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Giro d’Italia 2026 route, stage-by-stage guide and start list
The first Grand Tour of 2026, the Giro d’Italia gets underway on Friday 8 May with its Grande Partenza taking place in Bulgaria for the first time.
The 109th edition of the Giro will be fought out over 3,459km of road and 49,150m of climbing en route to the now-traditional processional final stage in Rome, where a successor to last year’s winner Simon Yates will be crowned.
Yates’ surprise retirement on the eve of the 2026 season means he will not defend his title, but there are two former winners and two further podium finishers on the provisional start list, with Jonas Vingegaard of Visma-Lease a Bike the hot favourite to seal the one Grand Tour winner’s jersey he has yet to claim, after two maillots jaunes and one maillot rojo.
Pure climbers will be pleased to see just one individual time trial on the menu, while there’s something for everyone on a varied route: seven summit finishes, eight flat stages for the sprinters, and seven so-called ‘medium mountain’ days earmarked for breakaway artists.
As in most Giros the GC battle will really ignite in the final week, starting with a detour through Switzerland on stage 15 before the queen stage on stage 19, featuring six classified climbs in the Dolomites including the race’s Cima Coppi – the highest point. One more mountainous day on stage 20 will sort out the standings before a jaunt all the way from Italy’s northeast to Rome for the final day’s sprint.
Giro d’Italia 2026 route guide
Stage 1 (Friday 8 May): Nessebar – Burgas (147km, flat)
A fast, flat opening stage along the Bulgarian coast, including two laps of a 22km circuit which contain the extent of the day’s very minimal climbing. The riders pass the finish line once before the two laps, giving lead-out trains time to get organised, and then it’s into the city centre for a very slight uphill sprint. It’ll be a fast man wearing pink at the end of day one.
Stage 2 (Saturday 9 May): Burgas – Veliko Tarnovo (221km, hilly)
A long second stage in Bulgaria offers the first minor test for the big names, with three classified climbs to surmount, the last just 8km from the finish and likely to be earmarked as the place to either monitor or go on late attacks. While some of the general classification contenders may opt to steal a march and gain some bonus seconds, this early in the race it’s equally likely to be a breakaway artist taking victory as the GC favourites keep their powder dry.
Stage 3 (Sunday 10 May): Plovdiv – Sofia (175km, flat)
Another outing for the sprinters and another chance to wear pink into the first rest day, which allows the race to travel from Bulgaria into Italy. There’s a category 2 climb to crest on the way there, though, coming right in the middle of the stage – early enough for the sprinters to regroup afterwards on the gentle descent towards the capital, Sofia, but also ripe ground for a breakaway to jump clear.
Monday 9 May – travel day
Stage 4 (Tuesday 12 May): Catanzaro – Cosenza (138km, flat)
Officially another ‘flat’ stage, like stage three, this first outing on Italian soil – along the Tyrrhenian coast – features a category two climb, this time in the second half of the stage. While it’s a long ascent at nearly 15km the sprinters should be shepherded over it in one piece, with a long descent and then uphill drag to the finish to follow. The urban finale features more rises, with the 3.7 per cent gradients of the final drag favouring a punchier sprinter.
Stage 5 (Wednesday 13 May): Praia a Mare – Potenza (203km, hilly)
Stage five provides rolling hills all day in Calabria and the quiet Basilicata region, with the general classification contenders needing to be on high alert throughout the entire 203km slog. Enterprising breakaway riders will also be on the look-out for a stage win so the pace should be high all day. After 4,100m of altitude gain – including the Montagna Grande di Viggiano with its maximum 15 per cent slopes – there’s a descent into the finish town of Potenza before another uphill drag to the line.
Stage 6 (Thursday 14 May): Paestum – Napoli (142km, flat)
Another early outing for the sprinters, with only one minor climb to get out the way, very early on. It’s one for the history buffs: the stage begins near the ancient Greek temples of Paestum before a long ride up the Tyrrhenian coast, passing through the plain around Mount Vesuvius, before getting into 70km of urban sprawl, with plenty of road furniture to navigate before the finish line on the wide roads of central Naples.
Stage 7 (Friday 15 May): Formia – Blockhaus (244km, mountainous)
The longest stage of the entire Giro and with the second-most altitude gain, stage seven is the toughest so far and the first proper GC test as the race enters the Apennines. There’s 4,600m of climbing to overcome, with the most notable climb the formidable Blockhaus – approached from the tougher Roccamorice road – and a summit finish atop its infamous slopes: it’s just shy of 14km, with nearly 10km of that at a bruising nine per cent gradient and highs of 14. The Red Bull Kilometre – with its bonus seconds – comes in its lower slopes and could be the springboard for a GC contender to launch to victory.
Stage 8 (Saturday 16 May): Chieti – Fermo (156km, hilly)
Stage eight sees more climbing but on shorter, punchier hills than stage seven, and at nearly 100km shorter in theory is an easier day in the saddle – but there are plenty of pitfalls as the riders travel up the Adriatic coast. With each climb followed by a sharp descent and straight into the next uphill, stage eight will require full concentration from the GC riders and their lieutenants. The toughest is the Reputolo, with gradients maxing out at 22 per cent, with another 10 per cent ramp up to the finish line in Fermo.
