, Chevrolet, Team Penske, 230.165
Row 9
25. (18) Romain Grosjean, Honda, Dale Coyne Racing, 229.791
26. (27) Kyle Kirkwood, Honda, Andretti Global, 229.067
27. (11) Katherine Legge, Chevrolet, A.J. Foyt Racing, 229.456
Row 10
28. (47) Mick Schumacher, Honda, Rahal Letterman Lanigan, 229.450
29. (24) Jack Harvey, Chevrolet, Dreyer & Reinbold Racing, 229.207
30. (15) Graham Rahal, Honda, Rahal Letterman Lanigan, 229.017
Row 11
31. (19) Dennis Hauger, Honda, Dale Coyne Racing, 228.982
32. (51) Jacob Abel, Chevrolet, Abel Motorsports, 226.169
33. (77) Sting Ray Robb, Chevrolet, Juncos Hollinger, 226.572
–Field Level Media
Sports
Aaron Rai emerges to win first major, first PGA for England since 1919
May 17, 2026; Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, USA; Aaron Rai reacts on the first green during the final round of the PGA Championship golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa. — Aaron Rai undersold the reaction to the mammoth putt that sealed his first major championship.
His tee shot at the par-3 17th landed clear on the other side of the green, 68 1/2 feet from the pin. His putt traveled up one ridge and down a second, aligning perfectly with the shadow of the flagstick as it tracked straight into the cup.
Rai’s facial expression barely changed. He shared one solitary hand-slap with his caddie, something less than a full high five. No one was going to catch him, but Rai waited till completing the 18th hole to finally exhale and celebrate winning the PGA Championship on Sunday at Aronimink Golf Club.
On a weekend where fans studied the leaderboard and wondered, “Who’s that?,” Rai showed exactly who he is.
Rai, 31, drained a series of increasingly long putts to write himself into the history books as the first Englishman to win the PGA Championship since Jim Barnes in 1919. Americans had claimed this major each of the last 10 years.
He made a 40-foot eagle putt at the par-5 ninth hole to cap an uneven first nine, then pulled away with four birdies on the back and converted his remarkable birdie at No. 17 to remove any doubt.
“The shadow of the pin gave a really nice line for probably the last 10 feet. So that definitely helped with the visual of the putt,” Rai said during the trophy presentation. “But it was so long that it was just trying to put good speed on it and make a good putt, and it just tracked extremely well on the last half. Yeah, amazing to see that one go in.”
Rai began the day in a five-way tie for second behind Alex Smalley. His 5-under-par 65 brought him to 9-under 271 for the week, three strokes ahead of Smalley (70) and Jon Rahm of Spain (68).
The first English major winner since Matt Fitzpatrick took the 2022 U.S. Open title, Rai was one of several less familiar names on the 54-hole leaderboard. But he was ranked No. 44 in the world entering the week, with one win on the PGA Tour and three more on the DP World Tour for his career.
He previously had not finished better than T19 at a major.
“It’s a really long journey to even get to compete at major championships at events like the PGA,” Rai said. “Yeah, to be stood here, it still hasn’t sunk in for sure.”
Justin Thomas (65), Sweden’s Ludvig Aberg (69) and Germany’s Matti Schmid (69) tied for fourth at 5-under 275.
Thomas was the leader in the clubhouse at about 3:05 p.m. local time, and that held up for most of the afternoon as players battled Aronimink’s more demanding back nine. Thomas had improved on his Saturday 72 by seven shots.
“I vented and kind of got everything off my chest to my wife Jill last night,” Thomas said. “Credit to her, she gave great advice. She was like, ‘Well, use that tomorrow.’ She’s seen me play pissed off. I’ve done it in Ryder Cups a lot, and it’s like sometimes it brings a little different energy and different side out of it.
“So I’ve got to give her a lot of credit for that because I tried to use that out of my finish and round today to play today and shoot as low as I could.”
