Yankees rally after beatdown, top Dodgers 7-3 to avoid sweep in World Series rematchNew Foto - Yankees rally after beatdown, top Dodgers 7-3 to avoid sweep in World Series rematch

They didn't quite return the favor after Saturday's beatdown at Dodger Stadium, but the New York Yankees are leaving Los Angeles with a win after all. The Yankees, after awild 18-2 blowout loss Saturday, rolled to a solid 7-3 win over the reigning World Series champions on Sunday afternoon. That gave them their first win of the three-game series as they successfully avoided the sweep. The Yankees are one of three teams in the league, along with the New York Mets and Cincinnati Reds, who have yet to be swept this season. The Yankees jumped out in front right away on Sunday afternoon after Trent Grisham scored on an error following a Jasson Domínguez single. While Tommy Edman hit a solo home run in the second for the Dodgers to tie it up, the Yankees responded the next inning. Ben Rice hit a deep two-run shot to center, which put the Yankees up 3-1. Anthony Volpe scored on a wild pitch from Yoshinobu Yamamoto that inning, too. Yamamoto lasted just 3 2/3 innings on the mound for the Dodgers in his shortest start of the season. He gave up seven hits and four earned runs. The Yankees added two more runs in the fifth after DJ LeMahieu and Oswald Peraza each hit RBI singles. That gave them a 6-1 lead, which just about put the Dodgers away. Though both Andy Pages and Max Muncy hit solo shots for the Dodgers in the seventh, the comeback attempt started too late. The Yankees made it out of that inning, and then quickly fought through the final two to escape with the four-run win. LeMahieu hit a deep RBI double in the final inning to add one last run for good measure. He went 4-for-5 on the night in what was his first four-hit game since 2021. The Dodgers won the opening game of the series 8-5 on Friday, thanks to a pair of home runs from star Shohei Ohtani. Thencame Saturday's stunner, which was powered by seven RBI from Muncy. Their 18 runs were the most the Dodgers have ever put up against the Yankees. Things got so bad at one point that Ohtani even hilariously lost interest. Shohei Ohtani. Locked in…pic.twitter.com/KhqvyLz69L — OldTimeHardball (@OleTimeHardball)June 1, 2025 The Dodgers, even with Sunday's loss, sit at 36-23 on the season. They lead the NL West, and have won four of their past six games. They'll open a four-game series with the Mets on Monday night. Though the Yankees are still in great position at this point of the season — they hold a 36-22 record and are leading the AL East — it's clear the Dodgers are still one step ahead of them after this past weekend's series in Southern California.

Yankees rally after beatdown, top Dodgers 7-3 to avoid sweep in World Series rematch

Yankees rally after beatdown, top Dodgers 7-3 to avoid sweep in World Series rematch They didn't quite return the favor after Saturday...
Scottie Scheffler rolls to victory at Memorial for 3rd win of yearNew Foto - Scottie Scheffler rolls to victory at Memorial for 3rd win of year

