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Fever-Sun postgame brawl draws fines from WNBA

Fever-Sun postgame brawl draws fines from WNBA

Yahoo14 hours ago

The post Fever-Sun postgame brawl draws fines from WNBA appeared first on ClutchPoints.
Tuesday night's contest between the Indiana Fever and Connecticut Sun turned plenty of heads for how chippy it was throughout. Everything boiled over late in the fourth quarter after Sophie Cunningham defended Caitlin Clark in the closing seconds. The WNBA announced fines for several players involved.
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Reports indicate that Sun guard Marina Mabrey's flagrant one call was upgraded to a flagrant two, and she is being given a standard fine, according to Alexa Philippou of ESPN. Cunningham was also slapped with a fine for her hard foul on Jacy Sheldon, who got in a tiff with Clark several times throughout the game.
'Marina Mabrey's technical from last night's Fever-Sun game has been upgraded to a flagrant 2, the league told ESPN. A flagrant 2 comes from a standard fine. Additionally, Sophie Cunningham was fined separately for her hard foul with 46 seconds to play. No players will be suspended.'
Philippou also reports that neither head coach of either team were given a fine for openly criticizing referees after the game. The only individuals to receive fines from the WNBA are Marina Mabrey and Sophie Cunningham. The Fever's Stephanie White was quick to critique the refs shortly after the game.
'And to this point, neither coach has been fined for their postgame criticism over the officiating.'
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Mabrey was the player who shoved Caitlin Clark to the ground shortly after the Fever guard retaliated for getting hit in the face by Sheldon. Despite the chaos that ensued, Indiana got the last laugh after winning the contest in an 88-71 blowout.
Since the postgame brawl, Sophie Cunningham has become a fan favorite amongst social media users. It came to light that the 28-year-old guard has a black belt in Taekwondo, which she achieved at the age of six. Cunningham ended Tuesday night's game with five points of her own, along with seven rebounds and an assist.
We can expect the full Fever roster back in action on Thursday when they take on the Golden State Valkyries.
Related: Tennis legend Chris Evert, adult star come to Fever's Caitlin Clark's defense
Related: Sophie Cunningham, Marina Mabrey avoid suspensions after Fever-Sun clash

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This Date in Baseball - St. Louis' Tony La Russa becomes 3rd manager with 2,500 career victories
This Date in Baseball - St. Louis' Tony La Russa becomes 3rd manager with 2,500 career victories

Associated Press

time38 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

This Date in Baseball - St. Louis' Tony La Russa becomes 3rd manager with 2,500 career victories

