Sports
Amanda Anisimova returns to action, win first-round match in Paris
American Amanda Anisimova in action during her first round match against France’s Tiantsoa Sarah Rakotomanga Rajaonah on May 25, 2026 at the French Open in Paris.
Amanda Anisimova needed some time to shake off the rust on Monday during her first-round match at the French Open.
It was nine weeks to the day that Anisimova last played a competitive match. But once the No. 6 seed found her form, she rolled to a 6-3, 6-1 victory over France’s Tiantsoa Rakotomanga Rajaonah on a scorching hot day in Paris.
Anisimova had 24 winners and 24 unforced errors and needed just 69 minutes to complete the victory.
Anisimova’s hiatus was due to a left wrist injury that she described as “nothing too serious.” Her last action was at the Miami Open and on Monday, she was happy to be running around the court at Roland Garros.
“I tried to not really overthink anything,” Anisimova said. “I was super excited to be here, to be fit to play, honestly, and that was the only thing I really thought about is what a great opportunity. … I’m just super relieved that all is good and that I’m ready to play.”
Rakotomanga Rajaonah had 11 winners and 19 unforced errors in defeat.
Anisimova next plays Austria’s Julia Grabher, who registered a 6-2, 6-2 win over Slovakia’s Rebecca Sramkova.
No. 2 Elena Rybakina of Kazakhstan and No. 3 Iga Swiatek rolled to straight-set wins.
Rybakina had 27 winners and 27 unforced errors while beating Slovenia’s Veronika Erjavec 6-2, 6-2. Swiatek carded 17 winners and 16 unforced errors in a 6-1, 6-2 win over Australia’s Emerson Jones.
Swiatek would have preferred the temperatures weren’t in the low 90s, atypical weather for Paris in May.
She said the heat couldn’t be compared to when the Summer Olympics were held in Paris in late July and early August of 2024.
“It is much different,” Swiatek said. “Maybe it was that hot in the Olympics, but the balls were different, so I wouldn’t treat it as the same tournament.” No. 7 Elina Svitolina of Ukraine lost the first set and had to win a third-set tiebreaker to land a 3-6, 6-1, 7-6 (3) victory over Hungary’s Anna Bondar in two hours, 26 minutes.
Svitolina ended a two-match losing streak against Bondar and now leads the head-to-head competition, 3-2.
“When you are competing at your highest level, it’s all about the small details,” Svitolina said. “It’s physical freshness, it’s mental freshness and, you know, just being strong and collected in these moments.”
Czech 10th seed Karolina Muchova took care of Russia’s Anastasia Zakharova 7-5, 6-2. Italy’s Jasmine Paolini, seeded No. 13, notched a 7-5, 6-3 victory over Ukraine’s Dayana Yastremska. Camila Osorio of Colombia upset No. 14 Russian Ekaterina Alexandrova 6-2, 6-4, and Switzerland’s Jil Teichmann knocked off Russia’s Liudmila Samsonova, the No. 20 seed, 6-4, 6-4.
No. 23 Elise Mertens of Belgium beat Germany’s Tatjana Maria 7-5, 6-0 and No. 28 Anastasia Potapova of Russia was a 6-1, 6-2 winner of Maya Joint of Australia.
Meanwhile, American Alycia Parks upset No. 24 seed Leylah Fernandez of Canada 6-4, 6-4, with a 26-10 edge in total winners. No. 25 seed Diana Shnaider of Russia had an easier time beating Mexico’s Renata Zarazua 6-4, 6-1.
No. 29 Jelena Ostapenko of Latvia posted a 6-4, 6-4 victory over Ella Seidel of Germany. Swiss qualifier Susan Bandecchi beat No. 31 Cristina Bucsa of Spain 6-4, 2-6, 6-4. In other first-round matches, Poland’s Maja Chwalinska defeated China’s Zheng Qinwen 6-4, 6-0; Eva Lys of Germany defeated Croatia’s Petra Marcinko 6-3, 6-0; and Viktorija Golubic of Switzerland rolled to a 6-0, 6-2 victory over Panna Udvardy of Hungary.