Stage 9 (Sunday 17 May): Cervia – Corno alle Scale (184km, hilly)
The final stage of the first week proper is another summit finish, with 2,400m to climb on the way there – all of that crammed into the final 30km. There’s a deceptively easy start, with a flat run to Bologna, before rising into the central Apennines with a category three climb, a very brief descent, and then the category one ascent to Corno alle Scale. It’s a similar route parcours to those often used in the Vuelta, with all the drama coming on the very last climb. Again the Red Bull Kilometre is on the lower slopes of the 10.8km last ascent, with more bonus seconds on offer.
Monday 16 May – rest day
Stage 10 (Tuesday 19 May): Viareggio – Massa (42km, individual time trial)
After a rest day we’re straight back into GC action with the one and only time trial on this year’s route. It’s a pan-flat, fast, almost entirely straight run out and back from Viareggio, with only two sharp U-turns as it wends one way along the Tuscan coastline and then back up the other. The approach to the finish is also nice and simple: there’s a right-hander on the seafront with 1km to go, then another turn at 150m onto the finishing straight. It’s a TT for the specialists so expect the bigger engines to shine and the pure climbers to try to limit their losses.
Stage 11 (Wednesday 20 May): Porcari – Chiavari (195km, hilly)
Back into the hills on stage 11, with a chance to catch out the odd GC rider who hasn’t quite got back into the swing of things after the first rest day. It’s another run along the Tuscan coast, with a flat but technical first section before criss-crossing the hills – including three categorised climbs – before entering Chiavari. The riders will need to be on high alert for the final 5km as a short climb is followed by a technical descent.
Stage 12 (Thursday 21 May): Imperia – Novi Ligure (175km, flat)
Stage 12 takes the race back into sprinters’ territory with a start on the Liguarian coast. It’s by no means an easy day in the saddle, with two short, sharp category three climbs at Colle Giovo and Bric Berton to get over, but from there the sprinters’ teams have around 50km of descending and flat road to get themselves shipshape and claw back any aspiring breakaway on the flat road towards Milan.
Stage 13 (Friday 22 May): Alessandria – Verbania (189km, flat)
Another stage in theory designed for the fast men, but this one has got a real sting in the tail in the form of two categorised climbs inside the final 20km, in the vicinity of Lake Maggiore. It’s almost entirely flat until then, setting up a real nervy finish – almost Milan-San Remo-esque in its design – as the race inches towards the foothills of the Alps and the Swiss border. The climb up Bieno is the hors-d’oeuvre, with the following category-three to Ungiasca a nasty one, with several kilometres at double-digit gradients. Then there’s a descent along the lakeside to the finish in Verbania, which could be contested either by punchier sprinters who have survived the climbs, or breakaway riders who excel going downhill.
Stage 14 (Saturday 23 May): Aosta – Pila, Gressan (133km, mountainous)
The weekend kicks off with a short but fearsome mountain stage: only 133km but with just shy of 4,400m of elevation gain packed in, with little real recovery time, as the route alternates from descents into the valley to soaring high up in the Val d’Aosta. There is one category two climb and three category ones including the summit finish, the 16.5km ascent to Pila up the Gressan side, which returns to the Giro 30 years after it last featured, on a stage won by Robert Millar. All four climbs have double-digit gradients at their worst, and the climbing starts right from the gun as the riders head out of Aosta to Saint-Berthelemy. The final kilometres range from nine per cent to 11, and it’s all uphill to the line.
Stage 15 (Sunday 24 May): Voghera – Milano (157km, flat)
The sprinters are rewarded for their Alpine slog on stage 14 with one last run out to end the second week. There’s only 200m of elevation gain on a very straightforward flat stage, with wide roads taking the peloton to Pavia before a jaunt along some sections of the traditional Milan-San Remo route. The finale is four laps of a simple 16.3km circuit on the flat boulevards of central Milan, with few technical corners to deal with, so it should be a classic bunch sprint.
Monday 25 May – rest day
Stage 16 (Tuesday 26 May): Bellinzona – Cari (113km, mountainous)
Racing resumes with the shortest road stage of the entire Giro, with 3,000m of climbing crammed into this outing entirely within Swiss borders. There are three individual climbs on the menu but two are covered twice over, in two laps of a punchy 22km circuit; the notable one is the category-two Leontica, with ranges from 8.5 to 14 per cent over its 3km length. From there it’s down into the Gotthard valley before the summit finish at Faido in the Cari ski resort: a category one, 12km climb with a nasty 13 per cent wall in its final kilometre. This stage looks perfectly designed to catch out the GC rider who took the rest day a bit too easy.
Stage 17 (Wednesday 27 May): Cassano d’Adda – Andalo (202km, hilly)
The GC battle gets a slight reprieve on a rolling stage well suited to the stage hunter. Heading north of Milan and bypassing Bergamo, near the stunning Lake Garda, there are three category three climbs, the last to Andalo-Lever just 9km from the finish, with a brief descent followed by another uphill to the line in Andalo. It’s a classic transitional stage before the weekend’s double-header of brutal days in the mountains which will decide the GC, so expect the major names to keep their powder dry and maybe give their lieutenants a run-about.