June 21 1916 — Rube Foster of the Red Sox pitched a 2-0 no-hitter against the New York Yankees. Foster struck out three and walked three and pitched the first no-hitter at Fenway Park. 1938 — Pinky Higgins of the Boston Red Sox extended his consecutive hit string to 12, with eight hits in a doubleheader split with the Detroit Tigers. He went 4 for 4 in an 8-3 win in the opener and 4 for 4 in a 5-4 loss in the nightcap. The next day, Higgins struck out against Vern Kennedy in his first at-bat to end the streak. 1939 — The New York Yankees announced Lou Gehrig's retirement, based on the report that he has amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. The 36-year-old star remained as the team as captain. 1941 — Lefty Grove's 20-game consecutive win streak at Fenway Park ended with a 13-9 loss to the St. Louis Browns. The streak spanned from May 3, 1938, to May 12, 1941. 1950 — Joe DiMaggio gets his 2,000th hit, a 7th-inning single off the Indians'Marino Pieretti, as the Yanks win, 8 - 2. DiMaggio joins Luke Appling and Wally Moses as the only active players with 2,000 or more hits. 1956 — In a rare double one-hitter, Chicago's Jack Harshman outdueled Connie Johnson and George Zuverink of Baltimore as the White Sox beat the Orioles 1-0. 1964 — Jim Bunning of the Philadelphia Phillies pitched a 6-0 perfect game against the New York Mets in the opener of a Father's Day doubleheader. Bunning threw 89 pitches and struck out 10, including John Stephenson to end the game. The no-hitter gave Bunning one in each league and Gus Triandos became the first catcher to handle no-hitters in both leagues. 1970 — Detroit Tigers shortstop Cesar Gutierrez had seven hits in seven times at bat in a 9-8, 12-inning victory over the Cleveland Indians. Gutierrez had six singles and a double. 1989 — Carlton Fisk set an American League record for homers by a catcher and drove in three runs to lead the Chicago White Sox to a 7-3 victory over the New York Yankees. Fisk hit his 307th homer as a catcher to pass the Yankees' Yogi Berra. 2000 — Eric Chavez hit for the cycle in Oakland's 10-3 win over Baltimore. Chavez doubled in the second inning, singled in the fourth, tripled in the fifth and finished off the cycle with a homer in the seventh. 2005 — Jeff Larish matched a College World Series record with three homers, and J.J. Sferra drove in the game-winning run with a bloop single in the 11th inning as Arizona State rallied for an 8-7 victory and eliminated hometown favorite Nebraska. Larish's record-tying third homer tied it in the bottom of the ninth, and Sferra's single in the 11th punctuated the 4-hour, 7-minute game. 2006 — Jose Reyes hit for the cycle in the New York Mets' 6-5 loss to Cincinnati. 2009 — St. Louis' Tony La Russa joined Connie Mack (3,831) and John McGraw (2,763) as the only managers with 2,500 victories following a 12-5 win over Kansas City. 2011 — Minnesota tied a major league record by opening with eight consecutive hits against San Francisco's Madison Bumgarner, en route to a 9-2 win. Ben Revere had two hits and two RBIs to highlight an eight-run first inning. 2021 — Jacob deGrom pitches five scoreless innings to lead the Mets to a 4-2 win over the Braves. This extends his scoreless innings streak to 30 innings, lowering his ERA to 0.50. He becomes the first pitcher in history to go twelve straight starts of giving up to one or no earned runs topping the record set by Bob Gibson in 1968. _____

For Pacers and Thunder, there's no looking back. All eyes are only on Sunday's Game 7 of the NBA Finals.
For Pacers and Thunder, there's no looking back. All eyes are only on Sunday's Game 7 of the NBA Finals.

Chicago Tribune

time41 minutes ago

  • Chicago Tribune

For Pacers and Thunder, there's no looking back. All eyes are only on Sunday's Game 7 of the NBA Finals.

OKLAHOMA CITY — Game 6 of the NBA Finals had been over for only about 10 or 15 minutes, and the Indiana Pacers and Oklahoma City Thunder were turning the page. What happened over the previous couple of hours in Indianapolis had already been deemed irrelevant. The only thing on their minds: Game 7. 'A privilege,' Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. 'A great privilege,' Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. A back-and-forth title matchup — Indiana led 1-0 and 2-1, Oklahoma City led 3-2 — will end on Sunday night with an ultimate game, the first winner-take-all contest in the NBA Finals since 2016. It'll be Pacers at Thunder, one team getting the Larry O'Brien Trophy when it is over, the other left to head into the offseason wondering how they let the chance slip away. 'We have one game for everything, for everything we've worked for, and so do they,' Thunder guard and reigning NBA MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander said. 'The better team Sunday will win.' History favors the home team in these moments: 15 of the previous 19 Game 7s in the NBA Finals were won by the club playing on its own court. The Thunder played a Game 7 at home earlier in these playoffs and won by 32, blowing out Denver to reach the Western Conference finals. Indiana's most recent Game 7 was at Madison Square Garden in last season's Eastern Conference semifinals; the Pacers blew out New York by 21 in that game. All-time, home teams are 112-38 in Game 7s (excluding the 2-2 record 'home' teams had in the bubble in the 2020 playoffs, when everything was played in Lake Buena Vista, Florida). But in recent years, home sweet home has been replaced by road sweet road; visiting teams have won nine of the last 14 Game 7s played since 2021. 'It's exciting, man. It's so, so, exciting,' Pacers guard Tyrese Haliburton said. 'As a basketball fan, there's nothing like a Game 7. There's nothing like a Game 7 in the NBA Finals. Dreamed of being in this situation my whole life. So, to be here is really exciting. Really exciting for our group. What happened in the past doesn't matter. What happened today doesn't matter. It's all about one game and approaching that the right way.' The fact that Haliburton is playing at all right now is a story in itself. He looked good as new in Game 6 even with a strained right calf, something that he's needed around-the-clock treatment on this week. The Pacers haven't had to coax him into it; Haliburton's own family is offering up constant reminders that he needs to be working on his leg. 'My family has been on me,' Haliburton said. 'If they call me, they are like, 'Are you doing treatment right now?' … My family has been holding me accountable.' There's a lot of accountability going on among the Thunder right now as well. A different kind, of course. They were massive favorites going into Game 6 — +3000 odds to win the series, according to BetMGM Sportsbook. That means a $100 bet on the Thunder would have returned a whopping $103 or so if they had won the game and clinched the title. A 36-9 run by Indiana turned a one-point lead early in the second quarter into a full-fledged blowout early in the third. And with that, a Thunder team that finished with the best record in the NBA this season now has zero room for error. Win on Sunday, and all ends well for Oklahoma City. Lose on Sunday, and they'll go down in history as one of the best regular-season teams that failed to win a title. 'If they had won by one, they would have probably walked out of this game with confidence,' Thunder guard Jalen Williams said of the Pacers before leaving Indy's arena for the final time this season. 'That's what makes them a good team. That's what makes us a good team. … They're going to go into Game 7 confident, and so are we.' The Thunder flew home after the game on Thursday night. The Pacers were flying to Oklahoma City on Friday afternoon. They'll spend some time looking at film, then go through the final practices — which won't be much more than glorified walk-throughs — of the season on Saturday. And then, Game 7. For everything. 'I think we played to exhaustion,' Pacers guard T.J. McConnell said after Game 6. 'But we have to do it again on Sunday.'

Jurickson Profar, Addison Barger and more top fantasy baseball waiver wire adds
Jurickson Profar, Addison Barger and more top fantasy baseball waiver wire adds

