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Deadspin | Kelvin Yeboah, Minnesota extend San Diego’s winless streak  Apr 11, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; San Diego FC midfielder Onni Valakari (8) shoots against the Minnesota United FC during the first half at Snapdragon Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Abe Arredondo-Imagn Images   Kelvin Yeboah scored his fourth goal of the season just before halftime and visiting Minnesota United held on for a 2-1 victory over 10-man San Diego FC on Saturday night.  Kyle Duncan also scored in the first half and Owen Gene had assists on both goals for the Loons (3-2-2, 11 points), who completed a second straight away win.  They were aided by a third red card received by a San Diego player in as many games, when defender Christopher McVey received his second booking in the opening minutes of the second half.  It was also McVey’s second ejection in as many appearances.  Luca Bombino, 19, scored his second career MLS goal and first of the season on a thunderous early volley for San Diego (3-2-2, 11 points), which is winless in its last five matches across all competitions.  Before that slide, the second-year club had won five out of its first six between MLS and CONCACAF Champions Cup play.  Duncan pulled Minnesota level in the 15th minute, eight minutes after going behind.  After a nice sequence of passes on the left attacking half, Gene picked out Tomas Chancalay on the left flank.   Chancalay lofted a left-footed cross to the back post, where Duncan met it with a firm header past Duran Ferree.  Next, Yeboah punished some reluctant San Diego defending to give the Loons the lead in the 40th minute.  This time it was Gene sending in an early cross from the right to the back post, where Anthony Markanich met it with a downward header.  Defenders reacted slowly, and Yeboah reached the loose ball to stab it across the line from close range.  It got worse for the hosts in the opening seconds of the second half when McVay fouled Minnesota’s Nicolas Romero.  For the second time, referee Victor Rivas produced a caution in McVey’s direction. His previous dismissal late in a 2-2 draw against Real Salt Lake on March 22 also resulted from multiple bookings.  The hosts still applied pressure for a leveler, coming closest when Anders Dreyer forced Drake Callendar into a leaping save late in second-half stoppage time.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Kelvin #Yeboah #Minnesota #extend #San #Diegos #winless #streak

Deadspin | Kelvin Yeboah, Minnesota extend San Diego’s winless streak
Deadspin | Kelvin Yeboah, Minnesota extend San Diego’s winless streak  Apr 11, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; San Diego FC midfielder Onni Valakari (8) shoots against the Minnesota United FC during the first half at Snapdragon Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Abe Arredondo-Imagn Images   Kelvin Yeboah scored his fourth goal of the season just before halftime and visiting Minnesota United held on for a 2-1 victory over 10-man San Diego FC on Saturday night.  Kyle Duncan also scored in the first half and Owen Gene had assists on both goals for the Loons (3-2-2, 11 points), who completed a second straight away win.  They were aided by a third red card received by a San Diego player in as many games, when defender Christopher McVey received his second booking in the opening minutes of the second half.  It was also McVey’s second ejection in as many appearances.  Luca Bombino, 19, scored his second career MLS goal and first of the season on a thunderous early volley for San Diego (3-2-2, 11 points), which is winless in its last five matches across all competitions.  Before that slide, the second-year club had won five out of its first six between MLS and CONCACAF Champions Cup play.  Duncan pulled Minnesota level in the 15th minute, eight minutes after going behind.  After a nice sequence of passes on the left attacking half, Gene picked out Tomas Chancalay on the left flank.   Chancalay lofted a left-footed cross to the back post, where Duncan met it with a firm header past Duran Ferree.  Next, Yeboah punished some reluctant San Diego defending to give the Loons the lead in the 40th minute.  This time it was Gene sending in an early cross from the right to the back post, where Anthony Markanich met it with a downward header.  Defenders reacted slowly, and Yeboah reached the loose ball to stab it across the line from close range.  It got worse for the hosts in the opening seconds of the second half when McVay fouled Minnesota’s Nicolas Romero.  For the second time, referee Victor Rivas produced a caution in McVey’s direction. His previous dismissal late in a 2-2 draw against Real Salt Lake on March 22 also resulted from multiple bookings.  The hosts still applied pressure for a leveler, coming closest when Anders Dreyer forced Drake Callendar into a leaping save late in second-half stoppage time.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Kelvin #Yeboah #Minnesota #extend #San #Diegos #winless #streakApr 11, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; San Diego FC midfielder Onni Valakari (8) shoots against the Minnesota United FC during the first half at Snapdragon Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Abe Arredondo-Imagn Images

Kelvin Yeboah scored his fourth goal of the season just before halftime and visiting Minnesota United held on for a 2-1 victory over 10-man San Diego FC on Saturday night.

Kyle Duncan also scored in the first half and Owen Gene had assists on both goals for the Loons (3-2-2, 11 points), who completed a second straight away win.

They were aided by a third red card received by a San Diego player in as many games, when defender Christopher McVey received his second booking in the opening minutes of the second half.

It was also McVey’s second ejection in as many appearances.

Luca Bombino, 19, scored his second career MLS goal and first of the season on a thunderous early volley for San Diego (3-2-2, 11 points), which is winless in its last five matches across all competitions.

Before that slide, the second-year club had won five out of its first six between MLS and CONCACAF Champions Cup play.

Duncan pulled Minnesota level in the 15th minute, eight minutes after going behind.


After a nice sequence of passes on the left attacking half, Gene picked out Tomas Chancalay on the left flank.

Chancalay lofted a left-footed cross to the back post, where Duncan met it with a firm header past Duran Ferree.

Next, Yeboah punished some reluctant San Diego defending to give the Loons the lead in the 40th minute.

This time it was Gene sending in an early cross from the right to the back post, where Anthony Markanich met it with a downward header.

Defenders reacted slowly, and Yeboah reached the loose ball to stab it across the line from close range.

It got worse for the hosts in the opening seconds of the second half when McVay fouled Minnesota’s Nicolas Romero.

