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With Tigers flailing, Tarik Skubal talk is about to dominate trade deadline

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The only remaining question is whether Tarik Skubal can establish he is healthy. His team, the Detroit Tigers, is on the verge of achieving the near-impossible – falling out of contention not just in one of the weakest divisions in baseball, but also in an underwhelming American League with six playoff spots available.

Skubal, recovering from an innovative new surgery to remove a loose body from his left elbow, is scheduled to throw another simulated game Monday. If he continues his rapid progress, he will be back sometime in the next few weeks, maybe sooner. And if the Tigers decide to trade him, they likely will hold off as long as possible before the Aug. 3 deadline, allowing demand to build and Skubal to demonstrate he is back to his two-time Cy Young form.

Still, a growing belief exists within the industry that Skubal is a goner. And if NanoNeedle surgery indeed repaired his elbow with minimal disruption, the frenzy to acquire him might even top what we saw with Juan Soto in 2022 or any other July auction in recent memory.

Every contender will at least check in – yes, even the spendaholic, back-to-back World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers, who might view the deadline as something close to last call. The next collective bargaining agreement will include either a salary cap, closing the sport’s Free Spending Saloon, or other payroll restrictions that would have a similarly sobering effect.

The Tigers, 4-21 since learning Skubal would need surgery, are 16 games under .500, the worst team in the AL. They are 11.5 games out in the Central, seven games back in the wild-card race. And they have 14 players, including 10 pitchers, on the injured list, tied with the Dodgers for the most in the majors.

Right fielder Kerry Carpenter (shoulder) returned as a DH on Sunday, and second baseman Gleyber Torres (oblique) should not be far behind, potentially sparking the offense. Skubal, whenever he rejoins the team, obviously should provide a jolt.

So for now, the Tigers cling to faint hope, recalling their incredible run in the final two months of 2024. Yes, it was just two years ago when they earned a postseason berth after falling behind by 10 games, the largest deficit any team has overcome under the current playoff format, which began in 2022.

Yet, even that Tigers club was never more than nine games under .500. This Tigers club, seven games worse than that, is all but buried. No team this many games under .500 has made the playoffs under the current format, according to STATS Perform.

Only one team in AL/NL history, the 1914 Boston “Miracle” Braves, reached the postseason after going 16 games under .500. Far more playoff spots are available now than there were then, when each eight-team league sent just one team to the postseason, which then consisted only of the World Series. Such is the current state of the AL, a sub-.500 club, the Toronto Blue Jays, holds the league’s sixth and final postseason berth.

One rival executive, granted anonymity for his candor, spoke from experience about the difficulty of climbing out of a crater as massive as the Tigers’.

“Once you start your ascent, you can never stop it. You’re done with your slumps,” he said.

The Tigers, after constructing a franchise-record $217 million payroll, will not want to concede. Both their offense and defense, however, rank among the worst in the majors. To win even 85 games, they would need to go 63-39 the rest of the way.

If the Tigers keep Skubal, then make him a qualifying offer and lose him as a free agent, they will receive only a draft pick after the first round as compensation. A trade would yield greater projected value, though the return would be depressed by three factors: Skubal’s status as a rental, the remaining portion of his $32 million salary he is owed and his lack of eligibility for a qualifying offer as a player traded in the middle of a season.

Still, it’s Tarik Skubal. And the griping from rival executives about dealing with Scott Harris, the Tigers’ notoriously exacting president of baseball operations, would be as entertaining as the Skubal sweepstakes themselves.

The Dodgers wouldn’t figure to have a need for another high-priced ace. Blake Snell is recovering from the same surgery as Skubal. Tyler Glasnow is only dealing with lower back spasms. River Ryan has a 29-to-3 strikeout-to-walk ratio at Triple A. And, lest anyone forget, president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman hates overpaying at the deadline.

The Dodgers’ farm system, however, is second only to Milwaukee’s, according to The Athletic’s Keith Law. Heaven knows how healthy their rotation will be in two weeks, much less two months. And what’s another $10 million or so to add to the payroll, plus another $11 million or so in luxury-tax penalties?

The Dodgers, though, represent just one possibility.

