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Archives for September 2025

Crazy Day in the NFL

September 14, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

MIAMI GARDENS – (Wire Service Report) – Antonio Gibson’s 90-yard kickoff return for a touchdown helped the New England Patriots post a 33-27 win over the Miami Dolphins in a Sunday afternoon shootout in Florida.

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Gibson’s first career touchdown return was the difference in the game, coming on the ensuing kickoff 12 seconds after a 74-yard punt-return touchdown by Miami’s Malik Washington gave the Dolphins the lead with 7:39 left.

The Dolphins drove into New England territory in the final 90 seconds, but the drive ended on Milton Williams’ second sack of the game on fourth-and-12 at the 28-yard line, clinching the Patriots’ first win in Miami since 2019. The Dolphins fell to 0-2 for the first time since 2020.

New England quarterback Drake Maye sparked the offense by completing 19 of 23 passes for 230 yards and two touchdowns with a rushing touchdown. He was supplemented by Rhamondre Stevenson, who led the Patriots with 88 receiving yards and 54 rushing yards.

Miami quarterback Tua Tagovailoa was 26 of 32 for 315 yards and two touchdowns, with one interception. Tyreek Hill sparked the offense with 109 yards on six catches while De’Von Achane led the Dolphins with 30 rushing yards and added 92 receiving yards and a touchdown.

On paper, the Patriots (1-1) should have had a larger halftime lead than their 15-14 advantage. They outgained Miami 143-18 in the first quarter and scored on all three first-half possessions before kneeling out the final 31 seconds.

And yet, a pair of missed extra points by Andy Borregales and a drive stalling inside the 5-yard line opened the door for the Dolphins, who scored touchdowns on their final two first-half drives.

Both quarterbacks were exceptional throughout the opening 30 minutes, each throwing a pair of touchdown passes.

Maye threw a pair of first-quarter TDs, to Mack Hollins with 9:34 left and to Kayshon Boutte with 55 seconds left.

Tagovailoa responded with a pair of second-quarter touchdowns, an 18-yarder to Jaylen Waddle with 11:25 left and a 29-yarder to Achane with 41 seconds remaining.

After Riley Patterson gave the Dolphins the lead with a 40-yard field goal to begin the third quarter, the Miami defense delivered a stop.

Patterson extended the lead with another field goal from 44 yards to make it 20-15 Dolphins before the Patriots took the lead back on a 6-yard Maye scramble in the closing seconds of the third quarter.

The Patriots finished with five sacks of Tagavailoa, keeping Miami without a second-half offensive touchdown.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, NFL, Patriots Tagged With: Miami Dolphins, New England Patriots, NFL

TL’s Sunday Notes | Sept. 14, 2025

September 14, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

By TERRY LYONS, Editor-in-Chief of Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – “What’s Goin’ On?”

Last weekend before the U.S. Open men’s singles final, the United States Tennis Association issued a statement to request media outlets refrain from showcasing any disruptions or reactions in response to the President’s attendance in any capacity.

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The USTA Statement read in part:

“With respect to Broadcast Coverage, the President will be shown on the World Feed and the Ashe Court Feed during the opening anthem ceremony,” the USTA said in the memo, which has been viewed by multiple publications.

“We ask all broadcasters to refrain from showcasing any disruptions or reactions in response to the President’s attendance in any capacity, including ENG coverage.”

Quoting U.S. Open champion John McEnroe years ago when he stormed the courts and argued with chair umpires, “You’ve got to be kidding me?”

While I understand the USTA back pedaled and pretended the request was akin to asking cameras at all sporting events not broadcast a drunken fan running out on the field of play, being chased by the Keystone Cops, I could read the lines themselves and see in between the lines that they were sending the media in attendance a preemptive strike – surely requested by The White House – to not show the chorus of boos which accompany the current President of the United States (POTUS) nearly everywhere he travels.

The ridiculous act of censorship, thankfully, was not adhered to by ESPN and other media on site, covering the event as the news it is. But, the USTA’s reprehensible action immediately leads to the question, “Just what is next?”

Let’s ask Grok?

“Censorship has indeed escalated in recent years, manifesting in various forms across governments, corporations, and institutions. This includes direct bans on platforms and content, algorithmic suppression, legal pressures on social media companies, and self-censorship driven by fear of repercussions,” wrote the AI guru.

As so many media members state on the airwaves these days, “there’s a lot to unpack,” so let’s dice it up for a second.

Governments, Corporations and Institutions – directly placing a ban on content. The verdict here, in these United States – GUILTY!

Bans on platforms and content – GUILTY!

Legal pressures on Social Media companies – GUILTY!

Self-Censorship (by media) driven by fear of repercussions – GUILTY!

What happened to “telling it like it is with he thrill of victory and the agony of defeat. News crews covering … the human drama of athletic competition? Maybe Wide World of Sports should’ve added, “unless the fans boo one of the competitors or boo a newsworthy happening in the stands which reflects negatively on a corrupt politician.”

USA Today’s Nancy Armour wrote of the boo-birds, “Resistance takes many forms.

