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Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Saturday, May 31

Today's NYT Mini Crossword Answers for Saturday, May 31

Yahoo2 days ago

Looking for the most recent Mini Crossword answer? Click here for today's Mini Crossword hints, as well as our daily answers and hints for The New York Times Wordle, Strands, Connections and Connections: Sports Edition puzzles.
Today's NYT Mini Crossword has a couple of fun ocean-related clues and answers. It's the extra-long Saturday version, of course. Need some help with today's Mini Crossword? Read on. And if you could use some hints and guidance for daily solving, check out our Mini Crossword tips.
The Mini Crossword is just one of many games in the Times' games collection. If you're looking for today's Wordle, Connections, Connections: Sports Edition and Strands answers, you can visit CNET's NYT puzzle hints page.
Read more: Tips and Tricks for Solving The New York Times Mini Crossword
Let's get at those Mini Crossword clues and answers.
1A clue: This one and that oneAnswer: BOTH
5A clue: Ballet-inspired fitness classAnswer: BARRE
6A clue: Mississippi ___ (rich chocolate dessert)Answer: MUDPIE
7A clue: Sea creature with the scientific name Monodon monoceros ("one tooth, one horn")Answer: NARWHAL
8A clue: Like some soccer shotsAnswer: ONGOAL
9A clue: Strict in toneAnswer: STERN
10A clue: Place for a "For Sale" signAnswer: YARD
1D clue: $#!&, e.g.Answer: BADWORD
2D clue: Harry Potter, Annie or Bruce WayneAnswer: ORPHAN
3D clue: ___ and errorAnswer: TRIAL
4D clue: Dog trainer's "Walk next to me!"Answer: HEEL
5D clue: Hot dog alternativeAnswer: BURGER
6D clue: Relative of a stingrayAnswer: MANTA
7D clue: All up in one's businessAnswer: NOSY
The New York Times Games section offers a large number of online games but only some of them are free for all to play. You can play the current day's Mini Crossword free but you'll need a subscription to the Times Games section to play older puzzles from the archives.

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Cubs aren't waiting until the trade deadline to make more moves for pitching
Cubs aren't waiting until the trade deadline to make more moves for pitching

New York Times

time16 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Cubs aren't waiting until the trade deadline to make more moves for pitching

