Top Ad
I DIG Radio
www.idigradio.com
Listen live to the best music from around the world!
I DIG Style
www.idigstyle.com
Learn about the latest fashion styles and more...
I Dig Sports

I Dig Sports

Wild rookie Buium arrives, skates with teammates

Published in Hockey
Monday, 14 April 2025 16:42

ST. PAUL, Minn. -- Zeev Buium was conducting his first media interview as a member of the Minnesota Wild on Monday, when a white practice jersey suddenly sailed over the circle of reporters and cameras and landed square in the rookie's face.

The rookie defenseman paused briefly to uncover his face, revealing a wide smile and an unfazed expression as he quickly resumed the conversation. While Buium's performance on the ice in the NHL has yet to unfold, the 2024 first-round draft pick with the unusual name and the unconventional pathway to the sport sure looks like he'll be able to more than hold his own.

After winning the NCAA championship as a freshman with Denver and returning to the Frozen Four last weekend, Buium decided to end his college career after two seasons and make the jump to Minnesota. He signed a three-year, entry-level contract on Sunday and joined the Wild at the rink for practice, meet-and-greets and more paperwork on Monday.

"Kind of like your first day school," coach John Hynes said. Buium, for the record, e-mailed his Denver professors to inform them he wouldn't be in class this week.

"I don't think there was much more, development-wise, for me in college hockey," said Buium, who was the country's highest-scoring defenseman and one of three finalists for the Hobey Baker player of the year award. "I can obviously get bigger, stronger and faster, but taking this next step and pushing myself even more, it's the right moment."

Wild defensemen Jake Middleton has missed the last four games with an injury, though he was on the ice on Monday. Another one of their top four defensemen, Jared Spurgeon, was recently banged up and didn't play in the last game. Even if they're both available for the critical final regular-season game on Tuesday against Anaheim, with a spot in the playoffs not yet secure, Buium could well find himself in the middle of the action.

"That's the dream, playing in the NHL and taking that rookie lap, so if I'm fortunate enough to do it, then I'm going to be super pumped and ready to go," Buium said. "But it's just still a dream right now. It's pretty awesome."

Buium, whose last name is pronounced BOO-yum, grew up in San Diego where his parents emigrated from Israel in their mid-20s to be near family and start a heating, venting and air conditioning business. Once Buium and his two brothers found a passion and skill for hockey, his mother drove them to daily practices in the Los Angeles area -- a 112-mile, one-way trip -- while their father worked.

Buium eventually attended the prestigious prep school Shattuck St. Mary's in Faribault, Minnesota, where numerous NHL players have come through. One of his brothers, Shai Buium, is currently a Detroit Red Wings prospect playing in the AHL.

If the Wild win on Tuesday, they're in the playoffs. Simply taking the Ducks to overtime would send them to the postseason as the first wild-card team, too, with one more point needed to ensure a finish ahead of St. Louis and Calgary. The Wild have the tiebreaker in hand with more regulation wins than both clubs.

But if the Wild were to lose in regulation, they'd be on thin ice. The Blues host Utah at the same time. The Flames host San Jose an hour later and also have an extra game remaining at Los Angeles on Thursday. If both St. Louis and Calgary win out, the Wild would be left out if they don't gain at least one point against Anaheim.

After playing in the world juniors and, most recently, helping Denver reach the national semifinals, Buium has been on plenty of big stages. That bodes well for the situation he's entering.

"He's a really well-spoken kid," Buium said. "He's been a captain at the levels he's been at, so when you have that type of a person and his personality and the experiences he's had, it certainly makes it a little bit easier."

Slow CWC ticket sales don't worry FIFA's Infantino

Published in Soccer
Monday, 14 April 2025 17:44

ATLANTA -- FIFA President Gianni Infantino said he is not concerned about ticket sales for this summer's Club World Cup in the United States despite questions about how well the 32-team event is selling across the country.

Infantino, making an appearance at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on Monday to promote the Club World Cup, said his reasoning for not being worried is because of how stadiums filled up for friendly matches between top-tier teams during preseason tours in the United States in years past.