“Sometimes it’s people taking to the streets in protest, as they did this weekend in Chicago and its suburbs. Sometimes it’s governors banding together to ensure their citizens have access to vaccines that have been thoroughly vetted, as the governors of California, Oregon, Washington and Hawaii have.

“And sometimes it’s ABC and ESPN not muting the full-throated chorus of boos that occurred when the president of the United States was shown at the U.S. Open on Sunday.

“The U.S. Tennis Association’s request that broadcasters “refrain from showcasing any disruptions to the President’s attendance in any capacity” was an embarrassment. This is not North Korea or Russia, and it is not ABC’s, ESPN’s or any other broadcaster’s job to stroke President Donald Trump’s ego.

“To suggest otherwise was wholly inappropriate by the USTA and, worse, served to overshadow the anticipation for the latest meeting in what has become tennis’ next great rivalry. Instead of talking about Sinner and Alcaraz, the focus before the match was on the USTA’s clumsy attempt at censorship,” she wrote Monday morning.

Let’s take look at what the records show:

  • Nearly 4.8 billion people (60% of the global population) faced some form of restriction in 2024.
  • Social media saw 360 censorship instances across 76 countries from 2006-2023, accelerating mostly after 2018.
  • U.S. Federal agencies, such as The White House and FBI coerced Meta (Facebook, etc), Twitter (pre-Elon Musk era), and others to censor what they believed to be “misinformation.”
  • In 2024, U.S. libraries faced 821 challenges targeting 4,190 titles on race, gender, and sexuality.
  • The general censorship moved to the State Houses as 56 bills were filed in U.S. State legislatures in 2024, all restricting discussions on race, gender and American history. Of those, 22 were enacted in 16 U.S. States by mid-2025, citing “divisive concepts” in higher education and the classrooms.

If you think the Colorado Rockies have had a bad year, consider the American Civil Liberties Union. Founded 105 years ago, the ACLU has been set back the full century, maybe more. Then again, the ACLU hasn’t had a big win since Miranda v. Arizona in 1966.

Going forward, the media companies and their leaders need to grow a spine. News divisions must stand up for the rights of the people they serve. Sports media needs to cover the news of the event, not the news that event organizers prefer you cover.

When you hear the sentence, “Instead of that, you should be covering,” media need to run to their laptops, cameras, tape recorders and editing machines to report the very news they’ve witnessed, live and in color. Report the truth and nothing but the truth.

The truth should never be censored. Observations and opinions should not be censored and crowd reactions, peaceful assemblies and protests should never be censored.

Of course, later in the week leading into this weekend missive, the United States saw another murder by long gun in the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. This columnist must admit to having never even heard of Kirk before the news of his death. Regardless of political ideals, the “must relate” was as a father of two – his kids just toddlers. What, possibly, can Kirk’s young wife tell those two little kids?


HERE NOW, THE NOTES: As a follow-up to a previous column on the WNBA and a potential move of the Connecticut Sun to Boston after former Celtics team owner Steve Pagliuca made an offer to purchase the franchise for $350 million. when the news broke, many a Boston-area politician and pundit was considering it a done deal. “Not so fast,” said the WNBA league office. Then, Commonwealth of Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey really jumped on the bandwagon, claiming, “we’re ready for the WNBA. Well, Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT) thinks otherwise. The Senator sent a letter to the WNBA this week “officially warning the league” to stay out of negotiations, and that “any attempts by the WNBA to block efforts to keep the Sun in Connecticut could violate federal antitrust laws,” he wrote.

NBA Commissioner Adam Silver (file photo/NBA)

TELEPHONE LINE: Here’s another very bad example of the misinformation circulating regularly on “X,” the once called Twitterverse. The story starts with NBA Commissioner Adam Silver conducting a short press conference to update NBA media (and thus the fans) on the news stemming from the NBA Board of Governors meeting held this week. Topics of discussion included: The Board ratifying slight changes to the replay rule (in regard to last second heaves (now to count as a Team FG attempt, rather than an individual attempt).

In the misinformation world, a snippet of Silver’s full press conference made its way around social media and – guess what? No one bothered to read the full, well thought out and thorough answer to the question. Instead, Silver was tattooed for the snip where he said “the NBA is very much a highlights driven league.

What he really said, was a full 180-degree opposite of the words he is being criticized for saying in the midst of a much broader point – focusing mainly on the fact that in 2025-26, the NBA will have more free-to-air broadcasts (off full games) than anytime in recent history. Here’s the full transcript:

Q. It’s become very expensive to watch the NBA as a fan, not just going to games but also in order to — there’s different streaming services you have to subscribe to, some of the RSNs are expensive. I know that there are other points of entry for fans to interact with the NBA. There’s social media, and a lot of younger fans, that is how they’re experiencing the sport. But I wonder how much you think about that and how that will shape the next generation of fans?

