Sports
Dodgers visiting Yankees for first time since 2024 World Series
The Dodgers celebrate after beating the Yankees in the 2024 World Series at Yankee Stadium. The last time the Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Yankees convened at Yankee Stadium, massive amounts of champagne were sprayed in the visiting clubhouse to celebrate a World Series title.
The only celebrations this time will be one team shaking hands on the field after securing victories starting Friday night when the Dodgers visit the Yankees for the opener of a three-game series.
Neither team has announced who will be their starting pitcher as of Thursday afternoon.
The teams are meeting in New York for the first time since Oct. 30, 2024, in Game 5 of the World Series when the Dodgers scored five runs in a mistake-filled fifth inning for a 7-6 win that clinched a title. The Dodgers are coming off another World Series victory by outlasting the Toronto Blue Jays in a Game 7 last season and head to New York with an MLB-best record of 61-36.
Perhaps the only concerns recently are the condition of Shohei Ohtani’s knee and taking a three-game losing streak into the All-Star break. It is unclear if Ohtani will pitch in the series, but he will be in the lineup after getting his left knee drained.
The procedure was done to alleviate some irritation, and it led to Ohtani sitting out the All-Star game. Ohtani underwent the procedure after hitting his 22nd homer in Sunday’s 5-3 loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks. The knee pain caused the Dodgers to skip his last turn on the mound.
The Dodgers are on their third three-game skid this season after dropping four straight April 28-May 2 and May 9-12. Los Angeles is 2-5 over its past seven games after getting held to three hits Sunday when it also committed a pair of errors and headed into the break with an 11 1/2-game lead in the NL West.
“We’re still battling for the best record in baseball, and we’re still battling ourselves in the sense of trying to play good baseball and continuing to play good baseball. That’s what we’re trying to really shoot for,” Los Angeles manager Dave Roberts said. “But we haven’t done that well here in the last handful of days. I think the lead, the division lead, I don’t think it’s as important as just ourselves playing better baseball.”
The Yankees headed into the break feeling better about things by winning four straight to cut their deficit in the AL East from five games to three. New York’s 3-0 loss at Tampa Bay on July 8 gave it 15 losses in 20 games but the Yankees started a four-game winning streak with a 12-4 win at Tampa Bay the following day and swept a three-game series in Washington by scoring 10 runs in the eighth inning or beyond.
New York entered the All-Star break with Sunday’s 5-3 win when Ben Rice had an eighth inning two-run triple to turn a 3-2 deficit into a 4-3 lead. Rice is hitting .359 with six homers and 14 RBIs this month after hitting .196 in 26 games last month without Aaron Judge hitting behind him.
Judge was scheduled to undergo imaging this week on his fractured rib and the Yankees are hoping to see some kind of progress. The Yankees are 18-19 without Judge and will play their next 22 games against teams who currently own a winning record.
“It’s the best team with the best record in the big leagues, so we’re going to have to come out ready,” New York outfielder Cody Bellinger said. “You know they’re going to come out ready – and once Friday comes, it’s right back to it.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Rory McIlroy goes aggressive to stay in The Open hunt
Rory McIlroy is 1-under par through 36 holes at The Open Championship. Rory McIlroy was hovering around the projected cut line at The Open Championship on Friday when favorable wind conditions opened the door for a more aggressive strategy.
With the wind behind him for the second consecutive round, McIlroy took out his driver on the 414-yard par-4 ninth hole. It led to a second consecutive birdie that got the world’s No. 2-ranked player back to even par for the day.
McIlroy added a lone birdie on his back nine to card a 3-under-par 67 at Royal Birkdale on Friday that moved him to 1 under for the tournament.
“The main objective today was to be here for the weekend, which I am,” McIlroy said. “I felt like I left a couple out there.”
That was especially true after he looked at the scoreboard and saw the 62s posted by Lucas Herbert and Sam Burns. McIlroy will be chasing at least seven shots when he begins his third round on Saturday. Herbert was atop the leaderboard after the morning wave at 8-under.
McIlroy has been inconsistent on the greens through 36 holes but has remained as aggressive as possible with his driver. The ninth hole was a perfect example, as he never considered trying to drive the green during practice rounds.
“Honestly, the practice rounds I played were in a completely different wind direction. I didn’t even think about it,” McIlroy said. “Then when I got on the tee yesterday and saw the wind, it was like, well, the corner on the right there to cover is like 335 (yards), and downwind it’s like, as long as I just strike it well, that should be fine.
“I’ve driven the ball so well the last two days. I think anytime I can get a driver in my hand, I’m going to try to.”
To put himself in contention on Sunday, the Northern Irishman needs to post an excellent score early and then hope the pack comes back to him a bit. In addition to the rounds posted by Herbert and Burns, Royal Birkdale yielded a 64 to Eric Cole during Friday’s morning wave, which also saw five players post 4-under 66s.
