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How a Carson Benge comebacker turned into a Little League home run for the Mets

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Carson Benge celebrates.

Carson Benge celebrates with his teammates Tuesday. Adam Hunger / AP Photo

NEW YORK — This was a Royal mess.

The Kansas City Royals committed three errors on one Carson Benge comebacker in the first inning at Citi Field on Tuesday night, turning a ball that traveled maybe 50 feet into three New York Mets runs.

With two on and two outs in the first inning, Benge tapped a ball between the pitcher’s mound and the third-base line. Starter Seth Lugo pounced on it, but his rushed throw against the speedy Benge skipped past Jac Caglianone’s glove and into foul territory, allowing the first run to score.

The runners had already stopped at second and third when Caglianone uncorked as wild a throw home as you’ll see, with the ball nearly entering the visiting dugout, allowing Bo Bichette to scoot home and Benge to move to third.

Nick Loftin recovered the ball and tried to get Bichette at the plate, but his throw was late and slid past Carter Jensen, permitting Benge to finish his cycle of the bases.

(The third throw is cut off here, but was also wild.)

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— Tim Britton (he/him) (@timbritton.bsky.social) July 7, 2026 at 7:34 PM

The play was scored a single with an E1, E3 and E5 on Kansas City’s throws.

This is just the second time in the last decade that a team has committed three errors on a single play, according to Elias Sports Bureau. Last September, the Marlins achieved the ignominious feat in the second inning of a 2-0 loss to the Tigers.

The Royals and Mets, who matched up in the 2015 World Series, entered Tuesday’s series opener each with the second-worst records in their respective leagues.

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European football’s revenues top €40bn but long-term sustainability a concern, warns Deloitte

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Revenues in European club football continue to climb but are accompanied by warnings about the sport’s long-term financial health in a new report from consultancy firm Deloitte, released on Wednesday.

The latest Annual Review of Football Finance, now in its 35th iteration, covers finances on the continent in the 2024-25 season, when European football revenues topped €40billion (£33.6bn; $43.5bn) for the first time.

That represented 13 per cent growth on 2023-24, a rise attributed to expanded UEFA and FIFA competitions, principally the Champions League and the Club World Cup, but the report’s authors have cautioned that simply adding more games to football’s calendar is not sustainable.

Tim Bridge, lead partner in Deloitte’s Sports Business Group (SBG), said: “An increasingly saturated market may not be good for players or fans, particularly if it weakens the on-pitch spectacle. This approach, without a collective mindset from all rightsholders, risks prioritising short-term gain over long-term prosperity.”

Moreover, the report emphasises the need for a “shared plan for the future” to help European football retain its dominance as well as staving off competition from “other entertainment businesses”. Diversified business models will be required, not least as simply adding more games to broadcast packages is an unsustainable long-term strategy.

Bridge, in the report’s foreword, also notes a “critical juncture” regarding club stadiums and how revenues are extracted from matchgoing fans. Premier League matchday revenues topped £1bn for the first time in 2024-25, and grew across all of Europe’s ‘big five’ leagues, but clubs have come increasingly under fire for ticket price rises. Further afield, the inflated prices of tickets for this summer’s World Cup overshadowed much of the build-up to the tournament.

The warnings arrive even as Deloitte projects more revenue growth looms. The report details expected revenues across European football of €44.bn in 2025-26, then a further rise to €45.7bn in the upcoming 2026-27 season.

That growth is spearheaded by the Premier League, where 2024-25 revenues hit €8.1bn (£6.8bn) and are expected to surpass €8.5bn (£7.4bn) in 2025-26. Improved European performances alongside an uplifted TV deal put La Liga’s 2026-27 projected revenues at €4.5bn, the second-highest in Europe, but that is still 90 per cent below where England’s top tier is expected to land this season.

