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Bohm, Schwarber each hit 2-run homers to power Phillies past Reds, 5-1

Bohm, Schwarber each hit 2-run homers to power Phillies past Reds, 5-1

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Alec Bohm and Kyle Schwarber each hit two-run homers and Edmundo Sosa added a solo shot to lift the Philadelphia Phillies to a 5-1 victory over the Cincinnati Reds on Saturday.
Phillies starter Ranger Suárez was pulled by manager Rob Thomson after throwing just 80 pitches in five innings. He struck out six and lowered his ERA to 1.99, putting the left-hander in prime position to make his second straight All-Star team.
Suárez allowed seven earned runs in his first start of the season, and has now allowed only 11 over his last 11 starts. The circumstances of his early exit were not immediately known, Suárez had pitched at least seven innings in each of his last five starts and thrown at least six innings in all but his first start of the year.
Bohm hit a two-run homer in the sixth inning off Reds starter Nick Lodolo (5-6) for a 3-1 lead and Schwarber connected on his 27th homer of the year in the eighth to make it 5-1.
Will Benson hit a solo homer off Suárez for the Reds in the fifth, and Sosa followed with a solo shot in the bottom of half of the inning off Lodolo to make it 1-1.
Lodolo struck out eight and allowed three runs over six innings.
Jordan Romano (1-3) earned the win and was the first of four Phillies relievers to each toss a scoreless inning.
Key moment
Cincinnati's first two runners reached in the eighth against Orion Kerkering. Spencer Steer grounded into a double play off the Phillies reliever and Noelvi Marte was retired on a comebacker to end the threat.
Key stat
Trea Turner had two hits to add to his NL-best total with 108. He also leads the league in multi-hit games with 31.
Up next
The Reds send Chase Burns (0-1, 13.50 ERA) to the mound Sunday against Phillies RHP Zack Wheeler (8-3, 2.27 ERA).
___
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Ricky Hatton, 46, to make boxing comeback in Dubai
Ricky Hatton, 46, to make boxing comeback in Dubai

Associated Press

time19 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Ricky Hatton, 46, to make boxing comeback in Dubai

MANCHESTER, England (AP) — Ricky Hatton, the 46-year-old former two-weight world champion, will return to the ring to fight in the United Arab Emirates in December, 13 years after he retired. The Manchester native, who turns 47 in October, will face Eisa Al Dah in Dubai on Dec. 2, it has been announced. Hatton (45-3) has not fought since losing in his last comeback bout to Vyacheslav Senchenko in November 2012. 'Fight! Fight! Fight! It's official,' Hatton posted on X. He won world titles at welterweight and light-welterweight, with his other two losses coming against pound-for-pound greats Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Manny Pacquiao. He is the latest former champion to announce a comeback long after retirement in a growing market for such events, with Pacquiao, Mike Tyson, Roy Jones Jr. and Julio César Chávez Jr. all making lucrative returns. Al Dah, also 46, has not fought since 2021 and only once since 2012. But he was adamant it will be action packed. 'It will not be like the Mike Tyson-Jake Paul fight,' Al Dah said. It will be a true fight. True action and I will do my best.' Hatton became a British sporting hero after winning epic battles against Kostya Tszyu, José Luis Castillo and Paulie Malignaggi. They earned him clashes with Mayweather and Pacquiao — but both ended in knockout defeats. He retired for the first time after his brutal second round knockout defeat against Pacquiao in 2009, but returned more than three years later and fought Ukrainian Senchenko at the Manchester Arena. That fight also ended in defeat with a ninth-round stoppage that left Hatton in tears. Since retiring, Hatton has trained other fighters in his Manchester gym. He said he hoped his fight would lead to more being staged in Dubai. 'There's a market for it,' he said, 'and I think it'll be a sensational evening.' ___ James Robson is at

Lessons the Wizards can learn from the Thunder and Sam Presti's GM tree
Lessons the Wizards can learn from the Thunder and Sam Presti's GM tree

Washington Post

time37 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Lessons the Wizards can learn from the Thunder and Sam Presti's GM tree