Stage 18 (Thursday 28 May): Fai della Paganella – Pieve di Soligo (171km, flat)
Another bumpy outing with two categorised climbs but plenty of small rises, stage 18 is another transitional stage and the penultimate outing for the sprinters, who have a hefty two days in the mountains to surmount before the traditional run-out in Rome. It undulates through the valley roads between Trento and Treviso, heading southeast into the Veneto with the Dolomites looming ominously overhead. The final ‘muro’ climb 9km from the finish line will test the legs – it maxes out at 19 per cent – before a slightly tricky finale: mostly downhill with a couple of corners before an uphill drag to the line.
Stage 19 (Friday 29 May): Feltre – Allghe, Piani di Pezze (151km, mountainous)
Stage 19 is the queen stage and likely where the winning move will be made, an epic outing in the Dolomites with 5,000m of climbing packed into the final 100km. A rolling first 46km leads into the first of six categorised climbs, with each of those coming essentially back-to-back with no respite.
They are: the Passo Duran (max 14 per cent), Coi (max 19 per cent), Forcella Staulanza (max 10 per cent), Passo Giau (the Cima Coppi, the highest point of the whole race at 2,233m above sea level, max 14 per cent), the Passo Falzarego (max 10 per cent), and the 5km climb to to the finish at Piani di Pezze (max 15 per cent). It’s not just the climbing that matters: there’s a long descent of over 20km off the Falzarego to test the GC riders’ mettle too. Expect fireworks.
Stage 20 (Saturday 30 May): Gemona del Friuli – Piancavallo (200km, mountainous)
The climbing continues on stage 20, with room for another twist in the tale after yesterday’s gruelling effort. Another undulating start leads to a category three climb at Clauzetto, before a rolling approach to the 14.5km, category-one Piancavallo. It’s so good organisers RCS opted to include it twice, with a long descent including the Red Bull Kilometre – with more bonus seconds on offer – before it’s tackled a second time, ending with a summit finish. It’s a steep climb, averaging 9 per cent before a slight flat section and another 8 per cent section leading into a technical final kilometre.
Stage 21 (Sunday 31 May): Roma – Roma (131km, flat)
After a flight down to Rome and with the destiny of the maglia rosa determined, the riders embark on the now-traditional final stage in the Italian capital. It’s pan-flat and relatively short, with the first section taken at a Sunday-jog pace as the winner and his team sip fizz and pose for photos on the flat, wide roads out to the coast at Ostia. From there it’s a turn back along the same roads into the centre of Rome itself, where the pace will steadily ramp up over eight laps of a 9.5km city-road circuit swinging past the Colosseum and other landmarks. It includes some technical corners and a few cobbled sections – known as sanpietrini – for extra jeopardy, with a minor tilt uphill on the finishing straight.
Giro d’Italia 2026 confirmed start list
*Not all teams have confirmed rosters
Alpecin-Premier Tech
- Kaden Groves (Australia)
- Tobias Bayer (Austria)
- Francesco Busatto (Italy)
- Jonas Geens (Belgium)
- Edward Planckaert (Belgium)
- Jensen Plowright (Australia)
- Johan Price-Pejtersen (Denmark)
- Luca Vergallito (Italy)
Bahrain Victorious
- Santiago Buitrago (Colombia)
- Damiano Caruso (Italy)
- Robert Stannard (Australia)
- Fran Miholjević (Croatia)
- Afonso Eulálio (Portugal)
- Mathijs Paasschens (Netherlands)
- Alec Segaert (Belgium)
- Eduardo Zambanini (Italy)
Bardiani CSF 7 Saber
- Filippo Magli (Italy)
- Martin Marcellusi (Italy)
- Luca Paletti (Italy)
- Vicente Rojas (Chile)
- Manuele Tarozzi (Italy)
- Nikita Tsvetkov (Uzbekistan)
- Filippo Turconi (Italy)
- Enrico Zanoncello (Italy)
Decathlon CMA CGM Team
- Felix Gall (Austria)
- Tobias Lund Andresen (Denmark)
- Tord Gudmestad (Norway)
- Gregor Mühlberger (Austria)
- Oliver Naesen (Belgium)
- Rasmus Søjberg Pedersen (Denmark)
- Callum Scotson (Australia)
- Johannes Staune-Mittet (Norway)
Groupama – FDJ United
- Remi Cavagna (France)
- Cyril Barthe (France)
- Axel Huens (France)
- Johan Jacobs (Switzerland)
- Josh Kench (Australia)
- Paul Penhoet (France)
- Remy Rochas (France)
- Brieuc Rolland (France)
Lidl-Trek
- Giulio Ciccone (Italy)
- Simone Consonni (Italy)
