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Vinnie Pasquantino Player Props: June 15, Royals vs. Athletics

Vinnie Pasquantino Player Props: June 15, Royals vs. Athletics

USA Today17 hours ago

Vinnie Pasquantino Player Props: June 15, Royals vs. Athletics
Vinnie Pasquantino will try to get back on track after a hitless showing in his last game (0 for 4). His Kansas City Royals take on Jeffrey Springs and the Athletics on Sunday at 2:10 p.m. ET on FDSKC and NBCS-CA.
Find odds, stats, and more below to make your Vinnie Pasquantino player prop bets.
Pasquantino paces the Royals in home runs (10) and runs batted in (38). Pasquantino ranks 58th in home runs and 44th in RBI among all batters in MLB play.
Watch tonight's Royals game on Fubo!
Vinnie Pasquantino Prop Bets and Odds
Hits Prop: 0.5 hits (Over odds: -227)
0.5 hits (Over odds: -227) Home Runs Prop: 0.5 home runs (Over odds: +750)
0.5 home runs (Over odds: +750) RBI Prop: 0.5 RBI (Over odds: +140)
0.5 RBI (Over odds: +140) Runs Prop: 0.5 runs (Over odds: +135)
0.5 runs (Over odds: +135) Total Bases Prop: 1.5 total bases (Over odds: +125)
1.5 total bases (Over odds: +125) Stolen Bases Prop: 0.5 stolen bases (Over odds: +1350)
How to Watch Kansas City Royals vs. Athletics
Matchup: Kansas City Royals vs. Athletics
Kansas City Royals vs. Athletics Time: 2:10 p.m. ET
2:10 p.m. ET Date: Sunday, June 15, 2025
Sunday, June 15, 2025 TV Channel: FDSKC and NBCS-CA
FDSKC and NBCS-CA Live Stream: Fubo (Watch now! - Regional restrictions may apply)
Vinnie Pasquantino vs. Jeffrey Springs
Pasquantino is 0 for 2 over his career against Jeffrey Springs.
Vinnie Pasquantino prop bet insights
Pasquantino has a hit in 47 out of 70 games this season (67.1%), with multiple base knocks in 20 of those games (28.6%).
He has gone yard in 14.3% of his games in 2025 (10 of 70), 3.4% of his trips to the dish.
Pasquantino has scored at least one run 25 times this season in 70 games played (35.7%), including three times scoring multiple runs (4.3%).
In 28 of 70 games this season (40.0%), he has tallied an RBI, and eight of those games (11.4%) included a performance that produced more than one RBI. He has also accounted for three or more of his team's runs in two contests.
Pasquantino has been set down on strikes at least once 35 times this year in 70 games played (50.0%), including 13 multi-strikeout contests (18.6%).
MLB odds courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook. Odds updated Sunday at 1:29 p.m. ET. For a full list of sports betting odds, access USA TODAY Sports Betting Scores Odds Hub.
Vinnie Pasquantino stats against the Athletics
Athletics starter: Jeffrey Springs

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Mondo Duplantis ‘full to the brim' after breaking pole vault world record for 12th time
Mondo Duplantis ‘full to the brim' after breaking pole vault world record for 12th time

CNN

time29 minutes ago

  • CNN

Mondo Duplantis ‘full to the brim' after breaking pole vault world record for 12th time

Mondo Duplantis broke the pole vault world record for the 12th time in his career in front of a delighted home crowd in Stockholm, Sweden. Duplantis cleared 6.28 meters on his first attempt to surpass his previous record by a centimeter, immediately running over to the stands to celebrate. This was the first time that the 25-year-old had broken a world record in Sweden, saying afterwards that he felt 'full to the brim' with the 'special' achievement. 'I've got a lot of family here,' said Duplantis, who was raised in the United States but represents Sweden, his mother's native country. 'The first time I jumped in this stadium was when I was 11,' he added. 'It was rainy, cold, I jumped right under four meters. I still jumped quite high, actually, for how young I was.' Duplantis first broke the pole vault world record in 2020 and over the years has steadily raised his own history-making standards a centimeter at a time. At Sunday's Diamond League meet, he had victory wrapped up with a first-time clearance of six meters, then put the bar straight up to 6.28m – well clear of his own meet record of 6.16m. Despite grazing the bar on the way up, Duplantis safely cleared the record height and raced over to the stands to celebrate with his fiancée. The two-time Olympic gold medalist is now unbeaten since July 2023, winning the Stockholm meet by 38 centimeters more than Australia's Kurtis Marschall in second. 'It gets a little bit tougher as it gets higher,' said Duplantis about the prospect of clearing 6.30m in the future. 'I'm just a perfect day away from it, technically and physically and everything like that.'

Where do the Oilers and Panthers rank among the greatest repeat Stanley Cup Final matchups?
Where do the Oilers and Panthers rank among the greatest repeat Stanley Cup Final matchups?

New York Times

time29 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Where do the Oilers and Panthers rank among the greatest repeat Stanley Cup Final matchups?

