
Leagues Cup roundup: Lionel Messi injures hamstring as Inter Miami top Necaxa
Miami (1-0-1, 5 points) converted all of their penalties, with Luis Suarez clinching the extra point with a finish off the underside of the crossbar after a wild game that saw both teams finish with 10 men.
Herons goalkeeper Rocco Rios Novo made one save, thwarting Tomas Badaloni's attempt from the spot.
Earlier, Badaloni scored his third of the tournament in the 33rd minute for Necaxa (1-0-1, 4 points), who played 11-on-10 for 43 minutes after Inter Miami's Maximiliano Falcon was ejected for denying an obvious goal-scoring opportunity with a 17th-minute foul.
Cristian Calderon's second yellow card in the 60th minute evened numbers before Necaxa's Ricardo Montreal and Miami's Jordi Alba traded goals after the 80th minute.
Miami's Telasco Segovia opened the scoring a minute after Messi's departure.
The 38-year-old Messi limped off the field under his own power. Miami manager Javier Mascherano confirmed postgame that Messi felt hamstring soreness, and expressed optimism it was relatively minor.
Club America 3 (8), Minnesota United 3 (7)
All eight penalty takers converted to lift 10-man Club America to an important two points with an 8-7 penalty shootout victory after rallying from behind three times.
Sebastian Caceres' 90th-minute header pulled America (0-0-2, 3 points) level from behind for a third time in the match and fifth time in the tournament. Goalkeeper Luis Malagon then followed a sensational denial of Carlos Harvey in second-half stoppage time with a penalty save of Nicolas Romero on Minnesota's eighth PK to help seal the shootout win.
The Mexico City outfit previously tied it at 1-1 through Michael Boxall's own goal in the 27th minute and 2-2 on Jose Zuniga's 53rd-minute contribution.
Tani Oluwaseyi and Bongi Hlongwane each scored their second goals of the tournament for Minnesota (1-0-1, 4 points). Harvey then put the Loons up 3-2 in the 65th minute, three minutes after America's Igor Lichnovsky received his second yellow card.
Pumas UNAM 3, Atlanta United 2
Coco Carrasquilla completed a second-half brace for his second and third goals of the tournament and Pumas held on for victory despite the late ejection of their goalkeeper.
Alvaro Angulo scored the earlier goal for Pumas (1-0-1, 5 points). Then he played in goal for the final moments after Keylor Navas was sent off in the fifth minute of second-half stoppage time in a match played in Orlando, Fla.
Atlanta (0-2-0, 0 points) took a 2-1 lead into halftime through an own-goal from Navas and a late-first-half strike from Emmanuel Latte Lath. But the Five Stripes were eliminated from tournament contention after conceding multiple second-half goals for a second consecutive match.
Carrasquilla leveled at 2-2 in the 62nd minute with a powerful finish from the edge of the penalty area, then put Pumas in front in 89th when he put in the rebound of his own saved penalty.
Atletico San Luis 2 (4), Real Salt Lake 2 (1)
Andres Sanchez saved one penalty in regulation, then one more to help visiting Atletico San Luis to a hard-earned shootout win in Sandy, Utah.
Miguel Garcia and Joao Pedro scored in regulation for San Luis (0-1-1, 2 points) before all four PK takers converted in the tiebreaker (4-1).
Braian Angulo scored both goals for Real Salt Lake (0-0-2, 3 points), including an 88th-minute equalizer that snuck inside the far right post on what looked to be an intended cross.
But Diego Luna's failure to convert from the spot in regulation against Sanchez forced the shootout, where Brayan Vera missed the target and Sanchez saved Justen Glad.
Orlando City 3, Atlas 1
Martin Ojeda scored the decisive goal in the 57th minute to boost Orlando City's hopes of reaching the knockout phase and eliminate visiting Atlas from contention.
Ivan Angulo opened the scoring, and Marco Pasalic added very late insurance 12 minutes into second-half stoppage time seal the win for Orlando (1-0-1, 4 points). The Lions opened their tournament with a 1-1 draw against Pumas UNAM and lost the ensuing penalty shootout.
Matias Coccaro briefly leveled the contest in the 50th minute for Atlas (0-2-0, 0 points), which lost its opening match 2-1 to Inter Miami on a stoppage-time goal assisted by Messi.
