McIlroy makes double bogey in 73 and opens Dubai Desert Classic 8 shots behind Molinari

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Rory McIlroy took a double-bogey seven in a 1-over opening round of 73 to start the Dubai Desert Classic trailing eight shots behind clubhouse leader Francesco Molinari on Thursday.

Playing the 18th hole as the ninth of his round, McIlroy’s chip approach for his third shot pitched in front of the green and rolled back into the water. After taking a penalty, his next approach left McIlroy six feet from the pin needing two putts.

McIlroy’s playing partner, Tommy Fleetwood, also dropped a shot on the 18th after making bogey also at the 14th and 16th. The world Nos. 2 and 3 both carded 73.

The third member of the stellar group of Ryder Cup winners, Tyrrell Hatton, shot a 2-under 70 to begin the defense of his Dubai title at Emirates Golf Club. Another Ryder Cup teammate, Shane Lowry, also was on 2 under.

Molinari hit eight birdies in a 7-under 65, including four in his first five holes starting at the 10th. He later had three straight birdies through the ninth to finish his round.

Mikael Lindberg was two shots back in second place with a 5-under 67, and Joel Girrbach was alone in third place in the clubhouse on 4 under.

A group of players on 3 under included Wenyi Ding, the 21-year-old former Arizona State University student from China.

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AP golf: https://apnews.com/hub/golf

Power ranking all 30 MLB farm systems ahead of the 2026 MLB season

The 2026 MLB season begins on March 25. That's little more than two months away, and while everyone assumes the Los Angeles Dodgers are destined to three-peat, the bright side is that everyone is already looking to 2027 and beyond.

Looking so far ahead is difficult though. We don't know how players will age. We don't know what trades or free agent acquisitions will be made. We don't even know whether or not there will be a lockout when the current CBA expires on Dec. 1 this year.

The only decent indication we have of each team's future is their farm system. The teams with the best farm systems often become the best teams in the league soon after. The Chicago Cubs had one of the best in the league prior to their World Series title in 2016. The Tampa Bay Rays were near the top for much of the transition between the 2010's and 2020's. The Baltimore Orioles had the best for several years before finally breaking through in 2024, even if they fell apart just one year later.

So, looking ahead to the second half of the decade, which teams are set for contention? Here's every MLB team's farm system ranked from worst to best entering the 2026 season.

Power ranking all 30 MLB farm systems

*Prospect rankings listed via MLB.com

30) San Diego Padres

Top 5 prospects:

  • C Ethan Salas (No. 77 on MLB.com's Top 100)
  • LHP Kruz Schoolcraft (No. 95)
  • RHP Humberto Cruz
  • LHP Kash Mayfield
  • RHP Miguel Mendez

The Padres basically gutted their farm system last year at the trade deadline, with their biggest prospects, Leo De Vries being shipped to the Athletics in the deal for Mason Miller. The Padres have some players who could wind up becoming franchise stalwarts in the future but outside of Salas, Schoolcraft, and Mayfield, there isn't much to love about San Diego's future.

29) Los Angeles Angels

Top 5 prospects:

  • RHP Tyler Bremmer (No. 91)
  • RHP Ryan Johnson (No. 96)
  • RHP George Klassen
  • LHP Johnny Slawinski
  • SS Joswa Lugo

The Angels reached for Tyler Bremmer at No. 2 overall, and he is widely considered their top prospect. That's not a great combination unless Bremmer can break out and exceed the expectations he had prior to being drafted. Another one of the organization's top prospects, Caden Dana, also experienced some setbacks a season ago. For a team prone to calling up their prospects much earlier than they should, that's a very unfortunate situation and could further delay the team's rebuild.

28) Houston Astros

Top 5 prospects:

  • 2B Brice Matthews (No. 93)
  • SS Xavier Neyens
  • C Walker Janek
  • RHP Miguel Ullola
  • OF Joseph Sullivan

Losing Jacob Melton in the Brandon Lowe trade is a huge blow to the Astros' farm system, which was already rated lowly to begin with. While Melton didn't have a spectacular stint in the big leagues, slashing just .157/.234/.186 in 32 games for Houston, we'd yet to see how he could perform in a full season. Now, Houston is forced to lean on guys like Janek and Kevin Alvarez who have potential but have yet to establish themselves as legitimate fanbase-inspiring prospects.

27) Atlanta Braves

Top 5 prospects:

  • LHP Cam Caminiti (No. 72)
  • RHP JR Ritchie (No. 86)
  • SS/OF Tate Southisene
  • SS Alex Lodise
  • LHP Briggs McKenzie

The lack of depth in the Braves' farm system is really showing here. The team had a great crop of young talent get called up a season ago including Drake Baldwin, AJ Smith-Shawver, and Hurston Waldrep, but outside of those guys, the Braves didn't have much else to lean on in 2025. Now, heading into the 2026 season, the team didn't do really anything to quell those concerns. Luckily for the Braves, most of their key players are locked up for a while, so the farm system isn't much of an issue ... for now.

26) Kansas City Royals

Top 5 prospects:

  • C Carter Jensen (No. 39)
  • C Blake Mitchell (No. 62)
  • OF/2B Sean Gamble
  • 3B Josh Hammond
  • SS Yandel Ricardo

It's hard to have faith in this team's farm considering Jensen will be on the big league team sooner rather than later. Even with Jensen though, this team's system lacks sustained star power. Sean Gamble doesn't possess any attributes that really pop out of the stat sheet. Hammond likely won't be ready for the majors anytime soon, and Ricardo is 18 years old and struggled in A-ball. There's potential down the line, and Jensen is a stud, but they might have a dry spell of great prospects coming to the big leagues for a few years.