- Derek Gee-West (Canada)
- Amanuel Ghebreigzabhier (Eritrea)
- Jonathan Milan (Italy)
- Matteo Sobrero (Italy)
- Tim Torn Teutenberg (Germany)
- Max Walscheid (Germany)
Movistar Team
- Ivan Garcia Cortina (Spain)
- Orluis Aular (Venezuela)
- Juan Pedro Lopez (Spain)
- Enric Mas (Spain)
- Lorenzo Milesi (Italy)
- Nelson Oliveira (Portugal)
- Javier Romo (Spain)
- Einer Rubio (Colombia)
NSN Cycling Team
- Alessandro Pinarello (Italy)
- Jan Hirt (Czechia)
- Ryan Mullen (Ireland)
- Nick Schultz (Australia)
- Dion Smith (New Zealand)
- Jake Stewart (Great Britain)
- Corbin Strong (New Zealand)
- Ethan Vernon (Great Britain)
Pinarello-Q36.5 Pro Cycling Team
- Sjoerd Bax (Netherlands)
- Fabio Christen (Switzerland)
- David De La Cruz (Spain)
- Mark Donovan (Great Britain)
- David Gonzalez (Spain)
- Chris Harper (Australia)
- Matteo Moschetti (Italy)
- Nickolas Zukowsky (Canada)
Red Bull – Bora – hansgrohe
- Jai Hindley (Australia)
- Giovanni Aleotti (Italy)
- Nico Denz (Germany)
- Gianni Moscon (Italy)
- Giulio Pellizzari (Italy)
- Mick van Dijke (Netherlands)
- Aleksandr Vlasov
- Ben Zwiehoff (Germany)
Team Jayco AlUla
- Pascal Ackermann (Germany)
- Koen Bouwman (Netherlands)
- Bob Donaldson (Great Britain)
- Felix Engelhardt (Germany)
- Alan Hatherly (South Africa)
- Chris Juul-Jensen (Denmark)
- Ben O’Connor (Australia)
- Andrea Vendrame (Italy)
Team Picnic PostNL
- Timo De Jong (Netherlands)
- Sean Flynn (Great Britain)
- Chris Hamilton (Australia)
- Warren Barguil (France)
- Gijs Leemreize (Netherlands)
- Tim Naberman (Netherlands)
- Frank van den Broek (Netherlands)
- Casper van Uden (Netherlands)
Team Polti VisitMalta
- Mattia Bais (Italy)
- Ludovico Crescioli (Italy)
- Giovanni Lonardi (Italy)
- Mirco Maestri (Italy)
- Andrea Mifsud (Malta)
- Thomas Pesenti (Italy)
- Alessandro Tonelli (Italy)
- Diego Pablo Sevilla (Spain)
Tudor Pro Cycling Team
- Will Barta (USA)
- Robin Froidevaux (Switzerland)
- Fabian Lienhard (Switzerland)
- Luca Mozzato (Italy)
- Matthys Rondel (France)
- Michael Strorer (Australia)
- Florian Stork (Germany)
- Larry Warbasse (USA)
UAE Team Emirates-XRG
- Igor Arrieta (Spain)
- Jan Christen (Switzerland)
- Mikkel Bjerg (Denmark)
- Jhonatan Narvaez (Ecuador)
- Marc Soler (Spain)
- Antonio Morgado (Portugal)
- Jay Vine (Australia)
- Adam Yates (Great Britain)
Unibet Rose Rockets
- Dylan Groenewegen (Netherlands)
- Elmar Reinders (Netherlands)
- Lukas Kubis (Slovakia)
- Wout Poels (Netherlands)
- Matyas Kopecky (Cezchia)
- Tomas Kopecky (Czechia)
- Niklas Larsen (Denmark)
- Hartthijs De Vries (Netherlands)
Uno-X Mobility
- Johannes Kulset (Norway)
- Erlend Blikra (Norway)
- Andreas Leknessund (Norway)
- Markus Hoelgaard (Norway)
- Fredrik Dversnes Lavik (Norway)
- Sakarias Koller Løland (Norway)
- Martin Tjøtta (Norway)
- Ådne Holter (Norway)
XDS Astana Team
- Davide Ballerini (Italy)
- Alberto Bettiol (Italy)
- Arien Livyns (Belgium)
- Harold Martin Lopez (Ecuador)
- Martin Malucelli (Italy)
- Christian Scaroni (Italy)
- Guillermo Thomas Silva (Uruguay)
- Diego Ulissi (Italy)
Sports
Yellow Brick triumphs in 2026 The Archer at Rockhampton
A short wait was all Tony and Maddysen Sears needed to endure before their stable ace Yellow Brick secured The Archer at Rockhampton, making the delay entirely justified.
The $1 million showcase race, planned for Sunday, faced a rescheduling due to track troubles in the home straight sections – areas at 200m, 150m and 80m were heavy, unlike the good stand elsewhere.
With jockey Tommy Berry still in place for the new date, he guided the $3.40 top pick away from interference on the bend, leaving the Group 1 runner with plenty of runway in the long Rockhampton finish.
Local runner Cherry Rose hit the front strongly entering the final 300m, however class held firm as Yellow Brick powered to a length victory ahead of Anemacore ($19), Boomtown Boss ($10) just a head behind in third.
Maddysen Sears, partnered with her father in the stable, shared that the win carried deep emotion for the family featuring their banner carrier, who boosted earnings above $3.7 million with his tenth success.
“It’s just really special,” Sears said.
“My grandma’s here to watch, all my family come out to do it.
“We brought the right horse up and someone told me a couple of days before, a very good trainer in Melbourne said he’s going to win for fun and he did.
