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How Astros' Hunter Brown became calendar year AL Cy Young

Open Extended Reactions Of the 460,000-plus outings by a starting pitcher in Major League Baseball history, among the ugliest came a little more than a year ago. Hunter Brown, a right-hander for the Houston Astros with a high-octane fastball and an array of off-speed pitches, allowed nine runs to the Kansas City Royals and mustered […]

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How Astros' Hunter Brown became calendar year AL Cy Young

Of the 460,000-plus outings by a starting pitcher in Major League Baseball history, among the ugliest came a little more than a year ago. Hunter Brown, a right-hander for the Houston Astros with a high-octane fastball and an array of off-speed pitches, allowed nine runs to the Kansas City Royals and mustered only two outs. He yielded 11 hits, the most ever for a start of less than one inning.

In the weeks following the thrashing, Brown journeyed to find the version of himself who had gone from unheralded high schooler to standout at Division II Wayne State to major league rotation piece. He asked hard questions — of his teammates and himself. He weathered a few more middling outings and was on the cusp of a demotion. And he realized that in order to secure his future, he needed to look into his past and reacquaint himself with a long-abandoned pitch.

“He embraced that ass whooping,” Astros closer Josh Hader said, “and just became who he is now.”

Today, the 26-year-old Brown is one of the best pitchers in baseball. Since a transformative relief appearance last May, in which he unleashed a two-seam fastball he had stopped throwing five years earlier, Brown owns the best earned run average among American League starters at 2.20, nearly a quarter-point better than reigning AL Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal. Only Paul Skenes, arguably the game’s finest starter, has a lower ERA in that time frame than Brown. In six starts this season, Brown sports a 1.22 ERA, has struck out nearly six times as many hitters as he has walked and resembles the archetypal modern pitcher, marrying velocity with a six-pitch arsenal that consistently flummoxes hitters.

It all started May 11, 2024, in Detroit, where Brown grew up rooting for the Tigers and trying to emulate Justin Verlander. He had fiddled with seemingly everything since the Kansas City nightmare, changing his stride and hand placement during his delivery to no avail. He had sought counsel from teammates — Verlander, Hader and veteran reliever Ryan Pressly. His best advice came from hitters, though, when Brown presented them with a question: If you were facing me, what would you be looking for?

“Oh, Brown, that’s easy,” nine-time All-Star second baseman Jose Altuve told him. “Hard and away.”

Brown asked Astros shortstop Jeremy Peña the same question and was greeted with the identical answer. Ditto for longtime Astros third baseman Alex Bregman. Each said Brown’s arsenal, with his four-seamer, cutter, slider and curveball breaking to his glove side, needed a complementary offering inside to right-handed hitters particularly. His two-seamer re-debuted May 5 against the Mariners but found its footing six days later at Comerica Park.

“It’s no secret. At the time I was pitching terribly,” Brown said. “I knew I was running out of time. Something had to give. I just switched my mentality. Like, all right, this is going awful. I got to see all my family and friends, and I was like, ‘You know what, if this is my last major league game for a while, I’m gonna go out there and let it all loose.'”

Brown entered the game in the third inning determined to embrace a pitch he had ditched when the Astros chose him in the fifth round of the 2019 draft. While others, including Statcast, call it a sinker, it doesn’t have the standard boring action of the pitch. Brown says it is a “flat, running” fastball thrown with a two-seam grip — and he is convinced it helped salvage his career. He limited the Tigers to one run on five hits over five innings with seven strikeouts that day.