25) Texas Rangers

Top 5 prospects:

  • SS/3B Sebastian Walcott (No. 6)
  • SS Gavin Fien
  • RHP Jose Corniell
  • RHP Winston Santos
  • RHP AJ Russell

The Rangers have some potential with their group of prospects considering many of their young pitchers were highly touted, even cracking MLB's top-100 prospect list before small stints of poor play and suffering injuries that derailed their 2025 campaigns. If guys like Santos, Alejandro Rosario, and even Emiliano Teodo can bounce back, there's reason to be excited. Obviously, Walcott is a stud, but he's the only sure thing the Rangers have currently.

24) New York Yankees

Top 5 prospects:

  • SS/2B George Lombard Jr. (No. 25)
  • RHP Carlos Lagrange (No. 74)
  • RHP Elmer Rodriguez (No. 97)
  • OF Spencer Jones (No. 99)
  • RHP Bryce Cunningham

Despite four players in MLB's top-100 prospect list, the Yankees don't have anyone outside of Lombard who has proven capable of sustaining such success. Spencer Jones smacked 35 home runs in Double and Triple-A last year, but his previous best was just 17. We'll need to see more from him, Lagrange, and Rodriguez before we're ready to rank the Yankees any higher.

23) Colorado Rockies

Top 5 prospects:

  • SS Ethan Holliday (No. 19)
  • 1B/OF Charlie Condon (No. 61)
  • OF/SS Cole Carrigg
  • OF Robert Calaz
  • RHP Brody Brecht

Everyone lauds Ethan Holliday as this marvelous prospect. He is, but we can't forget just how many lumps his brother Jackson has taken in the majors. He's yet to really be an above average player for the Orioles. All that is to say that it might be some time before Ethan Holliday makes an impact for the club. That said, the team did pick up solid left-handed pitching prospect Griffin Herring at the trade deadline, and guys like Calaz and Carrigg have shown flashes of star potential if they can put all of their tools together.

22) Arizona Diamondbacks

Top 5 prospects:

  • OF Ryan Waldschmidt (No. 66)
  • OF Slade Caldwell
  • SS Kayson Cunningham
  • 2B/3B Demetrio Crisantes
  • 2B/OF Tommy Troy

Much of the Diamondbacks' farm system lies in the strength of their 2024 draft haul. Waldschmidt has been an offensive juggernaut at every level he's played in. Slade Caldwell has a great gap-to-gap swing which has allowed him to rack up extra-base hits in A and High-A ball. JD Dix hit .342 in rookie ball last year. And Daniel Eagen posted a sub-2.5 ERA in 97.2 innings of High-A last year. There's reason to be optimistic moving forward, but it would be a shock to see many of these players make an impact at the big league level before 2027.

21) San Francisco Giants

Top 5 prospects:

  • 1B Bryce Eldridge (No. 12)
  • SS Josuar Gonzalez (No. 82)
  • 2B/SS Gavin Kilen
  • SS Jhonny Level
  • OF Bo Davidson

The Giants had legitimate depth in their farm system going into the 2026 offseason, then they added the No. 1 international prospect in Luis Hernandez as well. That's a major get for a team that has struggled to produce home grown talent for the last decade. Eldridge is expected to be a massive bat right away for the Giants in 2026, and although the team lacks star pitchers in their farm, the team needs young position players considering Willy Adames, Matt Chapman and Rafael Devers are all 29 or older.

Bryce Eldridge is expected to be a contributor in the Giants' lineup in 2026.

20) St. Louis Cardinals

Top 5 prospects:

  • SS/2B/3B JJ Wetherholt (No. 5)
  • LHP Liam Doyle (No. 36)
  • C Rainiel Rodriguez (No. 55)
  • C Leonardo Bernal (No. 92)
  • LHP Quinn Mathews

What's not seen in this top-five above is that the Cardinals have another strong catching prospect in their system in Jimmy Crooks, who appeared in 15 games for the Cardinals last season. The team has depth at a very key position and it's kind of shocking that they didn't make any moves by dealing one of those players. Even with down seasons for players like Tink Hence and Quinn Mathews, the Cardinals have more than a few prospects with stellar upside and could probably make a move or two to make themselves more competitive in 2026.

19) Washington Nationals

Top 5 prospects:

  • SS Eli Willits (No. 15)
  • C Harry Ford (No. 42)
  • RHP Travis Sykora (No. 49)
  • RHP Jarlin Susana (No. 87)
  • RHP Luis Perales

The addition of Harry Ford really propels this team forward. Without him, this is a team that has sunk a lot of assets into unproven talent with recent draft picks Willits, Petry, Harmon, James, and Sime each earning more than $2 million in signing bonuses.

18) Toronto Blue Jays

Top 5 prospects:

  • RHP Trey Yesavage (No. 26)
  • SS JoJo Parker (No. 43)
  • SS Arjun Nimmala (No. 68)
  • LHP Ricky Tiedemann
  • LHP Johnny King

The Blue Jays lost some depth at the trade deadline last year, dealing guys like Khal Stephenand Juaron Watts-Brown, but Trey Yesavage also put together a monster postseason run, still classifying as a prospect. One hit from a prospect pool is a big plus in my books as very few players are every sure-fire hits. Yesavage looked like a future star and that alone is enough to push Toronto up a few spots in these rankings.

17) Cincinnati Reds

Top 5 prospects:

  • INF Sal Stewart (No. 31)
  • C Alfredo Duno (No. 48)
  • SS Tyson Lewis (No. 76)
  • SS Steele Hall (No. 79)
  • RHP Rhett Lowder (No. 80)

Sal Stewart and Rhett Lowder have both flashed significant potential in limited MLB action for Cincinnati, but Stewart still only posted a 102 OPS+ and Lowder is coming off a rather severe injury, so it's yet to be seen if either can create long-term impact.

16) Miami Marlins

Top 5 prospects:

  • LHP Thomas White (No. 22)
  • SS Aiva Arquette (No. 41)
  • OF Owen Caissie (No. 47)
  • LHP Robby Snelling (No. 51)
  • C Joe Mack (No. 70)

MLB is underrating Thomas White in my opinion. This man could be the top pitching prospect in baseball. He's succeeded at every level, and even is just 20 years old. He made a brief appearance in Triple-A last season and was striking out 16.4 batters per nine innings. That is insane. Just nutty stuff. That said, I'm not sold on most of the other players in this system. Arquette didn't wow anyone in his first year in the minors. Caissie was the big name in the Edward Cabrera deal, but he spent nearly two full seasons in Triple-A, didn't show much improvement between 2024 and 2025 (but he did display a bit more pop) and then struggled in limited MLB action. There's a reason the Cubs gave him away. That's all I'll say.

15) Chicago White Sox

Top 5 prospects:

  • OF Braden Montgomery (No. 35)
  • LHP Noah Schultz (No. 40)
  • SS Billy Carlson (No. 71)
  • SS/3B Caleb Bonemer (No. 73)
  • LHP Hagen Smith (No. 88)

MLB.com isn't considering Munetaka Murakami a prospect I guess, which is weird considering they counted Roki Sasaki for the Dodgers a year ago. If Murakami was on this list, the White Sox would have legitimate top-10, maybe top-7 considerations. Still, even without their Japanese slugger, the White Sox have tons of solid talent scheduled to come up in 2026, 2027, and 2028. While they don't currently have someone who stands out as a potential MLB superstar, they have a well of talent that should continue to improve the team for years.

14) Chicago Cubs

Top 5 prospects:

  • C Moises Ballesteros (No. 53)
  • RHP Jaxon Wiggins (No. 67)
  • SS/2B Jefferson Rojas
  • OF Kevin Alcantara
  • OF Ethan Conrad

Even without Caissie, I like this team moving forward. They were very well-prepared for the departure of Kyle Tucker in free agency, with Alcantara ready to take over the starting right field job. Ballesteros also flashed remarkable potential in 20 games with the Cubs at the end of 2025. Essentially, the Cubs don't have a plethora of top-100 talent and lost Caissie, but they have a lot of pieces ready to fill in for anyone who might suffer an injury or get traded and they likely won't see much of a dip in production.

13) Philadelphia Phillies

Top 5 prospects:

  • RHP Andrew Painter (No. 16)
  • SS Aidan Miller (No. 32)
  • OF Justin Crawford (No. 54)
  • RHP Gage Wood
  • 2B Aroon Escobar

When a guy with a 5.40 ERA in Triple-A is being heralded as the next big pitching prospect, there's reason to be concerned. Painter was coming off Tommy John surgery, but there were more reasons to be skeptical about his potential moving forward. If he has a rough start to 2026, this team could fall much further down these rankings. Still, the questions surrounding Painter are mostly offset by breakout seasons from guys like Aroon Escobar, who managed an .828 OPS in A-ball from second base. That's something to keep an eye on.

12) Athletics

Top 5 prospects:

  • SS Leo De Vries (No. 3)
  • LHP Jamie Arnold (No. 38)
  • LHP Gage Jump (No. 60)
  • RHP Brade Nett
  • OF Henry Bolte

The addition of Leo De Vries did wonders for this team's farm. Sure, losing Mason Miller hurts, but it bolsters this team's future drastically, which is good considering they want to be great for their first year in Vegas. There were far more breakout seasons than there were setbacks in the A's system altogether. That's a recipe for succcess when guys like Nick Kurtz and Jacob Wilson have already made valuable impacts at the major league level.

11) New York Mets

Top 5 prospects:

  • RHP Nolan McLean (No. 11)
  • OF Carson Benge (No. 21)
  • RHP Jonah Tong (No. 46)
  • 3B/1B Jacob Reimer
  • OF/2B A.J. Ewing

It's shocking to see how the Mets' farm system has turned on its head in the past year. Brandon Sproat was supposed to be the top guy in the organization, and he didn't experience a bad year per se in 2025, posting a 4.24 ERA in Triple-A before having a brief, mediocre stint in the majors. But he's not even on the team anymore after the Mets traded him and Jett Williams to Milwaukee.

Thankfully for Mets fans, the team saw several of their mid-tier prospects break out in unexpected ways. Benge, McLean, Tong, Ewing, and Reimer all exceed expectations, which has set them up very nicely for the immediate future, and enabled them to make the move for Freddy Peralta without their farm system suffering too drastically for it.

10) Boston Red Sox

Top 5 prospects:

  • SS Franklin Arias (No. 24)
  • LHP Payton Tolle (No. 28)
  • RHP Kyson Witherspoon (No. 89)
  • LHP Connelly Early
  • OF Justin Gonzales

Many people believed the Red Sox farm would fall off after graduating guys like Roman Anthony, Kristian Campbell and Marcelo Mayer last season. However, the team enjoyed a plethora of breakouts, particularly from Payton Tolle. Pitching certainly won't be a problem for this team for years to come.

9) Baltimore Orioles

Top 5 prospects:

  • C/1B Samuel Basallo (No. 7)
  • OF Dylan Beavers (No. 83)
  • C/OF Ike Irish
  • OF Enrique Bradfield Jr.
  • SS Wehiwa Aloy

A little top-heavy, it's hard to rank the Orioles lower than top 10 considering how good and how ready for the bigs Samuel Basallo is. The Orioles certainly have depth but will need more consistency from their mid-tier prospects before anyone is ready to consider them a true powerhouse farm system again.

8) Tampa Bay Rays

Top 5 prospects:

  • SS Carson Williams (No. 50)
  • OF Theo Gillen (No. 65)
  • RHP Brody Hopkins
  • OF Jacob Melton
  • SS Daniel Pierce

Another year, another great haul of prospects for the Rays. The addition of Jacob Melton just added to an already loaded farm. The Rays do lack some pithing depth, particularly southpaws, as not a single lefty cracks their top-30 prospects, but outside of that, this team has such a "next man up" attitude and great developmental program that you can't really knock them too much.

7) Minnesota Twins

Top 5 prospects:

  • OF Walker Jenkins (No. 10)
  • SS Kaelen Culpepper (No. 52)
  • C Eduardo Tait (No. 57)
  • OF Emmanuel Rodriguez (No. 69)
  • LHP Kendry Rojas

Considering the fire sale the Twins endured in 2025, you'd hope they have a good farm system now. Thankfully, they do, the addition of guys like Mick Abel, Kendry Rojas, and Eduardo Tait mark a serious shift in the outlook for this team's future.

6) Cleveland Guardians

Top 5 prospects:

  • 2B Travis Bazzana (No. 17)
  • OF Chase DeLauter (No. 58)
  • SS Angel Genao (No. 59)
  • C Cooper Ingle
  • OF Jaison Chourio

For a team that was in the playoffs a year ago, it's easy to forget they actually bolstered their farm system by playing the role of "seller" at the trade deadline, shipping Shane Bieber to Toronto for Khal Stephen. Stephen struggled in Double-A for Cleveland, but has the tools necessary to be a strong major league arm. He's still only 22 and doesn't walk people much. His strikeout numbers could stand to improve though.

5) Pittsburgh Pirates

Top 5 prospects:

  • SS/OF Konnor Griffin (No. 1)
  • RHP Bubba Chandler (No. 14)
  • RHP Seth Hernandez (No. 27)
  • LHP Hunter Barco (No. 78)
  • OF/1B Edward Florentino (No. 81)

Griffin and Chandler are the truth. They were already on the team heading into the 2025 trade deadline. Then they added Rafael Flores Jr. and Sammy Stafura at the deadline? Yeah, this team has a bright future, meaning they'll have a three-year window of playoff contention before all their best players sign with the Dodgers, thus beginning another 10-year rebuild.

4) Detroit Tigers

Top 5 prospects:

  • SS Kevin McGonigle (No. 2)
  • OF Max Clark (No. 8)
  • C/1B Josue Briceño (No. 33)
  • SS Bryce Rainer (No. 37)
  • C/1B Thayron Liranzo

Everyone knows how great the top four prospects in this system are, but they have some potential further down as well. A player a lot of people have noticed is Cris Rodriguez who slashed a stellar .308/.340/.564 at 17 years old in the Dominican Summer League.

3) Milwaukee Brewers

Top 5 prospects:

  • SS/2B Jesus Made (No. 4)
  • INF Luis Peña (No. 18)
  • SS/OF/2B Jett Williams (No. 30)
  • SS Cooper Pratt (No. 56)
  • C Jeferson Quero (No. 84)

Jesus Made and Luis Peña emerged as two of the best international prospects in baseball last season. They were already highly touted and then each enjoyed an OPS of .760 or better in A-ball. Oh, they're also each entering their age-19 seasons.

Furthermore, while the loss of Freddy Peralta obviously hurts the team, the additions of the Mets' No. 3 and 5 prospects in Jett Williams and Brandon Sproat gives the farm system a huge boost.

Wisconsin Timber Rattlers shortstop Jesus Made (12) tags out the Quad Cities River Bandits' Erick Torres at second base during a game at Fox Cities Stadium in Grand Chute, Wisconsin, on Aug. 27, 2025.

2) Los Angeles Dodgers

Top 5 prospects:

  • OF Josue De Paula (No. 13)
  • OF Zyhir Hope (No. 20)
  • OF Eduardo Quintero (No. 34)
  • SS/3B Alex Freeland (No. 45)
  • OF Mike Sirota (No. 64)

The rich get richer. Look at it. This is what baseball has become. It wasn't enough for them to give out $1.2 billion in guaranteed money, they had to have a tremendous scouting department as well. On the bright side, most of these guys will likely get traded away for proven MLB-ready talent.

1) Seattle Mariners

Top 5 prospects:

  • SS/3B Colt Emerson (No. 9)
  • LHP Kade Anderson (No. 23)
  • OF Lazaro Montes (No. 29)
  • RHP Ryan Sloan (No. 44)
  • 2B Michael Arroyo (No. 63)

The impressive part of the Mariners' farm system is that they built it quietly and have put themselves in position to have a steady influx of highly-touted talent join the team for years to come. While the loss of Harry Ford certainly stings a little bit, the Mariners already have a decent catcher (in case you hadn't noticed) and just added Luke Stevenson via the draft, who enjoyed a very solid year in A-ball, slashing .280/.460/.400.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB farm system power rankings: Where does each team sit in 2026?

Leaders Aston Villa, Lyon and Midtjylland aim for away wins in Europa League

ISTANBUL (AP) — The Europa League returns after a break with a leading trio of Aston Villa, Lyon and Midtjylland seeking away wins to close on automatic qualification to the round of 16 on Thursday.

The three are tied on points from five wins and a loss with two games to go in the league phase. Like in the Champions League, the top eight finishers advance automatically after eight rounds.

Villa may have the toughest encounter by traveling to Istanbul to meet Fenerbahce that is near to the top eight spots in 12th. The unlikely title challenger in the Premier League will miss injured captain John McGinn as it hopes to recover from a surprise 1-0 defeat to Everton at Villa Park on Sunday, a first home loss since Aug. 31.