“He’s the pivotal horse for my career. Anyone that knows me, knows my family, this horse is this horse is so special.”
Berry expressed ongoing assurance in the mount, crediting a leading rider for the opportunity aboard Yellow Brick up north.
“They just wanted me to make sure I got room,” Berry said of the instructions.
“He’s a big horse and he takes a little bit of winding up, but it was a good effort today. Because he was first up and he was a little bit keen in the run and being on the fresh side.
“Great effort by the team to get him ready, to get him ready twice too for today. It was worth coming back for, for the second time.
“He’s definitely got a good carnival ahead. They’ve got some nice races mapped out for him. Thanks to James McDonald, he’s the one who got me up here, so I’ll try and keep it, and you can ride something else from now on, that’d be nice.”
Visit betting sites to find racing odds for The Archer.
Sports
Sabres vs. Canadiens prediction, odds, time: 2026 NHL playoff second-round picks for Wednesday, May 6
A second-round series in the 2026 Stanley Cup playoffs gets underway on Wednesday as the Buffalo Sabres host the Montreal Canadiens. Buffalo (50-23-9) defeated Boston in six games in the first round for its first series win since 2007. Montreal (48-24-10) knocked off Tampa in seven games in a series in which the teams alternated wins throughout. This is the eight postseason matchup between these franchises, with Montreal holding the 4-3 series edge.
The puck drops at 7 p.m. ET from KeyBank Center in Buffalo, N.Y. These teams split their four regular-season matchups. The latest Canadiens vs. Sabres odds have Buffalo as the -130 favorite on the money line (risk $130 to win $100), while the over/under for total goals scored is 5.5. Before making any Sabres vs. Canadiens picks, check out the NHL predictions and betting advice for Canadiens vs. Sabres from the SportsLine Projection Model.
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The SportsLine Projection Model simulates every NHL game 10,000 times. The model entered the second round of the 2026 NHL playoffs with a +668 return on top-rated money-line NHL picks. Anyone following its NHL betting advice at sportsbooks and on betting apps could have seen strong returns.
Now, the model has simulated Canadiens vs. Sabres 10,000 times and just revealed its coveted NHL picks and betting predictions. You can head to SportsLine now to see the model’s picks. Here are several NHL odds and trends for Sabres vs. Canadiens:
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Canadiens vs. Sabres money line: |
Sabres -130, Canadiens +109 |
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Canadiens vs. Sabres over/under: |
5.5 goals |
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Canadiens vs. Sabres puck line: |
Sabres -1.5 (+187) |
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Canadiens vs. Sabres picks: |
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Canadiens vs. Sabres streaming: |
Fubo (Try for free) |
Top Canadiens vs. Sabres predictions
After 10,000 simulations of Sabres vs. Canadiens, SportsLine’s model is going Over on the total (5.5). Each of their four regular-season matchups had at least six total goals scored, but these high-scoring affairs date back beyond that. At least six goals have been scored in eight straight meetings between these teams, with an average of 7.3 combined goals over this span.
Both teams saw Game 1 of their first-round series eclipse the total. Jakub Dobes of Montreal ranks just 29th in GAA, but Buffalo’s Alex Lyon isn’t much better at 28th. The model projects Cole Caufield and Tage Thompson to combine for 1.02 goals, on average, while there are five others in this game forecasted to have at least 0.30 goals. The sims call for 5.9 combined goals, making the Over the value play in over-under betting. See the model’s Canadiens vs. Sabres predictions at SportsLine.
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How to make Sabres vs. Canadiens picks
After simulating each shift of Canadiens vs. Sabres 10,000 times, the model also says one side of the money line has all the value. You can head to SportsLine to see the model’s NHL picks.
So who wins Sabres vs. Canadiens, and which side of the money line has all the value? Visit SportsLine now to see which side of the Canadiens vs. Sabres money line to back, all from the model that has returned over $550 on top-rated NHL picks, and find out.
Sports
Thunder crush Lakers in series opener
OKLAHOMA CITY — Chet Holmgren had 24 points and 12 rebounds, and the Oklahoma City Thunder routed the Los Angeles Lakers 108-90 on Tuesday night in Game 1 of their Western Conference semifinal series.
Canada’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Ajay Mitchell each added 18 points for the Thunder. The defending champions improved to 5-0 in the playoffs, despite missing 2025 All-Star Jalen Williams with an injured left hamstring for the third straight game. The Thunder shot 49.4 per cent from the field and made 13 of 30 three-pointers.
Oklahoma City will host Game 2 on Thursday.
Los Angeles struggled to find offence without scoring champion Luka Doncic, who has missed the past month with an injured left hamstring. LeBron James scored 27 points and Rui Hachimura added 18 for the Lakers. Austin Reaves, who averaged 23.3 points in the regular season, was held to eight on 3-for-16 shooting.
Oklahoma City won all four regular-season matchups by an average of 29.3 points, and this one was only slightly closer. The Thunder held the Lakers to 41.7-per-cent shooting and forced 17 turnovers.
The Lakers ran out to a 7-0 lead, with James scoring five of the points. Eventually, the Thunder shook off the rust from an eight-day break and went up 31-26 at the end of the first quarter, despite 12 points from James.
