Sports
Brewers Misiorowski throws 103.7 mph pitch to set starter record
DENVER — Milwaukee Brewers ace Jacob Misiorowski threw a 103.7 mph pitch Saturday night against the Colorado Rockies, the fastest by a starter since began in 2008.
The 24-year-old right-hander’s record-setting pitch was low and outside to Kyle Karros in the third inning.
“It’s one of those things: It is what it is,” Misiorowski said. “I’m going to keep going, trying to get strikeouts, and if that’s what it takes to get strikeouts, then so be it.”
Misiorowski has thrown the 12 fastest pitches by a starter this season. His previous high was 103.4 mph against the St. Louis Cardinals on May 25.
He threw 52 pitches 100 mph or faster Saturday night, including a record 45 of at least 101 mph. He allowed just an unearned run while striking out eight in seven innings, lowering his ERA to 1.50 in a 7-1 victory over the Rockies at Coors Field.
“Miz has got great extension and great velocity, so that doesn’t surprise me,” Brewers manager Pat Murphy said about the 103.7 mph fastball. “But we’ve got to get off that — the harder the better, and all that. He’s got to throw the ball in the zone and throw his other pitches in the zone. As I say often, good hitters can time up anything.”
Misiorowski threw a record 57 pitches 100 mph or faster in the May 25 game, including 40 of 101 mph or faster.
Aroldis Chman holds the record for fastest pitch by any pitcher since 2008, throwing a 105.8 mph pitch as a member of the Cincinnati Reds in 2010.
Misiorowski moved his career strikeout total to 203 in 28 pearances, tying him with the Pirates‘ Paul Skenes and former Mets right-hander Noah Syndergaard as the seventh-fastest player in MLB history to reach 200 strikeouts.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Sports
World Cup 2026: England & Thomas Tuchel must get serious after New Zealand game
Tuchel has to take his own share of responsibility for this situation, having made some experimental selections leading up to these final preparations, including in the friendlies against Uruguay and Jan at Wembley in March.
Manchester City’s Phil Foden played up front against Jan. In the Uruguay game, Tuchel fielded Foden, Everton’s James Garner and Spurs striker Dominic Solanke. None of those made his World Cup squad.
Ivan Toney came on for the second half in Tampa after spending a year in the England wilderness, following a three-minute pearance in the friendly defeat against Senegal at the City Ground, Nottingham.
This, in effect, makes it even more important that Tuchel puts a line-up on the pitch against Costa Rica that is as close as possible to the one that will face Croatia. It will be an opportunity to find rhythm and momentum and build combinations before that tournament opener.
Tuchel did, at least, report no injuries from this first warm-up game, while he added: “The better the opponent gets, the better we will get.”
Kane’s goal came just before half-time, which heralded the mass changes, but Tuchel said: “I was hpier with the second half. I thought we had more hunger and more desire. We played better but did not score.
“We didn’t play according to our plan in the first half. It slowed the game down, but it was better in the second half.
“We will acclimatise to the humidity and the sun while we are here. Tomorrow will be recovery day, then we have two days to prepare for Costa Rica. Then a chunk of players will get more minutes. The Arsenal players are in now, which is good because it gives us energy and quality, and then we have another one and a half days off.
“Then we go to Kansas and prepare for Croatia.”
Sports
Kentucky Derby winner Golden Tempo wins Belmont Stakes
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. — Golden Tempo showed exactly why he is a great closer, and his stretch run at the Belmont Stakes on Saturday delivered more history for trainer Cherie DeVaux.
Ridden by jockey Jose Ortiz from 12 lengths off the lead, Golden Tempo surged from the back of the pack to win the 158th rendition of the race. The victory came five weeks after his last-to-first charge to win the Kentucky Derby.
“Golden Tempo is amazing. Jose is amazing,” DeVaux said. “I think he needed to do this to kind of show that he was meant to win the Derby and that he is a horse that belongs in that conversation of being one of the top 3-year-olds.”
Golden Tempo held off Commandment to win by a length and a quarter at 6-1 odds. Commandment was second, and favorite Renegade placed third.
“I followed them closely in the second turn,” Ortiz said. “They started to pick it up, so I did as well. I was just waiting for the right time to go all-in. When I asked him to go, my horse responded.”
DeVaux, after becoming the first woman to train a Kentucky Derby winner, is the second in four years to do so at the Belmont. Jena Antonucci won it with Arcangelo in 2023. DeVaux is the first woman to win multiple Triple Crown races.
“It’s overwhelming,” DeVaux said. “All the credit goes to Golden Tempo, who won the race, and Jose did a wonderful job of making it hpen. But I’m just so fortunate to be in this position. It’s history-making, and I’ve kind of shied away from it, but I’m really grateful that I am that person.”
DeVaux was born in Saratoga Springs and began her training career there, but she doesn’t call herself a Saratoga native. She spends most of her time in Kentucky now, and she said she grew up in southern Florida. But after all the support she has received from this town, she has started to embrace it.
“Everyone is kind of calling me the hometown girl,” DeVaux said. “So, that’s kind of fun. I’m going to miss our petizer [at] Saratoga, as we call it, the ‘Bellatoga.'”
Golden Tempo was the third choice in the race. There were concerns about whether he could pull off another big comeback win in a field that included Renegade, the Todd Pletcher-trained horse that finished second to Golden Tempo by a neck in the Derby.
The pace was not nearly as fast as it was at Churchill Downs, yet Golden Tempo still was able to close in time to win the 1¼-mile race in 2:03.49. It didn’t matter, as he was the best in the Belmont’s field of nine horses.
“He wasn’t going to get that setup as he did in the Derby,” Ortiz said. “We all knew that, and I was a little worried about it. He needed some kind of setup. But today, there wasn’t one, and he showed up today and won.”
