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Sabalenka’s superior serve helps her past spirited Osaka
World number one Aryna Sabalenka praised the support of the crowd – and even moonwalked on court – after beating Naomi Osaka in straight sets to advance to her fourth consecutive French Open quarter-final.
The 28-year-old was playing in the first women’s singles match to be held in the night session on Court Philippe Chatrier since 2023 – and only the fifth since one-match night sessions were introduced in 2021 – and was jokingly disappointed to see off the 16th seed in an hour and 26 minutes, telling the crowd she wanted to “keep going”.
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However, in a meeting between two of the heaviest baseline hitters in the women’s game, Sabalenka’s accuracy on serve and delicate drop shots proved the difference as she came through 7-5 6-3 to beat Osaka for the third time in the past three months.
Four-time Grand Slam champion Sabalenka, the only player with experience of playing in a major final left in the women’s draw, will face 25th seed Diana Shnaider in the last eight as she continues her bid for a maiden French Open title.
“It is amazing to play in the night session. I really want to keep going. Thank you for bringing such an amazing atmosphere. You guys make this place special,” Sabalenka told the crowd on court.
“I’m happy with the win, it was a very tough one. She [Osaka] is such a great player – always a tough battle against her. I am mostly happy with the way I served and that I was able to put pressure back on her.”
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When the two players met in Madrid in April, it was Osaka who won the opening set and she started quickly once again, breaking Sabalenka in her opening service game.
However, it proved to be the only moment of uncertainty on serve for the top seed, who only conceded four points across the remainder of the first set and finished the match with 12 aces to Osaka’s two – and an 83% win percentage behind her first serve.
Osaka, by contrast, invited pressure on herself, being taken to deuce after leading 40-15 in three first-set service games and landing just 53% of her first serves. Sabalenka routinely stepped inside the baseline to receive second serves and won 21 points from a possible 35.
Sabelenka’s canny shot selection also proved effective, winning 10 of her 11 points at the net and hitting five drop shots among her 39 winners as she avoided being drawn into endless baseline slog-fests.
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She made the decisive break in the 11th game of the opening set before closing it out with a hold to love, and her relentless pressure told again in the second.
Osaka saved a break point in the fifth game but was broken to 15 in her next two service games, with Sabalenka converting match point with a trademark booming forehand.
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2026 U.S. Open: Wyndham Clark earns respect from tough crowd in second title win
SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. — Wyndham Clark arrived at Shinnecock Hills on Sunday knowing that his name would be etched in history. Either he would capture his second U.S. Open title in the last four years or he would join an infamous list of players to blow a massive lead at the 54-hole mark in a major championship as he entered the deciding day a half dozen clear of his closest competitor.
There was no in between with Clark, and perhaps that was always the point.
Much has been made about Clark the person this week as he slept on the lead on Thursday, Friday and Saturday. He will sleep with the U.S. Open trophy on Sunday. But when one gets put into that position, they got put under a microscope. It’s part of the deal. For better or worse, almost everything is revealed and people latch on.
The smashed and destroyed locker at Oakmont Country Club after last year’s U.S. Open. The thrown driver that damaged a sponsorship sign at the PGA Championship and came close to hitting a volunteer. Some eyebrow raising rulings, head-scratching quotes and apology attempts.
There’s more than a few to latch onto.
All of them put Clark’s character at the forefront of the conversation. All of it overshadowed Clark the golfer and what the American was accomplishing around a brutally tough Shinnecock Hills. All of it came to a boiling point as he made the slow stride from the driving range to the first tee Sunday afternoon.
A long embrace with his mental coach and a deep breath ensued, and then Clark entered the arena knowing he’d be up against it, knowing it would all be used against him.
There was no mistaking who those lining the fairways of Shinnecock Hills were cheering for on a picture perfect New York summer day. It was not Scottie Scheffler. It was not Sam Burns. It was not Tom Kim.
It was anybody but Clark. Anybody who would make this tournament interesting.
“Man, they definitely didn’t want me to win,” Clark said with the trophy shining right next to him in the champions press conference. “It’s pretty rare in an Open Championship or a major to have fans kind of boo against your shots or cheer for bad shots.
“That was tough, but sometimes being the underdog is nice. I was in ’23, and I kind of did the same thing. Anytime someone said something negative to me, I replaced it with something positive. You know, some of it’s self-deserved. I kind of brought it on myself, but I also get it, too. Scottie was going for the career Grand Slam, and it hasn’t happened very often.
“It was tough, but I’m proud of myself that I battled through. Things really could have gotten away from me. I stood tough. I would have liked to have won by more, but as long as you win, it doesn’t matter.”
Around every turn and in between every hole, those outside the ropes let him have it. A constant barrage of jeers, with cheers being produced only when he took a misstep. A tunnel of naysayers felt suffocating to walk through as excitement rose with the dust only when a ball would fall off line.
It reached the point on the back nine that fans summoned others away from the golf course to lend a helping hand. Those on site turned to their phone to FaceTime friends so that they could get in on the action. Additional insults were hurled from miles away.
Clark heard them all.
“I was kind of making jokes about it with Dave where if we heard someone cheer for me, I’d go, ‘Oh, there’s one person that likes me.’ So we would kind of make jokes and make it maybe a little light-hearted,” Clark said. “But it’s tough, man. I’ve played now a Presidents Cup and Ryder Cup on foreign soil, and it kind of had that atmosphere a little bit.
“I also got good prep last week in Canada. They were pretty harsh on me the last day, so I think that all of that combined kind of led to this moment where, all right, I’ve been in this position. It sucks being the underdog or getting rooted against, but I can pull through, and there’s nothing like winning kind of an away game, if you will.”
Clark took his fair share of punches on Sunday — some self-inflicted, others not. He made a horrible bogey on the par-5 5th and turned in 3 over on the front nine alone. He helped make this a golf tournament as much as Burns and the other pursuers.
But he also threw some, too.
Clark landed a body blow on No. 10 after Scheffler rolled in a birdie bid before him. Little applause it caused.
The fans countered a few holes later as it felt as if the grandstand behind the 13th hole willed his ball off the green. It stopped and started to trickle away from the pin only when the noise around the surface started to reach new levels. This back-and-forth was continuous.
It was relentless.
It was nonstop.
It kept coming wave after wave, hole after hole.
Groans for good shots. Claps and high fives for the bad.
But Clark had the last laugh as he threw the last punch in the form of an uppercut on the par-5 16th. Out of position off the tee and without the best look for a birdie, Clark summoned his putter again to drain a 24-footer, as he would a couple holes later for his championship-sealing two-putt par.
Clark emerged from the ringer and came out the other side as a two-time U.S. Open champion. Something only Tiger Woods, Bryson DeChambeau, Retief Goosen and Brooks Koepka have accomplished in the 2000s. Cheers and applause were muted for Clark’s addition to this list, but the few were more than hard-earned.
He climbed up the path towards the sun and the clubhouse and was greeted by his peers — players, caddies, members of the traveling circus that is professional golf. The respect was apparent.
All week, Clark has voiced his regret for his past actions. He has been peppered again and again about his past indiscretions.
On Friday, he said this:
“I’m hoping I can win back the fans that I had or some new fans because it was a terrible incident. You know, I really feel like I can show people that I’m fun and outgoing, I’m fierce, competitive, love the game, respect the game, and I just had a bad moment.
“Hopefully I can win those people back. I definitely feel like I’m in a better place. Hopefully a great weekend and great rest of the year, maybe I’ll gain all those fans back.”
Whether you believe in his contrition is not really the point. You can like Clark. You can dislike him. You can wish that he did not win. You can hope it is his last major championship victory. This is sport after all. Opinions about those in the arena are half the fun. If everyone was vanilla, the game would lose its taste.
But after a performance like that in an environment like that — one few if any of his peers have experienced en route to a major championship — you have to respect him.
It’s the other part of the sports equation, and much like Clark himself, there’s no in between on that.
“I sure hope it closes the door on it,” Clark said. “I figured in my mind that this would maybe be the last time just because it’s one year removed. I’ll probably always get them, but I hope I don’t become the heel of the PGA [Tour].
“I guess if I am, any press is good press, right?”
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All eyes on Senators GM Steve Staios after Tkachuk blockbuster
OTTAWA — Was Brady Tkachuk asking out of Ottawa to play in Florida with his brother Matthew inevitable?
It sure feels like it in retrospect.
On Father’s Day, the Senators lost their torchbearer as Brady Tkachuk was sent to the Florida Panthers for the ninth and 25th picks in this year’s draft, a conditional 2029 first-rounder and a 2027 second-round pick.