It's a good time to be a member of the Oklahoma City Thunder. The Thunder just won the NBA title, its three best players have an average age under 25, and it has the most draft capital in the league. It's no wonder that Sam Presti, the Thunder's general manager, was named NBA executive of the year. This isn't his first run at success — Presti also built a championship-worthy team by drafting former MVPs Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook and James Harden. As is custom in the copycat world of sports, other teams have tried to replicate the Thunder's success by hiring Presti's protégés. Since 2010, the Thunder has had a league-high five front-office members hired as general managers, according to the team website. Two of them lead the Washington Wizards: President Michael Winger and General Manager Will Dawkins. Winger, who was previously the Los Angeles Clippers' general manager, was the Thunder's assistant general manager and team counsel from 2010 to 2017. The Clippers went 272-200 and made the playoffs four times during his tenure as GM. He worked under Lawrence Frank, the president of basketball operations. Dawkins rose up from intern to vice president of basketball operations over 15 seasons with the Thunder. But Winger and Dawkins aren't the first Presti offshoots to get hired. How did the others do — and what could the Wizards learn from them? Rob Hennigan Orlando Magic general manager, 2012-17 Thunder experience: 2008-12, 2017-present When he was hired in 2012, the 30-year-old was the youngest general manager in NBA history. His teams never made the playoffs over five seasons, compiling a regular season record of 132-278. What worked: Among Hennigan's first moves was trading star center Dwight Howard. The Magic's return wasn't spectacular but did net it a solid center in Nikola Vucevic. Hennigan also made some decent draft picks, taking Victor Oladipo at No. 2 in 2013 and Aaron Gordon at No. 4 in 2014. What didn't: The Magic whiffed in the 2015 draft by taking Mario Hezonja at No. 5. But Hennigan's biggest mistake came in a trade he made with Presti. On draft night in 2016, the Magic dealt Oladipo, Ersan Ilyasova and the No. 11 pick — which became Domantas Sabonis — to the Thunder for Serge Ibaka. Ibaka, a pending free agent, didn't make it the full season in Orlando. Hennigan traded him in February 2017 to the Toronto Raptors for Terrence Ross and a 2017 first-round pick, which ended up as the No. 25 selection. What happened next makes the deal look worse. The Thunder traded Oladipo and Sabonis to the Pacers for star wing Paul George. And the Thunder traded George to the Los Angeles Clippers as part of a package that included 2025 regular season MVP and Finals MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. Oladipo, Sabonis, George and Gilgeous-Alexander have combined for 12 all-NBA selections. Ross and Ibaka? Zero. Lesson for the Wizards: Evaluate your own talent properly. The George and Gilgeous-Alexander trades aside, Oladipo blossomed into a star in Indiana before multiple injuries limited him. Gordon was miscast as a No. 1 option but turned into a high-level starter and an NBA champion with the Denver Nuggets. Vucevic and Sabonis could have been a solid big man tandem. The core probably wouldn't have been a true contender but might have been a solid, playoff-worthy squad. Hennigan declined a request to comment through an Oklahoma City representative. Rich Cho Portland Trail Blazers general manager, 2010-11; Charlotte Bobcats/Hornets general manager, 2011-18 Thunder/SuperSonics experience: 1995-2010 Cho was fired after less than a year in Portland and worked under President of Basketball Operations Rod Higgins in Charlotte. Cho became the top decision-maker after Higgins's exit in 2014. Charlotte went 223-334 and made the playoffs twice with Cho. After Higgins's exit, Cho and the Hornets went 152-175. What worked: In Cho's first draft, Charlotte selected four-time all-star Kemba Walker with the No. 9 pick. With Cho as the lead decision-maker in 2017, the franchise selected Malik Monk — who has been a productive scoring guard throughout his career — with the No. 11 pick. Charlotte also traded for reliable wing Nicolas Batum in 2015. What didn't: Cho never found a running mate for Walker. With the No. 2 pick in 2012, the then-Bobcats took Michael Kidd-Gilchrist, a defense-oriented, shooting-challenged wing. He stuck around the league for eight years but never turned into a premier defender nor a passable shooter. Over the next three drafts, Charlotte selected Cody Zeller, Noah Vonleh and Frank Kaminsky with its first-round pick. Zeller, a solid but unremarkable player, became the best of the bunch. Charlotte won 48 games and made the playoffs in 2015-16 but couldn't build on that success. Cho traded the team's 2016 first-round pick, No. 22 overall, for Marco Belinelli. It proved too steep a price — ESPN gave the Hornets a D-minus for the trade — and Belinelli was traded less than a year later. Charlotte won just 36 games next season and hasn't made the playoffs since. Lessons for the Wizards: 'Draft and develop better' isn't game-changing advice but remains a critical part of a general manager's job. Another one: operate with ambition. Cho seemed to nibble around the edges during his tenure and never built on his team's brief competitive stint, instead getting stuck in the middle. Cho, now working for the Memphis Grizzlies, declined a request to comment through a team representative. Troy Weaver Detroit Pistons general manager, 2020-24 Thunder experience: 2008-20 Weaver's four years in Detroit yielded no playoff appearances and a 74-244 record. After leaving Detroit, he came to Washington to be a senior adviser for the Wizards for a year before joining the New Orleans Pelicans' front office. 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It did trade for Duren (No. 13 overall) on draft night in 2022 but had to give up a protected first-round pick to do so. Weaver also struggled to find the right coach. He inherited Dwane Casey, who was hired in 2018, and only moved on from him in 2023. Weaver then signed Monty Williams, who had success with the Phoenix Suns, to a six-year contract. Williams made it just one season. Weaver's successor, Trajan Langdon, fired him. Lesson for the Wizards: Use avenues such as free agency and trades (absorbing bad contracts, signing and trading veterans, etc.) to give yourself as many opportunities in the draft as possible. The Thunder has embraced this lesson. The Wizards seemingly have as well — their roster features eight players picked in the first round of the past three drafts. Weaver declined a request to comment through a New Orleans representative.

