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Is Caitlin Clark playing tomorrow for Fever vs Minnesota Lynx?

Is Caitlin Clark playing tomorrow for Fever vs Minnesota Lynx?

Yahoo3 days ago
Before their Tuesday night matchup against the Minnesota Lynx in the WNBA Commissioner's Cup final from Target Center in Minneapolis, Minn., the Indiana Fever updated the injury status of star Caitlin Clark in their league-mandated injury report Monday afternoon.
Clark, who has missed the previous two games with a left groin injury, struggled mightily on the offensive end of her game during Indiana's three-game West Coast trip. While it is unknown whether the injury was a partial cause of the difficulties, Clark scored just 30 points on 13-for-47 shooting from the field and 1-for-17 from 3-point range during the road trip.
Per the Fever's injury report, Clark is listed as questionable for the game against the league-leading Lynx with the previously mentioned left groin injury. In addition to Clark, forward Damiris Dantas is listed as out and will not be present at the game due to her involvement with the Brazilian National Team in the 2025 FIBA Women's AmeriCup in Chile.
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If Clark can return to the floor for the Fever, her presence will be a significant boost to the team's offensive firepower as Indiana hopes to keep pace with Minnesota's 85.3 points per game average.
Tomorrow's game will start at 7 p.m. CT and be broadcast exclusively on Amazon Prime Video.
Contact/Follow us @HawkeyesWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Iowa news, notes, and opinions. Follow Scout on X: @SpringgateNews
This article originally appeared on Hawkeyes Wire: Is Caitlin Clark playing tomorrow for Fever vs Minnesota Lynx?
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The Most Important Packers: No. 19 — Sean Rhyan
The Most Important Packers: No. 19 — Sean Rhyan

Forbes

time11 minutes ago

  • Forbes

The Most Important Packers: No. 19 — Sean Rhyan

Sean Rhyan (75) started all 17 games at right guard for the Green Bay Packers last season. The Green Bay Packers went 11-6 last season, sweeping the NFC West and the AFC South along the way. Overall, though, no one in the building was happy. The Packers failed to build on their terrific finish to the 2023 campaign, settled for the No. 7 seed in the NFC playoffs, and lost a Wild Card game to eventual Super Bowl champion Philadelphia. Afterwards, general manager Brian Gutekunst turned up the heat on everybody in the building. 'We need to continue to ramp up our sense of urgency,' Gutekunst said. 'I think it's time we started competing for championships.' Those are fair expectations. The Packers return 20 of 22 starters, and appear to have upgraded the roster via free agency and the draft. With several third and fourth year players trending upward, Green Bay should be poised to make a move. 'I think they're ready,' Gutekunst said. Now, it's time for the Packers to prove their G.M. right. Green Bay's first training camp practice is July 23. Between now and then I will count down the '30 Most Important Packers' heading into the 2025 campaign. At No. 19 is right guard Sean 19 Sean Rhyan, RG Last season Rhyan started all 17 games at right guard and had a respectable season. Rhyan allowed four sacks, had six penalties, and allowed 24 pressures. Rhyan's pass blocking grade from Pro Football Focus was 69.4, which ranked 38th out of 136 guards. His run blocking grade was 58.4, which ranked 87th. Rhyan split time with 2024 first round draft pick Jordan Morgan the first two months. In early November, though, Morgan was placed on the injured reserve list with a shoulder injury and Rhyan played all but eight snaps in the final 10 to date Rhyan, a third round draft pick in 2022, was suspended the final six games of his rookie season for violating the NFL's policy on performance-enhancing substances. That ended a dismal rookie year in which Rhyan played just one snap, and that came on special teams. Rhyan started the 2023 season where he spent the 2022 campaign — on the bench. By midseason, though, he had impressed enough during practice and began platooning with former Packer Jon Runyan. From Week 9 on, Rhyan played 183 snaps at right guard, didn't allow a sack and didn't have a penalty. According to league data, the Packers averaged 0.78 more yards per rushing attempt with Rhyan on the field versus when he wasn't in the lineup. Rhyan (6-5, 325) has unique athleticism for a guard, impressive strength and is incredibly bright. Rhyan's vertical jump of 34-1/2' was No. 1 among all guards at the NFL Combine in 2022. He set shot put and discus records while attending San Juan Hills High School (Calif.) and qualified to play on the feeder team for the Olympic USA rugby team. Rhyan also posted a 29 on the 50-question Wonderlic test, which is eight points higher than the NFL average. 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Will Bale really buy Cardiff? Wales great's bid explained
Will Bale really buy Cardiff? Wales great's bid explained

