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Canadian teen Mboko beats Rybakina to reach WTA Montreal final

Canadian teen Mboko beats Rybakina to reach WTA Montreal final

Yahoo3 days ago
Canadian wild card Victoria Mboko saved a match point on the way to a thrilling 1-6, 7-5, 7-6 (7/4) victory over former Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina on Wednesday to reach the final of the WTA Canadian Open.
The 18-year-old fed off the energy of the crowd, crediting ecstatic supporters with carrying her through after a tumble left her with a sore right wrist in the third set of her first tour-level semi-final.
Mboko, who ousted top-seeded French Open champion Coco Gauff in the fourth round, didn't let it stop her.
After going down an early break in the third set she refused to go quietly, loading up on her forehand fending off a match point as she broke Rybakina in the 10th game to level the set.
A couple of untimely double faults helped ninth-seeded Rybakina break back for a 6-5 lead, but the ninth seed from Kazakhstan was broken at love in the next game, setting the stage for a gritty tiebreaker.
"Anything can happen," an exhausted Mboko beamed as the crowd's cheers rained down on her. "Unfortunately I fell, but I had everyone supporting me and pushing me."
Mboko, playing in just her third 1000-level event, will play the winner of the second-semi-final between four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka of Japan and Denmark's Clara Tauson.
Osaka, still seeking to find consistency since returning from maternity leave in 2024, arrived in Montreal ranked 49th in the world.
She'll face a tough challenge in Tauson, who reached the semi-finals with wins over Wimbledon champion Iga Swiatek and Australian Open winner Madison Keys.
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No man of mystery, UCLA quarterback Nico Iamaleava dazzles at training camp
No man of mystery, UCLA quarterback Nico Iamaleava dazzles at training camp

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

No man of mystery, UCLA quarterback Nico Iamaleava dazzles at training camp

Try as one might to keep Nico Iamaleava under wraps, the media viewing sessions at UCLA's football training camp shorter than the lifespan of a soap bubble, several trends have emerged. The Tennessee transfer unquestionably has a strong arm. Every pass is thrown with purpose and usually on target. The wiry 6-foot-6, 215-pound redshirt sophomore has a quick release. When he faced heavy pressure during the only team period open to reporters Saturday afternoon, Iamaleava smartly and swiftly completed a short pass when no better options were available. The guy can improvise. Scanning the defense for a weakness, Iamaleava scurried up the middle for a touchdown, making the right decision on what appeared to be a run-pass option play. Read more: Bringing the juice, UCLA safety Key Lawrence infuses a new defense with passion All of this shows exactly why his arrival might have so drastically altered the team's trajectory. 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Josh Simmons passes test: 5 takeaways from Chiefs' preseason opener vs. Cardinals
Josh Simmons passes test: 5 takeaways from Chiefs' preseason opener vs. Cardinals

New York Times

time30 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Josh Simmons passes test: 5 takeaways from Chiefs' preseason opener vs. Cardinals

GLENDALE, Ariz. — The Kansas City Chiefs opened their preseason with a 20-17 road loss to the Arizona Cardinals on Saturday night. As is always the case with preseason games, the score doesn't matter … but that doesn't mean everything we saw was irrelevant. Here are five things that stood out for the Chiefs: Coach Andy Reid's checklist for quarterback Patrick Mahomes likely had to be something like this: Check, check and check. After the Chiefs recovered a Cardinals fumble on the opening kickoff, Mahomes took over on a short field and coaxed a defensive pass-interference call before completing a 1-yard touchdown pass. That was enough for Reid. Mahomes was in for three plays, finishing his day with a satisfying line: 1-for-1 passing, 1 yard, one TD, one minute. Advertisement So, did Mahomes want additional snaps? He said afterward that he didn't lobby his coach for that. 'I let Coach Reid handle it,' Mahomes said in the locker room. 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In other words … so far, so good for one of K.C.'s most important players in 2025. The Chiefs have some decisions to make at the end of their roster at both receiver and tight end. On Saturday, a few of those guys emerged while trying to earn their spots. Start with receiver Tyquan Thornton, who was already a near-lock. With Rashee Rice sitting out because of a mild groin injury, Thornton played each of the team's first three snaps and also drew a defensive pass-interference penalty. That usage should make it clear how much the Chiefs have liked him in camp. Former Jets receiver Jason Brownlee also had a good day. He showed excellent flexibility in bringing down a 1-yard touchdown catch from Mahomes, continuing a pattern in recent weeks of showing himself to be a red zone, jump-ball specialist. Patrick Mahomes to Jason Brownlee for a beautiful back shoulder TD! Stream on @NFLPLus — NFL (@NFL) August 10, 2025 Nikko Remigio, if he is to make the 53-man roster, will have to do so as a return specialist. But he also impressed, returning a kickoff 48 yards to set up the Chiefs' second touchdown. 'I'm just trying to make the most of my opportunities,' Remigio told The Athletic. 'There's so few that you get in preseason, especially when you're trying to spread those opps with all the other guys. So definitely don't want to let any go to waste.' Advertisement At tight end, veteran Robert Tonyan built on a strong camp with three catches for 49 yards, including a 20-yard reception from backup quarterback Gardner Minshew in the second quarter. Tonyan appears to be in line to be the Chiefs' third tight end. Look, it's dangerous to read too much into preseason games with the tiniest sample size of reps. 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The near future will be important regardless. Suamataia has the physical tools to succeed on the line, but his struggles last season led to a lack of confidence (and undoing of his fundamentals), which ultimately led to his quick benching. Reid moved Suamataia to left guard late last season, partly believing it could give him a mental reset. The Chiefs will surely pay close attention to Suamataia and how he performs over the next few days. Advertisement One of the Chiefs' biggest losses this offseason was safety Justin Reid leaving for the New Orleans Saints in free agency. And the player the Chiefs are most relying on to fill his role? Second-year player Jaden Hicks, whose playing time is set to increase significantly. He certainly looked the part of a starting safety on Saturday. Hicks peeled back in the first quarter and read the eyes of Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray, intercepting a pass to give the Chiefs their top defensive highlight. Jaden Hicks with the @Chiefs pick! Stream on @NFLPlus — NFL (@NFL) August 10, 2025 It's worth noting that Hicks, despite a situational role for the Chiefs last season, still led the team with three interceptions. If nothing else, it was a promising start for the Chiefs' 2024 fourth-round pick — a safety who only turns 23 next week. (Photo of Jason Brownlee: Joe Camporeale / Imagn Images) Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