Daria Kasatkina of Australia defeated Turkey’s Zeynep Sonmez 6-4, 6-4. Spain’s Kaitlin Quevedo beat France’s Leolia Jeanjean 7-6 (5), 7-6 (2), and Yulia Putintseva of Kazakhstan knocked off Talia Gibson of Australia, 4-6, 6-4, 6-1.
Uzbekistan’s Kamilla Rakhimova outlasted Romania’s Jaqueline Cristian 6-3, 4-6, 6-4, and Brit Katie Boulter outlasted American Akasha Urhobo 6-4, 4-6, 6-4.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Iran national football team to stay in Mexico during 2026 World Cup
Iran‘s national soccer team will sleep in Mexico and travel to the U.S. on the days of its three World Cup matches after Washington declined to host the squad for the tournament, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said on Monday.
Sheinbaum said FIFA approached her government after U.S. authorities said they did not want Iran staying in the country throughout the June 11-July 19 competition, even though Iran is scheduled to play three Group G matches there.
“We have no reason to deny them the possibility of staying in Mexico,” Sheinbaum told her daily press conference.
Iran is due to face New Zealand in Los Angeles on June 15, Belgium in Los Angeles on June 21 and Egypt in Seattle on June 26.
The White House and the State Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
U.S. President Donald Trump said in March that Iran was welcome to participate in the World Cup but that he did not believe it was appropriate for Iran’s team to be in the United States “for their own life and safety.”
Mehdi Taj, head of Iran’s football federation, said on Saturday the team’s base would be moved from Arizona to the Mexican border city of Tijuana during the tournament. FIFA confirmed the move on Monday.
Taj added that the swap would help avoid visa-related complications and allow direct Iran Air flights to Mexico.
Iran’s World Cup plans have been under scrutiny since late February, when the United States joined Israel in attacks on Iran, triggering a war that raised doubts over whether Tehran would send its team to play in one of the host countries.
In March, Taj said Iran was in talks with FIFA about moving its group matches to Mexico on safety grounds, and Sheinbaum said Mexico would be open to hosting them. FIFA kept the schedule unchanged.
The uncertainty fueled wider speculation about Iran’s place at the tournament. In April, Trump’s envoy for global partnerships, Paolo Zampolli, suggested Italy should replace Iran, prompting a dismissive response from Italian officials and FIFA.
Iran qualified for a fourth consecutive World Cup by topping its group in the third round of Asian qualifying last year.
(FRANCE 24 with Reuters)
Sports
Greg Sankey ‘committed’ to SEC Championship amid 24-team CFP expansion debate
MIRAMAR BEACH, Florida — Amid a flurry of questions about potentially expanding the College Football Playoff, SEC commissioner Greg Sankey said Monday night the conference still sees the value in its championship game.
It has almost become accepted that playoff expansion means the death of the conference championship game. There are already scheduling challenges even with a 12-team playoff, and the conventional wisdom is that a move to 16 or 24 teams will prompt the extinction of those title games.
“We have contracts,” Sankey said about the SEC Championship, “so pretty committed.” When asked a follow-up to his philosophical commitment to the game, he replied, “I’m pretty committed.” The SEC and Mercedes-Benz Stadium have a contract to play the game through 2031.
Sankey’s comments come amid a busy spring, during which multiple high-profile SEC figures called for the conference to move on from the championship game. Alabama AD Greg Byrne told USA Today about the SEC Championship, “I think the ship has sailed. It’s run its course.” Georgia head coach Kirby Smart said in April that something would have to be gained if the SEC Championship was lost.
“Where we are right now with 12 teams, I don’t necessarily agree that it needs to quit being played,” Smart told On3. “But if it gets to 16 or 24 and we’ve got to move the end of the season up and we’ve got to get everything done by the second week of January, then I’d say it probably has to go.”
