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Deadspin | FaZe Clan slip into BLAST Rivals Spring playoffs  Nov 5, 2022; San Francisco, California, USA; Fans react during the League of Legends World Championships between T1 and DRX at Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Kelley L Cox-Imagn Images   FaZe Clan eked out a 2-1 win over FURIA in the Group B elimination match on Thursday, earning the last playoff berth at the BLAST Rivals Spring event in Fort Worth, Texas.  Natus Vincere finished atop Group B by sweeping GamerLegion 2-0.  In Group A, Team Vitality squeezed past G2 Esports 2-1 in the winners match, and Astralis ousted FUT Esports in the elimination match.  The 0,000 Counter-Strike: Global Offensive tournament began with eight teams divided into two double-elimination groups for the initial stage. The group winners move directly to the semifinals of the single-elimination playoff. The group runners-up go to the quarterfinals as high seeds, and the teams that finish third in their groups advance to the quarterfinals as low seeds.  All matches in the group stage and the playoffs are best-of-three until the grand final on Sunday, which will be best-of-five. The championship team will receive 5,000 and two BLAST Frequent Flyer Tokens.  On Thursday, FaZe Clan opened with a 13-4 victory on Dust II before FURIA captured Mirage 13-7. On the decisive third map, Nuke, FaZe Clan powered to a 13-3 win.  Slovakia’s David “frozen” Cernansky, France’s Ryan “Neityu” Aubry and Latvia’s Helvijs “broky” Saukants each logged 37 kills for FaZe Clan. broky had a team-best plus-8 kill-death differential. Kazakhstan’s Danil “molodoy” Golubenko and Latvia’s Mareks “YEKINDAR” Galinskis both had 42 kills for FURIA.  Natus Vincere downed GamerLegion 13-10 on Mirage and 13-4 on Ancient. Ukraine’s Ihor “w0nderful” Zhdanov produced 46 kills and a plus-26 K-D differential for Natus Vincere. Sweden’s Fredrik “REZ” Sterner registered 30 kills and an even K-D differential for GamerLegion.  Team Vitality took Mirage 16-13 in overtime, but G2 Esports bounced back to claim Overpass 13-11. Team Vitality wrapped up the series win by a 13-3 count on Dust II.  France’s Mathieu “ZywOo” Herbaut recorded 56 kills and a plus-14 K-D differential for Team Vitality. Spain’s Alvaro “SunPayus” Garcia amassed 52 kills and a plus-6 K-D differential for G2 Esports.  Astralis knocked out FUT Esports 13-5 on Mirage and 13-10 on Nuke. Denmark’s Rasmus “HooXi” Nielsen totaled 38 kills and a plus-14 K-D differential for Astralis. Kosovo’s Aulon “Krabeni” Fazlija ended up with 33 kills and a plus-1 K-D differential for FUT Esports.  The remaining schedule:  Quarterfinals, Friday  –GamerLegion vs. Astralis  –G2 Esports vs. FaZe Clan  Semifinals, Saturday  –Team Vitality vs. GamerLegion/Astralis winner  –Natus Vincere vs. G2 Esports/FaZe Clan winner  Final, Sunday   –Semifinal winners  BLAST Rivals Spring final group-stage standings  Group A  1. Team Vitality, 2-0, +18  2. G2 Esports, 1-1, +1  3. Astralis, 1-1, -1  4. FUT Esports, 0-2, -18  Group B  1. Natus Vincere, 2-0, +20  2. GamerLegion, 1-1, -9  3. FaZe Clan, 1-1, +5  4. FURIA, 0-2, -16  BLAST Rivals Spring prize pool  1. 5,000, two BLAST Frequent Flyer tokens  2. ,000  3-4. ,000  5-6. ,000  7-8. ,000 — FUT Esports, FURIA  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #FaZe #Clan #slip #BLAST #Rivals #Spring #playoffs

