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  • Zach Johnson chases leaders at 2026 John Deere Classic while Jordan Spieth struggles late

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    Imagn Images

    SILVIS, Ill. (AP) — Zach Johnson is skipping three majors for the John Deere Classic, which feels like a major for the Iowa native. He made the decision pay off Thursday with an eagle-birdie finish for a 7-under 64 that left him one shot out of the lead.

    Lucas Glover and Zac Blair played in the morning and each posted a 63, a good start for both as the PGA Tour heads into the final two months. Both are well outside the top 100 in the FedEx Cup.

    Johnson, a 50-year-old in his first year on the PGA Tour Champions and already with two victories, never considered anything but the John Deere Classic even with the U.S. Senior Open in Ohio this week at Scioto.

    He used putter from off the green for a 45-foot eagle on the par-5 17th, and capped off his round with a shot into 12 feet for a closing birdie.

    “I just love being here, and I’m comfortable, obviously,” said Johnson, who won the John Deere Classic in 2012. “My scorecard … I know that’ an ingredient this week, but it’s not everything. I can’t stress it enough. I’m just appreciative of having a partnership with John Deere and feeling like a long, long-distance son to this area.

    “A lot of affinity, a lot of affection.”

    Along with skipping the U.S. Senior Open this week, Johnson did not enter the British Open at Royal Birkdale, where he is exempt for 10 more years. He also is skipping the Senior British Open at Gleneagles, where he played in the 2014 Ryder Cup.

    Instead, Johnson is playing a senior major next week at Firestone. His reasoning for skipping the two British events is because he didn’t think he could play four straight weeks.

    The immediate goal is to play four rounds on the TPC Deere Run, where hot weather is expected to yield thunderstorms over the next few days.

    Glover, who goes on the PGA Tour board next year, is at No. 119 in the FedEx Cup. His exemption from winning back-to-back weeks in 2023 — including a FedEx Cup playoff event — ends after this year. Blair is at No. 160 and has been playing where he can, along with Korn Ferry Tour events.

    “Playing golf professionally is pretty stressful, especially for me,” Blair said. “I’ve kind of always been right in that 125 to 150 spot my whole career. So every start is important. Just trying to do a good job of playing well, whichever kind of tour I’m playing on. It’s still golf at the end of the day, which is fun.”

    Glover began the year recovering from surgery for a torn labrum in his left shoulder, and to put together a round like his 63 was encouraging to know good golf is still in there. And it helps being on a property that brings good memories.

    “Even struggling like I have this year, you pull down the driveway somewhere you’ve had success, it gives you a good feeling. Yeah, always liked it here,” Glover said.

    Stephan Jaeger and Lee Hodges joined Johnson at 64. Jaeger is at No. 60 in the FedEx Cup, wanting to be sure he’s among the top 70 in six weeks to qualify for the postseason. The BMW International Open in Munich is this week on his home course of Eichenried.

    Jordan Spieth, playing the Deere for only the second time since winning in 2015, had a double bogey on the 18th hole in the middle of his round and closed with a bogey for a 69

    Scoring was good, as usual, with 20 players at 66 or lower. That included NCAA champion Preston Stout, who takes over as the No. 1 amateur in the world because Jackson Koivun turned pro.

    Koivun made his professional debut and it was a struggle. He wound up with a 73, leaving him in danger of missing the cut.

