New Photo - Week 5 Fantasy Film Room quarter season review: 8 Biggest SURPRISES from top 12 at each position

Week 5 Fantasy Film Room quarter season review: 8 Biggest SURPRISES from top 12 at each position Matt Harmon and Nate TiceOctober 1, 2025 at 10:00 PM 0 Subscribe to Yahoo Fantasy ForecastApple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube It's another edition of the Fantasy Film Room with Matt Harmon and Nate Tice.

- - Week 5 Fantasy Film Room quarter season review: 8 Biggest SURPRISES from top 12 at each position

Matt Harmon and Nate TiceOctober 1, 2025 at 10:00 PM

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It's another edition of the Fantasy Film Room with Matt Harmon and Nate Tice. Given we've reached the first quarter pole of the season, the two look at the biggest surprises in the top 12 at each of the four main positions in fantasy. The two do a deep dive on the biggest positive surprises at the QB, RB, WR and TE position and determine if those starts are sustainable. The two end the show previewing the TNF matchup between the 49ers and Rams.

(3:00) - Fantasy fallout from RB injuries: Latest on Bucky Irving, Trey Benson and Chuba Hubbard

(21:00) - Biggest surprises from top 12 in RB fantasy scoring so far

(37:30) - Biggest surprises from top 12 in WR fantasy scoring so far

(1:00:15) - Biggest surprises from top 12 in QB fantasy scoring so far

(1:05:45) - Biggest surprises from top 12 in TE fantasy scoring so far

(1:11:15) - TNF preview: 49ers vs. Rams

It's another edition of the Fantasy Film Room with Matt Harmon and Nate Tice. Given we've reached the first quarter pole of the season, the two look at the biggest surprises in the top 12 at each of the four main positions in fantasy. The two do a deep dive on the biggest positive surprises at the QB, RB, WR and TE position and determine if those starts are sustainable. The two end the show previewing the TNF matchup between the 49ers and Rams. (Jason Jung)

🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at yahoosports.tv

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Week 5 Fantasy Film Room quarter season review: 8 Biggest SURPRISES from top 12 at each position

Week 5 Fantasy Film Room quarter season review: 8 Biggest SURPRISES from top 12 at each position Matt Harmon and N...
New Photo - Babies' deaths in Cameroon show how US aid cuts curtail malaria fight

Babies' deaths in Cameroon show how US aid cuts curtail malaria fight By Amindeh Blaise Atabong, Robbie CoreyBoulet and Jennifer RigbyOctober 2, 2025 at 3:08 AM 0 Aguitia Pascal, a nurse, gestures as he stands in front of an Integrated Health Center, in Bogo, Cameroon September 2, 2025.

- - Babies' deaths in Cameroon show how US aid cuts curtail malaria fight

By Amindeh Blaise Atabong, Robbie Corey-Boulet and Jennifer RigbyOctober 2, 2025 at 3:08 AM

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Aguitia Pascal, a nurse, gestures as he stands in front of an Integrated Health Center, in Bogo, Cameroon September 2, 2025. REUTERS/Desire Danga Essigue

By Amindeh Blaise Atabong, Robbie Corey-Boulet and Jennifer Rigby

BOGO, Cameroon (Reuters) -Nine-month-old baby Mohamat burned with fever for three days before his family took him to the closest health centre in northern Cameroon, but it was too late. He died of malaria that day.

Mohamat's death was part of a spike this year in malaria fatalities that local health officials attribute to foreign aid cuts by the United States.

Before the cuts, Mohamat might have been diagnosed earlier by one of more than 2,000 U.S.-funded community health workers who would travel over rough dirt roads to reach the region's remotest villages.

And at the health centre, he might have been treated with injectable artesunate, a life-saving drug for severe malaria paid for by U.S. funds that is now in short supply. But the centre had none to give out.

