Sports
Marlins aim to remain hot in visit to Phillies
Jun 14, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Miami Marlins shortstop Otto Lopez (6) hits a single against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the eighth inning at PNC Park. Mandatory Credit: Scott Galvin-Imagn Images The Miami Marlins are crossing Pennsylvania with some momentum as they open a three-game road set against the Philadelphia Phillies on Monday.
Miami is coming off a series victory in Pittsburgh, highlighted by a 4-2 win over ace right-hander Paul Skenes and the Pirates on Sunday. The Marlins rode a strong start from Max Meyer (one run in six innings) and second-inning homers from Heriberto Hernandez and Joe Mack to their seventh win in eight games.
“A couple All-Stars potentially going at it today,” Marlins manager Clayton McCullough said of Meyer, who improved to 7-0, facing the reigning National League Cy Young Award winner. “You go into it facing someone that’s as tough as Paul Skenes is, (knowing) that runs are going to be at a premium, and it was nice for us to get a couple early. … It’s showing that (Meyer) can go up against anyone, and in a game where it’s probably going to be low scoring, (that he’s going) to be able to go match zeros against a premium arm.”
Miami will be facing another premium arm Monday in Zack Wheeler (5-1, 2.22 ERA), who has allowed more than three runs in a start only once this season. He held the host Toronto Blue Jays to one run over six innings Tuesday in an eventual 3-2 defeat.
“It wasn’t the best, wasn’t the sharpest,” Wheeler said. “Velocity was down just a tick. You take those games and throw them out right away and move on.”
Wheeler is 13-4 with a 2.68 ERA against the Marlins in 27 starts in his career. He has faced them once this season, holding Miami to one run and three hits over six innings in a 6-5 win on May 1.
The veteran right-hander will be opposed by Ryan Gusto (0-1, 6.00), who will be making his fifth appearance and third start of the season. The second-year righty will be facing the Phillies for the first time in his career.
In his last start, Gusto gave the Marlins four scoreless innings in an 8-0 home victory over the Arizona Diamondbacks.
“I’m just trying to do my job,” Gusto said. “Obviously, I want to be in the mix as much as possible, but I have to earn that spot, and so it’s not up for me to decide. I just have to do my job every chance that I get, and hope that things work out.”
The Phillies enter this matchup on the heels of a series defeat in Milwaukee, where the Brewers shut out Philadelphia twice in the three-game set. In Sunday’s 4-0 setback, Cristopher Sanchez suffered his first loss since April 18 while the Phillies’ bats managed only four singles on the day.
“Everything was off today, especially my energy,” Sanchez said. “It wasn’t like it usually is. Not to use that as an excuse. Just got to go out there on days like this and try to battle.”
Monday’s matchup is the fifth of 13 meetings between the teams this season. The Phillies won three of four in Miami in early May.
–Field Level Media
Sports
No. 5 Tar Heels top No. 16 W. Virginia, move on at MCWS
Jun 12, 2026; Omaha, NE, USA; North Carolina Tar Heels pitcher Caden Glauber (27) pitches against the Mississippi Rebels during the ninth inning at Charles Schwab Field. Mandatory Credit: Dylan Widger-Imagn Images Gavin Gallaher hit a tiebreaking two-run triple during a three-run seventh inning to help No. 5 North Carolina produce a 5-2 victory over No. 16 West Virginia on Sunday night in Men’s College World Series play at Omaha, Neb.
Owen Hull had two hits and one RBI and Carter French also had two hits for the Tar Heels (52-12-1), who will continue on in winner’s bracket play on Wednesday.
Right-hander Walker McDuffie (9-3) pitched 3 2/3 scoreless innings of relief for North Carolina before running into trouble in the ninth. Right-hander Caden Glauber struck out both batters he faced for his fifth save.
Armani Guzman had two hits and one RBI and Brodie Kresser had two hits for West Virginia (46-16), which committed two errors during North Carolina’s three-run seventh-inning uprising. The Mountaineers will oppose Troy on Tuesday in an elimination contest.
At the outset of the seventh, Mountaineers third baseman Tyrus Hall and second baseman Kresser booted routine grounders in a span of three batters to set up the Tar Heels.
Gallaher then made West Virginia pay with a shot into the gap in right-center off Maxx Yehl (9-3) to score French and Jake Schaffner and give North Carolina a 4-2 lead. Hull followed with a grounded single up the middle for another run.
The left-handed Yehl allowed five runs (two earned) and eight hits over seven-plus innings. He had seven strikeouts and walked one.
North Carolina right-hander Ryan Lynch gave up two runs and five hits over 4 2/3 innings. He struck out two and walked two. McDuffie struck out four and gave up three hits and two walks.
Matt Ineich drew a one-out walk off McDuffie in the ninth and Kresser followed with a single to right-center. Glauber entered and struck out Ben Lumsden and fanned Hall looking to end it.
The Tar Heels scored twice in the first inning after loading the bases with one out. The first crossed when Erik Paulsen walked and the second came in on Cooper Nicholson’s infield out.
