
Mid-Atlantic Sportswatch Daily Listings
(All times Eastern)
Virginia Tech at NC State — ACCNX
Virginia at California — ACCNX
COLLEGE SOFTBALL
Boston College at Virginia — ACCNX
MLB BASEBALL
Baltimore at Pittsburgh — SportsNet Pittsburgh, Fubo Sports US, MLB.TV
The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive TV listings provided by LiveSportsOnTV.

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Washington Post
an hour ago
- Washington Post
Herndon, Wakefield earn shootout victories in Class 6 boys' soccer semis
GLEN ALLEN, Va. — Herndon created the better chances in Friday's state semifinal against reigning Virginia Class 6 boys' soccer champions Cosby, but the Hornets couldn't find the back of the net in 80 minutes of regulation or 20 minutes of overtime. Even when the penalty shootout arrived, Herndon missed its first spot kick and found itself trailing.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
5️⃣ must-watch fixtures across matchday 19 in MLS
Action across MLS continues in earnest this weekend in the wake of NYCFC's 4-0 demolition job over visiting Atlanta United yesterday evening in the Bronx. As wandering eyes begin to focus in on the Club World Cup set to kick off tomorrow night as Inter Miami locks horns with Egyptian giants Al Ahly, there are still plenty of storylines waiting on the domestic front for MLS enthusiasts. Advertisement With that, let's take a look at five must-watch games for matchday 19. Timbers eyeing second-best in the West Phil Neville will be enjoying life in the Pacific Northwest in 2025 as his Portland Timbers remain in the running to finish in the upper echelon of the Western Conference as they tackle the visiting San Jose Earthquakes tonight at Providence Park. Sitting fourth in the table and just a single point behind both Minnesota United and San Diego FC, back-to-back recent wins should offer a springboard for adding to their point total against a Bruce Arena-led outfit who have managed just one win in their last five MLS fixtures. However, the loss of key forward Jonathan Rodríguez could be a cause for concern after confirmation of his pending season-ending knee surgery. Still, many fans remain confident of banking at least a point on the night, and should Portland win while results go their way elsewhere, they could jump up to second in the conference. Can the Crew stop tumbling down the table? Columbus Crew find themselves in a spot of bother of late as they continue to nose-dive down the table in the East, so there could not have been a worse time to welcome the Vancouver Whitecaps to town this weekend. Advertisement Jesper Sørensen's outfit continues to lead both the West and MLS overall with 35 points from just 16 fixtures while allowing just 12 goals and tasting defeat just once along the way. 📸 via MLS Communications In contrast, the Crew has fallen to sixth while failing to put three points in the post across their last five overall meetings (0-3-2), which included an absolute drubbing at the hands of Inter Miami last time out during a 5-1 loss in South Florida. The Whitecaps will certainly fancy their chances despite being on the road, but the Crew still boast more than enough talent on any given night to test any opposition they come up against. Philadelphia looking to dig in atop the East Bradley Carnell and the Philadelphia Union continue to lead the race at the top of the Eastern Conference while closing the distance to Supporters' Shield leaders Vancouver Whitecaps coming into the weekend action, and the Union will no doubt feel confident when they welcome a struggling Charlotte FC to Subaru Park. Advertisement Boasting one of their best-ever starts to a regular season campaign as they coast on a nine-match undefeated run, the Eastern powerhouse has a chance to make history tomorrow night while piling misery on the Crown, who have tumbled down the table and currently cling to the final post-season place in the standings. Should Philly book all three points, or at least earn a draw, it will be the first time they've ever gone on a 10-match undefeated run in club history, while also potentially watching Charlotte drop out of the top nine in the process. The Loons battle SDFC for second-spot Arguably the headline clash of the entire matchday, Minnesota United welcomes fairytale outfit San Diego FC to Allianz Field as the two outfits come into proceedings deadlocked on 30 points near the top of the West. Advertisement Both sides have been impressive throughout the 2025 MLS season, but SDFC may have a slight edge on Saturday given their better run of form (3-1-1) compared to their not-so-gracious hosts (2-1-2). It's a fixture hardly lacking without some notable attacking talent, too, including Danish star winger and joint-MLS assist leader Anders Dreyer (8) and budding Canadian goalscorer Tani Oluwaseyi (8), with Dreyer showing out for Denmark during the recent international break and could bring that form back with him at the weekend. The pair of attacking talents will look to be the decisive factor given the chance to take sole possession of second spot in the table come the end of 90 minutes. Can the Red Bulls make it four in a row? The final match to watch this weekend takes us to Texas as Austin FC welcomes a hot NY Red Bulls side to Q2 Stadium, with NYRB on the hunt to make it four wins from their last four as they climb the ladder in the East. Advertisement Among their ranks beyond midfield fulcrum Emil Forsberg, is MLS newcomer Eric Maxim Choupo-Moting, who has quickly adapted to life in the tri-state area to the tune of 10 goals in what has become an impressive debut campaign at Red Bull Arena. 📸 via MLS Communications The Cameroonian international forward is on course to easily outstrip his best-ever return in the goals column should he avoid something cataclysmic this season, while also boasting an outside chance to set a new debut goals record for the club. Austin will be hopeful of keeping him silent on the night, but with just a single win across their last five matches and a real struggle in front of goal over the entirety of the season tonight, it may be a bridge too far for The Verde and Black. 📸 Editorial Photo Credit: © Brad Penner | 2025 Jun 12 - Imagn Images


