Sports
USMNT hopefuls Brenden Aaronson, Chris Richards have injury scares
Mar 31, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; United States forward Brenden Aaronson (11) controls the ball against Portugal at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images United States attacking midfielder Brenden Aaronson came away with left leg injury while playing for Leeds United on Sunday, although initial speculation is that the setback is not expected to jeopardize his World Cup status.
Prospective USMNT defender Chris Richards also went down with a injury Sunday when he rolled his left ankle while playing for Crystal Palace. The second-half substitute returned to the match after a minute on the sideline and played to its completion.
Aaronson, who is in excellent position to make the United States Men’s National Team for the second consecutive World Cup cycle, went to the ground in the 58th minute of Leeds’ Premier League match against Brighton & Hove Albion.
The 25-year-old Medford, N. J., native was clutching at his left leg as Leeds’ medical team came onto the pitch. He limped off the field and was replaced in an eventual 1-0 victory.
Richards, 26, is a native of Alabama who was in the FC Dallas development program before joining Bayern Munich’s academy in Germany in 2018. He played in Germany’s Bundesliga for two seasons before moving to Crystal Palace in 2022.
USMNT coach Mauricio Pochettino will reveal his 26-player squad for this summer’s World Cup on May 26 at a public event in New York.
Aaronson tops Leeds with five assists and has added four goals, while playing a team-best 35 (of 37) matches this season.
Aaronson signed a five-year deal with Leeds in 2022. He was loaned to FC Union Berlin in the German Bundesliga in 2023-24 after Leeds was relegated, but returned to the West Yorkshire, England, club a year later.
Aaronson earned his first call-up to the USMNT in October 2019, made his debut with the team in 2020 and played in all three of the United States’ 2022 World Cup games.
Richards has 36 appearances with the USNMT since 2020, scoring three goals, but was not named to the United States’ 2022 World Cup roster. He has played in 33 Premier League games for Crystal Palace this season, scoring one goal.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Wings look to turn over new leaf as they host Mystics
May 14, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Dallas Wings guard Azzi Fudd (35) looks on during the second half against the Minnesota Lynx at College Park Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images The Dallas Wings have been asked by their coach to carry a new attitude to the court when they host the gritty Washington Mystics on Monday in Arlington, Texas.
The Wings (1-2) have dropped the first two games of a three-game homestand, most recently a 90-86 setback to Minnesota on Thursday. Paige Bueckers led Dallas with 27 points while Maddy Siegrist added 17, all in the first half, and Odyssey Sims hit for 11.
Arike Ogunbowale, who was the Wings’ leading scorer in their first two games, had just six points on 2 of 11 shooting from the floor. Recent top overall WNBA draft selection Azi Fudd scored a career-high eight points after missing Dallas’ game with Atlanta on Tuesday with a knee injury.
After winning their first game of the season in overtime in Indiana, the Wings have lost their next two by a combined nine points.
New Dallas coach Jose Fernandez has called out his team for being selfish while demanding that the Wings’ players understand what’s important and what’s not.
“Really, really good teams and championship teams, they don’t care who starts, they don’t care how many minutes they play,” Fernandez explained. “They don’t care if the ball’s not going in for them; they can do different things on the defensive end. When we start doing that, and we don’t get in our feelings — because body language never whispers. Championship teams, you play for the guy next to you.
“And it doesn’t matter if the ball’s not going in, you can do so many other things. You can defend, you can share it, you can go get stuff off the glass. When that changes, then you don’t lose these type of games.”
Washington (2-1) travels to the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex with momentum built from a 104-102 overtime win at Indiana on Friday. Sonia Citron led the way for the Mystics with 30 points on 10-for-14 shooting while Kiki Iriafen racked up 25 points, Shakira Austin tallied 19 and Cotie McMahon scored five of her 13 points in overtime during her WNBA debut.
“Every single game we want to put our best foot forward,” Citron said. “We want to show who we can be, and we want to be tough. We showed how gritty we are (in the win at Indiana).”
The Mystics have played back-to-back overtime contests; they lost 98-93 in OT vs. New York on May 10. All three of their games have been decided by five points or less.
“This just shows our resilience,” Iriafen said. “We believe we can beat anybody, no matter what it shows on paper. We truly believe in each other. We play with an edge to us. We know nobody’s going to help us out.”
Monday’s game is the first of three between the teams this season. Washington will host the Wings in back-to-back contest on July 31 and Aug. 5.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Winless Sun looking for defensive answers as they visit Fire
May 13, 2026; Uncasville, Connecticut, USA; Connecticut Sun guard Hailey van Lith (2) drives the ball against Las Vegas Aces guard Chennedy Carter (23) in the first half at Mohegan Sun Arena. Mandatory Credit: David Butler II-Imagn Images When the Connecticut Sun take on the host Portland Fire on Monday, the game will probably not be a defensive battle. Portland and Connecticut rank at the bottom of the WNBA in the early season defensive scoring stats, allowing 98 and 98.5 points per game, respectively. Monday’s matchup offers a chance to improve and grab an elusive win for the Sun.