Ottawa has become the place where captains more often ask out than seek to finish out their contracts.
The Senators have had five captains since 1998. Four of them asked to be traded, with only Daniel Alfredsson staying through the prime of his career. But even Alfredsson decided to finish his career elsewhere.
For a long time it seemed like Tkachuk might follow Alfredsson’s path, but it was not meant to be. Franchises tend not to recover easily after trading a centrepiece and a superstar. It can take years, it can remove them from a competitive window.
It, inevitably, creates a new path.
The timeline for the Senators to become a contender has changed: it’s not the next two years with Tkachuk, but the next five with Tim Stutzle and Jake Sanderson signed to long-term, cap-friendly contracts until 2031 and 2032.
The Senators have three first-round picks in Friday’s draft, tied with St. Louis for most in the league. They would be prudent to consider making a pick at ninth overall and adding a prospect of strong calibre to one of the worst farm systems in the league. However, GM Steve Staios will show which direction the Senators will head as he navigates the draft and free agency.
Starting with the picks he’s acquired (the Senators cannot trade the reinstated 32nd overall pick), Ottawa could enter trade bidding wars for Robert Thomas, Matthew Knies, Mason McTavish, or any available scorer in their prime. Even Jason Robertson, should it come with an extension. In an extreme case, an offer sheet could be an option.
According to Sportsnet’s Elliotte Friedman, there is “no doubt Ottawa, which is trying to contend, will use these picks to try and immediately improve itself.”
There won’t be a strong group of UFAs this summer, but the Senators now have $25 million in cap space to play with and assets to make moves in the trade market.
But there might be a domino effect from Tkachuk leaving.
Will Drake Batherson and Artem Zub (free agents next season) want to stay long-term in Ottawa now? What about RFA Jordan Spence? Claude Giroux is days away from becoming a UFA, will he re-sign here or choose another team he thinks he can go after a Cup with?
Staios had limited options because of Tkachuk’s no-trade clause. According to Friedman, Tkachuk submitted a four-team list of places he was willing to go, which included Carolina, Vegas, Minnesota and Florida, but that “it became clear the preference was alongside Matthew in South Florida.” In context, Staios grades very well in acquiring the picks he did.
If Ottawa had won earlier in his tenure, we might not be here. The team’s previous owner and GM wasted precious years of Tkachuk’s prime by not providing enough good secondary talent to surround him. But new owner Michael Andlauer and Staios had reversed many poor decisions of the old regime and created a very good and competitive team for Tkachuk.
So, his decision to leave Ottawa now – when they looked like a contender on the upswing – will invite a tsunami of vitriol from the nation’s capital. Imagine the reception for his first game back next season, which we suspect will have more boos than cheers.
Tkachuk’s time with the Senators ends with two playoff wins and a tattered legacy.
Behind the scenes, you cannot find anyone who would say one bad thing about Tkachuk, the person. He did plenty of charity work in the community.
But this sudden shock to the fan base will be difficult to accept. However, looking back, the result shouldn’t be so surprising.
Rumours had followed Tkachuk for some time, including two seasons ago when talk about the Rangers heated up.
After the 2026 Olympics ended, Tkachuk admitted it was challenging to bounce back, and it showed during Ottawa’s playoff push.
What made Tkachuk beloved by some Sens fans was his fiery personality, fighting spirit and enthusiasm for hockey. A heart-and-soul player on and off the ice. But he was held pointless in the playoffs this year and his ‘it’ factor was noticeably absent, despite his attempts to rejuvenate enthusiasm through fighting.
What we can’t underestimate is that the Tkachuk brothers played together at the 4 Nations and Olympics, representing the United States against the backdrop of the most strained Canadian-American relations in our lifetimes. While Matthew enjoyed a glorious return to Florida after winning Olympic gold, Brady returned to Ottawa with questions about the Americans’ dressing-room celebration and their reception from the President.
There are surely many reasons to explain Tkachuk’s exit from Ottawa, which we expect him to discuss on the Wingman Podcast that he and brother Matthew started this season. Perhaps that’s where embittered Sens fans can search for closure.
In the end, the Senators are worse off after the trade and we feel for the fans who had waited years and now hoped for joy that seemed within reach, only for another captain to exit for the south.
However there is still hope that they come out the other side of July 1 looking like a brand new challenger, still on the rise.
