Sports
Reds' Rhett Lowder, Yankees' Cam Schlittler get first look at foes
Jun 15, 2026; Cincinnati, Ohio, USA; Cincinnati Reds third baseman Eugenio Suarez (28) hits a two-run home run in the first inning against the New York Mets at Great American Ball Park. Mandatory Credit: Katie Stratman-Imagn Images The New York Yankees and Cincinnati Reds saw injuries sideline their marquee players on May 31. The teams have responded in very different ways since.
Entering the opener of a three-game series Friday night in New York, the Yankees own a respectable record since losing Aaron Judge to a stress fracture in his right rib cage. Meanwhile, the Reds are struggling since losing Elly De La Cruz to a strained right hamstring.
New York is 9-5 since Judge last played in a 13-8 win over the host Athletics. When Judge landed on the injured list, the team announced he would be evaluated in four to six weeks.
The Yankees, despite making a pair of baserunning mistakes and getting only a homer from Ryan McMahon in a 5-1 home loss to the Chicago White Sox on Thursday, are performing better than they did during Judge’s last long-term injury. In 2023, he fractured a toe and missed nearly two months, and the team went 19-23 without him.
“Good players that are playing with real purpose,” manager Aaron Boone said Thursday regarding how the Yankees are getting by without their star slugger. “We’ve been able to win in a lot of different ways.”
Before Camilo Doval allowed a pinch-hit grand slam to Andrew Benintendi in the eighth inning on Thursday, the Yankees had won four games in a row while scoring 33 runs and totaling 46 hits. That surge came despite the absence of Judge, Giancarlo Stanton (sidelined since late April due to a right calf strain) and Trent Grisham (out since straining his right hamstring on June 12).
Among New York’s hottest hitters of late is Paul Goldschmidt, who has a .395 average (17-for-43) during a 10-game hitting streak. Another is Ben Rice, who is hitting .325 (25-for-77) in his past 19 games.
Cincinnati is 5-10 since losing De La Cruz, though the shortstop is expected to begin a minor league rehab assignment Friday. Since De La Cruz got hurt, the Reds are hitting .217 and the trio of Spencer Steer, Eugenio Suarez and Sal Stewart are struggling.
In June, Steer is batting 6-for-46 (.130), Suarez is hitting .185 (10-for-54) and Stewart is hitting .214 (12-for-56).
The Reds are 15-27 since winning 20 of their first 31 games. Cincinnati has scored three runs or fewer in nine of its past 15 games, including a 9-1 home loss to the New York Mets on Wednesday.
After scoring 17 runs while winning twice over the Mets, the Reds allowed 15 hits in the series finale. That figure equaled the second-highest total against Cincinnati this season.
“I do think for us to be the team we want to be, we have to play very clean baseball,” Reds manager Terry Francona said. “We haven’t done that as well as we’d like to.”
New York’s Cam Schlittler (7-3, 1.82 ERA) will face the Reds for the first time as he attempts to halt a personal three-start winless stretch. Since a win at Kansas City on May 26, the right-hander is 0-1 with a 3.18 ERA.
Schlittler has allowed one run or none in 10 of his 15 starts, including Saturday in Toronto, when he yielded one run on six hits in seven innings.
Right-hander Rhett Lowder (3-3, 4.60 ERA), who is 0-2 with a 7.00 ERA in his past five outings, opens the series for the Reds. Lowder has pitched better since missing a month with a right shoulder injury, allowing one run in a total of 8 2/3 innings over two starts.
He will be opposing the Yankees for the first time.
–Field Level Media
Sports
After first win, Tiger-Cats feeling confident with Lions set to visit
Nov 8, 2025; Hamilton, Ontario, Canada; Hamilton Tiger-Cats quarterback Bo Levi Mitchell (19) throws a pass during warm up before the start of the Eastern Final against the Montreal Alouettes at Hamilton Stadium. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images After pulling off a road win last week in Winnipeg to make up for losing the home opener the week before, the Hamilton Tiger-Cats will try to defend home field on Friday night when they take on the BC Lions.
Hamilton’s 37-27 win over the Blue Bombers featured a balanced offensive effort. Bo Levi Mitchell threw for 287 yards and three touchdowns on 19-of-24 accuracy, while Larry Rountree III racked up 124 yards on 23 carries for his first 100-yard game as a pro.
This week, Mitchell advised his teammates to not look back.
“Attack the day, attack the play,” he said. “Do everything you can do to be the best you can be on that day. We weren’t perfect … but this is a damn good football team.”
Hamilton (1-1) got a fine performance from its offensive line, which allowed just one sack against an opponent that used the pass rush as a big part of its Week 1 win in Calgary, registering four sacks. And Marc Liegghio added three field goals, including a game-sealing 23-yarder in the last minute.
Meanwhile, BC is coming off a season-opening 31-27 loss at Grey Cup champion Saskatchewan last Saturday. The Lions owned the lead until giving up a touchdown with 46 seconds left.
Adding injuries to insult, BC will be short-handed at receiver this week. Seven McGee (foot) has landed on the six-game injured list and Jevon Cottoy (thigh) wasn’t able to finish the game in Saskatchewan. Another receiver, Stanley Berryhill, was ruled out with a thigh injury as well, and wideout Keon Hatcher Sr. (thigh) is questionable after missing Wednesday’s practice.
The Lions were reduced to using backup fullback Jacob Bond at receiver on their final drive. They have signed receiver Jermaine Jackson to the practice squad but it wouldn’t be a surprise if he were elevated sooner instead of later.
“Opportunities for guys to step up, opportunities for guys that you know have been here working,” second-year coach Buck Pierce said of the receiver situation. “It’s no different than any other team.”
BC quarterback Nathan Rourke is coming off a 330-yard effort at Saskatchewan, where he also ran for a team-high 59 yards and a touchdown.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Royals throttle Cards but see Bobby Witt Jr. exit game
Jun 18, 2026; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; Kansas City Royals first baseman Jac Caglianone (14) celebrates in the dugout after hitting a two-run home run in the fourth inning against the St. Louis Cardinals at Kauffman Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Peter Aiken-Imagn Images Bobby Witt Jr. homered and was one of seven Kansas City players with at least two hits — but later exited with right knee discomfort — while Salvador Perez’s solo shot made him the all-time home run leader at Kauffman Stadium as the host Royals beat the St. Louis Cardinals 14-6 on Thursday night.
The star shortstop injured himself going into the hole to field Jordan Walker’s RBI infield single in the fourth. Witt finished the inning but was pinch-hit for in the bottom of the frame.
Witt’s departure overshadowed a potent night for the Royals, who set season highs for runs and hits (17), while posting eight doubles, including a club-record five during their six-run second inning.
Meanwhile, Perez had three hits and his 137th homer at home — a 385-foot shot to left in the sixth inning — broke George Brett’s record to give Kansas City a 12-4 lead. Starling Marte also had three hits and Jac Caglianone clubbed a two-run homer for Kansas City, now 2-2 versus St. Louis this season.
Masyn Winn and JJ Wetherholt each had three hits while Jose Fermin added two with two RBIs for the Cardinals, who recorded 13 hits but stranded 15 runners.
St. Louis wasted no time getting to the Royals’ Noah Cameron (4-4) in the first. Wetherholt singled, advanced when Ivan Herrera walked, and scored on Walker’s grounder that went under Witt’s glove. A walk to ex-Royal Nelson Velazquez loaded the bases, then Alec Burleson delivered a sacrifice fly.
In the bottom of the first, Witt sent a Matthew Liberatore pitch over the left field wall.
Perez opened the Royals’ second with a double off the right field wall. Kansas City then went ahead after RBI doubles from Carter Jensen and Isaac Collins, who scored when Velazquez dropped Michael Massey’s fly ball to left. A run-scoring double from Lane Thomas and Witt’s RBI hit followed.
Marte’s double down the right field line scored Witt for a 7-2 Royals lead and chased Liberatore (3-4), who was charged with seven runs — five earned — over 1 2/3 innings.
The Royals scored four more in the fourth. After Caglianone’s homer with a man on, Nick Loftin’s two-run double made it 11-3.
Cameron allowed four runs — three earned — and eight hits with two walks, while striking out six in five innings.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Goalie error leads Mexico past South Korea, seals first place in Group A
June 18, 2026; Guadalajara, Mexico; Mexico’s Luis Romo celebrates scoring their first goal with Erik Lira as South Korea’s Son Heung-min reacts. Mandatory Credit: Paul Childs-Reuters via Imagn Images Luis Romo punished a critical 50th-minute error by goalkeeper Kim Seung-gyu, and co-host Mexico’s historical dominance of South Korea at the World Cup continued with a 1-0 victory in Zapopan, Mexico, on Thursday to win Group A.
Raul Rangel made a spectacular late double-save to keep Mexico’s second clean sheet and secure the top group spot, one that guarantees Mexico will play a round-of-32 match and a potential round-of-16 fixture in Mexico City.
Both heroes for Mexico (2-0-0, 6 points) were starring in the venue where they play their club football for CD Guadalajara. Their actions sealed El Tri’s third World Cup victory in as many appearances against South Korea.
South Korea (1-1-0, 3 points) still would finish second in the group with a win in their finale against South Africa (0-1-1, 1 point), regardless of how Mexico performs against Czech Republic (0-1-1, 1 point).
South Korea all-time caps leader Son Heung-min didn’t go the whole 90 minutes for a second consecutive match, with the attacker departing before the hour mark.
Romo’s finish — only his fourth international goal — could not have been simpler after Seung-gyu crashed into a teammate while trying to make a catch and spilled the ball near the penalty spot.
Romo connected on the first bounce, stabbing it with his right foot into an open goal to send a crowd into delight after the fans had been critical of their side not long before.
Seung-gyu made some measure of amends, denying Raul Jimenez with a strong stop in the 75th minute at the near post and making a sprawling denial of Obed Vargas in the 85th.
Shortly after, the rarely tested Rangel was forced into an exceptional sequence, first denying Cho Gue-sung’s header at the back post and then maintaining his position just long enough to deny Yang Hyun-jun’s second effort.
It was a late outburst during a match that took time to get going.
Mexico’s Julian Quinones had the only effort on target before the half, with Seung-gyu denying his glancing header in the 20th minute.
By halftime, the home crowd had tired of Mexico’s passiveness and booed the co-hosts off the pitch.
–Field Level Media