San Diego Padres general manager A.J. Preller is probably calling around already, trying to gather additional prospects for a run at Skubal. The Philadelphia Phillies already have a dynamic 1-2 in Cristopher Sánchez and Zack Wheeler, but would anyone seriously expect the ultra-competitive duo of owner John Middleton and president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski to learn of Skubal’s availability and say, “Nah, we’re good?”

The same would apply to the New York Yankees, another team currently deep in starters. In Atlanta, Skubal could join Chris Sale, Bryce Elder and Spencer Strider to give the Braves a hammer to potentially overtake the Dodgers. Perhaps no contenders need Skubal more than the Chicago Cubs, who lack a No. 1 without Justin Steele and Cade Horton, and Toronto Blue Jays, who currently have an entire rotation on the IL.

On it goes.

The Baltimore Orioles’ head of baseball ops, Mike Elias, might be concerned enough about his job to push for Skubal. Splurging for a rental is not the Brewers’ style, but they have the system to put together a terrifying trio of Skubal, Jacob Misiorowski and Kyle Harrison. The Tampa Bay Rays, the one small-market team that routinely plays on big names, currently lead the AL East. Perhaps new ownership would be tempted to make a splash.

The risk of acquiring Skubal would be considerable. He could get hurt. The team that acquires him could scuffle. So many front offices are conservative. The combined acquisition cost in dollars and prospects likely would scare off a number of suitors.

It would be one of those deals where a team couldn’t miss. It also would be one where the impact might rival the transformative effect CC Sabathia had on the Brewers in 2008.

The deadline hinges on how well Skubal recovers. The chances of the Tigers recovering get smaller by the day.

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World Cup 2026: How to follow on the BBC – TV, radio, online and social media

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There will be live commentary on every World Cup game (except for the clashing final group games, when one of the two matches being played simultaneously will be broadcast live in full, with updates from the other) on BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds.

And there will be podcasts galore.

The BBC will have a Football Daily podcast every day of the World Cup, released at 06:00 BST, while from then until 09:00, Rick Edwards will be live in Los Angeles for 5 Live Breakfast.

There will be two episodes of The Wayne Rooney Show every week – and a 606 every week too.

BBC Radio Scotland will will have a daily podcast every morning – plus YouTube live shows throughout the group stages – and extended programming on the radio on game days.

Special editions of The Saturday Show from Boston, Off the Ball and Breaking the News are on the agenda.

There are also offerings on BBC Radio nan Gàidheal and BBC ALBA’s YouTube page.

And Sunday League manager Steve Bracknall has six World Cup specials of Game’s Gone: The Steve Bracknall Podcast, plus reaction to home nations games.

To find a home nations commentary, you can say to your smart speaker ‘ask BBC Sounds to play the England or Scotland match’ or request it to play the radio station you want.

And BBC World Service will have a Global World Cup podcast three times a week. The Sport Today (Monday to Friday) and Sportsworld (Saturday and Sunday) shows will be broadcast to more than 66 million listeners worldwide on location from host cities.

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Tuchel tackles questions from team of under-11s

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England head coach Thomas Tuchel fields questions from under-11 players before his team head to the World Cup.

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Women’s College World Series championship series set: Texas to rematch Texas Tech

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OKLAHOMA CITY — Texas and Texas Tech will meet in the championship series of the Women’s College World Series in back-to-back years after both teams won semifinal matchups on a scorcher of a day at Devon Park that saw the maximum four games with two “if necessary” showdowns.

Texas has won six elimination games in the NCAA Tournament so far and did so twice Monday to return to its fourth championship series in five years, its third straight. The Longhorns and Red Raiders became the 11th and 12th teams in WCWS history to lose their opener and then reach the finals. This is the first matchup of teams to do so since 2021, when FSU and Oklahoma accomplished the feat.

The Red Raiders return to the championship series after knocking out No. 1 overall seed Alabama in two straight games, marking their second consecutive appearance in the finals. Kaitlyn Terry and NiJaree Canady worked in tandem in the circle in Game 1 to keep the bats of a potent Alabama offense relatively quiet, but Canady took it to another level in Game 2, throwing a complete-game shutout. She now has a shutout in each of her four appearances in the WCWS.

“I’m just excited to be able to make it to the championship series again,” Canady said on facing Texas in back-to-back championships. “It’s just a blessing to play them again. It’s good for the state of Texas, showing how good softball is in the state, and I feel like we’re going to get a good turnout.”

