Rangers scratch 2-time Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom from start against Phillies with sore neck

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — TheTexas Rangersscratched two-time Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom from his scheduled start Saturday against the Phillies because of neck stiffness.

Associated Press

Rangers manager Skip Schumaker said he expected deGrom to start Tuesday or Wednesday at Baltimore.

The Rangers gave left-hander Jacob Latz the start.

Latz failed to win a spot in the rotation out of spring training. He's pitched mostly out of the bullpen in parts of four seasons with the Rangers.

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DeGrom's final two years with the New York Mets were plagued by injury before he left in free agency after the 2022 season. He then had Tommy John surgery after only six starts in his Rangers debut in 2023, the season of their only World Series title. They won each of his starts that all came before the end of April that year.

The $185 million, five-year deal deGrom signed with Texas included a conditional sixth-year club optionworth at least $20 millionand up to $37 million for 2028 that has been triggered because of the time missed injured.

AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Rangers scratch 2-time Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom from start against Phillies with sore neck

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — TheTexas Rangersscratched two-time Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom from his scheduled start Saturd...
Frustration expected in chase of Tyler Reddick at Martinsville

When the NASCAR Cup Series rolls across the Virginia state line this week and checks into venerable Martinsville Speedway, competitors will not find anything different in Sunday's Cook Out 400 that they haven't encountered before.

Field Level Media

Because it's Spring in southern Virginia, and that means the start of the short-track season, though it is rather shortened -- too brief, to be honest -- in its current state.

Back in the day, there truly was a stretch -- three-quarters of a month -- when NASCAR visited its moonshining roots in North Carolina and neighboring Tennessee and Virginia, usually in the year's fourth month but sometimes in the previous one.

This time it's March, and it's not three visits. It's two.

The 400-lapper at the half-mile Martinsville Speedway, NASCAR's oldest venue that opened in 1947, is the first of just two back-to-back races on bullrings less than a mile in length.

Let's just call this stop in Martinsville and the day race in Bristol a "Fortnight of Fun and Frustration" because short-track racing is usually straight-up fun, though the races will be two weeks apart and not on consecutive weekends due to Easter.

It would be hard to ignore the growing frustration as one driver dominates the show.

Let's start with Chevrolet's struggles.

Through six races, the manufacturer has recorded 11 top-five finishes, which may sound like a lot, nearly two per race, but it has been hard to get all the way up front.

Ricky Stenhouse Jr., Shane van Gisbergen and Chase Elliott have each posted runner-up finishes at Daytona, COTA and Vegas, respectively, but the bow-tied hotshoes have not been able to take their cars to Victory Lane.

One-sixth of the way through the schedule, Chevy is experiencing its worst drought to start a season since the one before 2020, the COVID-stricken one that serves as a line of demarcation.

In 2019 in an 0-for-9 skid, the manufacturer watched Toyota win six times and Ford notch three more before Elliott finally parked his No. 9 Hendrick Motorsports ride in Victory Lane at Talladega on April 28.

Almost all the way to May without winning.

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Chevy went winless over the next six to create a 1-for-16 stretch in nearly half the season, but at least Elliott bailed out General Motors.

Hope springs for the racing group though.

Since 2020, no manufacturer has hauled its way out of tiny Martinsville Speedway with more grandfather clocks, the bullring's quirky trophy, than Chevy.

In 12 races, one of its drivers has left with the odd timepiece six times: William Byron with three, while Elliott, Kyle Larson and Alex Bowman have one apiece.

But the frustration runs through the garage, primarily due to the success of Toyota's Tyler Reddick, who is making this look way too easy at 23XI Racing with four wins in six starts.

After Reddick smoked the Darlington field and ran away from Brad Keselowski by 5.847 seconds -- the largest winning margin since Bill Elliott claimed the 1994 Southern 500 by 6.39 seconds -- the Ford driver said it's basically the field versus Reddick right now.

"A lot," said Keselowski when asked what he needed to beat the sport's new star. "We were not that close to him. He's in another category, for sure.

"He was really in a class of his own."

That's the source of much of the current frustration, and it won't be alleviated until the rest of NASCAR figures out how to outrun the current best driver.

Denny Hamlin, who grew up in Chesterfield, Va., scored the Busch Light Pole on Saturday, his fifth career top qualifying spot at the short track and his first overall of 2026.

A six-time Martinsville winner, Hamlin breezed around the half-mile track in his No. 11 Toyota at 98.241 mph to win his 49th career pole and earn the best spot to defend his victory at the Virginia track a year ago.

William Byron's No. 24 Hendrick Motorsports Chevrolet will start second. The Wood Racing Ford's Josh Berry slotted third followed by Ty Gibbs and Shane van Gisbergen.

Four-time season winner and points leader Reddick grids eighth.

--Field Level Media

Frustration expected in chase of Tyler Reddick at Martinsville

When the NASCAR Cup Series rolls across the Virginia state line this week and checks into venerable Martinsville Speed...
Denver Summit shatters NWSL crowd record with 63,004 fans at Mile High

The expansion Denver Summit's match against the Washington Spirit on Saturday broke theNational Women's Soccer Leaguerecord for attendance with its announced crowd of 63,004.