For the second time, referee Victor Rivas produced a caution in McVey’s direction. His previous dismissal late in a 2-2 draw against Real Salt Lake on March 22 also resulted from multiple bookings.

The hosts still applied pressure for a leveler, coming closest when Anders Dreyer forced Drake Callendar into a leaping save late in second-half stoppage time.


–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Kelvin #Yeboah #Minnesota #extend #San #Diegos #winless #streak

Apr 11, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; San Diego FC midfielder Onni Valakari (8) shoots against the Minnesota United FC during the first half at Snapdragon Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Abe Arredondo-Imagn Images

Kelvin Yeboah scored his fourth goal of the season just before halftime and visiting Minnesota United held on for a 2-1 victory over 10-man San Diego FC on Saturday night.

Kyle Duncan also scored in the first half and Owen Gene had assists on both goals for the Loons (3-2-2, 11 points), who completed a second straight away win.

They were aided by a third red card received by a San Diego player in as many games, when defender Christopher McVey received his second booking in the opening minutes of the second half.

It was also McVey’s second ejection in as many appearances.

Luca Bombino, 19, scored his second career MLS goal and first of the season on a thunderous early volley for San Diego (3-2-2, 11 points), which is winless in its last five matches across all competitions.

Before that slide, the second-year club had won five out of its first six between MLS and CONCACAF Champions Cup play.

Duncan pulled Minnesota level in the 15th minute, eight minutes after going behind.

After a nice sequence of passes on the left attacking half, Gene picked out Tomas Chancalay on the left flank.

Chancalay lofted a left-footed cross to the back post, where Duncan met it with a firm header past Duran Ferree.

Next, Yeboah punished some reluctant San Diego defending to give the Loons the lead in the 40th minute.

This time it was Gene sending in an early cross from the right to the back post, where Anthony Markanich met it with a downward header.

Defenders reacted slowly, and Yeboah reached the loose ball to stab it across the line from close range.

It got worse for the hosts in the opening seconds of the second half when McVay fouled Minnesota’s Nicolas Romero.

For the second time, referee Victor Rivas produced a caution in McVey’s direction. His previous dismissal late in a 2-2 draw against Real Salt Lake on March 22 also resulted from multiple bookings.

The hosts still applied pressure for a leveler, coming closest when Anders Dreyer forced Drake Callendar into a leaping save late in second-half stoppage time.

–Field Level Media

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#Deadspin #Kelvin #Yeboah #Minnesota #extend #San #Diegos #winless #streak

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Teenage sprint star Gout Gout powers to 200m win in blistering 19.67s at Australian Athletics Championships <div id="content-body-70853385" itemprop="articleBody"><p>Teenage sprint sensation Gout Gout ran a blistering 19.67 seconds to win the 200m at the Australian championships on Sunday, reinforcing his status as a rapidly rising star.</p><p>Fellow Australian Aidan Murphy also cracked the 20-second mark, coming second in 19.88—the two quickest times of the year and with a legal tailwind.</p><p>“This is what I’ve been waiting for,” said Gout at the Sydney Olympic Park Athletic Centre.</p><p>“We have such incredible athletes in Australia and me being able to race these athletes, we push each other to the limits. Two Australians sub-20. I mean, this is amazing.”</p><p>The 18-year-old burst on the scene in 2024 when he clocked 20.04 seconds at the Australian All Schools Athletics Championships.</p><p>It shattered Peter Norman’s national record of 20.06 from the 1968 Olympics and was the quickest ever by a 16-year-old, earning him comparisons to Usain Bolt.</p><p>He had improved to 20.02 but never gone under 20 seconds legally before.</p><p>The race was billed as a showdown with his closest Australian rival Lachlan Kennedy.</p><p>But 22-year-old Kennedy, who is also on a rapid rise, withdrew after executing flawlessly to win the 100m in 9.96 on Saturday—the fastest time run by an Australian on home soil.</p><p>He also clocked 9.96 in his heat.</p><p>“It’s the standard I’ve set now, so hopefully I can go a bit quicker next time and see where it takes me,” Kennedy said. “I think the sky is the limit.”</p><p>World under-20 mile record holder Cameron Myers reinforced his potential by running 3:29.85 in the 1500m, edging out reigning Commonwealth Games champion Oliver Hoare.</p><p>It was the best time globally this year and the quickest ever in Australia.</p><p>The 19-year-old Myers backed up by taking out the 5000m in a personal best 13:11.66.</p><p>But Paris Olympic 1500m silver medallist Jessica Hull’s bid for a rare 800m-1500m-5000m treble fell apart.</p><p>Hull was leading the 1500m with 100m to go, but was clipped from behind and dramatically fell with fellow Olympian Claudia Hollingsworth crossing first.</p><p>Hollingsworth was initially disqualified over the incident, but reinstated on appeal.</p><p>Hull pulled out of the 800m, won by Abbey Caldwell in 1:58.57, but returned to win the 5000m in 15:13.21.</p><p>The four-day meet also saw Olympic pole vault champion Nina Kennedy clear 4.65m to stand on top of the national podium for the fifth time in her career.</p><p>Kennedy continues to jump off a restricted run-up as she returns from a long injury layoff ahead of defending her title at the Glasgow Commonwealth Games in July.</p><p>“I’m happy with how I jumped. I got the win pretty comfortably out there, so there is no need to push the body,” she said.</p><p>High jump world champion and Olympic silver medallist Nicola Olyslagers cleared 1.99m to outleap Olympic bronze medallist Eleanor Patterson (1.93m).</p><p class="publish-time" id="end-of-article">Published on Apr 12, 2026</p></div> #Teenage #sprint #star #Gout #Gout #powers #200m #win #blistering #19.67s #Australian #Athletics #Championships