Deadspin | FaZe Clan slip into BLAST Rivals Spring playoffs
Deadspin | FaZe Clan slip into BLAST Rivals Spring playoffs  Nov 5, 2022; San Francisco, California, USA; Fans react during the League of Legends World Championships between T1 and DRX at Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Kelley L Cox-Imagn Images   FaZe Clan eked out a 2-1 win over FURIA in the Group B elimination match on Thursday, earning the last playoff berth at the BLAST Rivals Spring event in Fort Worth, Texas.  Natus Vincere finished atop Group B by sweeping GamerLegion 2-0.  In Group A, Team Vitality squeezed past G2 Esports 2-1 in the winners match, and Astralis ousted FUT Esports in the elimination match.  The 0,000 Counter-Strike: Global Offensive tournament began with eight teams divided into two double-elimination groups for the initial stage. The group winners move directly to the semifinals of the single-elimination playoff. The group runners-up go to the quarterfinals as high seeds, and the teams that finish third in their groups advance to the quarterfinals as low seeds.  All matches in the group stage and the playoffs are best-of-three until the grand final on Sunday, which will be best-of-five. The championship team will receive 5,000 and two BLAST Frequent Flyer Tokens.  On Thursday, FaZe Clan opened with a 13-4 victory on Dust II before FURIA captured Mirage 13-7. On the decisive third map, Nuke, FaZe Clan powered to a 13-3 win.  Slovakia’s David “frozen” Cernansky, France’s Ryan “Neityu” Aubry and Latvia’s Helvijs “broky” Saukants each logged 37 kills for FaZe Clan. broky had a team-best plus-8 kill-death differential. Kazakhstan’s Danil “molodoy” Golubenko and Latvia’s Mareks “YEKINDAR” Galinskis both had 42 kills for FURIA.  Natus Vincere downed GamerLegion 13-10 on Mirage and 13-4 on Ancient. Ukraine’s Ihor “w0nderful” Zhdanov produced 46 kills and a plus-26 K-D differential for Natus Vincere. Sweden’s Fredrik “REZ” Sterner registered 30 kills and an even K-D differential for GamerLegion.  Team Vitality took Mirage 16-13 in overtime, but G2 Esports bounced back to claim Overpass 13-11. Team Vitality wrapped up the series win by a 13-3 count on Dust II.  France’s Mathieu “ZywOo” Herbaut recorded 56 kills and a plus-14 K-D differential for Team Vitality. Spain’s Alvaro “SunPayus” Garcia amassed 52 kills and a plus-6 K-D differential for G2 Esports.  Astralis knocked out FUT Esports 13-5 on Mirage and 13-10 on Nuke. Denmark’s Rasmus “HooXi” Nielsen totaled 38 kills and a plus-14 K-D differential for Astralis. Kosovo’s Aulon “Krabeni” Fazlija ended up with 33 kills and a plus-1 K-D differential for FUT Esports.  The remaining schedule:  Quarterfinals, Friday  –GamerLegion vs. Astralis  –G2 Esports vs. FaZe Clan  Semifinals, Saturday  –Team Vitality vs. GamerLegion/Astralis winner  –Natus Vincere vs. G2 Esports/FaZe Clan winner  Final, Sunday   –Semifinal winners  BLAST Rivals Spring final group-stage standings  Group A  1. Team Vitality, 2-0, +18  2. G2 Esports, 1-1, +1  3. Astralis, 1-1, -1  4. FUT Esports, 0-2, -18  Group B  1. Natus Vincere, 2-0, +20  2. GamerLegion, 1-1, -9  3. FaZe Clan, 1-1, +5  4. FURIA, 0-2, -16  BLAST Rivals Spring prize pool  1. 5,000, two BLAST Frequent Flyer tokens  2. ,000  3-4. ,000  5-6. ,000  7-8. ,000 — FUT Esports, FURIA  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #FaZe #Clan #slip #BLAST #Rivals #Spring #playoffsNov 5, 2022; San Francisco, California, USA; Fans react during the League of Legends World Championships between T1 and DRX at Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Kelley L Cox-Imagn Images

FaZe Clan eked out a 2-1 win over FURIA in the Group B elimination match on Thursday, earning the last playoff berth at the BLAST Rivals Spring event in Fort Worth, Texas.

Natus Vincere finished atop Group B by sweeping GamerLegion 2-0.

In Group A, Team Vitality squeezed past G2 Esports 2-1 in the winners match, and Astralis ousted FUT Esports in the elimination match.