Yahoo

time11 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Will Bale really buy Cardiff? Wales great's bid explained

Gareth Bale (left) was born and raised in Cardiff but never played for the club owned by Vincent Tan (right) [Getty Images] The last time Gareth Bale was at Cardiff City, he was about to take his country to the World Cup. Now he wants to buy the club. Or at least that is what the former Wales captain appears to have his heart set on after the surprising revelation he is part of an investment group aiming to take over the League One outfit. Advertisement A consortium led by Bale has reportedly made a second approach but club sources have told BBC Sport Wales they have not yet received any proposals that would make them seriously consider selling. One of his nation's greatest players, the retired 35-year-old told Cardiff fans "more news will come out" regarding the attempt to persuade owner Vincent Tan to sell up. But others have suggested the bid launched by Bale's group for his hometown club is not quite as it seems. So is the former Real Madrid megastar about to go from the Bernabeu to the Bluebirds' boardroom? What we know so far Wales' most capped and highest scoring men's international, Bale was initially linked with a takeover at Plymouth Argyle. Advertisement With owner Simon Hallet looking for fresh investment, Bale was said to be the face of a USA-based private equity group that had entered early talks over a deal. Some sources at Plymouth played down those reports with no public utterance from Bale or the unnamed other members of the consortium. That changed, though, when it emerged the group had written to Cardiff owner Tan making it clear they would be keen on taking control at the club recently relegated from the Championship. There was no formal bid but the proposal did make clear what the group would be looking to pay for a shareholding. Cardiff's board became aware of the approach but only after it had been dismissed pretty swiftly by Tan. As a result, there was no boardroom discussion or invitation for further talks. Advertisement BBC Sport Wales has been told a second approach was made to Tan but was met with the same short shrift. Why Cardiff City? On paper, the move makes sense. Bale was born and raised in Cardiff and would come home whenever he could during a glittering playing career, even though the majority of it was spent in Spain. His uncle, Chris Pike, played for the club during the late 1980s and early '90s, and Bale was close to emulating him before deciding to join Los Angeles FC from Real Madrid in 2022. "It's my home club, where I grew up. My uncle used to play for them," Bale said last month. Advertisement "So to be involved with an ownership group would be a dream come true. It's a club close to my heart. I would love to be able to be a part of growing Cardiff, taking it to the Premier League where it belongs." As the city of his birth and the location for some of his most heroic acts in a Wales shirt, Cardiff is a place that clearly holds special meaning for Bale. He did not grow up a Bluebirds fan. It was a picture of Zinedine Zidane that adorned his bedroom wall as a child. Playing for Real Madrid was the childhood dream he realised when he became the world's most expensive footballer in 2013. Having never played for Cardiff though, there seems to be an attraction for Bale in returning to rescue his home city's club. Advertisement Although Cardiff are preparing for their first season in the third tier since 2003, it is a well-supported club with significant potential. Restoring it to the Premier League would enhance Bale's already legendary status in the Welsh capital and, for those providing the bulk of the consortium's financial power, this could be a good time to acquire a club with plenty of room to grow. Wrexham and Birmingham City demonstrated last season how high-profile owners – and wealthy backers – can elevate teams from League One. Bale and his associates will have noted those success stories and will feel they could do the same. Advertisement Why now? Cardiff were relegated last season after finishing bottom of the Championship [Huw Evans Picture Agency] It has been two and a half years since Bale retired and it still remains to be seen how he will spend his life after playing. Between charity work, commercial commitments and very occasional media punditry or ambassadorial jobs for the Football Association of Wales, Bale appears to be keeping his options open – and allowing plenty of time for golf. If the proposed takeover of Cardiff were to prove successful, it is unclear what role he would play. American football legend Tom Brady holds a minority stake in Birmingham but has no day-to-day involvement in the running of the club, while the same is true of Bale's former Real Madrid team-mate Luka Modric at Swansea City. Advertisement There is a precedent set if Bale wanted to take a fairly hands-off approach, though Cardiff fans would be delighted if he were more active and visible than his celebrity-owner peers. Bluebirds supporters are desperate for change and have staged protests to express their dismay at the way Tan, chairman Mehmet Dalman and chief executive Ken Choo have run the club over the past decade. Prospective buyers will be aware of such ill feeling towards Cardiff's board but any possible takeover would come with several complications. Why not? It has not yet been possible to verify who, aside from Bale, is involved in the interested consortium - or what kind of wealth they have. 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Furthermore, the yearly accounts have long made reference to the ongoing reliance on Tan's financial support. Losses over the past three seasons have averaged around £1.5m per month. There is an agreement that Tan will continue to help plug those gaps between turnover and expenses, even with the club's relegation to League One set to hit revenue by as much as £10m. And despite scaling back some of his business interests in recent years - including selling a minority stake in Bale's former club LAFC - Tan still has the money to do that. Advertisement In Malaysia, where his conglomerate Berjaya Corporation is based, he has involvement in several companies and businesses including mobile phone networks, financial institutions, supermarkets, hotels and property. In April, financial publication Forbes estimated his wealth at $770m (more than £550m). It is one of the reasons Tan has not held much serious interest in selling the club. Despite his absence, those close to him have routinely stressed he retains a strong interest and passion in the club's success. And it is also why, on the subject of selling in the past, there has been seemingly little interest unless it was of a price in excess of its realistic, business value. Advertisement It suggests any offer would have to be too big for Tan to turn down. In his most recent major interview with Welsh media - three years ago - he said he had received many approaches but had no interest in selling, adding that only returning the club to the Premier League would make a deal financially viable. Ironically, in reference to the criticism he has faced from fans during his ownership, he said: "To those guys who want 'Tan out', they should ask a rich Welshman, probably a billionaire, to buy this club and take it to the Premier League and keep them there for 10 years - because that is my goal." What happens next? 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Advertisement The feeling at board level is that the Bale-led interest lacks substance, a view that is supported by the Cardiff City Supporters' Trust, which has said the proposal amounts to little more than a "fishing trip". That was a telling statement from the trust, which has previously voiced its concerns about the way the club is being run under Tan. Cardiff has been ravaged by division and discord in recent years, with fan protests, poisonous atmospheres at games and a general sense of disillusionment around the club. Bale and his consortium may believe that presents an opportunity but, as the Bluebirds' turbulent past demonstrates, nothing is straightforward when it comes to Cardiff City.

