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Deadspin | Brandon Williamson, Reds combine for three-hit shutout of Marlins  Apr 6, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher Brandon Williamson (55) delivers a pitch against the Miami Marlins during the fifth inning at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images   Brandon Williamson pitched 6 2/3 innings of scoreless baseball, and hometown hero Sal Stewart stroked an RBI single as the Cincinnati Reds defeated the host Miami Marlins 2-0 on Monday night.  Cincinnati, which has won four straight games, also got a home run from Tyler Stephenson.  Williamson (1-1) lowered his ERA from 11.57 to 4.76 as he allowed just three hits and one walk.  Stewart, a Miami native, had an eventful day that included a stolen base. He was also thrown out trying to advance from second to third on a groundout.  Emilio Pagan pitched a 1-2-3 ninth, earning his fourth save of the year.  Miami was held to just three hits, a triple and two singles.  Marlins starter Janson Junk (0-1) was solid in 7 1/3 innings, allowing seven hits, one walk and two runs.   Cincinnati threatened in the opening frame as the first two batters reached — TJ Friedl singled, and Matt McLain walked. But Junk got out of the jam by getting Elly De La Cruz on a lineout and Stewart on a double-play grounder.  Cincinnati opened the scoring in the fourth as De La Cruz doubled past diving second baseman Leo Jimenez and scored on Stewart’s RBI single, which was smoked to center at 103 mph.  The Reds may have gotten more out of that rally but Stewart got thrown out at third base as he tried to advance on a grounder by Eugenio Suarez. Credit first baseman Connor Norby with a bullet throw to get Stewart at third.  With two outs in the sixth, Agustin Ramirez tripled off the top of the wall in right, a 360-foot, opposite-field poke. It was just the second triple in Ramirez’s brief MLB career, but he was stranded when Jakob Marsee struck out swinging at a 2-2 sweeper that was low and out of the zone.  In the seventh, Otto Lopez singled, and, with two outs, lefty reliever Brock Burke came on and struck out Xavier Edwards looking at a 95-mph fastball in the zone.  Stephenson made it 2-0 in the eighth as he slugged a hanging slider over the fence in left, and Miami’s offense never got untracked against Tony Santillan (eighth inning) or Pagan.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Brandon #Williamson #Reds #combine #threehit #shutout #Marlins

Deadspin | Brandon Williamson, Reds combine for three-hit shutout of Marlins
Deadspin | Brandon Williamson, Reds combine for three-hit shutout of Marlins  Apr 6, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher Brandon Williamson (55) delivers a pitch against the Miami Marlins during the fifth inning at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images   Brandon Williamson pitched 6 2/3 innings of scoreless baseball, and hometown hero Sal Stewart stroked an RBI single as the Cincinnati Reds defeated the host Miami Marlins 2-0 on Monday night.  Cincinnati, which has won four straight games, also got a home run from Tyler Stephenson.  Williamson (1-1) lowered his ERA from 11.57 to 4.76 as he allowed just three hits and one walk.  Stewart, a Miami native, had an eventful day that included a stolen base. He was also thrown out trying to advance from second to third on a groundout.  Emilio Pagan pitched a 1-2-3 ninth, earning his fourth save of the year.  Miami was held to just three hits, a triple and two singles.  Marlins starter Janson Junk (0-1) was solid in 7 1/3 innings, allowing seven hits, one walk and two runs.   Cincinnati threatened in the opening frame as the first two batters reached — TJ Friedl singled, and Matt McLain walked. But Junk got out of the jam by getting Elly De La Cruz on a lineout and Stewart on a double-play grounder.  Cincinnati opened the scoring in the fourth as De La Cruz doubled past diving second baseman Leo Jimenez and scored on Stewart’s RBI single, which was smoked to center at 103 mph.  The Reds may have gotten more out of that rally but Stewart got thrown out at third base as he tried to advance on a grounder by Eugenio Suarez. Credit first baseman Connor Norby with a bullet throw to get Stewart at third.  With two outs in the sixth, Agustin Ramirez tripled off the top of the wall in right, a 360-foot, opposite-field poke. It was just the second triple in Ramirez’s brief MLB career, but he was stranded when Jakob Marsee struck out swinging at a 2-2 sweeper that was low and out of the zone.  In the seventh, Otto Lopez singled, and, with two outs, lefty reliever Brock Burke came on and struck out Xavier Edwards looking at a 95-mph fastball in the zone.  Stephenson made it 2-0 in the eighth as he slugged a hanging slider over the fence in left, and Miami’s offense never got untracked against Tony Santillan (eighth inning) or Pagan.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Brandon #Williamson #Reds #combine #threehit #shutout #MarlinsApr 6, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher Brandon Williamson (55) delivers a pitch against the Miami Marlins during the fifth inning at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Brandon Williamson pitched 6 2/3 innings of scoreless baseball, and hometown hero Sal Stewart stroked an RBI single as the Cincinnati Reds defeated the host Miami Marlins 2-0 on Monday night.