ADAM SILVER: “I think about it a lot. I will say, I saw the story your publication ran. You took all the different streaming services and added them up and what those costs would be. I look at it a little bit differently, because most people can only consume so many games. By way of one example, in these new media deals, we’re going from essentially 15 exposures on broadcast television to 75. So to the extent someone wants to put little rabbit ears on their television, you can still get 75 marquee games in essence for free in the marketplace.

“I’d say in addition to that, and this is an ongoing issue for the league, there’s a huge amount of our content that people essentially consume for free. This is very much a highlights-based sport, so Instagram, TikTok, Twitter, you name it, any service, the New York Times for that matter, to the extent that your content is not behind a paid firewall, there’s an enormous amount of content out there. YouTube, another example that is advertising based that consumers can consume.

“I think this is a new world now of streaming media. I think we’re paying a lot of attention to that. It was one of the discussions we had with our media partners, not just the cost of the games — and I think most people are conditioned to paying a certain amount for high-value content — but also the discovery of those games.

“Again, I’m a fan of many different sports. I think we’ve all had that experience where you’re going to Google to find the game you want to watch because the world has changed it’s not just automatically in the place you thought it would be.

“But ultimately, I’ll talk about it in terms of reach and how you reach your consumers. It’s interesting — because of the disruption in the regional sports network business, I never would have predicted this was coming 10 years ago, but a lot of our local games are moving back to broadcast television. In fact, we have more games on broadcast television locally than we’ve had anytime in recent history.

“We’re continuing to look at it. But the ultimate answer is we think a lot about it. We know where we have mass appeal. On a global basis, we’re literally reaching billions of people. We don’t want to disenfranchise people by working with partners that are creating price points that make it inaccessible to them.”

So, those who clipped and pontificated on the “highlights” failed to underline the main point of making more full games (what was 15 will now be 75 free-to-air broadcasts).

Shame on those who regurgitated the snippet as though it was Silver’s only comment.

UNDER FURTHER REVIEW: The accusatory line of questioning directed at Adam Silver for the NBA’s new TV deal seemed to lean towards a money-grab without regard to the best interests of the fans. Yet, many of the same people accusing Silver and his NBA Board of being greedy think that the sun rises and sets on College Football, the bands, the pageantry and the, ahem, wagering. But, to watch a full day of NCAA college football on Saturday, September 13th, a fan would need to have his remote wired and his subscriptions paid up to watch a rather weak schedule of college football games televised by (hold your breath):

  1. ABC
  2. CBS
  3. FOX
  4. CBSSN
  5. ESPN
  6. ESPN2
  7. ESPN+
  8. SECN+
  9. ESPNU
  10. FS-1
  11. Paramount+
  12. Peacock Net
  13. HBO Max
  14. YouTube TV
  15. truTV
  16. TNT
  17. Spectrum Sports
  18. Big Ten Network
  19. SEC Network
  20. SECN+
  21. ACC Network
  22. Mountain West Network
  23. The CW Network
  24. NEC Front Row

TIDBITS & NUGGETS: From the sports business file, SBJ on Friday reported a reorganization within the NBA league office structure. Such events occur yearly in the September 15 to Oct 1 zone. This year, NBA Commissioner Adam Silver focused his office on increasing viewership and global appeal. Key changes include integrating direct-to-consumer (DTC) marketing teams with digital consumer products under Chris Benyarko, Head of Direct to Consumer Products, Technology & Operations. Additionally, media and brand teams, led by Janine Dugre and Andy Heatley respectively, will now report to Gregg Winik, President, Content & Executive Producer, to align with content and media partners. These adjustments are designed to enhance operations and strengthen the NBA’s strategy for a broader global audience and greater engagement with digital offerings.

CFP TOP 12, ACCORDING TO THE AFCA COACHES: As of week two of the college football season, here are the top 12 teams.

Rank, School/Team, (First place votes), Points from Voters, W/L Record

1 Ohio State (62) 1,668 2-0

2 Penn State (4) 1,576 2-0

3 Georgia 1,488 2-0

4 LSU (1) 1,472 2-0

5 Oregon 1,423 2-0

6 Miami (Fla.) 1,330 2-0

7 Texas 1,288 1-1

8 Notre Dame 1,041 0-1

9 Illinois 1,019 2-0

10 South Carolina 1,007 2-0

11 Clemson 995 1-1

12 Florida State 843 2-0


THIS JEST IN: After visiting the Gulf of America, then playing a few rounds of golf near Mar-a-Lago, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth announced in a press conference that the office building where he calls home base will now be called the Octagon. “We’re planning to add a few sides,” said Hegseth when informed the word Octagon would indicate eight sides as opposed to the five-sided building now standing. … There’s no word on whether the United States Military Academy will change its name from ARMY to ICEY.

TURTLES: Mark Volman, the singer who co-founded the popular 60s rock band, The Turtles, died at the age of 78. Reps for Volman confirmed the death to Rolling Stone, citing a “a brief and unexpected illness.” In 2020, Volman was diagnosed with Lewy body dementia, but continued touring and only announced his diagnosis in 2023. In fact, when promoting his memoir “Happy Forever: My Musical Adventures with the Turtles, Frank Zappa, T. Rex, Flo & Eddie, and More” in 2023, Volman went public with his 2020 diagnosis of Lewy body dementia, a disease that results in a decline in cognitive ability, affecting reasoning, memory and movement. Here’s a tune.