The $350,000 Counter-Strike: Global Offensive tournament began with eight teams divided into two double-elimination groups for the initial stage. The group winners move directly to the semifinals of the single-elimination playoff. The group runners-up go to the quarterfinals as high seeds, and the teams that finish third in their groups advance to the quarterfinals as low seeds.

All matches in the group stage and the playoffs are best-of-three until the grand final on Sunday, which will be best-of-five. The championship team will receive $125,000 and two BLAST Frequent Flyer Tokens.

On Thursday, FaZe Clan opened with a 13-4 victory on Dust II before FURIA captured Mirage 13-7. On the decisive third map, Nuke, FaZe Clan powered to a 13-3 win.

Slovakia’s David “frozen” Cernansky, France’s Ryan “Neityu” Aubry and Latvia’s Helvijs “broky” Saukants each logged 37 kills for FaZe Clan. broky had a team-best plus-8 kill-death differential. Kazakhstan’s Danil “molodoy” Golubenko and Latvia’s Mareks “YEKINDAR” Galinskis both had 42 kills for FURIA.

Natus Vincere downed GamerLegion 13-10 on Mirage and 13-4 on Ancient. Ukraine’s Ihor “w0nderful” Zhdanov produced 46 kills and a plus-26 K-D differential for Natus Vincere. Sweden’s Fredrik “REZ” Sterner registered 30 kills and an even K-D differential for GamerLegion.

Team Vitality took Mirage 16-13 in overtime, but G2 Esports bounced back to claim Overpass 13-11. Team Vitality wrapped up the series win by a 13-3 count on Dust II.

France’s Mathieu “ZywOo” Herbaut recorded 56 kills and a plus-14 K-D differential for Team Vitality. Spain’s Alvaro “SunPayus” Garcia amassed 52 kills and a plus-6 K-D differential for G2 Esports.

Astralis knocked out FUT Esports 13-5 on Mirage and 13-10 on Nuke. Denmark’s Rasmus “HooXi” Nielsen totaled 38 kills and a plus-14 K-D differential for Astralis. Kosovo’s Aulon “Krabeni” Fazlija ended up with 33 kills and a plus-1 K-D differential for FUT Esports.

The remaining schedule:

Quarterfinals, Friday

–GamerLegion vs. Astralis

–G2 Esports vs. FaZe Clan

Semifinals, Saturday

–Team Vitality vs. GamerLegion/Astralis winner

–Natus Vincere vs. G2 Esports/FaZe Clan winner


Final, Sunday

–Semifinal winners

BLAST Rivals Spring final group-stage standings

Group A

1. Team Vitality, 2-0, +18

2. G2 Esports, 1-1, +1

3. Astralis, 1-1, -1

4. FUT Esports, 0-2, -18

Group B

1. Natus Vincere, 2-0, +20

2. GamerLegion, 1-1, -9

3. FaZe Clan, 1-1, +5

4. FURIA, 0-2, -16

BLAST Rivals Spring prize pool

1. $125,000, two BLAST Frequent Flyer tokens

2. $75,000

3-4. $40,000

5-6. $25,000

7-8. $10,000 — FUT Esports, FURIA


–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #FaZe #Clan #slip #BLAST #Rivals #Spring #playoffs

Nov 5, 2022; San Francisco, California, USA; Fans react during the League of Legends World Championships between T1 and DRX at Chase Center. Mandatory Credit: Kelley L Cox-Imagn Images

FaZe Clan eked out a 2-1 win over FURIA in the Group B elimination match on Thursday, earning the last playoff berth at the BLAST Rivals Spring event in Fort Worth, Texas.

Natus Vincere finished atop Group B by sweeping GamerLegion 2-0.

In Group A, Team Vitality squeezed past G2 Esports 2-1 in the winners match, and Astralis ousted FUT Esports in the elimination match.

The $350,000 Counter-Strike: Global Offensive tournament began with eight teams divided into two double-elimination groups for the initial stage. The group winners move directly to the semifinals of the single-elimination playoff. The group runners-up go to the quarterfinals as high seeds, and the teams that finish third in their groups advance to the quarterfinals as low seeds.

All matches in the group stage and the playoffs are best-of-three until the grand final on Sunday, which will be best-of-five. The championship team will receive $125,000 and two BLAST Frequent Flyer Tokens.