Cincinnati, which has won four straight games, also got a home run from Tyler Stephenson.

Williamson (1-1) lowered his ERA from 11.57 to 4.76 as he allowed just three hits and one walk.

Stewart, a Miami native, had an eventful day that included a stolen base. He was also thrown out trying to advance from second to third on a groundout.

Emilio Pagan pitched a 1-2-3 ninth, earning his fourth save of the year.

Miami was held to just three hits, a triple and two singles.


Marlins starter Janson Junk (0-1) was solid in 7 1/3 innings, allowing seven hits, one walk and two runs.

Cincinnati threatened in the opening frame as the first two batters reached — TJ Friedl singled, and Matt McLain walked. But Junk got out of the jam by getting Elly De La Cruz on a lineout and Stewart on a double-play grounder.

Cincinnati opened the scoring in the fourth as De La Cruz doubled past diving second baseman Leo Jimenez and scored on Stewart’s RBI single, which was smoked to center at 103 mph.

The Reds may have gotten more out of that rally but Stewart got thrown out at third base as he tried to advance on a grounder by Eugenio Suarez. Credit first baseman Connor Norby with a bullet throw to get Stewart at third.

With two outs in the sixth, Agustin Ramirez tripled off the top of the wall in right, a 360-foot, opposite-field poke. It was just the second triple in Ramirez’s brief MLB career, but he was stranded when Jakob Marsee struck out swinging at a 2-2 sweeper that was low and out of the zone.

In the seventh, Otto Lopez singled, and, with two outs, lefty reliever Brock Burke came on and struck out Xavier Edwards looking at a 95-mph fastball in the zone.

Stephenson made it 2-0 in the eighth as he slugged a hanging slider over the fence in left, and Miami’s offense never got untracked against Tony Santillan (eighth inning) or Pagan.


–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Brandon #Williamson #Reds #combine #threehit #shutout #Marlins

Apr 6, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher Brandon Williamson (55) delivers a pitch against the Miami Marlins during the fifth inning at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

Brandon Williamson pitched 6 2/3 innings of scoreless baseball, and hometown hero Sal Stewart stroked an RBI single as the Cincinnati Reds defeated the host Miami Marlins 2-0 on Monday night.

Cincinnati, which has won four straight games, also got a home run from Tyler Stephenson.

Williamson (1-1) lowered his ERA from 11.57 to 4.76 as he allowed just three hits and one walk.

Stewart, a Miami native, had an eventful day that included a stolen base. He was also thrown out trying to advance from second to third on a groundout.

Emilio Pagan pitched a 1-2-3 ninth, earning his fourth save of the year.

Miami was held to just three hits, a triple and two singles.

Marlins starter Janson Junk (0-1) was solid in 7 1/3 innings, allowing seven hits, one walk and two runs.

