Men’s College World Series: Zander Sechrist and Tennessee advance to the Finals men,s,college,world,series,zander,sechrist,and,tennessee,advance,to,the,finals,sbnation,com,front-page,college-baseball,college-world-series,ncaa-baseball-tournament


Wednesday was the kind of outing you dream about as a pitcher for Tennessee’s Zander Sechrist. The senior left-hander got the call for the Volunteers and was tasked with slowing down Florida State with a spot in the Men’s College World Series Final on the line.

For six innings, Sechrist did exactly that.

Facing a Seminoles lineup that hung 11 runs on the Volunteers earlier this week and had mashed all season long — Florida State posted a Slugging Percentage of .559 this season (seventh in the nation) and an OPS of .974 (sixth in the country) — the left-hander kept Florida State scoreless through six innings of work. Sechrist showed complete command of the strike zone, placing an array of fastballs and sharp-breaking balls almost anywhere he wanted to. With some of those breaking balls topping out in the low 80s and even upper 70s, the Florida State hitters were kept off-balance for the first six innings of the game.

By the time the Seminoles finally got to Sechrist for a pair of solo home runs in the seventh inning, the Volunteers’ potent offense had put six runs on the board, spurred on by a three-run first inning. Tennessee added another run in the second, and one more in the third when Christian Moore — who made MCWS history earlier in the week when he became just the second player ever to hit for the cycle — ripped a triple down the right-field line, bringing catcher Cal Stark around to score from first:

And while the Seminoles made it interesting with the two solo home runs in the seventh, Blake Burke added an insurance run for Tennessee with this absolute bomb to right-center:

But the headlines belong to Sechrist, who finished the day giving the Volunteers 6.1 innings of solid work, allowing just a pair of runs while striking out three.

Earlier this week Tennessee head coach Tony Vitello talked about Sechrist getting this opportunity, and how Vitello was “excited” to see the left-hander on the bump.

“We’re really excited,” Vitello said. “This is the guy that has the ability to pitch on the weekend, which he’s accomplished that and helped pitch our team to Omaha, which he did last year as well. I mean, it’s so crucial every game that you play. And he’s logged a ton of innings for us in his career with us and just been a good leader and a good teammate as well.

“I don’t want to call it gravy or anything like that, but now it’s time to enjoy the opportunity for him to compete and then for us to enjoy the opportunity to watch him compete while at the same time just kind of managing the game as best we see fit.”

Sechrist made managing the game easier for Vitello, thanks to his outing on Wednesday.

Now the Volunteers will wait to see who they will face in the Men’s College World Series Finals, between the winner of the Texas A&M-Florida matchup. The Aggies just need one win to advance, while the Gators need two straight wins to make a return appearance in the Finals.

Men’s College World Series: Kentucky-Florida moved to Wednesday due to severe weather men,s,college,world,series,kentucky,florida,moved,to,wednesday,due,to,severe,weather,sbnation,com,front-page,college-baseball,college-world-series,ncaa-baseball-tournament


Florida and Kentucky are set to square off at the Men’s College World Series, in a do-or-die game for both teams.

Now they will have another night to think about what needs to be done.

With the threat of severe weather looming over Omaha — forecasters are calling for thunderstorms and heavy rain — Tuesday night’s elimination game between the two teams has been moved to Wednesday morning.

That sets up a baseball triple-header in Omaha Wednesday, and a double-header for the team that wins the rescheduled game between Kentucky and Florida. Wednesday’s new schedule for the Men’s College World Series is as follows, with all times Eastern:

  • Game 10 Kentucky vs. Florida | 11 a.m.
  • Game 11 Tennessee vs. the winner of North Carolina/Florida State | 3 p.m.
  • Game 12 between Texas A&M vs. the winner of Kentucky/Florida | 7 p.m.

Both Florida and Kentucky are 1-1 in Omaha. The Gators are coming off a 5-4 win over NC State that kept their season alive, while the Wildcats just dropped their first game in Omaha to Texas A&M, losing by a final score of 5-1.

The SEC rivals played one series this year in early May, and the Wildcats won two of those three games in Gainesville.

Travelers Championship: How to watch, preview, tee times, more travelers,championship,how,to,watch,preview,tee,times,more,sbnation,com,golf,fantasy-football-draft-guide,golf-pga-tour,golf-news

Travelers Championship How to watch preview tee times more travelerschampionshiphowtowatchpreviewteetimesmoresbnationcomgolffantasy football draft guidegolf pga tourgolf news


The PGA Tour is in Cromwell, Connecticut, for the eighth and final Signature Event of the season: the Travelers Championship.

TPC River Highlands, a Robert J. Moss and Maurice Kearney course, will play as host. This tournament will not feature a cut as 71 players battle for a piece of the $20 million purse.

Here is the one-stop information shop for the Travelers Championship.

