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Reds place 3B Noelvi Marte (oblique) on IL

Reds place 3B Noelvi Marte (oblique) on IL

Reuters07-05-2025
May 7 - The Cincinnati Reds placed third baseman Noelvi Marte on the 10-day injured list Wednesday with a left oblique strain.
In a corresponding move, the club recalled outfielder Rece Hinds from Triple-A Louisville.
Marte's IL stint is retroactive to Monday. He was scratched minutes before Tuesday night's game against the Atlanta Braves. Marte joins fellow 3B Jeimer Candelario (lumbar spine strain) on the IL.
Santiago Espinal started in Marte's place Tuesday night and is in the lineup for Wednesday's game against the Braves.
Marte, 23, is batting .294 with three home runs and 17 RBIs in 19 games this season. He's a career .253 hitter with 10 HRs and 50 RBIs.
Hinds, 24, has yet to appear in a game for the Reds this season. He hit .261 with five homers and 11 RBIs in 24 games in 2024.
He's batting .281 with eight HRs and 32 RBIs in 33 games at Louisville this season.
--Field Level Media
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Raul Jimenez wears Diogo Jota shirt as he walks out for Mexico in emotional tribute before copying star's celebration
Raul Jimenez wears Diogo Jota shirt as he walks out for Mexico in emotional tribute before copying star's celebration

The Sun

time26 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Raul Jimenez wears Diogo Jota shirt as he walks out for Mexico in emotional tribute before copying star's celebration

RAUL JIMENEZ paid tribute to his former Wolves teammate Diogo Jota as Mexico won the Gold Cup on Sunday. The football world remains shaken by the tragic deaths of Jota, 28, and his brother Andre Silva, 25, last week. 6 6 6 Both Jota and Silva were killed in a car accident in Spain just over a week after Jota had married his wife Rute Cardoso. Tributes for the pair have poured in over the days that followed the tragedy and Jota's former teammate Jimenez is the latest to give a touching nod to the Liverpool star. Jimenez, who played with Jota for two years at Wolves, wore a shirt with his name and number on the back as he walked out onto the pitch for Mexico in the Gold Cup final against the USA. The 34-year-old Fulham striker later scored a crucial equaliser for Mexico in the 27th minute, hammering home from close range to bring Mexico level. And in the moment of jubilation Jimenez took another chance to honour his friend by copying Jota's 'Fifa' celebration. Jimenez mimicked playing video games in the same way that Jota previously did after scoring a 94th minute winner in a 4-3 victory over Tottenham in 2023. Jimenez also took the shirt he was wearing during the walkout and national anthems with Jota's name and laid out on the floor during the celebration. 6 6 Jota was an avid video game fan and known to be one of the best Fifa players in professional football, previously topping PlayStation 's FIFA Ultimate Team Champions leaderboard as world No1 in 2021. Jimenez and his Mexico teammates went on to add a second goal through West Ham midfielder Edson Alvarez, tipping the scales in their favour and winning the Gold Cup 2-1 over the USA. Jimenez had spoken before the game about the heartbreaking loss of Jota, recalling the memories he will cherish with the Premier League champion. He said: "He was a great teammate. We shared many beautiful moments being important parts of what Wolves achieved in those times. "It's very tough to learn this type of news about someone so close to you and who was a great friend." While he also reacted to the news on social media last week with a message that read: "It's hard to get this kind of news and I still can't believe it. An excellent colleague, friend and above all a great father. "Thank you for everything friend, we will always remember you. A hug to heaven R.I.P." 6

Mexico 2-1 USA: El Tri wins Gold Cup title in dominant fashion
Mexico 2-1 USA: El Tri wins Gold Cup title in dominant fashion

The Guardian

time3 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Mexico 2-1 USA: El Tri wins Gold Cup title in dominant fashion

Update: Date: 2025-07-07T01:39:46.000Z Title: Topic A for the', 'USA', 'is … Content: Mexico won the 2025 Gold Cup title after Edson Álvarez's winning goal in the second half. Read Beau Dure's minute-by-minute report. Beau Dure Mon 7 Jul 2025 02.26 BST First published on Sun 6 Jul 2025 22.30 BST 2.26am BST 02:26 Last word to Scott Martin: 'In the referee's defense, He has a solid 'not a foul' signal, and it would be a shame not to use it.' I warm up for games by yelling 'advantage' a lot. I should probably stop using that as a crutch. But these games are incredibly difficult to officiate, and it would've taken some baffling decisions to give the USA a chance in this one against a superlative Mexican team. Good night to those in the USA, and happy Monday to those in other time zones. 2.24am BST 02:24 Topic A for the USA is … … who took advantage of their teammates' absences to stake a claim for the World Cup roster? I don't know that anyone surprised us with their standout play here except perhaps Alex Freeman. Malik Tillman and Diego Luna already have a decent amount of buzz. Maybe Matt Freese, with his penalty shootout heroics against Costa Rica? Still a very long way to go. 2.20am BST 02:20 Landon Donovan: 'Other guys kind of fell apart during the match.' The USA won the Fair Play Award. It's presented to Ream, who poses with USSF president Cindy Cone. Mexico's Luis Malagon wins the Golden Glove. Honestly, he was a bit lucky on the saves he made tonight, but it's hard to fault him on the goal. Edson Alvarez gets the 'best player' award. 2.15am BST 02:15 Tim Ream's interview is abruptly cut short because the people at the desk apparently needed to say something. He was saying something about calmness. Not sure if he meant Mexico having it or the USA not having it. 2.13am BST 02:13 The great drummer Neil Peart once said of an album release by his band, Rush, that it's everything you hate about Rush. This game was everything you hate about Concacaf. Cynical fouls, with a referee struggling to keep pace. An awkward playing surface – specifically, grass trucked in and put over artificial turf. US supporters being outnumbered in the crowd by their opponents. An opening ceremony that left a thick haze in the stadium through much of the game. And a dreadful game by the US team. They make take some positives from this tournament, but they can take no positives from this game. They were outplayed in every aspect of the game in nearly every minute. The absences, of course, were noteworthy. No Christian Pulisic. No Weston McKennie. No Antonee Robinson. But several of these players will be disappointed in their performances tonight, and rightly so. The Fox Sports crew is spinning it as a way for the younger players to gain experience. To be sure, that's true for Alex Freeman (age 20), Damion Downs (21) and Diego Luna (21), all of whom had some good moments in this tournament. Malik Tillman is still 23, though a game like this will age someone quickly. But the 2-1 score flatters the USA. This could've been so much worse. Full credit, however, to Mexico. This is a team that knows how to possess the ball and knows how to win it back. Their lack of finishing acumen will limit their progress in the World Cup, but in Concacaf, they are absolutely the top team of 2025. Updated at 2.14am BST 2.05am BST 02:05 Call it what you like, but don't call it undeserved. 2.03am BST 02:03 90 min +7: Aaronson bundles the ball over his own goal line to concede a corner. 2.02am BST 02:02 90 min +5: In roughly the amount of time it takes a first-time novelist to complete a draft, Mexico take a throw-in. The USA go off to the races when they get it back, and Montes simply takes the ball away from Freeman. 2.01am BST 02:01 90 min +4: Freeman tries to switch the point of attack, but Vega sees it all the way and easily picks it off. 2.00am BST 02:00 90 min +3: Ruiz with a timely step to break up a US attack. The seams in the grass are plainly visible. Footing has been a problem at times. 1.59am BST 01:59 90 min +2: Whatever the USA tried to do off that free kick didn't work. But Ream knocks it forward, and it's a CHANCE for the USA. Downs, perhaps thinking he was offside, leaves the ball for Agyebang, who doesn't make clean contact. That was very close to a stunning equalizer. 