Reuters travelled to northern Cameroon - where the U.S. had played a leading role in the malaria response for nearly a decade - to document how the sudden cuts are contributing to delayed malaria diagnoses, inadequate treatment and a growing number of deaths. This story is based on interviews with more than 20 doctors, nurses, community health workers, residents and former U.S. officials involved in malaria programming.

Mohamat's father, sorghum and banana farmer Alhadji Madou Goni, is mourning a son he had hoped would one day escape poverty.

"I feel so sad about my loss. I hope no one suffers from this (malaria) again," Goni, 30, told Reuters as he sat outside his home, his wife next to him holding prayer beads.

"Since there is hardship here, and people don't have the means, we hope aid comes."

U.S. MALARIA PROGRAMME DISRUPTED BY CUTS, END OF USAID

Upon taking office in January, U.S. President Donald Trump paused all foreign aid, including the President's Malaria Initiative (PMI), launched in 2005 by George W. Bush. The PMI is credited with helping to save 11.7 million lives and prevent 2.1 billion malaria cases.

A limited waiver issued in February allowed life-saving work on malaria to continue, but PMI's 30 partner countries - most of them in Africa - have reported major disruptions linked to the dissolution of the U.S. Agency for International Development, the main implementer of PMI-funded programmes.

In Cameroon's Far North region, where Goni lives, the cuts stripped support for PMI-funded community health workers who distributed prevention tools like bed nets and identified serious cases.

PMI funded half - 1,492 out of 2,824 - of all community health workers in the region, said Dr Jean-Pierre Kidwang, coordinator of the regional technical group for malaria control.

The support included a monthly stipend of 15,000 CFA francs ($26), a transport allowance, bicycles and clothing.

Nearly all of the U.S.-funded community health workers are now out of service. Prosper Laurent Messe Fouda, head of planning, monitoring and evaluation at the National Malaria Control Programme, confirmed that 2,105 out of the 2,354 U.S.-funded workers in Cameroon's Far North and North regions were no longer working.

AFTER FALLING FOR YEARS, MALARIA DEATHS NOW RISING

PMI made Cameroon a focus country in 2017, and recorded malaria deaths in Far North dropped from 1,519 in 2020 to 653 in 2024 - but now appear to be rising, Kidwang said.

"With PMI funding, we moved from a mortality rate of 17% to bring the situation down to 8%," Kidwang said.

"Now, with the September–October peak underway, available trends indicate that fatalities are rising sharply, even though official data has yet to be released," he said, citing a figure of 15% for the first half of 2025.

"We may get to a point where all the gains against malaria are reversed."

The Trump administration says it is reforming foreign aid that did not align with its "America First" agenda and Secretary of State Marco Rubio has said repeatedly that no-one has died as a result of the cuts.

Trump has said the U.S. pays disproportionately for foreign aid and wants others to pay more. Between 2010 and 2023, the U.S. contributed an average of 37% of funding for malaria programmes, the World Health Organization says.

This year, the U.S. has cancelled more than 80% of aid contracts, but said life-saving work, including for malaria, would continue. Yet organizations on the ground and the WHO in April said "critical gaps" remained in the malaria response after the cancellations.

Going forward, Trump's initial budget request for fiscal year 2026 included a 47% cut to PMI's budget from the just below $800 million it had hit in recent years, though Congress will have the final say later this year.

The "America First Global Health Strategy" Rubio announced in September stated some commitments to reducing malaria mortality and incidence, but made no mention of PMI or budgets. A State Department spokesperson confirmed to Reuters that the programme would continue.

Anne Linn, former senior community health advisor for PMI, told Reuters that before the January cuts the programme supported 115,000 community health workers across 30 countries. That all disappeared, she said, although it is unclear how much funding has since resumed and where governments and non-profits have stepped in to fill urgent gaps.

The State Department spokesperson said in the future it would provide support to fight malaria through bilateral agreements with partner countries, and committed to maintaining 100% of current U.S. funding for commodities such as nets and drugs and frontline health workers in fiscal year 2026, before asking governments to co-invest. They gave no details of their current annual budget.

