Sports
Why Stephen A. and Skip Bayless Are Reuniting on First Take
For the first time in one decade, Stephen A. Smith and Skip Bayless will be back together on ESPN.
On Friday, Bayless will appear on a special edition of “First Take” on ESPN at 10:00 a.m.
The dynamic duo debated sports together on television for over 15 years until Bayless departed for FOX Sports in a move that fractured their relationship.
Bayless exited FS1 in 2024 and has been hinting at a return to the mainstream sports talk scene ever since. The 74-year-old has continued to post on his YouTube channel and co-hosts a show for Underdog Sports, where Smith appeared as a guest a few months ago. Bayless tried to reunite with Smith in 2020, but FOX offered him a deal that he couldn’t turn down.
On Friday morning, Smith and Bayless will reunite on ESPN for a one-time episode – at least that’s how it has been marketed.
Could this be more than a one-time broadcast?
Smith had claimed to have moved on from one of the most dominant debate pairings ever and has ascended into his own tier of sports talk. He’s blossomed into the premier talent across ESPN’s properties and has even floated a potential United States presidential nomination. But sports debate is his passion, and “First Take” has become a bit of a revolving door since Bayless exited.
Max Kellerman’s stint on the show ended at Smith’s request. Host Molly Qerim departed shortly after, but Stephen A. insists he was not behind that decision.
Currently, a revolving cast of ESPN personalities spanning from Dan Orlovsky, Marcus Spears and Kendrick Perkins debate Smith on a show that hasn’t had the same identity that it once had.
The show remains a ratings juggernaut for ESPN, even without a fixed cast. Despite speculation that a pairing of Smith and Bayless is due to declining ratings, they’ve continued to lap their competition, even in an evolving media landscape.
That’s what makes Friday’s pairing of Smith and Bayless even more interesting. Everybody involved continues to market this as a one-time appearance. And perhaps that’s true.
But watching Smith lose his marbles over Skip’s hot takes is going to be a nostalgia play for plenty of sports fans. It could leave the audience yearning for more of this duo together. In a rapidly-changing media climate, ESPN has chased what sports fans are chasing. It’s why Pat McAfee dominates the daytime airwaves while simulcasting on YouTube with ESPN logos plastered all over the set.
Even though Bayless is 74, he’s consistently posting to YouTube to an audience of over a quarter million subscribers. Smith is an even more powerful digital engine with over 1.25 million subscribers on YouTube.
Even if “First Take” with Stephen A. and Skip never returns to what it once was, this certainly feels like an experiment of sorts for ESPN. This “one-time” broadcast will certainly drive massive ratings based on intrigue alone.
But could the four-letter network be priming us for some greater plans? It’s a scenario that certainly shouldn’t be ignored.
Sports
Who Is the Best Golfer Without a Major? Breaking Down the Top Contenders
In this space just last month, I wrote that Tommy Fleetwood was “certainly the best player without a major title” going right now. I think Cameron Young might have pulled a Michael Jordan and taken that personally.
For an avid golf follower, I was slow to the Young hype train, but others like Fried Egg Golf’s PJ Clark were in the conductor’s chair. I vividly remember reading his piece “Confessions of a Cameron Young Addict” as we covered the U.S. Open last summer, before Young had even won on the PGA Tour.
Not only has Young won three times since then, two of them were The Players Championship (the “unofficial fifth major” of golf) and the PGA Tour’s newest signature event, the Cadillac Championship this weekend at Doral.
His opening-round 64 allowed him to go wire-to-wire and win by six strokes Sunday over Scottie Scheffler — and watching Young’s explosion, you get the feeling Scheffler is a good comp, a prospect people considered the best player yet to win on tour in 2022 until he started winning everything in sight.
We’re a week away from PGA Championship week, so I think it’s time for one of the more fun debates in sports: Who’s the best golfer in the world without a major title?
It feels like we don’t have the discussion as much as we did in the Tiger/Phil era, perhaps because of the great spread of winners since the turn of the decade. There have been 13 first-time major champs since Gary Woodland at the 2019 U.S. Open, with guys like Jon Rahm, Bryson DeChambeau and Collin Morikawa claiming two and Scheffler, Rory McIlroy and Brooks Koepka padding their totals.
With all due respect to Colin Montgomerie and the generations before, we’re only going to explore active players and the current scene.