Sports
Ivory Coast’s Elye Wahi denied entry to Canada
Ivory Coast striker Elye Wahi has been denied entry to Canada ahead of the “Elephants’” World Cup game against Germany in Toronto on Saturday due to match-fixing allegations.
Wahi, who is under contract at German Bundesliga club Eintracht Frankfurt but was on loan at French Ligue 1 side OGC Nice last season, is currently being investigated by authorities in Marseille in connection to allegations of “organized fraud, organized sports corruption, handling of proceeds of crime and money laundering,” according to a statement provided to The New York Times (NYT).
Ivory Coast: What is Elye Wahi alleged to have done?
The allegations concern in particular a Ligue 1 fixture between Nice and FC Metz (0-0) on May 17 in which the 23-year-old is alleged to have intentionally picked up a yellow card.
In a statement, the French Football League (LFP) said they had been made aware of “an unusual volume of bets relating to a booking involving the player Elye Wahi.”
According to the NYT, Wahi was arrested on by French police on May 29 – just hours after scoring two goals in a play-off win against AS St. Etienne, which kept Nice in Ligue 1 – but was released without charge as investigations continued.
Having not been charged with a crime, Wahi’s entry into the United States, where Ivory Coast are based and where Wahi started in a 1-0 win over Ecuador in Philadelphia on Sunday, was deemed unproblematic.
Elye Wahi: Ivorian federation express support
But Canadian authorities have taken a stricter line, with the Ivorian Football Federation (FIF) confirming on Thursday that the “necessary administrative authorization for [Wahi’s] entry into Canadian territory could not be obtained at this stage.”
They said Wahi would therefore “remain in the United States pending the team’s return” ahead of Ivory Coast’s third Group E game against Curacao in Philadelphia on Thursday.
“At this particularly delicate time, the FIF extends its full support to the player and reaffirms its confidence in him,” concluded the statement, adding that “Elye Wahi remains an important element of the Ivory Coast national team.”
Canada: Ghana’s Partey also denied entry
Wahi is not the first player to be denied entry to Canada due to ongoing investigations abroad.
Last week, Ghana‘s Thomas Partey was refused a Canadian visa due to rape and sexual abuse charges in the United Kingdom, to which he has pleaded not guilty.
Wahi was born in Paris and represented France at youth level before opting to play for Ivory Coast. He has since made three appearances for the Elephants.
The allegations could also have ramifications for Eintracht Frankfurt who, following the season-long loan to Nice and the World Cup, would have been hoping to sell Wahi in order to fund the permanent signing of French striker Arnaud Kalimuendo from Nottingham Forest.
Sports
Uruguay struggles as Luis Suárez watches from stands

Uruguay players walk from the field following the World Cup Group H soccer match between Uruguay and Cape Verde in Miami Gardens, Fla., Sunday, June 21, 2026. (AP Photo/Rebecca Blackwell)
MIAMI GARDENS, Florida — Uruguay is off to a start many did not expect. After draws against Saudi Arabia and Cape Verde, and with a match against Spain still to come, the two-time World Cup winner is at risk of missing the knockout stage.
Among the many fans watching was someone the team looked to for goals for more than 15 years: Luis Suárez.
The matches were played in Miami Stadium, near where Suárez serves as striker for Inter Miami. The 39-year-old watched from above as Uruguay struggled despite being heavily favored.
READ: Uruguay’s Luis Suarez announces retirement from international football
Suárez ended his international career in 2024 as the all-time leading scorer for the national team with 69 goals in 143 appearances. He was ultimately left off coach Marcelo Bielsa’s squad after months of speculation.
After the match, Bielsa spoke about the team’s inability to capitalize on some of its advantages.
“I think that the problem or greatest issue is that we started the second half with the ball and with the victory,” Bielsa said through a translator after Sunday’s game. “And it was at that moment that we didn’t close it. We didn’t make any danger.”
Bielsa claimed his team “lacked a finishing touch” in Sunday night’s draw. Something that Suárez once delivered in his time with Uruguay.
Fans of Uruguay recognized how difficult it can be to replace a player of Suárez’s caliber.
“(I have) mixed feelings to be honest,” Uruguay supporter Frederico Suárez said. “He’s old and now it’s time for the younger players. But he’s a good player, maybe the best player I’ve ever watched with Uruguay.”