YOU CAN’T MAKE IT UP: For decades, the European Basketball championship final would feature the likes of Spain, Yugoslavia, Croatia, Italy and Lithuania. This year? It’s reigning FIBA world champion Germany against an upstart national team from Türkiye. … Dating back to 1935, Türkiye has medaled only one time. That silver medal came in 2001 when the tournament was played on their home court.

In what looked to be a much closer matchup (on paper) turned into a one-sided affair, with Turkey winning 94-68. Greece had trouble scoring all around, finishing with three players in double figures, but none with more than 15 points, including NBA superstar Giannis Antetokounmpo (Milwaukee Bucks) who was held to 12 points, on 6-for-13 shooting.

Türkiye’s Alperen Sengun (Houston Rockets) had 15 points in the victory but Ercan Osmani (Efes Pilsen-EuroLeague) was the star, tallying 28 points and playing a stellar defensive game against Antetokounmpo.

Head coach Ergin Ataman (Panathinaikos-EuroLeague) had some choice words: “As I said, this isn’t the NBA. In European basketball, if you prepare well, protect the paint, and your players stay aggressive, you can be successful, it’s not that hard to stop him (Antetokounmpo). I think Osmani played excellent defense against Giannis. I don’t know if my friend, the GM of Anadolu Efes, will be in trouble because many NBA teams might come after Osmani to stop Giannis. But I believe he’s happy at Efes. He stopped him really well, with both intelligence and aggression”

Türkiye will face Germany in the 2025 FIBA EuroBasket Final at 2:00pm (ET) today (Sunday, September 14).

Filed Under: While We're Young Ideas Tagged With: TL's Sunday Sports Notes, While We're Young Ideas

Stanford Defeats Boston College

September 14, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

PALO ALTO – (Wire Service Report) – Stanford’s Micah Ford rushed for a career-high 157 yards on 17 carries with a touchdown to lead his school to a 30-20 win over Boston College on Saturday night in California.

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The game was the home opener for Stanford (1-2, 1-0 Atlantic Coast Conference) after the Cardinal opened the season losing at Hawaii and BYU. The win was their first under interim coach Frank Reich.

Boston College (1-2, 0-1) lost despite former Alabama quarterback Dylan Lonergan passing for 333 yards while completing 30 of 44 passes with a touchdown and an interception.

Stanford gained 213 yards on the ground on 37 carries.

The Cardinal’s final possession, consisting of 12 rushing plays, took the last 7:36 off the clock. They achieved four first downs in the drive.

Toward the end of the third quarter, a 75-yard run by Ford was followed by his 5-yard scoring run.

The touchdown with 1:35 left in the third quarter put Stanford ahead 27-20.

After a three-and-out for Boston College, Ford started Stanford’s following possession with a 31-yard run.

Emmet Kenney finished the possession with a 26-yard field goal with 11:26 left.

The teams each scored two touchdowns in the second quarter and converted two field goals in the first half for a 20-20 tie at halftime.

Kenney accounted for the scoring in the first quarter with field goals of 23 and 35 yards.

Boston College scored 17 unanswered points in the second quarter, beginning with a 51-yard field goal by Luca Lombardo.

Lonergan’s 49-yard scoring strike to Turbo Richard was followed in the next possession with a 46-yard pass from Lonergan to Jordan McDonald that set up another touchdown.

McDonald scored on a 2-yard run following the connection with Lonergan, giving Boston College a 17-6 lead with 8:04 left in the second quarter.

Stanford scored two touchdowns in the last 1:47 of the half to take a 20-17 lead.

After Ben Gulbranson completed a 69-yard touchdown pass to Sam Roush with 1:47 remaining in the second quarter, Collin Wright returned an interception 19 yards for a touchdown on Boston College’s second play of the next possession.

Boston College, starting at its 25, managed to get a last-second 31-yard field goal by Lombardo heading into halftime.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, NCAA, NCAA Football Tagged With: ACC Football, Boston College, Stanford

Yankees Do More Damage to Sox

September 13, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – (Wire Service Report) – New York’s Jazz Chisholm Jr. went 3-for-5 with a home run and three RBIs to help lift the visiting Yankees to a 5-3 win over the Boston Red Sox on Saturday.
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The Yankees (83-65) scored twice in the first inning and never relinquished a 4-0 lead built by the fifth inning, though Jarren Duran‘s pinch-hit solo home run in the eighth brought the hosts back within a run.
Cody Bellinger went 2-for-4 with two RBIs, including a two-out double high off the Green Monster to drive home an important insurance run against Boston reliever Aroldis Chapman, who allowed a run for the second straight outing. Aaron Judge (2-for-3, two runs) singled and advanced to second on a wild pitch to set up the RBI opportunity.

