Sports
Phillies, back in contention, take on surprising White Sox
Jun 5, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies designated hitter Kyle Schwarber (12) scores on a slide past Chicago White Sox catcher Edgar Quero (26) during the seventh inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images Standings-watcher Don Mattingly must like what he sees.
Mattingly, the interim manager of the Phiilies, has guided an impressive turnaround for Philadelphia, which will continue a three-game weekend set with the visiting Chicago White Sox on Saturday afternoon.
Philadelphia was 9-19 and 10 1/2 games back in the National League East when the team fired manager Rob Thomson in late April and replaced him with Mattingly. Since then, the Phillies are 25-10, including four straight wins.
In the division, they are in second place, 8 1/2 games behind the Atlanta Braves, who have baseball’s best record. More importantly, the Phillies occupy a wild-card position.
“To be honest with you, I pay attention to (the standings) from the very first day,” Mattingly said. “I see who’s winning, and I watch the races all the time. But also with some perspective of knowing how many games are left, knowing what we have to do to take care of ourselves and just try to keep getting better and better all the time, so that as the end of the season is coming, we’re playing our best baseball.”
Indeed, the Phillies are hot, with eight wins in their past 10 games. They topped the White Sox 8-6 in Friday’s series opener, thanks, in part, to home runs by Brandon Marsh and Adolis Garcia and four hits by Kyle Schwarber.
“If we want to get to where we want to go, we’re going to need those guys — and all of us,” Marsh said of key contributions from Garcia and Alec Bohm (two hits, two RBIs).
The surprising White Sox also occupy a wild-card slot despite the Friday loss. Chicago fell behind by three runs early before rallying to tie the score at 6-6 in the seventh. Randal Grichuk was the hitting star for the White Sox with a pair of home runs, although the team still fell to 1-3 in its past four contests.
“Getting down 5-2 … in this place with the pitchers that we faced today, is not an easy task,” Grichuk said. “So coming back, tying it up, ultimately obviously losing, but it’s positive vibes for the offense.”
The White Sox hope the positive vibes continue Saturday against Andrew Painter (1-6, 5.74 ERA), who has not won a game since his major league debut on March 31. The rookie right-hander was limited to 3 1/3 innings Sunday against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the shortest start of his young career.
Painter gave up four runs and seven hits in a 9-1 defeat, failing to build off back-to-back quality starts.
“Just continue to be aggressive in the zone,” said Painter, who has not faced the White Sox in his career. “Not shying away from the competition. But the reality is, falling behind a lot of those guys, that’s kind of where they do their damage.”
Chicago will start Saturday’s clash with left-hander Brandon Eisert (1-0, 3.55 ERA), who will serve as an opener with an eye on Philadelphia’s left-handed sluggers Schwarber and Bryce Harper at the top of the order. From there, the White Sox are expected to turn to Sean Burke (2-3, 3.72), who has a 2.65 ERA over his past three starts.
It will be his first appearance against Philadelphia. Most recently, Burke gave up one run in 5 1/3 innings in his team’s 2-1 win against the Detroit Tigers on Sunday. He did not figure into the decision.
“I love playing for this group, I love the guys in there,” Burke said.
“I look forward every single day to coming to the ballpark. This year there’s a day where I go to bed and I’m so excited to pitch the next day with the way the fans are showing up and the way we’re playing. I wake up every day and thank God that I get to play with the Chicago White Sox.”
–Field Level Media
Sports
Foster Griffin shines as Nationals handle Astros
Jul 8, 2026; Washington, District of Columbia, USA; Washington Nationals pitcher Foster Griffin (22) throws a pitch against the Houston Astros during the first inning at Nationals Park. Mandatory Credit: Rafael Suanes-Imagn Images Foster Griffin pitched seven strong innings, Luis Garcia Jr. had three hits including a three-run homer and the Nationals beat the Houston Astros 8-2 Wednesday night in Washington.
CJ Abrams also homered for Washington, which took two of three from Houston, and Daylen Lile had two hits. James Wood drew three walks and scored twice.
Griffin, who bolstered his case as a potential injury replacement on the National League All-Star team, gave up a run on five hits and struck out nine without a walk while improving to 10-2. He allowed one earned run or fewer in his seventh consecutive start and lowered his ERA to 2.77.
“I feel like I had really good command of my cutter and my sweeper especially,” Griffin told Nationals TV. “I was able to keep…the hitters off balance. I feel like they couldn’t make a decision on which one was coming out of the same tunnel.”
Isaac Paredes and Zach Dezenzo each had two hits each for the Astros.
Houston starter Spencer Arrighetti (7-5) gave up eight runs on seven hits in four innings. Astros pitchers allowed nine hits and 10 walks.