Cincinnati threatened in the opening frame as the first two batters reached — TJ Friedl singled, and Matt McLain walked. But Junk got out of the jam by getting Elly De La Cruz on a lineout and Stewart on a double-play grounder.

Cincinnati opened the scoring in the fourth as De La Cruz doubled past diving second baseman Leo Jimenez and scored on Stewart’s RBI single, which was smoked to center at 103 mph.

The Reds may have gotten more out of that rally but Stewart got thrown out at third base as he tried to advance on a grounder by Eugenio Suarez. Credit first baseman Connor Norby with a bullet throw to get Stewart at third.

With two outs in the sixth, Agustin Ramirez tripled off the top of the wall in right, a 360-foot, opposite-field poke. It was just the second triple in Ramirez’s brief MLB career, but he was stranded when Jakob Marsee struck out swinging at a 2-2 sweeper that was low and out of the zone.

In the seventh, Otto Lopez singled, and, with two outs, lefty reliever Brock Burke came on and struck out Xavier Edwards looking at a 95-mph fastball in the zone.

Stephenson made it 2-0 in the eighth as he slugged a hanging slider over the fence in left, and Miami’s offense never got untracked against Tony Santillan (eighth inning) or Pagan.

–Field Level Media

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#Deadspin #Brandon #Williamson #Reds #combine #threehit #shutout #Marlins

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Deadspin | Michael Wacha earns win as Royals down Guardians <div id=""><section id="0" class=" w-full"><div class="xl:container mx-0 !px-4 py-0 pb-4 !mx-0 !px-0"><img src="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/28671437.jpg" srcset="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/28671437.jpg" alt="MLB: Kansas City Royals at Cleveland Guardians" class="w-full" fetchpriority="high" loading="eager"/><span class="text-0.8 leading-tight">Apr 6, 2026; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Kansas City Royals starting pitcher Michael Wacha (52) delivers during the first inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field. Mandatory Credit: David Dermer-Imagn Images<!-- --> <!-- --> </span></div></section><section id="section-1"> <p>Carter Jensen hit a go-ahead, solo homer in the sixth inning and Jonathan India belted a two-run shot in the eighth, lifting the visiting Kansas City Royals to a 4-2 victory over the Cleveland Guardians on Monday night.</p> </section><section id="section-2"> <p>Jensen drove a fastball into the right field stands off rookie Peyton Pallette (0-1), giving the Royals their first lead at 2-1. India, who had an RBI single in the fourth, took Kolby Allard deep to left two innings later to plate Jensen and make it 4-1.</p> </section><section id="section-3"> <p>Michael Wacha (1-0) pitched seven strong innings, giving up one run on a homer to Steven Kwan as part of three hits. The right-hander had three strikeouts and three walks as Kansas City won the opener of the three-game series.</p> </section><section id="section-4"> <p>Lucas Erceg earned his third save in three opportunities with a clean ninth. Brayan Rocchio had a solo homer off Matt Strahm in the eighth for the Guardians, who only advanced two runners past second base.</p> </section><section id="section-5"> <p>Cleveland third baseman Jose Ramirez appeared in his franchise-record 1,620th game, walking twice and going 0-for-2. The seven-time All-Star, who has spent all 14 of his major league seasons with the Indians/Guardians, surpassed Terry Turner for the mark.</p> </section><br/><section id="section-6"> <p>Kwan gave the Guardians a 1-0 lead in the third with his first homer since Sept. 21, 2025, a 381-foot shot that hooked inside the foul pole in left. It was the initial run allowed by Wacha in 8 2/3 innings to begin the season.</p> </section> <section id="section-7"> <p>Kansas City tied it in the fourth on India’s sharp, two-out single that scored Vinnie Pasquantino. Guardians starter Tanner Bibee appeared to end the frame one batter earlier when he struck out Jensen, but the wild pitch evaded catcher Bo Naylor.</p> </section><section id="section-8"> <p>Bibee gave up one run in 4 2/3 innings, striking out three with a walk. The right-hander was visibly displeased when manager Stephen Vogt removed him with two on and one out, but Tim Herrin entered and retired Pasquantino.</p> </section><section id="section-9"> <p>Cleveland shortstop Gabriel Arias exited in the fifth with left hamstring tightness, injuring himself while running to second base with a double.</p> </section><section id="section-10"> <p>Maikel Garcia, Bobby Witt Jr., Jensen and India each had two hits for Kansas City, while Kwan accounted for half of the Guardians’ total output of four hits.</p> </section><section id="section-11"> <p>–Field Level Media</p> </section></div> #Deadspin #Michael #Wacha #earns #win #Royals #Guardians