Travelers Championship:

Where: TPC River Highlands, Cromwell, Connecticut (Par-70, 6,852-yards)

When: Jun. 20-23rd

Purse: $20,000,000/$4,000,000 (First Place)

FedEx Cup Points: 700

Defending Champion: Keegan Bradley

Photo by Rob Carr/Getty Images

How to Watch The Travelers Championship

Golf Channel and CBS will share the television coverage. Check out the full schedule below:

Thursday, June 20: 3-6 p.m. ET (Golf Channel)

Friday, June 21: 3-6 p.m. ET (Golf Channel)

Saturday, June 22: 1:00-3:00 p.m. ET (Golf Channel); 3:00-6 p.m. ET (CBS)

Sunday, June 23: 1:00-3:00 p.m. ET (Golf Channel); 3:00-6 p.m. ET (CBS)

How to Stream The Travelers Championship

ESPN+ will exclusively air early round and featured group coverage all four days of the Travelers Championship. Peacock will have simulcasts of the Golf Channel’s broadcast.

Coverage on Peacock can be streamed here.

In addition, fans can tune into CBS Sports streaming service Paramount+ while CBS airs its third and final round broadcasts.

The Travelers Championship Preview:

Coming off a dramatic U.S. Open week, the best of the PGA Tour is in Connecticut for the final Signature Event of the year.

Defending champion Keegan Bradley won his sixth PGA Tour event here in 2023. He also broke the tournament record by one stroke.

World No. 1 Scottie Scheffler is coming off one of his weakest performances at Pinehurst No. 2, but he remains one of the many heavy hitters who headline this event.

Xander Schauffele is also in the field as the PGA Championship winner finished strong at Pinehurst.

Ludvig Åberg struggled at Pinehurst throughout the weekend, but this TPC River Highlands track fits his game well. Last year, he was one of four sponsor exemptions in the field, and now, heading into this event, the Swedish phenom is a PGA Tour winner.

He tied for 24th in 2023, going 67-65-65-70 through four days of play. Åberg’s game is in a good spot coming off the U.S. Open, so watch out for him to make moves this week.

Collin Morikawa, Rory McIlroy, Tommy Fleetwood, Viktor Hovland, and many other top players will tee it up this week in New England as they all fight to take home that hefty $4 million first-place price.

This week will be interesting as most of the field is coming off a major championship. Will fatigue affect some of the biggest names in golf?

The Travelers Championship Round 1 Tee Times (ET):

(All go off the first tee)

8:05 a.m. — Chris Gotterup

8:15 a.m. — Robert MacIntyre, Jake Knapp

8:25 a.m. — Akshay Bhatia, Thomas Detry

8:35 a.m. — Taylor Pendrith, Victor Perez

8:45 a.m. — Davis Riley, Rickie Fowler

8:55 a.m. — Lee Hodges, Eric Cole

9:05 a.m. — Brian Harman, Tom Hoge

9:15 a.m. — Nick Taylor, Harris English

9:25 a.m. — Taylor Moore, Seamus Power

9:40 a.m. — Kurt Kitayama, Mackenzie Hughes

9:50 a.m. — Sahith Theegala, Sepp Sraka

10:00 a.m. — Jason Day, J.T. Poston

10:10 a.m. — Cameron Young, Patrick Rodgers

10:20 a.m. — Hideki Matsuyama, Keegan Bradley

10:30 a.m. — Scottie Scheffler, Max Homa

10:40 a.m. — Wyndham Clark, Jordan Spieth

10:50 a.m. — Shane Lowry, Justin Thomas

11:00 a.m. — Nick Dunlap, Adam Scott

11:15 a.m. — Will Zalatoris, Ben Griffin

11:25 a.m. — Austin Eckroat, Webb Simpson

11:35 a.m. — Peter Malnati, Christian Bezuidenhout

11:45 a.m. — Emiliano Grillo, Andrew Putnam

11:55 a.m. — Sam Burns, Byeong Hun An

12:05 p.m. — Si Woo Kim, Adam Svensson

12:15 p.m. — Matt Fitzpatrick, Adam Hadwin

12:25 p.m. — Tom Kim, Corey Conners

12:35 p.m. — Justin Rose, Adam Schenk

12:50 p.m. — Chris Kirk, Sungjae Im

1:00 p.m. — Russell Henley, Denny McCarthy

1:10 p.m. — Cam Davis, Brendon Todd

1:20 p.m. — Lucas glover, Tommy Fleetwood

1:30 p.m. — Collin Morikawa, Viktor Hovland

1:40 p.m. — Tony Finau, Patrick Cantlay

1:50 p.m. — Xander Schauffele, Matthieu Pavon

2:00 p.m. — Ludvig Åberg, Michael Thorbjornsen

2:10 p.m. — Billy Horschel, Stephan Jaeger

The Travelers Championship Round 2 Tee Times (ET):

(All go off the first tee)

