The Las Vegas Bowl announced Tuesday it will move to Las Vegas Stadium in 2020 and has a deal to feature either a Big Ten or Southeastern Conference team vs. a Pac-12 team.
mc-sports
With the No. 2 choice, the Kansas City Royals grabbed Texas high school shortstop Bobby Witt Jr., son of former big league pitcher Bobby Witt.
Ryan O’Reilly scored the go-ahead goal midway through the third period for his second of the night as the Blues beat the Bruins 4-2.
Desert Oasis graduate and UNLV shortstop Bryson Stott was selected with the No. 14 overall pick Monday by the Philadelphia Phillies in the MLB Draft.
Brothers Jason and Josh Sharman were high school tennis and baseball stars at Desert Oasis High. They’ll soon be reunited as baseball players at UNLV.
The U.S. national team, ranked No. 1 globally, will try to defend its title in soccer’s premier tournament, which kicks off Friday in Paris.
To say the Las Vegas Aviators are bridging the gap between the United States and Latin America with it’s new alternate home uniforms would be barely scratching the surface.
With the Golden Knights facing several difficult economic decisions this summer, William Karlsson is a prime candidate to receive the seldom-used offer sheet from another team.
The Golden State Warriors scored the first 18 points of the second half on their way to a 109-104 victory over the Toronto Raptors.
The greatest of all college scorers and Aces guard Kelsey Plum struggled mightily in an 80-74 loss to Connecticut on Sunday, going 0-for 3 in 20 minutes of play for Las Vegas.
Franklin Barreto snapped a sixth-inning tie with an RBI double then cracked a two-run home run in the eighth inning Sunday as the Aviators rallied for a 7-5 Pacific Coast League victory over the Sacramento River Cats at Raley Field.
Tomas Jurco scored with 1:07 left in the second period to snap a 3-3 tie as the Charlotte Checkers defeated the Chicago Wolves 5-3 Sunday in Game 2 of the Calder Cup Final at Bojangles’ Coliseum in Charlotte, North Carolina.
The Aces built a 10-point lead in the first half, but committed 14 turnovers in the second half and surrendered a 7-0 run late in the fourth quarter en route to a second consecutive loss.
Lee6 has the number in her name because she was the sixth player with the name on the Korean LPGA.
It was the lowest final round by a winner in tournament history, and it moved the 27-year-old Californian into the top 10 in the world.