(Washington, D.C., June 16, 2025) – U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke L. Rollins announced American agricultural producers will have greater market access to Thailand and Vietnam and maintained access to Brazil. The Trump Administration continues to break down non-tariff barriers and defend current market access, and these latest actions are some of many wins ahead for American producers. U.S.
June 2025
MLB reveals 2025 All-Star week uniforms, but players won’t wear them during All-Star Game
MLB All-Star week uniforms were revealed Monday, but with a twist. While the league will have All-Star jerseys, players won’t actually wear them during the All-Star Game.
For the first time since 2019, players will wear their primary home and road uniforms during the All-Star Game. Instead of donning an “American League” jersey, New York Yankees star Aaron Judge will don the pinstripes at the game.
So, why introduce All-Star uniforms at all? Players will don the 2025 All-Star week jerseys during the Home Run Derby.
The league unveiled both jerseys and caps Monday. They use the same lettering seen on Atlanta Braves uniforms. The Braves are hosting the All-Star Game in 2025.
The 2025 All-Star week uniforms have been unveiled 🤩 Players will wear their primary home and road uniforms for the All-Star Game itself for the first time since 2019 pic.twitter.com/EcOVzioZ5M
— FOX Sports: MLB (@MLBONFOX) June 16, 2025
While the caps feature the upper-case “A,” most MLB fans will recognize, some fans might be less familiar with the lower-case “a” featured on the jerseys. The Braves used a lower-case “a” logo from 1972-86. The team has donned throwback jerseys featuring the lower-case “a” logo in recent seasons.
MLB All-Star week begins Saturday, July 12, with the Futures Game. The 2025 MLB Draft will be held Sunday. The 2025 Home Run Derby is scheduled for Monday, July 14, with the All-Star Game taking place the following day, Tuesday, July 15.
2025 NBA Finals Game 5: Four things to watch in Pacers vs. Thunder
OKLAHOMA CITY — There is an easy narrative heading into Game 5 of a 2-2 NBA Finals: Can Indiana bounce back from the kind of crushing fourth-quarter comeback loss it has handed so many other teams?
Of course they can — if there is one thing these Finals should have made clear, it’s that the Pacers are tough.
“I think we’ve just got to move on. That’s something that we’ve been good at…” Pascal Siakam said of his team. “I don’t look at anything in life as like a missed opportunity. I always know that there’s something coming up. You’ve just got to believe and move on to the next and do everything that we’ve been doing to get to where we’re at today.”
However, those Pacers now have to win another game on the road against the physicality and intensity of Oklahoma City on its home court. Indiana’s first chance is Game 5, and here are four things to look for in this critical matchup.
Pacers lean into Pascal Siakam
With the intensity and physicality of Oklahoma City’s defense taking the flow out of Indiana’s offense for stretches, Pascal Siakam has become critical. He is one of only a couple of Pacers who create their own shot in isolation, most get those buckets out of the flow of the offense. It’s when that flow breaks down that they turn to Siakam.
SIAKAM THROWDOWN!
He’s got 10 points and FOUR steals in the 1st quarter pic.twitter.com/OiTzDdnQJg
— NBA (@NBA) June 14, 2025
Siakam started hot and scored 20 points on 15 shots through three quarters of Game 4, but took just one shot in the fourth quarter, a 3-pointer.
“That can’t happen,” Pacers Rick Carlisle said. “He is a guy that if we are not playing through him, he needs to touch the ball more.”
If Indiana is going to take Game 5 on the road, it’s going to have to be a big Siakam night.
3-point shooting variance
We could have said this about roughly 1,000 NBA games this season, but it’s especially true in a series like this one, won on the margins:
Making 3-pointers is critical.
Through the first three games, the team with the better 3-point shooting percentage won. The best example was Game 1, where the Pacers shot 46.2% from 3-point range, keeping them close enough to come back and win the game in the end.
Game 4 was different. Oklahoma City shot just 18.8% from 3-point range, but took only 16 shots — they focused on getting into the paint, attacking, and drawing fouls. Indiana attempted 36 3-pointers, with 34 of those being “open” or “wide open” under the NBA’s tracking designations, and the Pacers made just 10 of them. That’s 29.4% on good looks.
It feels rather simplistic to say “the team that makes its 3s will win,” but that is also true.
Alex Caruso’s bigger role for Thunder
Alex Caruso averaged less than 20 minutes a game for Oklahoma City this season, playing more than 30 minutes just twice, and that was by design. The goal was to keep him healthy and fresh so he could be there for the critical moments in the playoffs.
The Finals are as critical as moments get and Caruso has played more than 30 minutes in each of the last two games, and he has scored 20 points in two of the last three games, in addition to his stellar defense.