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Cartier Special for ELLE Germany’s September Issue by Andreas Ortner

Death, taxes, and speculation about Max Verstappen’s Formula 1 future.

The sport has been dominated in recent weeks by speculation over Verstappen’s future with Red Bull, keyed by some difficult sessions this season. After crashes during qualifying for the Austrian Grand Prix and in the closing stages of the British Grand Prix — with Verstappen chasing a podium finish — it is confirmed that he cannot rise to the top two spots in the Drivers’ Championship standings by the summer shutdown, which comes after the Hungarian Grand Prix next weekend.

With that, according to multiple reports, a clause in his Red Bull contract can be triggered, giving him an out for the 2027 season.

Sprinkle in a dash of the general frenzy that is the F1 driver transfer market, and you have arguably the dominant story ahead of this weekend’s Belgian Grand Prix.

And despite his manager, Raymond Vermeulen, tamping down those rumors recently, the F1 world got a chance to hear from the driver himself on Thursday in the buildup to this weekend’s Belgian Grand Prix.

And Verstappen made it clear that his focus is elsewhere.

Mainly, on turning the season around, and his “future” driving for Red Bull.

“There’s nothing to say,” answered Verstappen when asked about the speculation during the FIA Press Conference on Thursday. “I don’t want to say yes and no, and this and that about my future. I said already many times that if there was something new, I would say it myself.”

The driver then addressed the recent struggles, as well as his efforts alongside the team to right the ship.

“Now we’re just looking to the future trying to fix current issues that we have on the car, but that’s an open discussion,” he said. “Yes, sometimes you get a little bit disappointed or upset after a race, but for example after Silverstone, you go home and you reset.

“On Wednesday I was back at the factory and then you prepare again for the weekends ahead. That’s how I’ve been operating in all the years together. And of course, some years are just a little bit more competitive than others, but in terms of my approach and how we work as a team, nothing really changes.”

Part of that process is a focus on the rear wing of the RB22. That component — the revolving design referred to as the “Macarena” wing in the media — has been identified as the reason for those two high-speed crashes from Verstappen in recent weeks. The driver called the situation “super dangerous” when speaking to the media after the crash in Silverstone, and the team will reportedly shelve the component for this weekend.

But in terms of his future beyond Spa, Verstappen remained adamant on Thursday.

“Red Bull are like a second family to me,“ added the driver.

Here at SB Nation we are talking F1 every hour, every day. Join the discussion at the new F1 Feed, a community for Formula 1 fans!