Lyon plays Young Boys in Bern while Midtjylland is at Norwegian side Brann in Bergen. The hosts are 21st and 22nd in the table, respectively.

The teams placed from nine to 24 enter a two-leg playoff to progress.

Among other matches, Nottingham Forest at 11th is away at seventh-placed Braga while Roma (10th) and Stuttgart (ninth) who are tied on points meet at Stadio Olimpico in Rome.

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AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Washington visits Calgary after Strome's 2-goal game

Washington Capitals (24-21-6, in the Metropolitan Division) vs. Calgary Flames (21-24-5, in the Pacific Division)

Calgary, Alberta; Friday, 9 p.m. EST

BOTTOM LINE: The Washington Capitals visit the Calgary Flames after Dylan Strome's two-goal game against the Vancouver Canucks in the Capitals' 4-3 loss.

Calgary has a 13-8-3 record in home games and a 21-24-5 record overall. The Flames are third in the league serving 12.4 penalty minutes per game.

Washington is 24-21-6 overall and 10-11-3 on the road. The Capitals have a 10-13-6 record in games their opponents serve fewer penalty minutes.

The matchup Friday is the first meeting this season between the two teams.

TOP PERFORMERS: Nazem Kadri has nine goals and 25 assists for the Flames. Yegor Sharangovich has three goals and four assists over the past 10 games.

Alexander Ovechkin has 20 goals and 23 assists for the Capitals. Justin Sourdif has scored five goals and added five assists over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Flames: 3-6-1, averaging two goals, 3.4 assists, 3.5 penalties and nine penalty minutes while giving up three goals per game.

Capitals: 3-6-1, averaging 2.9 goals, 5.4 assists, 4.4 penalties and 11 penalty minutes while giving up three goals per game.

INJURIES: Flames: None listed.

Capitals: None listed.

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Sri Lanka bats 1st in 1st ODI against England

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) — Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat in the first one-day international of the three-match series against England on Thursday.

England had to make a last-minute change as Will Jacks was ruled out due to illness and legpinner Rehan Ahmed replaced him in the playing XI. Ahmed will team up with another legspinner Adil Rashid with Jacob Bethell and Joe Root the other spin options for England.

England skipper Harry Brook said he would have liked to bat first, “but it is what it is." Brook believed Sri Lanka is a strong side in its own conditions and he was looking forward to the challenge.

Sri Lanka test captain Dhananjaya de Silva returns to ODIs since last playing the 50-over format in November 2023 while Wanindu Hasaranga misses out to focus on next month’s T20 World Cup to be jointly hosted by India and Sri Lanka.

“Looks a good pitch, want a good score on the board," Sri Lanka captain Charith Asalanka said at the toss while confirming that Hasaranga was rested for the World Cup.

Sri Lanka also went in with two specialist spinners Dunith Wellalage and Jeffery Vandersay in a hope the wicket will suit the slow bowlers. De Silva and Asalanka are the two off-spinners in hosts’ starting lineup.

It is the first international series for England since it lost the Ashes earlier this month in Australia.

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Lineups:

Sri Lanka: Pathum Nissanka, Kamil Mishara, Kusal Mendis, Dhananjaya de Silva, Charith Asalanka (captain), Janith Liyanage, Pavan Ratnayake, Dunith Wellalage, Pramod Madushan, Jeffrey Vandersay, Asitha Fernando

England: Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Joe Root, Jacob Bethell, Harry Brook (captain), Jos Buttler, Sam Curran, Rehan Ahmed, Jamie Overton, Liam Dawson, Adil Rashid.

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AP cricket: https://apnews.com/hub/cricket

Game Preview: San Antonio Spurs vs Utah Jazz

If there’s one thing that’s sure to help a team coming off a loss (and in the midst of dealing with an overly condensed schedule), it’s a double helping of patsy, sandwiched around the week’s biggest challenge.

The Spurs more or less thrashed the Jazz just before going the distance with the Rockets, and now they have the still-banged-up Utah team in their crosshairs after a quiet but public challenge to their mental and physical toughness from their coach, Mitch Johnson.

How a team responds to that kind of critique is always worth watching, but you have to feel a little bit bad for the Jazz if the Spurs come out with a chip on their shoulders.

The Spurs were lights out against the Jazz on Monday, shooting just shy of 56% from the field and 42% from three, in a game where the final score fell short of expressing how over-matched the Jazz were.

The Jazz will still be without their leading scorer in Markkanen, and their best post defender in Walker Kessler, so San Antonio should be able to more or less arrange a layup line in this contest, even if their streaky outside shooting fails them.

The Spurs have been on a relative heater, though, ranking 7th in Effective Field Goal Percentage, 9th in True Shooting Percentage, 10th in Field Goal Percentage, 12th in Three-Point Percentage, and 7th in Offensive Rating, all of which are improvements over their extended post-Christmas slump.

They’ve also avoided giving the ball away, ranking 8th in limiting turnovers and 6th in assist-to-turnover ratio, offering no help to a Jazz defense that’s been one place shy of dead last (29th in defensive rating) during that same stretch.

The only area in which the Jazz have outperformed the Spurs is in 2nd chance scoring, something the Spurs have struggled with both producing and preventing for most of the season.

So, if the Spurs go cold again, the Jazz are likely to be able to prevent them from taking another shot and to corral their own misses, which feels like their most realistic chance at victory.

If, however, the Spurs take Mitch Johnson’s post-game comments to heart, I wish the Jazz the best of luck because I would personally not want to be on the other side of an angry Spurs team that ranks in (or near) the top 10 in most offensive categories this season.