Smalley, Rahm, Rai and Schmid each held at least a share of the lead at 6 under at some point. Smalley — seeking his first professional win of any kind — harmed his chances with a messy double bogey at the par-4 sixth and a bogey at No. 8.
“I knew it was going to be a difficult round mentally and just because the golf course was drying out, it was warm, ball was bouncing a lot, rolling a lot,” said Smalley, who rallied in part because of an eagle at No. 16. “Hung in there. Kind of gave myself some stress on the first few holes again. Made a couple of back-to-back mistakes on No. 6 and paid for it.”
Schmid, playing in the final pairing with Smalley and also winless on the PGA Tour, took the lead from him at No. 6 when he got a 19 1/2-foot birdie to fall. But his bogey on No. 10 opened the door for Rai.
Rai’s putter was far from the only club working for him. He gave himself 4-foot birdies with tight approaches at Nos. 1 and 11, though he overshot the greens at Nos. 3 and 6 to lead to two of his three front-nine bogeys.
Everything turned when Rai lined up his eagle putt at No. 9. He left in the pin for the downhill, left-to-right putt and watched it turn straight toward the hole.
“I was just trying to focus on speed. Hit a great putt, great speed, and we were lucky it went in,” Rai said. “Definitely helped and provided a bit of a boost to the round.”
The birdie at No. 11 drew Rai even with Schmid, and he became the first player to touch 7 under all week at the short par-4 13th. Rai’s tee shot went in the front-right bunker, but he got his 39-yard sand shot to stop inside 7 feet to set up birdie.
Rai was one of the only players who managed to tame the back nine. Northern Ireland star Rory McIlroy could not muster a late rally, posting 69 and landing at 4 under. He tied for seventh with Australian Cameron Smith (68) and Xander Schauffele (69).
Kurt Kitayama played Sunday morning and fired a bogey-free, 7-under 63 to tie the record for lowest final round at a major championship. He tied for 10th at 3 under with Chris Gotterup (69), Patrick Reed (70) and England’s Justin Rose (69).
Reigning champion and World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler had a ho-hum 69 and finished seven behind Rai at 2 under.
Rahm had the greatest chance to pressure the less experienced contenders when he hit fine approaches into Nos. 1 and 2 and collected birdies to reach 6 under. He could not keep that going and gave them back with bogeys at Nos. 3 and 7.
“I played really good golf. That’s the only way to look at it,” Rahm said after his best major finish since 2023. “Just wish I’d have done better with the speed of the greens. Just couldn’t seem to get it to the hole, and that’s the reason why I didn’t hole any more putts.
“As far as I’m concerned, to be in the mix again and hit it as good as I did and perform as well as I did this weekend, it’s been a great week.”
Then Rahm praised Rai, not only for his sharp play but also for the consensus around golf that “there’s very few people that are nicer and kinder human beings than” the Wolverhampton-area native.
A son of Indian immigrants, Rai is widely known as a mild-mannered, humble and respectful player. He is still in the habit of using iron covers, a rarity in the sport, because he came from a working-class family and it would be prohibitively expensive — and unfair to his parents — to replace damaged equipment.
“Golf is an amazing game,” Rai said at the trophy presentation. “It teaches you so many things, and it teaches you so much humility and discipline and absolute hard work because nothing is ever given in this game no matter what level you’re playing, no matter what course you’re playing on. So I think it just teaches so many amazing life skills.”
–Adam Zielonka, Field Level Media
Sports
Sky rebound from first loss with road victory over Lynx
May 17, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Chicago Sky forward Rickea Jackson (5) works around Minnesota Lynx forward Nia Coffey (12) in the first quarter at Target Center. Mandatory Credit: Bruce Kluckhohn-Imagn Images Gabriela Jaquez scored 20 points and grabbed eight rebounds, and the Chicago Sky held on for an 86-79 win over the Minnesota Lynx on Sunday night in Minneapolis.