Scottie Scheffler showed once again that he's ready to conquer whatever challenge he's faced with on the PGA Tour. The world's No. 1 golfer had another smooth round and won for the third time in his last four tournaments, successfully defending his title at the Memorial Tournament with Sunday's 2-under-par 70 in the final round at Muirfield Village Golf Club in Dublin, Ohio. "This is a golf course that is definitely going to expose your weaknesses," Scheffler said. "Did some really good battling today. ... Put up another really good round on this very difficult golf course." At 10-under 278 for the tournament, Scheffler secured a four-shot victory over Ben Griffin -- the only other golfer to win a PGA Tour event that Scheffler started in the past month. Scheffler hadn't won in 2025 until capturing the CJ Cup Byron Nelson, which is considered his hometown event in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, and followed that with claiming the PGA Championship. He won seven times in 2024. Scheffler and Tiger Woods are the only back-to-back winners of the Memorial Tournament. It's a tournament hosted by legendary Jack Nicklaus, who greeted the current champion as he walked off the green. "It's pretty cool," Scheffler said. "It's always a hard week. It's so challenging to play this tournament." Much like on Saturday, Scheffler was content with pars as he played the front nine in 1 under with eight pars. Griffin (73 on Sunday) led for large chunks of the first three days, but lost a share of the top spot with a bogey on Saturday's final hole. He began Sunday with another bogey, and he was 2 over for the day through 13 holes. "I'll learn from some of my swings down the stretch," Griffin said. "I'll remember some of the good stuff, and I'll bounce back and get right back to it." An eagle on the par-5 15th with a 12-foot putt followed by a birdie on No. 16 allowed Griffin to extend the suspense. Then the margin went from two strokes to four when Griffin was stuck with a double bogey at No. 17. "We battled really hard on the weekend," Scheffler said. "Ben made things interesting down the stretch. Overall, it was a great week." A week ago, Scheffler tied for fourth place as Griffin won the Charles Schwab Challenge. Scheffler has secured seven consecutive top-10 finishes. "The guy's relentless," said Sepp Straka, the tournament's third-place finisher from Austria. "He loves competition, and he doesn't like giving up shots." Griffin said his putting was costly during the weekend. The runner-up spot didn't seem as rewarding as it would have in previous years. "I'd take this finish, like, a year ago, two years ago, three years ago," he said. "I'm definitely a little disappointed to not have made it a little bit closer or gotten it done." Straka (70) was third at 5 under and second-round co-leader Nick Taylor of Canada (73) finished fourth at 4 under. Russell Henley (71) and Maverick McNealy (70) shared fifth place at 2 under. Brandt Snedeker's 65 was the best score of the final round, moving him to 1 under and into a five-way tie for seventh place. "I think I probably made 200 feet of putts today," Snedeker said. "I had the putter working. When you have days like that, it's just get it on the green, give yourself a chance." Also in that cluster at 7 under was Rickie Fowler (73), who qualified for next month's British Open as a result of his finishing spot. "We're heading the right way," Fowler said. "This week still could have been a lot better, but definitely positive is going over to Portrush. That's one I've wanted on the schedule." --Field Level Media

Scottie Scheffler rolls to victory at Memorial for 3rd win of year

Scottie Scheffler rolls to victory at Memorial for 3rd win of year Scottie Scheffler showed once again that he's ready to conquer whatev...
NASCAR Nashville winners and losers from Ryan Blaney's Cracker Barrel 400 winNew Foto - NASCAR Nashville winners and losers from Ryan Blaney's Cracker Barrel 400 win

Ryan Blaneytook control of the race with a pass for the lead on the restart with 116 laps to go, then drove to his first victory of theNASCAR Cup Seriesseason in theCracker Barrel 400on June 1 at Nashville Superspeedway. Blaney won Stage 2 but dropped behind Joey Logano after pit stops at the stage break. Blaney then drove by Logano on a restart on Lap 199 and held the top spot for the majority of the final 100 laps. The final pit cycle completed under green, with Blaney holding a sizeable lead over second-place Carson Hocevar and third-place Denny Hamlin. Hocevar finished in second for the second time this season, tying his career-best finish in the Cup Series. Here are the winners and losers from Sunday's NASCAR Cup Series race at Nashville: NASHVILLE RACE RESULTS:Ryan Blaney is winner, plus full leaderboard for Cracker Barrel 400 Hocevar is a future star in the sport, and always a part of the story. Sunday's race had the best and worst of Hocevar, all in 300 laps. In Stage 2, Hocevar drove hard into turn 3 and bumped Ricky Stenhouse Jr., sending the No. 47 Chevrolet spinning and into the wall. Stenhouse did not finish, credited with 39th, then told Amazon in an interview that retribution could be coming. But Hocevar finished the second stage in the top 10, then worked the strategy late to end up second after the final pit cycle completed with about 30 laps to go. Hocevar couldn't cut into Blaney's lead at the end, but was able to hold off Hamlin to finish second. It ties a runner-up finish at Atlanta earlier this season as his career-best in the Cup Series. Bubba Wallace needed a good finish badly, but probably did not think he would get one early in the race. Wallace was penalized for speeding on the first stop of the race, on Lap 44. He lost a lap, and wasn't able to get it back at the stage end. Wallace did get the free pass on Lap 104 as a group of cautions helped the bottom of the running order, then steadily climbed the leaderboard. The No. 23 Toyota entered the top 10 early in the final stage, and Wallace drove up into sixth on the final run. Wallace entered Nashville with three straight DNFs, dropping out of the top 10 in points. Sunday's result should help Wallace and his 23XI Racing team reset positively as the second half of the regular season begins this month. Alex Bowman's stretch of poor finishes continued on Sunday in Nashville after wrecking alongside Noah Gragson early in Stage 2. Bowman's 36th-place finish is his fifth finish of 29th or worse in the last seven races, and it puts into question his playoff status with 12 regular-season races left. To give context on Bowman's struggles: He finished second at Homestead and was third in points through six races. After Nashville, Bowman is in 12th in points. Stenhouse was on the receiving end of Hocevar's too-aggressive bumping on Lap 106. (That incident comes up a couple times, doesn't it?) The No. 47 Chevrolet was a model of consistency throughout the first 13 races, coming into Nashville at 13th in points despite just two top-10 finishes but no finishes outside the top 25. But Hocevar's contact sent Stenhouse into the wall, out of the race and down the standings and the playoff picture. The biggest stories, every morning. Stay up-to-date on all the key sports developments bysubscribing to USA TODAY Sports' newsletter. This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean:NASCAR Nashville winners and losers: Ryan Blaney gets first win of 2025

