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🚨 Headlines
⚽️ Record ratings: Sunday’s Euro (6.43 million viewers) and Copa América finals (6.02 million) were Fox’s most- and second-most watched non-World Cup soccer broadcasts ever.
🏈 Aiyuk requests trade: 49ers star WR Brandon Aiyuk requested a trade amidst stalled contract talks. Here are five likely landing spots if the Niners oblige him.
⚾️ Little Papi: With the 567th pick in the draft, the Red Sox selected infielder D’Angelo Ortiz, the 20-year-old son of franchise legend and Hall of Famer David Ortiz.
🎾 Nadal wins in return: Rafael Nadal won on Tuesday in his first singles match since his early French Open exit. And speaking of famous sons, his opponent was Leo Borg, son of 11-time Grand Slam champion Björn.
⛳️ Woods fires back: Tiger Woods shot back at Colin Montgomerie on Tuesday, days after the former Ryder Cup champion suggested Woods should retire: “As a past champion, I’m exempt [from The Open] until I’m 60. Colin’s not. He’s not a past champion, so he’s not exempt.”
💔 RIP, Mr. Bryant: Joe “Jellybean” Bryant, Kobe’s father and an eight-year NBA vet, died on Tuesday after suffering a stroke. He was 69.
⚽️ Why the chaotic Copa doesn’t (necessarily) spell doom for the 2026 World Cup
The chaos that enveloped much of Copa América, which crescendoed in an ugly scene before Sunday’s finale, left many wondering whether it spelled doom for the 2026 World Cup, also hosted by the United States. The answer? Not necessarily.
From Yahoo Sports’ Henry Bushnell:
It was billed, enthusiastically, as a World Cup warm-up. The 2024 Copa América, staged in the United States, was seen by some as a dress rehearsal. It arrived, audaciously, in Atlanta, then Dallas, then 12 other U.S. cities, as a fútbol fiesta. It also felt like an appetizer for the grandest sporting event on Earth — the men’s World Cup, which is coming to North America in 2026, bigger and more bombastic than ever.
But over four messy weeks, the Copa América unraveled. On Sunday, it collapsed into chaos. And so, rather than whet American soccer appetites, it sparked all sorts of questions and concerns about the country’s readiness for 2026.
The concerns are wide-ranging and understandable. The 2024 tournament, a pan-American championship, was dogged all along by heat, empty seats, criticism of fields, unprofessional quirks and, in the end, disorder. A semifinal ended in a player-fan brawl. The final, delayed by security failures, left thousands of fans suffering — at a 2026 World Cup venue, Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.
But no, the events of the past four weeks don’t necessarily spell doom for 2026.
This was a slapdash tournament shoddily organized by CONMEBOL, the South American soccer confederation. FIFA, soccer’s global governing body, has already spent far more time and money and manpower planning the 2026 World Cup — the first that it will manage entirely on its own, rather than by delegating that responsibility to a local organizing committee.
Keep reading.
🌎 The world in photos
Arlington, Texas — The AL resumed its winning ways with a 5-3 victory over the NL thanks to Jarren Duran’s tiebreaking two-run homer, which earned him MVP on an electric night in which Paul Skenes tossed a scoreless inning and Shohei Ohtani, naturally, blasted a three-run bomb.
Madrid — Real Madrid officially introduced Kylian Mbappé to over 80,000 fans on Tuesday at the Bernabéu. The French superstar, who signed a five-year deal with the Spanish giant, said he “spent endless nights dreaming about playing for Real Madrid, and today I am one happy guy.”