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Sinner beats Medvedev after rain stoppage, physical issues to set up Italian Open final vs. Ruud

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ROME — Jannik Sinner played through exhaustion and maintained his focus overnight to beat Daniil Medvedev 6-2, 5-7, 6-4 when their rain-delayed semifinal resumed on Saturday to extend his winning streak to 28 matches and set up an Italian Open final against Casper Ruud.

The top-ranked Sinner is one victory away from becoming only the second man after Novak Djokovic to win all nine Masters 1000 titles.

Rome is the only event in the Master series — the biggest outside the Grand Slams — that Sinner hasn’t won. Djokovic won each Masters event at least twice.

Sinner had led 4-2 in the third set when the match was suspended late Friday. The Italian finished off the match quickly when play resumed on Saturday, sealing it on his third match point after Medvedev had managed to fend off two on his serve.

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Earlier on Friday on the red clay of the Foro Italico, Ruud maintained his focus during a nearly two-hour rain delay to rout home player Luciano Darderi 6-1, 6-1.

Coco Gauff will play Elina Svitolina in the women’s final later Saturday.

The men’s final is scheduled for Sunday.

Sinner is also attempting to become the first Italian man to raise the Rome trophy in a half century — since Adriano Panatta in 1976. Panatta will present the title to this year’s champion on Sunday, with Italian President Sergio Mattarella also slated to attend the final.

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Sinner appeared exhausted

After winning the first set easily on Friday, Sinner appeared fatigued as Medvedev stepped up his game and started running him around the court with drop shots and groundstrokes to the corners.

After several points, Sinner bent over in apparent exhaustion and leaned on his racket for support.

Sinner came back from a 3-0 deficit in the second only to get broken again in the final game and hand the set to Medvedev.

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But a bad bounce helped Sinner break Medvedev’s serve early in the third set to take control for good.

Sinner also had his right thigh treated by a trainer midway through the second set.

Sinner is 4-0 against Ruud

Sinner has won all four of his career meetings with Ruud without dropping a set — including a 6-0, 6-1 rout in the Rome quarterfinals last year.

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“Jannik is chasing history,” Ruud said. “I have to be the guy to try to stop him, and it will not be easy playing here in his home country. … Last year, he really (routed me) here on the same court, so of course I’m looking for revenge. But at the same time, I realize that he’s an incredible player and a unique talent.”

Sinner lost last year’s final in Rome to Carlos Alcaraz, who is now sidelined due to a right wrist injury, while Jasmine Paolini in 2025 became the first Italian woman to raise the trophy in 40 years.

Sinner hasn’t lost since getting beat by Jakub Mensik in the Qatar Open quarterfinals on Feb. 19 and has already set the record with five straight Masters titles. He’s also trying to become the second man to win all three Masters 1000 tournaments on clay – including Monte Carlo and Madrid – in the same season after Rafael Nadal accomplished the feat in 2010.

Sinner has now won 10 of his last 11 meetings with Medvedev.

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Next up for Sinner after Rome comes the French Open, which is the only Grand Slam he hasn’t won.

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Notebook: Caballero’s clock antics add new element to Blue Jays-Yankees rivalry

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TORONTO — A tug-of-war over the pitch clock is the newest element in the Toronto Blue Jays’ rivalry with the New York Yankees, with a strange incident representative of how hard the two teams fight for every inch against one another. 

Centre stage was Jose Caballero, who during the sixth inning of New York’s 8-3 win Sunday, stretched the limits of the rule that batters must be alert to the pitcher once the timer hits eight seconds, earning a warning from umpire Steven Jaschinski for “intentionally delaying.” 

At issue was the way Caballero stepped into the box against Spencer Miles and positioned his body for the pitch, but took his time raising his head to the pitcher. He twice skirted the line before Jaschinski took action and issued the warning, saying if it happened again, he’d be charged a strike.

The Blue Jays were frustrated that more than two minutes of discussion took place before play could resume, and Miles was left idle, unable to throw a pitch, since Caballero, Jaschinski, Yankees manager Aaron Boone, and eventually crew chief John Tumpane were all standing over home plate.

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That’s why when Blue Jays manager John Schneider came out to argue an eighth-inning balk call on Jeff Hoffman with Jaschinski, a native of Burlington, Ont., he had more than just that play on his mind.

