Sports
Dodgers live up to their own expectations, defeating Mets to reach the World Series
The low point came 34 days ago.
During a late-season series in Atlanta, the Dodgers lost two games as their division lead dwindled. They learned Tyler Glasnow would become the latest, and most important, pitcher lost for the season to injury. For a brief moment, the team felt that people were “panicking,” as outfielder Teoscar Hernández described it, about their season. For one of the few times in a year full of adversity and unforeseen setbacks, manager Dave Roberts noticed confidence in his clubhouse waning.
So, in an uncharacteristic move for a manager who describes himself as “not a big meeting guy,” Roberts decided to call one, gathering his players before a Sept. 15 game against the Braves to deliver a simple reminder.
“We’re still the Dodgers,” Roberts told the group, as Hernández recalled. “We can do special things.”
Five weeks later, the Dodgers made good on that prediction.
On Sunday night, they returned to the World Series.
With a 10-5 defeat of the New York Mets in Game 6 of the National League Championship Series, the Dodgers won the 25th pennant in their storied franchise history. For the fourth time in the last eight years, they will play for a championship that, this season, few outside the team saw coming.
“There’s just a lot of unforeseen things that can happen in a long baseball season, and we have a lot of good players,” Roberts said this week, having been at the helm for each of the team’s past World Series trips.
“I just felt we have enough talent in the room to do that,” Roberts added. “But the most important thing was that those guys responded amongst themselves.”
Respond, the Dodgers have.
To the litany of starting pitching absences that left their October rotation unsettled. To an ever-changing cast of characters amid their injury-plagued season.
Even the playoffs have brought setbacks, from Freddie Freeman’s sprained ankle to inconsistent starting pitching to two elimination games in the NL Division Series, and a squandered chance to clinch the pennant in Game 5 of the NLCS on Friday.
Yet, the team managed to advance to the Fall Classic anyway — riding a wave of internal belief that hasn’t always been present in October disappointments of years past.
“It was just about how we were gonna get here,” outfielder Mookie Betts said. “The question was not if.”
Indeed, the Dodgers always planned to be in this position, trying to win their second championship since 2020 and first in a full season since 1988. But the group mounting this run looks far different than they ever expected.
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1. Dodgers shortstop Tommy Edman, left, celebrates with right fielder Mookie Betts after being named MVP of the NLCS. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times) 2. Dodgers manager Dave Roberts celebrates and holds up the Warren C. Giles Trophy, awarded to the winner of the National League Champions Series. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times) 3. Dodgers players, including pitcher Blake Treinen and catcher Will Smith, celebrate immediately after their NLCS Game 6 win over the Mets. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times) 4. Dodgers players celebrate after defeating the New York Mets 10-5 in Game 6 of the NLCS at Dodger Stadium. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times) 5. Dodgers pitcher Brusdar Graterol wears a mask while celebrating with teammates in the clubhouse. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
It’s why, in Game 6 on Sunday, they had to go with a bullpen game, lacking the rotation depth typically required of a deep postseason run. They didn’t have Freeman in the starting lineup, either, electing to rest him amid a one-for-15 slump in which his ankle had hampered his swing and limited his defensive range.
The team had a rookie in center field, Andy Pages. They had two veterans with sub-.230 batting averages in the regular season, Kiké Hernández and Chris Taylor, in the infield. They had a slumping catcher, Will Smith, behind the plate.
“How we got there,” Roberts conceded with a laugh, “absolutely not how we envisioned this.”
But they also had Betts, Shohei Ohtani … and Tommy Edman, the trade deadline acquisition who tied a Dodgers franchise record with 11 RBIs in the series, including four on Sunday (a two-run double and two-run homer). They had a lockdown bullpen that escaped jam after jam in Game 6, leaving 12 runners stranded by holding the Mets one-for-eight with runners in scoring position.
Highlights from the Dodgers’ 10-5 win over the New York Mets in Game 6 of the NLCS at Dodger Stadium.