West Virginia got a run back in the third on Guzman’s RBI single. One inning later, a double-play grounder plated the tying run.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Yan Diomande breakout star in Ivory Coast's opening win over Ecuador
June 14, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.; Ivory Coast’s Yan Diomande and Elye Wahi in action. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images PHILADELPHIA — In his first World Cup match, 19-year-old Yan Diomande announced himself to the world, and so did his youthful Ivory Coast side in a 1-0 victory over Ecuador to open their World Cup campaign on Sunday.
The RB Leipzig wide man and reigning Bundesliga Rookie of the Season was Man of the Match in the Group E encounter, no small feat against an opponent that entered with 19 matches unbeaten, including 11 in the gauntlet of CONMEBOL World Cup qualifying.
“We know all about Yan Diomande,” said his manager Emerse Fae. “He’s an impactful player. He’s hard to play for opponents. He delivered an excellent match.”
While Diomande’s brilliant service in the first half and dribbling in the second didn’t lead to the decisive goal — even after Amad Diallo’s historic 90th-minute winner — it was hard not to think about what could be ahead for a player valued at about $105 million, according to the website Transfermarkt.
“He’s a great striker and his added value is very clear,” said fellow Ivorian forward Elye Wahi. “We’re very happy for the (award) he notched up.”
Despite appearing only twice in World Cup qualifying for “Les Elephants,” Fae entrusted Diomande with a start on the right flank in the Ivory Coast’s first World Cup match since 2014 and first World Cup victory against South American opposition.
It quickly became clear why, as he terrorized Ecuador’s back line and Arsenal fullback Piero Hincapie in particular over the opening 45 minutes.
Diomande’s best sequence in that role came on 35 minutes, when he picked up a ball at midfield, quickly rounded Hincapie and sent in a cross that Nicolas Pepe couldn’t finish after attempting a second touch to get the ball on his favored left boot.
After switching to the left following Diallo’s 56th-minute insertion, he tried to solve Ecuador’s stubborn rear guard himself.
In the 58th minute, he somehow split John Yeboah, Alan Franco and Moises Caicedo to enter the left side of the penalty area before firing high.
He nearly achieved the feat again in the late stages, before the Ivorians finally took advantage of the attention he commanded, with Wilfried Singo surging up the opposite flank to send in a low cross and Diallo dispatching a clinical finish.
–Ian Nicholas Quillen, Field Level Media
Sports
Rangers get off to hot start, hold off Red Sox
Jun 14, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Texas Rangers right fielder Brandon Nimmo (24) hits an RBI double during the fourth inning against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park. Mandatory Credit: Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images Wyatt Langford and Kyle Higashioka homered in back-to-back innings to start the game, and the visiting Texas Rangers avoided a three-game series sweep at the hands of the Boston Red Sox with a 6-4 win on Sunday night.
The Rangers tagged Boston starter Connelly Early (5-5) for six runs and 11 hits through the first 4 2/3 innings and totaled 13 knocks in the game.
Beyond the long balls, Brandon Nimmo (2-for-5) hit a clutch two-RBI double in the fourth inning, while Justin Foscue went 3-for-3 with a run scored. Higashioka and Cody Freeman also had multiple hits.
The early offense stood tall as Rangers starter Nathan Eovaldi (6-7) pitched seven innings, striking out six while working around three runs and six hits.
Willson Contreras homered twice on his 3-for-4 night and Masataka Yoshida went 2-for-4 with a double and run scored to lead the Red Sox, who have lost five of their last seven games.
With the Tartan Army filling the Fenway Park stands after Scotland’s World Cup win in Foxborough, Mass., on Saturday, Early was tagged for a first-pitch leadoff home run for a second consecutive start. Langford crushed a solo shot completely over the Green Monster and out of the ballpark to lift Texas to an immediate 1-0 lead in the first inning.
The Rangers busted open the score with three straight hits to start the second. After Foscue and Cody Freeman stung back-to-back singles to center, Higashioka drove them both home with a three-run shot that just cleared the left-field wall.
After Eovaldi set down his former team 1-2-3 to start the game, Contreras went deep to left to get Boston on the scoreboard at 4-1. The inning continued with Caleb Durbin drawing a one-out walk and Isiah Kiner-Falefa knocking an infield single over second base. After a wild pitch moved both into scoring position, Marcelo Mayer’s RBI grounder made it a two-run game.
Early escaped a two-on jam without any damage in the third, but Texas extended its lead in the following frame. Alejandro Osuna started the rally with a one-out single, then back-to-back walks preceded Nimmo’s key double high off the Monster.
While Greg Weissert (1 1/3 innings), Ryan Watson (two innings) and Tommy Kahnle (one inning) teamed up for scoreless relief, Boston inched closer when Contreras knocked another solo shot out to deep left with two outs in the sixth, making it a 6-3 game.
In the eighth, Yoshida’s one-out knock got the Sox started, and he scored on Abreu’s liner to right two batters later.
Contreras followed with his third hit, but Jacob Latz entered to induce an inning-ending grounder from Jarren Duran before dealing a scoreless ninth to finalize his 11th save.
–Field Level Media