NASCAR Nashville winners and losers from Ryan Blaney's Cracker Barrel 400 win

NASCAR Nashville winners and losers from Ryan Blaney's Cracker Barrel 400 win Ryan Blaneytook control of the race with a pass for the le...
Analysis-Trump tax bill poses limited benefits, higher costs for lower-income AmericansNew Foto - Analysis-Trump tax bill poses limited benefits, higher costs for lower-income Americans

By David Morgan WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. PresidentDonald Trump's signature tax break on tips promises relatively few upsides for low-income Americans, who face a net loss of income under his massive tax and spending bill in Congress, analysts say. The new tax break is one of several aimed at helping working-class Americans who are a key bloc in Trump's political coalition. But experts say it would reach only a fraction of the bartenders, hairdressers and other workers who rely on tips. And those who benefit could see gains outweighed by cuts to healthcare and food assistance. "If you're thinking about things that could help low-income workers, 'no taxes on tips' would not be high up on my list," said Martha Gimbel, director of the Budget Lab at Yale University. Several independent analyses conclude that the bill now before the Senate would effectively transfer money from poor Americans to the rich. The Penn Wharton Budget Model, for example, found it would reduce after-tax income by $1,500 for families earning less than $22,000 per year, and boost income by $104,000 for those earning more than $5.2 million. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office reached a similar conclusion. Still, the idea of making tipped income tax-free has drawn wide support since Trump first floated it last year at a campaign stop in Nevada, a swing state with a large hospitality industry. The bill that passed the House of Representatives last month allows workers earning up to $160,000 a year to deduct tips from their gross income until 2029, though tips would remain subject to Social Security and Medicare taxes. House Republicans say the bill would provide the typical family with a $1,300 tax cut and that business tax breaks would lead to higher wages for workers. "Permanently lower tax rates and a doubled standard deduction, combined with President Trump's no tax on tips, overtime, and auto loan interest, will help workers afford the roof over their head, food for their families, and help build their financial security and wealth," House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith, a Republican, said in a recent statement. Senate Republicans are likely to seek considerable changes to the bill, which also would make Trump's 2017 tax cuts permanent and implement other top priorities, like a crackdown on immigration. MANY WOULDN'T QUALIFY But the deduction for tip income would not help the 37% of tipped workers who already earn too little to pay any income tax, according to the Yale Budget Lab. Tipped employees account for only about 2.5% of all U.S. workers. The tax break would cost the U.S. government nearly $40 billion in lost revenue through 2028, according to the congressional Joint Tax Committee. Other benefits for working families face similar limits, including deductions on overtime pay and interest on auto loans. In each case, the greatest benefits accrue to people with higher incomes. "All of those will only benefit someone if they have enough income that they are paying a positive tax liability," said Brandon DeBot, policy director at New York University's Tax Law Center. The new tax breaks would be outweighed by higher costs from cuts to social safety-net programs and rising debt levels. At least 8.7 million lower-income Americans would lose health insurance coverage from new restrictions to Medicaid and the Affordable Care Act, according to CBO. Republicans have also added new restrictions to two bulwarks of support for low-income families: the child tax credit and the earned income tax credit. The legislation would temporarily increase the $2,000 child tax credit to $2,500 through 2028 and adjust it for inflation after that. But it contains a new requirement that parents provide Social Security numbers to qualify. That would exclude 4.5 million eligible children, according to the nonpartisan Center for Migration Studies. Families would also have to meet tighter standards to qualify for the earned income tax credit, a major anti-poverty program that reached 23 million tax filers in 2022. And analysts warn that cuts to Internal Revenue Service funding and staff would leave the tax agency less able to help lower-income people navigate the new restrictions. The legislation would add $3.8 trillion to the national debt, which now stands at $36.2 trillion, according to CBO. Ultimately, the cost would weigh most heavily on poor Americans, according to the Penn Wharton Budget Model, which estimated that low-income households in the future would see a lifetime loss of $8,500 due to a weaker safety net and higher debt service. The model found that some high-income households would see a lifetime gain of $17,800. "You're inheriting this higher debt, this higher burden. Somebody has to pay for it," said the budget model's director, Kent Smetters. (Reporting by David Morgan; editing by Andy Sullivan and Alistair Bell)