The SEC invented the conference championship game under former commissioner Roy Kramer back in 1992. Famously, Alabama defeated Florida that year and went on to win the national championship. Played annually in Atlanta, beyond the nostalgia and historical appeal, it is a significant revenue driver for the conference. Last year’s Alabama-Georgia SEC Championship game drew 16.86 million viewers on ABC.
The financial appeal of conference championship games was part of Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti’s recent pitch to grow to 24 teams. Once a proponent of a 16-team automatic qualifier-heavy format, Petitti believes the financials no longer make sense for it. The Big Ten commissioner said the Power Four collectively would lose $200 million in annual revenue if it eliminated the conference championship games. A move to 16 teams and the accompanying additional revenue wouldn’t make up for it, he said last week at the Big Ten spring meetings.
“I just don’t think it works economically,” Petitti said. “I don’t think it works scheduling-wise as well. I think it doesn’t create enough new inventory. And then the last piece, I don’t think it gets enough access.”
Sports
Three Astros pitchers combine to throw first MLB no-hitter since 2024
Major League Baseball’s no-hitter drought has come to an end.
Three Houston Astros pitchers combined to no-hit the Texas Rangers on Monday, marking the first time since the Cubs’ combo effort on Sept. 4, 2024, that a big-league team has completed the feat.
Tatsuya Imai got things started with six hitless innings of his own before handing the ball to Steven Okert and Alimber Santa, who finished the job in a 9-0 Houston win.
Santa was making his MLB debut.
Okert took over to start the seventh Monday night after Imai got 16 outs over the last 16 batters he faced. Imai walked three of his first four batters but benefited from a double play in the first inning before settling into a groove.
Imai’s fourth walk of the game was to Brandon Nimmo leading off the fourth, but Ezequiel Duran then grounded into a double play.
Imai threw 57 of his 97 pitches for strikes. He struck out two.
It is the 327th no-hitter in MLB history and the 18th thrown by the Astros.
The last Astros pitcher to do so was Ronel Blanco on April 1, 2024, against the Toronto Blue Jays.
The previous pitcher to throw a complete-game no-hitter was Blake Snell for the San Francisco Giants against Cincinnati on Aug. 2, 2024.
Imai’s fourth walk of the game was to Brandon Nimmo leading off the fourth, but Ezequiel Duran then grounded into a double play.
Imai threw 57 of his 97 pitches for strikes. He struck out two.
The 28-year-old Imai is in his first big league season after coming over from Japan. He was 1-2 with an 8.31 ERA in his first five starts for the Astros.
Imai joined the Astros in January after agreeing to a $54 million, three-year contract. He was a three-time All-Star during eight seasons in Japan, and went 10-5 with a 1.92 ERA last season for the Pacific League’s Seibu Lions, striking out 178 in 163 2/3 innings.
Rangers leadoff hitter Joc Pederson was retired on a nifty play in the third when shortstop Jeremy Peña made a backhand stop and a twisting throw to first for the out. Justin Foscue and Danny Jansen had deep flyouts in the Texas fifth.
Okert walked Nimmo leading off the seventh before retiring the next three batters.
— with files from the Associated Press
Sports
SEC commissioner Greg Sankey pumps brakes on CFP expansion: ‘We have time’
MIRAMAR BEACH, Florida — Greg Sankey arrived at the SEC’s spring meetings Monday with a message for anyone expecting a breakthrough on the College Football Playoff: the SEC has time, and it intends to use it.
Every other power conference has picked a side on whether to expand the CFP from 12 to 24 teams. The SEC might be filled with varying opinions, but the conference’s leadership is still thinking.
“I do not anticipate any decisions on the College Football Playoff — just so we’re clear, so we can tamp that down,” SEC commissioner Greg Sankey said Monday evening, the day before the conference’s annual spring meetings were set to begin in Florida. “We have time. We’ll have informed discussion.”