"I'm not worried at all to fill a stadium when teams are coming to play a World Cup, to play for something real, not just an exhibition game where sometimes the second or third squads are fielded and so on," Infantino said. "This is a real game. This is a real competition.

"This is a real World Cup. It's the best players. It's the best teams coming."

He added that once people understand the competition, they'll buy in, but admitted FIFA has to explain the Club World Cup to fans.

The 32-team competition has never been this large before and has a new format after a 7-team version was held in 2021, 2022 and 2023. FIFA officials declined to release ticket sales numbers thus far when asked by ESPN on Monday.

The cheapest seat on Ticketmaster for the June 14 opening match in Miami Gardens, Florida, featuring Lionel Messi and Inter Miami CF vs. Egyptian side Al Ahly, costs $356.80. Multiple sections in both the upper and lower decks of Hard Rock Stadium show over 100 tickets available on Ticketmaster.

The same goes for the second match of the tournament on June 15 in Cincinnati between Bayern Munich and Auckland City, with the cheapest seat going for a more reasonable $94.80 on Ticketmaster and multiple sections with over 100 tickets remaining.

For the first match at the Rose Bowl on June 15 between Paris Saint-Germain and Atlético Madrid, over half of the Rose Bowl's 26 sections have at least 100 tickets available on Ticketmaster, with the cheapest seat being $133.80.

FIFA also recently announced a package where fans can buy packages of tickets to this summer's Club World Cup with a "guaranteed option" to buy a ticket to one of next summer's World Cup games, not including the final.

"When people see what it is, then they realize that they have to come," Infantino said. "I was always told in the United States of America, you need to bring the best. Americans, they just want to see the best. They don't want to see average things.

"Well, the best are coming."

Infantino also addressed the possibility of Atlanta playing host to a Women's World Cup final. He joked the 71,000-seat venue would need another 20,000 seats, but also indicated the city, which has 14 games between the Club and regular World Cups, including a World Cup semifinal next year -- has a chance to make an impression.

While Infantino may say he's not worried about ticket sales for the Club World Cup, he did make one thing clear: Tickets are still available.

The FIFA president ended his introductory comments by saying he wanted to do some publicity after showing off the Club World Cup trophy and announcing a $1 million contribution "for social projects" for children in Atlanta.

"Let me do some publicity," Infantino said at the podium. "There are still some tickets available. FIFA.com/tickets, get them and enjoy the best of the best playing for this, which is something incredible."

'Madrid is Madrid': Marcelo warns Arsenal

Published in Soccer
Monday, 14 April 2025 17:44

Real Madrid legend Marcelo has said the club cannot be written off as they look to overturn a 3-0 deficit against Arsenal in their Champions League quarterfinal second leg on Wednesday.

A pair of stunning free kicks helped Arsenal stun Madrid at the Emirates last week, leaving Carlo Ancelotti's side with a mountain to climb. However, Marcelo, who won five Champions League titles with Madrid, said no task is too big for the club.

"You can never write off Real Madrid," Marcelo told ESPN in an interview in Mexico on Monday. "Although three goals is a lot of goals, but I am always thinking about Real Madrid and have a lot of faith that they'll come back. Real Madrid is Real Madrid and they always come back."

Marcelo is in Mexico this week playing in the Club Legends Clásico with other former Madrid and Barcelona players.

"The return leg is at the Bernabéu, the fans will push hard and the players are confident it can happen. Of course, we don't know what will happen, we have faith and Real Madrid will come back," Marcelo said.

Marcelo added that winning is in the DNA of Real Madrid players, as it is something taught to them from the moment they wear the shirt.

"I think that from the moment we joined Real Madrid, we're taught to never give up, and that's always been in our blood," he said. "It's been like this for many years, and apart from the DNA, it's hard work, humility, daily dedication, and the support of the fans as well. It's all part of making things work."

Madrid, who will welcome Arsenal to the Bernabéu, can boast a track record of recovering from the position they find themselves entering Wednesday, although the club has never come back from a 3-0 first-leg defeat.

Ancelotti's side delivered a series of logic-defying comebacks en route to the Champions League title in 2022, including two stoppage-time goals to deny Manchester City in the semifinals.