On Thursday, FaZe Clan opened with a 13-4 victory on Dust II before FURIA captured Mirage 13-7. On the decisive third map, Nuke, FaZe Clan powered to a 13-3 win.

Slovakia’s David “frozen” Cernansky, France’s Ryan “Neityu” Aubry and Latvia’s Helvijs “broky” Saukants each logged 37 kills for FaZe Clan. broky had a team-best plus-8 kill-death differential. Kazakhstan’s Danil “molodoy” Golubenko and Latvia’s Mareks “YEKINDAR” Galinskis both had 42 kills for FURIA.

Natus Vincere downed GamerLegion 13-10 on Mirage and 13-4 on Ancient. Ukraine’s Ihor “w0nderful” Zhdanov produced 46 kills and a plus-26 K-D differential for Natus Vincere. Sweden’s Fredrik “REZ” Sterner registered 30 kills and an even K-D differential for GamerLegion.

Team Vitality took Mirage 16-13 in overtime, but G2 Esports bounced back to claim Overpass 13-11. Team Vitality wrapped up the series win by a 13-3 count on Dust II.

France’s Mathieu “ZywOo” Herbaut recorded 56 kills and a plus-14 K-D differential for Team Vitality. Spain’s Alvaro “SunPayus” Garcia amassed 52 kills and a plus-6 K-D differential for G2 Esports.

Astralis knocked out FUT Esports 13-5 on Mirage and 13-10 on Nuke. Denmark’s Rasmus “HooXi” Nielsen totaled 38 kills and a plus-14 K-D differential for Astralis. Kosovo’s Aulon “Krabeni” Fazlija ended up with 33 kills and a plus-1 K-D differential for FUT Esports.

The remaining schedule:

Quarterfinals, Friday

–GamerLegion vs. Astralis

–G2 Esports vs. FaZe Clan

Semifinals, Saturday

–Team Vitality vs. GamerLegion/Astralis winner

–Natus Vincere vs. G2 Esports/FaZe Clan winner

Final, Sunday

–Semifinal winners

BLAST Rivals Spring final group-stage standings

Group A

1. Team Vitality, 2-0, +18

2. G2 Esports, 1-1, +1

3. Astralis, 1-1, -1

4. FUT Esports, 0-2, -18

Group B

1. Natus Vincere, 2-0, +20

2. GamerLegion, 1-1, -9

3. FaZe Clan, 1-1, +5

4. FURIA, 0-2, -16

BLAST Rivals Spring prize pool

1. $125,000, two BLAST Frequent Flyer tokens

2. $75,000

3-4. $40,000

5-6. $25,000

7-8. $10,000 — FUT Esports, FURIA

–Field Level Media

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#Deadspin #FaZe #Clan #slip #BLAST #Rivals #Spring #playoffs

