Sports
Padres go up early, improve to 5-0 this season against Mariners
May 16, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; San Diego Padres first baseman Gavin Sheets (30) runs to the bases after hitting a home run in the second inning at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Richard Dizon-Imagn Images Gavin Sheets, Nick Castellanos and rookie Rodolfo Duran homered as the San Diego Padres defeated the host Seattle Mariners 7-4 on Saturday.
The Padres improved to 5-0 against Seattle this season.
Right-hander Walker Buehler (3-2) went five innings for the victory. He allowed two runs on five hits, with two walks and six strikeouts.
Padres reliever Jeremiah Estrada worked the ninth for his first save of the season.
J.P. Crawford homered for the Mariners.
The Padres opened the scoring in the top of the second as Sheets led off with a homer to right field.
With one out in the fourth, Manny Machado and Sheets drew back-to-back walks off Mariners starter Logan Gilbert, and Xander Bogaerts lined a single to left to load the bases. Miguel Andujar grounded into a forceout to third base, with Machado scoring on the play. Castellanos hit the next pitch over the wall in left-center field to make it 5-0.
The Mariners got on the board in the bottom of the inning as Josh Naylor led off with a single to right and Randy Arozarena walked. With one out, Cole Young lined a run-scoring single to right.
Crawford went deep to right with one out in the fifth, his solo shot pulling Seattle within 5-2. Despite his pitch count reaching 101, Buehler was able to get through the inning to qualify for the victory.
With two outs in the seventh, Ramon Laureano doubled to right-center and Duran followed his his first major league hit in his fourth game — a two-run shot to left — to extend San Diego’s lead to 7-2 and end Gilbert’s night.
Gilbert (2-4) allowed seven runs on five hits over 6 2/3 innings. The right-hander walked two and fanned five.
The Mariners pulled within 7-4 in the eighth. Julio Rodriguez led off with a single and stole second. Naylor walked, and a double steal put runners on second and third. Rodriguez scored on Arozarena’s infield single and Naylor came home on a groundout by Young.
Rodriguez robbed Duran of a second two-run homer with a leaping catch at the wall in right-center to end the top of the ninth.
Seattle manager Dan Wilson was ejected by first-base umpire Chad Fairchild in the fourth inning for arguing a check-swing call.
Mariners third baseman Brendan Donovan and catcher Mitch Garver were both late scratches from the starting lineup. No immediate word was available for their absences.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Angel Martinez helps Guardians rally past Reds
May 16, 2026; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Cleveland Guardians right fielder Angel Martinez (1) scores in the second inning against the Cincinnati Reds at Progressive Field. Mandatory Credit: David Richard-Imagn Images Angel Martinez hit a go-ahead, two-run homer in the seventh inning off Pierce Johnson and scored three runs, lifting the Cleveland Guardians to a 7-4 comeback win over the visiting Cincinnati Reds on Saturday night.
Cleveland trailed 4-2 before scoring five times over the sixth, seventh and eighth, highlighted by Martinez’s blast to right-center field that greeted Johnson. Kyle Manzardo, who reached on a liner off shortstop Elly De La Cruz, came around.
The Guardians had tied it at 4-4 in the sixth on a wild pitch by Reds reliever Luis Mey that brought home Steven Kwan, and Rhys Hoskins’ sacrifice fly to plate Martinez.
Cleveland tacked on an insurance run in the eighth when Jose Ramirez scored on a fielding error by pitcher Connor Phillips. Ramirez stole second and third base after singling, taking over the American League lead with 20 thefts.
Erik Sabrowski (2-1) struck out De La Cruz — the only batter he faced — in the seventh for the victory. Cade Smith walked one in the ninth before earning his 14th save.
Sam Moll (1-3) allowed Manzardo’s single in the seventh and took the loss.
The Guardians took a 2-0 lead in the second on Brayan Rocchio’s single, scoring Kwan and Martinez. They were the only runs allowed by Chris Paddack, who worked a season-high tying six innings in his debut with the Reds.
Cincinnati got on the board in the third on Dane Myers’ solo homer to right, then went in front 4-2 in the fifth with three runs off Guardians starter Joey Cantillo. Sal Stewart drew a bases loaded walk, bringing in Blake Dunn, to tie the game.
Spencer Steer’s two-run double gave the Reds their initial advantage, scoring Ke’Bryan Hayes and De La Cruz, but Stewart was thrown out at the plate to end the inning.
Cantillo pitched five innings, giving up four runs on four hits with four walks and four strikeouts. The left-hander surrendered more than three runs in an interleague start for the first time in six career outings.
Paddack, who was released by the Miami Marlins on May 11, allowed six hits and struck out three with one walk. The right-hander lowered his ERA to 7.07 in remaining winless in eight games this season.
De La Cruz extended his hitting streak to nine games with a single. His 34 runs lead the majors at his position.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Napoleon Solo captures Preakness; top 3 did not run in Kentucky Derby
May 16, 2026; Laurel, MD, USA; Napoleon Solo (10) ridden by Paco Lopez wins the 151st Preakness Stakes at Laurel Park. Mandatory Credit: Amber Searls-Imagn Images Al Gold, the owner of Napoleon Solo, said he was not sure if the horse had what it took to win the Preakness Stakes.