8:05 a.m. — Will Zalatoris, Ben Griffin

8:15 a.m. — Austin Eckroat, Webb Simpson

8:25 a.m. — Peter Malnati, Christian Bezuidenhout

8:35 a.m. — Emiliano Grillo, Andrew Putnam

8:45 a.m. — Sam Burns, Byeong Hun An

8:55 a.m. — Si Woo Kim, Adam Svensson

9:05 a.m. — Matt Fitzpatrick, Adam Hadwin

9:15 a.m. — Tom Kim, Corey Conners

9:25 a.m. — Justin Rose, Adam Schenk

9:40 a.m. — Chris Kirk, Sungjae Im

9:50 a.m. — Russell Henley, Denny McCarthy

10:00 a.m. — Cam Davis, Brendon Todd

10:10 a.m. — Lucas glover, Tommy Fleetwood

10:20 a.m. — Collin Morikawa, Viktor Hovland

10:30 a.m. — Tony Finau, Patrick Cantlay

10:40 a.m. — Xander Schauffele, Matthieu Pavon

10:50 a.m. — Ludvig Åberg, Michael Thorbjornsen

11:00 a.m. — Billy Horschel, Stephan Jaeger

11:15 a.m. — Chris Gotterup

11:25 a.m. — Robert MacIntyre, Jake Knapp

11:35 a.m. — Akshay Bhatia, Thomas Detry

11:45 a.m. — Taylor Pendrith, Victor Perez

11:55 a.m. — Davis Riley, Rickie Fowler

12:05 p.m. — Lee Hodges, Eric Cole

12:15 p.m. — Brian Harman, Tom Hoge

12:25 p.m. — Nick Taylor, Harris English

12:35 p.m. — Taylor Moore, Seamus Power

12:45 p.m. — Kurt Kitayama, Mackenzie Hughes

12:55 p.m. — Sahith Theegala, Sepp Sraka

1:10 p.m. — Jason Day, J.T. Poston

1:20 p.m. — Cameron Young, Patrick Rodgers

1:30 p.m. — Hideki Matsuyama, Keegan Bradley

1:40 p.m. — Scottie Scheffler, Max Homa

1:50 p.m. — Wyndham Clark, Jordan Spieth

2:00 p.m. — Shane Lowry, Justin Thomas

2:10 p.m. — Nick Dunlap, Adam Scott

Savannah Leigh Richardson is a golf staff writer for SB Nation’s Playing Through. For more golf coverage, be sure to follow us @_PlayingThrough on all major social platforms. You can also follow her on Twitter @SportsGirlSL and Instagram @savannah_leigh_sports.

Derrick White got his face smashed in for Celtics to prove how bad he wants a ring derrick,white,got,his,face,smashed,in,for,celtics,to,prove,how,bad,he,wants,a,ring,sbnation,com,front-page,nba


The Boston Celtics have a chance Monday night to capture their 18th NBA Finals title. And they are putting it all on the line in pursuit of that championship.

Literally.

With the minutes ticking down in the first half, Boston held a 52-39 lead over the visiting Dallas Mavericks in Game 5, and were locked in on the defensive end. Dallas forward P.J. Washington stumbled off the dribble and tried to shove a pass in the direction of Dereck Lively, but the ball was knocked loose by Jayson Tatum.

In the ensuing melee for the loose ball, Derrick White of the Celtics absolutely laid out trying to corral the ball, before catching an entire face full of the parquet floor at T.D. Garden:

If you dare, you can watch the close-up replay of White’s effort:

In the moment, it looked as if Boston would lose the player that has been the “oomph” of their roster since he was acquired via trade during the 2022 season. White made his way to the Celtics bench after staying down on the floor for a moment, and was looked at by Celtics trainers:

He returned to the game immediately after.

And buried a three moments later to give Boston a 60-42 lead.

Look at this guy:

Between that and another heave at the buzzer from Payton Prichard, Boston has had one heck of a first half.

And they are 24 minutes away from their 18th banner.

F1 Spanish Grand Prix: Mercedes and Toto Wolff hope to build on ‘positive momentum’ f,spanish,grand,prix,mercedes,and,toto,wolff,hope,to,build,on,positive,momentum,sbnation,com,front-page,formula-one,2024-formula-one

F1 Spanish Grand Prix Mercedes and Toto Wolff hope to


Mercedes are coming off their best weekend of the entire 2024 season in the Canadian Grand Prix. George Russell scored the team’s first podium in a Grand Prix this season, with a second-place finish after qualifying on pole position, and the fourth-place finish from teammate Lewis Hamilton — coupled with the bonus point for the fastest lap of the Grand Prix — saw the Silver Arrows bank 28 points over their weekend in Montreal.

Can they keep that momentum going in Barcelona?

Previewing this weekend’s Spanish Grand Prix, Mercedes Team Principal Toto Wolff outlined how the team hopes to keep the momentum going, but the configuration of the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya may pose a stiff test for the upgraded W15.