After getting barbecued in Kansas City last April, Hunter Brown has been the American League’s best starting pitcher for the past year. AP Photo/Colin E. BraleyHe picked up the pitch almost immediately because of his familiarity with it. During his three seasons at Wayne State, Brown threw almost exclusively a two-seamer and slider. When he entered the Astros organization, their philosophy was simple: Pair a hard breaking ball with a top-of-the-zone four-seam fastball and find success. He did and shot through Houston’s system after COVID, joining the Astros for the stretch run of their eventual World Series victory in 2022.Brown’s ability to add pitches had already endeared him to Houston’s development staff. During his draft year, he filled out a survey for the Astros on his pitch mix and said he threw a curveball even though he had scrapped it in college. Early in his time with the Astros, coaches asked him to throw the curveball just to see what they had. After the first curve Brown tried, a coach chimed in: “Yeah, you’re gonna keep throwing that.”Considering he had added a changeup and cutter during his time with the Astros, too, Brown didn’t fret about the rebirth of his two-seamer. The pitch didn’t need to move like his teammate Framber Valdez’s. It simply served as a reminder to hitters that Brown wasn’t afraid to throw inside and that they couldn’t hunt the rest of his arsenal on the outer half of the plate.

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“I wanted to go back to just athletic throwing,” Brown said. “I don’t want to be a robot. I think people get so locked in and dialed into repeating the exact same delivery every single time, which, yes, in a vacuum, if you can do that, that’s awesome. There’s not a lot of guys that can actually do that over the course of the season. I kind of just like taking — I don’t wanna say a whiffle ball-in-the-backyard approach, but realistically, that’s what you’re trying to do. It’s just against the best players in the world.”

Over time, as the two-seamer paid dividends and was further incorporated into his pitch mix, Brown regained his confidence and began to understand the advice Verlander was giving him. Mindset isn’t just important, Verlander said. It’s everything. If a hitter gets jammed and flares a ball into the outfield, that’s not bad luck worth lamenting; it’s a reminder that process trumps outcome, and any sort of pitch that induces a weakly hit ball is a good one — and one that can be replicated to greater effect going forward.

Slowly, Brown cobbled together strong starts and began to live up to the nickname given to him a few years earlier, when he was at Triple-A. The team had gathered at the airport at 3:30 a.m. to return home, and Brown was pounding a drink loaded with caffeine. Why, his teammate Pete Solomon asked, would he do that in the middle of the night when their flight wasn’t scheduled to land until 8 a.m.?

“Hey, man,” Brown said. “You put diesel in, you get diesel out. I’ve got stuff to do today.”

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On that day, Diesel was born — and Brown’s velocity numbers support the sobriquet. Only Hunter Greene, Skenes, Skubal and Jose Soriano throw an average fastball harder than Brown’s 97.4 mph. It’s almost a tick and a half higher than last season, a function, Brown said, of a more mature routine. In addition to offseason work on mobility and strength gained through Bulgarian split squats, the 6-foot-2, 220-pound Brown relaxed his off-day weightlifting habit and ramped back his velocity in between-starts bullpen sessions from 92-to-94 mph to 86-to-88.

“His whole demeanor when he steps out there is different,” Pena said. “He shows up ready to dominate every time he’s about to take the mound. Every time he’s up there, you see him strutting around.”

It’s reminiscent of Verlander, whose cocksure mound presence is a defining feature. During Brown’s struggles, Verlander tried to remind him that his raw stuff was good enough to stop trying to execute perfect pitches and instead challenge hitters to hit his stuff in the strike zone. Brown’s walk rate this year is among the game’s best, and on pitches in the zone, hitters are batting .191/.200/.258 against him, good for the third-lowest OPS in the game.

“It goes one way or the other,” Hader said. “You feel sorry for yourself and play the victim or you figure out, ‘Hey, I got to do this to be where I want to be, and I want to stay here. I’ve got to be better.’ And that’s just the type of dude he is. I mean, go and look at the numbers over the last year.”

They remained sparkling Sunday during his first outing in Kansas City since the disasterpiece of 2024. Brown blitzed through six innings against the Royals, yielding one run and striking out seven, and solidified his case for AL Pitcher of the Month. Awards don’t really matter to Brown, though. This time last year, he worried about simply keeping his rotation spot.