Coccaro was later sent off in second-half stoppage time before Pasalic's tally for his role in a late skirmish that involved several players from both teams.
--Field Level Media
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New York Times
28 minutes ago
- New York Times
For one night, Jesús Sánchez is the face of the Astros' trade deadline
MIAMI — Caught within Carlos Correa mania and a franchise's reunion with one of its icons is Jesús Sánchez. The acquisition of the ex-Marlins outfielder came together within minutes of Correa agreeing to waive his no-trade clause, rendering the 27-year-old outfielder a footnote of the Houston Astros' frenzied trade deadline. Advertisement Before it began, Sánchez served as an archetype for what the Astros desired. He hits left-handed, ravages right-handed pitching and can play all three outfield positions, ideal for an imbalanced roster that's missing its starting center fielder and witnessing a regression from the rookie playing right. Sánchez fixes all of those flaws. If he and utility infielder Ramón Urías were the extent of Houston's offensive acquisitions, few would've fretted. Correa's availability changed the calculus and cemented him as the obvious face of Houston's deadline. At loanDepot Park, that title belongs to Sánchez. Hovering around .500 prevented Marlins president of baseball operations Peter Bendix from orchestrating a total selloff. Edward Cabrera and Kyle Stowers are still around. So is Sandy Alcantara, despite serious interest from a slew of teams, including the Astros. Sánchez is the lone exception. Fate brought him back to the ballpark four days after he departed. A sparse crowd of 10,827 showered him with a nice ovation before his first at-bat and during a video tribute between the first and second inning. Sánchez flashed the smile that's already become contagious inside the Astros' clubhouse. 'Such a great guy. Not a bad bone in his body,' shortstop Jeremy Peña said after Houston's 8-2 win. 'He's so happy. Always great energy. I admire that about him.' Houston surrendered two prospects and a major-league starter with six years of control for Sánchez's services, signaling how high he sat on the Astros' priority list. On the first day of Sánchez's tenure, manager Joe Espada promised to 'hit him in the middle of the lineup.' He has hit second or third in each of the four games since. 'He's asking a ton of questions,' Espada said. 'He wants to know how we've done it here for so many years. You want to be part of something special, a winning culture, and we've been able to do that for a long time.' On Monday, the roles reversed. Houston's advance scouting meeting began at 4 p.m. Sánchez stood before his new teammates and offered insights into the Marlins' tendencies. Among the topics: how best to attack Alcantara, a portrait of inconsistency in his first season back from Tommy John surgery, but still armed with some of the sport's nastiest stuff. Advertisement 'Seeing Alcantara made me really happy, very happy to see him,' Sánchez said through an interpreter. 'Very excited to see him. Facing him is a lot of fun.' Just a select few can make such a claim. Now, count Sánchez among them. His ringing double during the fourth inning catalyzed a five-run frame from a lineup that sorely needed it. Houston scored six runs and had nine hits against Alcantara. None were struck harder than the 112.2 mph missile Sánchez delivered against Alcantara's first-pitch curveball. If not for a diving play from center fielder Jakob Marsee in the fifth, Sánchez would've had his second multi-hit game in an Astros uniform. 'Honestly, it feels great to be here,' Sánchez said. 'With this group, it's really easy to feel at home. There's a lot of Hispanic players here and we understand each other real well. It just feels good to be here.' Such is the standard for so many that enter Houston's clubhouse. The culture inside of it is unquantifiable, but this season has supplied the closest thing to tangible proof of its existence. New faces have shuttled in and out amid a rash of injuries. All of them have, in some form, contributed to a club that is 13 games over .500. 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Trying to impress a new team can cause some overcompensation, though Espada sought to squash that upon Sánchez's arrival. When the two men first met, Espada encouraged him to 'play without pressure.' Too many stars are on this team for Sánchez to feel he must be something superhuman. 'With this team, the confidence that this team has is very key, super important,' Sánchez said. 'Confidence is everything you need with this team.'
