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New Wisconsin coach Luke Fickell worked quickly to improve the quarterback room as he added Oklahoma transfer Nick Evers to the roster on Saturday.

Evers was an ESPN 300 recruit in the 2022 class, ranked as the No. 166 prospect overall. He was a 6-foot-3, 190-pound recruit from Flower Mound High School in Flower Mound, Texas.

Evers originally committed to Florida out of high school, but then flipped his commitment to Oklahoma and signed with the Sooners. He sat behind Dillon Gabriel this season, who transferred to Oklahoma from UCF and threw for 2,920 yards, 24 touchdowns and 6 interceptions while rushing for 298 yards and five touchdowns.

Gabriel will be back next season for the Sooners, and Evers wanted a new opportunity. Wisconsin starting quarterback Graham Mertz entered the transfer portal this offseason, and after Fickell was hired by Wisconsin, the coach was searching for a new option at quarterback.

He is getting Evers, who will have four years of eligibility remaining and will be eligible to play next season for the Badgers. The staff also has three-star quarterback Cole LaCrue from Broomfield, Colorado, committed in the 2023 class, as well as freshman Myles Burkett.

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Blue Jays vs. Mariners (Oct 16, 2025) Live Score – ESPN

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Blue Jays vs. Mariners (Oct 16, 2025) Live Score - ESPN

2nd Naylor homered to center (394 feet). 0 1 3rd Giménez homered to right (364 feet), Kiner-Falefa scored. 2 1 3rd Varsho walked, Lukes scored, Kirk to second, Guerrero Jr. to third. 3 1 4th Springer doubled to left, Kiner-Falefa scored. 4 1 4th Springer scored on Brash wild pitch. 5 1 6th Suárez singled to right, Polanco scored, Naylor thrown out at third. 5 2 7th Guerrero Jr. homered to right center (359 feet). 6 2 8th Giménez singled to center, Clement scored and Straw scored. 8 2

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Chourio grabs at hamstring, hobbles out of Game 3

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Chourio grabs at hamstring, hobbles out of Game 3

LOS ANGELES — Milwaukee Brewers right fielder Jackson Chourio left Game 3 of the National League Championship Series in the middle of an at-bat in the seventh inning Thursday, grabbing at the right hamstring that had caused him to exit a previous postseason game.

The 21-year-old Chourio, Milwaukee’s leadoff hitter and most productive offensive player during the playoffs, fouled off a Blake Treinen pitch and immediately stood up and put his hand on the back of his leg.

After an athletic trainer checked on him and Chourio tried stretching, he hopped off the field on his left leg, barely putting any pressure on the right.

Blake Perkins replaced Chourio and eventually struck out, spoiling another opportunity for the Brewers in what ultimately was a 3-1 loss that put them in a 3-0 series hole.

Speaking through an interpreter after the loss, Chourio said cramping was the reason for his exit and expressed confidence he can play in Game 4 on Friday.

Chourio had recently deemed his hamstring near 100% after tweaking it in Game 1 of the NL Division Series against the Chicago Cubs on Oct. 4. He had left in the second inning and surprisingly returned to the lineup for Game 2 two days later, hitting a home run and driving in three.

Chourio also hit a leadoff home run in Game 2 of the NLCS off Dodgers starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who didn’t allow another run in a complete-game effort.

In his second big league season, Chourio — whom the Brewers signed to an eight-year, $82 million contract before his major league debut — hit .270/.308/.463 with 21 home runs, 78 RBIs and 21 stolen bases.

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Dodgers roll in G3, near repeat World Series trip

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Dodgers roll in G3, near repeat World Series trip

LOS ANGELES — The Los Angeles Dodgers are poised to become the first defending champion to reach the World Series in 16 years.

Tommy Edman hit a tiebreaking single off hard-throwing rookie Jacob Misiorowski in a two-run sixth inning, and the Dodgers beat the Milwaukee Brewers 3-1 on Thursday to take a 3-0 lead in their best-of-seven NL Championship Series.