“Upset about the balk initially and upset about some other things,” explained Schneider, ejected for the second time this season. “It’s not why we lost, but Hoff has a good inside move. He’s done it quite a bit this year. It’s kind of what I was relaying to them and didn’t think it was a balk. Thought they could have maybe put as much focus and attention on that play as they did the 10-minute conversation with Jose Caballero, who seems to have a problem with the pitch clock. That’s when I got a little bit upset.”

Schneider said he didn’t get any further explanation of the Caballero situation beyond the in-stadium announcement from Jaschinski about the warning, but took issue with the latitude granted to the Yankees infielder.

“There are a lot of major-league players in this league. There seems to be one guy that has an issue with it,” said Schneider. “It sucks that Spencer Miles has to sit out there for as long as he did. Seems like it could have been handled a lot quicker and a lot more efficiently than it was. That’s not why we lost, but it’s major-league baseball and everyone knows the rules.”

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Caballero told reporters in the Yankees clubhouse that he was simply doing the same pre-pitch setup he always does and that “it’s not my fault the pitchers rush a little bit.”

Miles said while “it was tough,” he made a point of staying focused mentally throughout the delay, especially since he was unable to throw any warm-up pitches during or after, but added Caballero’s antics didn’t come as a surprise.

“I think everyone in here knows what’s going on. I think it’s pretty common him doing that, and I think the umpire finally caught on,” said Miles. “He did it again there. Like he looked at me and looked back down. So it’s out of habit. But I think everyone in here kind of knows that deal. So just be ready to pitch it when he’s looking at you.”

BUSY BULLPEN: Five of the 22 most frequently used big-league relievers are Blue Jays, with Mason Fluharty’s 38 appearances tops in the majors and Braydon Fisher’s 36 outings tied for second.

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Louis Varland and Tyler Rogers are next among the group tied for sixth at 34 outings, while Jeff Hoffman is among the 11 pitchers tied for 12th at 33 games. 

The Blue Jays have the most relievers among that top group — the Yankees and Athletics each have three — and it’s demonstrative of how they’re trying to concentrate leverage innings among their most trusted arms. However, some of their blips over the weekend — Varland giving up Paul Goldschmidt’s two-run homer in the ninth Saturday, Fisher coughing up a two-run shot to Ben Rice in the ninth Sunday — might be reflective of the wear from all those outings.

“Yeah, probably,” said John Schneider. “The life of a reliever is really, really hard, and when they’re available, they’re available, and when not, they are not. But over the course of time, it takes its toll on you a little bit, and we’re asking a ton out of those guys.”

That’s the way the relievers like it, of course, and Fisher wasn’t ready to use that as an excuse.

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He conceded that heavy workloads can impact performance “sometimes,” but he quickly added that “I don’t think that was the case” against Rice. The slider down and on the inner edge of the zone that the emergent force in the Yankees lineup clubbed over the right-field wall “would have been like the most perfect strike pitch,” he said, “but to strike him out, maybe get it a little lower, a little more in. Preferably a little bit lower, but I’m not trying to be perfect; nobody’s perfect. Maybe looking back, we throw him a different pitch, or maybe I do just throw one 40 feet before I throw it more in the zone.”

Fisher has been invaluable this season, a prime option for Schneider to put out rallies in the middle innings, open in front of a starter, set up in the late innings or even close, with one save to his credit. During busy periods, he throttles down both his catch play and his warmups in the bullpen.

Fluharty, who atypically walked lefty Jazz Chisholm Jr. on four pitches to open the eighth after recording two outs in the seventh, does the same thing. He makes a point of “utilizing all the recovery resources, treadmill pool, all that stuff,” he said. “Making sure I’m on top of arm-care with the trainers. Some days just taking off when I can.”

“Early on in the season, still building up this workload, it was a little tough,” Fluharty continued. “After like the first three weeks, I think, stuff and velo started to trend down a little bit until my body and my arm realized, like, this is where we’ve got to be. Now I feel like my arm and my body are in a spot to where this is my workload and now it’s all balanced out. Everything feels good, so now I’m at a point where I’m used to it.”