1.58am BST 01:58 90 min: We should have about 800 minutes of stoppage time. We'll have seven. Actually, that's probably about right. But add on to that – Freeman is down after being shoved to the ground. Free kick for the USA near the sideline, 40 yards from goal. 1.56am BST 01:56 88 min: Aaronson rolls a couple of times after being tripped. Gimenez, who just came into the game, is down. Seems suspicious, but a closeup shows a finger that bent in a way you do not want fingers to bend. 1.54am BST 01:54 87 min: After spending a few minutes on the substitutions, play resumes with the USA getting a couple of touches in the Mexican penalty area. 1.53am BST 01:53 85 min: A brilliant slide tackle from Alvarez stops Agyemang's promising run. Raul Jimenez gets a yellow card for time-wasting as he takes an epoch or two to leave the field as he's subbed out for Gimenez. Reyes replaces Sanchez. Huerta comes on for Alvarado, who had a tremendous game. Tolkin replaces Arfsten, which seems a bit unfortunate. Aaronson replaces Luna. 1.51am BST 01:51 83 min: Alvarado shoots wide, then drops the ground. Possible cramp. Or time-wasting. Gimenez and Huerta are about to come on Mexico; Aaronson and Tolkin for the USA. 1.49am BST 01:49 82 min: McGlynn replaces the ineffective Adams, who kicks something on the bench in frustration. 1.46am BST 01:46 The VAR decision is that Alvarez barely stayed on. I suppose, but given the way the freeze-frame technology usually finds some fingernail in an offside position, I don't know that I buy it. 1.45am BST 01:45 At least for now. The ball is played across the area, off one Mexican player's head and then off Alvarez's head and into the net. But he's offside. Or … 1.43am BST 01:43 76 min: Strong defensive play from Berhalter near the top of the penalty area, but Mexico regain possession, and Luna is called for a foul. The ball is near the far sideline. 1.42am BST 01:42 74 min: Mexico bring in Pineda for the youngster Mora, who certainly made his presence felt in this game. 1.40am BST 01:40 73 min: Alvarado has a sliver of space, but the US defense swarm to take it away. 1.39am BST 01:39 72 min: Pochettino sent Downs into the game with instructions to be relayed to his teammates, and it appears they were not correctly relayed. The team are in disarray. 1.38am BST 01:38 71 min: Against all odds and all stats, this game is still 1-1. Mexico gets their 11th corner kick. The USA have none. 1.36am BST 01:36 69 min: US sub: Downs for de la Torre. Today is Downs' 21st birthday, so if the USA were to somehow win this, he'd be allowed to taste the champagne. 1.35am BST 01:35 67 min: Vega's cross sails across the front of the net, and Richards chests it out for a corner. Replay shows the defender certainly put a hand on the ball while it was sitting on the ground. From a common-sense point of view, I can understand why that wasn't called, but from a Laws of the Game perspective, I don't. 1.33am BST 01:33 67 min: Arfsten beats one defender but not the next, but the defender puts a hand down to the ground and … maybe handles the ball? 1.32am BST 01:32 65 min: Mexico's eighth corner kick is deflected for Mexico's ninth corner kick. But we'll pause as the ref notices the two Mexican players once again giving Berhalter a noogie. 1.31am BST 01:31 64 min: Adams slams into Alvarado and is surprised to be called for a foul. Joe Pearson: 'According to the ELO rankings (not the band), Mexico are 22, USA are 40. Seems about right.' Speaking of Elo ratings, congratulations to Magnus Carlsen for breaking the 2900 mark. 1.29am BST 01:29 61 min: Tillman slides through two Mexican players and is called for fouling at least one of them. Before that, a half-chance for the USA as a through ball pops into space, but Malagon alertly races out of his goal to play the ball. He was probably getting bored. 1.26am BST 01:26 58 min: As a referee myself (very, very low level), I hate to criticize the people with the whistles, but after a sound decision to establish control early by blowing the whistle often, he seems to have misplaced it. Tillman is just getting clobbered out there. 