“We have continued to make incremental gains across the past few races. It was encouraging therefore to take another positive step forward in Canada,” said Wolff in the team’s media preview. “To see that translate into our strongest team result of the season so far is a reward for everyone’s hard work.”

Wolff cautioned that not only is the circuit in Montreal “unique,” but Mercedes are not the only team working hard at upgrading their challenger.

“The Circuit Gilles Villeneuve is a unique track, however. It has a narrow range of corner speeds and, with a newly re-laid surface, was something of an outlier compared to more traditional venues,” added Wolff. “We know our competitors will perform more strongly at upcoming races so we will need to continue to work hard to consistently get ourselves in the fight for podiums, and eventually race wins.”

As for what to expect in Barcelona, Wolff outlined that the Spanish Grand Prix might be the best measuring stick yet for how far the team has progressed with the W15.

“Barcelona will provide a good test of our progress. It has a mix of fast, medium, and low speed corners, a long straight and plenty of elevation change,” described Wolff. “Tracks that contain this wide speed range have been a weakness of ours so far this year. This weekend will therefore provide another opportunity to evaluate our progress through our recent updates, and we hope to build on the positive momentum from Montreal.”

Mercedes enter the Spanish Grand Prix still in fourth place in the Formula 1 Constructors’ Championship, but the 28 points they banked in Montreal saw the team inch closer to not only Red Bull at the top of the table, but Ferrari in second:

Not only did Mercedes outscore Red Bull 28-25 in Montreal, but they outscored Ferrari 28-0 thanks to a double DNF from the Scuderia.

It might be hard to duplicated that in Barcelona, where Red Bull is expected to perform well and Ferrari might be bringing some upgrades of their own, but the results these past few weeks indicate that progress is truly happening at Mercedes.

PGA Tour: Jack Nicklaus’ tournament returns to old date pga,tour,jack,nicklaus,tournament,returns,to,old,date,sbnation,com,golf,golf-pga-tour,golf-news

PGA Tour Jack Nicklaus tournament returns to old date pgatourjacknicklaustournamentreturnstoolddatesbnationcomgolfgolf pga tourgolf news


The Memorial Tournament is returning to its original spot on the PGA Tour calendar.

After striking an agreement with the PGA Tour to stage its event the week before the U.S. Open in 2024, Jack Nicklaus announced Monday that his Memorial Tournament will take place during the first weekend of June.

That means the tournament will begin on Memorial Day Monday, two weeks before the U.S. Open.

“The relationship the Memorial Tournament presented by Workday has enjoyed with the PGA Tour is more like a partnership. The Tour has acted in the best interest of the Memorial Tournament, and we, in turn, have always supported the Tour and its initiatives. That is why a year ago when the Tour presented us its new business model, we were willing to work with them and move the 2024 date to a week before the U.S. Open,” Nicklaus said in a statement.

“Over recent months, we have had a number of conversations with Jay Monahan and his team—ones that have included our presenting sponsor Workday and Co-Founder and Executive Chair Aneel Bhusri—and together we determined that in the best interest of the Memorial Tournament, the Tour and its players, we would return to our traditional date and start Tournament week on the Memorial Day holiday.”

The Memorial Tournament presents a grueling test year in and year out, almost serving as a ‘Mini-major.’ This year’s edition certainly lived up to that billing, as Scottie Scheffler fought firm and fast conditions, as well as a charging Collin Morikawa, to win by a stroke at 8-under par. Scheffler even said it played like a U.S. Open, but it’s extremely difficult for both the mind and the body to play a U.S. Open-type course in back-to-back weeks.

Scottie Scheffler celebrates his par-save on the 18th green, which won him the 2024 Memorial Tournament.
Photo by Ian Johnson/Getty Images

Hence, at Pinehurst No. 2 this past week, Scheffler explained why he does not want to play the week before a major going forward.

“I think playing the week before, a lot of it depends on the golf course, but I think last week with the golf course the way it was, it probably was not the best prep work for me coming into another challenging event,” Scheffler said Sunday.

“I shot 5-under during the first round at the Memorial, which would have been the easiest day, and after that, I was 3-under from there on out. I mean, that’s pretty U.S. Open-like, and to play that many rounds, especially with what I’ve been dealing with the weeks leading up or the whole season, been playing a lot of good golf and being in contention, I think maybe my prep would have been a little bit better for this week if I was at home.”

Interestingly, Nicklaus, the 18-time major champion who has won more of them than anyone else, agreed with this sentiment.

“When I played, I rarely played a week before any major championship. So I’m asked to be part of putting on a golf tournament in a week that I would never play,” Nicklaus said before his tournament.

“From a sponsor’s standpoint, Memorial Day has been what our name is, and we were around Memorial Day. [Monday] is normally a huge day gallery-wise for us because it was Memorial Day, and we had maybe a thousand people here [this year on Monday].”