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IPL 2026: Nitish Rana fined for arguing with umpire; Ruturaj Gaikwad penalised for slow over-rate <div id="content-body-70853421" itemprop="articleBody"><p>Delhi Capitals batter Nitish Rana has been fined 25 per cent of his match fee for an intense altercation with the fourth umpire during their Indian Premier League (IPL) match against Chennai Super Kings in Chennai.</p><p>The incident occurred in the 19th over when the umpire denied Tristan Stubbs’ request to change his wet gloves, leading to a heated dispute. Stubbs asked to change his gloves due to heavy perspiration in Chennai’s humidity on Saturday.</p><p>After his dismissal, a frustrated Rana confronted the fourth umpire, for which he was also handed a demerit point.</p><p>“Nitish Rana, batter, Delhi Capitals, has been fined 25% of his match fee and has also accumulated 1 demerit point for breaching Level 1 of the IPL’s Code of Conduct for Players,” IPL said in a statement.</p><p>“Rana was found to have breached article 2.3 of the IPL’s Code of Conduct, which relates to ‘use of an audible obscenity during a match’,” the statement added.</p><p>Rana admitted to the offence and accepted the Match Referee’s sanction.</p><h4 class="sub_head">Gaikwad fined Rs. 12 lakh for slow over-rate</h4><p>Chennai Super Kings captain Ruturaj Gaikwad was fined Rs. 12 lakh after his side maintained a slow over-rate against Delhi Capitals.</p><p>CSK opened its account in this IPL with a 23-run win over Delhi Capitals at the MA Chidambaram Stadium on Saturday.</p><p>“As this was his team’s first offence of the season under Article 2.22 of the IPL’s Code of Conduct, which pertains to minimum over-rate offences, Gaikwad was fined INR 12 lakhs,” said the IPL media advisory.</p><p>CSK will face Kolkata Knight Riders next on Tuesday.</p><p class="publish-time" id="end-of-article">Published on Apr 12, 2026</p></div> #IPL #Nitish #Rana #fined #arguing #umpire #Ruturaj #Gaikwad #penalised #slow #overrate

Deadspin | Layne Riggs wins wild NASCAR Truck debut race at Naval Base Coronado  NASCAR Truck Series driver Layne Riggs (34) races during the Allegiance 200 at Nashville Superspeedway in Lebanon, Tenn., Friday, May 29, 2026.   CORONADO, Calif.– Short on fuel and long on perseverance and good fortune, Layne Riggs won Friday’s inaugural Navy 250 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Naval Base Coronado on the Qualcomm Circuit.  It wasn’t until the final two corners of overtime that Riggs was able to claim his fourth victory of the season and the ninth of his career. The driver of the No. 34 Front Row Racing Ford was running second behind Tyler Reif entering the chicane that precedes the final corner at the 3.4-mile, 16-turn street circuit.  Under pressure from Riggs, Reif blew the chicane, steered to the inside of the tire barriers defining the racing line and came to a stop after exiting. Riggs grabbed the lead and reached the finish line 1.332 seconds ahead of runner-up Daniel Hemric, who ran the final circuit with a tire losing air.  “Layne van Risberger came to play today, man,” Riggs chortled after climbing from his car — a facetious reference to road course superstar Shane van Gisbergen in the NASCAR Cup Series. “We’re undefeated in street course races — much respect, Shane. I hope I can be as good as you one day, man. I’m going to take all my glory here in the truck series.  “I don’t even know what happened at the end — sparks flying, people wrecking, staying in the throttle. I was running out of fuel the entire last lap. It was like St. Pete all over again (an earlier Riggs victory this season in an inaugural street race).”  Entering the chicane on the final lap, Riggs was trying to force Reif into a mistake — and succeeded.  “I faked left to scare him, and he missed the corner,” Riggs said. “I really wasn’t going to dive it in there, and it worked for me … An amazing, historic win.”  Reif was trying to win in only his seventh start in the series. He finished 19th after being assessed a 30-second penalty for short-cutting the course on the final lap.  “I hear (Riggs was) one (car-length) back from me, and I didn’t want to give him a chance to get to me,” Reif said. “It was my mistake. It’s very unfortunate that I did that. I don’t know how many more chances I’ll have like this, but I’m sure there’ll be more, and I’m going to make sure not to make that mistake again.”  The final two laps featured a surfeit of twists and turns. Superior strategy put Chandler Smith at the front of the field for the overtime restart on Lap 52, with fresher tires and more fuel than Riggs, his teammate.  Smith led the field to green with Kaden Honeycutt beside him, but Honeycutt brushed the wall on the downhill run toward Turn 2, and Smith crashed trying to avoid him. As cars bounced off each other behind them, Henric took the lead briefly, only to be challenged and passed by Reif, who blocked Hemric’s Chevrolet into the wall approaching the chicane on the white-flag lap.  Reif held the lead from that point on until his mistake in the tight, freshly-paved chicane. In the overtime melee, Kaz Grala finished third, followed by Landen Lewis (a career best) and Ty Majeski.  Smith and Honeycutt ran 22nd and 23rd, respectively. Seven-time NASCAR Cup champion Jimmie Johnson led two laps but finished 30th after spinning twice and losing power in the final stage. Johnson was making his second start in the series, 18 years removed from his first.  The race featured 16 lead changes among six drivers, with Riggs leading a race-high 21 circuits and Smith 13. There were seven cautions for 13 laps.  Riggs, who won the first stage, increased his series lead to 65 points over Honeycutt, with Smith trailing by 128 points in third place with five events left in the Truck Series regular season. Parker Kligerman won Stage 2 before finishing 18th.  NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series Race — Navy 250  San Diego Street Course  San Diego, California  Friday, June 19, 2026  1. (2) Layne Riggs, Ford, 53.  2. (32) Daniel Hemric, Chevrolet, 53.  3. (16) Kaz Grala, Toyota, 53.  4. (9) Landen Lewis, Chevrolet, 53.  5. (8) Ty Majeski, Ford, 53.  6. (17) Justin Haley, RAM, 53.  7. (34) Brenden Queen #, RAM, 53.  8. (13) Ben Rhodes, Ford, 53.  9. (30) Christian Eckes, Chevrolet, 53.  10. (6) Giovanni Ruggiero, Toyota, 53.  11. (23) Mini Tyrrell #, RAM, 53.  12. (35) Tanner Gray, Toyota, 53.  13. (24) Kris Wright, Chevrolet, 53.   14. (33) Adam Andretti, Toyota, 53.  15. (25) Cole Butcher #, Ford, 53.  16. (28) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 53.  17. (29) Austin Varco, Ford, 53.  18. (10) Parker Kligerman, Chevrolet, 53.  19. (14) Tyler Reif, Chevrolet, 53.  20. (27) Frankie Muniz, Ford, 53.  21. (7) Andres Perez De Lara, Chevrolet, 53.  22. (3) Chandler Smith, Ford, 53.  23. (1) Kaden Honeycutt, Toyota, Accident, 52.  24. (11) Connor Mosack, Chevrolet, 52.  25. (31) Justin Marks, Chevrolet, 51.  26. (18) Dawson Sutton, Chevrolet, 51.  27. (26) Jackson Lee, Ford, 50.  28. (20) Nathan Nicholson, Chevrolet, Accident, 48.  29. (5) Grant Enfinger, Chevrolet, 48.  30. (4) Jimmie Johnson(i), Toyota, Electrical, 47.  31. (12) Tyler Ankrum, Chevrolet, Accident, 46.  32. (19) Jake Garcia, Ford, Transmission, 40.  33. (22) Stewart Friesen, Toyota, Power Steering, 29.  34. (21) Jamie McMurray, RAM, Accident, 22.  35. (15) Corey LaJoie, RAM, Accident, 14.  Average Speed of Race Winner: 64.274 mph.  Time of Race: 2 Hrs, 48 Mins, 13 Secs. Margin of Victory: 1.332 Seconds.  Caution Flags: 7 for 13 laps.  Lead Changes: 16 among 6 drivers.  Lap Leaders: K. Honeycutt 1-2;L. Riggs 3-5;K. Honeycutt 6;L. Riggs 7-12;K. Honeycutt 13-16;J. Johnson(i) 17-18;C. Smith 19;P. Kligerman 20;L. Riggs 21;P. Kligerman 22-26;C. Smith 27;K. Honeycutt 28-30;C. Smith 31-33;L. Riggs 34-43;C. Smith 44-51;T. Reif 52;L. Riggs 53.  Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led): Layne Riggs 5 times for 21 laps; Chandler Smith 4 times for 13 laps; Kaden Honeycutt 4 times for 10 laps; Parker Kligerman 2 times for 6 laps; Jimmie Johnson(i) 1 time for 2 laps; Tyler Reif 1 time for 1 lap.  Stage #1 Top Ten: 34,11,1,38,9,18,99,44,45,42  Stage #2 Top Ten: 75,88,9,18,44,42,38,11,1,91  –By Spencer Reid, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Layne #Riggs #wins #wild #NASCAR #Truck #debut #race #Naval #Base #CoronadoNASCAR Truck Series driver Layne Riggs (34) races during the Allegiance 200 at Nashville Superspeedway in Lebanon, Tenn., Friday, May 29, 2026.