San Antonio Spurs(30-14) vs Utah Jazz (15-29)

January 22nd, 2026 | 8:00 PM CT

Watch: FanDuel Southwest| Listen: WOAI (1200 AM)

Spurs Injuries: Devin Vassell – Out (Groin), Luke Kornet – Questionable (Groin), Jeremy Sochan – Day-to-Day (Illness)

Jazz Injuries: Walker Kessler – Out (Shoulder), Georges Niang – Out (Foot), Keyonte George – Questionable (Forearm), Lauri Markkanen – Out (Conditioning), Brice Sensabaugh – Questionable (Illness)

Knicks set franchise record in thrashing of Nets

Jalen Brunson of the New York Knicks during the first half against the Brooklyn Nets at Madison Square Garden on January 21, 2026 in New York City.
New York Knicks' Jalen Brunson scored 20 points v Brooklyn Nets. [Getty Images]

The New York Knicks ended their four-game losing streak in emphatic fashion with a record-breaking 120-66 win over local rivals the Brooklyn Nets.

The 54-point margin of victory is the biggest since the Knicks were founded in 1946 and eclipses 48-point winning margins achieved in 1968, 1972 and 1994.

"Seeing us play the way we're capable of playing, to put it together for 48 minutes was a lot of fun," said Knicks coach Mike Brown.

The victory at Madison Square Garden followed a poor run that culminated in a 114-97 defeat by Dallas on Monday.

But the Knicks snapped out of that form against the Nets, roaring into a 38-20 lead in the first quarter and extending that to 59 points at one stage in the match.

Jalen Brunson, who scored 20 points, said the win was a huge boost as the Knicks approach the midpoint of the season in third place in the Eastern Conference, behind the Detroit Pistons and Boston Celtics.

"We just had to refocus and get back to who we are," Brunson said.

"This is a good step for us, but we've got to continue to press the issue of getting better every single day."

Jordan Clarkson’s playing time dwindling in Knicks’ bolstered rotation

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Jordan Clarkson, who only played during garbage time, shoots a floater during the Knicks' 120-66 blowout win over the Nets on Jan. 21, 2026 at Madison Square Garden

With the Knicks finally at full strength, Jordan Clarkson’s playing time has disappeared. 

He did not enter the Knicks’ historic 120-66 rout of the Nets on Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden until the start of the fourth quarter for garbage time, with the Knicks already leading by 32.

That came after playing just two minutes in the blowout loss to the Mavericks on Monday. 

Jordan Clarkson, who only played during garbage time, shoots a floater during the Knicks’ 120-66 blowout win over the Nets on Jan. 21, 2026 at Madison Square Garden. NBAE via Getty Images

“Yeah, it could be tough to get him in the rotation,” coach Mike Brown said. “Obviously Deuce [McBride] played well during his time, Mitch [Robinson] played well, Landry [Shamet] played at a pretty high level before he got hurt. So trying to find minutes for those guys as well as for our starting group is tough. I can’t even hit the minute threshold for all those guys that I’m looking for. It can be tough from time to time.” 

Clarkson was signed this past offseason to be a key part of what was supposed to be an improved bench unit. But after a strong start to the season, he has struggled of late. 

Clarkson averaged 20.2 minutes per game across the first 42 games before being effectively benched the last two. 



“I read the room, I see what it is,” Clarkson said. “I’m just a vet, coming here, doing my work, staying ready. When I’m playing those minutes with the young guys, I ain’t taking nothing away from them. Being a pro, talking to them, trying to get them in their spots.

“Still play but I’m not gonna go in there and f–k the game up.



“I’m just gonna try to keep continuing to play the right way, help these guys grow and continue to get better. That’s all I can do.” 

Clarkson said there wasn’t necessarily a conversation with Brown about the change, but that he wasn’t surprised. 

He remains confident he can regain an important role. 

“I can help any team in the league,” Clarkson said. “I help winning. You saw it early on in the year. I know I got a lot left in my tank. I can impact winning wherever. I’ll impact winning here. In the short time that I’ve been here, [we’re] winning games. Just gotta stay prepared and control what I can control.”

Canucks rally to end 11-game losing streak with 4-3 win over Capitals

VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — Brock Boeser had a goal and an assist as the Vancouver Canucks erased an early-two goal deficit and held on to end their 11-game losing streak with a 4-3 win over the Washington Capitals on Wednesday night.

Drew O’Connor, Evander Kane and Filip Hronek also scored goals while Jake DeBrusk and David Kampf added two assists each for the Canucks, who won for the first time since Dec. 29 and won at home for the first time since Dec. 6.

Kevin Lankinen made 29 stops.

Dylan Strome and Justin Sourdif scored power-play goals a little over a minute apart in the first period to give Washington a 2-0 lead. But Boeser and Kane knotted it at 2 after one.

Strome scored his second of the game with 3:23 to play to make it 4-3. He and Sourdif also had assists while Logan Thompson had 21 saves for the Capitals, who have lost four games in a row and five of their last six.

O'Connor and Hronek scored in the second period as Vancouver scored four unanswered.

Up next

Capitals: Are at Calgary on Friday night.

Canucks: Host New Jersey on Friday night.

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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Warriors have 14 days to make sincere effort at patching their deficient roster

Warriors have 14 days to make sincere effort at patching their deficient roster originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – The NBA trade deadline is precisely two weeks away, and those huddling in the Warriors’ front office would be negligent if Feb. 5 passes without giving Stephen Curry some capable assistance.

Golden State lost its second-tier contender status Monday night, when Jimmy Butler III was lost for the season. Now it’s time to make a sincere effort to at least approach that level. To compete against teams that seem to abuse the Warriors.

Shortly after the Warriors closed their the longest homestand with a tip-to-buzzer loss to the Toronto Raptors on Tuesday, coach Steve Kerr expressed satisfaction with the team’s progress, winning six of eight games at Chase Center.