New York starter Max Fried (17-5) earned the win despite allowing nine hits and two walks across 5 1/3 innings. He allowed just two runs and struck out six. David Bednar posted his 24th save to secure New York’s second straight win in the three-game set.

Alex Bregman and Duran both homered for the Red Sox (81-68), while Nate Eaton, Nick Sogard and Connor Wong each had two hits.
The Yankees took a 2-0 lead in the first inning. After loading the bases with nobody out against Boston starter Brayan Bello (11-7), Bellinger skied a sacrifice fly to deep center to score the first run, then Chisholm’s swinging-bunt single infield to the third base side drove in their second run.
Fried escaped jams in the first two innings. Three straight Red Sox reached to start the second, but Eaton was tagged out while attempting to go first-to-third on Sogard’s single.
After Bello got out of his first-inning trouble with consecutive strikeouts and fanned three in a row spanning into the second inning, Chisholm’s RBI single through the right side in the third upped the New York lead to 3-0.
The fifth inning saw the teams trade two-out solo homers. Chisholm’s towering shot to right made it a 4-0 Yankees lead, and in the bottom half of the frame, Bregman got the hosts on the board when he clanked the right-field pole for his first round-tripper since Aug. 12.
Three straight one-out hits in the sixth — by Eaton, Sogard and Wong — brought the Red Sox within 4-2 and chased Fried. Wong singled in a run, but reliever Luke Weaver struck out back-to-back batters to end the inning.
Bello allowed four runs on five hits across in five innings, breaking his streak of 14 consecutive scoreless frames against New York this season.
–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, MLB, Red Sox Tagged With: Boston Red Sox, MLB, New York Yankees

Yankees Take Sox, Take Charge, Take Game and a Half Advantage

September 12, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – (Staff Report) – In mid-September baseball with a postseason berth on the line, lethargic, pathetic, error-filled and one run producing baseball is not the remedy for a win. Not in the opening game, an important game in an important three-game, weekend series for the Boston Red Sox against the New York Yankees – on September 12th.

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The Red Sox game line read: 1 – 2 – 3 … that’s one run, two hits and three errors. The final score? New York 4, Boston 1.

How is it possible to compete while going hitless through six innings at Fenway Park – a bandbox full of run producing delicacies.

Not tonight.

The first glitch was Sox starter Lucas Giolito grooving a 92-mph four seamer down the Mass Turnpike which New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge whacked 468-feet, at the least, for a 1-0 NYY lead in the first inning.

Judge’s homer was his 362 career HR, passing the legendary Joe DiMaggio for the fourth most homers in New York Yankees franchise history. Judge trails only Babe Ruth (659), Mickey Mantle (536) and Lou Gehrig (493) in NYY franchise home runs.

Judge’s first inning homer also marked the 46th Yankees homer in the opening frame, leading the Majors this season and tying the Cincinnati Reds of 2019 for second-most of any team in the last 75 years. Only the Atlanta Braves are ahead of New York when the Braves concluded the season with 47 in 2023.

Sox bats were asleep at the wheel.

Besides the lackluster effort at the plate, the Red Sox also put a final boxscore in the Elias Sports Bureau records that tallied – let us count the ways – 1). A catcher’s interference error by Carlos Narvaez led directly to NY right-fielder Cody Bellinger’s base hit to allow Judge to score the second run. That was 2-zip, after three.

Fielding and throwing errors?  Sox second baseman David Hamilton scratched out both.

It was all too much to overcome Luis Gil’s no-hit effort through six innings pitched. Gil allowed no hits, no runs while walking four and striking out four. After the six innings and 93 pitches (54 strikes), Gil gave way to RHP Fernando Cruz who lost the team no hitter when Boston right fielder Nate Eaton homered to left field in the seventh inning (3-1, NY).

It all added up to Boston losing the second straight game, losing their seventh game of the last 10 at Fenway Park (since 8-17-25) which comes after winning nine of the previous 10 games in Boston (July 26-to-August 16.

Gil was credited with the win and is (4-1) on the season while Giolito (10-4) took the loss. New York’s reliever, David Bednar, earned his 23rd save of the season.

Interestingly, Giolito is now (5-1) in his last seven home starts, pitching at an incredible 0.80 ERA. He has allowed only one or zero earned runs over 5.2 IP in those seven games. Over his last 17 starts, Giolito is (9-3) with a 2.29 ERA and a .211 opponent batting average.

That wasn’t good enough for tonight and the Red Sox will now rely upon RHP Brayan Bello (11-6) to pitch Saturday and ace LHP Garrett Crochet (15-5) to throw vs. New York on Sunday. The Yankees will counter with ace LHP Max Fried (16-5) on Saturday and RHP Will Warren (8-6) to go Sunday.

The Yankees are now a game and a half ahead of Boston in the AL East standings with the same lead in the American League Wild Card race. Seattle holds the final Wild Card slot and leads the Texas Rangers by 1.5 games.