CORONADO, Calif.– Short on fuel and long on perseverance and good fortune, Layne Riggs won Friday’s inaugural Navy 250 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Naval Base Coronado on the Qualcomm Circuit.

It wasn’t until the final two corners of overtime that Riggs was able to claim his fourth victory of the season and the ninth of his career. The driver of the No. 34 Front Row Racing Ford was running second behind Tyler Reif entering the chicane that precedes the final corner at the 3.4-mile, 16-turn street circuit.

Under pressure from Riggs, Reif blew the chicane, steered to the inside of the tire barriers defining the racing line and came to a stop after exiting. Riggs grabbed the lead and reached the finish line 1.332 seconds ahead of runner-up Daniel Hemric, who ran the final circuit with a tire losing air.

“Layne van Risberger came to play today, man,” Riggs chortled after climbing from his car — a facetious reference to road course superstar Shane van Gisbergen in the NASCAR Cup Series. “We’re undefeated in street course races — much respect, Shane. I hope I can be as good as you one day, man. I’m going to take all my glory here in the truck series.

“I don’t even know what happened at the end — sparks flying, people wrecking, staying in the throttle. I was running out of fuel the entire last lap. It was like St. Pete all over again (an earlier Riggs victory this season in an inaugural street race).”

Entering the chicane on the final lap, Riggs was trying to force Reif into a mistake — and succeeded.

“I faked left to scare him, and he missed the corner,” Riggs said. “I really wasn’t going to dive it in there, and it worked for me … An amazing, historic win.”

Reif was trying to win in only his seventh start in the series. He finished 19th after being assessed a 30-second penalty for short-cutting the course on the final lap.

“I hear (Riggs was) one (car-length) back from me, and I didn’t want to give him a chance to get to me,” Reif said. “It was my mistake. It’s very unfortunate that I did that. I don’t know how many more chances I’ll have like this, but I’m sure there’ll be more, and I’m going to make sure not to make that mistake again.”

The final two laps featured a surfeit of twists and turns. Superior strategy put Chandler Smith at the front of the field for the overtime restart on Lap 52, with fresher tires and more fuel than Riggs, his teammate.

Smith led the field to green with Kaden Honeycutt beside him, but Honeycutt brushed the wall on the downhill run toward Turn 2, and Smith crashed trying to avoid him. As cars bounced off each other behind them, Henric took the lead briefly, only to be challenged and passed by Reif, who blocked Hemric’s Chevrolet into the wall approaching the chicane on the white-flag lap.

Reif held the lead from that point on until his mistake in the tight, freshly-paved chicane. In the overtime melee, Kaz Grala finished third, followed by Landen Lewis (a career best) and Ty Majeski.

Smith and Honeycutt ran 22nd and 23rd, respectively. Seven-time NASCAR Cup champion Jimmie Johnson led two laps but finished 30th after spinning twice and losing power in the final stage. Johnson was making his second start in the series, 18 years removed from his first.