ALEX CARUSO IN TONIGHT’S WIN:
⛈️ 20 points (2nd 20-PT game of Finals)
⛈️ 5 steals
⛈️ 7-9 from the fieldHe’s the first player to record 20+ PTS and 5+ STL off the bench in a Finals game since 1974 pic.twitter.com/xmermanvg1
— NBA (@NBA) June 14, 2025
” I haven’t talked about being conservative with him at all this time of year,” Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. “I think this is the time you’ve got to do everything you can to try to win the games and pull out all the stops. That’s been the mentality. He’s been great.”
The extra days off during the NBA Finals have helped, but this is the time Caruso wants that extra run.
“These are the games you are judged on,” he said on the eve of Game 5. “You can win 68 games like we did, and you lose in the first round and everybody is going to be like, oh, they won 68 they but lost in the first round…
“This is the time of the year that I live for. This is the time of the year where games matter, stakes are high, wins and losses are more important.”
Chet Holmgren vs. Myles Turner
Myles Turner has been relatively quiet over the past couple of games for Indiana, which is understandable, as he has played through an illness that has limited him.
“I’m all right. No excuses this time of year, it is what it is,” Turner said Sunday. “People get sick all the time. You can’t stop the train from rolling. Take it for what it is, take my medicine and get rolling.”
Turner had nine points and two rebounds in Game 3, although he made his presence felt with five blocks, including a couple of key ones to stall out Thunder threats late. Then it was 12 points on 3-of-10 shooting and two rebounds in Game 4.
At the same time, Chet Holmgren has looked increasingly comfortable on the Finals stage and taken on a larger and larger role for the Thunder.
If Indiana is going to win two of three and take this series, it’s going to need a big Turner game or two. Tyrese Haliburton and Pascal Siakam are the heartbeat of the Pacers’ attack, but it needs Turner to outplay Holmgren — like he did in Game 1 of the series — to help get that critical road win.
Fantasy Baseball: Trade from Red Sox could offer Rafael Devers fresh start with Giants despite switch to Oracle Park
I spent most of the weekend with my head buried in fantasy baseball rosters. A key deadline in my longtime keeper league is approaching. A bunch of big deals, many of them today-for-tomorrow swaps, have already gone down.
And then MLB took over Sunday night and made a trade that dwarfs all of our make-believe stuff.
Rafael Devers and the Boston Red Sox hit an awkward part of their marriage this year. Sunday, the Red Sox decided to call off the union entirely. Boston sent Devers to San Francisco in a shocking exchange. Four players came back to Boston: lefty starter Kyle Harrison, right-handed swingman Jordan Hicks, minor-league outfielder James Tibbs and minor-league reliever Jose Bello.
It ends a relationship of nearly 12 years between the Red Sox and Devers. The team signed Devers, then 16, as a free agent in August of 2013. He made his debut at the age of 20 and has been a star player, making three All-Star teams (a fourth nod looks imminent) and charting in five different MVP races.
Devers has never been better than this year, his age-28 season. He’s slashing .272/.401/.504, with 15 home runs and 58 RBI. His 56 walks lead the American League. Whatever performance metric you prefer is likely a career-best, such as his 152 OPS+ and his 148 wRC+.
Ironically, the impetus of this trade had nothing to do with Devers the hitter. When the Red Sox signed Alex Bregman in the offseason, it meant Devers was done as a third baseman in Boston, much to the incumbent’s chagrin. Devers has been a minus fielder for most of his career. The Red Sox initially told Devers that he’d be the full-time DH, then asked in-season if he’d move to first base after Triston Casas was injured. Devers, still stinging from the offseason demotion, balked at the move.
The other key element to this deal is money — Devers signed a 10-year, $313.5 million contract extension prior to the 2024 season. These types of lengthy contracts are usually good bets to age poorly, and perhaps the Red Sox felt it was prudent to move Devers — now without any defensive value — before his bat started to decline. To be clear, those decline years are off in the future somewhere. Devers, we state again, is currently at his offensive peak.
The current Devers wave could take a mild hit in San Francisco. Fenway Park is the second-friendliest place for scoring over the past three years, per Baseball Savant, while Oracle Park ranks 26th. If you run the metrics for left-handed offense, Fenway is second again, Oracle 27th. Fenway Park actually hurts left-handed power by about 10%, but Oracle Park is a 22% drag on lefty power.
Like many players, Devers has a home bias to his career stats: he’s slashed .292/.361/.522 at Fenway, .267/.338/.499 on the road. The second line is probably what San Francisco should expect moving forward, though home/road splits aren’t always about dimensions. Sometimes it’s nice to sleep in your own bed, eat home cooking, hang out in familiar surroundings. While his slash preferred Fenway, Devers does have more home runs on the road: 120 out of a suitcase, 95 in Boston.