 

Filed Under: Boston Sports, MLB, Red Sox Tagged With: Boston Red Sox, Fenway Park, MLB, New York Yankees

Yanks Invade Fenway for Weekend

September 12, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

BOSTON – (Wire Service Preview) – Two big rivals, one big series this weekend in Boston.

With just a half-game separating them behind the first-place Toronto Blue Jays in the American League East standings, the New York Yankees (81-65) and Boston Red Sox (81-66) begin their final head-to-head set of the regular season Friday night.

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The Red Sox have missed the playoffs in three straight and five of the last six seasons, meaning that series of this magnitude between the two have been few and far between of late. It didn’t take Boston newcomer Alex Bregman long to figure out the meaning, especially in the midst of a playoff chase.

“It’s so cool playing against those guys,” the third baseman said to USA Today. “Just fun games, pressure-packed, great environment. It was a lot of fun living out that childhood dream, watching those games on TV and watching them play in October.”

Boston’s three-out-of-four series victory in the Bronx last month (Aug. 21-24) marked Bregman’s first taste of the rivalry. He went 7-for-16 after being sidelined for the teams’ first six games against each other back in June.

The Red Sox settled for spitting a six-game road trip following Wednesday’s 5-4 walk-off loss to the Athletics. The game ended with closer Aroldis Chapman allowing two hits and his first run since July 23.

“At one point, he was going to give it up,” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said. “It just happened that it was (Wednesday). … We’re going home now. Just be ready for Friday.”

Now, right-hander Lucas Giolito (10-3, 3.38 ERA) will take the mound back at home.

Giolito allowed four runs (two earned) on seven hits across five innings in last Saturday’s loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks. He had won his two prior starts, including eight shutout innings against the Baltimore Orioles on Aug. 26.

Giolito is 3-2 with a 4.99 ERA in six career starts against New York.

While the Red Sox had Thursday off, the Yankees blitzed the Detroit Tigers 9-3 to avoid losing three in a row.

Massachusetts native Cam Schlittler pitched six innings of one-run ball.

Aaron Judge (3-for-4, two home runs) and Boston-area youngster Ben Rice (two doubles, RBI) helped support Schlittler’s effort. Judge tied Joe DiMaggio for fourth on the Yankees’ all-time home run list (361).

“Everybody had each other’s back,” Judge said. “We knew we had (Schlittler) on the mound, who wasn’t gonna give up too many runs. Just have to get one or two runs for a guy like that. It was a big day.”

New York banged out 14 hits, including two more from Jose Caballero, who made a second straight start in Anthony Volpe’s place.

Volpe (.206 average) had a cortisone shot in his left shoulder Wednesday, but Yankees manager Aaron Boone expects him “to be OK in the next couple days.”

“Obviously, we’re down to the end, and as I’ve said, it’s kind of all hands on deck, and do what we think is best, day in, day out,” Boone said.

Meanwhile, New York starting pitchers have allowed two or fewer earned runs in 15 of the team’s last 17 games. Right-hander Luis Gil (3-1, 3.31) looks to keep that streak going for a sixth consecutive start Friday. He is 1-1 with a 1.27 ERA in four career starts against the Red Sox.

Gil beat Toronto last Saturday by working around four walks to allow just one run over six innings.

“Hopefully, we can just start to build where the command and control is there with the stuff following,” Boone said.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, MLB, Red Sox Tagged With: Boston Red Sox, MLB, New York Yankees

A’s Avoid Sweep by Sox

September 10, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

SACRAMENTO – (Wire Service Report) – Lawrence Butler’s walk-off single in the bottom of the ninth gave the host Athletics a 5-4 win over the Boston Red Sox on Wednesday in Northern California.

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The Athletics (67-80), who avoided a sweep in the three-game series, got homers from Shea Langeliers and Nick Kurtz and snapped a three-game losing streak. Brent Rooker was 3-for-5 with two doubles, his 39th and 40th.

The Red Sox (81-66) had their three-game winning streak halted. Nate Eaton was 2-for-3 with an RBI and a run scored. The club will fly home to Boston, have a travel day Thursday then open up a weekend series against AL East and Wild Card rival New York.

Boston tied the game 4-4 with two outs in the top of the ninth on Rob Refsnyder’s RBI double off Elvis Alvarado. It scored pinch runner Ceddanne Rafaela from first.

Butler’s game-winning single scored Langeliers, who had doubled, from third.

Both hits came off of loser Aroldis Chapman (4-3), who had not allowed a hit to his previous 50 batters.

Hogan Harris (2-1) got the win.

Kyle Soderstrom’s pinch-hit two-run double with the bases loaded in the fifth gave the Athletics a 4-3 lead. Butler, who was on first, also tried to score but was thrown out at the plate.

Athletics starter Mason Barnett allowed three runs on seven hits in 3 2/3 innings with a walk and four strikeouts.

Boston tied it 2-2 on Trevor Story’s run-scoring double in the third. Jerran Duran’s groundout gave the Red Sox a 3-2 lead in the fourth.

Kurtz’s 30th homer, leading off the second, made it 2-1 Athletics. He drilled opener Payton Tolle’s pitch to the opposite field, down the left-field line and over the wall.