A team that needed to win a Wild Card Series at the start of the playoffs is 8-1 in the postseason behind outstanding starting pitching, an improved bullpen and just enough offense.

“We’re just excited,” said Edman, the 2024 NLCS MVP. “We didn’t play great during the regular season and we’re getting hot at the right time.”

No defending champion has reached the World Series since the 2009 Philadelphia Phillies. No team has won consecutive titles since the 1998-2000 New York Yankees took three in a row.

“You got to treat it like it’s a do-or-die game,” Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy said. “You can’t look ahead, and I think that’s something a lot of teams struggle with.”

Game 4 is Friday. The only one of the 41 teams that overcame a 3-0 postseason deficit was the 2004 Boston Red Sox against the Yankees, sparked by current Dodgers manager Dave Roberts.

“We’re up, but like Kobe [Bryant] said, ‘The job’s not done,'” Dodgers shortstop Mookie Betts said. “We got to keep going and just keep applying pressure. We got to keep in mind we’re five wins away from what we really want.”

Shohei Ohtani tripled off Aaron Ashby to start the bottom of the first and scored on Betts’ double to put the Dodgers ahead, but Jake Bauers tied the score with an RBI single in the second.

That was the only run allowed by Tyler Glasnow, who has combined with Ohtani, Blake Snell and Yoshinobu Yamamoto to give Dodgers starters a 1.54 postseason ERA.

Misiorowski replaced Ashby with two on and one out in the first and struck out Edman and Teoscar Hernández. The 23-year-old right-hander topped 100 mph with 17 pitches and struck out a Brewers postseason rookie record nine, but his fastball velocity dropped to 98-99 mph slightly in the sixth.

Will Smith singled with one out on a slider in the middle of the strike zone and Freddie Freeman walked after falling behind 1-2 in the count. Edman, who had struck out twice against Misiorowski, lined a low slider into center on Misiorowski’s 73rd and final pitch. Smith scored for a 2-1 lead as Sal Frelick made a weak throw.

“Misiorowski was nasty today. He’s got unbelievable stuff,” Edman said. “Will did a good job of capitalizing on a mistake and hitting one in the gap. He gave me one I could hit and fortunately, we were able to scrape one across and let our pitching do the rest.”

Abner Uribe relieved and struck out Hernández, then made a wild pickoff throw past first as Freeman scored, the second straight game with an error by the Brewers closer.

“I was really surprised,” Edman said. “I’m glad it happened. It gave us that insurance run.”

Glasnow allowed three hits and three walks in 5⅔ innings while striking out eight, leaving to a standing ovation from the crowd of 51,251.

Alex Vesia followed Glasnow and got two outs for his second win of the playoffs.

Rookie Roki Sasaki pitched a perfect ninth, finishing a four-hitter. Dodgers relievers allowed one hit in 3⅓ innings. A rookie who moved to the bullpen when he returned from a four-month injury layoff in the season’s final week, Sasaki became the first pitcher since saves became an official statistic in 1969 to earn each of his first three career saves in the postseason.

Eleven of 19 batters struck out in the middle innings as shadows crept across home plate and made it difficult for hitters.

“Take nothing away from Glasnow, who pitched great,” Brewers manager Pat Murphy said. “Take nothing away from Miz, who pitched great, but it was a really tough visual for both teams. Nobody can think of a hard-hit ball hit during that time. That’s very unusual in a game.”

Smith agreed, saying, “That was not fun. Even catching, I know it’s coming, it’s still hard to catch. The at-bats are even harder. That’s just kind of one of those games within the game and it’s who can kind of handle it better.”

Milwaukee, which swept the Dodgers 6-0 during the regular season, has lost its last 10 postseason road games dating to 2018. The Brewers have three runs and nine hits in the series, and dating to the Division Series finale the Dodgers became the first team to allow no runs or one run and four hits or fewer in four straight postseason games.

“It’s going to be tough no matter what we do, and you’re facing the Dodgers,” Misiorowski said. “I think we got this. Stay positive with the boys, and I think just put a few hits together and we’ll be fine.”

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