Racehorse Arrogate dies
Arrogate, winner of the 2016 Breeders' Cup Classic and the champion 3-year-old male that year on his way to becoming North America's all-time leading money earner, has died. He was seven.
Juddmonte Farms said Arrogate was euthanized Tuesday after becoming ill. The Lexington, Kentucky, breeding farm said it was unclear what the illness was and a necropsy is planned.
Trained by Hall of Famer Bob Baffert, Arrogate had seven wins in 11 career starts and earnings of $17,422,600, making him North America's all-time richest thoroughbred.
NFL
All 32 teams have been told by Commissioner Roger Goodell to hold training camps at their home facilities this summer because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Most NFL teams stay at their training complexes year-round, but Dallas, Pittsburgh, Kansas City and Buffalo are among those that stage training camp elsewhere.
The Cowboys and Steelers are scheduled for the Hall of Fame game in Canton, Ohio, on Aug. 6 and will be the first two teams to report in late July. Dallas usually trains in Oxnard, California, and Pittsburgh in nearby Latrobe, Pennsylvania.
The league has canceled all in-person workouts at team facilities, which only in the past two weeks have begun opening on a limited basis.
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
The season opener between Notre Dame and Navy has been moved out of Ireland because of the cornavirus pandemic.
The Irish and Midshipmen were scheduled to meet in Dublin on Aug. 29.
Notre Dame and Navy planned to stage the 94th consecutive installment of the longest continuous intersectional rivalry in the United States at Aviva Stadium in Ireland. Instead, the schools will strive to play at Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium in Annapolis, Maryland, on Sept. 5 or 6. This will be the first time the Fighting Irish will play at Navy's 34,000-seat stadium. The game is usually played at a larger alternative site when the Midshipmen host. ward a new arena, putting the wheels in motion for the rise of Fiserv Forum.
“This is a major step forward in my goal in keeping the Bucks here,” said Kohl, who bought the Bucks for $18 million in 1985. 2018 when they pushed the secondseeded Celtics to a seventh game in the Eastern Conference first round, and their series was highlighted by a sweet Game 4.
Antetokounmpo tipped in a layup with 5 seconds left to break a tie in a 104102 win over the Celtics to even the series at 2-2.
But the game might be just as memorable for Matthew Dellavedova's steal of a Marcus Morris inbound with 1 second left and circus shot at the first-quarter buzzer, setting the Bradley Center ablaze in its final playoff series.