And, most importantly, they had the right mixture of confidence, intensity and ever-abundant resiliency — displaying all the traits Roberts emphasized in his clubhouse meeting last month.
“It was just a meeting to put everybody’s head up again,” Teoscar Hernández said. “And just keep pushing until we win everything.”
To do that, the Dodgers will have to produce four more victories against the New York Yankees in the World Series, which will begin with Game 1 on Friday at Dodger Stadium. The matchup marks the 12th time the Dodgers and Yankees have met for a championship. Few have ever been so hyped.
The Dodgers’ final step there was Sunday’s nervy game, in which the team jumped to a 6-1 lead before hanging on down the stretch.
Edman supplied the early offense, answering an RBI infield single from Pete Alonso in the top of the first with a two-run double in the bottom of the inning. The cleanup hitter Sunday with Freeman out of the lineup, Edman delivered again in the third, getting four-straight changeups from Mets starter Sean Manaea before pounding an elevated fastball to left for a two-run blast.
“You’ve got to give them credit,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza told the Fox broadcast while discussing the Dodgers’ approach against Manaea, who failed to replicate his Game 2 effectiveness in a two-inning, five-run outing. “Because they were all over him.”
The Dodgers added more before the inning was over. Max Muncy drew a walk in Manaea’s final at-bat. Then, reliever Phil Maton threw a hanging slider that Smith launched over the center field wall. Smith only has six hits this postseason, but two have been important home runs in the team’s two series-clinching wins.
Up 6-1 at that point, Roberts carefully managed his limited options out of the bullpen the rest of the way.
Rookie right-hander Ben Casparius offered an early helping hand. Following opener Michael Kopech in the second inning, he escaped a two-on, two-out jam on a down-the-middle fastball that Brandon Nimmo popped up. He returned to the mound in the third for a fourth out.
Dodgers shortstop Tommy Edman runs the bases after hitting a two-run home run against the Mets in the third inning of NLCS Game 6 at Dodger Stadium.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
From there, Roberts was able to string together the final seven innings with nothing but trusted high-leverage relief arms. Anthony Banda stranded the bases loaded in the third, striking out Jeff McNeil to extinguish that threat. Ryan Brasier gave up a two-run homer to Mark Vientos in the fourth, but bounced back with a scoreless fifth.
More trouble arose in the sixth, when the Mets drew back-to-back two-out walks off Evan Phillips to load the bases again. But he executed a crucial three-pitch sequence against Jesse Winker, dotting a couple outer edge fastballs before snapping off a sweeper that Winker hit to left. The shallow fly ball that hung up just long enough for Teoscar Hernández to get there. Once again, disaster had been averted.
The teams traded runs in the next two half-innings. Ohtani hit an RBI single to center in the bottom of the sixth, capitalizing on Alonso’s poor decision to — unsuccessfully — try and get the lead runner on a Taylor sacrifice bunt in the preceding at-bat. The Mets then squandered another chance in the top of the seventh, scoring only once — on a Francisco Alvarez sacrifice fly — after having runners on the corners with one out against Daniel Hudson.
That paved the way for Blake Treinen, the Dodgers’ best reliever this postseason, to get the final six outs. The seventh Dodgers pitcher of the night, he got them out mostly with ease, hardly even needing the three insurance runs the Dodgers added in the eighth, even with the Mets scoring one more run in the ninth.
Asked earlier this week about the mid-September team meeting in Atlanta, Treinen called it a “challenge” from Roberts to the rest of the team.
“It wasn’t this big rah-rah thing, and he didn’t chew us [out],” Treinen said. “But it was like, ‘Hey guys, this is who we are … We’re as good as we want to be.’”
“I think we’ll look back,” Treinen added, “and say it was a turning point.”
One that has resulted in the Dodgers going to the World Series — an accomplishment that, despite everything that went wrong this year, they always believed they would achieve.