Greg Sankey ‘committed’ to SEC Championship Game amid 24-team playoff expansion debate
John Talty

That means the biggest story hovering over the sport will likely stretch into at least June, as the SEC remains the lone power conference not yet to publicly support expanding the format from 12 teams to 24 as early as the 2027-28 season. The SEC has long resisted expansion beyond 16 teams, but several athletic directors and coaches have expressed interest in renewing discussions initially sparked by the Big Ten last fall.
What is expected behind closed doors in a beachside resort in the Florida Panhandle is a wide range of opinions. CFP executive Rich Clark will present to coaches and athletic directors on Tuesday, covering the current 12-team format and selection process — a point of contention a year ago — before walking through the pros and cons of expansion.
Sankey pushed back on the cost of expanding to 24 teams, specifically the prospect of eliminating conference championship games to clear calendar space for a December playoff start.
The CFP’s executives — 10 FBS commissioners and Notre Dame‘s athletics director — are not scheduled to meet until June.
Sankey has publicly supported expansion, but he offered last week that he prefers 16 teams. He reiterated Monday, however, that a decision from the SEC is tied to the coaches, athletic directors and presidents.
“I’ve never said, even last year, that we’re opposed to some number other than 14. I’ve told my colleagues that,” Sankey said. “I’m not an opponent of 24 or 28. We have to inform the decision-making. I think we did a good job informing our position last year on 16. We’ll consider other ideas, certainly, this week and moving forward.”
Sankey shared Monday that the SEC has studied expansion and how a 24-team playoff could affect the regular season, a point of debate among the sport’s leadership. He pointed to Oklahoma‘s upset of Tennessee on Nov. 1 as an example, a signature win that propelled the Sooners into the CFP.
Would it carry the same weight in a 24-team field? Might teams with spots already secured sit starters late in the season?
“When you start to quantify, you look at a certain number,” he said. “What are games that may have mattered in a smaller number under the scarcity principles of 12? All of those games are high-leverage games for Oklahoma. Where you go to 24, and maybe one or two of those games don’t matter in the same way.
“Rivalry games will matter, I would argue. But, hey, if you’ve got somebody that needs to rest (at the end of the regular season) because they’re in at 24, those are things that we want to try to understand. I think you can quantify that because we’ve done some of that work for our own purposes.”
Most of Sankey’s 40-minute session with reporters focused on the CFP and governance. While discussing the CFP debate, he reflected several times on his 2020 work with a CFP subcommittee that explored expanding beyond a four-team field. The committee consisted of three commissioners and Notre Dame athletic director Jack Swarbrick, and it studied playoff models for five-, six-, eight-, 12-, 16-, 32-, and 64-team formats. They landed on 12.
He said that experience can still inform the future, even as the portal, NIL and revenue-sharing have fundamentally reshaped the sport and its prominent issues.
“There was never one variable that was, ‘We’re going to expand just because of this,’” Sankey said. “That was never in there. There were a set of issues that were part of the presentations that informed the decision-making.”
SEC coaches and athletic directors enter this week split on the CFP format, according to a CBS Sports survey conducted last week. At least three athletic directors and three head coaches prefer a 24-team playoff, and seven ADs and seven coaches expressed they are at least open to discussing an expansion to 24, including an outdated proposal discussed last year between the Big Ten and SEC to move to 16 with a commitment to expand to 24 within three years.
While compromise might be on the table among the SEC contingent, a 16-team playoff appears to be a no-go for the Big Ten. Big Ten athletic directors and coaches unanimously supported 24 at its annual meetings last week. The ACC and Big 12 voiced their support for the Big Ten’s model earlier this month.
“We’ve had zero conversation about 16,” Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti said after the conference’s annual meetings outside Los Angeles. “Plan B is what we have now (12 teams), what we negotiated … we would stay with what we have.”
The coaches themselves have also weighed in.
Earlier this month, the American Football Coaches Association formally recommended expanding the playoff field to its maximum. Their proposal was tied to tightening the postseason calendar so it doesn’t conflict with the transfer portal in January, while also allowing a uniform season start date in late August — a spot historically labeled Week 0.