  • John Deere Classic Scores

    POS CTRY NAME TO PAR R1 R2 R3 R4 TOTAL
    T1
    USA
    -8 63 1:34 PM* 63
    T1
    USA
    -8 63* 1:56 PM 63
    T3
    USA
    -7 64 1:01 PM* 64
    T3
    DEU
    -7 64 1:45 PM* 64
    T3
    USA
    -7 64 8:24 AM* 64
    T6
    USA
    -6 65 1:23 PM* 65
    T6
    USA
    -6 65* 2:18 PM 65
    T6
    USA
    -6 65 2:29 PM* 65
    T9
    USA
    -5 66 12:50 PM* 66
    T9
    PRI
    -5 66* 12:50 PM 66
    T9
    USA
    -5 66 1:01 PM* 66
    T9
    USA
    -5 66 1:12 PM* 66
    T9
    USA
    -5 66 1:23 PM* 66
    T9
    USA
    -5 66 1:45 PM* 66
    T9
    USA
    -5 66 1:45 PM* 66
    T9
    USA
    -5 66 2:07 PM* 66
    T9
    USA
    -5 66* 2:29 PM 66
    T9
    USA
    -5 66* 2:40 PM 66
    T9
    TWN
    -5 66* 8:24 AM 66
    T9
    USA
    -5 66 8:35 AM* 66
    T21
    USA
    -4 67 1:12 PM* 67
    T21
    USA
    -4 67* 1:12 PM 67
    T21
    USA
    -4 67* 1:12 PM 67
    T21
    USA
    -4 67* 1:23 PM 67
    T21
    USA
    -4 67* 1:34 PM 67
    T21
    ENG
    -4 67* 1:56 PM 67
    T21
    JPN
    -4 67* 1:56 PM 67
    T21
    CAN
    -4 67 2:29 PM* 67
    T21
    CHN
    -4 67 2:40 PM* 67
    T21
    USA
    -4 67 2:51 PM* 67
    T21
    USA
    -4 67* 7:51 AM 67
    T21
    USA
    -4 67 8:02 AM* 67
    T21
    KOR
    -4 67 8:35 AM* 67
    T21
    USA
    -4 67* 8:57 AM 67
    T21
    CHN
    -4 67 9:30 AM* 67
    T21
    USA
    -4 67* 9:41 AM 67
    T37
    USA
    -3 68* 12:50 PM 68
    T37
    USA
    -3 68 1:23 PM* 68
    T37
    USA
    -3 68* 1:23 PM 68
    T37
    CAN
    -3 68 1:34 PM* 68
    T37
    PHL
    -3 68 2:07 PM* 68
    T37
    USA
    -3 68 2:29 PM* 68
    T37
    KOR
    -3 68 8:13 AM* 68
    T37
    USA
    -3 68* 8:13 AM 68
    T37
    USA
    -3 68 8:46 AM* 68
    T37
    ZAF
    -3 68* 8:46 AM 68
    T37
    JPN
    -3 68* 9:08 AM 68
    T37
    SWE
    -3 68* 9:08 AM 68
    T37
    USA
    -3 68 9:19 AM* 68
    T37
    USA
    -3 68* 9:30 AM 68
    T37
    USA
    -3 68* 9:41 AM 68
    T52
    USA
    -2 69 12:50 PM* 69
    T52
    USA
    -2 69* 1:34 PM 69
    T52
    USA
    -2 69* 1:45 PM 69
    T52
    USA
    -2 69 1:56 PM* 69
    T52
    USA
    -2 69* 2:07 PM 69
    T52
    USA
    -2 69* 2:29 PM 69
    T52
    NOR
    -2 69 2:40 PM* 69
    T52
    USA
    -2 69* 2:40 PM 69
    T52
    USA
    -2 69 2:51 PM* 69
    T52
    USA
    -2 69* 8:02 AM 69
    T52
    USA
    -2 69 8:57 AM* 69
    T52
    USA
    -2 69 9:19 AM* 69
    T52
    USA
    -2 69* 9:30 AM 69
    T52
    USA
    -2 69* 9:30 AM 69
    T52
    USA
    -2 69 9:41 AM* 69
    T67
    USA
    -1 70* 12:50 PM 70
    T67
    USA
    -1 70* 1:01 PM 70
    T67
    USA
    -1 70 1:34 PM* 70
    T67
    USA
    -1 70* 1:34 PM 70
    T67
    USA
    -1 70* 1:45 PM 70
    T67
    ZAF
    -1 70* 2:07 PM 70
    T67
    USA
    -1 70 2:18 PM* 70
    T67
    USA
    -1 70 2:51 PM* 70
    T67
    CAN
    -1 70 7:40 AM* 70
    T67
    JPN
    -1 70* 7:40 AM 70
    T67
    USA
    -1 70 8:02 AM* 70
    T67
    CAN
    -1 70* 8:02 AM 70
    T67
    USA
    -1 70 8:13 AM* 70
    T67
    USA
    -1 70 8:24 AM* 70
    T67
    USA
    -1 70 8:35 AM* 70
    T67
    USA
    -1 70* 8:35 AM 70
    T67
    ARG
    -1 70 8:46 AM* 70
    T67
    ZAF
    -1 70 9:08 AM* 70
    T67
    USA
    -1 70 9:30 AM* 70
    T67
    JPN
    -1 70* 9:41 AM 70
    T87
    USA
    E 71* 1:12 PM 71
    T87
    COL
    E 71 2:07 PM* 71
    T87
    USA
    E 71 2:18 PM* 71
    T87
    USA
    E 71 2:18 PM* 71
    T87
    USA
    E 71* 2:51 PM 71
    T87
    USA
    E 71 7:40 AM* 71
    T87
    USA
    E 71* 7:40 AM 71
    T87
    USA
    E 71 7:51 AM* 71
    T87
    USA
    E 71 7:51 AM* 71
    T87
    USA
    E 71* 7:51 AM 71
    T87
    USA
    E 71* 8:02 AM 71
    T87
    ZAF
    E 71* 8:13 AM 71
    T87
    USA
    E 71* 8:24 AM 71
    T87
    USA
    E 71* 8:57 AM 71
    T101
    FRA
    +1 72 1:01 PM* 72
    T101
    ARG
    +1 72* 1:01 PM 72
    T101
    USA
    +1 72* 1:01 PM 72
    T101
    CAN
    +1 72 1:56 PM* 72
    T101
    COL
    +1 72 2:40 PM* 72
    T101
    USA
    +1 72* 2:40 PM 72
    T101
    BEL
    +1 72* 2:51 PM 72
    T101
    USA
    +1 72* 7:40 AM 72
    T101
    USA
    +1 72 7:51 AM* 72
    T101
    USA
    +1 72* 7:51 AM 72
    T101
    USA
    +1 72 8:13 AM* 72
    T101
    AUS
    +1 72* 8:35 AM 72
    T101
    USA
    +1 72* 8:35 AM 72
    T101
    USA
    +1 72 8:46 AM* 72
    T101
    USA
    +1 72 8:57 AM* 72
    T101
    USA
    +1 72 9:08 AM* 72
    T101
    SCO
    +1 72 9:08 AM* 72
    T101
    USA
    +1 72 9:19 AM* 72
    T101
    ENG
    +1 72* 9:19 AM 72
    T101
    USA
    +1 72* 9:19 AM 72
    T101
    DEU
    +1 72* 9:19 AM 72
    T101
    USA
    +1 72 9:30 AM* 72
    T123
    USA
    +2 73* 1:45 PM 73
    T123
    USA
    +2 73* 2:18 PM 73
    T123
    CAN
    +2 73 7:40 AM* 73
    T123
    USA
    +2 73 8:02 AM* 73
    T123
    USA
    +2 73 8:24 AM* 73
    T123
    USA
    +2 73* 8:46 AM 73
    T123
    CAN
    +2 73* 8:57 AM 73
    T123
    ARG
    +2 73 9:41 AM* 73
    T131
    USA
    +3 74 12:50 PM* 74
    T131
    KOR
    +3 74 1:12 PM* 74
    T131
    USA
    +3 74* 2:18 PM 74
    T131
    ZAF
    +3 74* 8:13 AM 74
    T131
    USA
    +3 74* 8:24 AM 74
    T131
    USA
    +3 74* 9:08 AM 74
    T131
    ARG
    +3 74 9:41 AM* 74
    T138
    USA
    +4 75* 2:07 PM 75
    T138
    DNK
    +4 75* 8:46 AM 75
    140
    USA
    +5 76* 1:23 PM 76
    141
    ZAF
    +6 77* 2:29 PM 77
    142
    USA
    +7 78* 2:51 PM 78
    143
    USA
    +10 81 8:57 AM* 81
    WD
    IRL
    77
    WD
    WD
    Notes
    • All times are US/Eastern.

    Legend

    • DQ
    • WD
    • CUT
    • MDF
    • (a)
    • *
    • Watch Live On Pga Tour Live App
    • Disqualified
    • Withdrew
    • Missed Cut
    • Made Cut Did Not Finish
    • Amateur
    • Golfer Started Round On Back 9
    • Winner
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  • FIFA World Cup Scores

    HT
    FOX1
    T
    soccer team logoSwitzerland
    1
    soccer team logoAlgeria
    0
    Round of 32, BC Place
    FT
    T
    soccer team logoSpain
    3
    soccer team logoAustria
    0
    Round of 32, SoFi Stadium
    FT
    T
    soccer team logoPortugal
    2
    soccer team logoCroatia
    1
    Round of 32, BMO Field
  • MLB Scores

    8TH
    R H E
    Angels36-51
    0 2 1
    1 1 1
    T-Mobile Park, Seattle, WA
    B
    S
    O
    AT BAT
    E. Bazardo (2.17) pitching to J. Crawford (.214)
    LAST PLAY
    Emerson struck out swinging
    END 4TH
    MLBN
    R H E
    Padres43-42
    6 7 0
    Dodgers56-31
    8 13 0
    Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles, CA
    DUE UP
    4th
    player headshot
    G. Sheets SD DH1-2
    5th
    player headshot
    T. France SD 1B0-2
    6th
    player headshot
    J. Merrill SD CF1-2, 1 R, 1 HR, 1 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Pirates44-44
    6 14 0
    1 4 0
    Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, PA
    • W: C. Mlodzinski  (5-3)
    • L: J. Alvarado  (3-3)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    C. Mlodzinski PIT P3.0 IP, 2 H
    player headshot
    J. Jones PIT P4.0 IP, 2 H, 1 ER, 6 SO, 2 BB
    FINAL
    R H E
    Reds40-46
    7 11 1
    Brewers53-32
    2 4 1
    American Family Field, Milwaukee, WI
    • W: C. Burns  (10-1)
    • L: J. Misiorowski  (9-4)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    C. Burns CIN P6.0 IP, 4 H, 2 ER, 4 SO, 2 BB
    player headshot
    J. Trevino CIN C3-4, 1 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    Marlins46-42
    4 7 0
    Rockies35-53
    14 14 0
    Coors Field, Denver, CO
    • W: B. Bernardino  (3-3)
    • L: J. King  (6-2)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    J. McCarthy COL RF2-4, 3 R, 1 HR, 4 RBI
    player headshot
    M. Moniak COL LF3-5, 3 R, 1 HR, 2 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    5 10 0
    6 9 2
    Progressive Field, Cleveland, OH
    • W: T. Herrin  (1-3)
    • L: G. Taylor  (4-2)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    T. Herrin CLE P1.0 IP, 1 SO
    player headshot
    B. Rocchio CLE SS1-4, 1 R, 1 HR, 3 RBI
    FINAL
    R H E
    11 15 0
    Braves50-35
    5 8 1
    Truist Park, Atlanta, GA
    • W: G. Graceffo  (6-1)
    • L: T. Kinley  (4-3)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    J. Walker STL RF2-4, 2 R, 1 HR, 4 RBI
    player headshot
    G. Graceffo STL P1.0 IP
    FINAL
    R H E
    Rays51-33
    5 11 1
    Royals35-53
    2 5 0
    Kauffman Stadium, Kansas City, MO
    • W: I. Seymour  (5-1)
    • L: S. Kolek  (4-3)
    • S: B. Baker  (22)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    I. Seymour TB P6.0 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 8 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    B. Baker TB P1.0 IP, 1 SO
    FINAL
    R H E
    Tigers38-50
    4 11 0
    Rangers45-43
    10 17 0
    Globe Life Field, Arlington, TX
    • W: N. Eovaldi  (9-7)
    • L: F. Valdez  (4-6)
    PLAYERS OF THE GAME
    player headshot
    N. Eovaldi TEX P5.0 IP, 6 H, 3 ER, 9 SO, 1 BB
    player headshot
    E. Diaz TEX DH2-4, 2 R, 1 HR, 1 RBI
  • 2 Arizona malls rank among 10 best shopping centers in U.S.

    Modern young woman enjoys shopping.
    Photo licensed from Adobe Stock.