The effects of the cuts have been felt in a number of African countries, including Liberia, where some community health workers are volunteering without pay.

In Cameroon's Far North, a region prone to droughts and flooding as well as violence linked to the Islamist Boko Haram insurgency in neighbouring Nigeria, the cuts came as officials were training community health workers to deploy during the rainy season, which runs from May to October, Kidwang said.

Oumarou Gassi, one of the health workers, said he was devastated to lose the job.

"I am struggling to survive. The little I used to get from the PMI project was helpful in supporting my family," he said.

With health workers no longer in the field, more malaria cases are becoming severe, and the U.S. cuts have also hit the supply of injectable artesunate, Kidwang said.

Far North was out of stock for much of this year, he said.

Some 200,000 vials arrived in Maroua, the regional capital, on September 2, but that is not enough to meet the region's needs for even three months, he said.

Authorities are trying to fill the gap but face resource constraints, said Olivia Ngou, executive director of Impact Sante Afrique, a nonprofit.

PICTURE UNCLEAR AS U.S. CUTS ALSO AFFECT DATA COLLECTION

Just how bad the situation gets may be difficult to gauge given that PMI also played a major role in data collection.

That data is no longer online. PMI's website says it is "currently undergoing maintenance as we expeditiously and thoroughly review all of the content" to comply with Trump's executive orders.

As a result, "we won't know the extent to which this bounce back is going to occur," said Louisa Messenger, a public health expert at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas who has worked with PMI and other malaria programmes in Africa.

The big-picture data matters little to Djidja and Daouda Amadou, who lost their five-month-old girl to malaria in July.

Like Goni, they waited in hopes the child's fever would subside before taking her to a health clinic, where staffers referred them to Maroua.

By the time they arrived, it was too late, and now their baby is buried under a mound of earth in their yard.

"I am devastated," Amadou said quietly. "The child's memory keeps coming back to me."

(Reporting by Amindeh Blaise Atabong in Bogo, Robbie Corey-Boulet in Dakar and Jennifer Rigby in London; Writing by Robbie Corey-Boulet; Editing by Estelle Shirbon, Alexandra Hudson)

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Babies' deaths in Cameroon show how US aid cuts curtail malaria fight

Babies' deaths in Cameroon show how US aid cuts curtail malaria fight By Amindeh Blaise Atabong, Robbie CoreyB...
New Photo - West Indies lose five 1st-session wickets in 1st test against India after deciding to bat

West Indies lose five 1stsession wickets in 1st test against India after deciding to bat October 1, 2025 at 10:08 PM 0 1 / 5India West Indies CricketIndia's Kuldeep Yadav, right, and India's captain Shubman Gill celebrates the dismissal of West Indies' Shai Hope on the first day of the first Test cr...

- - West Indies lose five 1st-session wickets in 1st test against India after deciding to bat

October 1, 2025 at 10:08 PM

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1 / 5India West Indies CricketIndia's Kuldeep Yadav, right, and India's captain Shubman Gill celebrates the dismissal of West Indies' Shai Hope on the first day of the first Test cricket match between India and West Indies at Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad, India, Thursday, Oct. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Ajit Solanki)

AHMEDABAD, India (AP) — West Indies lost half its batting attack by lunch on the first day of the first cricket test Thursday against India, reduced to 90-5 after winning the toss and deciding to bat.

Mohammed Siraj took 3-19 in seven overs, while Jasprit Bumrah (1-24) and Kuldeep Yadav (1-7) picked up a wicket each.

The visitors made a poor start as Siraj was on the money with the new ball. He struck early — Tagenarine Chanderpaul was caught behind for an 11-ball duck. Bumrah took a couple of overs to find his rhythm — he also struck in the seventh over as opener John Campbell was caught behind for eight runs.

Siraj put the morning conditions to good use. He swung the ball well and consistently hit a good length to trouble the batters repeatedly. West Indies' batters looked eager to play their strokes and fell for some poor shot selection.