The latest 24-team format proposed includes only one automatic qualifier spot reserved for the highest-ranked Group of Six champion. The remaining 23 teams would be seeded based on the Selection Committee’s rankings, a point of contention among SEC schools since last spring, when the conference demanded tweaks to the committee’s strength-of-schedule metrics.
The Big Ten and SEC hold decision-making power to change the CFP format, though they must consider the opinions of the other FBS conferences and Notre Dame before making a final decision. If the two conferences are unable to commit to a shared vision, the playoff will remain at 12 teams.
The deadline for a decision from the CFP’s executives is Dec. 1.
Sports
Vikings QB Room Named One of the Worst in NFL
If you are excited about the Minnesota Vikings’ quarterback changes in 2026, mainly the addition of Kyler Murray, CBS Sports does not share your enthusiasm. That website ranked Minnesota’s quarterback group as the NFL’s seventh-worst heading into the summer.
Minnesota’s quarterback group has risk, but calling it one of the league’s worst feels premature.
It’s the latest evidence to suggest that Murray’s stock is at its lowest.
Murray’s Track Record Makes the Ranking Hard to Defend
Seventh-worst? Really?
CBS Sports: Vikings QB Room Isn’t Good
Garrett Podell of CBS Sports decided seventh-worst for the Vikings’ QB room ranking, explaining, “One would think the Minnesota Vikings’ signing of two-time Pro Bowl quarterback Kyler Murray would keep them off this list, but that’s not the case. Murray earned his Pro Bowl selections in 2020 and 2021. That’s a lifetime ago in NFL years. From 2022 to 2025, Murray missed 30 of his possible 68 games.”
“In the five games Murray played for the Cardinals in 2025, he averaged a career low 227.0 total yards per game. Recent first-round pick J.J. McCarthy was the worst quarterback in the NFL in 2025, which sparked the signing of Murray. McCarthy’s performance was simply incredible considering the offensive ecosystem under 2024 Coach of the Year Kevin O’Connell.”
Murray is in town on a contract worth $1.3 million. The Cardinals are paying him to play for the Vikings.
“Despite an electrifying supporting cast, McCarthy ranked dead last in the league in completion percentage (57.6%), touchdown-to-interception ratio (11-12), and passer rating (72.6). Murray could rediscover his early career form with Minnesota,” Podell continued.
“Murray is one of just four players in NFL history with 20,000-plus passing yards (20,460) and 30-plus rushing touchdowns (32) through his first seven seasons, joining Josh Allen, Cam Newton and Lamar Jackson. Week 1 starter: Kyler Murray.”
Little Faith in Murray, McCarthy, and Wentz
Vikings fans are enthused about this year’s quarterback trio, primarily because the franchise finished 2025 with a 9-8 record, despite posting the NFL’s fifth-worst quarterback performance per Dropback EPA/Play. Adding Murray feels like a serious remedy to an even graver malady.
It’s just that the NFL populace doesn’t agree yet. It has to see Murray thrive in Minnesota to believe it. After all, a team as lowly as the Arizona Cardinals got rid of Murray in favor of Jacoby Brissett and Carson Beck. That’s pretty damning.
Minnesota now has a quarterback with something to prove in Murray, a man with upside in the 23-year-old McCarthy, and a gritty veteran named Wentz in case the other two flounder or get hurt.
The Sam Darnold Lesson
In 2024, the Vikings signed Darnold from free agency, and fans groaned. The club was really going to embark on the Kirk Cousins afterlife with Darnold, who was certifiably the butt of jokes at the time? Indeed, they were.
That offseason, though, Minnesota knew what it was doing, even if folks groused when Darnold signed on the Vikings’ dotted line. He’d later post 35 touchdowns in Minnesota, fully reclaimed his career, and after the Vikings were done with him, he went on to win a Super Bowl with the 2025 Seattle Seahawks.
Compared to Darnold, Murray starts his post-Cardinals adventure with much more proven production. Murray isn’t a punchline like Darnold was two years ago. Perhaps it’s not the best time to write off the Vikings’ decision-makers before seeing Murray’s time unfold. If they struck oil with Darnold for a season, there’s no reason to believe Murray can’t achieve the same outcome.
