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One team lives on in the American League Division Series. One team is done for the season.

In the first of two win-or-go-home ALDS games on Thursday, the Cleveland Guardians staved off elimination at the hands of the surging Detroit Tigers with a 5-4 win. They’ll meet Saturday in Cleveland for a deciding Game 5. In the late matchup, New York Yankees celebrated an ALCS berth after knocking off the Kansas City Royals.

Here is how the day went down, from live updates and analysis to takeaways and what’s next for each team.

Jump to: Takeaways and analysis | Live updates

Takeaways and analysis

Series tied 2-2

The best game of the series provided highlight reel moments for both teams, but it’s the Guardians who prevailed to force a Game 5 in Cleveland on Saturday thanks to the heroics of designated hitter David Fry, who wasn’t even in the starting lineup. Fry came off the bench to hit a two-run home run in the seventh, giving the lead back to the Guardians, who were down 3-2 at the time. Fry added an RBI on a squeeze play two innings later, cementing his status as the MVP of the night. The game was tied 1-1 and 2-2 before Detroit took its only lead in the sixth on an RBI hit by pinch hitter Wenceel Perez. The drama continued through the later innings as Guardians closer Emmanuel Clase was asked to complete a five-out save. He gave up a run in the ninth, but closed the door on Matt Vierling and the Tigers, getting him to strike out.

What to watch in Game 5: The Tigers lost Game 4, but they automatically earn the edge for Game 5 because Tarik Skubal is on full rest and ready to go in the biggest game of his life. The likely Cy Young winner shut down the Guardians over seven innings in Game 2 and hasn’t given up a run in the postseason yet. It’s unclear what Cleveland will do to counter him — Matthew Boyd is the likely starter — but either way, the Guardians will be underdogs against one of the best in the game. — Jesse Rogers


New York wins series 3-1

The New York Yankees closed out the Kansas City Royals with the same excellent brand of baseball they exhibited throughout their ALDS matchup, closing out the best-of-five series with a 3-1 victory in Game 4. Led by a dominant seven-inning start from Gerrit Cole, buoyed by a bullpen that threw 15.2 scoreless innings in the series, aided by a defense that played error-free for the second consecutive night, the Yankees reinforced why they’re the top seed in the AL. The Royals’ tremendous season — in which they made a 30-game improvement over their 106-loss 2023 club — ended with a whimper, though that’s as much because of the Yankees’ excellence as it was any specific failure by Kansas City. When the Yankees are playing clean, intelligent baseball, they look like the sort of team that can beat anyone. And with three wins in the books, they’ve got eight more to go for their first World Series title since 2009.

What to watch in the ALCS: Next up for the Yankees is Game 1 of the ALCS on Monday night at 7:37 p.m. ET against the winner of Cleveland and Detroit’s ALDS Game 5 on Saturday. The good news for the Yankees: If it’s Detroit, they won’t have to face AL Cy Young favorite Tarik Skubal — who will start Saturday for the Tigers — until Game 3. — Jeff Passan

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11-year-old rejects big haul for rare Skenes card

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11-year-old rejects big haul for rare Skenes card

The young collector who scored a one-of-a-kind baseball card featuring National League Rookie of the Year Paul Skenes has turned down a trade offer from the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Topps announced Friday that the 11-year-old from the Los Angeles area had declined the deal and instead was going to put the card — which features Skenes’ autograph and a patch from a game-worn jersey — up for auction.

The Pirates had put together a package that included 30 years’ worth of season tickets behind home plate at PNC Park and the chance to play a softball game on the field in exchange for the card.

Skenes’ girlfriend, LSU gymnast and influencer Livvy Dunne, also offered the card’s owner the opportunity to take in a game with her in a luxury suite at the ballpark during one of Skenes’ starts.

While the collector wrote in a journal entry shared by Topps that nabbing the card was a “dream come true,” that dream apparently did not include spending the next three decades attending games at PNC Park.

The team posted on X after the decision that it was “bummed” but offered to have the fan at a game sometime during the 2025 season.

Fanatics Collect, which will handle the auctioning of the card in March, said it would donate its proceeds from the sale to fire relief funds in the Los Angeles area.

The card could hold pretty high value considering the potentially bright future ahead for the 22-year-old Skenes, who finished third in NL Cy Young Award voting after an outstanding rookie season.

The No. 1 pick in the 2023 amateur draft made his major league debut in May and put together one of the most impressive rookie seasons in recent memory. Skenes was selected as the NL’s starting pitcher in the All-Star Game after only 11 starts and finished 11-3 with a 1.96 ERA in 23 games.

Skenes said over the weekend he hasn’t thought about the potential of signing a long-term contract to remain in Pittsburgh, saying instead that his focus is on helping the Pirates take a step toward contending in 2025. He is eligible for free agency after the 2029 season.

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Notre Dame safety Watts to enter NFL draft

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Notre Dame safety Watts to enter NFL draft

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Two-time All-America safety Xavier Watts will enter the NFL draft rather than return to Notre Dame for a sixth season.

Watts made the announcement on social media Friday, four days after the Irish lost to Ohio State in the College Football Playoff championship game in Atlanta.

Watts is the No. 4 draft-eligible safety in 2025, according to ESPN’s Mel Kiper Jr.

Watts began his college career as a receiver in 2020 and moved to defense his second season. He had 13 interceptions over the past two seasons, most by any player in the Football Bowl Subdivision. He picked off six passes this season, running one back 100 yards to help Notre Dame seal its win against Southern California. He was voted to the Associated Press All-America first team for two straight years.

Watts, whose hometown is Omaha, Nebraska, could have returned to Notre Dame to use the extra season granted by the NCAA to athletes who were active during the 2020 pandemic season. Most draft analysts project Watts to be selected late in the first round or in the second.

“As I embark on the next chapter of my football journey, I’m filled with pride as I look back on the many memories and people that I’ll forever cherish,” Watts wrote on X. “I hope that my time in the Irish uniform has helped continue the tradition of those that came before me.”

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.

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Jones, ex-Huskers star and NFL RB, dies at 54

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Jones, ex-Huskers star and NFL RB, dies at 54

OMAHA, Neb. — Calvin Jones, who rushed for more than 3,000 yards in three seasons at Nebraska and was with the Green Bay Packers when they won the Super Bowl after the 1996 season, has died. He was 54.

Police said Jones’ body was found in the basement of a house in north Omaha on Wednesday night. Police have not confirmed a cause of death pending an autopsy.

A friend of Jones, Jo Dusatko, told the Omaha World-Herald that carbon monoxide poisoning was suspected. She said the furnace in the home was not working and that Jones was using a generator in the basement.

Jones was a high school All-American at Central High School before he went to Nebraska, where he rushed for 3,166 yards and 40 touchdowns and was an All-Big Eight pick in 1992-93.

Jones and Derek Brown formed the tandem called the “We-Backs,” a nod to the Cornhuskers’ I-back position, with Jones the backup to Brown in 1991. Jones’ breakout that season came when he ran 27 times for a Big Eight freshman-record 294 yards and a school-record six touchdowns in a 59-23 victory over Kansas. His rushing total against the Jayhawks ranks No. 2 on the Nebraska single-game rushing chart.

Jones declared for the NFL draft in 1994 and was a third-round selection of the Raiders. He appeared in 15 games over two seasons with the Raiders and had a total of 27 carries for 112 yards and two catches for 6 yards. He appeared in one game for the Packers in 1996 but had no carries.

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