    Scottsdale Quarter and Kierland Commons have been ranked among the Top 10 in the Best Shopping Center category of the USA Today 10BEST 2026 Readers’ Choice Awards. Kierland Commons, part of the Macerich portfolio of thriving retail centers in top markets, has been ranked No. 9 in the Best Shopping Center category; and Scottsdale Quarter has been ranked No. 8.


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    The recognition — a step up from the center’s No. 10 ranking in 2025 — further affirms Kierland Commons’ place among the nation’s most celebrated retail destinations.

    “This recognition reflects the dedication and passion our entire team brings to Kierland Commons every single day,” said Victoria Buscher, General Manager of Kierland Commons. “To be recognized among the best shopping centers in the country for the second consecutive year — and to move up in the rankings — is a testament to our guests, our retail partners and the unique experience we’ve built together.”

    Nominations were curated to a list of top 20 picks by a panel of subject matter experts and USA Today 10BEST editors before the public was invited to vote for their favorites. The top 20 shopping centers were selected based on factors such as the variety of stores, breadth of dining and entertainment options, ease of access and events that set them apart from other retail destinations.

    Here’s what USA Today said about the two Arizona centers:

    Scottsdale Quarter: Fountains, palm trees, and modern desert architecture set the scene at Scottsdale Quarter, an open-air shopping center with more than 100 stores, restaurants, salons, and entertainment venues. The center features a mix of market-exclusive retailers, stylish local boutiques, and a range of dining options. Regular live music and seasonal events add to its energetic atmosphere in the heart of North Scottsdale.

    Kierland Commons: Blending desert-modern design with a lively urban feel, Kierland Commons is a sophisticated shopping center in Scottsdale. The open-air center features over 70 shops and restaurants, including national brands and stylish local boutiques. Pedestrian-friendly streets and shaded patios invite visitors to linger over meals at spots like Mastro’s Ocean Club, making it a favorite for leisurely, upscale outings.

    The Best Shopping Center category celebrates how shopping centers bring together a diverse selection of places to shop, eat and play in a single convenient location, becoming vibrant hubs with something for everyone.

    The first lifestyle center in Arizona to integrate retail, dining, office space and upscale residential living into a walkable, Main Street-inspired design, Kierland Commons continues to set the standard for open-air shopping and dining in the Southwest. The center is home to a dynamic mix of retailers, including favorites like Arhaus, Vuori, Mastro’s Ocean Club and Tommy Bahama Restaurant, Bar and Store.

    The center is pleased to announce an exciting lineup of new and relocated retailers, further enhancing its premier shopping experience. Earlier this month, Warby Parker and Kiehl’s debuted, while Evereve unveiled its newly reimagined store following a

    recent relocation within the center. The momentum continues this summer with the July 1 opening of Relevant Galleries, showcasing fine art photography, followed by the arrival of first-to-market retailer Hammitt in mid-July, bringing its collection of premium leather handbags to the center.

    Looking ahead to fall, the center will welcome two highly anticipated Arizona debuts: 7th Avenue, the digitally native furniture brand celebrated for its customizable modular sofas, and Beyond Yoga, the popular activewear brand known for its comfort-driven, lifestyle-focused apparel. Together, these additions reflect the center’s ongoing commitment to introducing sought-after brands and creating a dynamic retail destination for shoppers.

    “We’re thrilled by the momentum we’re seeing at Kierland Commons,” said Buscher. “Each new retailer and refreshed space brings added energy to the center and gives our guests even more reasons to visit. We look forward to continuing to evolve our lineup to meet the needs of our community.”

    Complementing its retail offerings, Kierland Commons hosts the Kierland Fine Art & Wine Festival twice a year, well on its way to becoming Arizona’s premier fine art festival. The festival has steadily grown in popularity among art enthusiasts and collectors and is recognized as one of the top fine art festivals in the regio

  • Fireworks and Arizona law: What’s safe and legal for July 4

    Fireworks and Arizona law: What’s safe and legal for July 4

    Every year on the Fourth of July, consumer fireworks harm revelers in Arizona — sometimes seriously.

    Olivia Lemorrocco, the vice president of operations at Phillips Law Group, said her team sees an influx of injuries — especially to hands and faces — because of drunkenness or carelessness.


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    “People do not understand how hot fireworks burn and how powerful they are,” she said.

    “Sparklers burn at over 2,000 degrees. That is hot enough to melt metal. If you give sparklers to kids, you have to be extremely careful. These are the kinds of scars, especially for kids, because they will have them for the rest of their lives.”

    The problem with fireworks is that the danger is not always obvious until it’s too late.

    “People just do not realize how dangerous fireworks can be until something goes wrong,” she said.

    In Arizona, consumer fireworks are permitted only from June 24 to July 6. They are not allowed between 11 p.m. and 8 a.m., except on July 4, when they can be used until 1 a.m. The law allows the use of ground-based devices, such as sparklers, smoke bombs, spinners and small fountains. Anything that launches or explodes, like Roman candles and skyrockets, is against the law.

    People are also not allowed to use fireworks on public property, like city parks and mountain preserves. Fines can reach $2,500.

    “Think of a place like the Riparian Preserve in Gilbert,” she said. “It is definitely against the law to use fireworks there.”

    She said people should let professionals handle fireworks whenever possible.

  • Here’s where a $1,500 rent budget gets you the most apartment space

    Photo licensed from 123RF.