'His threshold for a foul is insanely high,' says one person on the refereeing forum I peruse. Hey – foul called as Agyemang is held like a long-lost brother at midfield. Updated at 1.27am BST 1.24am BST 01:24 56 min: Just an embarrassing sequence for the US defense there, as Alvarado goes 1-on-2 and arguably wins. Then a desperate lunge masquerading as a slide tackle fails to do the task, and in the end, it's a deflected shot/cross that Freese awkwardly punches out for a corner. Then no one is marking Vega, and his cross slams into Freese and, to the US keeper's relief, stays under him. 1.22am BST 01:22 55 min: Tillman is mauled at midfield, and while our intermittently attentive referee blows the whistle, he still takes the time to let everyone know he doesn't appreciate that. Updated at 1.28am BST 1.21am BST 01:21 54 min: CHANCE for the USA, with Arfsten getting into the attack, faking out one defender and launching a shot that goes just over the far upper corner. 1.19am BST 01:19 53 min: Presumably, the US will have another touch on the ball before the game ends. 1.18am BST 01:18 51 min: CHANCE for Mexico, and that was so close. Alvarado, from near one corner of the penalty area, just misses the far post. 1.17am BST 01:17 50 min: The Turf Monster causes a Mexican attacker to trip. About time the USA's most consistent defender made an appearance. 1.16am BST 01:16 49 min: Jiménez lofts a cross from the right flank, and this time it's Freeman doing just enough to disrupt the attack. Mexico attack again, and Richards has to scramble back to knock it out for a corner. Updated at 1.19am BST 1.15am BST 01:15 48 min: Ream wins a header to stop a promising Mexican attack. It still looks too easy for Mexico to make incisive passes, while the USA have had … one? Maybe? 1.13am BST 01:13 47 min: The USA start by stringing a few passes together, which is an improvement. 1.12am BST 01:12 Second half is underway … and it's still hazy. 1.08am BST 01:08 Kurt Perleberg asks how far a full-strength US team can go in the World Cup next year. I'll say Seattle. 1.02am BST 01:02 Stat time Concacaf has some intriguing stats, including the aforementioned 'touchmap' that was, until now, more or less devoid of US touches in the Mexican penalty area. The Jimenez goal was graded at 0.149 'expected goals.' I'd have expected more. Freeman's shot was actually higher – 0.152. Mexico has a 5-0 edge in corner kicks, a 10-2 advantage in interceptions, and 298 passes to the USA's 162. They completed 85.9% of their passing attempts; the USA clocked in at 76.5%. The USA have an edge in something they probably don't want – clearances (27-7). Good news – the foul count has slowed. Just six a side at halftime, though the referee made several correct advantage calls and several possibly incorrect no-calls. 12.56am BST 00:56 Mexico have dominated, and yet the USA should consider themselves unlucky not to be up 2-1 right now. 12.55am BST 00:55 45 min +1: A minute ago, the US had exactly one touch on the ball in the Mexican penalty area. They nearly made it two goals on two touches, as the onrushing Freeman heads the ball straight into the face of the fortunate Malagon. The ball stays in the area, and the USA have a couple of potential shouts for a penalty, though they don't make a big deal of it. It ends up with Luna blasting the ball high. 12.53am BST 00:53 44 min: YELLOW to Montes for banging into Agyemang as the US forward was about to get past the defender. It's not a red card because Agyemang was too far to the side for it to be a 'last man' situation (or 'DOGSO' in ref speak). Updated at 1.17am BST 12.51am BST 00:51 43 min: Winston Smith takes me to task for neglecting to mention Jimenez's tribute to Diogo Jota after his goal. The soccer world is a small one in many ways, and Diogo Jota clearly touched so many people. Jimenez played with him at Wolves. Updated at 1.15am BST 12.50am BST 00:50 42 min: Another corner, and two Mexican players are giving Berhalter a noogie. Not sure why our referee is allowing it to continue. 12.48am BST 00:48 40 min: Mora shoots from 22 yards, and Freese probably should've held that ball rather than palming it wide and conceding a corner. 12.47am BST 00:47 39 min: Berhalter has dropped to right back, with Freeman pushing forward. It's working in the sense that the USA still have possession, but it's not going anywhere.