Ramirez hits 2-run homer as Miami Marlins top Minnesota Twins 4-1, win 4th straight series
Ramirez hits 2-run homer as Miami Marlins top Minnesota Twins 4-1, win 4th straight series

CBS News

time23 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Ramirez hits 2-run homer as Miami Marlins top Minnesota Twins 4-1, win 4th straight series

Agustín Ramírez hit a two-run home run, Xavier Edwards singled twice and the Miami Marlins won their fourth straight series with a 4-1 victory over the Minnesota Twins on Thursday. Eury Pérez (1-2) struck out a season-high seven and walked one in six innings of one-hit ball for his first win since June 25, 2023, against Pittsburgh. Cade Gibson relieved Pérez in the seventh after 80 pitches. The Marlins (39-46) have won 10 of their past 12 — including an eight-game winning streak — and have the same record as the Atlanta Braves for third in the NL East. The Twins went 2-4 in their six-game road trip, also losing a series at Detroit. Ramírez connected on a 1-2 fastball from Twins starter David Festa (2-3) and launched it 425 feet to left-center during a three-run first. Festa allowed five hits and four runs with seven strikeouts in six innings. Edwards hit leadoff singles in the first and third and stole his team-leading 15th base. Kyle Stowers went 0-for-3, ending his nine-game hitting streak. Ronny Henriquez earned his fifth save. Matt Wallner ended the shutout with a solo shot off Gibson in the seventh. Key moment from the game Wallner's two-out homer against Gibson made it 4-1 in the seventh. Anthony Bender then gave up consecutive singles before getting pinch-hitter Ryan Jeffers to ground out to end the inning. Ramirez leads rookies Ramírez leads all rookies in the majors with 13 home runs, and the homer extended his lead among rookies in extra-base hits to 29 (15 doubles, one triple, and 13 home runs).

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