Like McIlroy, Cameron Young shot a 3-under 67 that put him at 6 under for the tournament and two shots back of Herbert.
“There’s a couple of guys up there, this will be sort of their first experience of playing in the lead at a major championship on the weekend,” McIlroy said. “There’s obviously some that are very experienced at it like Cam and like Sam as well.
“I think if I can get off to a decent start tomorrow, be 4- or 5-under for the tournament, I’ll be right in it.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Titans to induct Chris Johnson into Ring of Honor
Tennessee Titans running back Chris Johnson (28) pulls away from Jacksonville Jaguars defense for a 52 yard touchdown run in the third quarter at LP Field on Nov. 1, 2009. The Titans defeated the Jaguars 30-13 for their first win of the season. The Tennessee Titans will induct former All-Pro running back Chris Johnson into the team’s Ring of Honor.
The ceremony is planned for halftime of the Titans’ 2026 season opener on Sept. 13. The Titans will host the New York Jets, for whom Johnson played one season.
The Titans selected Johnson with the No. 1 overall pick in the 2008 NFL Draft. During his six-season, 95-game tenure in Nashville, Johnson gained 7,965 rushing yards and scored 58 touchdowns.
He was named NFL Offensive Player of the Year and a first-team All-Pro in 2009, when he ran for 2,006 yards and set an NFL single-season record with his 2,509 yards from scrimmage. That record continues to stand despite the NFL expanding its schedule to 17 games.
“Chris Johnson holds a special place in the hearts of our organization and our fans,” Titans controlling owner Amy Adams Strunk said in a statement. “His stats speak for themselves, and he will forever remain a leader in our record books, but the man behind the yardage deserves just as much celebration. We look forward to welcoming him home on Sept. 13 and officially inducting him into the Titans Ring of Honor.”
He rushed for 9,651 yards and 55 touchdowns in 130 career games with the Titans (2008-13), Jets (2014) and Arizona Cardinals (2015-17). He rushed for at least 1,000 yards in each of his six seasons in a Titans uniform.
In an interview aired June 29 on “Good Morning America,” Johnson told co-anchor Michael Strahan that he was diagnosed with ALS, a progressive neurodegenerative disorder also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, in 2025. There is currently no cure.
“There’s no history of ALS in my family,” said Johnson, who was using a speech-generating device based on recordings of his voice to speak. “My doctors believe my case is what’s called sporadic ALS, which is actually how the vast majority of ALS cases happen.
“… That’s one of the reasons this disease can be so shocking. It can happen to someone who never expected it.”
Johnson, 40, will become the 20th inductee into Tennessee’s Ring of Honor, with the late Dave McGinnis, a former assistant coach and radio analyst, to be added later in the season.
The group includes players from the Titans’ history as the Houston Oilers. Among those already in the Ring of Honor are quarterbacks George Blanda, Warren Moon and Steve McNair, as well as running backs Earl Campbell and Eddie George.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Legal inquiries into FIFA's ticket practices won't end when World Cup does
Attorney General Jennifer Davenport of New Jersey said her investigation into World Cup ticketing practices will go on. While the 2026 World Cup officially comes to a close on Sunday at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J., the attorney general of New Jersey won’t stop her investigation into FIFA and its ticketing methods when the final whistle sounds.
In a report published Friday, New Jersey AG Jennifer Davenport told The Athletic that her office will continue to look at concerns that she and her New York counterpart, Letitia James, raised in May about the ways FIFA conducted the ticket-buying process for the eight matches hosted at MetLife Stadium during the 39-day tournament.
Those eight matches include the Sunday final, which pits Argentina against Spain.
In a joint news release issued in May, the attorneys general said they were looking into reports that FIFA allegedly hiked prices, changed ticketing maps after selling tickets to the public and created artificial scarcity.
Davenport addressed her continuing mission to protect consumers with The Athletic.
“For the initial ticket sales, FIFA seat maps divided the stadium into four zones, categories one through four,” Davenport said. “The category one seats were the most desirable. But after fans had already bought tickets, FIFA created new zones, which included a front row in a category, made up of the most desirable seats within the categories.
“We saw the reports indicating that there were fans who bought the tickets before these new zones were introduced but were then excluded from the seats and instead assigned less desirable seats. We also saw reports that some fans didn’t receive the tickets in the category they paid for.”
New Jersey and New York aren’t the only places where FIFA’s ticketing practices have come under fire. Officials in California and Texas also have been investigating claims regarding the 2026 World Cup.
In Frankfurt, Germany, on Tuesday, a court called FIFA’s practices on ticket resale outlet Ticombo “manipulative” and issued an injunction designed to force FIFA to stop selling tickets there. Per Newsweek, the court threatened to fine and/or imprison FIFA president Gianni Infantino and secretary general Mattias Grafstrom if they do not comply.
–Field Level Media