Two at the Top
Cameron Young: This New Yorker has been contending longer than you may realize. His T3 at the 2022 PGA Championship and runner-up to Cam Smith at St Andrews that year were the first two of his seven top-10 major finishes. He is an elite ball-striker who leads the PGA Tour this year in true strokes gained (which is adjusted for field strength), per DataGolf. Young’s major breakthrough is coming.
Tommy Fleetwood: Young is the hot commodity, but what Fleetwood has in his favor is longevity. His eight major top-10s are spread out since 2017 and he rarely misses cuts anymore. Instead of a Players Championship, he’s now the proud winner of a Tour Championship along with eight titles on the European Tour. It’d be a shame if his major career goes the way of Lee Westwood — always the bridesmaid, never the bride.
The Nordic Golf League
Ludvig Aberg: Briefly the next big prospect in golf, Aberg has settled into a good rhythm of contending at signature events, but he has just two wins on tour to show for it. Though he kicked off his major career by finishing second and seventh in consecutive Masters, he hasn’t shown up at any of the others.
Viktor Hovland: More accomplished than his Swedish counterpart, with a Tour Championship and FedEx Cup title on his resume, Hovland has one top-five at each major since 2022. Too bad he just hasn’t gotten his game in order yet in 2026.
The Dark Horse
Tyrrell Hatton: He may get overlooked because he’s currently with LIV Golf, but after tying for third at the Masters, Hatton may be the player on this list closer than anyone to winning major No. 1. The numbers are eerily similar to fellow Englishman Fleetwood: one PGA Tour title, eight wins in Europe and eight major top-10s.
The Lee Westwood Award for Lifetime Achievement
Rickie Fowler: Look, he’s no longer the most talented player on this list, but Fowler is the most accomplished. We won’t forget his generational run in the 2010s, but of his 13 major top-10s, only two have come this decade. His fans can only hope he has a final act in him; Fowler’s been one of the best putters on tour and just posted top-10s at back-to-back signature events.
Sports
Minjee Lee among 6 LPGA players added to WTGL roster
Jun 22, 2025; Frisco, Texas, USA; Minjee Lee poses with the winner’s trophy following the final round of the KPMG Women’s PGA Championship. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images Six more LPGA Tour players committed to participating in the inaugural WTGL season on Tuesday, including three-time major winner Minjee Lee.
In addition to Lee, an 11-time winner on the LPGA Tour from Australia, the newly announced participants in the tech-infused indoor golf league are Danielle Kang, Megan Khang, Andrea Lee, Celine Boutier of France and Albane Valenzuela of Switzerland
Play is expected to begin later this year at SoFi Center in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla.
WTGL has received 14 commitments from players, including five currently in the top 10 of the Rolex Women’s World Golf Rankings: No. 2 Jeeno Thitikul, No. 4 Charley Hull, No. 7 Lee, No. 9 Lydia Ko and No. 10 Lottie Woad.
“WTGL continues to build momentum as a global platform for LPGA stars and women’s team golf,” said Pete Jung, chief marketing officer of TMRW Sports. “With today’s brand reveal and 14 LPGA Tour players now committed — including major champions, Olympians and Solheim Cup players from around the world — this milestone underscores the excitement we’re seeing from players, team ownership groups and potential partners as we prepare for WTGL’s inaugural season.”
World No. 1 Nelly Korda has not committed to the league.
–Field Level Media
Sports
MLB suspends Pirates RHP Chris Devenski, skipper Don Kelly
May 2, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Pirates relief pitcher Chris Devenski delivers the ball to the Cincinnati Reds during the sixth inning at PNC Park. Mandatory Credit: Philip G. Pavely-Imagn Images Pittsburgh Pirates right-hander Chris Devenski received a three-game suspension and an undisclosed fine from Major League Baseball on Tuesday for intentionally throwing at Sal Stewart of the Cincinnati Reds on Saturday.
MLB also announced Pirates manager Don Kelly was handed a one-game suspension and a fine. He will serve that ban in Pittsburgh’s game against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Tuesday in Phoenix.
After reaching a settlement, Devenski’s suspension was reduced to two games, according to multiple reports. The reliever is also expected to begin his suspension on Tuesday.
Devenski, 35, threw at Stewart during the top of the seventh inning of the Pirates’ 17-7 home victory over the Reds.
Devenski has a 7.71 ERA without a decision in three relief appearances this season. He owns a 27-22 record with a 3.93 ERA in 319 career appearances (eight starts) with seven teams. He was an All-Star with the Houston Astros in 2017.
–Field Level Media