“Great homestand,” Kerr said afterward. “Toronto was amazing tonight, 21-for-34 from 3; they couldn’t miss. They had a great plan. They came in and took it to us early and we were obviously trying to swim upstream the entire game. It happens. We’ve been the team making all the threes the last few games, and we were probably due for one like this, where our opponent made them all.

“But we move on. Great homestand. But now we got to go out on the road and win some games.”

Winning on the road, however, will be appreciably harder to do without Butler, who sustained a torn right ACL injury. Considering how soundly Golden State was defeated by Toronto, winning on any court with this roster would be appreciably harder over the 37 games remaining on the schedule, with or without Butler.

The Raptors exposed the Warriors’ most visible weakness, just as the Atlanta Hawks had done while winning at Chase nine days earlier. In an NBA where length and athleticism matters, Golden State’s roster – as assembled by the front office led by CEO Joe Lacob and general manager Mike Dunleavy – is operating at a conspicuous deficit. The Warriors frequently are slower and relatively miniature when compared to their opponent.

A 6-2 homestand might indicate progress, but the team’s architects can’t be blind to the length/athleticism deficit. It’s apparent in most games, including some in which the Warriors found a way to win – mostly because of the brilliance of Curry and Butler.

“I can’t think of anybody at that age playing better,” Kerr said, responding to Curry, 37, being named an NBA All-Star Game starter for the 11th time. “I know Kareem [Abdul-Jabbar] played well late in his career, obviously, LeBron [James], but I just can’t imagine anybody playing at a higher level at this age than Steph. He’s been amazing all year, and I’m glad he’s being rewarded.”

Without Butler, the Warriors are primed to struggle even more than they have while compiling a 25-20 record. With De’Anthony Melton and Al Horford on the roster, the most realistic outlook is that they can be a slightly better version of the pre-Butler Warriors, who were 25-26 before Jimmy was acquired.

The Warriors entered the 2025-26 NBA season hugging the unforgiving second apron, spending to win now. While Curry still is elite. With Butler around from opening night. Dunleavy anticipated a boost from Melton and Horford, as well as among the under-25 players. They signed Jonathan Kuminga to a contract designed for a trade that could provide a midseason upgrade. Kerr, in the final season of his contract, was embracing his lame-duck status

Though no one said it out loud, this team was designed to provide the best player in franchise history with at least a semirealistic opportunity to make one more valiant run at a fifth NBA championship.

During the 80 games from Butler’s arrival through his last appearance on Monday, the Warriors were 53-27. That’s the equivalent to a second-tier contender. They were perhaps one impact trade – with Kuminga and future No. 1 draft picks as chips – away from joining the top tier.

Butler’s injury puts those preseason plans in peril. Dunleavy was fishing for trades before Jimmy went down, and he will continue fishing now that he is out.

“There’s a lot of dialogue going on around the league,” Dunleavy said Tuesday. “We talk to all these teams, everybody’s talking to each other, feeling each other out. We really haven’t seen any trades yet, which usually, two weeks away, you’ll see one or two. But I think there’s been some good discussions and stuff will start to heat up here the next couple weeks as we know. So we’ll see. 

“But for us, this injury is better now than two weeks from now or three weeks from now. It gives us a little bit of opportunity to assess and see if there’s something we can do to help us out.”

For those longing for the Warriors to add Anthony Davis, surely you know the overt risk. For those dreaming of Giannis Antetokounmpo coming to Golden State, it’s OK to fantasize. For those peeping at Jaren Jackson Jr., he’d be quite the upgrade.

For those hoping the Warriors can find any lengthy paint presence with the ability to provide a bounce that would allow them to compete at the league’s highest level, know that Lacob and Dunleavy want the same.
If they fail to achieve it, they will face the wrath of a mob roaring much louder than Steph.

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Bridges and the Hornets take on conference foe Orlando

Charlotte Hornets (16-28, 12th in the Eastern Conference) vs. Orlando Magic (23-19, seventh in the Eastern Conference)

Orlando, Florida; Thursday, 7 p.m. EST

BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Magic -6.5; over/under is 229.5

BOTTOM LINE: Desmond Bane and the Orlando Magic host Miles Bridges and the Charlotte Hornets in Eastern Conference play.

The Magic are 5-4 against Southeast Division teams. Orlando is third in the Eastern Conference with 54.4 points per game in the paint led by Franz Wagner averaging 11.4.

The Hornets have gone 11-19 against Eastern Conference opponents. Charlotte is eighth in the NBA with 33.2 defensive rebounds per game led by Bridges averaging 5.2.

The Magic are shooting 46.6% from the field this season, 1.2 percentage points lower than the 47.8% the Hornets allow to opponents. The Hornets average 15.1 made 3-pointers per game this season, 3.2 more made shots on average than the 11.9 per game the Magic allow.

The teams meet for the third time this season. The Hornets won 120-105 in the last matchup on Dec. 27.

TOP PERFORMERS: Bane is averaging 18.9 points and 4.5 assists for the Magic. Paolo Banchero is averaging 23.4 points, 10.1 rebounds and 6.3 assists over the past 10 games.

Bridges is averaging 18.9 points, 6.2 rebounds and 3.5 assists for the Hornets. Brandon Miller is averaging 18.8 points over the past 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Magic: 5-5, averaging 112.9 points, 45.3 rebounds, 27.7 assists, 7.9 steals and 5.1 blocks per game while shooting 46.2% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 114.6 points per game.

Hornets: 5-5, averaging 115.1 points, 49.6 rebounds, 26.6 assists, 5.9 steals and 4.3 blocks per game while shooting 46.4% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 105.3 points.

INJURIES: Magic: Jalen Suggs: day to day (knee), Colin Castleton: out (thumb).

