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Brandon Lowe's HR helps Rays take down Rangers

Brandon Lowe's HR helps Rays take down Rangers

Reuters3 days ago

June 5 - Brandon Lowe went 3-for-4 with a solo home run and two RBIs and the Tampa Bay Rays used a four-run third inning to top the visiting Texas Rangers 5-4 on Wednesday night.
The second baseman homered in the first and hit an RBI double in the third as the Rays won for the 11th time in 14 games and moved to 20-19 at home in the New York Yankees' spring training park.
Rays starter Shane Baz (5-3) surrendered three runs on five hits in five innings. He struck out five and walked one as Tampa Bay secured a three-game series win ahead of the Thursday finale.
In its second loss in the first two games of a nine-game road trip, Texas got a two-run homer by Jonah Heim in a three-run fifth. Wyatt Langford finished 3-for-5 with a double and two RBIs.
In his first start since May 28, slumping right fielder Adolis Garcia went 1-for-4 with two strikeouts.
In his first outing since April 23, having recovered from a right shoulder injury, starter Kumar Rocker (1-4) lasted just 3 1/3 innings and surrendered five runs on six hits. He fanned five, walked two and hit a batter as his ERA ballooned to 8.87.
Lowe's offense was felt right away -- on the scoreboard and physically by the visitors.
He smacked his 12th home run to straightaway center with one out in the first, lifting a low 91 mph changeup off the batter's eye. The ball bounced back into play and struck the face of Evan Carter, leaving the Texas center fielder with a bloodied upper lip.
After Josh Lowe slapped a one-out double in the third, Brandon Lowe followed with a screaming two-bagger off the right field wall for a 2-0 lead. Jonathan Aranda's RBI single and Jake Mangum's single that plated a pair pushed it to a five-run advantage.
Texas finally got to Baz in the fifth when Heim sliced an opposite-field homer to left, his seventh deep ball, to cut it to 5-2. Langford later doubled in Josh Smith.
Following scoreless innings by Rays relievers Manuel Rodriguez, Mason Montgomery and Edwin Uceta, closer Pete Fairbanks allowed an unearned run in the ninth but earned his 11th save in 12 chances.
--Field Level Media

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This win is for Americans who look like me, says French Open champion Gauff
This win is for Americans who look like me, says French Open champion Gauff

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  • Reuters

This win is for Americans who look like me, says French Open champion Gauff

PARIS, June 7 (Reuters) - Newly-crowned French Open champion Coco Gauff, the first Black American to win the title in a decade, said on Saturday her victory in Paris was for people back home who looked like her and struggled amid ongoing political turmoil. Gauff battled from a set down to beat Aryna Sabalenka 6-7(5) 6-2 6-4 and lift her first French Open crown and her second Grand Slam title after the 2023 U.S. Open. She is the first Black American to win the French Open since Serena Williams in 2015. "It means a lot (to win the title), and obviously there's a lot going on in our country right now with things -- like, everything, yeah. I'm sure you guys know," she said, smiling but without elaborating further. "But just to be able to be a representation of that and a representation of, I guess, people that look like me in America who maybe don't feel as supported during this time period, and so just being that reflection of hope and light for those people." There has been ongoing political turmoil in the United States following the election of President Donald Trump last year. Trump's first few months in office have featured an unapologetic assault on diversity and inclusion efforts, unravelling decades-old policies to remedy historical injustices for marginalised groups in a matter of weeks. In his second term, Trump revoked a landmark 1965 executive order mandating equal employment opportunities for all, slashed environmental actions to protect communities of colour and ordered the gutting of an agency that helped fund minority and women-owned businesses. The actions have alarmed advocates, who say they effectively erase decades of hard-fought progress on levelling the playing field for marginalised communities. "I remember after the election and everything, it kind of felt a down period a little bit and my mom told me during Riyadh (in November 2024) 'just try to win the tournament, just to give something for people to smile for'. "So that's what I was thinking about today when holding that (trophy). "Then seeing the flags in the crowd means a lot. You know, some people may feel some type of way about being patriotic and things like that, but I'm definitely patriotic and proud to be American, and I'm proud to represent the Americans that look like me and people who kind of support the things that I support." Trump has previously denied claims he has employed racist attacks and an agenda throughout his political career.

Chase Briscoe claims 3rd straight NASCAR Cup Series pole at Michigan
Chase Briscoe claims 3rd straight NASCAR Cup Series pole at Michigan

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Chase Briscoe claims 3rd straight NASCAR Cup Series pole at Michigan