Associated Press A fan holds up a towel for Denver Summit FC in the first half of an NWSL soccer match against the Washington Spirit, Saturday, March 28, 2026, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski) Denver Summit FC fans cheer in the first half of an NWSL soccer match against the Washington Spirit, Saturday, March 28, 2026, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski) A fan of Denver Summit FC holds up placard in the first half of an NWSL soccer match against the Washington Spirit, Saturday, March 28, 2026, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

NWSL Spirit Summit FC Soccer

Fans at the Denver Broncos' home stadium broke the previous NWSL record of 40,091 who attended Bay FC's match against the Spirit last season at Oracle Park, home of the San Francisco Giants.

In 2024, the Chicago Stars drew 35,038 to a game against Bay FC that was played at Wrigley Field, home to the Cubs.

The match was the Summit's first at home in Colorado. The team played its first three on the road, going 1-1-1. The game against the Spirit on Saturday ended in a scoreless draw.

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Denver was awarded the16th NWSL franchise in January 2025for a reported expansion fee of $110 million. The Summit started play this season along with the Boston Legacy.

After the opener at Mile High, the Summit will play home games at Dick's Sporting Goods Park in Commerce City, home of the Colorado Rapids in MLS. In July, the team will move to the temporary 12,000-seat Centennial Stadium while a women's soccer stadium is built in downtown Denver.

The Summit announced earlier this week they had closed on land at Santa Fe Yards for the future stadium, which the club hopes will be complete by the 2028 season.

AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Denver Summit shatters NWSL crowd record with 63,004 fans at Mile High

The expansion Denver Summit's match against the Washington Spirit on Saturday broke theNational Women's Soccer...
Body found in Colombia amid search for missing U.S. flight attendant

Colombian officials discovered a body Friday amid the search for a U.S. flight attendant who went missing in the country last weekend.

NBC Universal American Airlines Boeing 787 Dreamliner Departs From Amsterdam Schiphol Airport. (Nicolas Economou / NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Medellin Mayor Federico Gutiérrez announced the discovery in a post on X, saying that "a lifeless body has just been found between the municipality of Jericó and Puente Iglesias," in the northeast region of the South American country.

The mayor said the body was likely that of Eric Fernando Gutierrez Molina, a 32-year-old American Airlines flight attendant from Texas who vanished while out with colleagues in Medellín, Colombia, during a layover.

"There is a very high probability that it is this person. The lifeless body is being transported to legal medicine in Medellín for identification and recognition," Gutiérrez wrote on X. "We express our solidarity to his family and friends. I have just personally delivered the painful news to his father, who is in Medellín."

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Gutiérrez also said authorities suspect foul play, adding that officials "have very clear leads on those responsible" and calling for those individuals to be sought through extradition.

The mayor said he informed the U.S. ambassador to Colombia of the discovery. The State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment, nor did Gutierrez Molina's family.

His sister, Mayra Gutierrez, said in a phone call earlier this week that her brother had been out with another crew member over the weekend. She said the family last heard from him in the early hours of Sunday and confirmed that he worked for American Airlines.

American Airlines did not immediately respond to a request for comment. In a statement earlier this week, the airline said it is "actively engaged with local law enforcement officials in their investigation and doing all we can to support our team member's family during this time," but did not mention Gutierrez Molina by name.

Body found in Colombia amid search for missing U.S. flight attendant

Colombian officials discovered a body Friday amid the search for a U.S. flight attendant who went missing in the country ...
Intensifying drought could trigger water shortages, prolonged fire season in the West

Several regions in the West could be facing worsening drought conditions, increased wildfire risk, and reduced water supplies due to record-breaking temperatures and minimal winter snowpack.

ABC News

Much of the West has been coping with prolonged drought conditions that are now being worsened by historically low seasonal snowpack and persistent record-breaking temperatures. With mountain snowpack sharply reduced, the region's water supplies are facing mounting challenges and elevated wildfire risk is occurring earlier than usual.

More than half of the West continues to experience drought conditions of varying intensity, according to theU.S. Drought Monitor. The ongoing drought was compounded by the region's warmest winter on record, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

The drought and record-warm winter were followed by unprecedented, record-breaking heat in March, further intensifying conditions across the region.

Rounds of rain and mountain snow are expected to impact parts of the West in the coming weeks.

However, a full recovery is unlikely in the near term, meaning many detrimental impacts could persist, or even intensify, through the rest of the year. However, the long-term outlook remains uncertain, with the strength of the upcoming monsoon season and thepotential development of El Niñoand other influential factors.

MORE: El Nino is likely to return this year, but its strength and impacts remain uncertain

Record low snowpack

Every major river basin and state in the West is experiencing a snow drought, a period of abnormally little snowpack for the time of year, according to NOAA.

The snow drought has significantly worsened in recent weeks following the unprecedented record-breaking March heat in the region. Snowpack is a significant indicator of drought conditions but not the only one.