    Here’s where a $1,500 rent budget gets you the most apartment space

    If you have a $1,500 budget to rent an apartment, where you choose to live makes all the difference. In McAllen, TX, one of the lowest cost-of-living areas in the U.S., that amount stretches the furthest, to 1,378 square feet, enough for a three- to four-bedroom apartment. In Manhattan, NY, that same budget barely gets you 210 square feet, roughly the size of a dorm room.

    Nationwide, that amount is enough to secure an average of 703 square feet of apartment space. However, in nearly two-thirds of the cities analyzed (64.5%), $1,500 stretches further than that national benchmark.


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    Here’s how much a a $1,500 rent budget will get you in Arizona:

    • Tucson: $1,500 will get you 914 square feet

    • Peoria: $1,500 will get you 885 square feet

    • Glendale: $1,500 will get you 880 square feet

    • Surprise: $1,500 will get you 877 square feet

    • Mesa: $1,500 will get you 853 square feet

    • Chandler: $1,500 will get you 832 square feet

    • Gilbert: $1,500 will get you 824 square feet

    • Phoenix: $1,500 will get you 820 square feet

    • Tempe: $1,500 will get you 730 square feet

    • Scottsdale: $1,500 will get you 683 square feet

    Key national takeaways:

    • McAllen, TX, renters can get the most apartment space for $1,500 a month — 1,378 square feet, or enough for a three- to four-bedroom apartment.
    • $1,500 a month covers a one- to two-bedroom in roughly half of the 200 cities analyzed, but only 31 offer space for a two- to three-bedroom.
    • Metairie, LA, is the only city where $1,500 gets you a larger apartment than last year, jumping to the two- to three-bedroom range.
    • Renters in 26 cities, mostly in California, can’t even get a studio for that budget; Manhattan, NY, offers a mere 210 square feet.

    With the national average apartment rent at $1,740 per month as of March 2026 and the average apartment spanning 835 square feet, a $1,500 monthly budget falls short of the national benchmark but it can still stretch surprisingly far depending on where you look.

    McAllen, TX, leads the nation in square feet for $1,500 a month

    If you’re apartment-hunting on a $1,500-a-month budget, South Texas is where your dollar goes the furthest. McAllen, TX, tops the nation with 1,378 square feet for that price, which is enough for a three- or four-bedroom apartment.

    With rents averaging just $993 and the typical apartment measuring 912 square feet, McAllen renters get a lot more space for their money than most Americans do within that monthly budget. Still, that figure is down slightly from last year’s 1,393 square feet — a sign that even the most affordable markets are starting to tighten.

    Macon, GA, comes in close behind at #2 with 1,346 square feet, or the equivalent of a four- to five-bedroom apartment. Not far behind, Columbus, GA (1,335 square feet); Wichita, KS (1,287 square feet); and Jackson, MS (1,287 square feet) round out the top five. All five cities have average rents well below $1,200 and offer apartments significantly above the national average of 835 square feet. Across the board, the top of the list is dominated by lower-cost cities in the Midwest and South.

    Among the 100 large cities, Wichita, KS, leads at #1, followed by Toledo, OH (1,260 square feet); Oklahoma City, OK (1,239 square feet); Tulsa, OK (1,229 square feet); and Memphis, TN (1,220 square feet).

  • Wimbledon 2026: Schedule, bracket, results: Jannik Sinner, Novak Djokovic, Aryna Sabalenka cruise in Round 2

    The second round of the men’s draw largely went according to plan, as all of the top 10 seeds who were in action rolled through their matches on Wednesday. No. 1 seed Jannik Sinner looked much improved in a solid win over Nuno Borges (7-6, 7-6, 6-4), while No. 3 seed Felix Auger-Aliassime, No. 7 seed Novak Djokovic, No. 8 seed Daniil Medvedev and No. 9 seed Flavio Cobolli all cruised in three or four sets.

    Unfortunately for American tennis fans, the top seed to go down in the men’s draw on Wednesday was No. 16 seed Learner Tien, who struggled with cramping in his match with veteran Marton Fucsovics and lost in four sets (6-7, 6-4, 7-6, 6-3). While Tien got dumped out, a number of other Americans punched their ticket to the third round as No. 21 seed Tommy Paul, Jenson Brooksby and Michael Zheng all picked up wins on Wednesday.

    The women’s draw saw the biggest upset of the day, as No. 5 seed and the 2026 French Open champion Mirra Andreeva got taken out by Barbora Krejcikova (4-6, 7-5, 6-4) in a stunner on Centre Court. No. 7 seed Coco Gauff nearly made it two top 10 seeds getting eliminated on Wednesday, but Gauff fought back from 7-4 down in a third-set tiebreak to escape with a win over Solana Sierra (6-3, 3-6, 7-6).

    The rest of the top women’s seeds took care of business in less dramatic fashion. No. 1 seed Aryna Sabalenka fought off a game effort from American McCartney Kessler (6-1, 7-6), while No. 4 seed Jessica Pegula, No. 10 seed Karolina Muchova, No. 11 seed Belinda Bencic, No. 14 seed Naomi Osaka and No. 16 seed Iva Jovic all rolled in straight sets.

    Wimbledon 2026 predictions, odds, picks: More chaos coming after wild run in France?
    Brent Brookhouse
    Wimbledon 2026 predictions, odds, picks: More chaos coming after wild run in France?

    Keep it locked here over the next two weeks for our complete coverage of the 2026 Wimbledon Championships.