No longer is that a concern. Diesel has arrived, carving lineups, snatching hitters’ dignity, writing one more chapter in the story of a naysayer-slaying, doubt-squashing triumph. Now, he’s learning to embrace something far more palatable than an ass whooping: success.

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Tyreek Hill vs. Noah Lyles race would be entertaining, not competitive

Greg Olsen expresses excitement for upcoming Olympic flag football Former TE Greg Olsen is excited for some NFL players to showcase their skills in the upcoming 2028 Summer Olympics and the debut of flag football. Sports Seriously A few days after Xavier Worthy broke the NFL combine 40-yard dash record, USA TODAY Sports sarcastically asked […]

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A few days after Xavier Worthy broke the NFL combine 40-yard dash record, USA TODAY Sports sarcastically asked the then-draft prospect if he thought he could beat Usain Bolt in the 40-yard dash.

Bolt, the former Jamaican track and field superstar, eight-time Olympic gold medalist, and 100- and 200-meter world-record holder, effortlessly ran a 4.22 in the 40-yard dash in sweats and sneakers at the NFL Experience in 2019.

Worthy clocked in with an NFL combine record-setting time of 4.21 at the 2024 NFL scouting combine.

“No,” Worthy answered when asked if he could beat Bolt. “His 40 was in shoes and sweats. There’s no comparison. I’m not even gonna disrespect him.”

Worthy’s honest assessment applies to Miami Dolphins wide receiver Tyreek Hill, too.

Hill and Olympic 100-meter champion Noah Lyles have playfully gone back and forth about competing against each other in a race. Their scheduled race was canceled in June due to what Lyles described as “complications” and “personal reasons.”

The race would’ve been good publicity for both athletes and brought more casual fans to the sport of track and field. But let’s stop the charade. Hill is not in the same league as Lyles or any world-class sprinter when it comes to speed.

Hill did beat Lyles’ younger brother, Josephus, in a 100 prelim at the ATX Sprint Classic on Saturday with a wind-aided time of 10.10. Hill conveniently elected not to run in the final, where the top five finishers all ran sub-10 seconds (all times were wind-aided).

Hill, who competed in track and field in college, has a personal best legal time of 10.15 seconds in the 100 meters. The Dolphins wideout would’ve placed ninth at the 2024 U.S. Olympic track and field trials if he equaled his record.

Hill’s top mark in the 60 is 6.64. His record in the 60 would’ve been good enough for eighth in the event at the 2025 U.S. Indoor track and field championships.

Noah won a gold medal in the 100 at the Paris Olympics with a personal-best of 9.79. His lifetime best in the 60 is 6.43. Both times are comfortably ahead of Hill’s all-time best marks.

Furthermore, Noah’s 10 best times in the 100 are sub-9.90. His top 10 times in the 60 are all 6.55 or better. All of which are faster than Hill’s lifetime best in both events.

The times don’t lie. They reveal the obvious truth.

Yes, the Noah Lyles vs. Tyreek Hill showdown would’ve been entertaining for sports fans. They are two of the biggest stars in their respective sports. But it wouldn’t have been a competitive race.

Hill is arguably the fastest person in the NFL (although Worthy might have something to say about that). Lyles currently holds the title of the fastest man in the world, having won the Olympic gold medal in the 100. They are marquee athletes, but there’s a distinct difference between football speed and world-class track speed.

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on X @TheTylerDragon.





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Ketrzynski’s 21 points leads Canada to win over China in Volleyball Nations League

CHICAGO — Xander Ketrzynski’s 21 points helped Canada beat China in three straight sets on Sunday in both teams’ final match of Volleyball Nations League’s second men’s week. The Canadians won the sets 23-25, 20-25, 23-25. CHICAGO — Xander Ketrzynski’s 21 points helped Canada beat China in three straight sets on Sunday in both teams’ […]

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CHICAGO — Xander Ketrzynski’s 21 points helped Canada beat China in three straight sets on Sunday in both teams’ final match of Volleyball Nations League’s second men’s week. The Canadians won the sets 23-25, 20-25, 23-25.

