Author: Charles

  • Unsung heroes of Mariners Game 2 win: 3 middle relievers re-set staff for ALCS

    Unsung heroes of Mariners Game 2 win: 3 middle relievers re-set staff for ALCS


    Eduard Bazardo stood so tall inside the Mariners dugout, someone should have handed him a trident.

    But he doesn’t hit home runs. That’s the act that gets M’s their celebration stick with three points on the end to parade around with inside the dugout.

    Bazardo pitches. Monday in Game 2 of the American League Championship Series, he pitched like he never had — and like the Mariners never needed him to — before.

    When he stranded a Toronto runner at second base to end the fifth inning, his second of two scoreless frames that settled Seattle and this wild game, the 30-year-old right-hander’s teammates swarmed the middle reliever in the middle of the Mariners dugout.

    Manager Dan Wilson hugged Bazardo. All-Star center fielder Julio Rodriguez hugged him twice.

    Then the superstar showed Bazardo an elaborate hand-shake celebration. It ended with Rodriguez pantomiming a cowboy lasso rope toss then body turn. Bazardo and Rodriguez laughed. Bazardo had decisively corralled the Blue Jays. He sent the Mariners off from a 3-3 tie to a 10-3 victory and a 2-0 ALCS lead heading back to Seattle for the next three games.

    “Yeah, it’s very emotional. I’m very grateful for the opportunity that Dan gave us,” Bazardo said, in his first career postseason press conference on a podium in front of the brightest lights of his sport.

    “Obviously, the game (versus) Detroit (15 innings Friday) was a little long, longer than we needed to, but we’re in the postseason. We’re all here trying to do the most we can to win.

    “And the end goal is to get to the World Series.”

    Thanks to what he, Carlos Vargas and Emerson Hancock did after ineffective starter Logan Gilbert Monday, the Mariners are two wins away from their first World Series.

    In three innings of Game 2, Gilbert gave back all of the 3-0 lead Rodriguez had given him and the M’s with his three-run home run three batters into the game.

    Bazardo entered for the bottom of the fourth, with the game tied at 3. The Blue Jays had their fans inside packed Rogers Centre roaring on Canada’s Thanksgiving Day.

    It was the biggest spot yet for the former international free agent signed out his native Venezuela by Boston in 2014, who debuted in the majors for the Red Sox seven years after he signed. He pitched in 23 games for the Mariners last season, just nine in 2023.

    But this season he earned Wilson’s increasing trust by the month to pitch in more meaningful situations.

    Monday, Bazardo had the Blue Jays who had been ripping Gilbert with line drives all over Rogers Centre flailing.

    “That is the most important from us to the bullpen, try to keep attacking the hitters,” Bazardo said.

    Four of the seven Jays that faced Bazardo produced topped choppers that didn’t get past the pitcher’s mound.

    Bazardo and catcher Cal Raleigh fielded them all and threw to Josh Naylor at first base for outs.

    “Bazardo was huge,” Raleigh said. “I mean, that’s such a big two innings from him, going through the heart of the order.

    “So big.”

    Relief pitcher Eduard Bazardo (left) of the Seattle Mariners checks on teammate Cal Raleigh (right) after a play against the Toronto Blue Jays during the fourth inning in game two of the American League Championship Series at Rogers Centre on Oct. 13, 2025 in Toronto.

    Carlos Vargas, Emerson Hancock shine

    Vargas lost Game 1 of the division series when the Tigers got him in extra innings last week. Detroit also got two runs off him in one inning of Seattle’s Game 4 loss to the Tigers in the ALDS.

    Yet Vargas helped win Game 2 of this ALCS by matching Bazardo’s two scoreless innings Monday. He didn’t allow a hit, walked one and struck out one.

    “And Vargas, too,” Raleigh said. “He came in and really shut them down.

    “It was a big, big four innings from those guys. They did an awesome job.”

    When Hancock did the same thing with a scoreless eighth and ninth to finish off the win, he, Vargas and Bazardo did more than push Seattle’s lead in the series to 2-0.

    They — and Bryce Miller’s legendary start Sunday in Seattle’s Game 1 win here — re-set Seattle’s pitching staff for the rest of the ALCS.

    “When you’ve got a guy like ‘Vargy’ who’s able to come in and throw 98, 99 miles an hour, that’s a plus,” Wilson said. “He gave us two strong innings and turned it over to Emerson and another two strong innings.

    “Just an excellent job by the bullpen tonight. You can’t ask for more than that, and these guys really delivered and gave us some strong innings.”

    This was the first time since Sept. 24, the night they clinched their first AL West title since 2001 by running away from the woeful Colorado Rockies, that the Mariners won a game without high-leverage relievers Gabe Speier, Matt Brash and All-Star closer Andres Munoz pitching.

    “The off day (Tuesday) is huge,” Gilbert said, before the Mariners’ expected arrival home of around 1 a.m. Tuesday before rested George Kirby starts Game 3 Wednesday afternoon at T-Mobile Park. “Bryce really did that, and set the table with what he did (Sunday).

    “And then, yeah, getting ‘Mooney’ a break is a big deal. The offense kind of did that.

    “A lot of guys stepping up and re-setting the table, with the off day.”

    Starting pitcher Logan Gilbert of the Seattle Mariners pitches against the Toronto Blue Jays during the first inning in game two of the American League Championship Series at Rogers Centre on Oct. 13, 2025 in Toronto.

    “Can’t let up”

    Now the Mariners are two wins away from their first World Series.

    “You can’t let up,” Gilbert said. “Two wins here in Toronto, that’s huge. But we are a long ways away from the World Series.

    “I think we have to approach it that way. We love playing in Seattle, in front of our fans. Having a breather, I think, is going to be huge. But it’s not like we’re there yet.

    “We have two more, huge ones to get.”



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  • Falcons, Bijan Robinson handle, harass Josh Allen, Bills in 24-14 Monday night victory

    Falcons, Bijan Robinson handle, harass Josh Allen, Bills in 24-14 Monday night victory


    ATLANTA — Funny how fast perceptions can change in the NFL. Nine days ago, the Buffalo Bills were undefeated, a dead-bang lock for the No. 1 seed in the AFC and ready to charge through that still-open Super Bowl window. Two games ago, the Falcons were left for dead after losing 30-0 to the lowly-at-the-time Carolina Panthers.

    Now, after a 24-14 Atlanta victory, the Bills are looking surprisingly vulnerable, and the Falcons are looking surprisingly solid. These perceptions, too, might not hold, but for now, Atlanta looks like a team on the rise, and Buffalo like a team facing unexpected questions.

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    Coming into the game, the Bills were still looking to repair the damage from losing their pristine undefeated record last week at the hands of the Patriots. The Falcons, coming off a bye, needed to prove to the league, their fans and probably themselves that they weren’t just the same-old, same-old underachievers.

    And they would need to do it in front of a massive, and loud, contingent of Bills fans. Atlanta is always a destination for traveling fanbases from Pittsburgh to Dallas — the city is easy to reach by air, and the team is often, shall we say, accommodating to its visiting opponents.

    First half: A pair of Falcons highlights

    The Falcons, who haven’t reached the playoffs since the 2017 season, played one of their finest halves in years to start the game. Both teams scored on their opening drives, but only Atlanta could keep the momentum going with two more highlight-level touchdown drives. First, Bijan Robinson unleashed the longest run of his career, an 81-yard sprint along the sideline that put Atlanta up 14-7:

    Next, Drake London caught a Michael Penix Jr. pass just shy of the end zone, and reeeeeached out to break the plane:

    London came within a footstep of a second touchdown on the final play of the first half, stepping out of bounds while diving for the pylon. Even so, Atlanta took a 21-7 lead into the locker room at halftime, and the many Bills fans under the open roof of Mercedes-Benz Stadium were a whole lot more nervous than they thought they’d be.

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    Second half: Missed Buffalo opportunities

    Allen led Buffalo on another touchdown drive coming out of the locker room, but he was pressured all night, the Falcons establishing a harassing defense they’ve lacked for years. Buffalo went three-and-out four times, Allen again and again unable to break contain.

    The Atlanta Falcons defense harassed Josh Allen all night. (Logan Bowles/Getty Images)

    The Atlanta Falcons defense harassed Josh Allen all night. (Logan Bowles/Getty Images)

    (Logan Bowles via Getty Images)

    After Monday night, it’s clear that neither of these two teams is who we thought they were. The Bills remain a very good team, certainly one of the best in the league, but with some visible and exploitable flaws. Atlanta, meanwhile, has managed to find a new gear, as evidenced by their contained, controlled final drive that bled out all three of Buffalo’s timeouts, and soon afterward, a game-ending interception, the second of the night for Allen.

