Sports
Rangers, Braves kick off second half protecting division leads
Jul 10, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; Atlanta Braves starting pitcher Chris Sale (51) throws against the St. Louis Cardinals during the second inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images Two clubs trying to hold onto first place in their respective divisions open the second half on Friday when the Texas Rangers visit the Atlanta Braves to start a three-game series.
The Rangers are in first place in the American League West, sitting 1 1/2 games ahead of the Seattle Mariners. The Braves lead the National League East by two games over the Philadelphia Phillies and four games over the surprising Miami Marlins.
The starting pitchers for the series opener are expected to be Atlanta left-hander Chris Sale (9-6, 2.20 ERA) vs. Texas right-hander Nathan Eovaldi (9-7, 4.04).
Sale was selected to the All-Star roster but did not pitch. He last worked on Saturday in St. Louis when he threw 43 pitches in three scoreless innings before rain delayed the game for more than two hours.
“It is frustrating,” Sale said after the rain-shortened effort. “I’m a starting pitcher. I don’t get to play a whole lot. I like to be able to get a full slate when we can. It is what it is. There’s nothing you can do about it.”
Sale has had a long history of success in his career against the Rangers, going 9-2 with a 2.53 ERA in 17 appearances (13 starts). He did not face Texas last year.
Eovaldi has won four straight decisions. In his last start against the Los Angeles Angels on July 9, he pitched six innings and allowed four runs (three earned) with a season-high 10 strikeouts in a no-decision. He has fanned at least nine in his last four starts.
“It’s unfortunate he didn’t get the win there, the way he pitched,” Texas manager Skip Schumaker said. “He told me before the game, ‘You’re not taking me out tonight.’ So I figured he was going to go the distance. He was really, really good.”
Eovaldi has made 18 career starts against Atlanta, going 4-4 with a 2.86 ERA. He beat the Braves last year after throwing five scoreless innings.
One of the hottest hitters for Texas has been left fielder Wyatt Langford, who has hit safely in a season-high eight straight games (11-for-34, .324) and reached base in 14 straight games. He has homered in three of his last seven games and has nine for the season.
Atlanta’s biggest offensive surprise has been shortstop/outfielder Mauricio Dubon.
Despite going 1-for-13 in the three-game series against St. Louis prior to the break, Dubon has hit safely in 28 of the last 34 games (39-for-134, .291) with seven homers and 22 RBIs. He has already matched his career high of 10 homers and established career highs for RBIs (51) and walks (25).
The Rangers are awaiting the return of shortstop Corey Seager, out since July 1 with back inflammation, and starter Jacob deGrom, whose mild left glute strain limited him to five innings in his last start on July 7 and could send him to the injured list.
The Braves are awaiting word on the return of outfielder Ronald Acuna Jr. (out since June 10 with left hamstring strain), shortstop Ha-Seong Kim (right middle finger inflammation) and left-hander Martin Perez (left forearm contusion). Outfielder Mike Yastrzemski went on the injured list July 11 with left elbow inflammation.
The Rangers swept last year’s three-game series in Arlington. Atlanta had taken two of three in 2023 and 2024.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Lucas Herbert, Sam Burns tie major record with 62s at The Open
Golf – The 154th Open Championship – Royal Birkdale Golf Club, Southport, Britain – July 17, 2026 Australia’s Lucas Herbert hits his tee shot on the 10th hole during the second round. Lucas Herbert came tantalizingly close to a 59 before settling for the sixth round of 62 in major championship history Friday at the 154th Open Championship at Royal Birkdale Golf Club in Southport, England.
Playing two groups behind Herbert, Sam Burns matched the second-round 62 with a rescue from a greenside pot bunker for a birdie and his own slice of history.
At 8 under, the Australian Herbert earned a two-shot lead on Jackson Suber and Cameron Young as the morning wave wound down, while Burns moved to 5 under for the tournament.
Herbert, 30, zipped in front by birdieing six of his first nine holes and eight of the first 12. He reached 9 under at No. 16, then saved par after a wayward approach at No. 17.
At No. 18, needing par to shoot the first 61 at a men’s major, Herbert’s drive missed right but he placed his approach shot just in front of the green. He putted onto the surface for his third stroke and left himself 5 feet for par and the record — but his attempt slid left past the cup, leaving him with his only bogey of the day.
“It wasn’t my worst putt of the day,” Herbert said of the missed putt for 61.
Herbert said he felt some nerves and knew he was putting for history.
“It’s kind of odd feelings. It’s the second round of the tournament so you’re trying to push as far ahead as you can. I’m a golf geek so I knew all the records, I knew the numbers, I knew what people shot. I was very aware of that,” he said.
“I sort of … I didn’t know where to focus.
“It was kind of funny like I said walking up 18, ‘I might as well throw my phone in the bath because it’s going to be lit up this afternoon.’ So was kind of enjoying almost the peace of just being out there and playing golf before whatever this weekend throws at me.”
Burns closed Friday with three consecutive birdies and was 11 shots better in the second round than he was on his opening 18.
“I think it feels a little bit different in the sense of links golf. You don’t ever feel comfortable in links golf,” Burns said.