Browns Take the Cake as the Worst
Who has the quarterback situation in football? That’s the Cleveland Browns, says Podell.
He wrote, “There is no quarterback room more chaotic than that of the Cleveland Browns. There’s the husk of Deshaun Watson, a quarterback who tore his Achilles in 2023 and once more in his rehab process in 2024, set to enter the final season of his five-year, $230 million fully-guaranteed contract in 2026.”
“Then you have the lightning rod that is 2025 fifth-round pick Shedeur Sanders, the son of Deion. Despite being blitzed on 24% of his dropbacks since his NFL debut in Week 11, Sanders faced pressure on 51% of his dropbacks, the highest such rate in the league. Dillon Gabriel, a 2025 third-round pick, started in Weeks 5-11 for the Browns.”
All signs point to Watson starting for Cleveland in September.
“Then, there’s 2026 sixth-round pick Taylen Green, a player with so much athletic potential that fans are begging him to switch to wide receiver. It’s the final year of Watson’s contract, and if he can still move around after two Achilles tears, he’s the quarterback who has experienced the most NFL success with three Pro Bowl selections,” Podell concluded.
The Vikings’ first regular season game is less than 16 weeks away, when Murray can deconstruct the CBS Sports narrative.
Sports
Montreal fans briefly carry U.S. anthem after mic fails before Canadiens playoff game
Montreal Canadiens fans briefly carried “The Star-Spangled Banner” after the microphone cut out before Game 3 of the Eastern Conference final against the Carolina Hurricanes on Monday.
Quebec singer Éléonore Lagacé and three backup vocalists began singing the American national anthem with no sound coming from the speakers.
The spectators at the Bell Centre then picked up the lyrics for about five seconds before the microphones came back on.
A stirring rendition of “O Canada” followed as Lagacé paused to exclaim “êtes-vous prêts, Montreal!” — which translates to “are you ready, Montreal!” — before hitting her final note.
Monday’s brief carrying of the anthem contrasted with last year’s Bell Centre reception for “The Star-Spangled Banner,” as fans loudly booed the anthem amid political tensions before a Canada-U.S. game at the 4 Nations Face-Off tournament in Montreal.
The response also comes less than a month after fans at KeyBank Center in Buffalo sang “O Canada” when a microphone failed before the Sabres and Boston Bruins played Game 5 of their first-round playoff series.
Sports
Padres’ Fernando Tatis Jr. owes $3.74M in future earnings ruling
May 24, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; San Diego Padres second baseman Fernando Tatis Jr. (23) hits a double during the fifth inning against the Athletics at Petco Park. Mandatory Credit: David Frerker-Imagn Images San Diego Padres star Fernando Tatis Jr. struck out in court and must give Big League Advance about $3.74 million in back pay as a result of his future earnings agreement with the group.
Tatis signed a future earnings contract with Big League Advance (BLA) in 2017 and received $2 million from the firm in exchange for 10% of all future major league earnings. Tatis, who was 18 when he signed the deal, had previously praised BLA by saying the up-front cash allowed him to hire a personal trainer and make other important changes that early in his career.
However, Tatis stopped making payments in 2024, prompting BLA to begin an arbitration process seeking money it was owed. Tatis accused BLA of luring him into what amounted to an illegal loan and sued the firm in June 2025.
“Defendants have built a business model that preys on young, financially unsophisticated athletes, offering lump-sum advances in exchange for significant portions of their future earnings,” the lawsuit said in part.
An arbitrator sided with BLA last fall, saying Tatis must pay the full award of $3.74 million, the amount Tatis owed after ceasing payments.
Then Tatis petitioned the San Diego County circuit court for a ruling, but California state judge Judy S. Bae ruled Friday that Tatis’ petition needed to be filed before arbitration began in order to be considered.
While Bae said Tatis had waived a right to judicial review of his case, Tatis’ attorney told Front Office Sports that he’ll likely appeal.