June 7 - Chase Briscoe claimed his third consecutive NASCAR Cup Series pole position Saturday morning, with the Joe Gibbs Racing driver taking top honors at Michigan International Speedway for Sunday's FireKeepers Casino 400. Briscoe's No. 19 JGR Toyota turned a lap of 195.514 mph for his fourth pole of the season -- just besting Richard Childress Racing's Kyle Busch, who will start alongside with a lap of 195.317 in the No. 8 Chevrolet. This equals Busch's best start of the season (also second at Talladega, Ala.). Briscoe's work marks the first time a driver has won pole positions at three consecutive races since Hendrick Motorsports' Kyle Larson did it last April at Richmond, Michigan, and Texas. "I was surprised truthfully it held on,'' the 30-year-old Indiana native said of his fast lap. "It was not as easy as I thought it was going to be just holding it wide open. But our Bass Pro Shops has been pretty fast in race trim and I thought we could have been even better. 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It's not enough to make him over-confident but does give him some optimism heading into the all-important summer months of competition. With points so close, a victory may be the best option to earn a Playoff bid. "You can't depend on points to get you in the playoffs when it's as tight as it is every week,'' Buescher said. "I think that's been our mindset, which means that ultimately wherever we bounce around that [Playoff cutoff] line we'll be aware of it, but it's a matter of figuring out how to go win races and we haven't done that yet. "We've not been quite good enough and we're working on trying to clean up some of the detail work and study a little harder and be better from my end behind the wheel and make it to where we basically lock ourselves in on that side of it and don't have to have any of that thought in the back of our heads. "But I certainly don't want it to be what we're sitting here thinking of how can we get two points here, three points there and try and just feel like we can skate our way in. It doesn't work. Ultimately, you can't count on that when it comes down to the end." In last weekend's race at Nashville Superspeedway, 22-year-old Carson Hocevar and veteran Ricky Stenhouse Jr. collided on track -- ending the day for Stenhouse. But Hocevar was able to rally to a second-place finish - tying his career best showing in the NASCAR Cup Series. After the race, Stenhouse was understandably riled, but both drivers report that they have spoken, and all is good moving forward even if they don't necessarily agree on how last week played out. "Me and him both have the reputation, I guess, of being aggressive at times and everything, so at that one point, we both reminded each other that even with those reputations, we've raced each other very well together, right?'' the Michigan-native Hocevar said Saturday morning, before practice. "It clashes together. So, yeah, I mean we've had no issues before, as he had said, and I feel like we've had a decent relationship leading up to this." Stenhouse told SiriusXM NASCAR Radio this week that he was satisfied with the conversation between the two, "I thought it was productive and, based off his comments, I felt like it was received productive." Hocevar, who qualified 14th for the NASCAR Cup Series race and is also competing in Saturday's NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race, seemed at peace with where things sit and conceded he would rather be talking about his No. 77 Spire Motorsports team's improvement. He's already had a career best pair of runner-up efforts and also earned three top-10s - half of his full season total last year. Asked Saturday if he was satisfied to be known for his aggressive driving style - some reporters comparing him to his hero Dale Earnhardt - Hocevar insisted he's just being himself. "Everything about me is real... like I'm not trying to play a part, try to fit a role or trying to pretend to be anybody,'' he said. "But, you know, it's for everybody else to decide on what they get and perceive of me. I know who I am and, you know, ultimately, I want to be known as me and sometimes that leads to comparisons." Last week's Nashville race winner, Team Penske's Ryan Blaney was asked about the relief he felt finally earning that first trophy of the year -- and guaranteed Playoff position -- after being so close to wins multiple times this season. He insisted nothing would really "change" for his or his team's approach going forward. 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Coco Gauff French Open prize money revealed as win over Aryna Sabalenka lands US star her second Grand Slam
Coco Gauff French Open prize money revealed as win over Aryna Sabalenka lands US star her second Grand Slam

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Coco Gauff French Open prize money revealed as win over Aryna Sabalenka lands US star her second Grand Slam

Coco Gauff has landed the second Grand Slam title of her career after a thrilling victory over Aryna Sabalenka in Saturday's French Open final. The 21-year-old American sensation conquered Roland Garros for the very first time after coming from behind to defeat the top-ranked Sabalenka 6-7 (5), 6-2, 6-4. And as well as becoming French Open champion, Gauff has picked up some huge prize money in the process. The win on Saturday saw her claim a staggering $2.9million, while Sabalenka collected $1.4m as a consolation after her gut-wrenching defeat. Just three months on from her 21st birthday, Gauff has now raked in close to $30m over the course of her tennis career. Celebrity Net Worth estimated the US tennis star, who was listed by Forbes as the highest-paid female athlete in 2024, was worth $35m before Saturday's French Open final. That figure is only likely to have increased after she thickened her wallet and added another Grand Slam to her collection this weekend. The second-ranked Gauff made fewer mistakes in a contest that was full of tension and momentum swings to get the better of Sabalenka for the second time in a Grand Slam final. She also came from a set down to beat the Belarusian in the 2023 US Open final. She raised the winners' trophy aloft and then kissed it several times, before holding her hand over her heart when the US national anthem played. Gauff is the first American woman to win at Roland-Garros since Serena Williams in 2015. She then thanked her parents for doing everything 'from washing my clothes to keeping me grounded and giving me the belief that I can do it.' 'You guys probably believe in me more than myself,' Gauff said in her on-court speech. It was the first No. 1 vs. No. 2 final in Paris since 2013, when Williams defeated Maria Sharapova, and just the second in the last 30 years. After Sabalenka sent a backhand wide on her second match point, Gauff fell onto her back, covering her face with both hands as she started to sob, then got up and held her hand over her mouth. She continued to sob as she patted the clay with her left hand. Gauff greeted Sabalenka at the net with a warm hug and thanking the umpire, before screaming out with joy and relief. She then got to her knees and crouched forward, continuing to cry as she savored the win. The new champion later hugged film director Spike Lee and celebrated with her entourage in her box, three years after she lost in her first Grand Slam final at Roland-Garros. In her on-court speech, she also added that the defeat in 2022 at the age of 18 put her in a 'dark place' and then thanked the fans on Court-Philippe Chatrier, who were rooting mostly for her.

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