CHICAGO — Xander Ketrzynski’s 21 points helped Canada beat China in three straight sets on Sunday in both teams’ final match of Volleyball Nations League’s second men’s week.

The Canadians won the sets 23-25, 20-25, 23-25.

Ketrzynski had 14 kills, three blocks and four aces to lead Canada. Isaac Heslinga followed with 17 points.

Captain Chuan Jiang led China with 15 points.

Though Canada’s errors were high (23), the Canadian side scored more attack points (44-34), blocks (7-4) and aces (9-5).

Canada’s men have three Volleyball Nations League wins so far and currently sit in 14th place.

The league takes a break and resumes with the women’s competition on July 9. Canada’s women play Week 3 in Arlington, Texas.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 29, 2025.

The Canadian Press





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Ketrzynski’s 21 points leads Canada to win over China in Volleyball Nations League | National Sports

CHICAGO – Xander Ketrzynski’s 21 points helped Canada beat China in three straight sets on Sunday in both teams’ final match of Volleyball Nations League’s second men’s week. The Canadians won the sets 23-25, 20-25, 23-25. Ketrzynski had 14 kills, three blocks and four aces to lead Canada. Isaac Heslinga followed with 17 points. Captain […]

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CHICAGO – Xander Ketrzynski’s 21 points helped Canada beat China in three straight sets on Sunday in both teams’ final match of Volleyball Nations League’s second men’s week.

The Canadians won the sets 23-25, 20-25, 23-25.

Ketrzynski had 14 kills, three blocks and four aces to lead Canada. Isaac Heslinga followed with 17 points.

Captain Chuan Jiang led China with 15 points.

Though Canada’s errors were high (23), the Canadian side scored more attack points (44-34), blocks (7-4) and aces (9-5).

Canada’s men have three Volleyball Nations League wins so far and currently sit in 14th place.

The league takes a break and resumes with the women’s competition on July 9. Canada’s women play Week 3 in Arlington, Texas. 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 29, 2025.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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Cuba falls to Argentina in an intense match of the Volleyball Nations League

The Cuban men’s team fought until the end but lost 2-3 to Argentina this Sunday in a thrilling match in the 2025 Volleyball Nations League. The match, played with great intensity in Belgrade, Serbia, was decided with scores of 23-25, 25-23, 25-21, 21-25, and 15-11 in favor of the South American team. The main star […]

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The Cuban men’s team fought until the end but lost 2-3 to Argentina this Sunday in a thrilling match in the 2025 Volleyball Nations League.

The match, played with great intensity in Belgrade, Serbia, was decided with scores of 23-25, 25-23, 25-21, 21-25, and 15-11 in favor of the South American team.

The main star of the match was the Argentine opposite Germán Alfredo Gómez, who stood out by scoring 22 points. The Cuban captain Miguel Ángel López (18) was the most productive for his team.

José Massó (17), Javier Concepción (15), and Marlon Yant (12) also stood out, while for Argentina, Luciano Vicentin (13) and captain Agustín Loser Bruno (12) highlighted the group, completing the eight players with double digits.

After this unfavorable result, the largest of the Antilles currently sits in seventh place with a record of four wins and an equal number of losses, considering the performance of the first week (1-3), and they have accumulated 13 points, just like Argentina, but in sixth place, with five wins and three defeats, according to the site JIT.

According to the competitive schedule, in the challenging third week, based in Gdansk, Cuba will face Bulgaria (July 16), the hosts Poland (17), and France (18), will have a day off on the 19th, and will close out against China (20).

Frequently Asked Questions About Cuba’s Participation in the 2025 Volleyball Nations League

What was Cuba’s performance in the match against Argentina in the 2025 Volleyball Nations League?