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NBA Playoffs: New York Knicks advance with 51-point rout; Minnesota Timberwolves also enter Conference Semifinals <div id="content-body-70927612" itemprop="articleBody"><p>OG Anunoby scored 26 of his 29 points in the first half to lead visiting New York to a historic 140-89 victory over ​the Atlanta Hawks on Thursday as the Knicks won their first-round Eastern Conference playoff ‌series 4-2.</p><p>It was the most points scored by the Knicks ​in a playoff game and the 51-point margin of victory ⁠their largest in the postseason. The only bigger victory margin in club history came earlier this year, when New York routed the Brooklyn Nets 120-66 on January 21.</p><p>The ‌Hawks endured the second-worst postseason defeat in franchise history. The then-St. Louis Hawks lost 133-75 to the Minneapolis Lakers on March ‌19, 1956.</p><p>New York, which produced a 63-11 first-half run, led ‌by ⁠as many as 61 and beat the Hawks for the third ⁠straight game to advance to the conference semifinals for the fourth straight year. Karl-Anthony Towns had his second career playoff triple-double with 12 points, 11 rebounds and 10 assists, along ​with three steals. The starters were ‌out of the game midway in the third quarter.</p><h4 class="sub_head">Timberwolves 110, Nuggets 98</h4><p>Elevated into the starting lineup of a heavily depleted backcourt, Terrence Shannon Jr. scored a career-playoff-high 24 points to help Minnesota close out Denver ‌in Game 6 in Minneapolis.</p><p>The sixth-seeded Timberwolves advance to face the ​second-seeded Spurs in the Western Conference semifinals, with Game 1 scheduled for Monday in San Antonio.</p><p>Without All-NBA guard Anthony Edwards (knee), Donte ⁠DiVincenzo (Achilles), Game 4 hero Ayo Dosunmu (calf) and veteran Kyle Anderson (illness), the Timberwolves turned to Shannon — who did not play in the first three games of the series. ‌He stepped up, capping his 9-of-20 performance shooting from the field with a crucial three-point play that ignited a game-ending 10-1 run for the Timberwolves.</p><p>Jaden McDaniels scored a game-high 32 in the win. Nikola Jokic helped keep the Nuggets within striking distance, finishing with team highs in points (28), assists (10) and rebounds (nine).</p><h4 class="sub_head">76ers 106, Celtics 93</h4><p>Tyrese Maxey scored 30 points as surging Philadelphia ‌beat visiting Boston again, forcing a decisive Game 7 in their first-round series.</p><p>The second-seeded Celtics ​led the series 3-1 following a 32-point win in Philadelphia on Sunday, but the seventh-seeded Sixers rebounded to post double-digit wins ⁠in Games 5 and 6. The teams will reconvene Saturday for Game 7 in ⁠Boston, where the Sixers will aim to complete a 3-1 series comeback for the first time in franchise history.</p><p>Paul George added ‌23 points for Philadelphia, while Joel Embiid had 19 points, 10 rebounds and eight assists in his third game since returning from an emergency ​appendectomy. Jaylen Brown led Boston with 18 points but also committed five of his team’s 13 turnovers.</p><p class="publish-time" id="end-of-article">Published on May 01, 2026</p></div> #NBA #Playoffs #York #Knicks #advance #51point #rout #Minnesota #Timberwolves #enter #Conference #Semifinals

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FIFA World Cup 2026 — More than 500 million tickets requested for WC: Infantino <div id="content-body-70927500" itemprop="articleBody"><p>FIFA President Gianni Infantino said demand ​for tickets to the 2026 World Cup ‌had reached unprecedented levels, with 500 ​million requests already recorded ⁠for the expanded 48-team tournament in the United States, Canada and Mexico.</p><p>“You’ve heard, there ‌were many discussions about the ticketing of the World Cup,” ‌Infantino said at the FIFA ‌Congress ⁠on Thursday. “We had 500 million ⁠ticket requests — 500 million ticket requests. In the last two World Cups together, we had ​50 million ‌ticket requests. Here, 500 million.”</p><p>Infantino said FIFA had already sold the vast majority of tickets released so far.</p><p>“We’ve ‌sold 100 per cent of the inventory ​that we’ve put on the market, which is, more or ⁠less, 90% of the global inventory so far,” he said. “And of course, we ‌are always putting tickets on the market.”</p><p>Ticketing has emerged as a sensitive issue in the build-up to the tournament, with concerns raised about affordability and access for local ‌fans.</p><p>“There are expensive tickets, yes, but there ​are also affordable tickets,” Infantino added.</p><p>Football’s global governing body is expected ⁠to continue releasing batches of tickets ⁠in phases, a strategy designed to manage demand while maximising revenue ‌for what is set to be the most lucrative World Cup ​in history.</p><p class="publish-time" id="end-of-article">Published on May 01, 2026</p></div> #FIFA #World #Cup #million #tickets #requested #Infantino

