Sports
MLB 2026: Inside 2016 Cubs World Series win rarity
IN THE HISTORY of Major League Baseball, there have been 670 World Series games and just four have featured three catchers appearing for the same team. But only once in all those years and all those contests have all three catchers also produced a hit and RBI — and it happened in one of the most famous Fall Classic games ever played.
Chicago Cubs manager Joe Maddon entered Game 7 of the 2016 World Series against the Cleveland Indians with a script, and though chaos reigned over the course of 10 intense innings, his three catchers — Willson Contreras, David Ross and Miguel Montero — didn’t waver from their jobs, playing crucial roles in securing Chicago’s victory.
A decade after the Cubs ended their 108-year World Series curse in Cleveland, here is the story of the three catchers who made their own history on that November night.
Catcher No. 1
MADDON DEVISED HIS Game 7 plan in the hurried hours the night before after his team forced a decisive final contest in a series they had once trailed 3-1.
Kyle Hendricks, MLB’s ERA leader that season, would start for the Cubs against Cleveland ace Corey Kluber. Even with more than a century of history weighing on the matchup, Maddon chose the 24-year-old Contreras to catch Hendricks over two more experienced options.
“For him to be a rookie, starting Game 7, was pretty insane now that I look back on it,” Ross said recently. “He was really young.”
Contreras debuted midway through the 2016 season, immediately showing he was ready for big moments when he hit a two-run, pinch-hit home run on the first pitch he saw as a major leaguer on June 17. He played 76 games during the regular season and started nine in the postseason as one of three catchers on Chicago’s deep roster.
“I haven’t been on too many teams where you feel like there is competition at catching,” Ross said. “We didn’t care about our stats. I was on my way out. Miggy [Montero] had a guaranteed contract, and Willson is up from the minors and excited to be part of the group.”
With Contreras behind the plate, Hendricks navigated through Cleveland’s lineup, allowing just one earned run over the game’s first 4⅔ innings. When Hendricks was removed in the fifth, the Cubs were seemingly in control, up 5-1, with Contreras driving in one of those runs on a fourth-inning double.
“He was not intimidated by the moment,” Maddon said recently. “A street fighter who put his passion on right after brushing his teeth. I trusted him. He played hard and wanted to win. May have been young but he was a huge part of us getting through Game 7.”
Catcher No. 1 had done his job.
Catcher No. 2
MADDON TRIGGERED PART TWO of his plan when he removed Hendricks after he walked Carlos Santana on some questionable ball-strike calls. With left-handed hitter Jason Kipnis coming up for Cleveland — and with Jon Lester entering the game, it was time for his personal catcher, Ross, to enter as well.
The quick hook for a starter who had rolled through the first four-plus innings has been questioned in the years since Chicago’s victory, but Ross recently offered his explanation for Maddon’s maneuver.
“You don’t want to be too late in Game 7,” he said. “You might be early, but you don’t want to be late. And Jon was firing bullets down in the bullpen.”
Taking out the slugging Contreras meant a downgrade at the plate, but Maddon believed it was worth it in order to give Lester the familiarity of Ross, who had already declared Game 7 would be the final game of his career.
“We had talked about that the day before,” Maddon said in a phone interview recently. “Jonny Lester was going to be a big part of that game. And I told David the day before, ‘Listen, when Jon comes in, you’re coming in with him. I don’t care when it is, you’re coming into the game.’
“I also gave Willson the heads-up, too, that that was going to happen. I did not want to ambush him.”
Known as Grandpa Ross, the 39-year-old was the heart and soul of the Cubs clubhouse, keeping things loose in a pressure-packed season along with being the stern voice in the room when needed. It seemed fitting for him to be behind the plate for some of the final outs as Chicago marched toward history.
“Going into my last game, it was nice to have a plan that I was going to get in no matter what,” Ross said. “Except, I came in and almost wrecked it.”
On the sixth pitch of the at-bat, Kipnis barely made contact on a grounder that rolled a few feet in front of home plate. Ross jumped on it and turned to fire to first baseman Anthony Rizzo.
Ross shook his head remembering the moment a decade later: “I threw the ball into the stands, almost killing Rizz.”