Skipper Roston Chase (22 not out) and Shai Hope added 48 runs for the fifth wicket. It was the best passage of play for West Indies as the experienced pair displayed more caution than the top order.

Shubman Gill led India for the first time on home soil — the new test skipper had previously been in in charge for a 2-2 away draw against England.

It marked the first time in 15 years that India played a home test without Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma and Ravichandran Ashwin. The trio retired over the past season — their previous appearance on home soil against New Zealand last October was a stunning 3-0 loss for India.

West Indies has not beaten India in their last 25 tests — home or away — dating to 2002.

The second test in the two-test series is set to begin Oct. 10 in New Delhi.

___

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West Indies lose five 1st-session wickets in 1st test against India after deciding to bat

West Indies lose five 1stsession wickets in 1st test against India after deciding to bat October 1, 2025 at 10:08 ...
New Photo - West Indies wins the toss and chooses to bat in the first cricket test against India

West Indies wins the toss and chooses to bat in the first cricket test against India October 2, 2025 at 12:08 PM 0 West Indies' captain Roston Chase, right, and India's captain Shubman Gill after toss a coin on the first day of the first Test cricket match between India and West Indies at Narendra M...

- - West Indies wins the toss and chooses to bat in the first cricket test against India

October 2, 2025 at 12:08 PM

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West Indies' captain Roston Chase, right, and India's captain Shubman Gill after toss a coin on the first day of the first Test cricket match between India and West Indies at Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad, India, Thursday, Oct. 2, 2025. (AP Photo/Ajit Solanki) ()

AHMEDABAD, India (AP) — West Indies captain Roston Chase won the toss Thursday and decided to bat first in the opening cricket test against India.

Shubman Gill will lead India for the first time on home soil — the new test skipper had previously been in in charge for a 2-2 away draw against England.

It marks the first time in 15 years that India will play a home test without Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma and Ravichandran Ashwin. The trio retired over the past season — their previous appearance on home soil against New Zealand last October was a stunning 3-0 loss for India.

India has opted to go with three spinners and two pacers. Jasprit Bumrah and Mohammed Siraj will lead the pace attack, while Ravindra Jadeja, Kuldeep Yadav and Washington Sundar form the spin trio.

All-rounder Nitish Reddy returns after being injured during the English series. Dhruv Jurel will keep wickets in place of injured Rishabh Pant. Jadeja has been named vice-captain for this series in Pant's absence.

For West Indies, pacers Alzarri Joseph and Shamar Joseph miss out due to injury. The visitors too have opted for a two pacer-three spinner combination, with bowling allrounder Johann Layne and left-arm spinner Kharry Pierre handed test debuts.

West Indies has not beaten India in their last 25 tests — home or away — dating to 2002.

The second test in the two-test series is set to begin Oct. 10 in New Delhi.

___

Teams:

India: Yashasvi Jaiswal, K.L. Rahul, Sai Sudharsan, Shubman Gill (captain), Dhruv Jurel, Ravindra Jadeja, Washington Sundar, Nitish Kumar Reddy, Kuldeep Yadav, Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Siraj.

West Indies: Tagenarine Chanderpaul, John Campbell, Alick Athanaze, Brandon King, Shai Hope, Roston Chase (captain), Justin Greaves, Jomel Warrican, Khary Pierre, Johann Layne, Jayden Seales.

___

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West Indies wins the toss and chooses to bat in the first cricket test against India

West Indies wins the toss and chooses to bat in the first cricket test against India October 2, 2025 at 12:08 PM 0...
New Photo - South Korea's president apologizes over poorly managed foreign adoption programs

South Korea's president apologizes over poorly managed foreign adoption programs HYUNGJIN KIM October 2, 2025 at 7:09 AM 0 South Korean President Lee Jae Myung delivers his speech during a celebration to mark 77th Armed Forces Day in Gyeryong, South Korea Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2025.