Sergio Ramos may have moved to Liga MX side Monterrey, but the notorious former Real Madrid and Spain defender is still getting involved in all sorts of headline-grabbing antics.

The 39-year-old picked up red card No. 30 of his club career last month in only his fourth match in Mexico, and last weekend he was involved in a bizarre bout of mind games around his other great area of expertise: penalty kicks.

Early in the second half of Saturday's clash at Tigres, Monterrey were awarded a penalty, and with it a golden chance for their spot-kick expert to score the opening goal of the game. Ramos -- who had scored each of his last 21 penalties at club level -- stepped up, placed the ball on the spot and readied himself to shoot, only to be met by the sight of Tigres goalkeeper Nahuel Guzmán attempting some utterly baffling diversionary tactics.

As Ramos carefully mapped out his run-up and visualized his shot from 12 yards, Guzmán stood on the goal line with his back to his opponent with his arms splayed out and simply refused to turn around. Cue more than a minute of confusion as Ramos flashed quizzical looks at the match officials.

Despite having made over 1,000 career appearances and winning just about all there is to win in professional football, Ramos had obviously never had to contend with Guzmán's particular brand of pre-penalty shenanigans before and had no idea what the correct protocol might be. After what felt like an eternity of forcing Ramos to stare bewilderedly at his shirt number, the Tigres keeper then changed things up and began prancing up and down his line, waving his arms in a further attempt to distract the Monterrey captain.

Ramos then decided to get involved in the pantomime himself and motioned to Guzmán that he was going to attempt a Panenka-style penalty, something at which he has proved adept over the years. Several more agonizing moments passed before Guzmán then turned his back once again in a final attempt to disrupt Ramos' preparations.

Unfortunately for Guzmán, his decision to delay the taking of the penalty for over 90 seconds proved to have little effect on Ramos, who calmly swept the ball into the bottom corner before charging off in celebration.

For all of his failed chicanery, Guzmán still managed to have the last laugh. Monterrey held their slim lead until stoppage time, at which point Tigres hit back with two late goals from Sebastián Córdova and Nicolás Ibáñez to pilfer a dramatic 2-1 victory.

Just to add to the drama, there were three players sent off in the second half at the Estadio Universitario. By some miracle, given his track record, Ramos was not one of them.

With just two rounds of games left in the Clausura championship, Monterrey are ninth with 22 points while Tigres are fourth with 29, four points behind leaders Toluca.

Raiders' Crosby takes on asst. GM role with EMU

Published in Breaking News
Monday, 14 April 2025 17:30

Las Vegas Raiders standout pass rusher Maxx Crosby has been named the assistant general manager for the Eastern Michigan football program, the university announced Monday.

Crosby is the first active NFL player to hold the position. He will help Eastern Michigan evaluate high school and portal prospects, manage its NIL budget and also serve as special assistant to the fundraising, alumni relations and student-athlete support.

"There is no place more important to my personal and athletic development than Eastern Michigan University," Crosby said in a statement released by the school. "It truly is an honor for me to not only be named the Assistant GM of the EMU, but together with my wife Rachel, make another donation aimed at creating opportunities for other athletes to be impacted by the EMU program, community, students and alumni."

Crosby is one of the best defensive players to ever come out of Eastern Michigan. In three seasons, he set the program record with 20 career sacks, and his 41 tackles for loss are the third most in school history.

Crosby, a fourth-round pick in 2019, has recorded 59.5 sacks in six seasons with the Raiders. He was rewarded by the Raiders this offseason, signing a three-year, $106.5 million contract extension in March.

In addition to his role as assistant general manager for EMU, Crosby also launched the "Maxx Match," which is a fundraising challenge in which he will personally match all donations to the Eastern Michigan football program, up to $100,000, made before the end of May.

In 2023, Crosby and his wife Rachel donated $1 million to the football program.

"Maxx Crosby's return to EMU in this leadership role is a transformative moment for our football program," athletic director Scott Wetherbee said in the release. "His passion, vision, and generosity are inspiring, and the Maxx Match is a powerful example of that. ... With him on board, we're building a better football program and a stronger future for EMU athletics."