Golden Tempo won two-thirds of the Triple Crown after DeVaux and owners decided to bypass the Preakness Stakes. He is the second horse in as many years to win the Kentucky Derby and the Belmont after not running in the middle jewel.
“We made our decision, and we won today, and we’re going to be hpy about that,” DeVaux said.
This was the third and final time for the Belmont at Saratoga in upstate New York, while its traditional home on the border of Queens and Long Island is getting demolished and rebuilt. Run at 1¼ miles because of the track at Saratoga, the race is set to return to Belmont Park next year, when it will go back to its traditional 1½-mile distance.
“It’s so meaningful,” DeVaux said. “A lot of family here. Saratoga, it’s been wonderful to have such a historic race here. … It’s so meaningful because the town gets to have this and celebrate it along with us.”
Golden Tempo paid $14 to win, $7.32 to place and $3.88 to show. Commandment paid $7.02 to show and $4.08 to place, while Renegade paid $2.52 to place.
Ortiz followed Renegade, ridden by older brother Irad, just as he did in the Derby. It worked out just the same in the first Saturday in June as the first Saturday in May.
“He was bouncing a bit today, which made me very hpy because I wanted him to be a little bit sharper today,” Jose Ortiz said of Golden Tempo. “You can see him; he’s very relaxed. He does what I ask him to do. That’s the main thing.”
Co-owner Vinnie Viola dedicated the race to his late friend Dominic DiPrisco, who died Wednesday at age 70. Viola prayed to DiPrisco Saturday morning, hoping for an extra push in the Belmont Stakes.
“I know you’re in heaven, and I love you, and this race is for you,” Viola said. “It means more than I can express in words right now.”
Ortiz won the Belmont Stakes for the second time, nine years after his first aboard Twrit in 2017.
“We just wanted him to get better and keep winning these kinds of races,” Ortiz said of Golden Tempo. “We’re very hpy with him. It’s all about him.”
Sports
Monaco Grand Prix: Kimi Antonelli pips Max Verstappen to pole with Lewis Hamilton third
Antonelli keeps raising the bar in the second season of his career and this was as impressive as it has got so far.
A Monaco pole is a statement performance for any driver and one of the biggest prizes in Formula 1. To deliver in this fashion, at the age of 19, underlined his potential as the most likely world champion this year at this early stage.
He and Verstpen were separated by just 0.001secs after their first runs in the final session and Antonelli said he had produced a “magic l” to beat the Dutchman.
Leclerc went out early for the final runs after missing his first l with a lock-up at Mirabeau, and he put himself at the top with his first effort.
Verstpen then beat that mark by 0.257secs to take top spot, only for Antonelli to displace him.
Leclerc was not finished – he had given himself time to have one final l as the last driver on track. But he went over the limit and slid wide on the entry to Tabac, crunching his right rear wheel against the wall and breaking his rear suspension.
Antonelli said: “I was able to put everything together. It was such a close qualifying session. The last l was good.”
Verstpen said he was surprised to be able to compete for pole position.
“If you would have told me yesterday I would be on the front row, I would have taken it,” he said. “So heading into qualifying and being up there was extremely positive. Very hpy with how qualifying went.”
Ferrari had been quickest on Friday, first and second in both sessions, but Hamilton said the car felt different as soon as qualifying started.
“We were looking so good in practice and then the car was drastically different in qualifying,” Hamilton said, “so we have to take a look at that. But I was giving it everything. What a privilege it is to be one of the 22 drivers who gets to do this. I loved every second of it.”
Sports
Monaco Grand Prix: Kimi Antonelli on pole for fourth time, Max Verstappen behind
Kimi Antonelli set the pace after putting in a blistering qualifying l on Saturday to take pole position for the Monaco Grand Prix.
The 19-year-old Italian is currently leading the drivers’ championship and crossed the line with a time of 1:12.051 on the soft tyres.
He snatched pole from Red Bull’s Max Verstpen by 0.043 seconds, while Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton finished in third.
Charles Leclerc qualified fourth after hitting the wall on his last flying l, and Verstpen’s teammate Isack Hadjar was fifth fastest.
Sports
Spain 4-0 England: World champions expose Lionesses flaws
With a year to go until the World Cup starts in Brazil, this was a concerning scoreline that gives Wiegman plenty to ponder.
Facing world champions Spain away is arguably the toughest test in football, but to lose so comfortably was not an easy watch.
Former England midfielder Fran Kirby said Wiegman’s players looked “deflated” at full-time and she “hurt just watching it”.
“They will learn from it, and they have to rise up to put in a good performance against Ukraine,” Kirby told BBC Radio 5 Live.
Just the top team from their group automatically qualifies for the World Cup and even if England beat Ukraine on Tuesday they will likely miss out, with this defeat by Spain the only blotch on their otherwise solid campaign.
So what damage did the 4-0 defeat have on England?
“Of course, it’s not a great scoreline. It’s hard, it’s dispointing, and I think there was a difference – a big difference – between ourselves and Spain,” added Wiegman.
“We review this, recover, stick together, play a good game and then move forward.
“We know if we qualify [automatically] that there’s a different preparation than if we don’t qualify. Let’s first see what hpens on Tuesday.”
England midfielder Keira Walsh, who ctained the side in the absence of injured centre-back Leah Williamson, conceded they “just weren’t good enough”.
“Spain played incredibly well but I think there are a lot of things we could have done better. It felt like they had bodies everywhere,” said Walsh.
“It was very difficult to get out of our own box. I don’t have solutions right now. Obviously we’ll look back but right now the emotions are very high.
“It was a dispointing game. We’ve still got a small chance to qualify automatically. It’s out of our hands. We can hope Iceland do us a favour.”
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