READ: World Cup: Salah, Egypt down New Zealand, 3-1, for first win
In April, Luis Suárez announced he was willing to come out of retirement to play for Uruguay in the World Cup. The announcement fueled speculation that Uruguay’s star could make one final appearance on soccer’s biggest stage. Bielsa instead placed his faith in Uruguay’s next attacking generation, also excluding veteran striker Edinson Cavani from his roster.
“I feel like he’s a little older, so for players like Darwin (Núñez), I think it just gives him a little bit more of a chance to shine,” Uruguay fan Ian Lancaster said.
In its first World Cup match without Suárez since 2010, Uruguay narrowly avoided an upset against Saudi Arabia with the team’s only goal coming late from midfielder Maxi Araújo. Nuñez and Federico Viñas led the front line but were largely ineffective.
Bielsa chose a different lineup Sunday night, starting only Viñas to lead the attack. Midfielder Agustín Canobbio was added to the starting lineup against Cape Verde and made a difference, scoring Uruguay’s second goal.
It was Canobbio’s narrow miss in the second half, however, that could have given Uruguay a much-needed victory.
Suárez and Bielsa clashed after the 2024 Copa América when Suárez criticized Bielsa for the negative environment he had created under his leadership. Now, Bielsa and the Uruguay team will face further pressure to secure a win with an attack that has yet to dispel concerns.
All eyes will be on Uruguay on Friday as they travel to Guadalajara Stadium for a match against Spain.
“Our expectations with Uruguay now is that we never know,” Uruguay fan Alfonso Aguel said. “We need to play every match, go match by match, and see what actually happens.”
Sports
Mohamed Salah Scores As Egypt Downs New Zealand To Claim First FIFA World Cup Win
Mohamed Salah scored the go-ahead goal and Egypt went on to defeat New Zealand 3-1 on Sunday night and secure their first-ever World Cup win. Salah celebrated his 68th international goal by pumping his fist before he was mobbed by his teammates in the 67th minute, to the thrill of the red-clad Pharaohs fans in the sellout crowd at BC Place Vancouver. When Salah was subbed off in the 85th minute he was treated to a standing ovation. Egypt moved to the top of the standings in Group G with the win, but was not yet assured a spot in the knockout round. The Pharaohs will play a deciding game against Iran on Friday in Seattle, needing at least a draw to advance.
Egypt is making its fourth World Cup appearance after missing the field in Qatar four years ago. Salah scored a pair of goals in the 2018 World Cup in Russia.
Finn Surman put New Zealand in front in the 15th minute with a flying header off a corner kick delivered by Instagram sensation Tim Payne. It was the third international goal for the 6-foot-3 defender who plays for the Portland Timbers in MLS.
Omar Marmoush dropped a free kick off to Salah in the 35th minute but it went just wide and bent into the side netting.
Egypt turned up the pressure coming out of the half and Mostafa Zico broke through with equalizer, finding space between Surman and Payne for a header that goalkeeper Max Crocombe got a hand on but couldn’t stop in the 58th minute. Zico celebrated by gesturing for the fans in the crowd to cheer.
Salah took a back-heel pass from Zico for his goal, which puts him just one away from tying his coach Hossam Hassan for the national team’s all-time scoring lead. Trezeguet’s diving header wrapped up scoring for Egypt in the 82nd.
Egypt’s Hamdy Fathy was subbed off late in the first half after an apparent injury away from the ball. He was replaced by Ramy Rabia.
In the opener against Belgium, Emam Ashour scored the early goal for Egypt but then Romelu Lukaku subbed into the match and caused chaos in the box, resulting in an own goal for a 1-1 draw.
New Zealand twice took the lead against Iran in their group opener, only to cede it for a 2-2 draw in the end. Elijah Just scored both goals for the All Whites.
New Zealand previously appeared at the World Cup in 2010 and drew all three of its games.
Iran and Belgium played to a scoreless draw earlier in the day in Inglewood, California, giving both teams two straight draws at the tournament. New Zealand returns to Vancouver on Friday to face Belgium.
(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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Adrien Rabiot: The controversial France midfielder enabling Kylian Mbappe to shine at World Cup
It has not always been easy for a neutral observer to get behind Adrien Rabiot, whose dependency on the pitch has been repeatedly concealed by a curious, maddening penchant for irritating coaches, clubs and team-mates as much as opponents.