Dodgers players and coaches celebrate on the field after defeating the Mets in Game 6 of the NLCS at Dodger Stadium on Sunday.
(Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)
Sports
Conor McGregor’s long-awaited Octagon return cut short by apparent knee injury seconds into UFC 329
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Nearly five years after his last walk to the Octagon, Conor McGregor made his long-awaited UFC return Saturday night against fellow MMA star Max Holloway in the main event of UFC 329 in Las Vegas.
McGregor opened aggressively, attempting a running kick before throwing a head kick moments later. He appeared to slip on both tries. Holloway quickly capitalized after the second, taking top position and landing a right hand before McGregor was able to work his way back to his feet.
Moments later, McGregor hit the canvas again after trying to throw a kick with his right leg, which appeared to buckle underneath him.
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Conor McGregor of Ireland participates in the walkout before facing Max Holloway of the United States in their welterweight bout during UFC 329 at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. (Ian Maule/Getty Images)
The official inside the Octagon waved off the fight moments later, giving Holloway a TKO victory.
During the broadcast, UFC CEO Dana White pointed to a first-round replay that appeared to show the moment McGregor suffered the injury. The apparent injury was not to the same leg McGregor broke during his 2021 fight against Dustin Poirier, which led to a lengthy absence from the Octagon.
The loss extended McGregor’s long winless drought, with his last UFC victory coming by first-round TKO against Donald “Cowboy” Cerrone in January 2020.
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McGregor earned a unanimous decision over Holloway in a featherweight clash in 2013, when neither was an MMA megastar. In the blink of an eye, McGregor’s star rose.
Conor McGregor and Max Holloway face off during the UFC 329 ceremonial weigh-in at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada, on July 10, 2026. (Chris Unger/Zuffa LLC)
On Wednesday, he admitted he got caught up in his own stardom after winning UFC belts in two weight classes and becoming one of the biggest names in combat sports.
“I launched an Irish whiskey,” McGregor said. “I didn’t drink heavily, if at all, at that time of my life. I was an athlete at the top of my game. Next thing you know, thousands upon thousands of bottles (are) in my garage.
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“‘Sell this, Conor.’ OK, I’d leave my property with two bottles under my arm, and that was it. I was caught. And I wasn’t used to it. And that’s it. God gave me these lessons. That’s it. I was trapped and caught, and it is what it is.”
Conor McGregor jumps into the air for a kick as he fights Max Holloway in a welterweight bout at UFC 329 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (John Locher/AP)
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Easier said than done, perhaps, as the controversial former champion has been embroiled in multiple controversies and legal issues over the past several years.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Sports
Lakers’ Arthur Kaluma erupts for 34 points in breakout Summer League performance
LAS VEGAS — The door opened for Arthur Kaluma to show his worth for the Lakers in the NBA Summer League on Saturday night.
He did so in a big way.
Kaluma had 34 points and five rebounds during the Lakers’ 91-70 win over the Dallas Mavericks at the Thomas & Mack Center.
He was 11 for 16 from the field and six for 10 from three-point range.
With Lakers rookie guard Cameron Carr unable to play because of a right thumb contusion, Kaluma took over the scoring role. Carr, the 24th pick in the NBA draft, is averaging 17 points per game.
“Cam doesn’t play tonight, so he gets a little bit more minutes, gets a couple more touches,” said Lakers Summer League coach Ty Abbott about Kaluma. “But he’s done a really good job of making the most of it when he doesn’t have actions run for him. So the way that he’s been able to stay ready, find windows for himself has kept him in a rhythm. So, on a night like tonight, when we can run some actions for him, he knocks them down and just plays out of his mind. It was great.”
Kaluma said he was “a little nervous” but his three-point shooting said otherwise.
“When [teammate] Jon Elmore came down and he pitched it back to me for a three … I just knew when it came off my hand it was cash,” Kaluma said. “So I said, ‘Yeah, I’m hot.’ It went on from there.”
