
Marcus Stroman to return to Yankees' rotation after missing 2 1/2 months with knee injury
Marcus Stroman will be activated by the New York Yankees to start on Sunday after missing 2 1/2 months with left knee inflammation. Stroman threw a side session Friday, and manager Aaron Boone made the announcement after the Yankees beat the Athletics 3–0 in a series opener. 'We wanted to see him today, make sure he's in a good spot, good with his pen and everything,' Boone said. 'So, just checking the boxes.'
Stroman has not pitched for the Yankees since allowing five runs in two-thirds of an inning against the San Francisco Giants on April 11, when he threw 46 pitches in a steady rain. He was placed on the 15-day injured list the next day with what Boone hoped at the time would be a short-term absence. On May 9, Stroman experienced discomfort in his knee after throwing a batting practice session in Tampa, Florida. He did not begin a minor league rehabilitation assignment until June 11.
In three rehab appearances with Double-A Somerset, Stroman was 0–1 with a 6.97 ERA. He made his final rehab start on Wednesday and allowed five runs, 10 hits, and two walks over 3 2/3 innings against the Detroit Tigers' Erie Seawolves of the Eastern League. The Yankees placed No. 5 starter Ryan Yarbrough on the injured list Sunday with a strained right oblique and started Allan Winans on Monday in Cincinnati.
Stroman turned 34 on May 1 and is in the second season of a two-year contract guaranteeing $37 million. The right-hander's deal includes a $16 million conditional player option for 2026 that could be exercised if he pitches in at least 140 innings this year. Last season, Stroman was 10–9 with a 4.31 ERA in 29 starts and one relief appearance over 154 2/3 innings, his most since 2021 with the Mets.
Stroman struggled in the second half and did not pitch in the postseason when the Yankees made their first World Series appearance since 2009.
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Al Arabiya
2 hours ago
- Al Arabiya
Candace Parker Set To Have First Of 2 Jersey Retirements This Weekend In Los Angeles
Candace Parker has been on the go since she announced her retirement from the WNBA in 2024. From broadcasting college and pro games to taking over as the president of Women's Basketball for Adidas, the future Hall of Famer has been busy. She's also had more time for what she calls her most important job – being a mom to her daughter Lailaa and sons Airr Larry and Hartt Summitt. 'I am doing more now than I have. I used to be able to use basketball as a crutch,' Parker said in an interview with The Associated Press. 'Now it's like you ain't going to rest up for nothing. I think this first year of retirement has kind of been my like 'What do I want to do more of in this first year?' My main priority is being there for my family. My daughter's going to be a junior next year and is going to start to get recruited for volleyball.' For all the latest headlines, follow our Google News channel online or via the app. Next up for Parker is the Los Angeles Sparks game on Sunday to have her jersey retired. She brought a championship to the franchise in 2016, and the Sparks will be playing Chicago, Parker's hometown team that she went to and helped win a title for in 2021. The Sky will retire her No. 3 jersey later this summer, making her only the second WNBA player to have her number retired by two different teams. Lindsay Whalen had her jersey retired by both Connecticut and Minnesota. 'It's surreal to be honest,' Parker said of the two jersey retirements. 'I would be lying if I didn't say that when I go into an organization I want to be one of the best. I want to be remembered as one of the best. And sometimes one of the best doesn't always get their jersey retired.' Parker, who also wrote a book, The Can-Do Mindset, that was just published, said when she was drafted by Los Angeles No. 1 in 2008, she wanted to win championships there. 'My main thing when I look up into the rafters is like I want to hang a banner I wanted to hang banners,' she said. She brought one title to Los Angeles. Coming to Chicago, she wanted to help her hometown win its first championship. It was something she accomplished in her brief time there. 'To be able to do that and walk around the city and know you have a championship I think is super special for me,' she said. Parker never wanted a retirement tour when she decided to end her playing career before the start of last season. 'I never got a chance to stop and like really live in the moment and be where my two feet were,' she said. 'Now I'm able to. And because of that I realized how much I missed out on by not stopping and like smelling roses. And so now I'm like smelling every flower, every rose, every letter.' One area that Parker is trying to get into but hasn't had success yet is WNBA ownership. She was part of the expansion bid put in by Nashville. 'I can't think of why the league wouldn't want a team in Nashville. I feel like it's kind of the birthplace of women's basketball,' Parker said. 'In terms of Pat Summitt and what she's meant to the rest of women's basketball why can't or why shouldn't we have a team in Tennessee. I think it would be a state team and wouldn't just be a team from Nashville.' If Nashville was to get an expansion team that would just add more to Parker's plate, which is quite full right now. She's busy trying to make women's basketball at Adidas into the next big thing. 'Where women's basketball is in general it was looked at as a negative balance and now it's actually looked at as a business. It is the future of where sports are. We at Adidas have to be on our horse and make sure we understand the power of the dollar sign behind women. Women sell the numbers. That's the thing that's changed with women's sports. It went from being looked at as a charity to now it's a runway.'