Cuba lost 2-3 to Argentina in a thrilling and fiercely contested match. The set scores were 23-25, 25-23, 25-21, 21-25, and 15-11, with Cuban captain Miguel Ángel López standing out by scoring 18 points.

What difficulties did the Cuban volleyball team face during the Nations League?

The Cuban team faced serious issues with visas, which prevented all the players from traveling on time for the second week of the competition. This bureaucratic problem may have impacted their performance in the initial matches.

How is Cuba positioned in the 2025 Volleyball Nations League standings?

After the match against Argentina, Cuba is in seventh place in the standings, with a record of four wins and four losses. They share 13 points with Argentina, which is in sixth place.

What are the upcoming challenges for Cuba in the 2025 Volleyball Nations League?

In the third week of the competition, Cuba will face Bulgaria, Poland, France, and China, aiming to improve its ranking and add more victories to its record.



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Bojan Bogdanović retires after making NBA history

Bojan Bogdanović watches as countryman Mario Hezonja goes to the hoop (Photo credit: Keith Allison from Hanover, MD, USA/CC BY-SA 2.0) One of Croatia’s greatest basketball players, Bojan Bogdanović, has officially announced his retirement from professional basketball at the age of 36. The veteran shooting guard, who spent a decade in the NBA and represented […]

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Bojan Bogdanović watches as countryman Mario Hezonja goes to the hoop (Photo credit: Keith Allison from Hanover, MD, USA/CC BY-SA 2.0)

One of Croatia’s greatest basketball players, Bojan Bogdanović, has officially announced his retirement from professional basketball at the age of 36.

The veteran shooting guard, who spent a decade in the NBA and represented seven teams, leaves behind a legacy marked by broken records, historic milestones, and a career earnings total exceeding 100 million US dollars, making him the highest-paid Croatian athlete in history.

Bogdanović shared the news on Instagram, reflecting emotionally on his two-decade-long journey through the world of basketball.

The decision comes after a 14-month struggle with a foot injury that required two surgeries and multiple attempts to return to the court.

“Sometimes in life, you do not choose the moment. The moment chooses you,” wrote Bogdanović.

“After more than two decades on the court, the time has come to say goodbye to basketball. Not just as a sport, but as a part of myself.”

From Mostar to the NBA

Bogdanović’s journey began in Mostar, where he first dabbled in football and water polo before turning his focus to basketball. His early club career took him from Zrinjski Mostar to European giants such as Real Madrid, Murcia, Cibona, and Fenerbahçe.

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Bojan Bogdanović (Photo credit: Man Wiki/Dudek1337/CC BY-SA 2.0)

In 2014, his dream of playing in the NBA became reality when he signed with the Brooklyn Nets. Over the following ten years, he played for the Washington Wizards, Indiana Pacers, Utah Jazz, Detroit Pistons and, most recently, the New York Knicks.

Each stop added to a rich and respected NBA career. Notably, during his time with Utah Jazz, he signed a contract worth 73 million US dollars, the highest ever for a Croatian athlete.

Breaking Records and Making History

Bogdanović broke several long-standing Croatian basketball records in the NBA. He surpassed Dražen Petrović’s single-game scoring record with 48 points and overtook Toni Kukoč on the all-time Croatian scorers list in the league.

He also became the first player in NBA history to hit 11 three-pointers in a game without attempting a single two-point shot.

Above all, Bogdanović emphasised the honour of wearing the Croatian jersey. From cadet level to the senior national team, representing Croatia was, in his words, “not just a duty but an identity.”

“Wearing the colours of Croatia was the greatest responsibility and the greatest pride,” he said.

In his heartfelt message, Bogdanović thanked his coaches, teammates, doctors, fans and every club he played for along the way. He reserved special thanks for his family, whom he described as the foundation through every rise and every doubt.

“I have not reached the end,” his message concluded. “I have reached the other side of the beginning.”