Late in the fourth quarter, Kaluma lined up a three-pointer, setting his feet and scoring from 29 feet out. He flashed three fingers and smiled. His teammates on the bench stood and cheered, as did the fans.
“We have such a great group of guys this year at Summer League and going through this it’s hard to get that camaraderie with a group,” Kaluma said. “But I feel like everybody wants to see everybody succeed and I felt that tonight. I’m not going to lie to you. They tell me to shoot the ball. I passed up a couple of shots and they were mad at me the other day.”
Kaluma played for the South Bay Lakers in the G League last season. He averaged 14.6 points per game, 4.9 rebounds and shot 55% from the field, 37% from three-point range.
“The G can get grimey, you know what I’m saying? It’s a time where everybody is trying to fight for a position and there is a certain hunger that you have to have in order to be successful in the G,” Kaluma said. “And I feel like that drive that I had my first year in it pushed me into this summer to really get better and work on my game and come here and have the opportunity to perform.”
Kaluma wasn’t alone in helping the Lakers improve to 2-0 in Summer League play.
Adou Thiero ran the court, took a lob pass from Chris Mañon and threw down a two-handed dunk. He had another solid outing with 15 points and four rebounds. He shot just four for 12 from the field, but was a plus-15.
But the night belonged to Kaluma.
“I pride myself on the defensive end,” he said. “I know I got hot offensively, but the shot was just falling today, you know what I’m saying? My game is three-and-D. I lock-up on defense and I know I can hit open shots. I just got hot today and I’m not going to try to let it get to my head.”
Sports
Golf star records lowest round in LPGA major history with astounding performance at Evian Championship
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There are good days on the golf course, and then there is what Haeran Ryu just did on Saturday.
Ryu, 25, recorded the lowest round in LPGA major history on Saturday with an 11-under 60 at the Evian Championship. With the South Korean golfer’s historic round, she holds a three-stroke lead.
Ryu’s round comes just two weeks after winning her first major at the Women’s PGA Championship. On the 18th hole, Ryu left a 30-foot eagle putt a few inches short, and instead settled for a birdie.
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Haeran Ryu of South Korea reacts on the 18th green after the third round of The Amundi Evian Championship at Evian Resort Golf Club in Evian-les-Bains, France, on July 11, 2026. (Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)
She said after the round that she had no idea what she had done until she counted up her scorecard.
“But after the putt and I counted my score with my caddie,” she said. “Oh my God, it’s 11-under par today. It was so amazing. My caddie says, ‘Yep.’ I’m so happy right now.”
If Ryu had made the eagle putt on the 18th hole, she would have been just the second player to shoot a 59 in LPGA history.
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Haeran Ryu of South Korea celebrates a birdie on the 15th green during the third round of The Amundi Evian Championship at Evian Resort Golf Club on July 11, 2026, in Evian-les-Bains, France. (Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)
Her 60 broke the record for the lowest round in an LPGA major by one shot. Leona Maguire and Jeungeun Lee6 in 2021, and Hyo Joo Kim in 2014, each shot 61 at the Evian Championship, which was designated as an LPGA major in 2013.
The lowest round in a men’s major is 62, which is shared by four players — Branden Grace at Royal Birkdale in the 2017 British Open, Xander Schauffele and Rickie Fowler in the 2023 U.S. Open at Los Angeles Country Club, and Schauffele and Shane Lowry in the 2024 PGA Championship at Valhalla.
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Haeran Ryu of South Korea and Lottie Woad of England interact after their round on the 18th green during the third round of the Amundi Evian Championship at Evian Resort Golf Club in Evian-les-Bains, France, on July 11, 2026. (Stuart Franklin/Getty Images)
Ryu hopes her historic third round can help propel her to a second major win in three weeks.
“That is amazing, amazing dream,” Ryu said. “So I just want that one to come true, but we have one more day.”
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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