Deadspin | Phillies beat Giants in 10 to sweep doubleheader and 3-game set  Apr 30, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies infielder Alec Bohm (28) hits a sacrifice fly against the San Francisco Giants in the tenth inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images   Alec Bohm’s sacrifice fly plated automatic runner Adolis Garcia in the 10th inning Thursday night, giving the Philadelphia Phillies a 6-5 victory over the visiting San Francisco Giants and their second walk-off win of a day-night doubleheader that ended about nine hours after it started.  The Phillies scored twice in the ninth inning to pull out a 3-2 win in the opener.  The doubleheader was necessitated by a rainout Wednesday night. The clubs also sat out a brief storm that prompted a 24-minute delay in the top of the sixth of the Thursday nightcap.  After the Giants stranded runners at first and third in the top of the 10th inning, the Phillies went the fundamental route to give new manager Don Mattingly his third straight win. Bryson Stott sacrificed Garcia to third, setting up Bohm’s fly to medium-deep center field.  Chase Shugart (2-0), who escaped the jam in the top of the 10th, was credited with the win — his second of the day. He is the first major league pitcher to win both games of a doubleheader since 2013 and the first Philadelphia pitcher to do so since Terry Adams in 2002.  Matt Gage (2-1), who entered the game to start the last of the 10th, took the loss.  Each team scored a two-out run in the ninth to send the game into extra innings. Jung Hoo Lee’s RBI single gave the Giants a 5-4 lead in the top of the inning before the Phillies got even on a Kyle Schwarber run-scoring double.  Down to his final strike, Schwarber capped a 4-for-4 game with the clutch hit. In the doubleheader, he went 5-for-6, drove in three runs, scored three times and collected two home runs, two doubles and three walks.   After blowing a lead in the opener, the Giants rallied from behind in the second game, twice erasing two-run deficits. A two-out, two-run single by Luis Arraez in the sixth created the 4-4 tie that stood until the ninth.  Philadelphia’s first two-run lead was the product of back-to-back solo home runs by Trea Turner, his fourth, and Schwarber, his 11th, to begin the bottom of the first. Turner connected on Adrian Houser’s first pitch, Schwarber on his fifth.  Houser was pulled after 5 2/3 innings, charged with three runs on four hits. He struck out two and walked two.  The Phillies used Tim Mayza as an opener. He threw two shutout innings, allowing two hits and one walk. He struck out two.  Turner, who had two hits, and Schwarber scored twice apiece, while Garcia had a two-RBI single.  Drew Gilbert piled up three hits while Lee, Arraez and Casey Schmitt had two apiece for the Giants, who were swept in the three-game series despite out-hitting the hosts 13-9 in the finale.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Phillies #beat #Giants #sweep #doubleheader #3game #setApr 30, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies infielder Alec Bohm (28) hits a sacrifice fly against the San Francisco Giants in the tenth inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images

Alec Bohm’s sacrifice fly plated automatic runner Adolis Garcia in the 10th inning Thursday night, giving the Philadelphia Phillies a 6-5 victory over the visiting San Francisco Giants and their second walk-off win of a day-night doubleheader that ended about nine hours after it started.

The Phillies scored twice in the ninth inning to pull out a 3-2 win in the opener.

The doubleheader was necessitated by a rainout Wednesday night. The clubs also sat out a brief storm that prompted a 24-minute delay in the top of the sixth of the Thursday nightcap.

After the Giants stranded runners at first and third in the top of the 10th inning, the Phillies went the fundamental route to give new manager Don Mattingly his third straight win. Bryson Stott sacrificed Garcia to third, setting up Bohm’s fly to medium-deep center field.

Chase Shugart (2-0), who escaped the jam in the top of the 10th, was credited with the win — his second of the day. He is the first major league pitcher to win both games of a doubleheader since 2013 and the first Philadelphia pitcher to do so since Terry Adams in 2002.

Matt Gage (2-1), who entered the game to start the last of the 10th, took the loss.

Each team scored a two-out run in the ninth to send the game into extra innings. Jung Hoo Lee’s RBI single gave the Giants a 5-4 lead in the top of the inning before the Phillies got even on a Kyle Schwarber run-scoring double.


Down to his final strike, Schwarber capped a 4-for-4 game with the clutch hit. In the doubleheader, he went 5-for-6, drove in three runs, scored three times and collected two home runs, two doubles and three walks.

After blowing a lead in the opener, the Giants rallied from behind in the second game, twice erasing two-run deficits. A two-out, two-run single by Luis Arraez in the sixth created the 4-4 tie that stood until the ninth.

Philadelphia’s first two-run lead was the product of back-to-back solo home runs by Trea Turner, his fourth, and Schwarber, his 11th, to begin the bottom of the first. Turner connected on Adrian Houser’s first pitch, Schwarber on his fifth.

Houser was pulled after 5 2/3 innings, charged with three runs on four hits. He struck out two and walked two.

The Phillies used Tim Mayza as an opener. He threw two shutout innings, allowing two hits and one walk. He struck out two.

Turner, who had two hits, and Schwarber scored twice apiece, while Garcia had a two-RBI single.

