The Mariners are two wins away from their first World Series appearance

The Mariners are two wins away from their first World Series appearance

Yahoo Sports AM is our daily newsletter that keeps you up to date on all things sports. Sign up here to get it every weekday morning.

️ Coaching changes: Penn State fired James Franklin after yet another embarrassing loss; the Titans fired Brian Callahan, who went 4-19 in Tennessee; Padres manager Mike Schildt, 57, retired after two years in San Diego.

Week 8 rankings: Indiana climbed to a program-best No. 3 ranking in the latest AP poll after beating Oregon on the road, while USC (No. 20) and Texas (No. 21) both re-entered the top 25 after wins over Michigan and Oklahoma.

Preseason rankings: Purdue is No. 1 in the preseason poll for the first time ever, while Houston, Florida, UConn and St. John’s round out the top five. The season tips off in three weeks (Nov. 3).

Four Americans: For the first time in over 20 years, four Americans have qualified for the WTA Finals. Coco Gauff, Amanda Anisimova, Jessica Pegula and Madison Keys will be among the eight players competing for the season-ending title.

The Antetokounmp-bros: Alex Antetokounmpo will join his older brothers, Giannis and Thanasis, on the Bucks after signing a two-way deal with the franchise. They’re the first trio of brothers to play on the same NBA team at the same time.

ALCS: The Mariners have played 7,757 games in their history. They are now two wins away from their first-ever World Series after taking Games 1 and 2 in Toronto.

Man of the hour: With another clutch home run, Mariners 2B Jorge Polanco, known to his teammates as “George Bonds,” is ascending to October legend status.

From Yahoo Sports’ Jake Mintz:

For a fan base that has endured so much torment, so many fruitless nights and vacant Octobers, this must all feel completely surreal, inconceivably easy. Suddenly, the only franchise to never play in a World Series is just two wins away from the ultimate stage.

That is thanks, in large part, to Polanco, who has emerged as this postseason’s most improbable yet inevitable main character. While he has just eight hits across Seattle’s seven playoff games, three of those knocks have been homers, and many, including Monday night’s long ball, have come in big spots.

“Yeah, I love those situations,” Polanco admitted after Monday’s game. “I don’t know what to say, man. I’m clutch. But I’m just trying to keep it simple.”

What’s next: Game 3 is Wednesday in Seattle, where George Kirby (10-8, 4.21 ERA this regular season) will get the start for the Mariners against former Cy Young winner Shane Bieber (4-2, 3.57 ERA).

NLCS: Blake Snell tossed his second straight postseason gem (8 IP, 1 H, 10 K) and the Dodgers survived a ninth-inning scare to beat the Brewers, 2-1, in Monday’s series opener.

From Yahoo Sports’ Russell Dorsey:

The 10 strikeouts marked a postseason career high for Snell and made him the first pitcher in MLB postseason history with at least 10 strikeouts, one or fewer hits allowed and zero walks in a start of at least eight innings. It was also the first postseason start in which a pitcher faced the minimum number of batters through eight innings (24) since Don Larsen’s legendary World Series perfect game in 1956.

“You’re not going to see too many performances like that, certainly in the postseason. This was pretty special,” said Dodgers manager Dave Roberts. “I think it’s the most dominant performance against us. And I’ve been here 10 years,” added Brewers manager Pat Murphy.

Must-see play: The Brewers robbed the Dodgers of sure runs with one of the wildest double plays in baseball history. You have to see it to believe it.

The ideal NBA lineup has a superstar, a deferential co-star, a third star who owns that role, a fourth option and a fifth starter to tie it all together. Today, Yahoo Sports’ Ben Rohrbach ranks the No. 1 options.

Top 10:

Honorable mention: Paolo Banchero (Magic), Kevin Durant (Rockets), Kawhi Leonard (Clippers), Anthony Davis (Mavericks), Ja Morant (Grizzlies)

Landover, Maryland A year ago, the Commanders stunned the Bears with a last-second Hail Mary. On Monday, Chicago got its revenge with a last-second field goal by Jake Moody, who was added to the roster just hours earlier. Final score: 25-24.

Meanwhile, in Atlanta: The Falcons upset the Bills, 24-14, in Monday’s other game, handing Buffalo its second straight loss. Star of the night? Bijan Robinson (238 total yards, TD), who became the second player ever with 450 rushing yards and 300 receiving yards through five games.

Tampa, Florida The Buccaneers beat the 49ers, 30-19, to improve to an NFC-best 5-1 behind the continued brilliance of Baker Mayfield, who’s playing like an MVP with 12 touchdowns against just one interception and a laundry list of highlight reel plays.

Injury bug bites again: The Niners already lost Nick Bosa (ACL) and have been without Brock Purdy (toe, shoulder), Ricky Pearsall (knee) and Brandon Aiyuk (knee) for large chunks of the season. Now star linebacker Fred Warner (broken and dislocated ankle) is likely out for the year.