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    What’s next: Building on, learning from Monday night

    The Falcons now travel to face San Francisco before meeting two more AFC East opponents in Miami and New England. Buffalo, meanwhile, gets a week off before facing the Panthers, followed by yet another marquee matchup with the Chiefs to start November. Both teams learned a few lessons Monday night; it’ll be on each of them to turn that knowledge into victories in the coming weeks.



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  • Sal Frelick couldn’t believe his stunning double play against Dodgers

    Sal Frelick couldn’t believe his stunning double play against Dodgers


    This double play started by Sal Frelick is without a doubt the wildest moment of the 2025 MLB Playoffs. And even Frelick couldn’t believe what just happened after it went down!

    On Monday, the Milwaukee Brewers and Los Angeles Dodgers met for Game 1 of the NLCS, with the winner of the best-of-seven series headed to the World Series. In the top of the fourth inning, the Dodgers were threatening with the game’s first score as Los Angeles had the bases loaded with one out and Max Muncy at the plate. Muncy ended up putting the ball in play, but even he surely couldn’t have seen the outcome of this coming.

    With a 1-0 count, Muncy took pitcher Quinn Priester deep to center field for what could have very well been a grand slam. Frelick, however, was able to jump and get the ball in his glove before it popped out and hit the wall. The Brewers’ center fielder recovered the ball while in the air in an incredibly deft maneuver before throwing to shortstop Joey Ortiz for a play at home. Ortiz’s throw was on the money, as the ball beat Teoscar Hernández to the base for the force out.

    But the chaos didn’t end there! Frelick’s catch was not an out, as he caught the ball off a wall bounce, so the force out at home was the first out of the double play. The second came when catcher William Contreras walked the ball to third for the force out amidst the chaos on the Dodgers’ base paths.

    Wow! Here’s how it all went down.

    Talk about a bonkers series of events. It took awhile for people to realize that the double play was the force out at home then at third, but eventually after a replay both outs were confirmed and the inning was over.

    Perhaps the best part of the sequence was Frelick looking absolutely stunned in the outfield after all the chaos.

    What an absolute treat of a play.



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  • Nets waive Drew Timme, former first-round pick Dariq Whitehead in latest roster cuts

    Nets waive Drew Timme, former first-round pick Dariq Whitehead in latest roster cuts


    The Nets have parted ways with Drew Timme and Dariq Whitehead as they continue cutting down their roster ahead of the regular season. 

    Timme spent the majority of last season in the G League with the Long Island Nets, where he averaged a stellar 23.9 points and 10.3 rebounds per game. 

    Brooklyn decided to give him a shot on the active roster down the stretch, and he responded by producing 12.2 points and 7.2 rebounds over nine appearances.

    The 25-year-old was on a non-guaranteed deal. 

    Whitehead landed with the Nets out of Duke as the 22nd overall pick in the 2023 Draft. 

    The youngster showed plenty of promise when he was able to get out on the court, but he was sidelined by numerous different injuries throughout his time with the club. 

    He averaged 5.7 points and 1.5 rebounds in 20 games last season. 

    Whitehead was due a guaranteed $3.3 million in the third year of his rookie deal. 

    With both him and Timee out of the mix it looks like the Nets will roll with Nic Claxton, Day'Ron Sharpe, Noah Clowney, and rookie Danny Wolf as their big men. 



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  • Fred Warner to undergo season-ending surgery Tuesday

    Fred Warner to undergo season-ending surgery Tuesday


    An MRI confirmed the bad news: 49ers linebacker Fred Warner dislocated and fractured his right ankle.

    Warner will undergo season-ending surgery Tuesday, coach Kyle Shanahan said Monday.

    Shanahan said Warner should return in time for the team’s offseason program.

    “I think, usually, things like this are around three months,” Shanahan said, via David Bonilla of 49erswebzone.com, “but I haven’t asked all the questions you guys are asking me yet. But I assume he’ll be good for the offseason workouts and stuff like that.”

    Warner has missed only one game in his eight-year career, sitting out a game in 2021 with a hamstring injury. He played through a broken bone in his ankle last season.