Rachel Banham scored 13 points off the bench for Chicago (3-1), which bounced back from its first loss of the season on Friday against the Phoenix Mercury. Kamilla Cardoso notched a double-double with 11 points and 12 rebounds.
Kayla McBride scored 20 points on 8-for-17 shooting for Minnesota (2-2). Courtney Williams and Natasha Howard finished with 17 points apiece.
The victory came at a cost for Chicago. The team’s top scorer, Rickea Jackson, went down as she drove toward the rim midway through the second quarter, and she did not return.
Jackson stepped awkwardly as she planted her left leg during the play in which she was injured. She appeared to favor her left knee as the team’s medical staff attended to her. Jackson, who was averaging 22 points per game, finished with six in 11 minutes of play.
Despite losing Jackson, the Sky maintained their lead throughout the second half.
An 8-0 run in the fourth quarter helped Chicago avoid a comeback attempt by the Lynx. Banham made a 3-pointer to punctuate the run and put the Sky ahead 76-66 with 5:46 remaining.
The Sky built a 63-56 lead at the end of the third quarter.
Sydney Taylor made a pair of free throws to put Chicago ahead by double digits with 1:59 left in the third quarter. The Lynx pulled within six points after a layup by Williams and a tip-in by McBride, and the Sky inched ahead by seven before the buzzer.
Chicago led 40-38 at the half.
McBride drove to the rim for a layup to give Minnesota a 38-37 advantage with 8.8 seconds remaining.
The Sky responded quickly to take the lead. Natasha Cloud fed a pass to Taylor, who drained a 3-pointer with 1.9 seconds to go to give Chicago a 40-38 lead heading into the half.
The Lynx led 22-18 at the end of the first quarter. Minnesota scored the final four points of the session on back-to-back layups by McBride and Anastasiia Olairi Kosu.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Brittney Sykes' career game leads Tempo to first road win over Sparks
May 17, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Toronto Tempo forward Laura Juskaite (2) is defended by Los Angeles Sparks forward Cameron Brink (22) during the first half at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images Brittney Sykes scored a career-high 38 points against her former team, rookie Kiki Rice added a career-high 19 and the expansion Toronto Tempo picked up their first ever road win in a 106-96 victory over the Los Angeles Sparks on Sunday.
Marina Mabrey scored 14 points and Kia Nurse added 10 as the Tempo (2-2) led by as many as 17 points in the second half and shot 47.5% from the floor in the game to avenge a 99-95 loss at Los Angeles on Friday.
Rice, who won an NCAA national title with UCLA last month and was the sixth overall draft pick in last month’s WNBA Draft, made her first career start in her return to Los Angeles.
Kelsey Plum scored 28 points and Dearica Hamby added 21 points with nine rebounds as the Sparks (1-3) completed their season-opening four-game homestand. Nneka Ogwumike scored 17 points and Kate Martin added 11 as Los Angeles shot 51.6% from the floor.
The teams combined to commit 59 fouls, while attempting 72 total free throws. The Tempo were 39 of 42 (92.9%) from the line, while the Sparks went 23 of 30 (76.7%). Sykes was 15 of 15 from the line after going 11 of 11 on Friday.
After falling behind 21-2 to open Friday’s game against the Sparks, the Tempo led by as many as seven points in the opening quarter Sunday and were up by 14 in the second. Toronto took a 49-40 lead into halftime behind 14 points from Sykes.
The Sparks improved their offense in the third quarter by scoring 27 points on 58.3% shooting, but the Tempo countered with 30 points of their own in the period to take a 79-67 lead into the fourth.
Toronto shot 40% from the floor in the third quarter and went 15 of 15 from the free-throw line. The Sparks were 12 of 15 from the line in the third.
A 10-3 run pulled Los Angeles within 89-83 on two free throws from Plum before Sykes answered for Toronto with five consecutive points and a 94-83 lead with 3:51 remaining as the Tempo closed out the victory.
–Field Level Media