- - South Korea's president apologizes over poorly managed foreign adoption programs

HYUNG-JIN KIM October 2, 2025 at 7:09 AM

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South Korean President Lee Jae Myung delivers his speech during a celebration to mark 77th Armed Forces Day in Gyeryong, South Korea Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2025. (Kim Hong-Ji/Pool Photo via AP) ()

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea's president apologized Thursday for poorly managed foreign adoption programs that were rife with abuses and fraud, months after the country's truth commission admitted state responsibilities for such practices for the first time.

President Lee Jae Myung said in a Facebook post that he was offering "heartfelt apology and words of comfort" on behalf of the country to South Koreans adopted abroad and their adoptive and birth families.

Findings by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and recent court rulings have confirmed some cases of human rights abuses in the course of international adoptions, Lee said, adding that the government failed to play its role in such cases. He did not elaborate.

Lee said he "feels heavy-hearted" when he thinks about "anxiety, pain and confusion" that South Korean adoptees would have suffered when they were sent abroad as children. He asked officials to formulate systems to safeguard the human rights of adoptees and support their efforts to find their birth parents.

South Korea has faced growing pressure to address widespread fraud and abuse that plagued its adoption programs, particularly during a heyday in the 1970s and 1980s when the country allowed thousands of children to be adopted each year.

Many adoptees discovered their records were falsified to portray them as abandoned orphans, while others were carelessly removed, or even stolen, from their birth families.

In a landmark report in March, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission concluded the government bore responsibility for facilitating adoption programs that were driven by efforts to reduce welfare costs. The report followed a nearly three-year investigation into complaints from 367 adoptees in Europe, the United States and Australia.

Its finding broadly aligned with a 2024 investigation, in collaboration with Frontline (PBS), which detailed how South Korea's governments, Western countries and adoption agencies worked in tandem to supply around 200,000 Korean children to parents overseas, despite years of evidence that many were procured through questionable or outright unscrupulous means.

After years of delay, South Korea in July ratified the Hague Adoption Convention, an international treaty meant to safeguard international adoptions. The treaty took effect in South Korea on Wednesday.

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South Korea's president apologizes over poorly managed foreign adoption programs

South Korea's president apologizes over poorly managed foreign adoption programs HYUNGJIN KIM October 2, 2025 ...
New Photo - MLB playoffs 2025: Yankees force winner-take-all Game 3 vs. Red Sox with Jazz Chisholm Jr.'s dash home

MLB playoffs 2025: Yankees force winnertakeall Game 3 vs. Red Sox with Jazz Chisholm Jr.'s dash home Jake MintzOctober 2, 2025 at 6:10 AM 0 NEW YORK — Before Jazz Chisholm Jr.

- - MLB playoffs 2025: Yankees force winner-take-all Game 3 vs. Red Sox with Jazz Chisholm Jr.'s dash home

Jake MintzOctober 2, 2025 at 6:10 AM

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NEW YORK — Before Jazz Chisholm Jr.'s right hand swiped across home plate to score the winning run on Wednesday, Aaron Judge was already vaulting his enormous frame up and over the dugout railing.

The Yankees' captain swished his right arm through the air in jubilation, clapped his hands together, then pointed toward the hero of the moment, catcher Austin Wells, and hollered an emphatic "Let's go, baby!"

Wells' timely knock and Chisholm's ensuing mad dash sent Judge — and all of Yankee Stadium behind him — into a familiar October pandemonium. With two outs in the bottom of the eighth and Chisholm on first, Wells stroked a full-count changeup fair by a hair down the right-field line. The yard rocked and rattled as the speedy Bahamian flew around the bases. The place exploded with glee when he slid in just ahead of the tag to give the Yankees a 4-3 lead they wouldn't relinquish.

And for those 9.16 seconds — the time it took Chisholm to go from first to home — Judge, the man on whose sturdy shoulders all this rests, acted no different than the 46,500 other pinstripe die-hards packed into the stands.

He just happened to have a slightly better view of the action.