Fortunately for him, the colt’s connections listened to jockey Paco Lopez, and as a result, the two men, along with trainer Chad Summers, found themselves Saturday in the Laurel Park winner’s circle with each celebrating their first triumph in a Triple Crown race.
Napoleon Solo stalked hometown hero Taj Mahal from the start of the 1-3/16-mile race until they hit the second turn at the Laurel, Md., track. That’s when Lopez kept his mount in control and breezed past the betting favorite. As they turned toward the wire, Napoleon Solo had more than enough to stave off a challenge from Iron Honor to win by 1 1/4 lengths.
Leading up to Saturday, that second turn prompted questions about whether the horse named for a character from the 1960s television show “The Man from U.N.C.L.E.” from could win one of the sport’s top races. Liam’s Map, Napoleon Solo’s sire, won the Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile 11 years ago, and many felt the progeny would be better suited for shorter-distance races that featured just one turn.
Napoleon Solo also won the Champagne Stakes, which like the Preakness is a Grade 1 race, last October at Aqueduct in Queens. However, back-to-back fifth-place finishes in the Fountain of Youth and Wood Memorial Stakes led his connections to move him off the Kentucky Derby trail.
Even leading up to post time, Gold told NBC Sports he was worried about the distance. However, Gold said Lopez urged Summers to go to Maryland.
“I didn’t want to come here,” the owner said. “I didn’t think this horse could go this far, and Paco, it’s you, baby. You did this.”
There were a slew of other questions about the race as well. Kentucky Derby winner Golden Tempo skipped the race, as did Renegade, who finished second. While the Preakness featured a full field of 14 horses for the first time in 15 years, the headline attraction was Taj Mahal, a colt who won his first three races and all at Laurel, a smaller track located between Baltimore and Washington hosting the classic for Pimlico Race Course while workers finish a $400 million overhaul of the Baltimore track.
Going off at 7-1, Napoleon Solo paid $17.80 on a $2 win ticket, $9.80 to place and $7.40 to show. Iron Honor, who was the 9-2 morning-line favorite but went off as the 8-1 fifth choice, paid $9.20 and $6.60. Chip Honcho came in third, 4 1/2 lengths back of the winner and paid $8.20.
None of the top three ran two weeks ago in the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs, and the winning time of 1:58.69 was more than three seconds off Journalism’s time last year. The Preakness has been run at 1-3/16 miles since 1925, and the last time a slower winning time was recorded was in 1950.
Taj Mahal, trained by Brittany Russell who was seeking to become the first female to prep a Preakness winner, finished 10th. Ocelli, who finished third in Louisville on May 2, came in fourth, followed by Incredibolt.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Astros start fast, power past Rangers
May 16, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Houston Astros second baseman Jose Altuve (27) crosses home plate after hitting a home run to left field against the Texas Rangers during the first inning at Daikin Park. Mandatory Credit: Erik Williams-Imagn Images Jose Altuve and Yordan Alvarez slugged first-inning home runs to key a four-homer assault that propelled the Houston Astros to a 4-1 victory over the visiting Texas Rangers on Saturday.
The Astros secured the three-game series and will aim for a sweep on Sunday in the finale. Houston prevented Rangers right-hander Jacob deGrom (3-3) from securing his 100th win by doing something only one other team has accomplished against deGrom in his illustrious career.
Altuve drilled a 2-0 fastball from deGrom 358 feet out to left field in the bottom of the first inning for his 42nd career leadoff home run. Altuve spotted the Astros a 1-0 lead with his fourth homer of the season and, two batters later, Alvarez doubled that margin by taking deGrom out to right.
Alvarez launched a 3-2 fastball 362 feet for his 15th home run this season. Suddenly trailing 2-0, deGrom rallied with strikeouts of Christian Walker and Braden Shewmake to begin a stretch where he retired eight of nine batters. Zach Dezenzo singled with two outs in the second inning.
But the Astros ambushed deGrom again in the fourth. Walker crushed the first pitch of that frame, a fastball, 422 feet to left-center field for his 11th home run and a 3-0 lead. After deGrom retired Shewmake and Brice Matthews, Zach Cole blasted his third homer 361 feet to right.
deGrom allowed four home runs for the second time in 257 career starts. On July 7, 2017, he surrendered four dingers in a 6-5 road win over the St. Louis Cardinals with the New York Mets. deGrom retired the final seven batters he faced following the Cole homer and surrendered four runs on five hits with four strikeouts in six innings. He matched his season high with 94 pitches.
Astros right-hander Kai-Wei Teng (2-3) worked five scoreless innings. He allowed two hits and issued four walks while notching seven strikeouts.
Joc Pederson produced an RBI single against Houston reliever Enyel De Los Santos in the top of the seventh, but the Rangers finished 1-for-10 with runners in scoring position and stranded 13 baserunners overall.
Altuve departed in the eighth, clutching his left side after grounding into a double play.
–Field Level Media