Now Nicklaus gets his wish, as his tournament will welcome the PGA Tour’s best players two weeks before Oakmont Country Club in Pittsburgh—another brutally tough course—will host the 2025 U.S. Open.

And best of all, Scheffler, now knowing that the 2025 Memorial aligns with his plans, will be there defending his title, too.

Jack Milko is a golf staff writer for SB Nation’s Playing Through. Be sure to check out @_PlayingThrough for more golf coverage. You can follow him on Twitter @jack_milko as well.

U.S. Open: Scottie Scheffler to re-consider 2025 plans after tough week u,s,open,scottie,scheffler,to,re,consider,plans,after,tough,week,sbnation,com,golf,us-open-golf,golf-majors,golf-pga-tour,golf-news

US Open Scottie Scheffler to re consider 2025 plans after tough


Scottie Scheffler could not make a putt at the 124th U.S. Open, which helps explain why he made only four birdies over his four rounds.

He called it a “frustrating” week after he finished up on Sunday, adding that it was “long.” Indeed, Scheffler arrived at Pinehurst No. 2 fresh off a victory at the Memorial, his fifth win of the 2024 season. But Jack Nicklaus’ course played so tough, that many players compared it to a major championship.

That level of difficulty takes a lot out of a player, let alone the best golfer in the world, especially going into a U.S. Open. Hence, Scheffler will re-evaluate whether or not he will play in the weeks before majors going forward.

“I think playing the week before, a lot of it depends on the golf course, but I think last week with the golf course the way it was, it probably was not the best prep work for me coming into another challenging event,” Scheffler said Sunday.

Scottie Scheffler walks up the 18th hole during the third round of the 2024 U.S. Open.
Photo by Tracy Wilcox/PGA Tour via Getty Images

“I shot 5-under during the first round at the Memorial, which would have been the easiest day, and after that, I was 3-under from there on out. I mean, that’s pretty U.S. Open-like, and to play that many rounds, especially with what I’ve been dealing with the weeks leading up or the whole season, been playing a lot of good golf and being in contention, I think maybe my prep would have been a little bit better for this week if I was at home.”

Of course, Scheffler has had a lot happen in his life off the golf course in recent months. His arrest at the PGA Championship quickly became national news and an internet sensation. He and his wife, Meredith, also welcomed a baby boy on May 8, only nine days before he found himself in a jail cell in Louisville, Kentucky.

After that, he played in the Charles Schwab Challenge, where a remarkable tragedy happened in the middle of the tournament. Then, Scheffler skipped the RBC Canadian Open and made his next start at the Memorial.

“I’m obviously not going to skip Jack’s tournament,” Scheffler added.

“It’s a tournament I love playing. It’s a tournament that I’m humbled to be the champion at.”

Before this season, Nicklaus staged the Memorial Tournament during the first weekend of June, with the first practice round coinciding with Memorial Day.

The PGA Tour pushed it back one week this year, hoping to give golf fans three straight weeks of top-level golf. After the Memorial, the world’s best went straight to Pinehurst No. 2, and then, next week, the top players on the PGA Tour will head to the Travelers Championship, the final Signature Event of the season. Nicklaus hopes that his tournament will revert to its prior schedule, and surely, Scheffler feels the same.

“I think in terms of prep work for a week that I know is going to be as tough as this, I’m leaning towards maybe not playing the week before,” Scheffler added after Saturday’s round.

Scottie Scheffler, Tom McKibbin, U.S. Open

Scottie Scheffler and Tom McKibbin during the final round of the 2024 U.S. Open.
Photo by David Cannon/Getty Images

“Going into the major championships, especially the ones we know are going to be really challenging, it may be in my best interest not to play the week before.”

Scheffler echoed this sentiment after his Sunday round, too.

“As far as prep for this week, it may not have been the best, but I knew what my schedule was at the beginning of the year. I had it set,” Scheffler said.

“That was always the way it was going to be. I feel like going forward, I’ll maybe do things a little bit differently in the weeks leading up to majors, especially when you know it’s going to be a challenging setup at a U.S. Open.”

Perhaps the PGA Tour will change the date of the Memorial back to its traditional date on the heels of Memorial Day next season. But maybe it does not. Either way, Scheffler looks like he will take the week off before major championships, especially before U.S. Opens, in 2025 and beyond.

Jack Milko is a golf staff writer for SB Nation’s Playing Through. Be sure to check out @_PlayingThrough for more golf coverage. You can follow him on Twitter @jack_milko as well.