Yet if France are to reach an unprecedented third straight final, and wrest back the trophy from Argentina’s grasp, Didier Deschamps needs his team’s maligned midfield mainstay to keep pursuing what seems a neverending path to proving critics wrong.
Rabiot has come a long way from emailing Deschamps eight years ago to say he would not accept a place on the standby list for the 2018 World Cup in which Les Bleus ground their way to glory. Not long after that he was jettisoned by Paris Saint-Germain because of a dispute in which his mother and agent, Veronique, was infamously prominent.
But Rabiot began to grow at Juventus, leading to Andrea Pirlo, who served as head coach of the Old Lady for a spell, to declare him as a “complete” midfielder who could combine the technical and physical side of the game. High praise from one of the great purveyors of the former who struggled with the latter.
Gradually, Rabiot clawed his way back to the national team set-up and by Qatar was a crucial cog on the path to the greatest World Cup final of all, though he missed the last-four win against Morocco owing to illness.
Now Rabiot is one of Deschamps’ key lieutenants, among the cleanest players to carry out the dirty work, and a figure who is clearly more appreciated by his present team-mates than many of those who have gone before – not least former Marseille colleague Jonathan Rowe, with whom he had a changing room scrap that led to both players being sold last year.
“A guy with incredible resilience,” Kylian Mbappe said of Rabiot before the tournament got underway. “No matter what gets said about him, what happens to him, the guy’s always there. He’s weathered storms and gales and, when you look at his career, his CV speaks for itself.”
It is still missing a World Cup. But if Mbappe is to win his second, the leading star knows the less flashy presence two rows behind will be relied on intensely.
Maybe not against Iraq in Philadelphia on Monday night but from the group closer against Norway on Friday and into the knockout stages, it should become increasingly clear that this iteration of the fraternité is far more than the front four.
For all the criticism of Deschamps’ vague philosophy he has always considered balance a central tenet of all gameplans. So by committing to such a luxurious attack, the emphasis on Rabiot and Aurelien Tchouameni to bring control behind the chaos is even greater than before.
“With Aurelien, we need to maintain this balance,” Rabiot said before the tournament began. “We’re not restricted by the coach but, in this setup, we need to find the right adjustments with the four key attacking players who can make the difference.”
The early signs are promising. Rabiot’s pass to Bradley Barcola for France’s second against Senegal was exquisite, among the assists of the tournament to date, and he got through the standard pile of unseen work against an opponent whose mobility would upset plenty of teams.
There is an elegance to Rabiot that has often been overlooked by the perception of him being a workhorse; a misreading no doubt enhanced by him sharing a pitch with some of the game’s most thrilling forwards.
His physical capacity perhaps limits the appreciation of the technical side too. A team in which a gifted centre-forward has been fairly criticised for an unrivalled lack of work ethic off the ball requires the rest to be committed.
Deschamps knows that in Rabiot he can place unwavering faith to keep running, keep battling and keep trying – even if his inclusion seems destined to be forever questioned.
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Christian Lundgaard overcomes early collision to win XPEL Grand Prix
Christian Lundgaard (7) celebrates his victory with his team following the XPEL Grand Prix at Road America, Sunday, June 21, 2026, at Elkhart Lake, Wis. Christian Lundgaard displayed some resilience as he went from worst to first, capturing his second IndyCar Series victory of the season in the XPEL Grand Prix at Road America on Sunday.
Lundgaard fell from his starting position of 12th into last place after a Lap 1 collision. He gradually worked his way back up in his No. 7 Arrow McLaren Chevrolet, taking the lead for good on the 52nd lap of the 55-lap race at Elkhart Lake, Wisc.
It’s his third career IndyCar victory, meaning the 24-year-old Danish driver has won more this season than in his first four seasons in the series combined. The latest win moved him up to fourth in the NTT IndyCar Series Championship standings.
“I knew we had a chance,” Lundgaard said of his surge from the back of the pack. “I knew how this race panned out last year, and I knew it was all about just sticking in the race. I did that last year. I made a bunch of mistakes last year that spun ourselves around last year, and I just wanted to make up for that.
“We’ve been on the struggle bus all weekend, so to turn this around, I have to thank the team for that.”
Lundgaard led for just seven laps, fourth-most among competitors, after his car sustained damage to the left front wing and a deflated tire due to a Turn 1 collision with Scott Dixon.