The throw was high and wide, causing a mini collision between Kipnis and Rizzo as Santana took third while Kipnis was awarded second. Two pitches later, Lester spiked a curveball that smacked Ross in the helmet, knocking him over and allowing Santana and Kipnis to come home. The score was 5-3, and the Cubs were imploding.
“Wait a minute, I’m the defensive specialist,” Ross was thinking. “What the hell is going on?”
The next inning Ross capitalized on a chance to atone for his defensive mistakes, blasting a 1-2 fastball by reliever Andrew Miller out to right-center field for the final home run of his 15-year career.
“Being able to connect on one was a little bit of a relief,” Ross said with a smile. “I let two in but got one back.”
Things calmed for the Cubs after that home run as Lester pitched into the eighth inning before Jose Ramirez chased him with an infield single.
Maddon’s plan moved to the next phase: bringing in hard-throwing closer Aroldis Chapman for a four-out, World Series Game 7 save.
Ross stayed in, even though he had only been behind the plate with Chapman on the mound for 4⅓ innings since his arrival in July.
The pairing did not go smoothly.
With two outs and the Cubs leading 6-3, Ross called seven straight fastballs to outfielder Brandon Guyer, who caught up to the last one, doubling to right-center and bringing Cleveland within two runs.
Undeterred, Ross called seven more fastballs to Rajai Davis, who golfed the seventh one down the left field line for a tying homer that set off pandemonium inside Progressive Field.
“I called a ton of heaters,” Ross recalled without much fondness. “It was probably a big mistake. Rajai Davis choked up on the bat like 4,000 feet and connected.
“Too many fastballs.”
Cubs’ game planner Mike Borzello added: “And then we get to Aroldis. We attacked that inning with all heaters and Davis winds up catching one. Was supposed to be up, it was down and he was able to drop the head on it and here we are in a tie game. Brutal.”
Catcher No. 3
BY NOW, MADDON’S plan was nearly out the window. Cleveland had stormed back and the threat of another year of Cubs heartbreak was rising.
Ross led off the ninth inning by drawing a walk from reliever Cody Allen. He was replaced by a pinch runner, ending his night — and career.
“That was a crazy way to go out,” he said. “I’m just glad it eventually went our way.”
In an unusual move, the Cubs were switching catchers between the eighth and ninth innings — but not pitchers. It’s normally the opposite in a game. But of course, this was no normal game.
That meant the rest of the night behind the plate would belong to Montero, who had begun the 2016 season as Chicago’s starter but had seen his playing time reduced when Contreras arrived in June. Montero remained an integral part of the team and showed his clutch aptitude by blasting a monumental pinch-hit grand slam against the Dodgers in the NLCS days earlier.
His Game 7 task was no small one: get a shaken Chapman through the ninth unscathed. After sitting for eight innings, the game was in Montero’s hands.
“It started the night before when we were alerted of the game plan by Joe,” Borzello recalled. “We knew that Willson was going to start and catch Kyle and go as far as that went. Then we were going to line change the battery and bring Rossy and Lester in. Those were a given.
“Miggy was on the fly.”
Montero and Chapman had to quickly lock in a game plan against the top of Cleveland’s lineup: Santana, Kipnis and Francisco Lindor.
“The one thing that got me the most nervous is I didn’t have a feel for the hitters,” Montero said. “I hadn’t caught one game in the playoffs. To come in with the game tied, it’s f—ing nerve-racking.”
Despite that feeling, he displayed calm in front of Chapman and instead of calling for fastballs as Ross had, Montero mixed it up with some off-speed pitches. Borzello had prepared for the moment the night before and understood Montero hadn’t had much time behind the plate.
“I knew there was probably some bitterness there,” Borzello said. “I told him, ‘You’re going to get in this game. You have to be locked in.’
“We’re going to have to trick them. Sliders and a couple splits. Chapman’s fastball wasn’t the same. Miggy did an unbelievable job.”
Chapman retired the side in order. He and Montero did their jobs in the most intense moment, one emotionally spent and one straight off the bench.
“I knew, if we could make it through the ninth, I’d feel good about it,” Montero said. “But I wasn’t sure. Chapman is beat up, man. I mean beat up. We had the top of the lineup for them.