While Crosby is the first NFL player to take an administrative job with an NCAA team, he is not the only athlete. Golden State Warriors star Stephen Curry became the assistant general manager at Davidson College, his alma mater, last month.

Ward one of 17 to attend NFL draft; no Sanders

Published in Breaking News
Monday, 14 April 2025 17:30

Miami quarterback Cam Ward, the projected No. 1 pick in the 2025 NFL draft, is one of 17 players confirmed to attend the event in Green Bay, Wisconsin, in two weeks, the NFL announced Monday.

Ward is one of three quarterbacks who will be in attendance, along with Ole Miss' Jaxson Dart and Alabama's Jalen Milroe. Colorado quarterback Shedeur Sanders, widely expected to be the second quarterback selected, was not among those announced to be in attendance.

Travis Hunter, Sanders' star two-way teammate, will be in attendance, however. Other wide receivers who will be in attendance are Texas' Matthew Golden and Arizona's Tetairoa McMillan.

Other prominent players to be in attendance include Penn State defensive end Abdul Carter, Boise State running back Ashton Jeanty, LSU offensive tackle Will Campbell and Michigan defensive tackle Mason Graham. All four players are expected to be selected in the top 10 picks.

Alabama leads the way with three players confirmed to attend -- Milroe, guard Tyler Booker and linebacker Jihaad Campbell. Georgia (safety Malaki Starks and defensive end Mykel Williams) and Michigan (Graham and cornerback Will Johnson) will each have two players in attendance.

Rounding out the attendees are Ohio State offensive tackle Josh Simmons and Texas A&M defensive end Shemar Stewart.

The draft begins with the first round on Thursday, April 24 (8 p.m. ET), followed by the second and third rounds on Friday, April 25 (7 p.m. ET), and Rounds 4 through 7 on Saturday, April 26 (noon ET).

NEW YORK -- UConn star and newly minted NCAA champion Paige Bueckers was selected No. 1 by the Dallas Wings in the 2025 WNBA draft on Monday night.

Bueckers, a three-time first-team All-American from Hopkins, Minnesota, becomes the sixth player, and first since Breanna Stewart in 2016, to be drafted first overall and win a national championship in the same year. Bueckers led the Huskies to their first NCAA title in nine years last Sunday in her final collegiate game.

The 2021 national player of the year, Bueckers is also the sixth UConn player to be drafted No. 1, joining a distinguished group of WNBA superstars that includes Sue Bird (2002), Diana Taurasi (2004), Tina Charles (2010), Maya Moore (2011) and Stewart (2016).

The selection marks a hopeful change of fortune for the Wings, who went 9-31 last season, missed the playoffs and changed coaches. Dallas was rewarded the top pick in November when it won the draft lottery for the first time in franchise history.

The Wings organization, which previously played in Detroit and Tulsa when it was known as the Shock, has made the postseason in five of its nine seasons since relocating to Dallas in 2016, but advanced past the first round only once, in 2023.

Even before the addition of Bueckers, the 2025 Wings -- headlined by four-time All-Star Arike Ogunbowale -- were already set to feature a slew of newcomers. Stars Satou Sabally and Natasha Howard moved on to different teams, while new coach Chris Koclanes and general manager Curt Miller brought in DiJonai Carrington, Tyasha Harris, NaLyssa Smith and Myisha Hines-Allen during free agency.

Now the Wings will look to channel the momentum of drafting Bueckers into supercharging their franchise on and off the court. The team had already announced a move in 2026 from Arlington to Dallas, where it will have a standalone practice facility and play in a larger and newly renovated arena.

Bueckers enters the pros boasting the top career scoring average in UConn history (19.8 PPG) on remarkable efficiency (53% from the field, 42% from 3, 85% from free throw line), while also shining as a facilitator. The 6-foot guard overcame a pair of knee injuries, including an ACL tear that sidelined her the entire 2022-23 campaign, to play the best basketball of her career over the past two seasons with the Huskies.