"I'm a fan of all these guys in this room, you know," Judge admitted after the game. "So when they come up with a big moment like that, I'm their biggest supporter, biggest fan."

For Chisholm, the unfettered joy of wild-card Game 2 stood in stark contrast to his frustrating experience the night before. With the Yankees facing Boston's ace left-hander Garrett Crochet, manager Aaron Boone opted to sit Chisholm in favor of right-handed-hitting infielder Amed Rosario to capitalize on the platoon advantage. That decision came despite Chisholm — who this year became just the third Yankee ever to rip 30 homers and steal 30 bags in a season — getting starts in 26 of the team's previous 27 games against left-handed starters. On Tuesday, Rosario went 0-for-3.

And when the media inquired about his night off following the Yankees' 3-1 loss in Game 1, Chisholm was visibly displeased, turning his back on reporters and offering only an "I guess" when asked if he had been surprised to not start. His attitude in that moment fueled speculation that he and Boone might be embroiled in a deeper disagreement, but both parties insisted multiple times Wednesday that such was not the case.

[Get more New York news: Yankees team feed]

"Jazz and I are good," Boone said. "No concerns that he was going to go out there and get it done. He loves to play. He feels a responsibility to us, his teammates. And, you know, he and I have always been good, despite what you may think happened yesterday."

For his part, Chisholm said he got over the frustrating night and his team's loss by playing "MLB The Show."

Whatever he did, it seemed to work. And on Wednesday, Chisholm's game-winning sprint was made possible only by his running hard the entire play. With the count full, he was going on the pitch, and he appeared to be hoofing it full-gas the entire time. That enabled him to arrive at home just ahead of a 98.4-mph throw from Red Sox right fielder Nate Eaton.

That play proved to be the difference in what was yet another fabulously played game between the sport's most notorious rivals. New York opened the scoring on a Ben Rice two-run tank in the first inning. Boston punched back via Trevor Story's two-RBI single in the top of the third. Then, with two on and one out in the bottom of that frame, Red Sox manager Alex Cora changed the tenor of the evening by pulling starter Brayan Bello earlier than anybody could've expected.

"It was a tough lineup. A lot of lefties," the veteran skipper explained afterward. "The at-bats were getting better with the lefties, and we had a bunch of [lefties] in the bullpen. Felt like, at that point, kind of like we have to do this."

That unleashed Boston's bullpen carousel, which kept New York's lineup at bay for the middle innings, other than a clutch RBI single from Judge in the fifth. Boston returned the favor almost immediately when Story started the sixth with a solo blast off Yankees starter Carlos Rodón, who was pulled after he walked the first two hitters in the seventh. In came boisterous righty reliever Fernando Cruz, who escaped the jam, going full Vesuvius on his way back to the dugout.

Fernando Cruz is all @Yankees fans right now!#Postseason pic.twitter.com/clwLSNXoNo

— MLB (@MLB) October 2, 2025

That all set up Wells' game-winning single, Chisholm's fleet-footed scamper and Judge's inspired reaction. And now the focus turns to a winner-take-all Game 3 on Thursday, slated to begin at 8:08 p.m. ET after the Dodgers' dispatching of the Reds.

Both the Yankees and the Red Sox will send rookie starters to the mound Thursday. It'll be righty Cam Schlittler for New York and southpaw Connelly Early for Boston. Both are sure to be on a short leash at the first sight of real trouble, so expect a cavalcade of relievers. The first two games of this series have been delightfully crisp, wonderfully tense, a nostalgic callback to the Yanks-Sox playoff games of yesteryear, save for the violence.

And the stakes entering Game 3 are massive. Both these clubs have legitimate World Series aspirations. Boone has repeatedly referred to this Yankees team as the most talented he has ever managed. Any team that employs Garrett Crochet has a shot.

But somebody's season is ending Thursday. That means that no matter how things play out in Game 3, it'll be theater.

That's exactly how it should be for Red Sox vs. Yankees.