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Alexander, Peña help Astros beat Marlins and snap Miami's five-game winning streak
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Schwarber, the All-Star Game MVP, launched his NL-best 40th of the season into the right-center seats off Yaramil Hiraldo for a grand slam that sent the crowd of 41,099 into a frenzy. Harrison Bader homered for the first time since he was acquired by the Phillies at the trade deadline, a tiebreaking three-run shot earlier in the sixth. The Phillies added closer Jhoan Duran and Bader in trades on consecutive days with Minnesota. With his 102.5 mph fastball and electric entrance, Duran was an instant fan favorite in Philly. Bader made his case with a homer off Corbin Martin. BREWERS 3, BRAVES 1 ATLANTA (AP) — Isaac Collins hit a three-run homer, Quinn Priester allowed just one more hit over seven innings after surrendering a first-pitch home run, and Milwaukee beat Atlanta. Priester (11-2) struck out four and walked two while throwing 90 pitches as the Brewers improved to a major league-best 68-44. Jurickson Profar hit Priester's first pitch of the game over the right-field wall to put the Braves ahead. It was Profar's fourth home run of the year. Collins, the NL rookie of the month, made it 3-1 in the fourth with his drive to right. Erick Fedde (3-12), who made his first home start with the Braves, pitched 5 1/3 innings while giving up three runs. Aaron Bummer came in as relief and posted the first strikeout of the game for Atlanta in the seventh inning. PIRATES 5, GIANTS 4 PITTSBURGH (AP) — Isiah Kiner-Falefa's fielder's choice scored Jack Suwinski with the winning run in the bottom of the ninth inning as Pittsburgh rallied to beat San Francisco. Kiner-Falefa hit a hard ground ball to first baseman Rafael Devers but Suwinski beat the throw home. Joey Bart's RBI single off Randy Rodriguez (3-3) earlier in the inning tied the score. It was the fifth walk-off RBI of Kiner-Falefa's career. Dauri Moreta (1-0) pitched a scoreless inning in his second appearance of the season for the win. GUARDIANS 7, METS 6, 10 INNING NEW YORK (AP) — Pete Alonso hit his 251st career homer Monday night to pull within one of Darryl Strawberry's New York Mets franchise record, but Cleveland earned a 10-inning win after squandering a five-run lead. Gabriel Arias' 440-foot, three-run homer to left-center ended a five-run sixth inning against Sean Manaea, who surrendered RBI singles to David Fry and Carlos Santana earlier in the inning. Alonso, starting at designated hitter for the 59th time in his career, hit a 388-foot blast to left-center in the bottom half against Slade Cecconi. The slugger has three homers in his last four games. Alonso had his fourth hit, an RBI single, in the eighth, before Mark Vientos delivered the game-tying sacrifice fly. Cade Smith (4-4) escaped a bases-loaded, one-out jam in the ninth. 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CBS News
2 hours ago
- CBS News
Astros beat Marlins 8-2, snap Miami's five-game winning streak
Jason Alexander pitched six scoreless innings, Jeremy Peña doubled twice and the Houston Astros used a five-run fourth to beat the Miami Marlins 8-2 on Monday night. Alexander picked up his second win of the season after holding Miami to three hits. He struck out six and walked one. The Astros built a 5-0 lead during a disastrous fourth by Marlins starter Sandy Alcantara (6-10), who was perfect his first time through the Houston order before giving up six hits in the inning. Peña led off the fourth with a double. Jesús Sánchez then drove in Peña with a double in his first game against his former team, which dealt him to Houston at the trade deadline. Yainer Diaz added a two-run double, Carlos Correa had an RBI single and Christian Walker drove in another run on a fielder's choice. Alcantara allowed nine hits and six runs. He struck out five over seven innings and threw 100 pitches. Peña made it 6-0 with an RBI double in the seventh. Astros reliever Bryan King allowed back-to-back pinch-hit home runs to Javier Sanoja and Derek Hill that made it 6-2 in the seventh. Sanoja connected on a 91 mph fastball and sent it 402 feet to left center. Hill drove a 1-2 sweeper to left. Pinch-hitter Mauricio Dubón restored Houston's five-run lead with an RBI double in the eighth, and Cam Smith added an RBI single. After loading the bases on consecutive two-out base hits and a walk, Alexander (2-1) got Otto Lopez to ground out to keep Miami scoreless in the sixth. The Marlins had a five-game winning streak snapped. Marlins RHP Cal Quantrill (4-8, 4.79) will start the middle game of the series. Houston has not yet announced Tuesday's starter.