“Just so proud of my girls,” Texas Tech coach Gerry Glasco said. “They really bought in in the last — I feel like the last 30 days that we just have come together and became a whole different team, and they’re just playing for each other so well now.”

As per usual for the Red Raiders’ stacked lineup, it was a runs-by-committee kind of day, with RBIs from five players: Lauren Allred, Terry, Jasmyn Burns, Taylor Pannell — who both homered — and Mia Williams, whose walk-off in Game 1 kept the Red Raiders’ chances alive. Burns was the sole provider of the offense in Game 2 with a solo home run, her second in as many days. That was all Texas Tech needed to shut out the Tide, though another run scored on an error in the top of the seventh allowed Mihyia Davis to add some insurance.

Alabama’s Jocelyn Briski had been dominant the entire WCWS up until Monday’s first matchup, where she just couldn’t seem to find the zone. She had more control in Game 2, but the Tide’s offense couldn’t figure out Canady despite seeing her in the first game.

Texas Tech pitcher NiJaree Canady celebrates a strikeout during a game.

NiJaree Canady blanked the Crimson Tide in Game 2 for her fourth WCWS shutout. (Nathan J. Fish / USA Today Network via Imagn Images)

“The key today was one inning at a time,” Glasco said. “Play one inning at a time. Even break it down one pitch and go through. Don’t think about 14. Think get the next out, get to the next out, get to the next inning.

“We know that against a great team like Alabama, there’s going to be moments — I told her (Canady) before, you’re going to lose momentum at some point. You’re going to face adversity, and when you do, we’re going to respond really quickly and get it right back in our dugout.

“That adversity happened at the top of the seventh. Just like Oklahoma last year, we lost the lead. Let’s win it in the bottom here. Let’s not mess around and go eight. Let’s get it right now. It took one batter. They’re just really a resilient bunch of young women.”

The Longhorns likewise won both of the necessary games to advance and keep their hopes for a repeat title alive. Teagan Kavan struck out 10 batters — a new career high in OKC — and allowed just two hits in a complete-game shutout, the fifth of her career on this stage to surpass Texas legend and Olympian Cat Osterman. Tennessee, which defeated Texas on Thursday to open up play at Devon Park, needed just one win to advance, but its offense was shut down by Kavan and Game 1 starter Citlaly Gutierrez, who had a no-hitter going into the fourth inning.

Tennessee, undefeated in the NCAA Tournament until this point, had hit a home run in every contest but couldn’t find a rhythm in either game. For Texas, Katie Stewart led the way at the plate, launching her second and third home runs in 24 hours despite an uncharacteristic three errors in the field. Her second home run of the day was her 30th of the season, a Texas program record that also makes her the fourth player in Division I this season to surpass the 30-homer mark.

Katie Stewart celebrates a home run as she rounds the bases.

Katie Stewart hit a solo home run in the fifth inning of Game 1 against Tennessee to help Texas advance to the championship series. (Brett Rojo / Imagn Images)

“It’s what coach (Mike) White has put in us all season, just fighting back from losses,” senior catcher Reese Atwood said. “When we came out of the loser’s bracket after the first game, we fought so hard. We’ve had so many key players step up in different places, different roles, and it’s Texas fight. It’s what we do, and we’re going to continue to do going into the championship.”

Texas and Texas Tech have not faced each other so far in 2026, but the Longhorns have historically owned the in-state rivalry with a 58-12 record against the Red Raiders.

Last season, Texas Tech made program history with its first WCWS ticket punched, then came within one game of taking home its first title in a three-game battle against Texas. In the 2025 tournament, Texas and Texas Tech went through the winner’s bracket before facing each other; the first two games of the championship were pitchers’ duels until Texas’ offense exploded in Game 3 to take home the program’s first championship.

Notably, the college careers of Tennessee ace Karlyn Pickens and Alabama seniors Alexis Pupillo and Marlie Giles came to an end. Pickens has made an indelible mark on the game of softball and leaves behind the record for the fastest pitch recorded in college softball at 79.4 mph. After being drafted No. 1 in the AUSL Draft, Pickens will play professionally with the Carolina Blaze.

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