Drew Gilbert piled up three hits while Lee, Arraez and Casey Schmitt had two apiece for the Giants, who were swept in the three-game series despite out-hitting the hosts 13-9 in the finale.

–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Phillies #beat #Giants #sweep #doubleheader #3game #set">Deadspin | Phillies beat Giants in 10 to sweep doubleheader and 3-game set  Apr 30, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies infielder Alec Bohm (28) hits a sacrifice fly against the San Francisco Giants in the tenth inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images   Alec Bohm’s sacrifice fly plated automatic runner Adolis Garcia in the 10th inning Thursday night, giving the Philadelphia Phillies a 6-5 victory over the visiting San Francisco Giants and their second walk-off win of a day-night doubleheader that ended about nine hours after it started.  The Phillies scored twice in the ninth inning to pull out a 3-2 win in the opener.  The doubleheader was necessitated by a rainout Wednesday night. The clubs also sat out a brief storm that prompted a 24-minute delay in the top of the sixth of the Thursday nightcap.  After the Giants stranded runners at first and third in the top of the 10th inning, the Phillies went the fundamental route to give new manager Don Mattingly his third straight win. Bryson Stott sacrificed Garcia to third, setting up Bohm’s fly to medium-deep center field.  Chase Shugart (2-0), who escaped the jam in the top of the 10th, was credited with the win — his second of the day. He is the first major league pitcher to win both games of a doubleheader since 2013 and the first Philadelphia pitcher to do so since Terry Adams in 2002.  Matt Gage (2-1), who entered the game to start the last of the 10th, took the loss.  Each team scored a two-out run in the ninth to send the game into extra innings. Jung Hoo Lee’s RBI single gave the Giants a 5-4 lead in the top of the inning before the Phillies got even on a Kyle Schwarber run-scoring double.  Down to his final strike, Schwarber capped a 4-for-4 game with the clutch hit. In the doubleheader, he went 5-for-6, drove in three runs, scored three times and collected two home runs, two doubles and three walks.   After blowing a lead in the opener, the Giants rallied from behind in the second game, twice erasing two-run deficits. A two-out, two-run single by Luis Arraez in the sixth created the 4-4 tie that stood until the ninth.  Philadelphia’s first two-run lead was the product of back-to-back solo home runs by Trea Turner, his fourth, and Schwarber, his 11th, to begin the bottom of the first. Turner connected on Adrian Houser’s first pitch, Schwarber on his fifth.  Houser was pulled after 5 2/3 innings, charged with three runs on four hits. He struck out two and walked two.  The Phillies used Tim Mayza as an opener. He threw two shutout innings, allowing two hits and one walk. He struck out two.  Turner, who had two hits, and Schwarber scored twice apiece, while Garcia had a two-RBI single.  Drew Gilbert piled up three hits while Lee, Arraez and Casey Schmitt had two apiece for the Giants, who were swept in the three-game series despite out-hitting the hosts 13-9 in the finale.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Phillies #beat #Giants #sweep #doubleheader #3game #set

Carlos Alcaraz swapped his racket for a spectator’s seat at ​the Madrid Open on Thursday, watching his ‌14-year-old brother Jaime earn a straight-sets ​win that showcased the family’s ⁠talent.

Sidelined by a wrist injury that has ruled him out of Madrid, Rome and ‌the French Open, the 22-year-old world number two followed closely as ‌Jaime claimed a 6-3, 6-3 ‌win ⁠over seeded opponent Pol Mas ⁠in the under-16 event.

The teenager, playing on a wildcard, produced moments that drew murmurs of recognition ​from courtside observers.

A ‌delicate drop shot by Jaime, a signature element of his brother’s game, brought a smile to proud Carlos, ‌who sat with a brace on ​his right wrist.