Eaton’s RBI double in the second tied the game 1-1 for Boston. It was a short popup down the right-field line, on which first baseman Nick Kurtz and second baseman Zack Gelof collided as they tried to catch it. The ball actually bounced off of Kurtz’s glove.

Langeliers’ one-out home run in the first gave the Athletics a 1-0 lead. His drive barely eluded a leaping Duran, who lost his glove over the fence, at the left-field wall. It was Langeliers’ 30th homer.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, MLB, Red Sox Tagged With: A's, Boston Red Sox, MLB

NFL Power 10 | Week Two

September 10, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

NEW YORK – (Wire Service Report) – The first off day of the NFL regular season arrived Tuesday and a collective deep breath could be in order. Some teams can rest assured they are and undefeated 1-0 but others can stop to breathe deep. They need a win.

A loss by the three-time defending AFC champion Kansas City Chiefs and the Baltimore Ravens’ lateral of a sure victory into the hands of the Buffalo Bills are no cause for immediate panic.

10. Minnesota Vikings (1-0)
Last Week: W, 27-24 at Chicago Bears
Up Next: at Atlanta Falcons, 8:20 p.m. ET (Sunday)
Scintillating comeback by J.J. McCarthy allows for a mulligan on the forgettable first half by the Vikings in Chicago.

9. Los Angeles Rams (1-0)
Last Week: W, 14-9 vs. Houston Texans
Up Next: at Tennessee Titans, 1 p.m. ET
Losing their first three games on the road last season might imply Week 2 a risky trap at Nashville for the Rams. But this defense will travel, and rookies rarely thrive under the type of duress the Rams’ front can pile on a QB.

8. Tampa Bay Buccaneers (1-0)
Last Week: W, 23-20 at Atlanta Falcons
Up Next: at Houston Texans, 7 p.m. ET (Monday)
Rookie Emeka Egbuka caught two TDs last week. His matchup with the stellar secondary of the Texans should be worth the price of admission.

7. Washington Commanders (1-0)
Last Week: W, 21-6 vs. New York Giants
Up Next: at Green Bay Packers, 8:20 p.m. ET (Thursday)
Picked up where they left off last season with 432 yards and a strong defensive effort.

6. Detroit Lions (0-1)
Last Week: L, 27-13 at Green Bay Packers
Up Next: vs. Chicago Bears, 1 p.m. ET
Are the Lions lost without Ben Johnson calling plays for Jared Goff? We’ll wait for this week, against Johnson and the Bears, to decide.

5. Baltimore Ravens (0-1)
Last Week: L, 41-40 at Buffalo Bills
Up Next: vs. Cleveland Browns, 1 p.m. ET
Fourth-quarter breakdowns led to 22 points for the Bills and a horrific loss in the opener. How do the Ravens respond?

4. Kansas City Chiefs (0-1)
Last Week: L, 27-21 vs. Los Angeles Chargers (Brazil)
Up Next: vs. Philadelphia Eagles, 4:25 p.m. ET
In last place in the AFC West for the first time in four years, maybe the last defense Patrick Mahomes wanted to see coming is at Arrowhead on Sunday.

3. Buffalo Bills (1-0)
Last Week: W, 41-40 vs. Baltimore Ravens
Up Next: at New York Jets, 1 p.m. ET
Busted up by big plays, the Bills have serious concerns on defense. They also have Josh Allen. Allen had four TD passes and two rushing touchdowns in a pair of wins over the AFC East rival Jets last season.

2. Green Bay Packers (1-0)
Last Week: W, 27-13 vs. Detroit Lions
Up Next: vs. Washington Commanders, 8:20 p.m. ET (Thursday)
Micah Parsons is the ship raising all boats on a dynamic Green Bay defense. Jordan Love being overlooked among top quarterbacks in the league.

1. Philadelphia Eagles (1-0)
Last Week: W, 24-20 vs. Dallas Cowboys
Up Next: at Kansas City Chiefs, 4:25 p.m. ET
To paraphrase Jalen Hurts, the Eagles don’t care about style points, only wins. The secondary and pass rush left plenty to be desired in the opener and Hurts didn’t connect with his top receivers. But the Super Bowl champions still beat the Dallas Cowboys.

In regard to the local team, the New England Patroits and their Week 2 opponent, the Miami Dolphins, are about even. The Patriots come in at No. 26 while the Fins are one slot behind at No. 27.

26. New England Patriots (0-1)
Last Week: L, 20-13 vs. Las Vegas Raiders
Up Next: at Miami Dolphins, 1 p.m. ET
One of these teams exhales on Sunday night. The other starts hearing NFL draft talk. Drake Maye should be smiling after the Dolphins made Daniel Jones look the part of Unitas last week.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: NFL Tagged With: 2025 NFL Power Rankings, Philadelphia Eagles

Refsnyder Blasts the Long Ball

September 10, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

SACRAMENTO – Wire Service Preview) – Major League Baseball veteran Rob Refsnyder is the new owner of the longest homer hit by a Boston Red Sox player this season.