Football’s growing competitiveness worries

The Premier League’s financial dominance is nothing new and, speaking to The Athletic, Jennifer Haskel, SBG Knowledge and Insights Lead, outlined the need for “broad collective action” to ensure European football retains its competitiveness. While the Premier League’s success is worthy of acclaim, the figures in this report highlight the continuing dominance of English clubs.

That supremacy is, of course, a problem prevalent throughout football.

While the Premier League has opened up a gap to the rest, so too do the top leagues of Spain, Germany, Italy and France run away from everyone else. Collective 2024-25 revenues in those divisions were €13.5bn, or only three per cent below the combined revenues of every other division in Europe (€13.9bn).

The collective wage bills of the ‘big five’ divisions emphasise English dominance. Premier League clubs spent €5.2bn on wages in 2024-25, more than double the €2.5bn of the second-highest (La Liga). Such high wages naturally help English clubs attract the world’s best talent.

Clubs in La Liga, Bundesliga and Serie A actually managed to reduce wage costs as a proportion of revenue, but increases among English and French teams meant there was no overall improvement in that metric.

Matchday revenue was the only one of the three main income streams (broadcast and commercial being the others) that grew in each of Europe’s ‘big five’ divisions, aided by an increased number of fixtures in UEFA competition.

Yet the report clearly highlights the significance of what clubs choose to do next about stadiums and ticketing if they are to ensure those revenues hold up. Deloitte details the need for clubs to balance the recurring loyalty of lifelong fans, who provide the atmosphere which makes football so appealing, with the burgeoning appetite for live entertainment, particularly sport.

It will be, says the report, “a difficult equilibrium to find”, one which will differ by club and will involve “developing differentiated products”. Haskel reiterated the need for “balance” in clubs’ matchday offerings; clubs will need to improve takings from high-end consumers while at the same time retaining those fans who have gone, week in, week out, for many a year.

The issue of regulation

The report’s primary focus on top-line revenue figures is now customary, and while it risks shining insufficient light on the overall financial picture in a sport where almost every club loses money, that focus is reflective of the current regulatory environment. As the text notes, European football is experiencing an “ongoing shift towards revenue-linked spending regulation”; for three seasons, UEFA has operated a squad cost rule (SCR) which tethers spending limits to revenues, and Premier League clubs voted their own version through last November.

Such regulation of football’s finances is a key topic in the report, and Deloitte counsels against viewing the Independent Football Regulator, recently introduced in England, as a “silver bullet which absolves English football leagues and clubs of their responsibility to enhance and protect what are first and foremost cultural and community assets”.

Instead, says Haskel, football requires “fit-for-purpose” rules and an “adaptability of regulation”. Bridge also talks of the need for football’s strictures to “not only promote integrity and sustainability but to also drive value”. The message is that the sport, and the Premier League in particular, needs to find a way to regulate itself in a manner that ticks several boxes: protect community assets, improve club values, ensure transparency and clarity and improve bottom-line profitability.

High revenue does not equate to good financial health, and increased losses across the sport and particularly in England — the report references larger deficits in each of the Premier League, the three EFL divisions and the two Women’s Super League tiers — are noted. The Athletic has previously highlighted the worrying expansion in club deficits even as top-line figures grow.

For all football, and particularly in the English game, may appear in rude health at a glance, Deloitte’s report is shot through with cautionary notes and its belief the game’s clubs must employ a collaborative mindset in order to ensure continued prosperity.

Of noteworthy concern are disputes “which pit clubs against each other and are creating heightened uncertainty and distrust”, factors the authors view as “a barrier to the collaboration required to catalyse the next phase of growth”.

In the past two months, in England’s top two divisions alone, high-profile disputes between Middlesbrough and Southampton and Burnley and Everton — each of which possessed, in some way, money as a driver of discontent — have gobbled up headlines.

The report also references the ‘New Deal’ between Premier League and EFL clubs in England. A revised distribution of TV monies across the country’s highest tiers has been mired in stasis for years, with no sign of a breakthrough on the horizon.