#Belgian #Grand #Prix #Max #Verstappen #focused #future #Red #Bull">Belgian Grand Prix: Max Verstappen is focused on the ‘future’ at Red Bull  Death, taxes, and speculation about Max Verstappen’s Formula 1 future.The sport has been dominated in recent weeks by speculation over Verstappen’s future with Red Bull, keyed by some difficult sessions this season. After crashes during qualifying for the Austrian Grand Prix and in the closing stages of the British Grand Prix — with Verstappen chasing a podium finish — it is confirmed that he cannot rise to the top two spots in the Drivers’ Championship standings by the summer shutdown, which comes after the Hungarian Grand Prix next weekend.With that, according to multiple reports, a clause in his Red Bull contract can be triggered, giving him an out for the 2027 season.Sprinkle in a dash of the general frenzy that is the F1 driver transfer market, and you have arguably the dominant story ahead of this weekend’s Belgian Grand Prix.And despite his manager, Raymond Vermeulen, tamping down those rumors recently, the F1 world got a chance to hear from the driver himself on Thursday in the buildup to this weekend’s Belgian Grand Prix.And Verstappen made it clear that his focus is elsewhere.Mainly, on turning the season around, and his “future” driving for Red Bull.“There’s nothing to say,” answered Verstappen when asked about the speculation during the FIA Press Conference on Thursday. “I don’t want to say yes and no, and this and that about my future. I said already many times that if there was something new, I would say it myself.”The driver then addressed the recent struggles, as well as his efforts alongside the team to right the ship.“Now we’re just looking to the future trying to fix current issues that we have on the car, but that’s an open discussion,” he said. “Yes, sometimes you get a little bit disappointed or upset after a race, but for example after Silverstone, you go home and you reset.“On Wednesday I was back at the factory and then you prepare again for the weekends ahead. That’s how I’ve been operating in all the years together. And of course, some years are just a little bit more competitive than others, but in terms of my approach and how we work as a team, nothing really changes.”Part of that process is a focus on the rear wing of the RB22. That component — the revolving design referred to as the “Macarena” wing in the media — has been identified as the reason for those two high-speed crashes from Verstappen in recent weeks. The driver called the situation “super dangerous” when speaking to the media after the crash in Silverstone, and the team will reportedly shelve the component for this weekend.But in terms of his future beyond Spa, Verstappen remained adamant on Thursday.“Red Bull are like a second family to me,“ added the driver.Here at SB Nation we are talking F1 every hour, every day. Join the discussion at the new F1 Feed, a community for Formula 1 fans!  #Belgian #Grand #Prix #Max #Verstappen #focused #future #Red #Bull

dominated in recent weeks by speculation over Verstappen’s future with Red Bull, keyed by some difficult sessions this season. After crashes during qualifying for the Austrian Grand Prix and in the closing stages of the British Grand Prix — with Verstappen chasing a podium finish — it is confirmed that he cannot rise to the top two spots in the Drivers’ Championship standings by the summer shutdown, which comes after the Hungarian Grand Prix next weekend.

With that, according to multiple reports, a clause in his Red Bull contract can be triggered, giving him an out for the 2027 season.

Sprinkle in a dash of the general frenzy that is the F1 driver transfer market, and you have arguably the dominant story ahead of this weekend’s Belgian Grand Prix.

And despite his manager, Raymond Vermeulen, tamping down those rumors recently, the F1 world got a chance to hear from the driver himself on Thursday in the buildup to this weekend’s Belgian Grand Prix.

And Verstappen made it clear that his focus is elsewhere.

Mainly, on turning the season around, and his “future” driving for Red Bull.

“There’s nothing to say,” answered Verstappen when asked about the speculation during the FIA Press Conference on Thursday. “I don’t want to say yes and no, and this and that about my future. I said already many times that if there was something new, I would say it myself.”

The driver then addressed the recent struggles, as well as his efforts alongside the team to right the ship.

“Now we’re just looking to the future trying to fix current issues that we have on the car, but that’s an open discussion,” he said. “Yes, sometimes you get a little bit disappointed or upset after a race, but for example after Silverstone, you go home and you reset.

“On Wednesday I was back at the factory and then you prepare again for the weekends ahead. That’s how I’ve been operating in all the years together. And of course, some years are just a little bit more competitive than others, but in terms of my approach and how we work as a team, nothing really changes.”

Part of that process is a focus on the rear wing of the RB22. That component — the revolving design referred to as the “Macarena” wing in the media — has been identified as the reason for those two high-speed crashes from Verstappen in recent weeks. The driver called the situation “super dangerous” when speaking to the media after the crash in Silverstone, and the team will reportedly shelve the component for this weekend.