WNBA power rankings: Dallas' young cast looks like a strong support for Paige Bueckers
WNBA power rankings: Dallas' young cast looks like a strong support for Paige Bueckers

New York Times

time39 minutes ago

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This weekend's announcement of the All-Star Game reserves provided an interesting button to one of the more controversial moves of the offseason: Chicago's trade for Ariel Atkins. The Sky sent the No. 3 pick in the 2025 draft (along with first-round swap rights in 2027) to bring in Atkins; put another way, four years of cost control on a rookie for a one-year rental. Advertisement These swings work when the veteran player is good enough in the present to counteract the future value lost. The Los Angeles Sparks made a similar risk in trading the No. 2 pick for Kelsey Plum. However, when the player Atkins was ostensibly traded for, Sonia Citron, is already out-producing the veteran in Year 1 — voted an All-Star alongside her rookie teammate Kiki Iriafen — it poses some questions about team-building. In Chicago's defense, the Mystics and the Connecticut Sun were the only teams with the courage to attempt a rebuild this season. With the rollicking momentum the WNBA is experiencing, it's challenging to sit out a year and watch other teams pass you by. The Sparks, though Plum is at least outperforming Dominique Malonga, haven't experienced the success they hoped for with their veteran acquisition either. The best teams in the WNBA are generally built through multiple top draft picks. In recent vintage, the Seattle Storm won in 2018 and 2020 with the 2015 and 2016 No. 1 picks — plus Sue Bird from way back in 2002. Las Vegas had the top selections in 2017, 2018 and 2019. New York drafted only one top pick in Sabrina Ionescu but brought in Breanna Stewart and traded for another MVP in Jonquel Jones. Indiana is building toward contention with two consecutive top picks of its own. Having one great rookie, even if she put up historical numbers like Angel Reese, generally isn't enough to get the job done. And the idea of punting the present for the future may not even apply anymore. The current generation of college stars is more ready for the pros than previous groups; a great four-year collegian might be able to produce as well as an established veteran. Team-building is an art. Not all franchises can follow the same template. However, to lose a win-now trade in the present is a tough pill to swallow, the kind of outcome that might make teams a little more conservative moving forward. The Wings started a lineup of four rookies plus Li Yueru, who is in her third season, on Thursday against Phoenix. Against a trio of Mercury All-Stars and all-WNBA players, the youngins held their own. As Dallas has dealt with a rash of injuries, the absence of the veterans has clarified who fits around Paige Bueckers. Every decision the Wings make from here on out should be to optimize Bueckers, and the rookies seem to match her playing style. Advertisement JJ Quinerly and Aziaha James play with pace and make quick decisions with the ball. Quinerly is always pushing the tempo of makes and misses, while James immediately knows how she wants to attack, whether that's with a shot or a drive. Luisa Geiselsöder is a little more methodical in the half court, but she's a useful screening and handoff partner — the pairing of Bueckers and Geiselsöder has a better true shooting percentage than any other Bueckers duo. In the win against Phoenix, Dallas got 72 points from rookies, the most of any WNBA team since 1999, per Across the Timeline. It was also the first time in league history that three rookies have had at least 15 points and five assists. The pecking order is clear with no veterans — Bueckers is the best player on the team, and she shouldn't have to defer to players with more experience. Quinerly, James and the young bigs know where they stand — they play through Bueckers. When Bueckers tells Quinerly to 'go' on a jump ball late in the game, Quinerly starts running to the spot before the ball gets there. The Wings got a gift in the NaLyssa Smith trade, an opportunity to build up assets while also clearing out minutes for players who will be part of the future. With the way the rookies are performing, it might be worthwhile to move out more veterans by the Aug. 7 trade deadline. Now that Karlie Samuelson is out for the season with a foot injury, Minnesota coach Cheryl Reeve has to start trusting Diamond Miller. Natisha Hiedeman can't be the only guard off the bench, and 