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  • Max Verstappen still a major threat as papaya rules still in play

    Max Verstappen still a major threat as papaya rules still in play


    McLaren Racing CEO Zak Brown has confirmed that the team is not going to change its strategy in the drivers’ championship after securing the constructors’ title. 

    After third and fourth-place finishes at the Singapore Grand Prix, the Woking outfit took the victory in the constructors’ championship with six race weekends remaining in the season. This led some to question whether McLaren would alter its management style of drivers Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri, who are both fighting for their first drivers’ championship victory.

    McLaren has so far chosen not to back one driver for the title but has instead allowed them both to race freely under ‘papaya rules’, with the proviso that they keep on-track battles clean.

    Apart from the Canadian Grand Prix, where Norris crashed out during an intense battle with his team-mate, the drivers have managed to keep it relatively clean. But after a lunge from Norris to take third from Piastri in Singapore, tensions could well be rising.

    Following questions about whether the Brown-led team would now back one driver for the drivers’ title, Brown has confirmed that the team is not going to change its strategy despite the threat of four-time champion Max Verstappen.

    “While we’d like it to solely come down to our two guys, Max is still very much in the game. I think what has been key is that the team have remained so focused but also very humble,” Brown explained to McLaren.

    Zak Brown, McLaren CEO

    Zak Brown, McLaren CEO

    Photo by: Erik Junius

    “So, we’re just going to keep doing what we’re doing. Our strategy isn’t going to change because we’ve won the Constructors’, we’re going to approach the remaining race weekends in the same way we’ve approached every one before it.”

    He added: “That’s what we’re here to do: win races and win Championships. And we couldn’t be hungrier.”

    Heading into the final quarter of the season, Piastri leads the standings with 336 points, with a 22-point lead over Norris. Verstappen follows Norris in third with 273 points – 41 points behind the British driver and 63 points behind the championship leader.

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  • Northern Ireland 0-1 Germany: Michael O’Neill critical of ‘over fussy’ referee in Germany loss

    Northern Ireland 0-1 Germany: Michael O’Neill critical of ‘over fussy’ referee in Germany loss


    O’Neill, who was taking charge of NI for the 100th time as manager, praised his players for “giving everything” but was ultimately left to rue poor defending from a corner that allowed Woltemade to score, albeit fortuitously as the ball bounced off his shoulder and into the net.

    Dan Ballard had a goal disallowed in the first half, while Jamie Reid, Ethan Galbraith and Callum Marshal were among players who went close for an NI side that penned Germany back in the last quarter of the game.

    “First half, we lacked a little bit of belief with the ball, but we were in the game and weren’t conceding a lot of chances,” he added.

    “The goal was a freak goal; it comes off his shoulder. We should have defended it better.

    “Second half we were well in it. It’s a game we should have gone ahead in; we have the goal disallowed for offside and we shouldn’t be offside.

    “We had a chance or two at the end, Justin [Devenny] doesn’t settle himself to hit it, and Callum makes the goalkeeper make a save. Fatigue a bit at the end, but we couldn’t have asked for anymore and it’s just disappointing to lose the game.”

    The defeat leaves Northern Ireland third in Group A, three points behind Germany and Slovakia.

    They round off their campaign with an away game against Slovakia and a home match against Luxembourg next month.

    O’Neill acknowledged that their trip to Kosice is a must-not-lose game to keep them in contention for finishing second in the group and securing a play-off.

    “I haven’t really looked at it, but we will hope four points will be enough next month, but we have to go to Slovakia and make sure we are not beaten so we then have something to play for,” he said.



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  • Sweden set to miss the World Cup, it's almost official 😱

    Sweden set to miss the World Cup, it's almost official 😱


    Sweden set to miss the World Cup, it's almost official ��
    Sweden set to miss the World Cup, it's almost official 😱

    Thunderbolt!

    Just one point. With two matchdays remaining in the qualifiers for the 2026 World Cup, Alexander Isak and Viktor Gyökeres' Sweden has only one point and is at the bottom of its group!

    Defeated 1-0 at home on Monday night by Kosovo, the Swedes are six points behind their opponents of the night, who are in second place.

    To have any hope of at least reaching the playoffs, Sweden must win in Switzerland and against Slovenia in November… while also hoping that Kosovo loses both of its matches against the same opponents.