But in terms of his future beyond Spa, Verstappen remained adamant on Thursday.

“Red Bull are like a second family to me,“ added the driver.

Here at SB Nation we are talking F1 every hour, every day. Join the discussion at the new F1 Feed, a community for Formula 1 fans!

#Belgian #Grand #Prix #Max #Verstappen #focused #future #Red #Bull">Belgian Grand Prix: Max Verstappen is focused on the ‘future’ at Red Bull

Death, taxes, and speculation about Max Verstappen’s Formula 1 future.

The sport has been dominated in recent weeks by speculation over Verstappen’s future with Red Bull, keyed by some difficult sessions this season. After crashes during qualifying for the Austrian Grand Prix and in the closing stages of the British Grand Prix — with Verstappen chasing a podium finish — it is confirmed that he cannot rise to the top two spots in the Drivers’ Championship standings by the summer shutdown, which comes after the Hungarian Grand Prix next weekend.

With that, according to multiple reports, a clause in his Red Bull contract can be triggered, giving him an out for the 2027 season.

Sprinkle in a dash of the general frenzy that is the F1 driver transfer market, and you have arguably the dominant story ahead of this weekend’s Belgian Grand Prix.

And despite his manager, Raymond Vermeulen, tamping down those rumors recently, the F1 world got a chance to hear from the driver himself on Thursday in the buildup to this weekend’s Belgian Grand Prix.

And Verstappen made it clear that his focus is elsewhere.

Mainly, on turning the season around, and his “future” driving for Red Bull.

“There’s nothing to say,” answered Verstappen when asked about the speculation during the FIA Press Conference on Thursday. “I don’t want to say yes and no, and this and that about my future. I said already many times that if there was something new, I would say it myself.”

The driver then addressed the recent struggles, as well as his efforts alongside the team to right the ship.

“Now we’re just looking to the future trying to fix current issues that we have on the car, but that’s an open discussion,” he said. “Yes, sometimes you get a little bit disappointed or upset after a race, but for example after Silverstone, you go home and you reset.

“On Wednesday I was back at the factory and then you prepare again for the weekends ahead. That’s how I’ve been operating in all the years together. And of course, some years are just a little bit more competitive than others, but in terms of my approach and how we work as a team, nothing really changes.”

Part of that process is a focus on the rear wing of the RB22. That component — the revolving design referred to as the “Macarena” wing in the media — has been identified as the reason for those two high-speed crashes from Verstappen in recent weeks. The driver called the situation “super dangerous” when speaking to the media after the crash in Silverstone, and the team will reportedly shelve the component for this weekend.

But in terms of his future beyond Spa, Verstappen remained adamant on Thursday.

“Red Bull are like a second family to me,“ added the driver.

Here at SB Nation we are talking F1 every hour, every day. Join the discussion at the new F1 Feed, a community for Formula 1 fans!

#Belgian #Grand #Prix #Max #Verstappen #focused #future #Red #Bull
ENG vs IND 2nd ODI, Live Score: India 104/2 (18); Jacks dismisses struggling Rohit  Rohit Sharma and Shubman Gill walk out to open the batting for the visitor. Jofra Archer takes the new ball for the host.Rohit on strike, first ball, right on the money from Archer, thick outside edge to deep backward point for a single. Short ball down leg to Gill, umpire signals wide.Gill defends, dot ball. Width on offer from Archer, Gill toe edges the cut to deep third for a single. Archer nails the tight line and length, Rohit defends, no run.Test match leave on the outside off stump ball from Rohit. Ooooh Archer pitches it up and gets the ball to nick back in, beats Rohit’s drive. Tidy first over, just the three runs off it.   #ENG #IND #2nd #ODI #Live #Score #India #Jacks #dismisses #struggling #Rohit

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