Bojan Bogdanović departs as one of the finest players to wear the Croatian jersey and a respected figure in global basketball. His impact on the sport, both at home and abroad, will be remembered for generations to come.





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Michael Jordan, Cristiano Ronaldo and Tiger Woods in top 20 highest

Home> Other Published 23:06 29 Jun 2025 GMT+1 Jordan, Ronaldo and Woods all rank highly. Michael Jordan, Cristiano Ronaldo and Tiger Woods feature in an inflation-adjusted list of the top 20 richest athletes of all-time. All three men are considered as legends of their respective sports. Jordan is a six-time NBA champion, while Ronaldo has […]

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Michael Jordan, Cristiano Ronaldo and Tiger Woods in top 20 highest

Michael Jordan, Cristiano Ronaldo and Tiger Woods in top 20 highest-paid athletes of all-time adjusted for inflation

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Jordan, Ronaldo and Woods all rank highly.

Michael Jordan, Cristiano Ronaldo and Tiger Woods feature in an inflation-adjusted list of the top 20 richest athletes of all-time.

All three men are considered as legends of their respective sports.

Jordan is a six-time NBA champion, while Ronaldo has won seven Ballon d’Or titles during his football career.

Woods, meanwhile, has won 82 titles on golf’s PGA Tour, tying him for first place with Sam Snead. He has also won 15 majors, with 22 years spanning his first Masters success in 1997 and his most recent major in 2019.

Unsurprisingly, in a 2024 list from Sportico, all three rank highly when it comes to the richest athletes of all-time.

The list includes earnings from prize money, endorsements and sponsorship deals, meaning there are a number of American stars.

It is also adjusted for inflation to give the truest possible indication of who the richest athlete of all-time really is.

NBA stars make up six of the top 20, as well as six golfers, three football players, two boxers, two Formula 1 drivers and one tennis player.

Top 20 richest athletes of all-time

Here is the full top 20 list in descending order:

  • 19) Mike Tyson (Boxing) – $965 million
  • 18) Lewis Hamilton (F1) – $970 million
  • 17) Kevin Durant (NBA) – $1.07 billion
  • 16) Kobe Bryant (NBA) – $1.11 billion
  • 15) Greg Norman (Golf) – $1.14 billion
  • 14) Neymar (Football) – $1.17 billion
  • 13) Shaquille O’Neal (NBA) – $1.27 billion
  • 12) Michael Schumacher (F1) – $1.39 billion
  • 11) Phil Mickelson (Golf) – $1.49 billion
  • 10) Floyd Mayweather Jr (Boxing) – $1.52 billion
  • 9) Roger Federer (Tennis) – $1.59 billion
  • 8) David Beckham (Football) – $1.61 billion
  • 7) Jack Nicklaus (Golf) – $1.75 billion
  • 6) Arnold Palmer (Golf) – $1.82 billion
  • 5) Lionel Messi (Football) – $1.85 billion
  • 4) LeBron James (NBA) – $1.88 billion
  • 3) Cristiano Ronaldo (Football) – $2.23 billion
  • 2) Tiger Woods (Golf) – $2.79 billion
  • 1) Michael Jordan (NBA) – $4.15 billion

A host of other sports are represented further down the list, with NFL icon Tom Brady ($820 million) narrowly missing out on a spot in the top 20 in 21st position.

Major League Baseball’s Alex Rodriguez ($795m) is in 22nd place, with NASCAR legend Jeff Gordon ($730m) in joint-27th alongside boxing’s Canelo Alvarez and George Foreman.

The only other sport to feature in the top 50 is MotoGP, with seven-time champion Valentino Rossi – who transcended his sport – placing in 30th on $725 million.

Featured Image Credit: Getty

Topics: Michael Jordan, Cristiano Ronaldo, Tiger Woods, Lionel Messi, NBA, Football, Formula 1, Golf

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