20-year-old Anastasiia Kosu won't be ready in time for the postseason. It has to be Miller. After Miller got hurt and lost her starting spot to Bridget Carleton in 2024, she only reached double-figure minutes eight times over 36 games. Two of those were contests that Napheesa Collier missed. Miller hasn't had a lot of time to prove herself, but if she is to be counted on in the postseason, Reeve has to start building trust in her now. To wit, Miller has averaged 13 minutes since Samuelson went out. Advertisement Miller still looks like she doesn't know how to play off Collier; the cuts and off-ball movement in the halfcourt don't come naturally to the third-year guard. The comfort comes in transition, where Miller is an absolute freight train. She has more juice attacking the basket against even a set defense than anyone else on the Lynx. Miller's 3-point shot also looks smooth as the release is quick, and she's hit 3-of-6 during this stretch. There have been defensive lapses. Her inability to get around a screen at the top of the key against the Valkyries forced a rotation that led to Tiffany Hayes' open 3-pointer. A couple possessions later, Miller inexplicably doubled off Kate Martin in the corner, and the ball found its way to Martin in two passes. But when she puts in the effort, Miller has so many athletic gifts. Janelle Salaün looked genuinely stunned at the quality of a Miller closeout in the fourth quarter. Malonga is Seattle's highest draft pick since 2016, when the Storm lucked into Stewart, the greatest college player of her generation. Seeing the present go up against the past has to make Seattle feel good about its future. Malonga played only 10 minutes against the Liberty, a few of which came in garbage time, but she came to play on national television. Not a lot of rookies can bump Stewart off her spot and then hit a fadeaway, but Malonga managed that during a seven-minute stretch when she scored 11 points and grabbed seven rebounds as the Storm extended a six-point lead to 19. Malonga is massive around the rim and makes what should be easy finishes impossible for the opposing team. She is hit-or-miss in terms of her impact, but early in her career, Malonga has already had productive stretches against Stewart and Collier. The magnitude of the matchup doesn't faze her. Malonga hitting a Dirk fade over Stewie in the midst of a personal 6-0 run is what we came for, folks: [image or embed] — Lucas Kaplan (@ July 6, 2025 at 1:47 PM A lot of rookies already have gotten shine this week, so let's turn the focus to one who may be falling out of the rotation soon. With DeWanna Bonner waived, Damiris Dantas with Brazil at the AmeriCup and Brianna Turner relatively ineffective, Timpson has become the bench big of choice for Indiana coach Stephanie White. It's easy to see why White trusts the rookie, because Timpson has a high motor on defense, and the Fever have had to rely on their defense in Caitlin Clark's absence. Timpson is incredibly disruptive. She comes up high on screens, she pushes ballhandlers out to the perimeter and she has a good sense of where loose balls will end up. The all-energy, all-the-time philosophy is more useful on offense than defense. She had a couple mis-timed reads on passes and attempted to post up Chelsea Gray (a surprisingly sturdy paint defender) this past week. Yet Timpson has her moments, including a flash off a Natasha Howard post-up and a nice left-handed take against the Sparks. She has the best on-off differential for the Fever this season (plus-12.4 points per 100 possessions); all of that value comes from the defensive end. With Dantas on her way back, White has more options at her disposal again. Timpson has proven that she can hold up, even if it's shorter shifts. That manic defensive presence comes in handy. The Wings have won five of their last seven, and the Fever are starting to figure some things out defensively, which they did to great effect in the Commissioner's Cup title game. Nonetheless, let's not bury the lead — with any luck, this is the first time Paige Bueckers and Caitlin Clark will face off as WNBA players. After the drama of their final meeting in college, when a moving screen call helped Clark and the Hawkeyes advance to the national title game, and Clark missed the Fever's first game in Dallas, the anticipation to see the last two No. 1 picks on the court together is high. Let's see how two of the future faces of the league match up. (Photo of JJ Quinerly: Ron Jenkins / Getty Images)

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