Arab News
3 hours ago
- Arab News
4Aces, inspired by Reed and Warner, top both leaderboards at LIV Golf Dallas
CARROLLTON: Teammates Patrick Reed and Harold Varner III fed off each other to lead the way during Friday's first round of LIV Golf Dallas presented by Aramco. For the latest updates, follow us @ArabNewsSport They will hope to do the same on Saturday. Reed and Varner each shot 5-under 67s at Maridoe Golf Club to emerge as co-leaders on the individual leaderboard, while also helping the 4Aces to a commanding advantage in the team competition. It was a dominating day for the 4Aces, with captain Dustin Johnson contributing a 2-under 70 that included chip-ins for a birdie and an eagle on his first two holes. It was the kind of performance reminiscent of the 4Aces' dominance during the inaugural 2022 LIV Golf season when they won four consecutive regular-season tournaments, then claimed the season-ending Team Championship. The 4Aces won twice in 2023 but nothing since, and their only individual win was Johnson's victory last year. Friday's fast start presents an opportunity to reinforce their status as one of the league's big dogs. At 9-under as a team, they are six shots ahead of Crushers GC, who have won the last two tournaments and have the hometown support with captain Bryson DeChambeau being a local resident. The Crushers were the only team on Friday in which all four players shot par or better. 'The biggest thing is to keep the throttle down,' said Reed, among the league's best players without a LIV Golf win. 'Even though we have a lead now, (we will) start tomorrow as if everyone is even par and try to go win the day as a team and build on the lead.' On a course that became more difficult throughout the day, Varner had the only bogey-free round through 17 holes. Although his tee shot on his last hole, the par-4 ninth, left him with an awkward lie, he managed to find the green — but then three-putted for the only blemish on his card. Even so, it was his best round, relative to par, this season. 'I've been hitting it unbelievably this whole year and I just happened to make a couple of putts today,' said Varner, who has six top-20 finishes this year. 'I don't think there's like a genie in a bottle or anything like that but I felt like I was going to play well.' Reed's round was highlighted by a chip-in eagle at the par-5 second, allowing him to keep up with Varner in a threesome that also included teammate from 4Aces Thomas Pieters, the team's leading points producer this season, who shot a 3-over 75. 'Harold is out there playing some solid golf, hitting some quality golf shots,' said Reed, who has five top-three finishes in his LIV Golf career. 'It's always nice when you're seeing that because you can feed off of it. Obviously it was a bonus chipping in there for eagle.' Varner did not even think the eagle was his teammate's best chip of the day. He cited Reed's third shot at the par-5 13th from an awkward lie out of the greenside rough 30 yards from the pin. Varner said: 'He chips it, somehow shimmies it through the rough, misses the bunker and it goes to four feet — and he misses the putt. But it was the best chip, best shot I saw. It will be the best shot in all of golf on this golf course this week, without a doubt.' The closest pursuer to the individual co-leaders is Legion XIII captain Jon Rahm, whose 4-under 68 included an eagle at the par-4 sixth. His strong iron play allowed him to overcome an off-day with his driver, as he hit just five fairways. Fireballs GC's Abraham Ancer is solo fourth. He had a share of the lead until a double bogey on his final hole left him shooting 69. His seven total birdies on Friday led the field. 'Definitely (it) hurts to finish the way I finished with a double bogey,' Ancer said. '(It) just felt like I just lost a little bit of concentration on that par 3. Other than that, I felt great.' Reed, Varner and Rahm will be in the final group off the first tee on Saturday. Rahm has been the league's most consistent player since joining LIV Golf prior to last season, but is looking to start turning his top 10s into wins. Meanwhile, Reed and Varner are hoping to turn this weekend into a 4Aces' party. Varner said: 'The team camaraderie in the locker room, I think we're having a lot of fun. Maybe too much fun.' TEAM SCORES LIV Golf's new scoring format this season now involves all four scores counting in every round in the team competition (click here for more on the new format). Here are the results and scores for each team after Friday's round one of LIV Golf Dallas presented by Aramco. 