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Tim Merlier completes hat trick with Stage 12 win at Tour de France

Tim Merlier celebrates after crossing the finish line to win Stage 8 of the Tour de France from Perigueux to Bergerac on Saturday.Tim Merlier celebrates after crossing the finish line to win Stage 8 of the Tour de France from Perigueux to Bergerac on Saturday.

Belgium’s Tim Merlier won a wild sprint to the finish to claim Stage 12 of the Tour de France on Thursday during an attack-filled ride from Circuit Nevers Magny-Cours to Chalon-sur-Saone.

While the acclaimed sprinter rallied to collect his third stage victory of this race, so many riders were bunched together in the final meters that an accident sent several cyclists to the ground.

Colombia’s Fernando Gaviria was the first to hit the pavement and appeared to suffer the worst injuries in a spill that also included Stage 11 winner Soren Waerenskjold.

Merlier came from well back in the pack to catch Jasper Philipsen in a time of three hours, 38 minutes and 53 seconds over 179.1 kilometers. Olav Kooij of the Netherlands squeezed into second place for the second day in a row while Philipsen claimed third.

Nothing changed in the chase for the yellow jersey. Four-time champion Tadej Pogacar of Slovenia continues to hold a 3:36 lead over Denmark’s Jonas Vingegaard. Belgium’s Remco Evenepoel, Spain’s Juan Ayuso and France’s Paul Seixas round out the top five.

After back-to-back sprint stages, the race returns to the mountains for Stage 13 on Friday. The highlight of the 205.8-kilometer stage will be the steady climb to Ballon d’Alsace.

–Field Level Media

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Kaitlyn Chen scoring outburst helps Valkyries down Fever

Golden State Valkyries forward Kayla Thornton (5) guards Indiana Fever guard Sophie Cunningham (8) on Wednesday, July 15, 2026, during the first half of a game at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis.Golden State Valkyries forward Kayla Thornton (5) guards Indiana Fever guard Sophie Cunningham (8) on Wednesday, July 15, 2026, during the first half of a game at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis.

Reserve Kaitlyn Chen scored 12 of her 14 points in the third quarter, as the Golden State Valkyries won their eighth straight, 88-75 over the Indiana Fever on Wednesday night in Indianapolis.

Gabby Williams had 16 points, while backups Tiffany Hayes recorded 13 and Janelle Salaun added 12 for the Valkyries (18-7), who shot 52% while completing a 5-0 road stretch.

Kelsey Mitchell had 20 points, Aliyah Boston scored 15 and Caitlin Clark added 13 for the Fever (14-10), who shot 40% and committed 16 turnovers.

Golden State led 42-30 after Cecilia Zandalasini (10 points) scored the first basket of the second half. However, Indiana recorded the next nine points, including four straight by Clark.

The Fever took their first lead, 47-46, after Sophie Cunningham (10 points) hit two free throws, with 2:31 remaining in the third quarter.

Then, Chen, who entered averaging 7.2 points and played 10 minutes, took over.

She posted 10 points while Golden State scored 12 of the final 16 of the third. Her three-point play in the final 2 seconds gave the Valkyries a 58-51 edge entering the final period.

Salaun knocked down a 3-pointer to open the fourth, and Chen followed with a driving layup to give the Valkyries a 63-51 lead.

Golden State led 80-65 late. Indiana scored the next eight points, highlighted by two 3-pointers from Mitchell, but got no closer.

The Valkyries led 20-18 after one quarter, but Indiana got within 24-23 before a basket from Hayes and 3-pointer from Kayla Thornton (11 points) put the visitors ahead by six.

Meanwhile, Clark’s first bucket of the contest came at the 4:43 mark of the second quarter, when she drove to the basket to get the Fever within 31-27. However, she appeared to be hobbled after drawing contact with Golden State’s Kia Stokes, but no foul, on the play.

Clark showed her frustration when she was whistled for a foul shortly after, then exited and didn’t return before halftime.

Following Clark’s basket, the Valkyries scored nine of the game’s next 11 points — seven coming from Williams — to lead 40-29 before Indiana’s Monique Billings made a free throw to make it a 10-point contest at the break.

Golden State scored the first eight points of the game, and built a 12-2 lead. However, Mitchell had nine points, and the Fever held a 11-6 rebounding advantage to trail by two at the end of the first quarter.

–Field Level Media

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Jalen Brunson honored three times at 2026 ESPY Awards

Jul 15, 2026; New York, NY, USA; Jalen Brunson and Ali Brunson arrive on the red carpet before the 2026 ESPY Awards at Lincoln Center. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn ImagesJul 15, 2026; New York, NY, USA; Jalen Brunson and Ali Brunson arrive on the red carpet before the 2026 ESPY Awards at Lincoln Center. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

Jalen Brunson was on center stage in New York again Wednesday, this time for a trio of ovations at the 2026 ESPY Awards.

Hosted by Marcello Hernandez of “Saturday Night Live” fame Wednesday evening at the David H. Koch Theater at Lincoln Center in New York, the show kicked off with Brunson winning the first major award of the evening, before he capped things with another award a couple of hours later and then joined his teammates on stage for the final award of the evening.

Brunson won “Best Championship Performance” and then “Best Athlete – Men’s Sports” for guiding the New York Knicks — the ESPY’s “Best Team” — to their first NBA championship since 1973. Brunson averaged 32.6 points per game in the Finals, to go along with 4.6 assists, 4.2 rebounds and 2.2 steals. That came after a regular season where he averaged 26.0 points, 6.8 assists and 0.8 steals for the 53-29 Knicks.

