

DAN GARTLAND
Good morning, I’m Dan Gartland. I have to respect all the fans who showed up for this morning’s playoff between Viktor Hovland and Scottie Scheffler at the Travelers Championship. The whole thing was over in about 15 minutes after Scheffler missed a short putt.
In today’s SI:AM:
The World Cup is heating up

Kirby Lee/Imagn Images
If you enjoyed Canada’s late win over South Africa yesterday afternoon, there’s plenty more where that came from.
This week is shaping up to be perhaps the best week of the entire World Cup. Sure, the climactic matches will be great, and the worldwide representation of the group stage was a joy, but this week will feature the perfect combination of high stakes and nonstop action.
⚽ Check out SI’s World Cup Daily
There will be 15 do-or-die matches between now and Friday (three each day). Unlike in the group stage, a traditional power can’t shake off a poor result against an underdog. Perhaps best of all for U.S. fans, there will be no more draws. If the game is tied after 90 minutes, they’ll play 30 minutes of added time. If it’s still level after that, you’ll have the white-knuckle drama of a penalty shootout.
I’ll admit I was wrong about the expanded World Cup format. I thought it would dilute the group stage, but I underestimated the number of quality teams that were in the field. Who would have predicted that DR Congo and Cabo Verde would advance to the knockout stage? I wouldn’t expect either of them to win their next game (against England and Argentina, respectively), but their early success was a reminder that soccer can be beautifully unpredictable. And this week you’ve got 15 chances to see something unexpected happen.
A historic WNBA game

Rafael Suanes/Imagn Images
Anyone who’s a fan of international soccer and the WNBA faced a difficult choice yesterday at 3 p.m. ET: Should they watch the Canada-South Africa knockout stage match or the Fire-Mystics game? Well, Portland and Washington made sure people could catch the thrilling conclusion of both contests.
The Fire-Mystics game tied a WNBA record by taking four overtime periods to determine a winner. It lasted nearly four hours before Washington came away with a 124–123 victory.
Portland’s Carla Leite and Washington’s Sonia Citron stole the show, both scoring 32 points. Leite sank a wild, off-balance three off the backboard as the buzzer sounded at the end of regulation to send the game to OT and drilled another deep three in the closing seconds of the first overtime to keep her team in it. Citron had a clutch layup through traffic to tie the game with 15 seconds left in the second overtime, and Portland’s Bridget Carleton hit a smooth turnaround jumper to force the fourth OT. Citron’s layup with 21.4 seconds left in the fourth overtime proved to be the game-winner.
The only other game in WNBA history to go to four overtimes was on July 3, 2001, when the Mystics beat the Storm, 72–69. Comparing the scores of those two games is a great way to illustrate the progress the WNBA has made since its early days. That 2001 game was tied at 50 at the end of regulation, a score teams these days routinely surpass by halftime. There has not been a game in which neither team scored more than 50 points since 2008.
That 2001 game was a slog. Each team scored just 10 points in the first three OT periods combined. Yesterday’s game, on the other hand, was a legitimate thriller played in front of a sellout crowd. The league has come a long way in the past 25 years.
Red Sox sweep Yankees in dramatic fashion
Anyone who’s a fan of international soccer and the WNBA faced a difficult choice yesterday at 3 p.m. ET: Should they watch the Canada-South Africa knockout stage match or the Fire-Mystics game? Well, Portland and Washington made sure people could catch the thrilling conclusion of both contests.
The Fire-Mystics game tied a WNBA record by taking four overtime periods to determine a winner. It lasted nearly four hours before Washington came away with a 124–123 victory.
Portland’s Carla Leite and Washington’s Sonia Citron stole the show, both scoring 32 points. Leite sank a wild, off-balance three off the backboard as the buzzer sounded at the end of regulation to send the game to OT and drilled another deep three in the closing seconds of the first overtime to keep her team in it. Citron had a clutch layup through traffic to tie the game with 15 seconds left in the second overtime, and Portland’s Bridget Carleton hit a smooth turnaround jumper to force the fourth OT. Citron’s layup with 21.4 seconds left in the fourth overtime proved to be the game-winner.
The only other game in WNBA history to go to four overtimes was on July 3, 2001, when the Mystics beat the Storm, 72–69. Comparing the scores of those two games is a great way to illustrate the progress the WNBA has made since its early days. That 2001 game was tied at 50 at the end of regulation, a score teams these days routinely surpass by halftime. There has not been a game in which neither team scored more than 50 points since 2008.
That 2001 game was a slog. Each team scored just 10 points in the first three OT periods combined. Yesterday’s game, on the other hand, was a legitimate thriller played in front of a sellout crowd. The league has come a long way in the past 25 years.

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👀 The top five …
… things I saw yesterday:
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4. Some quick hands by the Valkyries’ Kayla Thornton to set up a fast break opportunity.
3. Junior Caminero’s towering 463-foot blast. (Caminero has homered in each of his last four games and has seven homers in his last six games.)
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