LIV Golf: Sergio Garcia needs to replace horrible uniforms liv,golf,sergio,garcia,needs,to,replace,horrible,uniforms,sbnation,com,golf,us-open-golf,golf-majors,golf-opinions,liv-golf

LIV Golf Sergio Garcia needs to replace horrible uniforms livgolfsergiogarcianeedstoreplacehorribleuniformssbnationcomgolfus open golfgolf majorsgolf opinionsliv golf


Sergio Garcia has had an impressive week at the U.S. Open. He opened the championship with a 1-under 69, then carded a pair of 1-over 71s to make the cut and remain in the mix throughout the weekend.

But what Garcia has worn this week has been a sight to behold. Garcia captains Fireballs GC, the LIV Golf team that employs Mexican Abraham Ancer and fellow Spaniards Eugenio Chacarra and David Puig. As such, he wore his team uniforms throughout the championship at Pinehurst No. 2.

Players can wear whatever they want or whatever their apparel sponsor chooses.

But if there is one takeaway from Garcia’s performance this week, it is that his Fireballs GC needs new uniforms.

On Thursday, Garcia repped a bright red shirt and a white hat with his team’s logo plastered on his chest and cap.

Sergio Garcia during the first round of the 2024 U.S. Open.
Photo by Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images

His first-round wardrobe was not terrible, at least relative to what he wore on the subsequent days. But it most certainly popped out. He had a similar outfit for Sunday’s final round, too.

Yet, his first and final round fits paled in comparison to what he wore on Friday. Garcia pulled out a pair of bright red slacks, a color similar to the shirt he donned on Thursday. He matched that with a white shirt and white hat, which featured the Fireballs GC logo.

Sergio Garcia, U.S. Open

Sergio Garcia lines up a putt during the second round.
Photo by Ross Kinnaird/Getty Images

Then, on Saturday, Garcia ditched the red altogether and decided to go with another color.

He wore a bright yellow shirt, coupled with a pair of white pants. He went with a black cap to round out his look.

Sergio Garcia, U.S. Open

Sergio Garcia on the 4th hole during the third round.
Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images

Of course, Garcia’s yellow shirt immediately brought back memories of yesteryear, when he wore yellow during the final round of the 2006 Open Championship. He tied for fifth that year, as Tiger Woods went on to win at Royal Liverpool. Garcia then lost to Padraig Harrington in a playoff at Carnoustie one year later.

Sergio Garcia, The Open

Sergio Garcia plays a shot during the final round of the 2006 Open Championship.
Photo by John McHugh/Getty Images

He will not get that close this year at Pinehurst No. 2, but he still had a respectable performance this week. Garcia made it into the field as a first alternate, thanks to his strong play in final qualifying.

This week also marked his 24th straight U.S. Open appearance, an impressive feat for the 2017 Masters champion. But his wardrobe has been anything but that, as his Fireballs GC squad should get new uniforms, perhaps in time for The Open Championship.

Jack Milko is a golf staff writer for SB Nation’s Playing Through. Be sure to check out @_PlayingThrough for more golf coverage. You can follow him on Twitter @jack_milko as well.

The Mavericks’ Game 4 showed a blueprint that could allow them to make history against the Celtics the,mavericks,game,showed,a,blueprint,that,could,allow,them,to,make,history,against,the,celtics,sbnation,com,front-page,nba,nba-playoffs,nba-playoffs-powerhouse-2024,dot-com-grid-coverage


After the Dallas Mavericks’ deflating loss in Game 3 to the Boston Celtics on Wednesday, the normal cliches and platitudes were shared by players and coaches alike. The theme was universal: the series isn’t over, take it one game at a time.

It was nothing earth-shattering, a semi-cliche sentiment and mentality shared by most professional athletes facing such a scenario. History said that Wednesday’s loss meant the likely end of the series for Dallas, but they still had a job they’re paid to do, and they’re still going to do it.

But even with all of the chatter, and knowing Boston might feel a little comfortable up 3-0, it’s hard to think anyone expected the Mavericks to completely dominate Game 4 of the NBA Finals in Dallas.

Their 122-84 demolition of Boston was such an extensive and brilliant performance that Dallas is actually leading in the aggregate for the series; they are now +6 through the four games, outscoring Boston 408-402. A team winning Game 4 after falling behind 3-0 in any playoff series isn’t unusual, but the Mavericks’ dominance in doing so certainly was, especially when you consider how historically great this Celtics team is.

So normally a win in this scenario doesn’t raise too many eyebrows or change thoughts about the series as a whole. Normally. But while the Celtics are still the overwhelming favorite to win the NBA title, a win of this magnitude does invite the possibility of “what if?” If the Mavericks could decimate the Celtics this badly in an elimination game, are the two teams as far apart from each other as most thought?

We’ll find out soon enough, but these questions have a sudden validity now that they didn’t feature before. So if we’re going to take Game 3 as a blueprint, here’s how the Mavericks can shock the world, beat the Celtics, win the NBA Finals, and make history by becoming the first NBA team ever to overcome a 3-0 series deficit.