Kansas City, Missouri You didn’t really think the Chiefs would start 2-4, did you? Kansas City (3-3) snapped Detroit’s four-game win streak with a 30-17 victory on “Sunday Night Football,” where Patrick Mahomes dazzled (4 TDs) and tempers flared in a post-game fight.

Branch suspended: Lions safety Brian Branch, who started the brawl when he shoved Chiefs WR JuJu Smith-Schuster, has been suspended one game without pay. This is nothing new for the young defender, who has already been fined 14 times (!!) since entering the league in 2023.

Indianapolis, Indiana The Colts rallied to beat the Cardinals, 31-27, and improve to 5-1 for the first time since 2009. Jonathan Taylor (137 yards, TD) starred once again and now leads the league with 8 TDs and ranks third with 750 scrimmage yards.

Offensive explosion: The Colts have scored 194 points already, which leads the NFL and is the most any Colts team has ever scored through six games. Peyton Manning’s 2007 team had the previous record with 193 points. Danny Dimes quite literally one-upped him.

More from Week 6:

Quick links: Scores | Stats | Standings

The Aces finished off their WNBA Finals sweep of the Mercury on Friday, winning their third title in four years to cement their status as one of the league’s great dynasties.

The star of the show: A’ja Wilson was named Finals MVP after averaging 28.5 points, 11.8 rebounds, 4 assists, 2 blocks and 1 steal in the four-game series, capping off an all-time great season in which she’d already won the scoring title, MVP and DPOY.

“You have your Mount Rushmore, and she’s sitting alone on Everest. By the time it’s all said and done, she will be the greatest to ever do it.”

Aces head coach Becky Hammon on Wilson (via ESPN)

Long road to success: The Aces franchise was a founding member of the WNBA but had just seven winning seasons across 21 years as the Utah Starzz (1997-2002) and San Antonio Stars/Silver Stars (2003-17). Everything changed in 2018, when new owners moved the team to Sin City.

The dynasty: It’s no mistake that the turnaround began when it did, as the first draft pick of the Vegas era was none other than Wilson, selected No. 1 overall in 2018. The Aces went a modest 14-20 that inaugural season, but have reached at least the Final Four every year since.

Sound investment: In 2021, Raiders owner Mark Davis expanded his Vegas sports empire by purchasing the Aces for $2 million. Four years and three championships later, the franchise is worth $310 million, an increase of 15,400%.

️ Dodgers at Brewers | 8pm ET, TBS

The NLCS continues tonight in Milwaukee, where the Dodgers will look to take a 2-0 lead before heading home for Game 3. Freddy Peralta (17-6, 2.70 ERA in the regular season) takes the mound for the home team, while Yoshinobu Yamamoto (12-8, 2.49 ERA) gets the ball for the visitors.

️ USMNT vs. Australia | 9pm, TNT

The U.S. didn’t exactly look like world beaters in Friday’s 1-1 draw against Ecuador, but the Americans at least showed signs of life as Mauricio Pochettino’s World Cup vision began coming into focus. They’ll look to build on that tonight in Colorado.

More to watch:

Today’s full slate.

The last four QBs taken No. 1 overall have seen their head coach fired during their rookie season, with Cam Ward being the latest after the Titans axed Brian Callahan.

Question: Can you name the three QBs before Ward? (Bonus points: Can you name the three coaches who were fired?)

Hint: Two NFC, one AFC.

Answer at the bottom.

Cape Verde, an archipelago of 10 volcanic islands off the coast of Africa, qualified for the 2026 World Cup on Monday. Not bad for a country with fewer people than America’s least-populated state.

Historic achievement: Cape Verde (population: 525,000) is the second-smallest nation ever to qualify for the World Cup, trailing only Iceland (pop: 405,000). For reference: Wyoming, America’s least-populated state, has 588,000 people.

From BBC News:

Cape Verde gained independence from Portugal in 1975 and first attempted to reach the 2002 World Cup hosted in Japan and South Korea.

The Blue Sharks have punched above their weight in the Africa Cup of Nations in recent years, reaching the quarter-finals on debut in 2013 and again in 2023, and currently sit 70th in the world rankings.

Cape Verde has a growing tourism sector but rarely hits the headlines for its sporting achievements with the nation only securing its first ever Olympic medal at Paris 2024 when boxer David de Pina won bronze in the men’s flyweight category.

Trivia answer: Caleb Williams and Matt Eberflus (2024 Bears); Bryce Young and Frank Reich (2023 Panthers); Trevor Lawrence and Urban Meyer (2021 Jaguars)

We hope you enjoyed this edition of Yahoo Sports AM, our daily newsletter that keeps you up to date on all things sports. Sign up here to get it delivered to your inbox every weekday morning.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *