Sports
Rays' Ian Seymour back home to face torrid Red Sox at Fenway
Jul 12, 2026; St. Petersburg, Florida, USA; Tampa Bay Rays starting pitcher Ian Seymour (61) throws a pitch against the Seattle Mariners in the first inning at Tropicana Field. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images Ian Seymour, who grew up in Massachusetts, will make his first career start at venerable Fenway Park as the American League East-leading Tampa Bay Rays look to bounce back from a doubleheader sweep when they continue a four-game series against the red-hot Boston Red Sox on Saturday afternoon.
Seymour (6-2, 4.59 ERA) also will try to bounce back from losing the Rays’ final game before the All-Star break, as he allowed six runs in 3 1/3 innings in an 8-2 decision vs. the Seattle Mariners on Sunday. It was the left-hander’s shortest outing since June 14.
“It just boils down to throwing strike one, and I didn’t do a very good job of that,” Seymour said of his struggles last Sunday, five days after he struck out a career-high 12 in a 6-4 victory over the New York Yankees.
Seymour, who was born in Connecticut and raised in Westborough, Mass., is 1-0 with a 1.13 ERA in three career appearances against the Red Sox. He made his MLB debut in relief in Boston on June 9, 2025, and worked four innings of one-run ball in Florida in his first career start against the team on June 8 of this season.
The Rays still hold a 2 1/2-game lead over the Yankees atop the division, but Friday’s 10-0 and 5-3 losses to the Red Sox dropped them to 4-7 in their last 11 games. In three straight contests, they have allowed at least five runs.
Boston, meanwhile, has won 11 straight games, its longest win streak since 2016. No team has a better record than its 19-5 since June 19.
“They’re playing very well right now,” Rays manager Kevin Cash said of the Red Sox between Friday’s games. “They created their opportunities and capitalized when they had guys on base.”
Tampa Bay’s Junior Caminero, who survived an injury scare in Tuesday’s All-Star Game, hit a game-tying solo homer in Friday’s nightcap to help spark the Rays’ offense after Tampa had just three hits in the matinee.
“You live and you learn,” shortstop Taylor Walls said. “Try to scrap it up.”
The nightcap saw Wilyer Abreu hit a pair of home runs, tying the game for the Red Sox in the first inning and giving them the lead in the third.
Add a Willson Contreras bomb and a dominant day from a pitching staff that has allowed just nine runs in its last eight games, and Boston moved to the .500 mark for the first time since March 28.
“It means a lot,” said interim manager Chad Tracy, who was named to his post on April 25, when the Red Sox were 10-17. “We talked a lot about the journey it’s been and how rough things were, but the guys have come together and they’re playing great baseball. … It’s nice, but there’s a long way to go.”
Abreu has nine games with multiple extra-base hits this season, but plenty of other Red Sox are feeling good during this stretch.
“It’s very fun right now,” Abreu said. “Everybody’s pushing in the same direction.”
Boston’s Patrick Sandoval (0-0, 2.08 ERA) is slated to make it a battle of left-handers on the mound on Saturday. It will be the 29-year-old’s second start since returning from Tommy John surgery that had sidelined him since 2024.
Last Thursday, Sandoval shut down the Chicago White Sox through his first four innings before being scored on and pulled in the fifth. He allowed a run on five hits, striking out five.
“Felt good, body feels good,” Sandoval said. “I thought (the stuff) was pretty good. I’m still knocking off a little bit of rust, but under the circumstances, I thought it was pretty good.”
Sandoval owns a 3.19 ERA across eight career outings in the head-to-head series.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Reds lock up star RHP Chase Burns with 7-year, $105M extension
Cincinnati Reds pitcher Chase Burns (26) pitches in the first inning between the Philadelphia Phillies and Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati on Wednesday, July 8, 2026. The Cincinnati Reds and star right-hander Chase Burns agreed to a seven-year, $105 million contract extension, the club announced Saturday.
Burns, 23, received the largest guarantee of any pitcher in MLB history with less than four years of service time. The deal, which begins next season and runs through 2033, includes a $2 million signing bonus. There are no options or deferred money.