    A relatively unlikely scenario that makes Sweden's non-participation in the World Cup almost official.

    Led by Alexander Isak, Viktor Gyökeres, Lucas Bergvall, Anthony Elanga, Victor Lindelöf: Sweden was, along with Switzerland, the big favorite in this group B.

    Quite a shock for a team that fields a duo worth 220 million euros up front…


    Group B Standings:

    1) Switzerland – 10 points

    2) Kosovo – 7 points

    3) Slovenia – 3 points

    4) Sweden – 1 point

    This article was translated into English by Artificial Intelligence. You can read the original version in 🇫🇷 here.


    📸 JONATHAN NACKSTRAND – AFP or licensors



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  • UFC 323: Merab Dvalishvili gets his wish, Petr Yan rematch set for December as champ eyes historic 4-0 year

    UFC 323: Merab Dvalishvili gets his wish, Petr Yan rematch set for December as champ eyes historic 4-0 year


    Merab Dvalishvili will get his chance to make history with a fourth title defense in one calendar year.

    UFC CEO Dana White announced Monday that the reigning UFC bantamweight champion Dvalishvili (21-4) will be challenged by Petr Yan (19-5) at UFC 323 on Dec. 6 at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. The title tilt will be a rematch nearly two years removed from their first meeting.

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    Dvalishvili, 34, recently earned his third bantamweight title defense when he defeated Cory Sandhagen at UFC 320 two weekends ago. In the aftermath of the fight, “The Machine” made his intentions clear that he wanted to turn around quickly. Now, he’ll get his wish.

    The matchup offers both men a familiar test with higher stakes. Dvalishvili defeated Yan via a dominant unanimous decision in March 2023, overwhelming the former champion with his patented relentless pace and wrestling over five rounds. The victory is commonly remembered for Dvalishvili setting the takedown attempt record with 49 in a single fight.

    Since then, both fighters have taken different paths but remained among the division’s most notable names. Yan has rebounded from that difficult stretch with three straight wins, looking to regain the consistency that once made him champion.

    Dvalishvili vs. Yan 2 wasn’t the only title fight announced for UFC 323, as White revealed the co-main event will feature the flyweight champion Alexandre Pantoja. Standing in his way will be the young superstar striker, Joshua Van. Another bantamweight tilt was also announced, featuring the former champion Henry Cejudo against notable prospect Payton Talbott.

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    Check out the current UFC 323 lineup:

    • Bantamweight: (C) Merab Dvalishvili vs. Petr Yan

    • Flyweight: (C) Alexandre Pantoja vs. Joshua Van

    • Bantamweight: Henry Cejudo vs. Payton Talbott

    • Light heavyweight: Jan Blachowicz vs. Bogdan Guskov

    • Middleweight: Marvin Vettori vs. Brunno Ferreira

    • Flyweight: Brandon Moreno vs. Tatsuro Taira

    • Flyweight: Maycee Barber vs. Karine Silva

    • Middleweight: Mansur Abdul-Malik vs. Antonio Trócoli

    • Lightweight: Terrance McKinney vs. Chris Duncan



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  • Football clubs will have to prove financial health before being granted licence under IFR plans

    Football clubs will have to prove financial health before being granted licence under IFR plans


    “We are making substantial progress on bringing the Independent Football Regulator regime forward,” he added.

    “We will support clubs at every step to reinforce these higher standards.”

    In a statement, the IFR says it will place “significant emphasis on clubs’ liquidity positions and the sources of funding on which they rely.

    “The IFR will work with clubs to stress-test their finances, to improve decision-making and ensure long-term resilience.

    “Should clubs be unable to demonstrate sound financial planning, the IFR will have the ability to require clubs to take steps to better manage day-to-day spending, such as increasing cash reserves, controlling costs or reducing debt,” it warned.

    The licensing measures have been opened to consultation for the next seven weeks.

    Once introduced, they will require clubs to consult with their fans on matters such as business priorities, club heritage and ticket prices. Supporters’ views must be taken into account when decisions are made, though they will not have a veto.

    Clubs will also have to publicly report on how they are meeting a new code “to foster good governance, decision-making, and improve overall club management”.

    Last week Kogan told BBC Sport the watchdog would have the power to force unsuitable owners to sell a club “as a last resort”.

    “Many clubs are operating at a loss – it’s not just a few,” he said.



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