Continue to trust their bigs defensively

The Mavericks’ biggest strength heading into the Finals was their rim defense, behind the stalwart duo of trade deadline acquisition Daniel Gafford and rookie standout Dereck Lively II. Through the first three games of the Finals, that advantage was hardly felt as the Celtics spread out and sliced up the Mavs’ defense and neutralized their size advantage.

In the first three games, this all looked like a system shock to both Gafford and Lively. Dallas had solid options for those two to roam off of in the first three rounds, while the Celtics give a defense no easy outs. It’s not just that Boston plays five-out, but the other four perimeter players in their starting lineup are all comfortable driving and passing. Lively in particular looked like he finally hit his rookie wall in the first two games, understandable for a 20-year-old rookie who had already impressed so much. That changed a little in Game 3, and then the script flipped completely in Game 4.

The duos’ performance in the win was easily their best of the series. After the two failed to contain drives well on switches early in the series, it was clear Dallas wanted its two bigs to stay as close to the rim as possible. In Game 3, that meant Lively and Gafford were sometimes stuck in the paint as the Celtics swung the ball to shooters in the corner. What made matters worse was Boston still shot well at the rim, despite the extra attention to guard the paint. Entering Game 4 the Celtics were shooting a staggering 81.7% in the restricted area, while also averaging 14.7 corner three attempts per game. The two best shots in basketball are layups and corner threes, and Boston was getting both of them, with Dallas’ centers often in no man’s land trying to cover ground they’d never had to cover before.

In Game 4 the two clearly felt more comfortable — Boston attempted a series low seven corner threes and only shot 58.8% in the restricted area. Credit the two bigs for being let off the leash a bit, as both Gafford and Lively ventured outside the paint again, this time with better results. The two put together a highlight reel of closeouts, quick feet, and strong contests on Friday night.

If Lively and Gafford can play in space defensively, it changes the game for the Mavericks defense. You could really feel the continued absence of Kristaps Porzingis, as Al Horford only had one 3-point attempt in 23 minutes, and Xavier Tillman off the bench only had two attempts total. The floor geometry is just significantly different with the slower trigger of Horford and the lack of threat Tillman presents. Lively and Gafford could be aggressive, knowing there’s not a seven-foot unicorn waiting behind them to make them pay from the perimeter. The closeouts are just a little bit easier with Porzingis on the bench.

It also helps when those bigs get support, like Luka Doncic showed repeatedly throughout Game 4.

Doncic played his best defensive game on Friday, rebounding from fouling out in Game 3. Dallas’ bigs are better suited when they can play aggressive and not have to clean up so many mistakes. If the mistakes keep coming, that means those two are reacting and compensating instead of dictating the terms. Dallas isn’t going to completely solve the math problem the Celtics present (Boston still shot 41 total threes Friday), but they can do a better job directing where those 3-pointers come from. The corner three is so valuable because it’s a shorter shot, but that swings both ways — it also means it’s less ground to cover on closeouts. Lively and Gafford are big, long dudes: they have the length and athleticism to close out to the corner and then recover to the rim. As long as their teammates continue to back them up and coach Jason Kidd trusts them, the Mavericks can give themselves a chance defensively.

Green, Exum pressuring the defense

The Celtics rarely double on defense, or blitz the pick and roll. They like to play drop with their bigs, and switch the other four spots. With as many talented individual and team defenders as they employ in their rotation, it makes a lot of sense. It makes even more sense against this Mavericks team, who play a lot of players that need Doncic and Kyrie Irving to spoon feed them buckets.

Boston made the correct bet that if Lively, Gafford, PJ Washington, and Derrick Jones Jr. don’t have wide-open space, their effectiveness on offense is limited. Those aren’t players that can bust one-on-one defense, or truly make a closeout pay: Lively and Gafford live on lobs, while Washington and Jones do their damage on corner threes and spot-up attempts. The Celtics have taken those away, as the Mavericks corner threes have plummeted. Doncic and Irving’s usage rates have skyrocketed in the Finals, and the Celtics are daring that duo to beat them with tough twos against shaded coverage. It’s not that Boston isn’t helping at all, it’s just that they’re not doubling aggressively to get the ball out of Doncic or Irving’s hands — they’re inviting the long twos, and shading help toward the paint without outright doubling.

That defense has left most of Dallas role players ineffective. It’s not just that they’re not making shots, but the volume of attempts for the Mavericks role players has decreased mightily in the Finals. Game 4 saw the right adjustment to this, with more minutes for backups Josh Green and Dante Exum. Exum and Green haven’t had great playoffs, but this matchup and style might suit them better — for better and worse, those two have the most live-dribble juice of any Mavericks players outside of Doncic and Irving. Exum and Green’s shared ability to both aggressively drive and pass gives the Mavericks a counter to the Celtics defense — if they’re daring the role players to beat one-on-one coverage, you need role players that can attack and pass. Not playmakers, necessarily, but just players that can make the simple straight-line drive and the right read.