Connecticut (0-4) is the last winless squad in the WNBA. The Sun dropped a 101-94 shootout to WNBA defending champion Las Vegas on Friday. The game represented a season-high point total for Connecticut, but much of the talk afterward centered around A’ja Wilson’s 45 points for Las Vegas.
“We know that she’s the best player in the world,” said Sun coach Rachid Meziane. “But I do think Reagan (Beers) freezed up a little bit… and she was a little too much of a spectator tonight.”
Beers, a rookie, had just six points while drawing the tough defensive assignment off the bench, but six Sun players scored in double figures. Connecticut was led by 17 points from Hailey Van Lith on 7-for-11 shooting.
Connecticut was at least competitive down the stretch on Friday, unlike a couple of brutal losses earlier, prompting Meziane to note, “We can be proud of how we fought tonight. It was a lot better for us.”
Brittney Griner, who leads the Sun with 14.5 points per game, has missed the last two contests with a left foot injury and is listed as day-to-day.
Portland (1-2) has had its own troubles, coming off a 100-82 loss to the New York Liberty on Thursday. The expansion Fire allowed New York to shoot 15 of 38 from 3-point range.
The long-range attack buried Portland in the third quarter. The Fire trailed by two at the half and just four with 5:15 left in the third quarter, but the quarter ended with a 20-7 Liberty run including three 3-point bombs that allowed New York to pull away.
“The story of the game was evident in that third-quarter stretch,” said Fire coach Alex Sarama. “We can’t let what happens with our offense define our defensive side… and I think we went away from that in the third quarter.”
Five players scored in double figures for Portland, led by reserve Megan Gustafson’s 14 points (on 5-for-6 shooting) in just 14 minutes.
“We’re going to keep trapping, keep scrambling,” said Sarama. “That’s the only way it can be.”
Guard Carla Leite, who leads the team with 19.5 points per game, did not play on Thursday and remains day-to-day with a right ankle injury.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Taylor Walls’ bases-clearing triple propels Rays past Marlins
May 17, 2026; St. Petersburg, Florida, USA; Tampa Bay Rays third baseman Junior Caminero (13) hits a home run against the Miami Marlins in the first inning at Tropicana Field. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images Taylor Walls’ fourth-inning triple plated three for the Tampa Bay Rays, who beat the visiting Miami Marlins 6-3 Sunday and took two-of-three in the rivalry weekend series in St. Petersburg, Fla.
Drew Rasmussen (4-1) gave up seven hits and a pair of walks over 5 1/3 innings, but the Rays right-hander yielded just two runs as he won for the second consecutive start.
Junior Caminero and Yandy Diaz homered off Marlins pitcher Eury Perez (2-6), who saw his personal losing streak extend to five starts. Caminero’s solo shot, his team-best 12th home run of the season, came in the first to give the Rays an early lead.
Miami jumped ahead with a two-run third thanks to RBI singles by Xavier Edwards (2-for-5) and Otto Lopez (2-for-4).
That lead lasted until the Rays’ fourth. Diaz started the inning with a walk. An out later, Jonny DeLuca (2-for-4) doubled and Cedric Mullins drew a walk to load the bases. Perez and Nick Fortes battled for eight pitches before Diaz was forced at home on a fielder’s choice.
However, Walls, the Rays’ nine-hole hitter, jumped on the first pitch he saw, smacking a fly ball to deep center that bounced off the wall to give Tampa Bay a two-run lead. The Rays shortstop has now hit safely in six straight games for the second time this season.
Diaz’ seventh homer came in the bottom of the fifth, extending the lead to three. Caminero walked with the bases loaded in the following inning. Miami outhit Tampa Bay 11-7, but Marlins pitchers gave up six bases on balls.
The Marlins had two runners on base in both the fifth and sixth innings, but saw those threats end with double plays.
They finally chipped away in the eighth, with Kyle Stowers’ single off Garrett Clevenger plated Lopez, who reached with a one-out double. Connor Norby doubled, and Jakob Marsee (2-for-3) walked to load the bases, chasing the reliever. However, Ian Seymour struck out Leo Jimenez, and pinch-hitter Heriberto Hernandez lined out to end the inning.
Bryan Baker allowed only a hit in the ninth to earn his 12th save and give the Rays their 12th victory in 15 games this month.
Perez went five innings, allowing five runs, five hits and four walks. He fanned five in a laborious 102-pitch outing.
–Field Level Media