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Ultimately, Fisher insisted, this is what each of them wants.

“We all love being out there,” he said. “Obviously, we’ve had some struggles with the IL this year and we’re getting our guys back here soon, so the workload will go down a little bit, and we’ll all be happy and sad about that. It’s good for the team as a whole and for each other individually. But we like earning our money.”

GARCIA GETTING CLOSE: Yimi Garcia’s second rehab outing with triple-A Buffalo — an inning of one-run ball in Saturday’s 8-7 win over Syracuse — went much better than his first, with his fastball averaging 95.5 m.p.h. and topping out at 97.1.

Three days earlier, he topped out at only 92.9, an unusually low number for him, so the jump back to normal levels was important.

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“Reports were good, velo was better and him after the game reported feeling good,” John Schneider said, although when it comes to his next steps, the Blue Jays are “not quite sure. We’re going to get in touch with him as we get going to Boston to see how he feels, and if he needs another one, we’ll see. But the reports were good and he felt better after that one.”

One factor, and it’s vital for the Blue Jays, is whether Garcia is ready to pitch every other day. Thus far in his rehab from elbow surgery, he’s only pitched once on two days of rest, the others coming with at least three. 

He’ll need to be available for a much heavier workload once he’s reinstated, and barring an injury, the Blue Jays will need to create a spot for him in the bullpen that doesn’t have easily optionable bullpen arms.

VLAD AND GIMENEZ: The Blue Jays had several potential lineups Sunday morning and they ended up using the one without Vladimir Guerrero Jr., out a second day due to lower tightness in his back, and Andres Gimenez, a late scratch due to left wrist soreness.

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But the news was better by the end of the game, as Guerrero tested himself during the game and was on deck to pinch-hit for Yohendrick Pinango in the ninth had the lineup gotten there. 

“Vlad felt better as the game went on,” said John Schneider. “Gimenez was still a little bit sore, but I think the off-day will be good for him and Vlad. … After the off-day, they should both be good.”

Guerrero’s back began tightening up before he played Friday while Gimenez jammed his wrist diving into first base Saturday to beat out an infield single.

He explained that he “hit the bag really hard because of the late slide. It wasn’t in my head (to slide) until I saw (Cam Schlittler) getting closer to me. Then I decided to slide, so it was late.”

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How ‘rebuilt’ Lewis Hamilton could win F1 title after breakthrough victory

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A “rebuilt” mind, family and friends, and an innovative part called the Macarena. These are just some of the building blocks in Lewis Hamilton’s resurgence at the front of the Formula 1 field.

The seven-time champion’s breakthrough first win with Ferrari on Sunday, his first since 2024, left him second in the standings and cut into the overall lead of Kimi Antonelli, the driver who replaced Hamilton when he left Mercedes.

Getting back to the front has been a long and painful process and Hamilton shed some light on his journey after the win in Spain.

Mental well-being takes priority

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Hamilton said he’d trained harder than ever ahead of this season to keep up with younger rivals like the 19-year-old Antonelli, after an injury dogged him through 2025 and he started to doubt his abilities.

That paid off as Hamilton became, at 41 years, 5 months, the oldest F1 winner since 1970, but it wasn’t all about physical fitness. Mental well-being has been central to his recovery.

“I’ve rebuilt my mind to this point, to get myself back to where I was,” he said Sunday, adding he’d focused on a message of “never second-guess yourself, never doubt yourself.”

That meant a social media detox and valuable real-world time with family and friends.

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“I’m only human. So, you know, there’s moments where I see the stuff (on social media) and for sure there’s moments where I allowed it to get to me and penetrate deeply,” he said.

“I went through a sequence of unplugging from that matrix. I spent lots of time with family, lots of time with friends, real people that know me, that have never doubted me, have stuck to and by me my whole life.”

At the track, Hamilton’s had support from Kim Kardashian, while he and his new race engineer Carlo Santi have been exchanging warm words of support over the radio after often-awkward exchanges with Riccardo Adami last year.

Ferrari’s newfound innovation

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Signing Hamilton in 2024 was something of a risk for Ferrari, too, given that when the move was announced, his most recent win had been more than two years before.