    Where to watch the 2026 Wimbledon Championships

    • Dates: June 29 – July 12, 2026
    • Location: All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club — London
    • TV: ESPN, ABC | Stream: fubo (try for free)

    Notable Gentlemen’s singles matches on Wednesday

    1. Jannik Sinner def. Nuno Borges — (7-6, 7-6, 6-4)
    3. Felix Auger Aliassime def. Dino Prizmic — (7-6, 6-3, 7-5)
    7. Novak Djokovic def. Stefanos Tsitsipas — (6-3, 6-4, 6-2)
    8. Daniil Medvedev def. Daniel Merida Aguilar — (3-6, 6-3, 7-5, 6-2)
    Marton Fucsovics def. 16. Learner Tien — (6-7, 6-4, 7-6, 6-3)
    21. Tommy Paul def. Kwon Soon-woo — (6-3, 7-6, 6-2)
    22. Alejandro Davidovic Fokina def. Fabian Marozsán — (6-3, 6-0, 6-3)
    23. Rafael Jodar vs. Pablo Carreno Busta — (3-6, 6-3, 1-6, 2-1 suspended)
    24. Joao Fonseca def. Jesper De Jong — (6-1, 7-5, 6-4)
    25. Arthur Rinderknech def. Martin Damm Jr. — (6-4, 7-6, 7-5)
    28. Brandon Nakashima vs. Jan-Lennard Struff — (6-4, 6-7, 6-7, 7-6, suspended)
    Jenson Brooksby def. 31. Ignacio Buse — (6-2, 6-2, 6-3)

    Notable Ladies’ singles matches on Wednesday

    1. Aryna Sabalenka def. McCartney Kessler — (6-1, 7-6)
    4. Jessica Pegula def. Sara Sorribes — (7-6, 6-1)
    Barbora Krejcikova def. 5. Mirra Andreeva — (4-6, 7-5, 6-4)
    7. Coco Gauff def. Solana Sierra — (6-3, 3-6, 7-6)
    10. Karolina Muchova def. Zhang Shuai — (6-3, 6-2)
    No. 11 Belinda Bencic def. Wang Xinyu — (7-5, 6-0)
    14. Naomi Osaka def. Anastasia Gasanova — (6-3, 6-2)
    16. Iva Jovic def. Tatjana Maria — (6-1, 6-2)
    18. Ekaterina Alexandrova def. Lanlana Taraudee — (7-5, 7-5)
    19. Anna Kalinskaya def. Diane Parry — (6-4, 3-6, 7-6)
    Nikola Bartunkova def. 32. Katerina Siniakova — (6-2, 6-4)

  • Jaylen Brown trade grades: 76ers get ‘A+’ for landing Celtics star as Boston makes baffling decision

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    The Boston Celtics are trading Jaylen Brown to the Philadelphia 76ers in exchange for Paul George, two first-round picks (2028 and 2031) and two second-round picks (2028 and 2030), according to ESPN. The 2028 first-rounder could convert from a first to a pick swap that is more favorable to the Celtics, while the 2031 pick is unprotected.

    The stunning deal marks the end of Brown’s enormously successful 10-season run in Boston. The No. 3 overall pick in the 2016 NBA Draft made five All-Star teams with the Celtics. He averaged at least 20 points for seven consecutive seasons, took the Celtics to the Eastern Conference Finals six times, the NBA Finals twice, and won Finals MVP as Boston won its 18th NBA championship in 2024. Now, he will continue his career in a rival city alongside a core of Joel EmbiidTyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe.

    Brown played alongside Jayson Tatum since Boston drafted the latter in 2017, but rumors about the Celtics splitting up the pair were common for much of their run together. The Celtics were linked to superstars like Anthony Davis and Kevin Durant over the years, but never pulled the trigger on a trade for Brown during his joint ascent with Tatum. The Celtics were rewarded for that faith with the 2024 title, but things slowly broke down from there.

    Tatum tore his Achilles during Boston’s title defense in 2025, and he missed most of the 2025-26 season. With Tatum sidelined, Brown had the best statistical season of his career in leading the Celtics to 56 wins, but Boston blew a 3-1 lead and lost Game 7 of its first-round series against the 76ers with Tatum out. That series exposed holes in Boston’s roster that would be hard to address with both Tatum and Brown earning supermax salaries in this enormously restrictive CBA environment.

    Brown responded by venting on Twitch after the Celtics were eliminated, claiming the NBA had an agenda against him. Perhaps just as notably, he called this season his “favorite year” of his basketball career rather than the 2024 title season. The Celtics, meanwhile, spent most of June negotiating a trade of Brown to the Milwaukee Bucks for Giannis Antetokounmpo. When Antetokounmpo was ultimately dealt to the Miami Heat, Boston elected to move on from Brown anyway, sending him to Philadelphia in a shocker.

    For much of the past two years, Philadelphia’s destiny was tied to two aging and injury-prone players. George has played just 78 regular-season games over two seasons with the 76ers, and he is entering his age-36 season. Coupled with the frequent absences of Embiid, Philadelphia appeared to be stuck with two supermax contracts that were aging badly.

    But George, following a 25-game suspension, returned to finish out the season strong. He averaged an efficient 17.4 points per game in the playoff series win over the Celtics, and now, he’s headed to Boston to serve as their Brown replacement. With Brown only 29 years old, the 76ers have improved at the forward spot with a player six years younger than the one that they sent out.

    Now, if Embiid can only stay healthy, the 76ers have a real path to genuine championship contention in a crowded Eastern Conference. Let’s grade the trade.