Green and Exum’s stat lines don’t pop off the box score (they combined for 13 points and one assist) but it was undeniable that their presence loosened the Celtics’ defense a little, just because they had the ability to dribble past their man and make the right play, unlike Washington and Jones.

On this Exum layup in the second quarter, look how tight Exum’s defender is playing up on him.

With Doncic face-guarded, Exum has a defender right on him despite holding a live dribble on the logo. Boston doesn’t respect the Mavericks role players to drive past that type of defense, so Exum’s ability to get by and score is the counter. The same goes for the nice Green assist in the third quarter for a Lively jam — Brown picks up Green tight, and Green burns the overplay and gets into the paint.

These are plays that the rest of the Mavericks non-stars can’t do. While it might have taken longer than Mavericks fans wanted, kudos to Kidd and the coaching staff for making the right adjustment.

Luka Doncic’s paint efficiency

After Game 3, Irving noted that with how the Celtics are giving himself and Doncic one-on-one chances in the paint and near the rim, it’s on them to be efficient enough to force the Celtics into another coverage. On Friday, that duo certainly was, especially Doncic.

Doncic missed every 3-pointer he took in Game 4, but was an impressive 11-16 in the paint, including 5-6 in the restricted area. Irving was 9-12 on twos, most in the paint. Dallas as a team scored 60 points in the paint, and you could see that paint control tilt the Celtics defense a little bit, as the Mavericks finally got some corner threes (4-7 from the corners, compared to 2-5 in Game 3). There was even a trap in the third quarter as the Celtics were underwater as the game spiraled out of control, but that’s what the Mavericks have to do to force Boston try something else. Dallas still didn’t have a high assist game on Friday, with only 21 total, and Doncic finished with six assists. There is still room for experimentation and working with Irving’s off-ball gravity, but none of this matters if Doncic isn’t converting in the paint, which he did in Game 4.

It also helps to score in the paint when you get stops, and it’s no coincidence that the Mavericks’ best defensive game of the series also resulted in Dallas scoring well in transition. The Mavericks only had 11 fastbreak points, after 12 in Game 3, but that follows up single-digit fastbreak performances in Games 1 and 2. It’s also no surprise that Lively and Gafford combined for 18 points, their highest of the series, as those two got out and ran the floor and got the space they needed before Boston’s halfcourt defense settled in.

None of this means a Game 7 or even a Game 6 is a guarantee — Boston is that good. But the Mavericks showed a formula in Game 4, a formula that really started to develop during Game 3 on Wednesday. The Mavericks put that blueprint together for a full game on Friday and executed, and while their chance to make history is still a ways off… it is just enough to allow oneself to start thinking about this series in a new light.

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The Boston Celtics had a chance to close out the 2024 NBA Finals on Friday night. Instead, the Dallas Mavericks extended the series at least one more game with a 122-84 trouncing of the visiting Celtics. The 28-point loss for Boston now goes into the NBA record books as the third-worst loss in NBA Finals history, behind Game 3 of the 1998 NBA Finals (where the Chicago Bulls defeated the Utah Jazz 96-54), and Game 6 of the 2008 NBA Finals (where the Celtics blew out the Los Angeles Lakers 131-92 to close out that series).

After the game, NBA Hall of Famer Charles Barkley had some thoughts.

Barkley blasted the Celtics, going as far to call their effort in Game 4 “unprofessional.” Barkley pointed to how well Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown had “gotten downhill” earlier in the series, and then pointed to a reliance on outside shooting from the Boston stars in early going Friday night.

“We said, if the Celtics come out just jacking up jumpers going through the motions, Dallas has a chance,” started Barkley. “They came out nonchalant. Lackadaisical … We said, if Jayen and Jason are going downhill … I think the first quarter they shot like 12 threes out of like the first 15 to 20 shots and they missed them.

“I still feel very good [Boston] winning [the] series, but that was so unprofessional the way they played that game tonight.”

You can see Barkley’s entire comments here:

While Barkley still thinks Boston will win the series, he even held up a sign handedd to him by a fan that said otherwise:

Beyond Barkley’s comments on the Celtics, the NBA Hall of Famer made some other news on Friday night. Speaking after the game on NBATV, he announced that next season — his 25th on television — would be his last.

“You know, there’s been a lot of noise around our network the last few months and I just wanna say, I’ve talked to all the other networks but I ain’t going nowhere other than TNT,” began Barkley. “I have made the decision myself no matter what happens last, next year is gonna be my last year on television.

“And I just want to say thank you to my NBA family. You guys have been great to me. My heart is full with joy and gratitude, but I’m gonna pass the baton at the end of next year.”

Barkley’s announcement can be seen here:

Given the brutal honesty he displayed in both discussing Boston’s effort in Game 4, and his own basketball future, you can understand why NBA fans might be saddened at this news.

And hoping Dallas truly forces a Game 7.