During his first acceptance speech, Brunson shouted out his family before thanking his coaches and teammates.

“I am forever indebted to them, thank you,” Brunson said.

Later in the evening, Jim Abbott, the former Major League Baseball pitcher who played in the majors for a decade despite being born without a right hand, won the “Jimmy V Award for Perseverance.”

“I was born missing my right hand, and I never wanted to make a big deal about that,” Abbott said. “Being born this way, I knew what it was like to be different, I knew what it was like to be on the outside looking in and I knew what it was like to be on a team.

“Of all the great blessings sports has given me, that sense of belonging is the best.”

Alyssa Liu won “Best Breakthrough Athlete” following her gold medal for figure skating at the Winter Olympics. “I had some really rough times in (the sport), and I took two years off, and so it really feels like I did break through in my own way, and for my sport,” Liu said.

Golden State Warriors superstar Steph Curry took home the “Muhammad Ali Sports Humanitarian” award. His charity “Eat, Learn, Play” has helped feed children and provide them playgrounds to play on in the Oakland area.

“When you hear Ali’s name, you think about greatness,” Curry said. “This award being connected to his legacy is incredibly humbling.”

After crediting volunteers, teachers, and all those involved in the program, Curry implored other athletes to give back to their communities.

“Don’t ever forget you have a platform, you have a voice, you have everything you need to make a true impact, and I encourage you to find your Oakland.”

The “Best College Athletes” were Indiana quarterback Fernando Mendoza and UCLA basketball player Lauren Betts, the latter of whom spoke about the importance of mental health in her acceptance speech.

“Your mental health is not separate from your success,” Betts said. “It is the foundation of everything that you do.

“The strongest people aren’t the ones who never struggle; they’re the ones who have the courage to let someone walk through the struggle with them.”

The “Pat Tilman Award for Service” went to Scott Ruskan, a former cross country athlete at Rider University who helped rescue 165 Texas flood survivors last July as a member of the Coast Guard.

“There were a lot of heroes that day who aren’t getting an ESPY Award,” Ruskan said. “It took a complete army of people to get (the rescue) done.”

Other 2026 ESPY Awards:

Best Athlete – Women’s Sports: A’ja Wilson

Arthur Ashe Award for Courage: Jason Collins

Best Single-Game Performance: Shohei Ohtani

Best Play: OG Anunoby

Best Record-Breaking Performance: Myles Garrett

Best High School Athletes: Maddie DiMaria, Grady Emerson

–Field Level Media

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Four teams ousted on first day of LoL competition at Esports World Cup

FURIA, Team Secret, Movistar KOI and LYON were all eliminated from contention with a pair of group-play losses on the first day of League of Legends competition at the Esports World Cup in Paris on Wednesday.

FURIA was eliminated from Group A with losses to G2 Esports and Dplus. Team Secret was eliminated from Group B with losses to Sentinels and Karmine Corp. Movistar KOI was ousted from Group C after defeats against Billbill Gaming and GAM Esports. LYON exited from Group D after losing to JD Gaming and MIBR.LOS.

The $2 million competition sees 16 teams divided into four groups of four teams each. All non-elimination matches are one-off matches while all elimination matches are best-of-three. Group play concludes on Thursday with two more matches in each of group.

The top two teams from each group advance to the single-elimination playoffs, which will be held Friday through Sunday. All playoff matches will be best-of-three until the best-of-five grand final, with the winning team taking home $600,000 and 1,000 Esports World Cup club points. The MVP will earn an additional $25,000.

In Group A action, G2 Esports beat FURIA in 24 minutes on red and AG.AL beat Dplus in 36 minutes on red. Dplus then swept FURIA 2-0 in the elimination match, winning in 31 minutes on red and 28 minutes on blue.

In Group B, Sentinels beat Team Secret in 35 minutes on blue while Gen.G bested Karmine Corp in 28 minutes on blue. In the elimination match, Karmine Corp won the deciding game in 35 minutes on red after they won the opener before Secret charged back with a 38-minute win on red.

Bilibili Gaming and T1 won their Group C openers, with Bilibili doing so in 33 minutes on blue against Movistar KOI and T1 coming out on top in 33 minutes on red over GAM Esports. GAM then rallied to win the elimination match, triumphing in 35 minutes on red and 34 minutes on blue after Movistar won the opening game in 36 minutes on red.

In Group D, Hanwha Life took care of MIBR.LOS in 19 minutes on red and JD Gaming opened with a 31-minute defeat of LYON on blue. In the elimination match, MIBR.LOS swept LYON with a 38-minute win on red and a 31-minute victory on blue.

Thursday schedule

Group A

G2 Esports vs. AG.AL (advancement match)

Dplus vs. G2/AG loser (advancement/elimination match)

Group B

Sentinels vs. Gen.G (advancement match)

Karmine Corp vs. Sentinels/Gen.G loser (advancement/elimination match)

Group C

Bilibili Gaming vs. T1 (advancement match)

GAM Esports vs. Bilibili/T1 loser (advancement/elimination match)

Group D

Hanwha Life vs. JD Gaming (advancement match)

MIBR.LOS vs. Hanwha/JD Gaming loser (advancement/elimination match)

Esports World Cup League of Legends prize pool (money, EWC club points)

1. $600,000, 1,000 — TBD

2. $340,000, 750 — TBD

3. $220,000, 500 — TBD

4. $140,000, 300 — TBD

5-8. $90,000, 200 — TBD

9-12. $55,000, 0 — TBD

13-16. $30,000, 0 — FURIA, Team Secret, Movistar KOI, LYON

–Field Level Media

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