CHICAGO — Drew Pomeranz already had Craig Counsell's contact information stored in his phone when the Chicago Cubs manager reached out to welcome the 36-year-old left-handed pitcher to his new team. Pomeranz had just used the upward mobility clause in his minor-league contract with the Seattle Mariners, leveraging an April transfer from Triple-A Tacoma and appreciating an unexpected opportunity. Advertisement 'It's always good when (the manager) calls and the name pops up on your caller ID,' Pomeranz said. 'This is my 11th organization in 15 years, so there's a lot of those names that keep popping up. I'm just glad they're still calling, to be honest.' The sudden emergence of Pomeranz (0.00 ERA) as a key member of the pitching staff explains why the Cubs are continuing to monitor pitchers who have June opt-out clauses in their minor-league contracts, as well as relievers such as Jorge López, who was recently designated for assignment by the Washington Nationals. The small moves can add up throughout a 162-game season, and those types of transactions would not preclude Jed Hoyer's front office from making a big summer splash. If the first two months of a Major League Baseball season are figuring out what you have, the Cubs already know they possess the talent, depth and experience to compete with anybody. With two months to go until the July 31 trade deadline, what this first-place team needs is clear. 'To quote our manager, 'We just need to get outs,'' Hoyer said when asked whether the rotation or the bullpen would be a higher priority at the trade deadline. Counsell managed the Milwaukee Brewers when they acquired Pomeranz at the 2019 trade deadline. Though the baseball industry primarily viewed Pomeranz as a struggling starter at that time — he was 2-9 with a 5.68 ERA for the San Francisco Giants — the Brewers used the lefty almost exclusively out of the bullpen and watched him dominate (45 strikeouts in 26 1/3 innings) in shorter bursts. 'I loved playing for Counsell,' Pomeranz said. 'I was with him for 2 1/2 months. And probably the best 2 1/2 months I've ever pitched, to be honest. That's what I told him: 'I was pretty good for you last time, so hopefully I can give you something like that again.'' Advertisement That history factored into the decision to bring Pomeranz to Chicago. Though far from an unknown — Pomeranz was a first-round pick in 2010 and an All-Star in 2016 — he also had not pitched in a major-league game since 2021. In his debut as a Cub, Pomeranz struck out Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber, beginning this run of 15 consecutive scoreless appearances. The Cubs have also successfully incorporated Brad Keller (2.22 ERA in 26 appearances) and Chris Flexen (0.00 ERA in 14 1/3 innings), two pitchers who were signed to minor-league deals after being part of the historically bad Chicago White Sox team that lost 121 games last year. Internally, the Cubs stuck with Daniel Palencia, who did not make the Opening Day roster but continues to earn Counsell's trust. Since getting promoted from Triple-A Iowa in the middle of April, Palencia has notched five holds and five saves and taken over as the closer. 'It's almost hard to keep up with,' Counsell said of the bullpen turnover. 'But it just highlights the difficulty of the job, as much as anything. So you try to just embrace that it's a harder job. And how you find the answers is to say, 'I don't know the answers.' 'Always be on the lookout. It's a 365-day job, trying to get bullpen help. Some areas of the team, you can't go get a third baseman on April 1, right? But with relievers, that's how it works.' López, for example, was released by the New York Mets last June after he threw his glove into the Citi Field stands. López, a one-time All-Star who previously worked with Counsell in Milwaukee, latched on with the Cubs and became one of their better relievers after that change of scenery. López, who signed a one-year, $3 million contract with the Nationals, is expected to clear waivers. The Cubs would not be in a position to offer López a guaranteed major-league spot or automatically put him at the top of a Triple-A depth chart that includes Nate Pearson, Gavin Hollowell, Tom Cosgrove and Riley Martin. But all that roster churn represents a chance to be opportunistic. Advertisement 'You got to take shots,' Counsell said. 'You never get satisfied. You never stop looking for those opportunities, and that's something else that the organization is doing well. The quest for opportunities in pitching, it's 365 days (a year). It doesn't matter if it's the offseason, May 28, June 28, August 28 — you're trying to add pitching and develop pitching.' Right now, that focus is particularly heightened. Between Justin Steele (season-ending elbow surgery) and Shota Imanaga (strained hamstring), the Cubs have two All-Star starters on the injured list, and their pitching depth is about to get tested even further. Beginning Tuesday night at Nationals Park, the Cubs are scheduled to play 26 games in 27 days. Imanaga was scheduled to travel to Arizona this week and begin the next phase of his rehab program, which will progress from live batting practice to multiple outings in controlled game situations. (Counsell said it doesn't really matter if Imanaga got those reps at the Mesa complex or a minor-league affiliate.) If there are no setbacks, Imanaga would rejoin the rotation later in June. By that point, the Cubs might have clarity on whether disappointing clubs such as the Baltimore Orioles and Arizona Diamondbacks will become sellers at the trade deadline. Though the Cubs are still dependent on the health of their own players, many of their preseason needs have been crossed off the list. After years of wondering where the star power would come from, Pete Crow-Armstrong, Kyle Tucker and Seiya Suzuki are performing at that level. Third base, the one big question mark among an established group of position players, appears to be resolved after Matt Shaw's mental reset and mechanical adjustments at Triple A. The bench is also noticeably improved. It is, and always will be, about pitching. When a team is already 15 games above .500, the goal becomes maximizing a tight-knit group and adding someone who can start a playoff game at Wrigley Field and help seize a World Series trophy. (Top photo of Drew Pomeranz: Geoff Stellfox / Getty Images)