While she can play both on and off the ball, multiple WNBA talent evaluators told ESPN they see her as a point guard long-term in the league. Her pairing with Ogunbowale in the backcourt could soon emerge as one of the best guard duos in the league.

Nuggets' Kroenke: Firings months in the making

Published in Basketball
Monday, 14 April 2025 13:07

DENVER -- Nuggets vice chairman Josh Kroenke said Monday that he twice balked at firing the winningest coach in franchise history and the general manager who connected the final pieces of the team's only championship puzzle before finally canning them last week with just three games left in the season.

Kroenke held off in November to give the team time to jell and an eight-game winning streak heading into the All-Star break tempered his desire to part ways in February with coach Michael Malone and GM Calvin Booth.

Kroenke finally fired both men last week in a move that stunned the league because the Nuggets were still in the mix for home court in the first round of the playoffs and less than two years removed from the city's first NBA championship parade.

"So, what would be crazier, me doing what I did last week or doing it on an eight-game winning streak?" Kroenke asked.

Only one of those eight wins leading into the All-Star break came against a team that would make the playoffs, the Orlando Magic, the No. 7 seed in the East.

"I think that those eight games masked a trend that was going on behind closed doors that ultimately started to really affect the end of our season," Kroenke said.

Kroenke said he also seriously considered a change around Thanksgiving with the Nuggets off to a so-so start and "I was really feeling like things weren't headed in the right direction." But he said he held off then to give the team time to settle in.

Despite leading Denver to its first title in 47 years, Malone and Booth long clashed over roster philosophies, a discord that led to a toxicity in the organization that began to affect the team's fortunes and which led Kroenke to fire them both.

Kroenke also addressed a report that he would not approve trading forward Michael Porter Jr. in part because of his ties to Porter's alma mater, Missouri, calling it "completely false."

"First of all I'll say, I'm incredibly proud of Michael," Kroenke said, referencing his journey back from multiple back surgeries earlier in his career. "... But I think that any kind of report saying that we're not open to trading everybody possible to improve the team is completely false.

"The other thing I'll say is ... I'm not going to be green-lighting any trades around here when I don't see complete organizational cohesion and we're not maximizing the group we got."

No players or club personnel requested the change in organizational structure, Kroenke added. He offered three-time MVP Nikola Jokic a chance to discuss a decision that had already been made, but Kroenke said Monday that Jokic's response was a head nod of "no."

"You have a responsibility when you have a player like that, especially, obviously, in his prime," Kroenke said of Jokic. "But I feel an even greater responsibility to the person. ... I'd be the dumbest guy in basketball if I wasn't asking him for his opinion on certain things. But it's my responsibility to make those decisions for the best of the organization and I think Jokic understands and respects that."

The Nuggets have won all three games under interim coach David Adelman to secure a third consecutive 50-win season and the fourth seed in the West, where they'll open at home Saturday against the fifth-seeded Los Angeles Clippers.

Kroenke said he'll commence a search for both positions after the season but he demurred when asked if he wanted to have a GM in place before hiring a head coach: "My thoughts aren't there because this season's not over."

Kroenke also announced he'd promoted Ben Tenzer to interim GM for the playoff run.

Kroenke began his nearly 30-minute news conference, his first since the firings, by praising Malone and Booth: "I want to start off by initially just staying thank you to both Calvin and Coach Malone ... And to be frank, neither one of them deserved it, so for that I apologize."

Kroenke said he ultimately made the decision to move on from both men "with the hope of kind of rejuvenating the energy of the group and re-establishing some positive thoughts before the playoffs. I think we did that over the last three games ... still have a long way to go."

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Vlad giving 'love back' to Canada with new deal

Published in Baseball
Monday, 14 April 2025 17:06

TORONTO -- Calling Canada his "second house," slugger Vladimir Guerrero Jr. signed his $500-million, 14-year contract with the Toronto Blue Jays on Monday.

Guerrero, 26, was born in Montreal while his Hall of Famer father Vladimir Sr. was playing for the Expos. The younger Guerrero signed with the Blue Jays as a 16-year-old in 2015 and made his big league debut in 2019.