    Philadelphia 76ers: A+

    Landing Brown while moving off George’s contract? An outright steal

    When I ranked the worst contracts in the NBA in March, George, making supermax money ($54.1 million) for the next two seasons, ranked No. 5. At the time, that was a fairly common sentiment. He was out at that point due to a 25-game PED suspension, but even before that, he was inefficiently averaging a pretty modest 16.2 points per game and had far less defensive impact than at his peak. A good player, but a severely overpaid one whose 36th birthday was looming. The assumption was that Philadelphia would have to attach draft capital to move off of his contract.

    What changed after that? He returned from that suspension and played 10 nearly star-level regular-season games. He was fantastic in the playoffs, making nearly half of his 3-pointers and turning back the defensive clock against the Celtics. Essentially, in 21 games, George went from immovable to the only player involved in a trade for Brown. For a brief, fleeting moment, another team considered George to be a positive-value asset, or at least not so overwhelmingly negative that he would impede a trade like this. Was it just shooting variance? Did the 25-game rest revive him? It just seems hard to imagine that a 36-year-old could turn the clock back like that in any sort of permanent way.

    Brown is coming off a Second-Team All-NBA season. There is a credible reason to believe that the season was fool’s gold. Brown shot just under 51% on mid-range shots and just under 71% on restricted area shots from October through December. That’s around the point at which some people tried to nudge him into an MVP conversation he really never should have been a part of. After Jan. 1, he fell back down to earth, falling to around 41% on mid-range jumpers and 69% in the restricted area. He is not, in fact, a Kevin Durant-level individual scorer. But the 76ers did not pay a Durant-level price.

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    Jaylen Brown

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    Any concerns about analytics, about unsustainable shooting, lackadaisical off-ball defense or years of on-off data suggesting the Celtics were just fine without Brown, fly out the window at this price. Two first-round picks. Two good first-round picks, to be fair, especially the 2028 pick that will reportedly be the better of the 76ers’ or the Los Angeles Clippers’ selections. But two picks nonetheless. That’s all it took for Philadelphia to turn an inferior, 36-year-old small forward into a superior one going into his age-30 season.

    So Brown isn’t really a Second-Team All-NBA player. Who cares? He won’t need to be in Philadelphia. For all of these years, we’ve talked about the possibility of Brown getting traded so he could lead his own team. On the 76ers, there will be nights in which he’s the leading scorer and there will be nights in which he finishes fourth. To get a reliable, in-his-prime All-Star for two picks and what we’ve been treating as one of the NBA’s worst contracts is an outright steal. Brown has never missed more than 19 games in a season. George has missed more time in six of the past seven.

    That youth and durability change a lot for Philadelphia. With Brown, Maxey and Edgecombe, the 76ers have so much shot creation that they can afford to be as cautious as humanly possible with Embiid. The name of the game, as we saw in the Boston series, is getting him into the playoffs healthy and then through the playoffs in one piece. He swung the series that we can now say broke up the Celtics. His workload has never been lighter than it is now.

    Brown is eligible to extend with Philadelphia. Even if he tacks on the maximum two years, his deal will still expire after his age-34 season. George’s tenure in Philadelphia began in his age-34 season. That’s how substantial the age gap here is. Brown should remain a productive player for a long time, but even as he starts to slip, the younger Edgecombe is in place to grow into a bigger role. Edgecombe, who turns 21 this month, won’t be paid market value for three more years, and Embiid’s contract expires at that point. Philadelphia should be able to keep this group together at least that long, and potentially longer.

    There are definite questions on the roster. The signing of Dean Wade addressed on-ball defense, and Brown will to some extent as well, but they’re still lacking on that end of the floor. The mere fact of paying Brown, Embiid and Maxey the max makes paying role players nearly impossible. The sixth-highest paid 76ers player right now is No. 22 overall pick Labaron Philon. They still have work to do.

    But we can’t overthink this one. Two first-round picks should not be able to turn a bad contract into an All-NBA six years his junior. No matter what concerns you might have about Brown, he is a substantial upgrade on George. This is among the biggest trade no-brainers in recent history.

    Boston Celtics: D-

    A baffling move for Boston on multiple levels

    Unless you’re treating George as a genuinely positive trade asset, Walker Kessler got traded for more than Brown on Wednesday. The Utah Jazz, at least, managed to extract two first-round swaps from the Los Angeles Lakers. The Celtics couldn’t even do that much with the 76ers.

    It’s not even clear that they got Philadelphia’s best available draft pick. That 2028 selection headed to Boston, reportedly the more favorable of the 76ers and Clippers, is great on paper. That’s especially true in the lottery reform era, where any pick has a chance to wildly outperform expectations. But the 2028 NBA Draft is regarded as relatively weak at this point. There’s a reason so many teams trading big-name players this offseason are targeting picks deep in the 2030s. Not only are the next few drafts considered underwhelming, but the new lottery reform rules expire after 2029, so there’s value in the uncertainty that will follow. Boston got one such pick in 2031. It did not get Philadelphia’s 2033 selection, arguably the best of the bunch for an executive with the sort of job security Brad Stevens has.

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    The theory of trading Brown in the first place, unless there was unresolvable tension behind the scenes, seemingly related to his contract. Both he and Tatum are making supermax money. Having two players make 35% of the salary cap every year puts an almost impossible strain on your depth. When the Celtics pursued Antetokounmpo, part of the idea was that a 35% max salary was justifiable for an MVP candidate who provided the exact rim-pressuring skills their team was lacking. George is not an MVP candidate. He does not have the exact skill set the Celtics were lacking. He is also making supermax money, just on a contract that is one year shorter.