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MLB playoffs 2025: Yankees force winner-take-all Game 3 vs. Red Sox with Jazz Chisholm Jr.'s dash home

MLB playoffs 2025: Yankees force winnertakeall Game 3 vs. Red Sox with Jazz Chisholm Jr.'s dash home Jake Mint...
New Photo - Yankees, Guardians and Padres extend their seasons; Dodgers advance to face Phillies

Yankees, Guardians and Padres extend their seasons; Dodgers advance to face Phillies The October 2, 2025 at 6:19 AM 0 New York Yankees Jazz Chisholm Jr.

- - Yankees, Guardians and Padres extend their seasons; Dodgers advance to face Phillies

The October 2, 2025 at 6:19 AM

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New York Yankees Jazz Chisholm Jr. dives into home plate to score on a hit by Austin Wells against the Boston Red Sox during the eighth inning of Game 2 of an American League wild-card baseball playoff series, Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II) ()

NEW YORK (AP) — Jazz Chisholm Jr. zipped all the way home from first base on Austin Wells' tiebreaking single in the eighth inning, and the New York Yankees extended their season Wednesday night with a 4-3 victory over the Boston Red Sox in Game 2 of their AL Wild Card Series.

Unhappy he was left out of the starting lineup in the opener, Chisholm also made a critical defensive play at second base that helped the Yankees send the best-of-three playoff to a decisive Game 3 on Thursday night in the Bronx.

In the latest chapter of baseball's most storied rivalry, the winner advances to face AL East champion Toronto in a best-of-five Division Series beginning Saturday.

Ben Rice hit an early two-run homer and Aaron Judge had an RBI single for the Yankees, who got three innings of scoreless relief from their shaky bullpen after starter Carlos Rodón put the first two batters on in the seventh.

Devin Williams worked a one-hit eighth for the win, and David Bednar got three outs for his first postseason save.

Trevor Story homered and drove in all three runs for the Red Sox, who won the series opener 3-1 on Tuesday night behind ace lefty Garrett Crochet.

GUARDIANS 6, TIGERS 1

CLEVELAND (AP) — Brayan Rocchio and Bo Naylor homered during a five-run eighth inning and Cleveland evened its AL Wild Card Series against Detroit with a victory in Game 2.

George Valera also went deep as the Guardians forced a deciding game in the best-of-three series.

The winner Thursday faces the Seattle Mariners in a Division Series. No team has lost Game 1 of a Wild Card Series and advanced since the expanded round began in 2022.

Javier Báez had two hits and an RBI for the Tigers, who were 1 for 15 with runners in scoring position and stranded 15 runners.

Detroit had the bases loaded with two out sin the ninth inning, but Cade Smith got Dillon Dingler to line out to first baseman C.J. Kayfus.

The game was tied 1-1 with one out in the eighth inning when Rocchio connected on a 99.9 mph fastball from losing pitcher Troy Melton and drove it 379 feet into the right-field stands for his second homer in three games. He had a three-run drive in the 10th inning on Sunday to give the Guardians a 9-8 victory over Texas Rangers in the regular-season finale.

The 24-year-old Venezuelan infielder has a .308 batting average (12 for 39) in 12 postseason games.

Daniel Schneemann added an RBI double before Naylor golfed a sweeper from Brant Hurter over the right-field wall for a five-run lead.

Jakob Junis got the win as the Guardians bullpen held Detroit scoreless over 5 1/3 innings.

Cleveland took the lead in the first when Valera drove a 94.1 mph fastball on the upper half of the strike zone from starter Casey Mize over the wall in center field. The homer came on a full count and the seventh pitch of the at-bat.

Detroit tied it in the fourth and nearly took the lead. Báez had a base hit up the middle to drive in Riley Greene and Dingler after Zach McKinstry appeared to beat José Ramírez's tag at third on a great throw by Chase DeLauter, who was making his big league debut. A video review overturned the safe call by umpire Stu Scheurwater and Dingler's run came off the board.