“It doesn’t feel real yet,” Burns told The Cincinnati Enquirer. “I’m sure here soon, next year and the year after, it’ll start hitting me.
“God can get you an opportunity, and he can also take it away. The biggest thing is staying humble, staying hungry.”
The second overall pick of the 2024 MLB Draft, Burns has excelled in his first full season since debuting in 2025, when he appeared in 13 games.
He is 11-1 through 18 starts for Cincinnati, tied for second behind Milwaukee’s Aaron Ashby (12-2) in wins. Burns ranks fifth in the majors among qualified pitchers in ERA (2.54) and has amassed 118 strikeouts versus 37 walks. Opposing batters have hit just .206 against him. Burns is next scheduled to start Tuesday on the road against the Seattle Mariners.
“We think the sky’s the limit for him,” Reds president of baseball operations Nick Krall said of Burns. “We know he works his butt off. He’s trying to get better. He’s a young pitcher in the big leagues, so he’s still developing and he’s been pretty successful in developing at this level.”
The deal gives the Reds a formidable one-two punch atop the rotation. The club agreed to a $53 million, six-year contract with right-hander Hunter Greene in 2023.
“We’re going to build something great here. I think we have a great set of guys,” said Burns. “I think we’re going to keep getting better every year and that’s the end goal, to win a championship.”
Manager Terry Francona praised the deal and the Reds’ confidence in their young ace.
“It’s exciting for Chase,” Francona said. “As far as the organization goes, I think it sends a great message. It’s a really good thing.”
With an average roster age of 28.5, per ESPN, the Reds boast a talented young core.
“We love our core group, and we do think that they’ve got a lot of talent,” Krall said. ” We’ve tried to lock a few guys up over the years, and we’re successful with Chase and Hunter. We think this is a really good building block to build on for the future.”
Saturday’s signing was delayed slightly after a cup of coffee was spilled on the contract before Burns could put his signature on it. A new copy was printed, and the deal was consummated.
Burns earned his first All-Star Game nod this year, though he did not appear for the National League in Tuesday’s All-Star Game. Burns cited a minor groin injury for pulling out of the game. He last pitched on July 8.
–Field Level Media
Sports
World Cup Final Best Bets: Three Picks for Argentina vs. Spain
The World Cup final is here, with a matchup between Argentina and Spain that should have the football world salivating.
Spain are the reigning European Champions. Argentina, the defending World Cup champions and two-time reigning Copa America holders.
Here are our three best bets for the encounter in East Rutherford, N.J.
Moneyline
You won’t find many sportsbooks offering the money line draw at a price north of +200 odds. And while that may seem steep, both history and circumstances suggest that’s the value play.
Over the entire course of World Cup history, 8 of 21 true finals have ended level after 90 minutes. And that includes a previous, much-higher-scoring era of the sport that lasted through the late 1950s.
Since goals per game came down in the 1960s, that ratio has increased to 7 of 16 finals.
And the relative ease of Spain’s semifinal victory, combined with the drama of Argentina’s fightback a day later, has obscured the fact that these sides are pretty even analytically.
Spain holds the highest expected-goal difference of the tournament at 11.2, but Argentina is second at 10.4.
Given the finals trend, that’s enough evidence to back the 90-minute draw trend here at +210 odds and an implied 32.3% probability.
Moneyline: Draw (+210, theScore)
Our Current Best Offers
Channel debug: betting
Goal bands
The trend for total goals in World Cup finals is not particularly clear. But there is a pretty consistent trend for both these sides over 90 minutes in knockout play.
Both Spain and Argentina are teams that aspire to be ball dominant. It’s a style that rarely leads to 0-0 draws, but also rarely leads to super high-scoring encounters.
In 90 minutes, each of these sides have seen the total land on 2 or 3 goals in three of their four knockout round fixtures. That was also true in three of Spain’s four fixtures at the 2024 European Championships and two of Argentina’s three knockout matches at the 2024 Copa America.