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Devers might also miss the Boston undertow on offense — the Red Sox rank fifth in runs scored, the Giants rank 14th. But you’d expect those rankings to move towards each other with the Red Sox losing a major bat and the Giants acquiring one. Hash it all together and I suspect Devers loses just an eyelash of fantasy value through this trade, but it’s negligible. And it’s also plausible that his new team could provide an emotional boost; Devers no longer has to deal with the stress likely caused from the breakdown of his relationship in Boston. The Giants are also expected to make the playoffs from their current spot (64.8%, per Fangraphs) while the Red Sox are a longer shot (30.9%).
The timing of this trade in Boston is curious given the team just swept the Yankees and climbed back into the Wild Card race in the American League. With Devers out of the mix, Boston has more lineup flexibility for young players like Marcelo Mayer and Roman Anthony, rookies who were likely to be squeezed from the roster when Bregman and Wilyer Abreu return from injuries in the next few weeks.
Anthony, Mayer and Kristian Campbell entered the year with glittering minor-league resumes, but all of them have struggled in their first MLB lap. Campbell had a hot first month but cooled quickly; he’s currently slashing .225/.324/.351 with six home runs. Mayer has a modest .224/.278/.469 slash but three homers in his 18 games, enough to push his OPS+ to 105, slightly above league average. Anthony had just one hit in 17 at-bats for his first week of action.
Boston needs to see the big picture here and let its young talent play, learn, make mistakes. Manager Alex Cora occasionally shields Mayer from left-handed pitching, for example — illogical in the long-term. Allow your high-end talent to grow.
Boston fetched a modest return in exchange for its superstar, in part because San Francisco is assuming the full Devers contract. But Harrison and Tibbs do offer some prospect pedigree.
Harrison was a top-20 prospect on two of the primary clipboards before the 2023 season, and was the consensus No. 31 prospect a year later. His 182.2 innings of MLB work have been underwhelming (4.48 ERA, 1.297 WHIP), though he has averaged just under a strikeout per inning. The Red Sox initially optioned Harrison to Triple-A but that’s likely to be a short stay; he’s 23 and not far from another shot in the majors.
Tibbs might be the key to the trade, a first-round pick from 2024 who’s shown power and patience at High-A this year (.246/.379/.478, 12 home runs, 42 walks against 45 strikeouts). He’s a left-handed hitter who can man a corner outfield spot or play first base. The Athletic prospect analyst Keith Law ranked Tibbs the second-best prospect in the San Francisco system before the year. Tibbs is 22 and has the look of someone who could rise quickly through the minors.
Knicks Coaching Search Notes: Door not completely closed on Jason Kidd; Taylor Jenkins to interview first
As the Knicks‘ coaching search continues, here are a few updates, via SNY NBA Insider Ian Begley:
– The door is not completely closed on the Knicks and Jason Kidd, per people familiar with the dynamic in Dallas. Other outlets reported as recently as last week that Kidd was still a possibility, and that remains the case as of Monday.
– Former Memphis Grizzlies head coach Taylor Jenkins is getting the first interview with the Knicks, according to people involved with the process. Mike Brown, most recently the head coach of the Sacramento Kings, is expected to interview after Jenkins.
– Bulls head coach Billy Donovan is not a candidate for the Knicks’ job, and he is expected to sign an extension with Chicago, as Marc Stein first noted.
– The Knicks have cast a wide net, and will continue to do due diligence on other candidates.
Warp raises $10M to fund fully automated robotic cross-dock facility
Football: Japan beats Indonesia with score 6-0 for 2026 FIFA World Cup
Image: Asian Football Confederation.
Monday, June 16, 2025
On June 10, Japan beat Indonesia 6–0 in the final Group C match of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) qualifiers at Panasonic Stadium Suita in Suita, Osaka Prefecture, Japan.
Daichi Kamada scored twice, and Takefusa Kubo, Ryoya Morishita, Shuto Machino and substitute Mao Hosoya each scored a goal. Indonesia had lost two defenders, Kevin Diks and his replacement Yakob Sayuri, due to injuries during the game.
According to the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA), on March 20, Japan secured a spot in the 2026 FIFA World Cup with a score 2-0 victory over Bahrain in a match held in Saitama.
Indonesia took fourth place in this round and still have a chance to qualify for the FIFA World Cup 2026: that will depend on the performance in the next matches of the Asian qualifiers.
According to Reuters, Japan has scored 30 goals in ten games in the event.
Sources
[edit]
- “Japan beat Indonesia 6-0 in final AFC World Cup Group C qualifier” — Al Jazeera, June 10, 2025
- Gabriel Tan. “In brutal fashion, Japan show Indonesia the level needed to reach FIFA World Cup” — ESPN, June 10, 2025
- “Japan power through to World Cup 26” — FIFA, March 20, 2025