"I was born here and this is my second house," Guerrero said in English on Monday. "I've spent a lot of time here in Toronto and Canada. When a country gives you love, you've got to give the love back, you know? That's what I'm doing right now."

Guerrero typically speaks in Spanish and uses a translator when taking questions from reporters, but spoke only English on Monday.

Edward Rogers, executive chair of team owner Rogers Communications, called Guerrero "truly a historic franchise player," and said the contract represented "an historic deal for Canada and for this club."

"This was the right move for the Jays, and that's the way that we looked at it," Rogers said. "Vlad started his career here. We also considered him family and wanted him to stay, right from the start. It's a great long-term deal that will make the Blue Jays more competitive, increase our chances to win and be contenders."

Guerrero is a .288 career hitter with 160 homers and 514 RBIs. The four-time All-Star is batting .302 with no homers and seven RBIs in 16 games this season.

"He's demonstrated that he's among the most impressive offensive performers in the game," Blue Jays president Mark Shapiro said.

A two-time Silver Slugger, Guerrero was the AL Gold Glove award winner at first base in 2022. He won the MLB Home Run Derby at the 2023 All-Star Game in Seattle, matching his father's 2007 achievement. They are the only father-son duo to win the derby.

Beyond offensive talent, Blue Jays general manager Ross Atkins said Guerrero's enthusiastic and energetic personality is an attractive quality.

"He brings not only elite competitiveness but that signature smile that everyone wants to be around," Atkins said. "Certainly I do. I know his teammates embrace it and will continue to."

Blue Jays players George Springer, Anthony Santander, Andrés Giménez and José Berríos were on hand for Monday's event, and cheered loudly after Guerrero signed his new deal.

Also in the crowd were manager John Schneider, associate manager DeMarlo Hale, first base coach Mark Budzinski, as well as Guerrero's wife, daughter, and extended family.

Guerrero agreed in January to a $28.5 million, one-year contract that avoided arbitration, and had said he wouldn't negotiate after he reported to spring training in mid-February. Still, talks with his agent continued into the regular season before the deal was struck last week.

The Blue Jays announced the contract while on the road at Boston last Wednesday.

Guerrero's deal is the third-largest contract in total dollars behind outfielder Juan Soto's $765 million, 15-year contract with the New York Mets that started this season and two-way star Shohei Ohtani's $700 million, 10-year agreement with the Los Angeles Dodgers that began last year and is heavily deferred.

Guerrero's $35.71 million average annual value under the new deal ranks eighth among current contracts behind the agreements of Ohtani ($70 million), Soto ($51 million), Philadelphia pitcher Zack Wheeler ($42 million), Yankees outfielder Aaron Judge ($40 million), Texas pitcher Jacob deGrom ($37 million), Dodgers pitcher Blake Snell ($36.4 million) and Yankees pitcher Gerrit Cole ($36 million).

Guerrero's deal includes a record $325 million signing bonus that protects the money from a possible work stoppage in 2027.

"It's just another mechanism that was a win-win for the team and the player," Atkins said of the hefty signing bonus. "He benefits from the guaranteed nature of it, there are some small accounting benefits to him and there are some small accounting benefits to the Blue Jays as well. It was just an avenue for us to find a way to get closer to the finish line."

Atkins declined to offer specifics on how those "accounting benefits" impact the Blue Jays. Guerrero's portion received as a signing bonus presumably will be exempt from state income tax in Florida, where he is a resident.

The signing bonus includes $20 million payable within 30 days of the agreement's approval by Major League Baseball. The remainder is due each June 30 from 2026-39: $13 million in 2026, $14 million in 2027, $16 million in 2028, $18 million in 2029, $20 million each in 2030, '31 and '32, $22 million apiece in 2033 and '34, $23 million in 2035, $24 million in 2036, $29 million in 2037, $31 million in 2038 and $33 million in 2039.

Guerrero gets salaries of $17 million each in 2026 and '27, $16 million in 2028, $15 million in 2029, $14.5 million apiece in 2030, '31 and '32, $12.5 million each in 2033 and '34, $11.5 million in 2035, $10.5 million in 2036, $7 million in 2037, $6.5 million in 2038 and $6 million in 2039.

