Sports
Jacob Misiorowski fans 11 as Brewers shut out Yankees
Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Jacob Misiorowski (32) throws during the first inning of their game against the New York Yankees Friday, May 8, 2026 at American Family Field in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Jacob Misiorowski struck out 11 over six scoreless innings, pacing the Milwaukee Brewers to a 6-0 victory over the visiting New York Yankees on Friday in the opener of a three-game series.
The hard-throwing Misiorowski (3-2) allowed just two singles and walked two in a dominant 95-pitch outing. Each of his 10 pitches in the first inning topped 102 mph. In his previous start, the 24-year-old right-hander pitched 5 1/3 hitless innings before exiting with a hamstring cramp.
Milwaukee rookie Shane Drohan allowed one hit over the final three scoreless innings for his first major league save.
Brandon Lockridge had two hits and two RBIs for the Brewers, who had lost two of the past three, before he was taken off the field on a cart in the fourth inning with an apparent leg injury. The left fielder was hurt sliding into the wall in foul territory. The team did not announce a status update before the end of the game.
Jose Caballero produced two of the three hits for the Yankees, who had won six of their previous seven games
The Brewers scored four runs in the second inning, when their first five hitters reached against Max Fried (4-2).
Gary Sanchez singled, and Andrew Vaughn and Luis Rengifo followed with back-to-back walks to load the bases. Lockridge lined an RBI single to right, and Sal Frelick blooped an RBI single into shallow center to make it 2-0.
Joey Ortiz drove in another run on a fielder’s choice, and Jackson Chourio delivered an RBI single up the middle to put the Brewers up 4-0. Fried recovered to strike out the final two hitters of the frame.
Milwaukee made it 5-0 in the third on a double by Vaughn and Lockridge’s two-out single.
The Brewers added a run in the seventh off Kervin Castro on a double by Joey Ortiz and RBI single by William Contreras.
The Yankees threatened in the fifth when Spencer Jones, making his major league debut, drew a one-out walk and Jose Caballero singled, but Misiorowski struck out Austin Wells and Ryan McMahon to end the inning.
Jones finished 0-for-2.
Fried battled through six innings, allowing five runs on six hits, striking out five and walking three.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Fighter Josh Hokit ejected from UFC Freedom 250 press conference
Apr 11, 2026; Miami, Florida, UNITED STATES; Josh Hokit (blue gloves) reacts after the fight against Curtis Blaydes (red gloves) during UFC 327 at Kaseya Center. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images The UFC’s plans to hold a fight card on the White House grounds briefly took a back seat to one fighter’s antics at the press conference for UFC Freedom 250 on Friday.
The media gathering was held in Newark, N.J., the site of UFC 328 on Saturday. But the focus for the day was on the upcoming event in Washington, with all 14 fighters scheduled for the card present Friday for faceoffs.
Josh Hokit, an undefeated heavyweight scheduled to face Derrick Lewis, turned the event into his personal stage.
Decked out in a black robe, sunglasses and American flag gloves and bandana, Hokit stood and cut WWE-style promos about not only Lewis but also Alex Pereira and Ilia Topuria until UFC security eventually removed him from the arena. His screeds were frequently vulgar, attempted to rhyme and invariably ended with, “Am I right, New Jersey?”
He called Lewis “the Black Pillsbury Doughboy” and lobbed multiple slurs at his fellow fighters. The other fighters tried not to engage until Topuria stood up to defend Pereira, who is not fluent in English and did not appear to understand Hokit’s insults.
Topuria threw something small at Hokit before the 28-year-old from California was dragged away.
A former college football player and wrestler, Hokit improved to 9-0 in his MMA career when he defeated Curtis Blaydes via unanimous decision last month at UFC 327.
Meanwhile, UFC CEO Dana White had to step in during Mauricio Ruffy’s faceoff with Michael Chandler, when Ruffy stretched out his arms and touched Chandler’s chin with his fist. The faceoffs otherwise went off without incident.
White on Friday explained why UFC was releasing 85,000 tickets to the public to watch the fights not on the South Lawn but across the street in Ellipse Park on big screens.
“It’s on federal land,” White said. “… We’re (paying) the bill for this whole fight. And I can’t sell a hot dog, a T-shirt or a ticket. Nothing can be sold on federal land.”
White said about 4,000 people will be on the South Lawn where the Octagon itself will be erected. President Donald Trump will receive 1,000 tickets, White and TKO Group CEO Ari Emanuel will have 200 apiece and the remaining tickets will be distributed across branches of the military.
Trump himself was not in attendance at the press conference, but on Wednesday he hosted several UFC fighters involved with the card and revealed renderings of the Octagon with the White House as a backdrop.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Wild hope 3-day rest leads to Game 3 reboot vs. Avalanche
May 5, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Colorado Avalanche center Nathan MacKinnon (29) awaits the puck during the third period against the Minnesota Wild in game two of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Ball Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images After a whirlwind start to the playoffs, the Minnesota Wild finally had a chance to take a breath.
Now they will find out whether fresh legs and a fresh mindset can prompt a fresh start.