“Like I said, it was really f—ing nerve-racking.”
Cubs exec Jed Hoyer added: “The ninth was the most harrowing, without a doubt. We were a sitting duck there, having a tired Chapman on the mound and he’s a mess. But Miggy did a heck of a job.”
Montero’s night was just beginning.
After a short rain delay interrupted play for 17 minutes, the Cubs came to the plate in the top of the 10th inning and broke through. Ben Zobrist doubled home a run and then Addison Russell was intentionally walked to load the bases with Montero at the plate.
After nine innings on the bench, one in the field and then a delay due to weather, finally, Montero was at the plate with a chance to add to Chicago’s lead. He sliced a 1-1 cutter from reliever Bryan Shaw through the left side of the infield for an RBI single and the Cubs lead grew to 8-6.
Like the two before him, catcher No. 3 had his hit and run driven in.
“The fact that all three catchers played on the defensive side and got at-bats and all had major contributions,” Borzello said. “You’re never going to see that in the history of the game. Game 7? Never again.”
Borzello’s next thought?
“We’re still not done.”
THE CUBS HAD the lead but needed to get through the bottom of the 10th and once again, their third catcher of the night would play a big part in it.
With their veteran relievers used up — and starter Jake Arrieta throwing in the pen on zero days rest — Maddon turned to 24-year-old righty Carl Edwards Jr. for the biggest three outs of his life.
Edwards got the first two batters, but his nerves began to show with a five-pitch walk to Guyer that brought the tying run to the plate. Davis, two innings after his tying home run, delivered an RBI single that cut Chicago’s lead to 8-7.
Maddon had seen enough. Knowing that lightly used switch-hitting outfielder Mike Martinez was on deck, he turned to Borzello.
“Which way, which way? Maddon asked.
“Righty. We want him righty,” Borzello answered.
Borzello’s preparation was crucial with the entire World Series coming down to a journeyman infielder who had entered in the top of the inning for his defense.
“This is big, because when you create a scouting report, you have to pay as much attention to the 25th man because who knows when he’s going to show up,” Borzello said.
Now, the career .194 hitter was about to take the most important at-bat of his life, and the Cubs wanted him taking it right-handed — so they brought in left-handed reliever Mike Montgomery. The 26-year-old Montgomery was finishing his first full year in the big leagues, and his nerves were clear to his catcher.
“The 10th inning when we got the lead, it was a little bit easier,” Montero said. “We got two outs — then it got complicated again.”
Montero and Montgomery met on the mound but neither knew how they were going to attack Martinez.
“Look, on his good days, you never know what you’re going to get with Miggy,” Montgomery said with a smile. “I said ‘Miggy, what do we got, what are we going to throw?’
“He goes, ‘I’ll let you know’ and then turns around and walks calmly away. I’m standing there, stunned.”
As he walked back to the dugout, Montero looked at Borzello for guidance.
“I know Michael Martinez, but Miggy doesn’t know him,” Borzello said. “I signal to him ‘curveball.'”
The Cubs dugout was filled with tension and no one outside of Borzello knew anything about Martinez, the man standing between them and the end of a 108 years of heartbreak.
“Lester and I were together in the dugout, and we didn’t know the plan,” Kyle Schwarber said. “Once you’re out of the game, you have no control. I ran down to Borzy.
“WHAT DO WE GOT? WHAT DO WE GOT?” Schwarber screamed.
Borzello turned to Schwarber and said, “We got curveball!”
“I ran back down the dugout, screaming, ‘WE GOT CURVEBALL, WE GOT CURVEBALL,” Schwarber said.
With the tying run at first base, Montero called for the curve — and Montgomery dropped one perfectly into his mitt. Strike 1 looking.
“I couldn’t feel my legs,” Montgomery said. “I set the International League record for wild pitches because of my curveball. Fast-forward two years, and it’s the pitch they’re calling to win the World Series. It had come a long way.”
Montero looked back into the dugout. Curve again.
“Why not?” Montero thought. “It worked once.”
The next one nipped the outside corner of the plate as Martinez swung and pulled a soft grounder to third base. Kris Bryant picked it up, threw to first and the Cubs had their elusive championship. Montgomery and Montero came through.