Hornets: Mason Plumlee: out (groin), KJ Simpson: day to day (hip).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Sacramento plays Cleveland, aims to break road slide

Sacramento Kings (12-33, 14th in the Western Conference) vs. Cleveland Cavaliers (25-20, fifth in the Eastern Conference)

Cleveland; Friday, 7:30 p.m. EST

BOTTOM LINE: Sacramento visits Cleveland looking to break its seven-game road skid.

The Cavaliers are 14-11 in home games. Cleveland ranks seventh in the Eastern Conference with 50.0 points per game in the paint led by Evan Mobley averaging 10.5.

The Kings are 3-17 on the road. Sacramento allows 120.7 points to opponents while being outscored by 10.0 points per game.

The Cavaliers average 119.1 points per game, 1.6 fewer points than the 120.7 the Kings give up. The Kings are shooting 46.7% from the field, 0.2% higher than the 46.5% the Cavaliers' opponents have shot this season.

TOP PERFORMERS: Donovan Mitchell is scoring 28.9 points per game with 4.8 rebounds and 5.7 assists for the Cavaliers. Mobley is averaging 16.3 points and 7.7 rebounds while shooting 56.2% over the last 10 games.

Russell Westbrook is averaging 15.6 points, 6.1 rebounds and 6.9 assists for the Kings. DeMar DeRozan is averaging 20.0 points over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Cavaliers: 6-4, averaging 117.1 points, 45.4 rebounds, 30.9 assists, 8.0 steals and 5.7 blocks per game while shooting 48.8% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 117.1 points per game.

Kings: 4-6, averaging 111.0 points, 41.6 rebounds, 25.1 assists, 6.6 steals and 5.0 blocks per game while shooting 49.2% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 114.7 points.

INJURIES: Cavaliers: Max Strus: out (foot), Darius Garland: out (foot), Sam Merrill: day to day (hand).

Kings: Keegan Murray: out (ankle), Domantas Sabonis: day to day (knee).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Nets take on the Celtics on 3-game skid

Boston Celtics (27-16, second in the Eastern Conference) vs. Brooklyn Nets (12-30, 13th in the Eastern Conference)

New York; Friday, 7:30 p.m. EST

BOTTOM LINE: Brooklyn enters the matchup against Boston as losers of three games in a row.

The Nets are 9-18 against Eastern Conference opponents. Brooklyn gives up 114.5 points to opponents and has been outscored by 6.6 points per game.

The Celtics are 6-4 in division games. Boston is 12-10 against opponents over .500.

The Nets' 14.2 made 3-pointers per game this season are just 0.1 fewer made shots on average than the 14.3 per game the Celtics allow. The Celtics average 116.8 points per game, 2.3 more than the 114.5 the Nets allow to opponents.

The teams play for the third time this season. The Nets won the last meeting 113-105 on Nov. 22. Michael Porter Jr. scored 33 points to help lead the Nets to the victory.

TOP PERFORMERS: Noah Clowney is scoring 13.1 points per game and averaging 4.1 rebounds for the Nets. Porter is averaging 18.8 points and 5.6 rebounds over the last 10 games.

Jaylen Brown is scoring 29.8 points per game and averaging 6.7 rebounds for the Celtics. Sam Hauser is averaging 3.6 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Nets: 2-8, averaging 104.8 points, 39.6 rebounds, 25.6 assists, 7.1 steals and 4.9 blocks per game while shooting 43.4% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 115.1 points per game.

Celtics: 6-4, averaging 116.0 points, 49.6 rebounds, 22.6 assists, 6.3 steals and 5.0 blocks per game while shooting 46.4% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 107.3 points.

INJURIES: Nets: Haywood Highsmith: out (knee).

Celtics: Josh Minott: day to day (ankle), Jayson Tatum: out (achilles).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Suns take on the Hawks, seek 4th straight victory

Phoenix Suns (27-17, sixth in the Western Conference) vs. Atlanta Hawks (21-25, 10th in the Eastern Conference)

Atlanta; Friday, 7:30 p.m. EST

BOTTOM LINE: Phoenix aims to keep its three-game win streak alive when the Suns take on Atlanta.

The Hawks have gone 7-13 at home. Atlanta leads the NBA with 31.0 assists per game led by Jalen Johnson averaging 8.0.

The Suns have gone 13-12 away from home. Phoenix ranks third in the Western Conference with 15.3 fast break points per game led by Devin Booker averaging 3.3.

The Hawks are shooting 47.3% from the field this season, 0.6 percentage points higher than the 46.7% the Suns allow to opponents. The Suns average 114.7 points per game, 4.4 fewer than the 119.1 the Hawks allow to opponents.

The two teams match up for the second time this season. The Hawks defeated the Suns 124-122 in their last matchup on Nov. 17. Onyeka Okongwu led the Hawks with 27 points, and Dillon Brooks led the Suns with 34 points.

TOP PERFORMERS: Okongwu is averaging 16.1 points, eight rebounds and 3.3 assists for the Hawks. Johnson is averaging 21.1 points over the last 10 games.

Collin Gillespie is averaging 13.4 points and 4.8 assists for the Suns. Booker is averaging 21.4 points and 3.3 rebounds while shooting 41.6% over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Hawks: 4-6, averaging 112.5 points, 42.9 rebounds, 30.3 assists, 10.6 steals and 4.5 blocks per game while shooting 44.2% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 117.4 points per game.

Suns: 7-3, averaging 112.0 points, 43.1 rebounds, 24.9 assists, 8.1 steals and 3.5 blocks per game while shooting 44.5% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 106.4 points.

INJURIES: Hawks: Kristaps Porzingis: out (achilles), Zaccharie Risacher: out (knee), N'Faly Dante: out for season (knee).

Suns: None listed.

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.