Many major river basins, including the Colorado River Basin, are experiencing record-low season-to-date snowpack levels. A key metric in assessing these conditions is snow water equivalent, the amount of water contained within the snowpack. It serves as a critical indicator of the West's water supply, helping determine how much runoff will flow into rivers and reservoirs during the spring melt.

When there is a snow drought in the West, it means "there will be a lack of available water due to the low snowpack to meet the water supply demands of the critical economic sectors we have," Jason Gerlich, regional drought early warning system coordinator for the NOAA-National Integrated Drought Information System, told ABC News.

Cheney Orr/Reuters - PHOTO: A skier stands in a puddle of water at Keystone Ski Resort as temperatures reach into the mid 60s in Keystone, Colorado, March 21, 2026.

While many areas received average or above-average precipitation in the fall and early winter, warmer temperatures led much of it to fall as rain rather than snow, resulting in unusually low snowpack, which typically acts as a natural reservoir.

"If winter precipitation is falling as rain instead of snow, our relationship with water in the West becomes even shakier," said Casey Olson, a climate scientist with the Utah Climate Center. "A gallon of winter rain that immediately runs off downstream is not nearly as helpful come July as a gallon of snowpack that melts in April or May. They are not equivalent gallons of precipitation in terms of our ability to use them when we need them the most."

Snowpack across the western United States typically peaks in late March or early April, marking a critical point in the region's water supply outlook. While additional mountain snowfall remains possible through April, and in some higher elevations, into May, recovery to normal snowpack is not climatologically possible at this point, Gerlich noted.

Drought on its own already stresses water supplies, agriculture, and ecosystems. But when winter fails to deliver significant mountain snow, those impacts can intensify. In some states, up to about 75 percent of water supplies can come from melting snow, according to the USGS.

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MORE: Worsening snow drought in the West will have cascading impacts, experts say

Mounting water supply concerns

The Colorado River provides water for more than 40 million people and fuels hydropower resources in seven states: California, Arizona, Nevada, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming, according to theU.S. Bureau of Reclamation. Major reservoirs in the Colorado River Basin remain well below average, the agency's latest data shows, heightening concerns about water availability across the region.

Lake Powell, the second largest reservoir in the United States, is one of them. Water levels have dropped roughly 7 feet so far this year and are forecast to continue a gradual decline through the months ahead. Despite the recent drop, the reservoir remains more than 8 feet above its record low set in April 2023.

However, current projections suggest that level could be approached, or even challenged again, by late summer if dry conditions persist.

Cheney Orr/Reuters - PHOTO: Depleted water levels are visible at Dillon Reservoir during a season of record low snow pack as temperatures reach into the 70s in Dillon, Colorado, March 21, 2026.

Denver Water, the city's public water utility,announced water restrictionsfor the first time since 2013 on Wednesday, seeking a 20% reduction in water use.

"The snowpack within Denver Water's collection system has deteriorated significantly and continues to decline," said Nathan Elder, Denver Water's manager of water supply. "Snowpack levels in both basins are now the lowest observed in the past 40 years, with accelerated melting underway."

Experts warn that restrictions are likely to expand in multiple states as the year progresses, barring significant changes.

MORE: Summer-like temperatures descend on the West as frigid weather keeps grip on the East

Wildfire concerns increase; Long-term risk remains uncertain

A large portion of the West will likely face an elevated wildfire risk this spring and summer driven by low snowpack, dry soils, and above-average temperatures, leaving vegetation drier and more flammable than usual.

However, experts say the long-term wildfire outlook for the region is less certain than it might seem and the risk could vary in intensity in the coming months, depending on conditions.

"Low snowpack and fire don't have a one-to-one relationship, but low snowpack can lead to an early start to the fire season," Gerlich said.

Nebraska State Patrol via AP - PHOTO: This image made from a video provided by the Nebraska State Patrol shows the Cottonwood Fire in Dawson County, Neb., on March 13, 2026.

The record-breaking March heat further dried the landscape, priming it for wildfires earlier than usual. Parts of Colorado, Wyoming and New Mexico have already seen impactful wildfires this year. Experts say the long-term wildfire outlook hinges on how several key conditions develop over the next few months.

"One positive right now is that the last few years have resulted in limited growth of the fine fuels that are quick to burn, so that does help temper fire risk for areas in the West, however, the lack of snowpack this year presents conditions through the high timber forests where fire risk this summer could be very high," Olson added.

The latest outlook from the National Interagency Fire Center shows an overall near-average risk of significant wildland fires across the West through May with a more widespread above-average risk unfolding across the Four Corners region, including parts of Colorado, New Mexico, Utah, and Arizona in June.

MORE: Megadrought out West expected to intensify, expand east: NOAA

"The Southwest looks to continue with the warm and dry seasonal pattern. One source of optimism is for the possibility of an active monsoon pattern this summer," said Olson. "An active monsoon system in general should provide some relief to portions of the Southwest states, the question remains exactly where that relief would focus, and we won't have a good handle on that until later this spring."

Intensifying drought could trigger water shortages, prolonged fire season in the West

Several regions in the West could be facing worsening drought conditions, increased wildfire risk, and reduced water supp...

 

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