“Miggy is an unsung hero,” Ross said 10 years later.
“You forget he had the same pressure that I did,” Montgomery said in agreement.
Montero was the final performer of something that we might never see in a World Series game again. Three catchers, three hits, three RBIs — in a one-run win. All while catching multiple pitchers.
“The fact that all three guys were able to handle their role and contribute on both sides of the ball is incredible,” Borzello said, shaking his head.
“All three contributing like that is a great thread in that game,” Maddon said. “It really is.”
Hoyer added: “You think about a roster with three catchers, generally that third guy is there for protection only so you can use the other two. It’s pretty amazing they all had a role in that game.
“Big ones.”
Sports
Australia cricket split over BBL future after selloff plan stalls
SYDNEY: As Twenty20 cricket competitions explode around the world, Australia’s Big Bash League is struggling to chart a vision for the future, after plans to privatise its franchises stalled.
Cricket Australia chief Todd Greenberg is adamant that outside investment is necessary to shore up the game’s financial future and keep pace with a boom in other well-funded leagues played in a similar time slot.
They include the UAE’s ILT20, South Africa’s SA20, and New Zealand’s privately-backed NZ20 scheduled to start in December 2027, all bidding for the best local and overseas players.
“If those salary caps (of other leagues) are significantly higher than ours over the coming years, and players can earn more in those areas, then players will follow those. That’s a real risk to us,” Greenberg told local media.
“I want to make sure that for Australian cricket, our ambition is to have a league that runs at the key part of the year for us, which is the December-January window, and it’s the best T20 league in the world at that moment in time.
“To do that, we have to have a significant amount of money in our salary caps to attract not only the best players from overseas, but to retain and attract our own best players.”
He added: “The concept of bringing private capital to cricket is inevitable at some point.”
While not a direct competitor as it runs in a different window, the benchmark Indian Premier League has seen massive success thanks to wealthy benefactors, with England’s The Hundred also on a roll after an influx of private capital.
But it is a thorny issue in Australia with an initial proposal to sell stakes in each of BBL’s eight teams stalling last month amid concerns about a loss of control for the game’s local custodians.
While the Victorian, Western Australian and Tasmanian cricket associations voiced support and South Australia said it was open to the idea, New South Wales and Queensland rejected the move.
Queensland Cricket, which controls the Brisbane Heat, said it was worried about player payments skyrocketing to unsustainable levels, and that private owners may not be as invested in the grassroots game.
Cricket NSW, which operates the Sydney Sixers and Sydney Thunder, was similarly concerned that it could be detrimental to how the sport is governed and how local players are produced.
‘Sugar hit’
There are also fears about an Indian takeover, with the most likely buyers seen as the rich IPL team owners who have invested in other short-form competitions around the globe.
Former Australian captain Greg Chappell is in the “No” camp, arguing that the BBL belongs to the states and communities that have built it into a successful and well-attended product.
While acknowledging the commercial realities, he said selling it off was not the answer.
“The moment you introduce private ownership at scale, you introduce a set of priorities that may not always align with the long-term health of the game,” he wrote in the Sydney Morning Herald.
“Private investors, however well-intentioned, answer to shareholders, not to Australian cricket.”
Andrew Jones, a former head of strategy at Cricket Australia who was instrumental in the launch of the BBL, is similarly unconvinced.
“A one-off sale is a sugar hit, not a solution,” he said in The Australian newspaper, arguing that revenues can be better grown through sponsorships, wagering, ticketing, and more focus on commercialising the women’s game.
Despite scepticism, Greenberg remains confident and is now eyeing a hybrid ownership model.
This would allow the BBL franchises keen to sell stakes to do so while allowing those against to maintain complete ownership.
“If we end up not going together at the same time, can we still extract the same level of revenue, and can we extract the same level of value?” he said.
“I think we can, but I’ve got to do the work to satisfy a recommendation that would ultimately go to the members and our board.”
Sports
Knicks take commanding 3-0 lead over Cavaliers in Eastern Conference Finals
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The New York Knicks took a commanding 3-0 lead in the Eastern Conference Finals on Saturday as the franchise eyes its first NBA Finals berth since 1999.