Belmont 2025: Post Positions, Odds, And Journalism's Tough Second Shot
Belmont 2025: Post Positions, Odds, And Journalism's Tough Second Shot

Forbes

time16 minutes ago

  • Forbes

Belmont 2025: Post Positions, Odds, And Journalism's Tough Second Shot

Will The Re-Match Look Like This: Sovereignty #18, ridden by jockey Junior Alvarado crosses the finish line to win the 151st running of the Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs on May 03, 2025 in Louisville, Kentucky. (Photo by) In a fine, sporting turn of the Triple Crown season, the 2025 Belmont Stakes favorite Journalism, at 8-5 in the Saratoga morning line, will face both the horse that blazed by him to win the Kentucky Derby, Sovereignty (2-1), and the show horse that was within strides of passing him in that race, Baeza (4-1), all pictured above in the middle of that wet battle on May 3. Talk about racing kismet. The 'Big Sandy,' as the brawny Belmont track has been nicknamed by the racing community, is still under renovation, and thus has added this other seemingly small, but deceptively big, similarity to the Derby. For the second year in a row, the Belmont's $2-million Belmont Stakes, will be a fair imitation of the Kentucky Derby at one-and-a-quarter miles. What's a quarter-mile? Another to put that would be to say, if Baeza had had another quarter-mile in front of him in the Kentucky Derby, Journalism would be the show horse. And another way to put that would be to say, although Saratoga has drawn a modestly-sized field, it's jam-packed with athletic talent. But before we get into what Bob Baffert and his onrushing front-runner Rodriguez have in mind for the top three, here are the freshly drawn post positions and the Saratoga morning line. (Source: NYRA, 6/3/2025) Piquant in the Saratoga draw is the fact that Journalism will be breaking just a stall to the outside of the horse that nearly beat him in the Derby, and both of them have a fair shot at settling in the early going. But the fact that matters more is that Journalism ran back in the Preakness, and did it quite well, just two weeks back. Sovereignty's Derby victory in the last furlong over Journalism was quite decisive, and the horse came out of the race well, but trainer Bill Mott and the Sovereignty connections decided with fair dispatch that Sovereignty would sit out the Preakness to return now. John Shirreffs and the Baeza team decided the same. Rodriguez missed both the Derby and the Preakness with his foot injury, which has been given a sterling stamp of full recovery. The point, which we'll be hearing about ad infinitum this week, is that the four most dangerous horses to Journalism in the Belmont are spanking fresh. And he's not.

Patriots receiver Stefon Diggs attends first practice since viral boat video emerged
Patriots receiver Stefon Diggs attends first practice since viral boat video emerged

Associated Press

time17 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Patriots receiver Stefon Diggs attends first practice since viral boat video emerged

FOXBOROUGH. Mass. (AP) — New England Patriots receiver Stefon Diggs participated in his first offseason practice since video appeared on social media showing him passing what appeared to be a bag of pink crystals to women on a boat. Diggs attended Monday's voluntary practice session six days after videos were posted online of him chatting with three women before producing the substance. It wasn't clear what the substance was. An NFL spokesman said the league would not comment, and Patriots coach Mike Vrabel said the team would handle the matter internally. Diggs, 31, has attended multiple events this offseason with hip-hop star Cardi B — including the Met Gala and a Boston Celtics-New York Knicks playoff game. The Patriots have two remaining optional workouts on Tuesday and Thursday as part of the spring organized team activity window allotted to each NFL team. Both of those remaining sessions are closed to the media. The players have a mandatory three-day minicamp beginning on June 9. Diggs signed with the Patriots this offseason, getting a three-year, $69 million deal that guarantees him $26 million. The four-time Pro Bowl selection had six straight 1,000-yard receiving seasons for the Vikings and Bills before he was traded from Buffalo to Houston last spring. ___ AP NFL:

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