He would earn a $150,000 bonus for winning an MVP award, $125,000 for finishing second in the voting, $100,000 for third, $75,000 for fourth and $50,000 for fifth. Guerrero would get $50,000 each for making the All-Star team or winning World Series MVP, a Gold Glove award or a Silver Slugger. He would get $25,000 for League Championship Series MVP.

In addition, Toronto will provide Guerrero with four seats for all regular-season home games and a luxury suite at a discounted rate, subject to availability, for all regular-season and postseason home games.

Guerrero was asked Monday about the future of teammate and shortstop Bo Bichette, who is eligible for free agency following the World Series. Both sons of former big leaguers, the two came up together through Toronto's minor leagues and debuted a few months apart in 2019.

"I can't control his destiny," Guerrero said. "I hope he stays here with me, from the bottom of my heart, but I can't control that."

Braves DH Ozuna back in Atlanta for MRI on hip

Published in Baseball
Monday, 14 April 2025 17:06

TORONTO -- Braves designated hitter Marcell Ozuna is not with the team for its game in Toronto on Monday night after returning to Atlanta a day earlier to have an MRI on his sore hip.

Ozuna, who went back to Atlanta after Sunday's game in Tampa Bay, is day-to-day, Braves manager Brian Snitker said.

"We just wanted to make sure it wasn't anything big," Snitker said. "There's some inflammation in there. He's going to stay back and get treated up. We'll just see every day how it gets."

Ozuna, 34, is batting .306 with three home runs and eight RBIs in 15 games. He went hitless in three at-bats in Sunday's 8-3 loss to the Rays.

Snitker said he noticed "a couple of days ago" that Ozuna was struggling because of the hip while running the bases.

Bryan De La Cruz was the DH for Monday's game against the Blue Jays.

Soccer

Amorim defends Højlund despite scoring woes

Amorim defends Højlund despite scoring woes

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsRuben Amorim has insisted that Rasmus Højlund is not solely to blam...

Weekend review: Real Madrid still in title race, plus much more

Weekend review: Real Madrid still in title race, plus much more

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsThroughout the course of the weekend, the LaLiga title race went fr...

Lewandowski (hamstring) in doubt for UCL semis

Lewandowski (hamstring) in doubt for UCL semis

EmailPrintBarcelona striker Robert Lewandowski is a major doubt for the Copa del Rey final and the C...

2026 FIFA


2028 LOS ANGELES OLYMPIC

UEFA

2024 PARIS OLYMPIC


Basketball

C's Tatum: X-ray on wrist negative after hard fall

C's Tatum: X-ray on wrist negative after hard fall

EmailPrintBOSTON -- Boston Celtics All-Star Jayson Tatum said a postgame X-ray on his right wrist wa...

NBA unveils award finalists for 2024-25 season

NBA unveils award finalists for 2024-25 season

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsThe NBA unveiled the three finalists for each of its seven major in...

Baseball

O's give up 24 runs in 'embarrassing' loss to Reds

O's give up 24 runs in 'embarrassing' loss to Reds

EmailPrintOpen Extended ReactionsBALTIMORE -- The Baltimore Orioles began Sunday with right-hander C...

Padres' Arraez exits on stretcher after collision

Padres' Arraez exits on stretcher after collision

EmailPrintHOUSTON -- San Diego Padres designated hitter Luis Arraez was carted off after colliding w...

Sports Leagues

  • FIFA

    Fédération Internationale de Football Association
  • NBA

    National Basketball Association
  • ATP

    Association of Tennis Professionals
  • MLB

    Major League Baseball
  • ITTF

    International Table Tennis Federation
  • NFL

    Nactional Football Leagues
  • FISB

    Federation Internationale de Speedball

About Us

I Dig® is a leading global brand that makes it more enjoyable to surf the internet, conduct transactions and access, share, and create information.  Today I Dig® attracts millions of users every month.r

 

Phone: (800) 737. 6040
Fax: (800) 825 5558
Website: www.idig.com
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Affiliated