Rangers starter Nathan Eovaldi is having his best season at age 35. Here's why
Rangers starter Nathan Eovaldi is having his best season at age 35. Here's why

New York Times

time30 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Rangers starter Nathan Eovaldi is having his best season at age 35. Here's why

He's thrown 111 innings. His ERA starts with a 1. Only two pitchers in baseball can make that claim. One is Paul Skenes. The other is Texas Rangers right-hander Nathan Eovaldi. It's been a white-hot season for the veteran righty so far. What's weird about Eovaldi's success thus far this season is that from all that we know about what makes pitches better, most of his pitches are the same as ever — or worse. That's about what you'd expect from a 35-year-old starting pitcher. The fastball is slower than ever. So's the curve, the split and the cutter, and he's lost some bite on those pitches. Advertisement What's been the magic sauce this year for the Rangers' starter? Three things stand out when you look under the hood. For one, his curveball, which he's throwing more than ever, looks different this year. He's never had this combination of horizontal and vertical movement on the pitch before. Most years, it has more horizontal movement than it does now — he had up to six inches more horizontal movement on the curveball with the Yankees in 2016. In the years it's been more of a 12-to-6, like this year, it's had more drop. It's gone from this, where it swept right into Jarren Duran's barrel last year… …. to this, where it stopped short of landing on the barrel swung by Jasson Domínguez. In any case, it's more of a vertical pitch even if it does move side-to-side, and that's made it a better weapon this year against lefties, who are hitting .068 (and slugging .068) against the pitch after slugging .410 off of it last year. It's gone from his fourth-most used pitch against lefties to his second-most. Going to more of a vertical movement pattern — he dropped his arm angle slightly — has made the pitch more deceptive. 'I had really good results on my curveball today. Probably should have used a little more,' Eovaldi said after a spring training start this year, before he started throwing the curveball more than he had in years. Since then, he's leaned into the pitch even more. Next, he may be hiding a new pitch. Could he be throwing a sinker? Sinkers, as opposed to four-seam fastballs, always have more arm-side movement even if they don't have a ton of drop. Look at the percentage of Eovaldi's fastballs that have had more than 16 inches of arm-side run, by season. In 2022, Eovaldi threw 664 fastballs, and only eight of them had more than 16 inches of run. This year, he's thrown 449 fastballs, and 108 of them have moved similarly. Here's what it looks like in practice. In 2023, he threw a four-seamer with 10 inches of run to Brandon Drury, who flew out. This year, Eovaldi threw one in a similar location to Mike Trout with seven more inches of run. These are subtle changes to our eyes, but not to the computer's, or — as the results seem to suggest — to the hitter's. And it's totally plausible that he's throwing a sinker. He used to. And this spring training, he told us he might. 'It just comes down to trusting and executing it,' he said about his sinker in February. 'I think once I'm able to slow it down and start executing it better, it'll be a good weapon for me to use up and in to the righties and have another weapon inside and to help the splitter out and all the other offspeed stuff.' Advertisement Looks like the sinker might be back, flying under the radar. There's one more shift in the righty's game that's pretty obvious when you look at one simple chart. His pitch usage. In 2015, Eovaldi adjusted his splitter and started ramping up its usage, maybe because he'd discovered that even though he had gas, no fastball was too big to hide. Now he's taken that trend that he started 10 years ago to its most extreme destination, and is finally throwing the splitter more often than his fastball (fastballs?) this year for the first time. This last chart may be the most important change to note, because it shows that he's now just as likely to throw any pitch at any point, which takes the load off of any one pitch to be great by itself. It's been quite the evolution for the Rangers' starter, who used to have great gas and touch 100+ mph in games while also giving up homers and hard contact. Then he discovered the splitter, went to work on it to the point that it's his primary pitch now. The cutter and curve, while slower than they've ever been, have more intriguing shapes, and fit into a much wider pitch-mix. The fastball even has a couple wrinkles now. 'He's just an artist out there,' his manager Bruce Bochy said after a recent start. 'His pitchability, his command, his focus, the way he reads swings, he can adjust on the fly, all those things. You've got four pitches with command of all of them that he can throw anytime. That's why he's having so much success.' If there ever was a thrower that became a pitcher over time, it's Nathan Eovaldi. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

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