On that matter, Deloitte make the two options clear: a future of fragmentation or one which preserves “the unique depth of quality and engagement that sets English football apart”. Further delays, they warn, will cause only “more collective damage … to the perception, value and strength of English football.”

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Fulham appoint Alvaro Arbeloa as Marco Silva’s successor as head coach

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Fulham have appointed Alvaro Arbeloa as their new manager on a three-year contract.

The former Real Madrid boss, 43, succeeds Marco Silva after he agreed to join Benfica.

“It is a real honour for me to be embarking on this new stage at Fulham FC, the oldest club in London,” he said. “I feel a great sense of responsibility and I’m deeply grateful to [chairman] Mr [Shahid] Khan and [vice-chairman] Tony Khan for the trust they have placed in me with Fulham in the Premier League.”

Chairman Shahid Khan said: “Alvaro is, by his own admission, very ambitious. He has spent quality time around the best players, clubs and methods in the game, experiences which will serve him well here at Fulham.

“Alvaro also has great interest in our academy set-up and believes in giving young players a chance. I loved hearing that from Alvaro, as well as his intent on playing attacking football.”

Arbeloa’s candidacy was supported by excellent references from recently re-elected Real Madrid president Florentino Perez and the Spanish club’s new manager Jose Mourinho, who he played for at Santiago Bernabeu.

The former full-back left Real Madrid at the end of last season and was replaced by Mourinho, who left Benfica. Silva then opted to move to the Portuguese side as Mourinho’s replacement despite contract offers from Fulham.

In an interview last month, Fulham‘s vice-chairman said Silva had previously “indicated he wanted to stay” but that “Marco changed his mind” and surprised the board by leaving Craven Cottage after five successful years.

Former Tottenham and Brentford boss Thomas Frank was linked to the Fulham job, while ex-Ipswich boss Kieran McKenna was deemed too expensive at £8m before factoring in his salary and staff costs.

Arbeloa was a youth coach in Madrid before taking over as interim manager following the departure of Xabi Alonso in January.

He led Real Madrid for the last 28 games of the season as they finished second in La Liga and were knocked out of the Champions League at the quarter-final stage by Bayern Munich.

Arbeloa is keen to bring players with him, including attacking midfielder Franco Mastantuono, full-back Fran Garcia and forward Gonzalo Garcia.

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5 Live Sport: All About… Wimbledon 2026 – Wimbledon Daily: Djokovic survives record-breaking quarter final

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Available for 29 days

Katie Smith, Russell Fuller, Leon Smith and Marion Bartoli break down Day 9 of Wimbledon.

It was another late finish on Centre Court as 7-time champion Novak Djokovic won a 5th set tie-break to beat 3rd seed Felix Auger-Aliassime to reach yet another Wimbledon semi-final – but has he got enough in his legs to take down world number one Jannik Sinner?

Katie speaks to Alexander Zverev who is through to his first Wimbledon quarter final – but he has a terrible record against his opponent, Taylor Fritz.

In the women’s draw, Naomi Osaka’s run is over – ended by Karolina Muchova, could she become the 3rd Czech woman in 4 years to win the Wimbledon title?

And for the 4th time this tournament, Coco Gauff won in 3 sets, this time against fellow American, Jessica Pegula

To listen to Wimbledon Daily, just search ‘Tennis’ on BBC Sounds.

TIMECODES:
01:05 – Djokovic outlasts Auger-Aliassime in 5 hour epic
10:12 – Sinner through, but yet to reach his best level
14:54 – Alexander Zverev speaks to Katie Smith after reaching first Wimbledon quarter final
17:08 – Can Zverev end Fritz hoodoo?
18:31 – Naomi Osaka speaks after losing to Muchova
19:40 – Muchova joins long list of Czech women to go deep at Wimbledon
22:25 – Gauff toughs it out again

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