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Reports: Orioles signing veteran OF Tommy Pham

MLB: Pittsburgh Pirates at St. Louis CardinalsAug 28, 2025; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; Pittsburgh Pirates left fielder Tommy Pham (28) high fives teammates in the dugout after hitting a solo home run against the St. Louis Cardinals during the first inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Tim Vizer-Imagn Images

The Baltimore Orioles are signing veteran outfielder Tommy Pham to a minor league deal, multiple outlets reported Saturday.

Pham, 38, was hitless (0-for-13) in nine games with the New York Mets last month before being designated for assignment on April 27.

The 13-year veteran has played for 10 teams since making his major league debut with the St. Louis Cardinals in 2014.

Pham is a career .256/.344/.421 hitter with 149 homers, 522 RBIs and 131 stolen bases in 1,250 games. He last played in the American League in 2024 with the Chicago White Sox and Kansas City Royals.

The Orioles are looking for outfield depth after placing Dylan Beavers on the 10-day injured list this week due to a right oblique strain.

–Field Level Media

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Dustin Johnson on LIV's future: 'Your guess is as good as mine'

PGA: PGA Championship - Practice RoundMay 12, 2026; Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, USA; Dustin Johnson plays a tee shot on hole 2 during a practice round of the PGA Championship golf tournament at Aronimink Golf Club. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa. — Dustin Johnson is content to compete in the PGA Championship this weekend — and that’s about as far as he’s willing to look ahead.

When asked where he will be in 2027 in the wake of the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund’s announcement that it will no longer back LIV Golf beyond this year, Johnson didn’t have much of an answer.

“I think Scott’s doing a good job,” Johnson said of LIV CEO Scott O’Neil. “I think your guess is as good as mine with what happens next year.”

In January, LIV Golf announced a multi-year extension with Johnson, the 4Aces GC captain and two-time major champion.

A 24-time winner on the PGA Tour, Johnson was one of the first players to defect for LIV Golf and became the Saudi-backed circuit’s first season champion in 2022. Johnson, 41, won the U.S. Open in 2016 and the Masters in 2020.

Johnson carded an even-par 70 on Friday that included three birdies against three bogeys. That followed an opening-round 72 to place him at 2-over-par 142 for the tournament.

“I’m happy with my game, honestly,” Johnson told reporters. “Not very thrilled with my driver. Everything else feels really good. I’m rolling it well, short game is good and obviously it’s difficult around these greens. It’s hard to judge the last few shots I hit, seemed really nice and that I hit better shots than where they ended up.

“But it’s just tough. Everybody’s dealing with it. The wind will be blowing and then all of a sudden all the way down a little bit, and that’s the difference 10 or 15 yards out here and that’s a big deal.”

–Field Level Media

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Pace of play crawling at PGA; Scottie Scheffler points to ‘absurd’ pins

PGA: PGA Championship - Second RoundMay 15, 2026; Newtown Square, Pennsylvania, USA; Scottie Scheffler plays his shot on the seventh hole during the second round of the PGA Championship golf tournament. Mandatory Credit: James Lang-Imagn Images

NEWTOWN SQUARE, Pa. — Justin Thomas, Keegan Bradley and Cameron Young were put on the clock early in their second round at the PGA Championship, and they didn’t understand why they were singled out.

They were far from the only ones whose round was dragging. As Thomas argued, they weren’t holding up the group behind them — they were the ones being held up. The broadcast captured Thomas and Bradley pointing to the group ahead of them on the fourth hole at Aronimink Golf Club.

“The hard part to me with the whole pace of play thing is that you, there’s so much that goes into golf and there’s so much that goes into hole to hole,” Thomas said. “… Are you hitting it close? Are you able to tap it in, or you have to mark it? Stuff like that — are you holding the group up or are you not — to where it’s very hard to make that call. And we just didn’t agree with it, to be honest.”

Thomas and his group hustled on the ensuing hole, and officials took them off the clock. Multiple slow shots while a player is “on the clock” can result in a one-stroke penalty, but Thomas said he didn’t feel rushed.

“I backed off on my first shot being on the clock, even,” Thomas said. “It’s just, it’s so hard out here, and that’s the last thing I’m going to do is make a mistake because I feel like I’m rushing.

“If we were, for some reason, to get in a position where I was getting, we were getting bad times and we were continuing to be on, I would have had more discussions with the rules officials to kind of plead my case.”

For the second straight day at this major championship, rounds frequently exceeded five hours and sometimes hit 5 1/2. World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler and Englishmen Justin Rose and Matt Fitzpatrick went out as a threesome at about 8:40 a.m. local time. They were wrapping up just after 2:10 p.m.

Scheffler and some of his peers pointed to the difficulty of the PGA of America’s pin locations as one factor slowing down play.

“You just got to continue to try to hit good shots, and most of the pins today were, I mean, kind of absurd,” Scheffler said after a 1-over 71 put him at 2 under for the championship.

“They were just so far into the areas where we thought the pins were going to be, and then they just — like the one on 14 was probably the hardest pin that I’ve seen in a long time just because, I mean, there’s literally just like a spine (in the green) and they’re like, ‘Oh, we’ll just put the pin right on top of it.’ And you’re like, ‘All right, well, I’ll see what I can do.'”

Chris Gotterup had similar feelings even after carding a 5-under 65.

“I don’t think it’s unfair, but I do think for pace of play and certain aspects, there have been a couple — you know, 14 today is probably aggressive, I will say,” Gotterup said. “You’re hitting a 4-iron to a 10-foot circle, and if it doesn’t go there, it’s off the green, and if you hit it 40 feet left, you have a very hard 2-putt.”

The issue also seems to include a logistical element. With 156 total players starting off the first and 10th tees — which share a tee box — some threesomes run into each other. Players leaving the eighth hole must cross through No. 11’s tee complex to get to the ninth tee.

“Back nine requires a little bit more quality, and pace of play was incredibly slow on the back,” Denmark’s Nicolai Hojgaard said Thursday. “We were two groups (waiting at a time) on a couple tee boxes. It was hard to get into a rhythm. Where, on the front nine, we were on the fly.”

The pace of play frequently crops up at majors with large fields, and it’s likely to be eased Saturday and Sunday following Friday’s 36-hole cut to the top 70 and ties.

–Adam Zielonka, Field Level Media


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USWNT star Sam Coffey (knee) recovering after surgery

Soccer: International Womens Friendly-Japan at USAApr 11, 2026; San Jose, California, USA; United States midfielder Sam Coffey (17) during the first half against Japan at PayPal Park. Mandatory Credit: Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

United States Women’s National Team midfielder Sam Coffey is recovering after undergoing minor knee surgery earlier this week, her club team, Manchester City, announced Friday.

Manchester City didn’t elaborate on the nature of Coffey’s injury or the surgery. The team said Coffey would “work on recovery over the summer.”

Coffey, 27, left the NWSL’s Portland Thorns for Manchester City on an $875,000 transfer fee in January. She played in 10 games and helped Manchester City win the Women’s Super League Championship.

Coffey has scored five goals in 46 matches for the USWNT and is one of the team leaders. She helped the squad win the gold medal in the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris.

Coffey will miss games against Brazil on June 6 and June 9. She is expected to be fully recovered before World Cup qualifying begins in November.

Coffey played four seasons (2022-25) in Portland and had five goals and 17 assists in 98 matches. She helped the Thorns win the NWSL title in 2022.

–Field Level Media

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