“The court made significant findings against BLA, and the only thing they prevailed on was timeliness of the challenge,” Mitts told the outlet, citing the judge’s ruling that BLA can be considered a lender, and that California has jurisdiction so its laws apply to the case. “That is something which we are very likely to appeal, and we feel strongly we have a very good chance.” Tatis signed a 14-year contract worth $340 million with the Padres in 2021 when he was seen as one of the brightest young prospects in baseball. That means he ultimately owes $34 million to BLA as part of the deal.
Tatis, now 27, is a three-time All-Star, two-time Gold Glove and Platinum Glove winner and two-time Silver Slugger honoree. In 722 career games over seven seasons played entirely for the Padres, Tatis has batted .275 with 152 home runs, 409 RBIs and 136 stolen bases. He missed the full 2022 season due to a wrist fracture combined with an 80-game suspension for a banned substance.
–Field Level Media
Sports
With ‘amazing’ show in Game 3, Thompson continues to awe Cone
Ginebra’s Scottie Thompson (second from left) and Justin Brownlee mix it up with the Rauin or Shine duo of Adrian Nocum and Jaylen Johnson. —MARLO CUETO
Scottie Thompson once again proved why Barangay Ginebra continues to lean on him in big moments.
Thompson fired 25 points and sparked a decisive second-half turnaround as Ginebra defeated Rain or Shine, 103-98, on Sunday night to seize a 2-1 lead in their PBA Commissioner’s Cup semifinal series at Mall of Asia Arena.
The veteran guard knocked down five three-pointers and added seven rebounds, two assists and three steals as the Gin Kings recovered from an eight-point halftime deficit and withstood a late Rain or Shine rally before a crowd of more than 13,000.
“There’s nobody better than a guy who comes out and does his job literally every game,” Ginebra coach Tim Cone said of Thompson. “He does all the stuff that no one else wants to do. It’s amazing to watch day in and day out.”
Wednesday game
Justin Brownlee delivered 24 points, eight rebounds and nine assists, while RJ Abarrientos chipped in 17 points and five assists despite ditching a protective mask after suffering a nose injury earlier in the series.
Ginebra can move within a victory of another Finals appearance when the best-of-seven series resumes Wednesday at Smart Araneta Coliseum.
And Thompson should play a key role in that match, too. Cone knows, having watched the do-it-all guard work hard even during practice.
“I’ve had the opportunity for 10 years to watch him do that every day, every game,” Cone said. “He just comes to work every day.”
“I tell you, he does it every practice, too. He comes out and he does his job. He does all the stuff that no one else wants to do. It’s just amazing to watch that day in and day out,” he added.
Thompson is averaging 19 points on 51-percent shooting while also contributing 6.7 rebounds, 3.3 assists and one steal per game in the semifinals.
Rain or Shine looked poised to regain control of the series after a blistering start led by Andrei Caracut, who scored all 15 of his points in the opening quarter on five three-pointers.
‘Explosive diarrhea’
The Elasto Painters also welcomed back Caelan Tiongson, who saw action after battling what coach Yeng Guiao described as “explosive diarrhea.”
Tiongson and Jaylen Johnson scored 23 points each and helped Rain or Shine build an early cushion, but Ginebra gradually turned the game around behind Thompson’s outside shooting and Brownlee’s steady playmaking.
Tjompson orchestrated Ginebra’s rally in the third and, when Rain or Shine rallied late in the game, hit timely shots that sealed the victory. INQ
Sports
Claressa Shields vows to take action following MVP ‘event ban’
Claressa Shields has threatened to take legal action and made an accusation of defamation in a fiery onslaught on social media.
Such allegations stem from the altercation between Shields and Alycia Baumgardner earlier this month, where both fighters were seen trading barbs in a hot-tempered exchange.
This took place during a Most Valuable Promotions Netflix event, headlined by Ronda Rousey vs Gina Carano, where Jake Paul’s promotional outfit delivered a series of MMA contests.