The last time this championship was played at Royal Birkdale in 2017, Branden Grace of South Africa shot the first 62 in major championship history. Four rounds had matched that number in recent years, twice by Xander Schauffele, before Herbert and Burns added their names name to the list.
Herbert joined LIV Golf in 2024 and notched his first win in the league this past May in Virginia. But he has not done better than T40 at a major since tying for 15th at the 2022 Open.
He started his day by rolling in three straight birdies, the first two from 16 and 14 1/2 feet away. He nearly chipped in for eagle at the short par-5 fifth and tapped in his fourth birdie.
Then came the most impressive putt of the day, a 36-footer that broke left to right, then back to the left and found a perfect line to drop in the cup.
Herbert wrapped up the sterling front nine by chipping in for birdie at No. 9, wrapping up a 6-under 28. He tied Englishman Denis Durnian (1983, also on Birkdale’s front nine) for the lowest nine-hole score in Open history.
Back-to-back birdies at Nos. 11 and 12 formally put him on 59 watch, and he holed a 7-footer at No. 16 to reach 9 under.
After a long drive at the par-5 17th, Herbert missed the green far left toward the gallery. But he hit a terrific recovery shot out of a sandy dirt lie, his ball staying on the green and curling back to 10 feet, from where he would two-putt for par.
–Field Level Media
Sports
World Cup final tickets soar above $7,500
Spain fans before their semifinal match on June 14, 2026. Tickets for the 2026 World Cup final continue to rise leading up to Sunday’s match between Argentina and Spain at New York New Jersey Stadium.
After the get-in price dropped as low as $6,636 on Monday, the three-day average rebounded to $7,612 by Friday morning, according to ticket-tracking service TicketData.com. The three-day average is now up 10%.
By comparison, the get-in price for Argentina’s semifinal victory over England settled at $3,177 by kickoff, while France’s win over Spain commanded less than half that at $1,315.
The get-in price for Saturday’s third-place match between France and England in Miami is $653, having plummeted 61% over the past three days.
Sunday’s final will kick off at 3 p.m. ET in East Rutherford, N.J., between a pair of global powerhouses. It will conclude the largest World Cup in history, with the White House confirming that President Donald Trump will attend.
The get-in price for tickets to the final peaked at $13,650 back in October before dipping as low as $6,336 a month later. They had risen back to above $8,000 when the tournament began on June 11 and the get-in price reached $12,129 on June 23 before declining again.
Through 102 matches across 16 cities, the median get-in price has been $916.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Lucas Herbert rides 62 to Open lead midway through 2nd round
Jul 17, 2026; Southport, ENG; Lucas Herbert lines up a putt on the 18th green during the second round of The Open Championship golf tournament at Royal Birkdale. Lucas Herbert leads the Open Championship halfway through the second round after tying the major championship record of 62 Friday at Royal Birkdale Golf Club in Southport, England.
The Australian needed par at No. 18 to shoot the first 61 in major championship history, but his 5-foot putt to save par missed centimeters to the left of the cup.
The round brought him from even to 8-under-par 132 for the championship, two clear of Cameron Young (67) and first-round leader Jackson Suber (69).
And Herbert’s round wasn’t even the only 62 of the morning wave. Two groups behind him, Sam Burns holed out for birdie from the greenside bunker at No. 18 to cap a three-birdie finish for a bogey-free 62.
Burns shot up to 5 under for the week. South Korea’s Sungjae Im was also 5 under for the championship through the front nine. Bud Cauley (68) and England’s Matt Wallace (67) were in the clubhouse at 4-under 136.
Herbert, 30, was asked when he believed he could equal or better the record of 62.
“It’s not a great question because I’m too much of an optimist, and I thought it when I hit it to about 5 feet on the third hole,” Herbert said. “I’m a golf nerd anyway, so I know all the numbers, all the records, everything like that.”
Branden Grace of South Africa shot the first round of 62 at a major nine years ago, the last time The Open was held at Royal Birkdale. The list has since grown to seven 62s, including Herbert’s and Burns’ on Friday.
Burns’ 62 was a mirror image of Herbert’s. Whereas the Australian tied the major nine-hole scoring record with a 28 on the front nine, Burns went out in 2 under and made six birdies coming in — including a chip-in at No. 16 before the bunker holeout at No. 18.
“Yeah, it was in a good spot in the bunker, which you never know what you’re going to get in the pot bunkers here. So I was happy when I saw that when I walked up,” Burns said. “It was a tricky bunker shot because I had to land it in the fringe there and use the slope down to the hole. Definitely very lucky for it to go in.”
Rory McIlroy of Northern Ireland improved on his opening 72 by five strokes, but left opportunities on the table with eight pars and one birdie on his back nine. His 67 lifted him to 1 under for the week.
Xander Schauffele rebounded from a bogey at No. 17 with a straightforward birdie at No. 18 to shoot 69 and head to the clubhouse on the current cut line at even par. The line is projected to move back by at least one shot. Schauffele’s run of 18 straight made cuts at major championships is the longest active streak.
Notables playing in the Friday afternoon wave include World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler, Jordan Spieth, Justin Thomas, Englishmen Tommy Fleetwood and Justin Rose, Spaniard Jon Rahm and Bryson DeChambeau, who briefly held a share of the lead Thursday before carding a 3-under 67.
–Field Level Media