Maybe it won’t happen here. But at +100 odds and an implied 50% probability, you like betting on those chances.
Goal band: 2 or 3 total goals (+100, DraftKings)
Our Current Best Offers
Channel debug: betting
To lift the trophy
The oddsmakers are giving a slight edge to Spain here, which is probably reflective of their slight expected-goal superiority and maybe their perceived more difficult tournament path.
But the gap between these sides is small enough that matter, and those favor the Argentines.
For starters, Argentine fans have relentlessly followed this team across the United States, creating cauldrons of support that sound like home stadiums. Crowds aren’t the only factor that creates a quantifiable home-field edge, but they are part of it.
Argentina also have the experience of playing at this stage in the previous World Cup. Spain have also played in big matches, but World Cups are different. If you were going to nitpick their run so far, you might point out that they haven’t played against anyone from beyond the European continent in the knockout stage.
Lastly, the Argentine mindset here is a dangerous combination of unified but not overly pressured. The Albiceleste very much want to send out their greatest player on a high, and there is no debate about their national identity. But they are not under the same burden as four years ago when they were trying to prove Messi’s greatness and end a 36-year drought.
Spain have always had a more complicated relationship with their national squad, in part because of Basque and Catalan separatist sentiments.
These don’t transform a 75-25 game. But they can swing a 58-42 encounter to a true coinflip. I believe that’s the case here, and that’s why I’m betting on Argentina to lift the trophy at +130 odds and an implied 43.5% probability.
To lift the trophy: Argentina (+130, DraftKings)
Our Current Best Offers
Channel debug: betting
Sports
Dru Brown faces former team as Blue Bombers clash with Redblacks
Nov 1, 2025; Montreal, Quebec, Canada; Winnipeg Blue Bombers wide receiver Ontaria Wilson (80) runs the ball against the Montreal Alouettes during the fourth quarter at Percival-Molson stadium. Mandatory Credit: David Kirouac-Imagn Images Dru Brown will pay his former team a visit less than a month after being traded when he starts at quarterback for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers on Sunday night at the Ottawa Redblacks.
The Blue Bombers (3-2) may have a quarterback controversy on their hands. Zach Collaros, 37, was off to a poor start to the season before sustaining a neck injury in Week 5.
Brown took all the snaps on July 10 in a 30-21 home win over the Toronto Argonauts, completing a stellar 25 of 31 passes for 339 yards, one touchdown and one interception. Collaros was ruled out for Winnipeg’s Week 7 matchup with Ottawa and Brown will make another start.
Brown gets his chance at revenge after he lost his starting job to Jake Maier in preseason and requested his release from the Redblacks.
“It probably was a little bit of a distraction, just how (Brown) went about it, but I thought he did his best to support Jake,” Ottawa coach and general manager Ryan Dinwiddie said in June. “He wanted to go someplace else, so we gave him that opportunity to do that.”
Now there’s a chance that could come back to bite the Redblacks (0-5), the last remaining winless team in the CFL.
Sunday’s matchup is between the two lowest-scoring offenses in the league, tied at 23.8 pointer per game. Each team has seven passing TDs this year; only the BC Lions are behind that with six.
Maier, Brown’s replacement as QB1 in Ottawa, tossed four interceptions in last week’s 40-17 drubbing at the hands of the Edmonton Elks.
“I knew (this potential storyline) was going to be coming weeks ago,” Dinwiddie told reporters this week. “I only worry about the guys in this building. Obviously, we wanted to keep Dru around, and it didn’t work out. … But we still believe in Jake. Obviously, the four interceptions are not what we wanted.”
Winnipeg coach Mike O’Shea didn’t want to feed the potential fuel, saying the revenge game angle was something “the media has to cover,” but one of his top receivers, Nic Demski, said “the whole team” is rooting for Brown to stick it to his old club.
“Everybody knows what the situation is,” Demski said. “It’s pro football but, at the end of the day, everybody has a personal relationship with Dru since he’s been here before. Everybody knows how hard he works and how much preparation he puts into this.”
–Field Level Media