New York Times

timean hour ago

  • New York Times

Jurickson Profar, Addison Barger and more top fantasy baseball waiver wire adds

Time for the weekly waiver report. Our most added names include a bunch of solid hitters on hot streaks. Here are your most added hitters on Yahoo: I'll actually start with the one name not included, because his 2025 stat line stops after the first four games: Jurickson Profar. He is eligible to return from his suspension on July 2, and if you want him on your team, you'll need to pick him up now. As for which version of him shows up, only time will tell. Last year was his best season by far, and it continued his long pattern of yo-yoing between good seasons and forgettable ones. The big difference in 2024 was his power, so if we see a ball hit over 110 MPH and (after a few weeks) a hard hit rate over 40%, that will hint at him maintaining last year's level. Advertisement We've mentioned many of these names recently, but other than Andy Pages, roster rates still hover in the 20-40% range. As for Pages, the breakout has officially arrived. Go get him if he's somehow still out there in your league. Addison Barger, Nick Kurtz, Gavin Sheets, Ryan McMahon, Alec Burleson, Colton Cowser and Wenceel Pérez all do the large majority of their damage against righties, and tend to sit against lefties. Of those seven, the first three feel the most solid. Barger and Kurtz have serious raw power and enough of a hit tool to back it up, while Sheets seems to be fully earning his batting line. McMahon has a similar Statcast profile to Sheets, but with more walks and strikeouts, and a huge difference in park. Sheets will give you a better average, McMahon does more for power. Burleson is useful enough in deep leagues, but the lack of power leaves me underwhelmed. Cowser has been swinging for the fences since returning from the IL. Baltimore is a nice place for lefty power hitters, and Cowser can do plenty of damage. The average will rise, but you can still pencil in something like the 30% strikeout rate he has last year, so he will hurt you in that category. There's nothing in Pérez's history to suggest he is suddenly one of the premier power hitters in MLB, but he's enjoyed three weeks of that existence. I listed him among the righty-crushers because the Tigers haven't used him much against lefties last year or this one, but he is actually a switch hitter who has raked against lefties the few times he's seen them. The funny thing is he's not actually riding some random BABIP or HR/FB luck. There is no way he maintains an 18.8% barrel rate, but he's worth rostering in most leagues just to see where this goes. While we're discussing inexplicably good Tigers, so much of Javier Báez's profile looks unchanged from last year. Swinging strike rate, K%, BB%, barrel rate, exit velocity, maxEV … all basically the same. And yet, last year he had an unplayable wRC+ of 43, and this year he's near-star level at 126. So what's changed? His BABIP, first of all, has gone from .220 to .340, bringing his average up 100 points with it. His HR/FB% has doubled to 16.7%. He's chasing a little less and making more contact in the zone. Like Pérez, he's pulling a lot, aiming for homers and doubles down the left field line. He will cool off, and he's capable of some ugly cold streaks, but he's made himself deep-league relevant and playable for now in 12-teamers. Advertisement Cam Smith shook off a rough first month, and now we're seeing what he can do with his top-notch tools. Get him now if you still can. Michael Toglia came back from the minors and hit three homers in two games. That puts him on pace for over 100 homers for the rest of the season, which is pretty good. In all seriousness, if he's tamed the strikeout issue to the point his power and speed can play, he can be a huge boost in the second half. Cam Smith (OF, HOU) — See above Evan Carter (OF, TEX) — Sure, there's some volatility here, but that comes with huge upside. He's still one of the fastest players in MLB, with enough power and contact to dream on a monster season. I mentioned Carter, Kyle Stowers (OF, MIA), Sal Frelick (OF, MIL), and Jo Adell (OF, LAA) last week. I'm still interested in all of them (in that order, with tweaks depending on your needs). Ryan O'Hearn (1B/OF, BAL) — Another righty-masher. He may cool off a bit, but what he's doing looks mostly sustainable. Nick Kurtz (1B, ATH), Ryan McMahon (3B, COL) — See above Rhys Hoskins (1B, MIL) — He has gone cold, but I still like him long term as a slugger who won't hurt you too much in batting average. J.P. Crawford (SS, SEA) — The power and speed are both unexceptional, but he's been hitting very well and should be good for counting stats from the leadoff spot. Jeff McNeil (2B, NYM) — There isn't enough raw power for me to buy his recent homer surge as a new level, but, like Crawford, he has plenty to offer despite not being a big contributor in homers or steals. He should have plenty of guys on base in front of him to make use of those contact skills. Alejandro Kirk (C, TOR) — He doesn't have the power of some other catchers, but he's a legitimately good hitter. Advertisement Agustín Ramirez (C/1B, MIA) — The average should rise, he has power, and he plays every day. Carlos Narváez (C, BOS) — Playing a little over his head, but the power is real. Jordan Beck (OF, COL) — Mentioned last week. I remain a fan. Jesus Sanchez (OF, MIA) — Another righty-masher with huge power. The park and the lineup drag him down, but in the right matchups, he's very dangerous. Matt Wallner (OF, MIN) — Again with a guy who crush righties. Wallner also has serious power, and the average should