Minnesota will try to claw back in its series against the Colorado Avalanche when the teams face off Saturday night in Saint Paul, Minn. Colorado holds a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven Western Conference semifinals.
The Wild dropped each of their first two games in Denver after rallying to beat the Dallas Stars in the conference quarterfinals. The Wild and Avalanche enjoyed three days off before the series shifted to Minnesota for Game 3.
“It’s huge, the rest is huge,” Wild forward Matthew Boldy said. “Sometimes it’s tough when you’ve got to jump right back into it (after winning a series). I think these days have been great for us to reel it back in, know what we need to do and reset a little bit.”
Meanwhile, Colorado hopes to pick up right where it left off.
The Avalanche are 6-0 in the postseason after sweeping the Los Angeles Kings in the first round and outscoring the Wild 14-8 in the first two games of the semifinals.
Colorado coach Jared Bednar senses similarities between Game 3 of this round and Game 3 of the previous round against the Kings. In that series, the Avalanche battled for a 4-2 win over the Kings to take a 3-0 series lead and open the door for a clean sweep.
Bednar expects the Wild to play with desperation.
“It doesn’t matter where you are, which building you’re playing in, if you have a 2-0 series lead, Game 3 is a critical game,” Bednar said. “We know we’ll see their best just like we did with L.A., and we have to be ready to play our best game of the series.”
Nathan MacKinnon leads Colorado with four goals and six assists through six playoff games. Gabriel Landeskog, Devon Toews and Martin Necas share second with seven points apiece.
Avalanche goaltender Scott Wedgewood will look to continue his perfect start to the playoffs. He is 6-0 with a 2.12 goals-against average and a .923 save percentage.
Wild coach John Hynes did not reveal his starting goaltender after Friday’s practice. He will choose between Jesper Wallstedt, who is 4-3 with a 2.81 GAA and a .903 save percentage in seven playoff games, or Filip Gustavsson, who is 0-1 with four goals allowed and an .818 save percentage to show for his lone appearance in Tuesday’s Game 2.
“I’ll let you know later,” Hynes said with a smile.
Kirill Kaprizov and Quinn Hughes lead the Wild in the playoffs with 11 points apiece. Boldy is next with 10 points, including a team-high six goals.
Joel Eriksson Ek could make his series debut after sitting out the first two games for Minnesota because of a lower-body injury. Hynes said there is a chance Eriksson Ek will play despite getting only one practice under his belt.
“I thought he looked good out there, so that was certainly encouraging,” Hynes said.
The Avalanche were outshot 31-23 in Game 2 but won 5-2 anyway.
Bednar said he liked the quality of his team’s shots, even if the quantity lagged.
“It gets harder to create chances this time of year,” Bednar said. “But, ultimately, you’ve got to find a way to win.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Red-hot Revolution encounter slowly improving Union
May 2, 2026; Foxborough, Massachusetts, USA; New England Revolution goalkeeper Matt Turner (30) and New England Revolution defender Ethan Kohler (22) celebrate the win after the game against Charlotte FC at Gillette Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Edward Finan-Imagn Images This season is starting to look a lot like last year for the New England Revolution.
At this time in 2025, the Revs were in the middle of a nine-game MLS streak without a loss. One year later, they are rolling again as they’ve gone 5-0-1 in their last six MLS matches to rise to second place in the Eastern Conference.
When the Revolution (6-3-1, 19 points) host the Philadelphia Union (1-7-3, 6 points) Saturday in Foxborough, Mass., they look to extend their unbeaten streak and maintain their perfect record (5-0-0) at home.
This year, the Revs want to cash in on their streak — unlike last season, when they followed their successful run with a nine-game winless streak and failed to make the playoffs for the second straight year.
“We’ve had good results in the last several weeks, which helps the dynamic, always,” Revolution coach Marko Mitrovic said. “We want to be sure that we are not emotional thinking like, ‘Oh, now we are winning,’ and we don’t ignore things that we need to do good.”
While the Revolution have steamrolled their five foes at home, outscoring them 13-2, Saturday’s 1-0 win over visiting Charlotte FC was a struggle. Carles Gil scored the lone goal on a penalty kick seven minutes into second-half stoppage time.
Gil (three goals, three assists) and set-piece weapon Luca Langoni (one goal, six assists) rev up the offense for the Revs.
For Philadelphia, this season bears no resemblance to last year when it captured the Supporter’s Shield by compiling the best record in MLS.
After opening the season with six straight MLS defeats, the Union have gone 1-1-3 over their last five matches. That includes a scoreless draw last week against Eastern Conference leader Nashville SC.
“What we’re trying to do is bring stability to the back line and I think you’ve seen that over the last four or five weeks,” Philadelphia coach Bradley Carnell said.
The Union have the fewest goals of any team in the Eastern Conference with nine. Milan Iloski and Danley Jean Jacques are their lone players who have scored multiple goals with two apiece.
“It’s a team that’s very aggressive going forward, pushing the ball forward as soon as possible and trying to win their attacks, very good on winning second balls. That’s kind of their identity,” Mitrovic said. “We are not looking at the standings. Every game is unique.”
–Field Level Media