The race featured 16 lead changes among six drivers, with Riggs leading a race-high 21 circuits and Smith 13. There were seven cautions for 13 laps.

Riggs, who won the first stage, increased his series lead to 65 points over Honeycutt, with Smith trailing by 128 points in third place with five events left in the Truck Series regular season. Parker Kligerman won Stage 2 before finishing 18th.

NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series Race — Navy 250

San Diego Street Course

San Diego, California

Friday, June 19, 2026

1. (2) Layne Riggs, Ford, 53.

2. (32) Daniel Hemric, Chevrolet, 53.

3. (16) Kaz Grala, Toyota, 53.

4. (9) Landen Lewis, Chevrolet, 53.

5. (8) Ty Majeski, Ford, 53.

6. (17) Justin Haley, RAM, 53.

7. (34) Brenden Queen #, RAM, 53.

8. (13) Ben Rhodes, Ford, 53.

9. (30) Christian Eckes, Chevrolet, 53.

10. (6) Giovanni Ruggiero, Toyota, 53.

11. (23) Mini Tyrrell #, RAM, 53.

12. (35) Tanner Gray, Toyota, 53.


13. (24) Kris Wright, Chevrolet, 53.

14. (33) Adam Andretti, Toyota, 53.

15. (25) Cole Butcher #, Ford, 53.

16. (28) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 53.

17. (29) Austin Varco, Ford, 53.

18. (10) Parker Kligerman, Chevrolet, 53.

19. (14) Tyler Reif, Chevrolet, 53.

20. (27) Frankie Muniz, Ford, 53.

21. (7) Andres Perez De Lara, Chevrolet, 53.

22. (3) Chandler Smith, Ford, 53.

23. (1) Kaden Honeycutt, Toyota, Accident, 52.

24. (11) Connor Mosack, Chevrolet, 52.

25. (31) Justin Marks, Chevrolet, 51.

26. (18) Dawson Sutton, Chevrolet, 51.

27. (26) Jackson Lee, Ford, 50.

28. (20) Nathan Nicholson, Chevrolet, Accident, 48.

29. (5) Grant Enfinger, Chevrolet, 48.

30. (4) Jimmie Johnson(i), Toyota, Electrical, 47.

31. (12) Tyler Ankrum, Chevrolet, Accident, 46.

32. (19) Jake Garcia, Ford, Transmission, 40.

33. (22) Stewart Friesen, Toyota, Power Steering, 29.

34. (21) Jamie McMurray, RAM, Accident, 22.

35. (15) Corey LaJoie, RAM, Accident, 14.

Average Speed of Race Winner: 64.274 mph.

Time of Race: 2 Hrs, 48 Mins, 13 Secs. Margin of Victory: 1.332 Seconds.

Caution Flags: 7 for 13 laps.

Lead Changes: 16 among 6 drivers.

Lap Leaders: K. Honeycutt 1-2;L. Riggs 3-5;K. Honeycutt 6;L. Riggs 7-12;K. Honeycutt 13-16;J. Johnson(i) 17-18;C. Smith 19;P. Kligerman 20;L. Riggs 21;P. Kligerman 22-26;C. Smith 27;K. Honeycutt 28-30;C. Smith 31-33;L. Riggs 34-43;C. Smith 44-51;T. Reif 52;L. Riggs 53.

Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led): Layne Riggs 5 times for 21 laps; Chandler Smith 4 times for 13 laps; Kaden Honeycutt 4 times for 10 laps; Parker Kligerman 2 times for 6 laps; Jimmie Johnson(i) 1 time for 2 laps; Tyler Reif 1 time for 1 lap.