Alcaraz turns spectator at Madrid Open, watches brother shine in U-16 event  Carlos Alcaraz swapped his racket for a spectator’s seat at ​the Madrid Open on Thursday, watching his ‌14-year-old brother Jaime earn a straight-sets ​win that showcased the family’s ⁠talent.Sidelined by a wrist injury that has ruled him out of Madrid, Rome and ‌the French Open, the 22-year-old world number two followed closely as ‌Jaime claimed a 6-3, 6-3 ‌win ⁠over seeded opponent Pol Mas ⁠in the under-16 event.The teenager, playing on a wildcard, produced moments that drew murmurs of recognition ​from courtside observers.A ‌delicate drop shot by Jaime, a signature element of his brother’s game, brought a smile to proud Carlos, ‌who sat with a brace on ​his right wrist. Carlos’ presence transformed what might have been a routine junior match into something of an occasion, with spectators ‌gathering around the court as Jaime sealed victory.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                Getty Images
                            

                            Carlos’ presence transformed what might have been a routine junior match into something of an occasion, with spectators ‌gathering around the court as Jaime sealed victory.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                Getty Images
                                                    The injury that has disrupted Carlos’ clay-court season, including ⁠his planned title defence in Paris, also limited his celebrations. He applauded his ‌brother’s shots but was unable to fully clap because of the wrist issue.Carlos’ presence transformed what might have been a routine junior match into something of an occasion, with spectators ‌gathering around the court as Jaime sealed victory.Carlos’ ​enforced absence in a blow to his clay-court campaign has ⁠grabbed the headlines but attention briefly shifted ⁠to his brother, whose composed display offered an early glimpse of ‌what the next generation of the Alcaraz family has to offer.Published on May 01, 2026  #Alcaraz #turns #spectator #Madrid #Open #watches #brother #shine #U16 #event

Carlos’ presence transformed what might have been a routine junior match into something of an occasion, with spectators ‌gathering around the court as Jaime sealed victory. | Photo Credit: Getty Images

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Carlos’ presence transformed what might have been a routine junior match into something of an occasion, with spectators ‌gathering around the court as Jaime sealed victory. | Photo Credit: Getty Images

The injury that has disrupted Carlos’ clay-court season, including ⁠his planned title defence in Paris, also limited his celebrations. He applauded his ‌brother’s shots but was unable to fully clap because of the wrist issue.

Carlos’ presence transformed what might have been a routine junior match into something of an occasion, with spectators ‌gathering around the court as Jaime sealed victory.

Carlos’ ​enforced absence in a blow to his clay-court campaign has ⁠grabbed the headlines but attention briefly shifted ⁠to his brother, whose composed display offered an early glimpse of ‌what the next generation of the Alcaraz family has to offer.

Published on May 01, 2026

#Alcaraz #turns #spectator #Madrid #Open #watches #brother #shine #U16 #event">Alcaraz turns spectator at Madrid Open, watches brother shine in U-16 event  Carlos Alcaraz swapped his racket for a spectator’s seat at ​the Madrid Open on Thursday, watching his ‌14-year-old brother Jaime earn a straight-sets ​win that showcased the family’s ⁠talent.Sidelined by a wrist injury that has ruled him out of Madrid, Rome and ‌the French Open, the 22-year-old world number two followed closely as ‌Jaime claimed a 6-3, 6-3 ‌win ⁠over seeded opponent Pol Mas ⁠in the under-16 event.The teenager, playing on a wildcard, produced moments that drew murmurs of recognition ​from courtside observers.A ‌delicate drop shot by Jaime, a signature element of his brother’s game, brought a smile to proud Carlos, ‌who sat with a brace on ​his right wrist. Carlos’ presence transformed what might have been a routine junior match into something of an occasion, with spectators ‌gathering around the court as Jaime sealed victory.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                Getty Images
                            

                            Carlos’ presence transformed what might have been a routine junior match into something of an occasion, with spectators ‌gathering around the court as Jaime sealed victory.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                Getty Images
                                                    The injury that has disrupted Carlos’ clay-court season, including ⁠his planned title defence in Paris, also limited his celebrations. He applauded his ‌brother’s shots but was unable to fully clap because of the wrist issue.Carlos’ presence transformed what might have been a routine junior match into something of an occasion, with spectators ‌gathering around the court as Jaime sealed victory.Carlos’ ​enforced absence in a blow to his clay-court campaign has ⁠grabbed the headlines but attention briefly shifted ⁠to his brother, whose composed display offered an early glimpse of ‌what the next generation of the Alcaraz family has to offer.Published on May 01, 2026  #Alcaraz #turns #spectator #Madrid #Open #watches #brother #shine #U16 #event

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