With plenty of runner-up finishes but no constructors’ title since 2008, under team principal Fred Vasseur’s leadership, Ferrari seems keener to take risks in a push to speed clear of the field rather than just be among the leading pack.

Hamilton talked up his meetings with senior Ferrari staff last year to plan out 2026, and the collaborative approach seems to be working.

“These guys have really listened and really worked hard to add performance and be innovative. This year is all about innovation,” Hamilton said, singling out the “Macarena” rear wing, which turns upside-down for better straight-line speed.

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“This is what I was asking for last year. This team has to be the leaders in that, and they’ve shown that they can and they will.”

Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff brought out an old F1 cliche Sunday after watching Antonelli break down on track, the second Mercedes non-finish in three races.

“To finish first, first you have to finish,” he told Sky Sports.

Hamilton is the only driver to finish in the top 10 of every race this season while Mercedes seeks to sort out its issues. That streak of results might not last for Hamilton, though. Teammate Charles Leclerc had to retire Sunday with an issue affecting his brakes and steering.

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Mercedes still has the edge

Hamilton says an historic eighth title hasn’t been on his mind, and Antonelli’s lead still stands at a formidable 41 points. Still, there are grounds for optimism for Hamilton.

F1 is heading into a run of European tracks which Hamilton knows well — including his home race in Britain next month — and where Antonelli largely underperformed last year.

In terms of car development, Wolff has suggested spending limits could restrict Mercedes’ response to the package of new parts Ferrari used so effectively in Barcelona.

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Dale Earnhardt Jr. had the perfect response to Jimmie Johnson’s supposedly drunk Le Mans interview: “What a legend”

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Jimmie Johnson found himself at the center of a lighthearted social media moment during the 24 Hours of Le Mans weekend, prompting a hilarious reaction from Dale Earnhardt Jr.

The seven-time NASCAR Cup Series champion Johnson attended the iconic endurance racing event as a spectator and was interviewed by Radio Le Mans during the race. Shortly after, a fan shared a clip of the interview on X (formerly Twitter), jokingly suggesting that the NASCAR legend appeared to be enjoying himself a little too much. The radio captioned the video:

“Have a radio le mans interview from this weekend with an incredibly drunk Jimmie Johnson”

The clip quickly gained the attention of Dale Jr., who couldn’t resist joining in on the on fun.

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Responding to it, Dale Jr. wrote:

“I know this guy. His name is Jimmie Jam. You haven’t lived until you have raised hell with Jimmie Jam. What a Legend. 🍻”

I know this guy. His name is Jimmie Jam. You haven’t lived until you have raised hell with Jimmie Jam. What a Legend. 🍻

Former NASCAR driver and JR Motorsports co-owner followed up with another playful message, adding:

“I told yall Jimmie was fun.”

Jimmie Johnson had previously made his 24 Hours Le Mans debut back in 2023, competing in the innovative Garage 56 entry. He shared the driving duties for the heavily modified NASCAR Next Gen Chevrolet Camaro ZL1 with Formula 1 champion Jenson Button and Le Mans winner Mike Rockenfeller.

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Dale Earnhardt Jr. and Johnson spent years as teammates at Hendrick Motorsports, and their bond has remained incredibly strong long after Dale Jr.’s retirement from full-time racing.


Dale Earnhardt Jr. jokes about quitting all of his NASCAR jobs

Dale Earnhardt Jr. at Dover - Source: ImagnDale Earnhardt Jr. at Dover - Source: Imagn
Dale Earnhardt Jr. at Dover – Source: Imagn

NASCAR Hall of Famer Dale Earnhardt Jr. recently posted a playful, lighthearted message on X joking about stepping away from all his responsibilities to strictly sell sports collectibles and memorabilia online.

While his tweet went viral on X, Dale Jr. remains deeply tied to the sport. He is heavily involved in his broadcasting roles, co-owns the JR Motorsports team, and even returned to the CARS Tour race in April.

“I’m considering quitting all other jobs, responsibilities, and requirements to just sell stuff on Whatnot and eBay. This isn’t likely, but I’m still gonna consider it for a while.” Dale Jr. wrote.

Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s driver Justin Allagaier secured his fifth win of the 2026 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series season last weekend at Pocono Raceway. He is leading the points table by 250 points over the defending series champion Jesse Love.