Stage #1 Top Ten: 34,11,1,38,9,18,99,44,45,42

Stage #2 Top Ten: 75,88,9,18,44,42,38,11,1,91

–By Spencer Reid, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Layne #Riggs #wins #wild #NASCAR #Truck #debut #race #Naval #Base #Coronado">Deadspin | Layne Riggs wins wild NASCAR Truck debut race at Naval Base Coronado  NASCAR Truck Series driver Layne Riggs (34) races during the Allegiance 200 at Nashville Superspeedway in Lebanon, Tenn., Friday, May 29, 2026.   CORONADO, Calif.– Short on fuel and long on perseverance and good fortune, Layne Riggs won Friday’s inaugural Navy 250 NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series race at Naval Base Coronado on the Qualcomm Circuit.  It wasn’t until the final two corners of overtime that Riggs was able to claim his fourth victory of the season and the ninth of his career. The driver of the No. 34 Front Row Racing Ford was running second behind Tyler Reif entering the chicane that precedes the final corner at the 3.4-mile, 16-turn street circuit.  Under pressure from Riggs, Reif blew the chicane, steered to the inside of the tire barriers defining the racing line and came to a stop after exiting. Riggs grabbed the lead and reached the finish line 1.332 seconds ahead of runner-up Daniel Hemric, who ran the final circuit with a tire losing air.  “Layne van Risberger came to play today, man,” Riggs chortled after climbing from his car — a facetious reference to road course superstar Shane van Gisbergen in the NASCAR Cup Series. “We’re undefeated in street course races — much respect, Shane. I hope I can be as good as you one day, man. I’m going to take all my glory here in the truck series.  “I don’t even know what happened at the end — sparks flying, people wrecking, staying in the throttle. I was running out of fuel the entire last lap. It was like St. Pete all over again (an earlier Riggs victory this season in an inaugural street race).”  Entering the chicane on the final lap, Riggs was trying to force Reif into a mistake — and succeeded.  “I faked left to scare him, and he missed the corner,” Riggs said. “I really wasn’t going to dive it in there, and it worked for me … An amazing, historic win.”  Reif was trying to win in only his seventh start in the series. He finished 19th after being assessed a 30-second penalty for short-cutting the course on the final lap.  “I hear (Riggs was) one (car-length) back from me, and I didn’t want to give him a chance to get to me,” Reif said. “It was my mistake. It’s very unfortunate that I did that. I don’t know how many more chances I’ll have like this, but I’m sure there’ll be more, and I’m going to make sure not to make that mistake again.”  The final two laps featured a surfeit of twists and turns. Superior strategy put Chandler Smith at the front of the field for the overtime restart on Lap 52, with fresher tires and more fuel than Riggs, his teammate.  Smith led the field to green with Kaden Honeycutt beside him, but Honeycutt brushed the wall on the downhill run toward Turn 2, and Smith crashed trying to avoid him. As cars bounced off each other behind them, Henric took the lead briefly, only to be challenged and passed by Reif, who blocked Hemric’s Chevrolet into the wall approaching the chicane on the white-flag lap.  Reif held the lead from that point on until his mistake in the tight, freshly-paved chicane. In the overtime melee, Kaz Grala finished third, followed by Landen Lewis (a career best) and Ty Majeski.  Smith and Honeycutt ran 22nd and 23rd, respectively. Seven-time NASCAR Cup champion Jimmie Johnson led two laps but finished 30th after spinning twice and losing power in the final stage. Johnson was making his second start in the series, 18 years removed from his first.  The race featured 16 lead changes among six drivers, with Riggs leading a race-high 21 circuits and Smith 13. There were seven cautions for 13 laps.  Riggs, who won the first stage, increased his series lead to 65 points over Honeycutt, with Smith trailing by 128 points in third place with five events left in the Truck Series regular season. Parker Kligerman won Stage 2 before finishing 18th.  NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series Race — Navy 250  San Diego Street Course  San Diego, California  Friday, June 19, 2026  1. (2) Layne Riggs, Ford, 53.  2. (32) Daniel Hemric, Chevrolet, 53.  3. (16) Kaz Grala, Toyota, 53.  4. (9) Landen Lewis, Chevrolet, 53.  5. (8) Ty Majeski, Ford, 53.  6. (17) Justin Haley, RAM, 53.  7. (34) Brenden Queen #, RAM, 53.  8. (13) Ben Rhodes, Ford, 53.  9. (30) Christian Eckes, Chevrolet, 53.  10. (6) Giovanni Ruggiero, Toyota, 53.  11. (23) Mini Tyrrell #, RAM, 53.  12. (35) Tanner Gray, Toyota, 53.  13. (24) Kris Wright, Chevrolet, 53.   14. (33) Adam Andretti, Toyota, 53.  15. (25) Cole Butcher #, Ford, 53.  16. (28) Brendan Gaughan, Chevrolet, 53.  17. (29) Austin Varco, Ford, 53.  18. (10) Parker Kligerman, Chevrolet, 53.  19. (14) Tyler Reif, Chevrolet, 53.  20. (27) Frankie Muniz, Ford, 53.  21. (7) Andres Perez De Lara, Chevrolet, 53.  22. (3) Chandler Smith, Ford, 53.  23. (1) Kaden Honeycutt, Toyota, Accident, 52.  24. (11) Connor Mosack, Chevrolet, 52.  25. (31) Justin Marks, Chevrolet, 51.  26. (18) Dawson Sutton, Chevrolet, 51.  27. (26) Jackson Lee, Ford, 50.  28. (20) Nathan Nicholson, Chevrolet, Accident, 48.  29. (5) Grant Enfinger, Chevrolet, 48.  30. (4) Jimmie Johnson(i), Toyota, Electrical, 47.  31. (12) Tyler Ankrum, Chevrolet, Accident, 46.  32. (19) Jake Garcia, Ford, Transmission, 40.  33. (22) Stewart Friesen, Toyota, Power Steering, 29.  34. (21) Jamie McMurray, RAM, Accident, 22.  35. (15) Corey LaJoie, RAM, Accident, 14.  Average Speed of Race Winner: 64.274 mph.  Time of Race: 2 Hrs, 48 Mins, 13 Secs. Margin of Victory: 1.332 Seconds.  Caution Flags: 7 for 13 laps.  Lead Changes: 16 among 6 drivers.  Lap Leaders: K. Honeycutt 1-2;L. Riggs 3-5;K. Honeycutt 6;L. Riggs 7-12;K. Honeycutt 13-16;J. Johnson(i) 17-18;C. Smith 19;P. Kligerman 20;L. Riggs 21;P. Kligerman 22-26;C. Smith 27;K. Honeycutt 28-30;C. Smith 31-33;L. Riggs 34-43;C. Smith 44-51;T. Reif 52;L. Riggs 53.  Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led): Layne Riggs 5 times for 21 laps; Chandler Smith 4 times for 13 laps; Kaden Honeycutt 4 times for 10 laps; Parker Kligerman 2 times for 6 laps; Jimmie Johnson(i) 1 time for 2 laps; Tyler Reif 1 time for 1 lap.  Stage #1 Top Ten: 34,11,1,38,9,18,99,44,45,42  Stage #2 Top Ten: 75,88,9,18,44,42,38,11,1,91  –By Spencer Reid, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Layne #Riggs #wins #wild #NASCAR #Truck #debut #race #Naval #Base #Coronado

One of the best stories out of the 2026 World Cup so far is without question Scotland.

Specifically, their supporters, and how they have captured the hearts and minds of Bostonians from the North End to the Back Bay, and points in between.

But on the pitch, Scotland opened with a win in the group stage over Haiti, and ahead of matches on Friday, June 19, they have a chance to clinch a spot in the Round of 32.

Here are all the current clinching scenarios for Group C at the 2026 World Cup.

Update Friday evening: With Morocco’s 1-0 win over Scotland, Scotland cannot clinch a spot in the knockout round. In addition, Haiti can now be eliminated with a loss to Brazil later tonight.

Update Friday night: Brazil’s 3-0 win over Haiti moves Brazil into first place, dropping Morocco into second place and Scotland into third place. Haiti has now been eliminated from knockout round contention.

What are the Group C standings?