Are you enjoying the rematch between the Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers? I'm guessing you are, since it's already getting some buzz as one of the greatest Stanley Cup Finals of the cap era. This comes one year after our own Chris Johnston ranked the 2024 edition as the best final of the era before it was even over. Advertisement So yeah, it's fair to say these two teams work well together. Sometimes, with the right matchup, that just happens. Where it's Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, Robert De Niro and Martin Scorsese, or Bret Hart and Steve Austin, some pairings just make magic together. And that can be true even if it takes a little while to get them back together. As luck would have it, the Oilers and Panthers are the tenth iteration of the same two teams meeting in multiple Stanley Cup Final since the start of the expansion era in 1968. 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You could make a case that they're among the worst Stanley Cup Finals of the expansion era, although the first meeting at least had a couple of overtimes. Star power: This wasn't the most star-studded Canadiens team ever, but they did feature names like Jean Beliveau, Henri Richard, Yvan Cournoyer and Serge Savard, as well as a young Rogie Vachon and an old Gump Worsley between the pipes. The Blues were basically team 'Red Berenson and pray for rain,' although they did have Glenn Hall in goal, and he was even backed up by Jacques Plante in the second meeting. Advertisement Controversy: Why are we letting an expansion team have a guaranteed path to the final? It would take the NHL one more year to fix that, resulting in a 1970 final that we'll see a bit further down the list. Most memorable moment: It probably came off the ice, as Canadiens legend Toe Blake announced his retirement from coaching shortly after the 1968 final ended. Bottom line: It's always nice when these sorts of rankings have at least one spot everyone can agree on. First matchup: In 1988, the Oilers swept the Bruins in five games. Second matchup: In a rematch two years later, the Bruins managed to win a game, but once again lost the series in five. Were they classics?: They were not. Star power: In addition to most of the Oilers legends (although Wayne Gretzky was gone by 1990), you had Boston's Ray Bourque in the first two finals of his career. We didn't know it at the time, but these series would be important building blocks for Bourque's OGWAC story. Also, the 1990 Conn Smythe winner was Oilers goalie Bill Ranford, which is fun because the Bruins had traded him to Edmonton a few years before. Controversy: Did you catch the part about the 1988 series being a five-game sweep? Yeah, this was the year that the lights went out in Boston during Game 4. 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They've faced each other in the final on five other occasions from before 1968, with the Candiens winning every one of them. As far as 1977 and 1978, no, they weren't classics (even though these two teams were capable of one, as we'll see in a minute). Star power: Those late-70s Canadiens were stacked, with names like Guy Lafleur, Larry Robinson and Ken Dryden. The Bruins weren't as star-studded, although they still had Hall of Famers like Brad Park, Gerry Cheevers and a 40-something Johnny Bucyk. Oh, and the coaching matchup was Scotty Bowman and Don Cherry. Controversy: Cherry let the refs have it in 1978, accusing them of favoring Montreal by only calling coincidental minors instead of giving Boston power plays. Most memorable moment: Mention these two teams from this era, and everyone remembers their classic Game 7 that featured the too-many-men call leading to the Canadiens' OT comeback win. 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Were they classics?: The first, no, but you could make an argument that the 1987 series was. Star power: The Oilers were stacked. The 1985 Flyers were not, with one Hall of Famer (Mark Howe) and a handful of Hall of Very Good guys like Tim Kerr and Brian Propp; their leading scorer in the final that year was 20-year-old winger Derrick Smith. The 1987 team wasn't much different, although rookie goalie Ron Hextall stole the show, winning the Conn Smythe in a losing cause. Controversy: Lots of rough stuff, as you'd expect from these two teams in that era. But my favorite controversy came in the 1985 series, when the Flyers' radical idea of letting their goalies have a water bottle on top of the net resulted in Glen Sather threatening to pull the Oilers off the ice while demanding to know whether buckets of fried chicken were next. Most memorable moment: It would be the Game 7, and probably Glenn Anderson's slapper to seal the Oilers' title. 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Mondo Duplantis ‘full to the brim' after breaking pole vault world record for 12th time
Mondo Duplantis ‘full to the brim' after breaking pole vault world record for 12th time

CNN

time34 minutes ago

  • CNN

Mondo Duplantis ‘full to the brim' after breaking pole vault world record for 12th time

Mondo Duplantis broke the pole vault world record for the 12th time in his career in front of a delighted home crowd in Stockholm, Sweden. Duplantis cleared 6.28 meters on his first attempt to surpass his previous record by a centimeter, immediately running over to the stands to celebrate. This was the first time that the 25-year-old had broken a world record in Sweden, saying afterwards that he felt 'full to the brim' with the 'special' achievement. 'I've got a lot of family here,' said Duplantis, who was raised in the United States but represents Sweden, his mother's native country. 'The first time I jumped in this stadium was when I was 11,' he added. 'It was rainy, cold, I jumped right under four meters. I still jumped quite high, actually, for how young I was.' Duplantis first broke the pole vault world record in 2020 and over the years has steadily raised his own history-making standards a centimeter at a time. At Sunday's Diamond League meet, he had victory wrapped up with a first-time clearance of six meters, then put the bar straight up to 6.28m – well clear of his own meet record of 6.16m. Despite grazing the bar on the way up, Duplantis safely cleared the record height and raced over to the stands to celebrate with his fiancée. The two-time Olympic gold medalist is now unbeaten since July 2023, winning the Stockholm meet by 38 centimeters more than Australia's Kurtis Marschall in second. 'It gets a little bit tougher as it gets higher,' said Duplantis about the prospect of clearing 6.30m in the future. 'I'm just a perfect day away from it, technically and physically and everything like that.'

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