Taylor v Serrano 3 – all you need to know
Taylor v Serrano 3 – all you need to know

BBC News

time4 hours ago

  • BBC News

Taylor v Serrano 3 – all you need to know

Katie Taylor and Amanda Serrano face off in the ring for a third time on Friday at Madison Square Garden in New trilogy encounter is unprecedented for a major female boxing rivalry and Taylor is two wins to the good against both fights were incredibly close and so the multiple-weight world champions return to the scene of their first, now classic, 2022 is also a stacked undercard with Britain's Ellie Scotney, Ramla Ali, Savannah Marshall and Chantelle Cameron all in you need to know about the event is below. How to follow Taylor v Serrano 3 on the BBC? Live text commentary will begin from 01:00 BST on the BBC Sport website and will be able to follow most of the undercard, including Scotney and Marshall's world title Sport will bring you daily coverage from New York in fight week with Steve Bunce delivering episodes of his 5 Live Boxing with Steve Bunce podcast. What time is Taylor v Serrano 3? Alycia Baumgardner's world title defence is the co-main event, meaning Marshall and Scotney will probably fight between 01:30 and 02: and Serrano are expected to make their ringwalks around 03:30 BST. Who is on Taylor v Serrano undercard and what is the running order? How many rounds and what weight is Taylor v Serrano 3? Taylor and Serrano have already shared 20 rounds together and their latest fight is scheduled for ten, two minute first fight was at lightweight and the rematch was at light-welterweight. The trilogy will also be at light-welterweight. Taylor v Serrano fight week schedule Tuesday - open workouts from 22:00 BST The Oculus World Trade Center hosts the workouts which will see every fighter in the ring from 17:00 local - news conference from 23:00 BSTAll boxers will gather for the news conference at the the Theater inside Madison Square Garden from 18:00 local - weigh-in from 23:00 BSTThe Theater hosts the public weigh-in from 18:00 local time. Many of the fighters will weigh in earlier in the day before doing another weigh-in in front of fans. How do Taylor and Serrano's records compare? Taylor and Serrano have two of the best records in boxing, not just the women's is a seven-weight world champion while Taylor is among an elite club in the modern era to win undisputed titles in two weight 39, has 24 wins and just one loss on her record, a 2023 defeat by Cameron she avenged in her next 36, is one of the most experienced pro-female fighters on the scene today with 47 wins, three losses and one draw on her has two victories over Serrano, while the other defeat was way back in 2012 at super-featherweight to Frida saw in the first fight how their styles gelled perfectly and just how many punches were thrown between them. A combined 320 punches were landed over the 10 rounds and after 20 rounds that figure rose to 861 won a narrow split decision in an instant classic at MSG three years Irishwoman suffered her first defeat since then while Serrano became undisputed champion at featherweight as she amassed five more fight last November was another epic as Taylor leaned on her reactions and experience while a badly cut Serrano refused to take a backwards step. Remarkably, after 40 minutes we still haven't seen a knockdown. Who won Taylor v Serrano 1 & 2? Taylor and Serrano's two fights couldn't have been much closer. The first encounter was a split decision for Taylor while the rematch was a little wider for the and grit for both women was a massive factor in each fight, with Taylor digging deep to stay on her feet at MSG before Serrano battled through a terrible cut above her eye through much of the rematch in Texas. On both occasions, Serrano slammed her foot on the gas from the very first bell, throwing a huge amount of punches. She out-landed Taylor in both fights, with 324 punches to Taylor's 217 in the the volume wasn't enough for Serrano as she failed to put a real dent in Taylor. The defending champion used her counters and speed to deal with the onslaught and landed more of the meatier Serrano had visibly hurt Taylor in the first fight, she was unable to rock her rival in the either woman come out with a different game plan for the trilogy or will we see another all-action firefight?

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