Here is where things stand after Morocco-Scotland, and ahead of Haiti-Brazil:

Team

W

D

L

GF

GA

GD

Points

Brazil11041+34
Morocco11021+14
Scotland1011103
Haiti00204-40

What are the next Group C matches?

Here is the rest of the Group C schedule, starting with today’s matches.

Morocco 1, Scotland 0
Brazil 3, Haiti 0

Morocco vs. Haiti
Scotland vs. Brazil

What are the current scenarios for Group C?

These are the scenarios for Group C entering play on Friday, June 19.

Scotland is the only team that can clinch a spot in the knockout round today. With a win over Morocco, they are guaranteed a spot in the Round of 32 as one of the top two teams in Group C.

However, they will win the group and book a match between the second-place team in Group F in the Round of 32 with a win over Morocco, coupled with a Brazil loss or tie against Haiti. Scotland and Brazil face each other in the final group match, and with a win over Morocco, Scotland would improve to six points. Should Brazil then lose or tie against Haiti, they could not jump over Scotland in the standings, even with a win in the final match. At most, Brazil would have five points.

On the flip side, Haiti faces elimination on Friday. Should they lose, a corresponding Morocco win over Scotland means Haiti is eliminated.

The good news? Neither team can be eliminated on Friday. But neither can clinch a spot in the knockout round just yet.

Here is how tiebreakers work at the World Cup this year.

If two or more teams in the same group are equal on points following the group stage, a three-step process will be followed to determine tiebreakers.

In the first step, the greatest number of points in the group matches between the tied teams will be applied. Then, the superior goal difference from the group matches between the tied teams will be applied, and finally, the greatest number of goals scored in all group matches between the tied teams will be applied.

If that cannot determine a tiebreaker, then the teams that are still equal will advance to step two. In this stage, the first step is the goal difference in all group matches, then the greatest number of goals in all group matches, and finally the highest team conduct score (relating to yellow and red cards) will be applied.

If that does not break the tie, then the teams still equal on points will be ranked according to the most recent FIFA World Rankings.

That first step, which reads “greatest number of points obtained in the group matches between the teams concerned” according to FIFA, effectively turns into a head-to-head tiebreaker in the case of ties between two teams.

Tiebreakers do not really factor into Group C head of the matches on Friday, June 19. But depending on those results, they could come into play ahead of the final matches in this group.

#World #Cup #clinching #scenarios #Group">World Cup 2026: What are the clinching scenarios in Group C?  One of the best stories out of the 2026 World Cup so far is without question Scotland.Specifically, their supporters, and how they have captured the hearts and minds of Bostonians from the North End to the Back Bay, and points in between.But on the pitch, Scotland opened with a win in the group stage over Haiti, and ahead of matches on Friday, June 19, they have a chance to clinch a spot in the Round of 32.Here are all the current clinching scenarios for Group C at the 2026 World Cup.Update Friday evening: With Morocco’s 1-0 win over Scotland, Scotland cannot clinch a spot in the knockout round. In addition, Haiti can now be eliminated with a loss to Brazil later tonight.Update Friday night: Brazil’s 3-0 win over Haiti moves Brazil into first place, dropping Morocco into second place and Scotland into third place. Haiti has now been eliminated from knockout round contention.What are the Group C standings?Here is where things stand after Morocco-Scotland, and ahead of Haiti-Brazil:TeamWDLGFGAGDPointsBrazil11041+34Morocco11021+14Scotland1011103Haiti00204-40What are the next Group C matches?Here is the rest of the Group C schedule, starting with today’s matches.Morocco 1, Scotland 0Brazil 3, Haiti 0Morocco vs. HaitiScotland vs. BrazilWhat are the current scenarios for Group C?These are the scenarios for Group C entering play on Friday, June 19.Scotland is the only team that can clinch a spot in the knockout round today. With a win over Morocco, they are guaranteed a spot in the Round of 32 as one of the top two teams in Group C.However, they will win the group and book a match between the second-place team in Group F in the Round of 32 with a win over Morocco, coupled with a Brazil loss or tie against Haiti. Scotland and Brazil face each other in the final group match, and with a win over Morocco, Scotland would improve to six points. Should Brazil then lose or tie against Haiti, they could not jump over Scotland in the standings, even with a win in the final match. At most, Brazil would have five points.On the flip side, Haiti faces elimination on Friday. Should they lose, a corresponding Morocco win over Scotland means Haiti is eliminated.The good news? Neither team can be eliminated on Friday. But neither can clinch a spot in the knockout round just yet.Here is how tiebreakers work at the World Cup this year.If two or more teams in the same group are equal on points following the group stage, a three-step process will be followed to determine tiebreakers.In the first step, the greatest number of points in the group matches between the tied teams will be applied. Then, the superior goal difference from the group matches between the tied teams will be applied, and finally, the greatest number of goals scored in all group matches between the tied teams will be applied.If that cannot determine a tiebreaker, then the teams that are still equal will advance to step two. In this stage, the first step is the goal difference in all group matches, then the greatest number of goals in all group matches, and finally the highest team conduct score (relating to yellow and red cards) will be applied.If that does not break the tie, then the teams still equal on points will be ranked according to the most recent FIFA World Rankings.That first step, which reads “greatest number of points obtained in the group matches between the teams concerned” according to FIFA, effectively turns into a head-to-head tiebreaker in the case of ties between two teams.Tiebreakers do not really factor into Group C head of the matches on Friday, June 19. But depending on those results, they could come into play ahead of the final matches in this group.  #World #Cup #clinching #scenarios #Group

captured the hearts and minds of Bostonians from the North End to the Back Bay, and points in between.

But on the pitch, Scotland opened with a win in the group stage over Haiti, and ahead of matches on Friday, June 19, they have a chance to clinch a spot in the Round of 32.

Here are all the current clinching scenarios for Group C at the 2026 World Cup.