Holmgren’s two-handed alley-oop dunk on a lob from Isaiah Hartenstein put the Thunder up 48-39. Lakers forward Jarred Vanderbilt injured the pinkie finger on his right hand on the play, left the game and did not return.
Oklahoma City led 61-53 at halftime, despite 16 points from James.
Mitchell, who started in Williams’ place, made a corner three-pointer and was fouled by Marcus Smart in the final minute of the third quarter. His free throw put the Thunder up 84-72, a score that held up until the end of the period.
Alex Caruso’s fast-break dunk early in the fourth put Oklahoma City up 88-73, and the Thunder maintained control from there.
Sports
How an hour-long putter fitting found me the right flatstick
Sports
Rajakovic Reflects on Season
Rajakovic Reflects on Season
Sports
D-backs support Eduardo Rodriguez’s gem, blank Pirates
May 5, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Arizona Diamondbacks pitcher Eduardo Rodriguez (57) throws against the Pittsburgh Pirates in the first inning at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images Eduardo Rodriguez tossed seven scoreless innings and Geraldo Perdomo had a two-run double during a five-run sixth inning as the Arizona Diamondbacks notched a 9-0 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates on Tuesday night at Phoenix.
Rodriguez (3-0) allowed two hits and three walks while striking out seven as he matched his longest outing of the season. He also threw seven shutout innings against the Atlanta Braves during a no-decision on April 3.
Jonathan Loaisiga pitched a flawless eighth and Brandyn Garcia fanned two in a perfect ninth to complete the two-hitter.
Ketel Marte had two hits, two RBIs and scored twice, Gabriel Moreno had two hits and one RBI and Adrian Del Castillo drove in two as Arizona broke a four-game losing streak while winning for just the fourth time in 13 games.
The Pirates were 0-for-7 with runners in scoring position while seeing their three-game winning streak halted.
Bubba Chandler (1-4) allowed two runs and two hits over five innings to lose his third consecutive start. He walked a season-worst six and struck out four.
The Diamondbacks scored twice in the first inning.
Marte hit a one-out triple and Corbin Carroll walked. Del Castillo hit a sacrifice fly to score Marte and Ildemaro Vargas ripped a double to center to score Carroll. Meanwhile, Rodriguez was mowing down Pirates until Jared Triolo doubled to left with two outs in the fifth for Pittsburgh’s first hit.
The only other hit Rodriguez allowed was Konnor Griffin’s one-out double in the seventh that high way high up the center field fence.
Arizona broke the game open in the sixth as Yohan Ramirez walked Lourdes Gurriel Jr. with one out and hit Nolan Arenado with a pitch.
Moreno followed with an RBI double to make it 3-0 and Alek Thomas followed with a walk. Perdomo then hit his double just inside the right field line to push the margin to five. Marte knocked in a run on a fielder’s choice with Thomas scoring when the throw from Griffin was wide of the plate. Carroll followed with a sacrifice fly to make it 7-0.
In the eighth, Thomas led off with a double against Dennis Santana and scored on Marte’s single to right. Del Castillo had a RBI single later in the inning.
Pittsburgh manager Don Kelly served an automatic one-game suspension due to reliever Chris Devenski being ejected from Saturday’s game against the Cincinnati Reds. Bench coach Kris Negron ran the team on Tuesday.
–Field Level Media
Sports
Lookman Eyes Nigerian Champions League History Against Arsenal
Ademola Lookman will hope to make Nigerian football history when he steps onto the pitch at the Emirates Stadium tonight as Atlético Madrid face Arsenal in the second leg of their UEFA Champions League semi-final clash.
The first leg in Spain ended 1-1, leaving both teams with everything to play for as Atlético chase their first Champions League final appearance since 2016.
Lookman now has the chance to become the first Nigerian player since John Obi Mikel to reach and possibly win the final of Europe’s biggest club competition.
Mikel achieved the feat in 2012 when he played every minute as Chelsea defeated Bayern Munich in the final. Before him, Nigerian legends Finidi George and Nwankwo Kanu also reached the final with Ajax in the 1990s.
The Super Eagles winger has enjoyed a strong start to life at Atlético since joining the club in January. He has scored seven goals and provided four assists in 18 matches.
Lookman was one of Atlético’s best players in the first leg. He caused problems for Arsenal’s defence throughout the game and created several chances, although he could not find the net.
Atlético manager Diego Simeone is expected to set his team up to defend deeply and attack on the counter, while Arsenal boss Mikel Arteta will likely rely on possession football at home.
Lookman’s speed and direct style could be important for Atlético on the break. He is also expected to face a difficult battle against Arsenal winger Bukayo Saka on the flank.
Interestingly, Lookman has never scored or provided an assist in six previous matches against Arsenal during his time with Everton, Fulham, Leicester City, Atalanta and Atlético Madrid.
However, his recent form has given Atlético supporters hope that he can finally make his mark against the Gunners on one of the biggest nights of his career.
The winner of the tie will book a place in the UEFA Champions League final in Budapest on May 30.
Sports
NBA playoff winners and losers: Austin Reaves is not loving Lakers vs. Thunder matchup, but Chet Holmgren is
The second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs continued Tuesday with two more Game 1s. The top seeds in the East and West both pulled away for victories. The Detroit Pistons defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers, 111-101, and the Oklahoma City Thunder pulled away from the Los Angeles Lakers for an 18-point win.