    Brown’s value can’t have fallen that far, could it? And if so, were there not better offers out there? The Cleveland Cavaliers are trying to convince LeBron James to return for a minimum salary right now. Cleveland could’ve offered similar draft compensation, but with Jarrett Allen attached to solve Boston’s center problem. Reports have suggested that neither the Houston Rockets nor Charlotte Hornets, both coached by former members of Boston’s staff, were interested in Brown. They are both so asset-rich that either could have topped this price without really disturbing their long-term plans.

    Is there a follow-up move that makes this make sense? The Celtics still have a $27.7 million trade exception, but after signing Mitchell Robinson, they don’t have the first-apron hard cap flexibility they’ll need to take advantage of it without moving off more salary. Two first-round picks are valuable trade chips, but the Celtics still control most of their own picks moving forward. If they’re planning to shoot for, say, Trey Murphy III, you’d figure they already had the draft capital to get him. Maybe they’re planning to spend their own picks elsewhere and just didn’t want to leave themselves completely bankrupt in terms of remaining draft capital? Maybe the situation behind closed doors was just bad enough that they had to take what they could get? We may never know.

    But on paper, the easiest comparison here is the disastrous Luka Dončić trade the Dallas Mavericks made in 2025. The Celtics traded the better and younger player for an older, worse one, with minimal draft capital attached. Brown is not as valuable as Dončić, but the same six-year age gap applies. The Celtics did not get meaningfully cheaper in the deal. They didn’t even steal a Max Christie-esque role player.

    Every fiber of my being wants to give this trade an “F.” It is, by all reasonable logic, an “F” trade. But the Celtics have been so undeniably competent for so many years that I have to believe there is more to this trade than we currently appreciate. We’re talking about a team that won a championship with Brown two summers ago. They’ve made six Eastern Conference Finals since drafting Brown and won 56 games with him leading the team a season ago.

    Whether there were interpersonal dynamics we don’t understand, the market was truly this barren, or if there’s another move coming that makes a bit more sense of the situation, the Celtics have earned just enough benefit of the doubt to believe there’s a better explanation for this trade than we see in this moment.

    But on paper, this is a catastrophe.

    The Celtics got older and worse without getting meaningfully cheaper or overwhelmingly richer in draft capital. A Brown trade made sense if it was going to net Antetokounmpo or a picks-and-depth bonanza. But at this price point, it’s just hard to justify giving Brown away rather than simply keeping him.

  • How the USMNT refused to blink against Bosnia and Herzegovina and kept World Cup dreams alive

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    SANTA CLARA, Calif. – At the World Cup, the U.S. men’s national team have become accustomed to an early lead and a game state that suits their fluid, attack-minded tendencies. Describing the goals they scored in Wednesday’s 2-0 win over Bosnia and Herzegovina in the round of 32 as inevitable would be a bridge too far, but it was well within their skillset, so much so that Folarin Balogun’s game-opening goal in the 45th minute felt like a long time coming. They had seemingly survived their opponents’ disruptive game plan just before the break, the group halfway to their first win in the World Cup knockouts in 24 years, the floodgates perhaps open in time for the second half.

    Soccer, though, had other plans.

    For starters, the flurry of shots they hoped to take against Bosnia and Herzegovina never came. The game resumed its slog-like nature as soon as the referee blew the whistle for the second half, their very first shot after the break only coming in the 79th minute. It was far from their biggest problem, though – star striker Balogun was shown a red card in the 64th minute for a studs-up challenge on Tarik Muharemovic, even if it was completely unintentional because he had his back to the defender. Conventional wisdom would suggest that the USMNT attempt to bunker down to protect a narrow one-goal lead with a half hour on the clock, their attempts not coming off no matter how hard they tried. That was especially true on the wings, through which the USMNT’s attack usually flows; Sergino Dest and Christian Pulisic drifted too wide and were not particularly present, with Balogun off the pitch, the balance was off.

    The USMNT, though, stuck to their guns and stayed true to a mode that had defined their World Cup journey but has never actually been the team’s trademark — they played like big shots.

    Soccer’s great tactical existential question has naturally carried over to a World Cup played after practical, rigid play took over certain subsections of the global game. The USMNT, and many other teams along with them at this World Cup, have decided that the best defense is as competent an offense one can possibly muster. It was never easy for the USMNT against Bosnia and Herzegovina, who limited them to just two shots on target and 0.92 expected goals. It did not deter the USMNT, who were rewarded for their persistence with a goal from Malik Tillman nearly 20 minutes after Balogun’s red card — and with only their shot of the second half.

    It was an ambitious strategy that reflected the aims of a team intent on making a statement run at a World Cup on home soil, the momentum of a hard-fought but solution-oriented victory aligning accordingly. It is also a signal that, against many odds, the USMNT are positioning themselves as a team that really can attempt to place themselves amongst the world’s best, many of them stylishly ambitious in their own right.

    Their round of 16 game against Belgium on Monday will offer a uniquely stiff test of their ability to live up to their own aspirations. Their next opponent has not always impressed at this World Cup but can rest on their top talents, chief among them midfielder Kevin de Bruyne, the greatest playmaker of his generation.

    A win in the round of 32 still feels like some version of purgatory between the group stage and the knockouts, even if the round has overall been entertaining. This win, though, is just as valuable as the rest and marks an important step in the journey — and a particularly memorable one, too.