Update Friday evening: With Morocco’s 1-0 win over Scotland, Scotland cannot clinch a spot in the knockout round. In addition, Haiti can now be eliminated with a loss to Brazil later tonight.

Update Friday night: Brazil’s 3-0 win over Haiti moves Brazil into first place, dropping Morocco into second place and Scotland into third place. Haiti has now been eliminated from knockout round contention.

What are the Group C standings?

Here is where things stand after Morocco-Scotland, and ahead of Haiti-Brazil:

Team

W

D

L

GF

GA

GD

Points

Brazil11041+34
Morocco11021+14
Scotland1011103
Haiti00204-40

What are the next Group C matches?

Here is the rest of the Group C schedule, starting with today’s matches.

Morocco 1, Scotland 0
Brazil 3, Haiti 0

Morocco vs. Haiti
Scotland vs. Brazil

What are the current scenarios for Group C?

These are the scenarios for Group C entering play on Friday, June 19.

Scotland is the only team that can clinch a spot in the knockout round today. With a win over Morocco, they are guaranteed a spot in the Round of 32 as one of the top two teams in Group C.

However, they will win the group and book a match between the second-place team in Group F in the Round of 32 with a win over Morocco, coupled with a Brazil loss or tie against Haiti. Scotland and Brazil face each other in the final group match, and with a win over Morocco, Scotland would improve to six points. Should Brazil then lose or tie against Haiti, they could not jump over Scotland in the standings, even with a win in the final match. At most, Brazil would have five points.

On the flip side, Haiti faces elimination on Friday. Should they lose, a corresponding Morocco win over Scotland means Haiti is eliminated.

The good news? Neither team can be eliminated on Friday. But neither can clinch a spot in the knockout round just yet.

Here is how tiebreakers work at the World Cup this year.

If two or more teams in the same group are equal on points following the group stage, a three-step process will be followed to determine tiebreakers.

In the first step, the greatest number of points in the group matches between the tied teams will be applied. Then, the superior goal difference from the group matches between the tied teams will be applied, and finally, the greatest number of goals scored in all group matches between the tied teams will be applied.

If that cannot determine a tiebreaker, then the teams that are still equal will advance to step two. In this stage, the first step is the goal difference in all group matches, then the greatest number of goals in all group matches, and finally the highest team conduct score (relating to yellow and red cards) will be applied.

If that does not break the tie, then the teams still equal on points will be ranked according to the most recent FIFA World Rankings.

That first step, which reads “greatest number of points obtained in the group matches between the teams concerned” according to FIFA, effectively turns into a head-to-head tiebreaker in the case of ties between two teams.

Tiebreakers do not really factor into Group C head of the matches on Friday, June 19. But depending on those results, they could come into play ahead of the final matches in this group.

#World #Cup #clinching #scenarios #Group">World Cup 2026: What are the clinching scenarios in Group C?

One of the best stories out of the 2026 World Cup so far is without question Scotland.

Specifically, their supporters, and how they have captured the hearts and minds of Bostonians from the North End to the Back Bay, and points in between.

But on the pitch, Scotland opened with a win in the group stage over Haiti, and ahead of matches on Friday, June 19, they have a chance to clinch a spot in the Round of 32.

Here are all the current clinching scenarios for Group C at the 2026 World Cup.

Update Friday evening: With Morocco’s 1-0 win over Scotland, Scotland cannot clinch a spot in the knockout round. In addition, Haiti can now be eliminated with a loss to Brazil later tonight.

Update Friday night: Brazil’s 3-0 win over Haiti moves Brazil into first place, dropping Morocco into second place and Scotland into third place. Haiti has now been eliminated from knockout round contention.

What are the Group C standings?

Here is where things stand after Morocco-Scotland, and ahead of Haiti-Brazil:

Team

W

D

L

GF

GA

GD

Points

Brazil11041+34
Morocco11021+14
Scotland1011103
Haiti00204-40

What are the next Group C matches?

Here is the rest of the Group C schedule, starting with today’s matches.

Morocco 1, Scotland 0
Brazil 3, Haiti 0

Morocco vs. Haiti
Scotland vs. Brazil

What are the current scenarios for Group C?

These are the scenarios for Group C entering play on Friday, June 19.

Scotland is the only team that can clinch a spot in the knockout round today. With a win over Morocco, they are guaranteed a spot in the Round of 32 as one of the top two teams in Group C.

However, they will win the group and book a match between the second-place team in Group F in the Round of 32 with a win over Morocco, coupled with a Brazil loss or tie against Haiti. Scotland and Brazil face each other in the final group match, and with a win over Morocco, Scotland would improve to six points. Should Brazil then lose or tie against Haiti, they could not jump over Scotland in the standings, even with a win in the final match. At most, Brazil would have five points.

On the flip side, Haiti faces elimination on Friday. Should they lose, a corresponding Morocco win over Scotland means Haiti is eliminated.

The good news? Neither team can be eliminated on Friday. But neither can clinch a spot in the knockout round just yet.

Here is how tiebreakers work at the World Cup this year.

If two or more teams in the same group are equal on points following the group stage, a three-step process will be followed to determine tiebreakers.

In the first step, the greatest number of points in the group matches between the tied teams will be applied. Then, the superior goal difference from the group matches between the tied teams will be applied, and finally, the greatest number of goals scored in all group matches between the tied teams will be applied.

If that cannot determine a tiebreaker, then the teams that are still equal will advance to step two. In this stage, the first step is the goal difference in all group matches, then the greatest number of goals in all group matches, and finally the highest team conduct score (relating to yellow and red cards) will be applied.

If that does not break the tie, then the teams still equal on points will be ranked according to the most recent FIFA World Rankings.

That first step, which reads “greatest number of points obtained in the group matches between the teams concerned” according to FIFA, effectively turns into a head-to-head tiebreaker in the case of ties between two teams.

Tiebreakers do not really factor into Group C head of the matches on Friday, June 19. But depending on those results, they could come into play ahead of the final matches in this group.

#World #Cup #clinching #scenarios #Group

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