Sports
Royals 3B Maikel Garcia exits with hamstring injury
May 30, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Kansas City Royals third baseman Maikel Garcia (11) comes up with a leg injury during the seventh inning against the Texas Rangers at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Andrew Dieb-Imagn Images Kansas City third baseman Maikel Garcia left in the seventh inning against the Texas Rangers with a right hamstring strain sustained Saturday at Arlington, Texas.
The 2025 All-Star was injured going from first to third base on Vinnie Pasquantino’s tiebreaking double. Garcia was 1-for-4 with an RBI in the contest, continuing a slow start to his 2026 season. The 26-year-old is batting .268 this year with just three home runs and 21 RBIs, a year after belting 16 homers to go along with 74 RBIs.
Tyler Tolbert pinch-ran following Garcia’s departure, and stayed in at second base while Garcia was replaced in the field by Nick Loftin. If Garcia goes to the injured list, Loftin, a four-year veteran, could be in line to get the majority of his time at third base. Loftin is batting .215 this year and .218 for his career.
Kansas City, which has now lost five in a row, led 6-3 entering the bottom of the eighth inning and went on to lose 7-6.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Emma Clarke homer powers Tennessee past Texas Tech in WCWS
May 30, 2026; Oklahoma City, OK, USA; Tennessee Lady Volunteers infielder Emma Clarke (13) hits a walk-off home run in the ninth inning beating the Texas Tech Red Raiders during the NCAA Women’s College World Series at Devon Park. Mandatory Credit: Brett Rojo-Imagn Images Emma Clarke’s home run in the bottom of the ninth inning ended a deadlock and gave Tennessee a walk-off 2-1 win over Texas Tech Saturday in a winner’s bracket game at the Women’s College World Series in Oklahoma City.
Clarke, who had been 0-for-3 when she stepped up to bat lead-off in the ninth, lifted pitcher Kaitlyn Terry’s hanger to deep left, making short work of any late inning dramatics.
Tennessee (49-10) also got a solo home run from Taelyn Holley against Nijaree Canady in the fifth inning.
The two dingers proved enough for starting pitcher Karlyn Pickens and reliever Sage Mardjetko, who combined to surrender one run on five hits with eight strikeouts and five walks over nine innings.
Texas Tech (58-8) got on the board to tie things up in the seventh when Taylor Pannell led the inning off with a single, advanced to second on a walk, stole third base and then finally reached home when Desirae Spearman hit a sacrifice fly to center. Tennessee center fielder Sophia Knight made a strong throw home and Pannell was initially ruled out before the play was challenged and overturned when replays showed catcher Elsa Morrison missed the tag.
But that was it for scoring for the Red Raiders, who could only manage just one extra-base hit, a double by Mia Williams.
Tennessee advances to the semifinals of the tournament. The Red Raiders will now face UCLA (53-9) in an elimination game Sunday.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Rain washes out qualifying, Denny Hamlin to start on Nashville pole
May 30, 2026; Lebanon, Tennessee, USA; Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin (11) will start from the pole tomorrow at Nashville Superspeedway. Mandatory Credit: Randy Sartin-Imagn Images LEBANON, Tenn. — Intermittent light rain showers forced the cancellation of Saturday’s NASCAR Cup Series Busch Light Pole Qualifying at Nashville Superspeedway, resulting in Joe Gibbs Racing driver Denny Hamlin starting from pole position in Sunday night’s Cracker Barrel 400 (7 p.m. ET, Amazon Prime, PRN, SiriusXM NASCAR Radio).
Championship points leader Tyler Reddick will start his No. 45 23XI Racing Toyota alongside Hamlin’s No. 11 JGR Toyota on the front row as Toyota hopes to earn its first ever series win at the 1.33-mile concrete oval.
Last week’s Charlotte race winner Daniel Suarez will start third in the No. 7 Spire Motorsports Chevrolet with JGR’s Christopher Bell (No. 20 Toyota) and two-time and reigning series champion Kyle Larson (Hendrick Motorsports No. 5 Chevrolet) rounding out the top five on the 38-car grid.
Defending race winner, Team Penske’s Ryan Blaney, will start his No. 12 Ford seventh.
Bell, who was fastest in the practice session, said he didn’t expect the cancelled time trials to make a big difference in either the run of the 400-miler or ultimately the outcome of the race. Especially with the field getting some time on track with practice.
“Well, it’s good for me today, because I have a good metric, so I’m okay with that,’ Bell said smiling of the formulation NASCAR used to set the field in lieu of qualifying.
His competitors were not overly concerned with the cancellation of qualifying, either — instead just glad to turn some laps and dial in their cars.
“They put a lot of resin down in both corners, more than they’ve done in the past and we’re really curious how the cars are going to drive,” said Roush Fenway Keselowski owner-driver Brad Keselowski. “So it’s semi-important (to qualify) although we’ve been racing here for the last three or four years, so we all have a pretty good feel for it.”
–Holly Cain, NASCAR Wire Service
Sports
Aneesah Morrow, Sun earn first home win at Sparks' expense
May 30, 2026; Hartford, Connecticut, USA; Connecticut Sun center Brittney Griner (42) defends against Los Angeles Sparks forward Dearica Hamby (5) in the first half at PeoplesBank Arena. Mandatory Credit: David Butler II-Imagn Images Aneesah Morrow collected game highs of 17 points and 14 rebounds as the Connecticut Sun hung on down the stretch for an 84-81 victory over the Los Angeles Sparks on Saturday night in Hartford, Conn.
Playing the first of two games in Hartford this season before the team moves to Houston for next season, the Sun (2-8) snapped a three-game losing streak and earned their first home win of the season.
Morrow posted her third straight double-double while shooting 6 of 13 from the floor. Reserve Kennedy Burke added 14 points while Diamond Miller and Leila Lacan contributed 12 apiece as the Sun shot 41.8% (28 of 67) and outrebounded the Sparks 37-29 in a game that featured 11 lead changes and seven ties.
Rae Burrell and Ace Atkins scored 16 apiece to lead the Sparks, who nearly erased a nine-point deficit in the second night of a back-to-back. Erica Wheeler added 13 while Nneka Ogwumike contributed 12 as Los Angeles (4-4) lost for only the second time in six games and fell to 1-1 without WNBA leading scorer Kelsey Plum (ankle).
The Sun held a 69-64 lead a little over two minutes into the fourth following a 16-footer by Lacan. Miller converted a layup for a 75-66 lead with 3:56 remaining.
The Sparks chipped away and trailed 81-79 when Burrell sank a 3 with 52 seconds left, but the Sun sank three free throws in the final 12 seconds to finish it off.
Los Angeles held a 33-27 lead on a 3 by Atkins with 3:25 left in the second quarter, and the Sun ended the half with an 11-3 spurt for a 39-36 edge after rookie Gianna Kneepkens sank a 3 with 1.5 seconds left.
Miller’s 3 gave the Sun a 48-41 lead with 7:19 left in the third and Morrow’s triple put Connecticut up 51-45 a little over two minutes later. After losing the lead, the Sun took a 62-60 edge into the fourth when Burke split a pair at the line with 5.2 seconds remaining.
–Field Level Media