Detroit had runners at the corners with no outs in the seventh after Gleyber Torres was hit by a pitch and advanced to third on Kerry Carpenter's hit. Hunter Gaddis retired Spencer Torkelson on a shallow flyout, and Tim Herrin struck out Jahmai Jones and Wenceel Pérez.

PADRES 3, CUBS 0

CHICAGO (AP) — Manny Machado hit a two-run homer, Mason Miller dominated again and San Diego beat Chicago, sending their NL Wild Card Series to a decisive third game.

Jackson Merrill hit an early sacrifice fly as San Diego avoided elimination after losing 3-1 on Tuesday. Dylan Cease struck out five in 3 2/3 innings before handing the ball to his team's hard-throwing bullpen.

The finale of the best-of-three series is back at Wrigley Field on Thursday.

The playoff-tested Padres are looking for a repeat of 2020, when they dropped Game 1 in the special pandemic wild-card round before advancing with two straight victories against St. Louis. Machado also homered in Game 2 of that series.

Chicago finished with four hits. The franchise is making its first appearance in the playoffs in five years, and it hasn't advanced since it eliminated Washington in a 2017 NL Division Series.

San Diego jumped in front on Merrill's flyball to right off Andrew Kittredge in the first, driving in Fernando Tatis Jr. Kittredge started for Chicago as an opener, and the right-hander was replaced by left-hander Shota Imanaga in the second.

The Cubs threatened in the fourth, putting runners on first and second with two down. Adrian Morejon then came in and retired Pete Crow-Armstrong on a bouncer to first.

The Padres added two more runs on Machado's 404-foot drive to left off Imanaga in the fifth. Tatis reached on a leadoff walk and advanced on a sacrifice ahead of Machado's 12th career playoff homer.

The three runs were more than enough for San Diego's bullpen, with Miller and Robert Suarez combining for 14 pitches of over 100 mph.

DODGERS 8, REDS 4

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Yoshinobu Yamamoto struck out nine while pitching into the seventh inning and Los Angeles broke it open with a four-run sixth inning to beat Cincinnati and advance to the National League Division Series.

After hitting a franchise playoff-tying five home runs in a 10-5 win in the NL Wild Card Series opener Tuesday, the Dodgers eliminated the Reds by playing small ball and rapping out 13 hits — two fewer than in Game 1. Mookie Betts went 4 for 5 with three doubles.

The Dodgers advanced to face the Phillies in the NLDS starting Saturday in Philadelphia. The teams last met in the postseason in 2009, when the Phillies beat the Dodgers in the NL Championship Series for the second straight year.

After the Reds took a 2-0 lead in the first, Yamamoto retired the next 13 batters.

The Dodgers rallied to take a 3-2 lead before the Japanese right-hander wiggled his way out of a huge jam in the sixth. The Reds loaded the bases with no outs on consecutive singles by TJ Friedl, Spencer Steer and former Dodger Gavin Lux.

Austin Hays grounded into a fielder's choice to shortstop and Betts fired home, where catcher Ben Rortvedt stomped on the plate to get Friedl. Yamamoto then retired Sal Stewart and Elly De La Cruz on back-to-back swinging strikeouts to end the threat.

With blue rally towels waving, Yamamoto walked off to a standing ovation from the crowd of 50,465.

He got the first two outs of the seventh before leaving to a second ovation. The right-hander allowed two runs, four hits and walked two on a career-high 113 pitches.

For the second straight night, the fans' mood soured in the eighth. Reliever Emmet Sheehan gave up two runs, making it 8-4, before the Reds brought the tying run to the plate against Alex Vesia. He got Friedl on a called third strike to end the inning in which Sheehan and Vesia made a combined 41 pitches. On Tuesday, three Dodgers relievers needed 59 pitches to get three outs in the eighth.

Rookie Roki Sasaki pitched the ninth, striking out Steer and Lux on pitches that touched 101 mph.

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Source: "AOL Sports"

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