He beat out second-place finisher David Malukas and his No. 12 Team Penske Chevrolet by 0.6241 seconds, with the race finishing under caution after the one-lap restart to determine the winner was halted by Graham Rahal going off the track after colliding with Will Power, who finished third.
For Malukas, it was his third runner-up finish of the season. He is still seeking his first career IndyCar win, but he’s up to second in the IndyCar standings with five top-five finishes in 10 races this season. Alex Palou, atop the standings with four wins this season, earned his sixth 2026 pole but the Spaniard finished in fifth (behind Chip Ganassi Racing teammate Kyffin Simpson) after he was penalized for speeding in the pits on Lap 29.
New Zealand’s Marcus Armstrong, seeking his first career win, held the lead for 14 laps into the final stretch. He led by nearly three seconds with five laps to go when his car abruptly lost power, allowing Lundgaard to overtake him and sending him falling all the way down to 24th place.
“It was all smooth sailing,” Armstrong said after the race. “I came out of Turn 6, and the engine just started sputtering like it was out of fuel. But clearly it wasn’t. And then it just completely died. There was no indication there was nothing wrong.”
Felix Rosenqvist of Sweden led for a race-high 18 laps, finishing in eighth place. –Field Level Media
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Phillies batter Mets behind Kyle Schwarber, Bryce Harper
Jun 21, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies designated hitter Kyle Schwarber (12) hits a three-run home run against the New York Mets in the second inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper capped their big weekends by each hitting home runs on Sunday night as the host Philadelphia Phillies rolled past the New York Mets 6-2 in the rubber game of a three-contest series between the National League East rivals.
Zack Wheeler pitched into the sixth for the 10th straight start for the Phillies, who outscored the Mets 21-5 over the final two games of the series to improve to 12-6 this month.
Carson Benge homered and scored both runs for the last-place Mets, who went 2-4 on a six-game road trip.
The Phillies picked up where they left off following Saturday’s 15-3 victory by scoring twice in the first against David Peterson (3-6). The left-hander threw 29 pitches in the opening frame of his first start since May 26.
Trea Turner and Schwarber drew leadoff walks against Peterson before Harper struck out. Turner scored on Alec Bohm’s infield single, which landed just fair down the third base line. Schwarber went to third when Brett Baty threw wide of first baseman Jacob Young and raced home one pitch later on Edmundo Sosa’s single.
Schwarber, who hit three homers on Saturday, slugged a 418-foot three-run homer in the second inning on Sunday. Harper, who hit for his first career cycle Saturday, went deep off Austin Warren in the fifth.
Harper finished 3-for-4 and went 7-for-9 in the last two games as he raised his average from .248 to .266.
Wheeler (7-1), who missed the first four weeks recovering from thoracic outlet syndrome surgery near his right shoulder, allowed the two runs on four hits — including Benge’s third-inning homer — and three walks while striking out seven over 5 2/3 innings. His ERA rose from 2.01 to 2.11. Wheeler issued all three walks in the sixth, when he exited after A.J. Ewing grounded into a forceout to score Benge. Jonathan Bowlan struck out Marcus Semien and the Mets got just two singles the rest of the way.
Ewing had two hits.
Peterson gave up five runs (four earned) on six hits and two walks while striking out five over four innings.
–Field Level Media
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Cape Verde continue to surprise with entertaining Uruguay draw
Cape Verde’s gripping debut World Cup campaign continued as they held two-time champions Uruguay to a thrilling draw in Miami.
Sports
Report: Thunder trading Aaron Wiggins to Hawks for two second-round picks
The Atlanta Hawks have added another guard to their young, talented roster.
The Thunder are finalizing a deal to send Aaron Wiggins to the Hawks in exchange for two second-round picks, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported on Sunday.
The two picks are Atlanta’s second-rounder in 2030 and the least favourable of the Hawks or Lakers in 2032, Charania added.
Wiggins has developed into a serviceable role player since being drafted 55th overall by the Thunder in 2021.
In 2025-26, he averaged 9.4 points, 3.1 rebounds and 1.7 assists in 65 games. He also shot 43.1 per cent from the field and 35.6 per cent from three.
Wiggins broke through in 2024-25, as the Thunder charged to an NBA Championship. He averaged career highs in points (12), rebounds (3.9) and assists (1.8) while appearing in 76 games.
Bringing in the 27-year-old Wiggins is the second move of the day for the Hawks. They gave CJ McCollum a one-year, $21-milliom extension earlier Sunday.
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