But while action took place inside the cage, there was also a confrontation between two high-profile women’s boxers inside the VIP area.
Video footage appears to show Shields slapping Baumgardner following their war of words, to which MVP have responded by banning the ‘GWOAT’ from future events.
In an official statement, MVP described the incident as a physical “attack”, while Baumgardner wrote in her own statement that Shields’ behaviour was “unprovoked”.
It is important to highlight, too, that Baumgarner is signed to the flagship promotional organisation for women’s boxing, while Shields is still being promoted by Dmitry Salita.
Regardless of their allegiances, though, Shields has said in a social media clip that she plans to sue both MVP and Baumgardner.
“MVP does not run boxing, so let’s wrap that s*** up. I’m not banned from boxing. Actually, I have a huge fight announcement coming soon.
“Both of MVP and Baumgardner’s statements were lies – that is defamation.
“For those who saw the video of Baumgardner threatening me, telling me ‘I’ll beat your ass right now’, that is a threat.
“You saying everything that happened was completely unprovoked – that’s a lie. Now that I’m looking at statements, and I’m seeing people lie, it’s okay because I’m not gonna handle it with the law; I’m gonna handle it with the court.
“Ya’ll gonna get sued for defamation.”
As a five-weight world champion, Shields is regarded alongside Katie Taylor as the greatest female fighter of this generation, if not of all time.
Sports
MJ, Celtics, Ferguson And Noel Gallagher Lead Global Tributes as Guardiola Bids Farewell to Manchester City
Tributes continue to pour in from across the sporting world following Pep Guardiola’s emotional farewell as Manchester City manager, with basketball legend Michael Jordan and NBA champions Boston Celtics among the high-profile names celebrating the Spaniard’s legacy.
Jordan stunned fans during City’s farewell event after appearing in a special tribute video congratulating Guardiola on what he called an “unbelievable career.”
“Hey Pep, this is Michael Jordan,” the six-time NBA champion said.
“I just want to congratulate you on an unbelievable career. Enjoy your retirement. Good luck on the links (golf). And keep them straight.”
The Boston Celtics also joined the tributes on social media, posting:
Congrats Pep on a legendary run at @ManCity pic.twitter.com/ScbJWpGvsH
— Boston Celtics (@celtics) May 24, 2026
The NBA champions’ connection to Guardiola runs deeper than a congratulatory message.
Celtics head coach Joe Mazzulla has repeatedly credited Guardiola for influencing his coaching philosophy during Boston’s championship-winning run. Mazzulla, a known admirer of Manchester City’s tactical structure and team culture, previously visited Guardiola in Manchester and maintained regular contact with the City boss during the Celtics’ title campaign.
After winning the NBA Finals, Mazzulla openly admitted Guardiola helped shape some of Boston’s tactical ideas.
“Pep helped me in transitions and how to move guys,” Mazzulla said while discussing how Boston solved Dallas’ defense during the Finals.
Mazzulla also praised Guardiola’s emphasis on “competitive joy” and togetherness, concepts he later implemented inside the Celtics locker room during their championship season.
The admiration between both coaches became one of the most fascinating cross-sport relationships in recent years. Guardiola attended Game 1 of the NBA Finals in Boston in 2024, while Mazzulla spent time observing Manchester City training sessions and exchanging ideas with the legendary football manager.
Guardiola’s influence has long stretched beyond football, with coaches from basketball, American football, rugby, and other elite sports often citing his leadership, tactical innovation, and team-building methods as inspiration.
The farewell celebration itself became a global sporting event, featuring emotional speeches, tributes from former players, celebrities, and musicians including lifelong Manchester City supporter Noel Gallagher.
After nearly a decade in charge, Guardiola departs Manchester City having transformed the club into one of football’s greatest modern dynasties — winning multiple Premier League titles, domestic trophies, and delivering the club’s first UEFA Champions League crown.
And judging by the tributes arriving from every corner of sport, Guardiola’s impact may ultimately be remembered as far bigger than football itself.
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