Refsnyder belted a 463-foot homer to fuel Boston’s second straight win in a three-game series against the Athletics, and he will aim to help the Red Sox complete the sweep Wednesday afternoon in the temporary Northern California home of the soon-to-be Las Vegas A’s.

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Boston (81-65) is in a virtual tie for second place with the New York Yankees (80-64) in the American League East, three games behind the Toronto Blue Jays (83-61). The Red Sox and Yankees also share the top two AL wild-card positions.

Refsnyder’s career-long homer was a three-run blast that capped a four-run first inning on Tuesday. It was just the 32th homer the journeyman has hit in 10 major league seasons.

“That’s the furthest ball I’ve ever hit, and it will probably be the furthest I’ll ever hit,” Refsnyder said after Boston’s 6-0 win. “It’s special to be able to do something like that. There’s a really bunch of bad years and stretches where I really couldn’t even hit the ball forward.”

When the subject turned to bragging rights, the reality that his homer was the team’s longest sunk in.

“They all count the same, but it’s bad when a 34-year-old is No. 1, so I will give some crap to some guys,” Refsnyder said.

Boston has had many heroes while outscoring the Athletics 13-0 over the first two games.

Trevor Story and Carlos Narvaez homered in the Red Sox’s 7-0 victory on Monday, and Romy Gonzalez led off Tuesday game with a homer shortly before Refsnyder’s blast.

Gonzalez also hit an RBI double in the second inning but exited with left knee soreness after 1 1/2 frames.

“Left knee kind of locked up on me, nothing too serious,” Gonzalez said. “Hoping I will be ready to go by Friday.”

Gonzalez is batting .455 (20-for-44) during a 12-game hitting streak. Prior to the homer and double on Tuesday, all 18 of the hits were singles.

The Athletics had 10 hits on Tuesday but also struck out 11 times in five innings against Boston left-hander Connelly Early, who was making his big-league debut. On Monday, Red Sox ace Garrett Crochet pitched the first seven innings of a shutout victory.

It marked the first time the A’s have been blanked in consecutive games since facing the Detroit Tigers on June 26 and the New York Yankees one day later.

“To get shut out back-to-back nights is tough,” Athletics manager Mark Kotsay said. “Our offense has been great all year.

“We’ve faced tough pitching. We had a lot of chances and we didn’t capitalize. When you have 10 hits and you don’t score any runs, it says a lot about your opportunities with runners in scoring position.”

A’s All-Star shortstop Jacob Wilson had three hits to raise his batting average to .319, second best in the majors behind the .321 mark of the Yankees’ Aaron Judge.

“It’s impressive — his ability to use the whole field the way that he does,” Kotsay said. “It doesn’t seem like he’s slowing down right now.”

Left-hander Payton Tolle (0-1, 7.56 ERA) will make his third start for Boston on Wednesday. His first went well, his second did not.

The 22-year-old struck out eight in 5 1/3 innings in a no-decision against the Pittsburgh Pirates on Aug. 29 in his big-league debut. He gave up two runs on three hits and two walks.

However, Tolle lasted just three innings and gave up five runs and five hits while losing to the Arizona Diamondbacks on Friday. He fanned two and walked four.

Right-hander Mason Barnett (1-1, 9.00) will make his third career start for the A’s.

Barnett, 24, struggled in his debut vs. the Texas Rangers on Aug. 30, permitting five runs on eight hits in four-plus innings. He came back to beat the Los Angeles Angels on Friday, when he allowed four runs and three hits over five innings. In the latter contest, he struck out eight and walked five.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, MLB, Red Sox Tagged With: A's, Boston Red Sox, MLB

Steel Curtain Adds Peppers

September 10, 2025 by Digital Sports Desk

PITTSBURGH – (Wire Service Report) – The Pittsburgh Steelers have agreed to terms on a deal with veteran safety Jabrill Peppers, NFL Network reported.

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Peppers, 29, was released by New England in a surprising move on Aug. 29. He signed a three-year, $24 million extension with the Patriots in July 2024, but injuries and a league suspension limited him to six games last season.

The Steelers add a player with 99 games of experience (85 starts) and more than 500 tackles with the Cleveland Browns (2017-18), New York Giants (2019-21) and Patriots. He has seven interceptions, seven fumble recoveries, 5.5 sacks and 35 passes defensed.

Peppers was selected by the Browns with the 25th overall pick of the 2017 NFL Draft out of Michigan.

Peppers spent time on the commissioner’s exempt list in 2024 after he was the subject of a domestic violence charge. He was acquitted of multiple assault charges in January.

The Steelers lost starting safety DeShon Elliott to a knee injury during Sunday’s season-opening win against the New York Jets. Elliott is expected to miss multiple weeks with an MCL sprain, per multiple reports.

Pittsburgh has a Week 3 meeting with the Patriots in Foxborough, Mass.

–Field Level Media

Filed Under: Boston Sports, NFL, Patriots Tagged With: New England Patriots

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