be more in the .240-range going forward. Not a ton to get excited about down here, but we'll see what we can do. The upside play is Brady House (3B, WAS), who we'll get to below. Nolan Schanuel (1B, LAA), Carlos Santana (1B, CLE), and Ty France (1B, MIN) all continue to provide boring but solid production and are at least deep-league fillers. Of those, I lean France for the power upside, but Schanuel is your guy if you want a high average and the occasional steal. Brooks Lee (3B/2B/SS, MIN) has similarly middling power and contact with good positional versatility. Colt Keith (1B/2B, DET) has the tools to be a great player, but he's been losing playing time as the Tigers get healthy. Hyeseong Kim (2B/SS/OF, LAD) — More playing time is on the horizon, and Kim looks like he'll contribute plenty of average, speed, and runs. Otto Lopez (2B/SS, MIA) — Plenty of speed, decent power, and x-stats that say his batting average should be at least last year's .270 instead of this year's .230. Max Muncy (2B/3B, LAD) — He has started to hit in the past couple of weeks. Still more of a deep-leaguer for me, but he can contribute across the board if he gets going. Dillon Dingler (C, DET) — Nice high average with decent power and a good lineup. Advertisement Victor Caratini (C, HOU) — Deep leagues only, but hey, he plays most days and isn't terrible! Christian Moore (2B, LAA) — I have my doubts the 22-year-old is ready to be a difference-maker right away, but if you need power, he's a decent speculative add. Where I'm less certain is if he'll make enough contact to take advantage of it. He carried a high swinging strike rate and strikeout rate through the minors, and due to the Angels' aggressive promotion, he has spent all of 79 games in the minors since being drafted eighth overall last year. Brady House (3B, WAS) — House has a similar power-and-strikeouts profile, but I trust him more because he's had more time in Triple A. He appears to have the job in Washington until further notice. Grant Taylor (RP, CHW) — Another aggressive promotion. He put up comical strikeout rates in Single and Double A. For fantasy purposes, he's a deep league saves dart throw and ratio helper, but in most leagues you can find a more established commodity for that purpose. Hayden Birdsong (SFG); Ryan Yarbrough (NYY); Brandon Walter (HOU); Ben Brown (CHC) Birdsong has looked good as a starter so far. He's figuring this out on the fly, but the arsenal is great and his home park helps contain the damage. Presumably, he'll stick in the rotation as long as he's performing after a certain trade you may have heard about. Yarbrough has tinkered with his pitch mix to favor the slower, bendier stuff, and it's been working. He's gotten the K% up to a workable 22% (which would be the best of his career over a full season), and SIERA and xERA, which factor in contact quality, say he has actually deserved better than his ERA. You're forgiven for not knowing about Walter, a Red Sox prospect who took a step back in 2023, missed all of 2024, and is now suddenly pitching like an ace for the Astros. It's too early to know what we're looking at here (or even if he keeps a rotation spot), but the stuff is legit, and he's worth picking up now. One more great start and the hype train will leave the station. Advertisement Brown has been giving up a lot of hard contact, which has undermined his strong strikeout and walk numbers. I'd tread carefully for now, but strength of contact rates for pitchers fluctuate a fair amount, and he's worth keeping an eye on. I'm trying to not repeat myself too much, but I'm still in on Chad Patrick, Cade Horton, Landen Roupp, and Jose Soriano, who looked great against the Yankees. Edward Cabrera (MIA); Michael Soroka (WAS); Bryce Elder (ATL); Lucas Giolito (BOS); Ben Casparius (LAD) Cabrera has looked good after a shaky first month, and he may have found a better version of his kitchen sink approach. He won't pick up a lot of wins — he doesn't always make it through five innings and the run support is subpar, but the ERA and K% are some of the best you'll find at this depth. Soroka is the sort of passable arm you may be looking for at this depth. He is throwing more in the zone this year, which has cut his walk rate, but may be contributing to a higher hard hit rate. Expect a mid-4s ERA and a 22% K-rate. While we're on boring-but-effective NL East pitchers, Elder is exactly that. The 20% K rate is fine in deeper leagues, and the sinker-heavy approach produces lots of grounders. SIERA and xFIP give him a sub-4 ERA. Giolito flashed better velocity in his dominant start against the Mariners (six shutout innings, 10 Ks). The optimistic take is he's shaking off the rust after missing last year and will start to see better results. We'll need to see him do that for another couple of outings before calling it a new level, but he's at least worth monitoring for now. Casparius' role is constantly in flux, but he's been a value whether he's starting, relieving, or bulk relieving (when he has a great shot at getting a win). He showed potential control issues in the minors, but so far he has kept the walk rate tidy and paired that with great stuff. Advertisement Shelby Miller has the job in Arizona, is pitching well, and is somehow there for the taking in a majority of leagues. Tommy Kahnle is likely to be the primary ninth-inning option in Detroit while Will Vest is out, and he will continue to get saves here and there when Vest returns. Calvin Faucher has righted the ship for now, and is the closer in Miami. (Photo of Jurickson Profar: Orlando Ramirez / Getty Images)

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