OKC has yet to lose this postseason, and the Pistons are up 1-0 in a playoff series for the first time since 2008. Let’s take a look at the big winners and losers from Tuesday night’s action.
Winner: Clutch Cade Cunningham
Pistons guard helped Detroit pull away late
When Cade Cunningham went to the bench with 6:32 to play in the fourth quarter, the Pistons, who at one time had led by 18 points and hadn’t trailed since 7-6 in the opening minutes, were clinging to a five-point lead. Less than 90 seconds later, Cleveland had tied the game.
JB Bickerstaff probably wanted to give his superstar a bit longer rest, but you could sense the game swinging to the Cavs, and he had to bring Cunningham right back in. Cunningham went to work right away, not as a scorer, but as a facilitator. He was spoon-feeding Jalen Duren for three straight dunks.
For everything that transpired over the first 40-plus minutes, those three possessions decided this game. The Cavs never got closer than four the rest of the way. Duren was dominant in his own right. He didn’t score in the first round against Orlando the way he did in the regular season, but he was super defensively and as a rebounder.
Same deal on Tuesday, when Duren finished with just 11 points and had just one field goal prior to those three dunks but tallied 12 boards (seven offensive) and two blocks. He was a beast on defense and the glass down the stretch and finished off Cade’s creation in the clutch, which was the predominant formula for his 19.5 PPG in the regular season.
Let’s give an additional shoutout here to Daniss Jenkins for his play late (he had some huge boards and a big-time pull-up jumper to put Detroit back up six with a little over three minutes left en route to 12 points, seven rebounds and three assists off the bench), and Tobias Harris was once again a rock with 20 points and eight boards.
Duncan Robinson buried five 3s on his way to 19 points. Ausar Thompson added 11 and was a defensive monster, as usual. Detroit no doubt loved its box-score balance in this game, with eight guys contributing at least six point and six in double figures.
But again, all of that was about to go out the window before Cade checked back into the game and created those three Duren dunks. The Cavs had all the momentum. And when push comes to shove, the Pistons are almost entirely reliant on Cunningham to create offense. He saved Detroit with 107 points in three elimination games vs. Orlando, and he clutched up again on Tuesday to give Detroit its first lead in a playoff series since 2008.
Loser: James Harden’s (and Cavs’) turnovers
Cleveland’s veteran creator coughed it up seven times
Turnovers were a major reason why the Cavs were forced to go seven games to beat the Raptors in the first round. They committed 121 of them in the series. James Harden was responsible for 36 of those, and in Game 1 against Detroit, he coughed up seven more. All told, the Cavs committed 20 turnovers that led to 31 Pistons points (a number of these were at least dead-ball turnovers, but still, it was too sloppy).
On the flip side, Detroit committed just 12 turnovers for 16 Cavs points. That’s a 15-point turnover swing to the Pistons in what wound up a 10-point game. You do the math.
As for Harden, he once again had more turnovers than made baskets (he went 6 for 15 from the field and 1 of 7 from 3 for 22 points). It marks the third time (in eight games) Harden has done that in these playoffs, in which he has now amassed 43 turnovers though eight games.
Over 181 career playoff games, Harden has now tallied at least as many turnovers as baskets 45 times, and more turnovers than baskets 22 times.
Harden has had the ball in his hands, on average, probably more than any single player in playoff history, so a certain amount of turnovers are going to be part of his equation. But he doesn’t score at the level he once did to offset those giveaways. This has to improve, or else Donovan Mitchell is going to have to take on more of the creative responsibilities for Cleveland.
Winner: Chet Holmgren’s matchups
OKC’s center took advantage of mismatches all night
You could just as easily give the nod to Jared McCain for his fourth-quarter shooting barrage. He’s playing for his long-term postseason minutes, whereas Holmgren is obviously secure in that respect.
But Holmgren was tremendous tonight in a way that bodes very well for the Thunder moving forward. The Lakers tried switching defensively early in the game. Holmgren took advantage of the mismatches to rack up a bunch of easy points early. When the Thunder get Jalen Williams back, they won’t need that much actual creation out of him. That’s what they have Shai Gilgeous-Alexander for. If he can just punish mismatches as he did in Game 1, he takes switching off of the table for Thunder opponents.
He has, at this stage, more or less secured the title of best defender in the NBA not named Victor Wembanyama, blowing up Laker actions left and right and finishing the game with three blocks and a steal. The Lakers scored just 40 points in the paint in Game 1. With the 3s not falling and the Thunder a near lock to win the transition battle every night, this series is hopeless for the purple and gold if they can’t get to the rim. Holmgren was dominant on both ends in an easy Oklahoma City victory.
Loser: Austin Reaves as a 1A option
The Lakers guard had a night to forget in Game 1
Winning this series without Luka Dončić is an unrealistic goal for the Lakers. Really, this matchup is about evaluating their own players. Who matches up well with the Thunder? Who’s ready for the moment? Who can they trust moving into next year, when they presumably push more assets into the center of the table in an effort to contend?