Analysis-Trump tax bill poses limited benefits, higher costs for lower-income Americans

Analysis-Trump tax bill poses limited benefits, higher costs for lower-income Americans By David Morgan WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. President...
Wall Street futures slip after Trump's steel, aluminum tariff threatsNew Foto - Wall Street futures slip after Trump's steel, aluminum tariff threats

(Reuters) -U.S. stock index futures dipped on Monday after President Donald Trump announced plans to double tariffs on imported steel and aluminum, amplifying concerns about trade- and tariff-related volatility. Trump said on late Friday he planned to increase tariffs on imported steel and aluminum to 50% from 25% starting Wednesday, just hours after he accused China of violating an agreement. The increased levies would deepen Trump's global trade war and douses some enthusiasm stemming from a softening in his trade stance. Last month, a temporary relief on some levies on China and a rollback of steep tariff threats on the European Union, along with strong earnings and improving economic data helped the benchmark S&P 500 log its best monthly performance in 18 months. Shares of U.S. Steel companies rose in premarket trading, with Cleveland-Cliffs jumping 26.2%, Nucor up 14.1% and Steel Dynamics 13.4% higher. "It is really hard to keep up or predict what's going to happen on trade at the moment, and that's before we factor in the full ramifications from the court ruling last Thursday night, and then subsequent brief stay of execution for them on appeal," Jim Reid, global head of macro and thematic research at Deutsche Bank, said in a note. A federal appeals court on Thursday temporarily reinstated most of Trump's 'Liberation Day' tariffs blocked by the Court of International Trade, the day prior. "For now, it seems likely that the tariff uncertainty will linger for a long time ahead even if we're still likely past the peak aggressiveness of U.S. policy," Reid said. At 5:22 a.m. ET, Dow E-minis were down 218 points, or 0.52%, S&P 500 E-minis were down 34 points, or 0.57%. Nasdaq 100 E-minis were down 156.5 points, or 0.73% Most megacap and growth stocks were down, with Tesla leading losses after it reported lower monthly sales in Portugal, Denmark and Sweden. The stock was last down 2%. Focus would be on comments from Fed Chair Jerome Powell later in the day as he presents opening remarks before the Federal Reserve Board International Finance Division's 75th anniversary conference at 1:00 p.m. ET (1700 GMT). Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller said on Monday that interest rate cuts remain possible later this year even with the Trump administration's tariffs likely to push up price pressures temporarily. On the data front, a reading of S&P Global U.S. manufacturing PMI is due at 9:45 a.m. ET and an ISM Manufacturing index reading is scheduled for 10:00 a.m. ET. Ahead in the week, investors await a crucial nonfarm-payrolls report due on Friday to ascertain strength in the U.S. economy amid tariff volatility. Among other stocks, Moderna rose 4.6% after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved its next-generation COVID-19 vaccine for everyone aged 65 and above. Separately, RBC Capital Markets raised its year-end target for the S&P 500 index to 5,730 from 5,550, citing modestly improved U.S. economic outlook and stronger-than-expected corporate earnings. (Reporting by Kanchana Chakravarty in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel)

Wall Street futures slip after Trump's steel, aluminum tariff threats

Wall Street futures slip after Trump's steel, aluminum tariff threats (Reuters) -U.S. stock index futures dipped on Monday after Preside...

 

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