Washington took a 2-0 lead in the third. Wood walked and stole second. Garcia walked and Wood went to third on a fly out and scored on Abrams’ sacrifice fly. Lile doubled Garcia home.
The Nationals staged a two-out rally in the fourth. Keibert Ruiz singled, Wood walked and Garcia followed with his 20th homer of the season, a shot to right center, and the lead was 5-0.
In the Houston fifth, Yainer Diaz doubled, went to third on a wild pitch and scored on Brice Matthews’ single.
Abrams hit his 20th homer of the season leading off the bottom half. Lile and Dylan Crews singled before Jorbit Vivas walked to load the bases. Lile scored when Jose Tena grounded out and Crews came home on a Ruiz sacrifice fly to make it 8-1.
In the Houston eighth, Dezenzo singled, advanced on a wild pitch and scored on Nick Allen’s single.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Kayla McBride, Lynx avenge recent defeat by handling Sun
Jul 8, 2026; Uncasville, Connecticut, USA; Minnesota Lynx guard Kayla McBride (21) drives the ball to the basket against Connecticut Sun forward Nell Angloma (33) in the second half at Mohegan Sun Arena. Mandatory Credit: David Butler II-Imagn Images Kayla McBride scored 23 points to lift the Minnesota Lynx to an 86-80 victory over the Connecticut Sun on Wednesday in Uncasville, Conn.
McBride made 6 of 10 shots from the floor and all nine attempts from the free-throw line for the Lynx (16-6), who rebounded after dropping a 90-89 decision to Connecticut on Monday in Minneapolis. McBride scored a season-high 28 points in that game.
Minnesota’s Natasha Howard collected 12 points and 10 rebounds on Wednesday and former Sun player Courtney Williams and Dorka Juhasz each added 12 points.
Cheryl Reeve recorded her 380th regular-season win, the most in WNBA history. She has been the head coach of the Lynx since 2010.
Minnesota rookie Olivia Miles sat out her second consecutive contest with a right calf strain after starting the team’s first 20 games.
Leila Lacan scored 15 points and Olivia Nelson-Ododa added 14 for the Sun (5-17), who played without Brittney Griner. The 6-foot-9 Griner sat out with a left quad strain after scoring a season-high 29 points in Monday’s game.
Sun guard Saniya Rivers exited the floor in a wheelchair after sustaining a left ankle sprain following a drive to the basket early in the second quarter. Rivers, who was fouled by Nia Coffey, did not return to the contest.
Connecticut held a 65-60 lead after three quarters before Minnesota responded with a 16-5 run to start the fourth. Antonia Delaere and Juhasz each sank a 3-pointer to give the Lynx a 76-70 advantage. Gianna Kneepkens converted from beyond the arc to halve the deficit, however Juhasz countered with another 3-pointer.
Diamond Miller drew the Sun to within three after sinking four free throws before Juhasz made her fourth 3-pointer with 7.1 seconds to seal the win.
Williams drained a long jumper to give Minnesota a 41-37 lead with 2:27 to play in the second quarter before the Sun responded with a flourish. Kneepkens sank a 3-pointer, Lacan scored four quick points and Raegan Beers added a free throw to give the Sun a 45-41 advantage at halftime.
–Field Level Media
Sports
LIV Golf warns employees of potential layoffs amid funding search
May 10, 2026; Sterling, Virginia, USA; Lucas Herbert lines up his final putt during the final round of LIV Golf Virginia golf tournament at Trump National Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Jack Power-Imagn Images LIV Golf informed staff that layoffs could be on the horizon on Wednesday.
The golf organization is facing a looming money crisis as its primary backer, the Saudi Arabian Public Investment Fund (PIF), announced earlier this year that it will pull its funding after the 2026 season.
PIF’s decision to walk away after sinking a reported $5 billion-$8 billion in the venture has left LIV scrambling to find a reported $300 million in fresh capital, leading to the announcement to staff about potential reductions.
A Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification, a required step for large businesses ahead of potential mass layoffs, is being filed by LIV, according to Golf Digest.
Without denying the veracity of the reporting, LIV reached out to media outlets later in the day, saying it is implementing “no changes to LIV Golf’s current workforce, operations, or schedule at this time.”
Yet the golf league also admitted that communication with employees took place.
“As our process to identify strategic investors moves forward in a positive direction, and as part of responsible planning for a range of possible outcomes, we have notified employees in the United States and United Kingdom of potential future actions related to the League’s corporate workforce,” LIV said.
“This step is being taken in accordance with legal obligations in each jurisdiction. We deeply appreciate our employees’ continued dedication as we work toward a strong and sustainable future for the league.”
–Field Level Media