No player in this series has more to prove than Austin Reaves. Had he not gotten injured earlier in the season, he would have been an All-Star. But he’s fairly athletically limited, and there are real questions about how he matches up against the sort of elite, physical defenders he’d expect to see in the postseason. Well, this is his fourth game against the Thunder this season, and he’s yet to reach 20 points or make more than six field goals. In this one, he shot 3-of-16 for eight points.
Now, Reaves isn’t at full strength. He came back from a Grade 2 oblique strain last round and likely isn’t at or near 100%. He wasn’t against Minnesota last year either. But he’s about to become a free agent this offseason, and while the Lakers almost certainly won’t let him go for nothing, how close they’re willing to get to the max and how untouchable they deem Reaves in future trade talks likely depend, to some extent, on their belief in him in this specific matchup. Winning a championship in the years to come probably means beating the Thunder, and at least in Game 1, Reaves didn’t look up to the task.
Sports
Francis Ngannou makes new prediction for Fury vs Joshua after losing to both: “It’s in his favour”
Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury are finally set to meet, presuming they each come through low-risk warm-up fights unscathed.
Now, Francis Ngannou, who has faced both men, has updated his prediction ahead of the biggest fight in British boxing history.
Ngannou made his boxing debut against then reigning WBC heavyweight ruler Fury in October 2023, and the former UFC heavyweight champion impressed as he knocked ‘The Gypsy King’ down in the third round, before losing a controversial split-decision.
That performance earned the Cameroonian a shot at Joshua, but ‘AJ’ was less forgiving and displayed the difference between a multi-disciplined fighter and an out-and-out boxer, brutally dispatching of ‘The Predator’ inside two rounds.
Although, despite the nature of those defeats, Ngannou was unsure on how Joshua-Fury would play out, when asked on the potential fight a few weeks ago.
“I think it’s a great fight. How it’s going to go? It’s the fight game – nobody knows what will happen.
“They are both elite fighters, but we all know how tricky Fury can be. He’s managed to be very hard to beat.”
However, now that fight rumours have turned into a signed agreement, Ngannou gave a more analytical prediction to Sky Sports Boxing, believing that Fury has a better chance the longer the fight lasts.
“At this level, I think it is very close, everybody can win. It depends on how the fight goes. I think, if it is going to go to a decision, I will pick Fury. If it is like a knockout, I think that Joshua has a chance early in the rounds [fight], but as far as the fight goes, it is going to be more in Fury’s favour.”
Joshua returns to the ring on July 25, against Albania’s Kristian Prenga, whilst Fury is also seeking a ‘tune-up’ of his own ahead of their long-awaited showdown.
Sports
Mikel Arteta explains ‘gut feeling’ selection that paid off in win over Atletico Madrid
Mikel Arteta said he trusted his “gut” when he decided to select the same XI from the win over Fulham at the weekend for Arsenal’s Champions League semi-final second leg victory over Atletico Madrid.
A tap-in from captain Bukayo Saka just before halftime and a ninth clean sheet in this season’s competition gave Arsenal a 2-1 aggregate semi-final victory over Atletico Madrid.
They now face either holders Paris St Germain, who knocked them out in last season’s semi-finals, or Bayern Munich in the Puskas Arena in Budapest on May 30 – a week after they hope to have sealed a first Premier League title for 22 years.
“Did you see my iPad with all the different line-ups I’ve done it, ‘what about this, freshness, the possible subs’…” Arteta laughed. “In the end it was my gut feeling. It’s painful to leave important players out but you saw the finishers, how much they helped the team.”
Arteta, who had sprinted onto the pitch at the final whistle to hug his players and then ran to the home fans for a series of oles, said it had been an “incredible night”.
“I cannot be happier, prouder for everybody that is involved in this football club,” Arteta told reporters. “We have all been so aligned on the desire and ambition that we had.”
The victory means Arsenal have also equalled their club record for most wins in a single season, according to Opta. They have now won 41 games across all competitions, matching the 55-year-old record set in the 1970-71 campaign.

Arteta said he had never experienced such a raucous build-up and atmosphere both inside and outside the stadium during his time at the Emirates, and that his side now had the bit between their teeth again.
Arsenal’s season appeared to be faltering a few weeks ago but having overcome Atletico and seen Premier League title rivals Manchester City stumble the previous night, the North London side are within touching distance of a first English title since 2004 and potential European glory.
“It’s great. Everybody can feel a shift in energy and belief in everything,” Arteta said.
“Let’s use it in the right way and understand that the margins and the difficulty of what we are trying to achieve is huge, but we have the ability and conviction today, that is for sure.”
Arsenal’s midfield engine, Declan Rice, also said the side had regained their momentum.
“We have kind of turned a corner again. We went through a stage where we weren’t performing at our best. We were a bit sloppy in our play, but we have found a new way to play again,” Rice told Amazon Prime.
“When you have got confidence in football it is everything. I know everyone is focused.”
Rice also underscored the longer-term progression Arsenal have made and the importance of their league game against his former side West Ham United at the weekend.
“We have kept building – we have kept pushing each other. This competition and the Premier League. We have gone full throttle,” Rice said.
“Sunday now is a massive one.”
additional reporting by Reuters
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