1. 4ACES GC -9 (Reed 67, Varner III 67, Johnson 70, Pieters 75) 2. CRUSHERS GC -3 (Lahiri 70, Casey 71, DeChambeau 72, Howell III 72) 3. LEGION XIII E (Rahm 68, McKibbin 71, Hatton 74, Surratt 75) 4. FIREBALLS GC +2 (Ancer 69, Puig 70, Garcia 75, Ballester 76) 5. STINGER GC +3 (Oosthuizen 71, Schwartzel 72, Burmester 74, Grace 74) T6. IRON HEADS GC +6 (Kozuma 72, Jang 74, Lee 74, Na 74) T6. MAJESTICKS GC +6 (Westwood 72, Poulter 73, Stenson 73, Horsfield 76) 8. HYFLYERS GC +9 (Tringale 72, Ogletree 73, Steele 75, Mickelson 77) T9. RANGEGOATS GC +10 (Campbell 73, Schniederjans 74, Watson 75, Uihlein 76) T9. CLEEKS GC +10 (Bland 70, Kaymer 73, Meronk 77, Rottluff 78) 11. SMASH GC +15 (McDowell 70, Kokrak 73, Gooch 79, Koepka/Carrera 81) 12. RIPPER GC +16 (Herbert 75, Leishman 75, Smith 75, Jones 79) 13. TORQUE GC +17 (Pereira 72, Muñoz 76, Niemann 78, Ortiz 79) Wild Cards: Kim 75, C. Lee 80


Asharq Al-Awsat
3 hours ago
- Asharq Al-Awsat
Coco Gauff is Just 21 but Already Thinking About What to Do after Tennis
To be clear, Coco Gauff didn't bring up the word 'star' during a recent interview with The Associated Press; the reporter did. So as Gauff began to answer a question about balancing her life as a professional athlete with her off-court interests, she caught herself repeating that term. 'I definitely didn't know how it would look like,' she began with a smile, 'before I got to be, I guess, a star — feels weird to call myself that — but I definitely did want to expand outside of tennis. Always. Since I was young.' She still is young, by just about any measure, and she is a really good tennis player — Gauff owns the Grand Slam titles and No. 2 ranking to prove it as she heads into Wimbledon, which begins Monday — but the 21-year-old American is also more than that, The Associated Press reported. Someone unafraid to express her opinions about societal issues. Someone who connects with fans via social media. Someone who is the highest-paid female athlete in any sport, topping $30 million last year, according to with less than a third of that from prize money and most via deals with companies such as UPS, New Balance, Rolex and Barilla. Someone who recently launched her own management firm. And someone who wants to succeed in the business world long after she no longer swings a racket on tour. 'It's definitely something that I want to start to step up for post-career. Kind of start building that process, which is why I wanted to do it early. Because I didn't want to feel like I was playing catch-up at the end of my career,' said Gauff, who will face Dayana Yastremska in the first round at the All England Club on Tuesday. 'On the business side of things, it doesn't come as natural as tennis feels. I'm still learning, and I have a lot to learn about," Gauff said. "I've debated different things and what paths I wanted to take when it came to just stimulating my brain outside of the court, because I always knew that once I finished high school that I needed to put my brain into something else.' In a campaign announced this week by UPS, which first partnered with Gauff in 2023 before she won that year's US Open, she connects with business coach Emma Grede — known for working with Kim Kardashian on Skims, and with Khloe Kardashian on Good American — to offer mentoring to three small-business owners. 'Coco plays a key role in helping us connect with those younger Gen-Z business owners — emerging or younger entrepreneurs,' Betsy Wilson, VP of digital marketing and brand activation at UPS, said in a phone interview. 'Obviously, she's very relevant in social media and in culture, and working with Coco helps us really connect with that younger group.' While Grede helped the entrepreneurs, Gauff also got the opportunity to pick up tips. 'It's really cool to learn from someone like her,' Gauff said. 'Whenever I feel like I'm ready to make that leap, I can definitely reach out to her for advice and things like that. ... This will help me right now and definitely in the long term.'