New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Making the U.S. Open was a dream. Then he shot 35-over-par
OAKMONT, Pa. — The smile wasn't particularly wide, but it was a smile. After playing in his first U.S. Open, after exploring every last inch of Oakmont Country Club, and after sinking one last putt to mercifully break 90, George Duangmanee deserved to grin as little or as much as he wanted. 'I knew it was going to be a hard test coming in, but I didn't think it was going to be this hard,' Duangmanee said, standing outside Oakmont's scoring area. With scores of 86-89, he finished his 36 holes at the U.S. Open at 35-over-par. Duangmanee stood in 156th place. Out of 156 players. Advertisement The U.S. Open is called an open for a reason. Duangmanee made it here the hard way. The 23-year-old from Fairfax, Va. graduated from the University of Virginia last year and began his pursuit of professional golf without membership on any professional tour. This spring, that pursuit included paying a $200 entry fee to sign up for the first stage of U.S. Open qualifying. Duangmanee was good enough to play his way into his first PGA Tour event last month, so why not the U.S. Open? In Maryland, Duangmanee shot a 1-under 71 to advance to the second and final stage, but that's the (relatively) easy part. Final qualifying came next: Duangmanee faced a stronger field with higher-ranked players, a harder course, and 36 holes to prove yourself. Rounds of 68 and 67 put Duangmanee in a tie for second place, and four players were moving on to Oakmont. Those two scores gave him his first major championship tee time. They gave him solace that the grind of mini-tour golf that's required for most to rise up the professional golf ranks was worth it. That's what makes this championship great. Anyone — at least anyone with a .4 handicap or better — can make it. The USGA accepted a record 10,202 entries for qualifying this year. That 10,000-plus dwindled to 980, and that 980 dwindled to 69. Of those 69 U.S. Open qualifiers, only 17 made it through both the local and final qualifying stages, Duangmanee included. But making it to a U.S. Open and playing in a U.S. Open — those are two different experiences. Duangmanee hit 10 of 28 fairways at Oakmont. He hit six of 18 greens. There were seven double bogeys, one triple bogey and one quadruple bogey. He slapped it around a course that wasn't just a brutal test of golf for a local qualifier. Oakmont is making a fool out of greats and major champions. Sergio Garcia, Max Homa and Rickie Fowler aren't even here. Advertisement Duangmanee played in the 2:42 p.m. pairing on Thursday, the last of the day. He went home that night after finishing an opening round 86 in the dark. Then got up out of bed on Friday to do it all over again. The next day, he finished his first U.S. Open in front of his family and friends, a pair of whom carried an overflowing merchandise bag as they begged a volunteer to let them pass onto a grandstand and watch him two-putt to avoid the ignominy of 90. 'I mean, going into today, I just wanted to have fun out there,' Duangmanee said. 'I knew I was kind of out of it after my first round. So I just tried to enjoy the experience as much as possible. I didn't really get down on myself. I just kept going, and I was just happy to be out here today.' Double bogey after double bogey, punch after punch, the 23-year-old tried to keep himself in good spirits, not only for his own sanity but for the future. After playing in his 36-hole U.S. Open qualifier last week, Duangmanee played four more 18-hole rounds and earned status on a tour for the first time. It's conditional status on the PGA Tour of Americas, but he'll take it. He bore the brunt of the U.S. Open, but that doesn't mean he couldn't learn something along the way. He'll keep learning when he sticks around for the weekend to watch the rest of the championship. 'It's a little bit intimidating being around people you watch on TV every week. I'm trying to learn as much about how they practice, how they warm up and everything. So I've been keeping an eye on how the best in the world do it, so I'm gonna use that going forward,' Duangmanee said. Duangmanee wasn't hesitant to share that this was the biggest stage of golf he's ever played in. He had no shame in admitting that the test all but slapped him in the face. But a highlight of the week? He couldn't necessarily think of one. He was just happy to be there, at Oakmont, grateful to soak it all in and say that he made it to the tournament in the first place. How many of the 10,000 would have traded places with him in that moment? (Top photo of George Duangmanee: Patrick Smith / Getty Images)