Jalen Brunson scored 30 points to lead New York to a 121-108 win over Cleveland, while Mikal Bridges added 22 as the Knicks never trailed in Game 3.
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The New York Knicks bench reacts during the fourth quarter against the Cleveland Cavaliers in game three of the Eastern Conference finals at Rocket Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, on May 23, 2026. (David Richard/Imagn Images)
New York is the seventh team in NBA history to win at least 10 straight during a postseason run. The last team to do it was the Boston Celtics, who also went on a 10-game run on their way to the 2024 title.
All but one of the Knicks’ wins have been by double digits, with an average margin of victory of 22.5 points.
Cavaliers star Donovan Mitchell finished with 23 points in 38 minutes, while teammate James Harden added 21. Cleveland shot 12 of 41 from 3-point range and 12 of 19 from the foul line.

Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell (45) drives to the basket against New York Knicks guard Landry Shamet (44) during the first quarter in Game Three of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals at Rocket Arena on May 23, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)
Cleveland rallied and tied it at 50-all on a jumper by Harden before the Knicks countered with a 10-1 run. They went into halftime with a 60-54 advantage.
Music superstar Taylor Swift was courtside for Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals on Saturday night alongside fiancé and Ohio native Travis Kelce.
Swift and Kelce, who recently signed a three-year, $54 million contract with the Kansas City Chiefs, took their seats in Rocket Arena shortly before the opening tip.

Singer Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce attend Game Three of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals between the New York Knicks and Cleveland Cavaliers at Rocket Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, on May 23, 2026. (Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)
With the Cavs trailing 91-82 at the end of the third quarter, Kelce and Swift were shown on the arena’s giant scoreboard. Fans cheered wildly as Kelce showed off his team cap and wine-and-gold shirt.
Game 4 is set for Monday night at Rocket Arena in Cleveland. The series will return to Madison Square Garden for Game 5 on Wednesday, if necessary.
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Meanwhile, in the Western Conference, the San Antonio Spurs will host the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 4 on Sunday night. Oklahoma City enters the matchup with a 2-1 series lead.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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NASCAR’s Truck Series and O’Reilly Autoparts Series honor Kyle Busch with moments of silence at Charlotte
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The NASCAR world is paying tribute to Kyle Busch this weekend, and that includes some classy ones from two series in which the late driver had a lot of success.
While Busch — who passed away Thursday after “severe pneumonia [that] progressed into sepsis” — had been a full-time driver in NASCAR’s top series, the Cup Series, for more than 20 years, he still competed occasionally in both the O’Reilly Auto Parts Series and the Craftsman Truck Series.
He was especially known for his dominance in the Truck Series, winning 69 of his 184 races, and at one point owned a team. In fact, the final win of Busch’s career came just under a week before his death in a Truck Series race at Dover.
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Kyle Busch, driver of the No. 7 HendrickCars.com Chevrolet, is introduced before the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series SpeedyCash.com 250 at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas, on May 1, 2026. (James Gilbert/Getty Images)
On Friday, the Truck Series was in Charlotte as part of the Coca-Cola 600 weekend for a race that Busch was supposed to take part in.
NASCAR, RACING WORLD REACTS TO KYLE BUSCH’S SHOCKING DEATH AT 41: ‘CANNOT COMPREHEND THIS NEWS’
Corey Day was in the No. 7 Chevrolet for Spire Motorsports, the truck in which Busch took his final win, and it was set to start on pole after Friday’s qualifying was rained out.

Kyle Busch celebrates the final win of his NASCAR career at Dover Motor Speedway. (Photo by David Hahn/Icon Sportswire)
Before the race was set to begin on Friday evening, teams and fans held a moment of silence for Busch.
Unfortunately, the race never got underway and was postponed until Saturday morning and then again to Saturday night.
The O’Reilly Autoparts Series, which Busch raced in many times and won many times during his career, also took a moment to remember him before their race at Charlotte on Saturday.
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That race was also suspended due to rain.
There will be some heavy hearts on Sunday when the Coca-Cola 600, the NASCAR Cup Series’ longest race of the year, gets started at 6 p.m. ET.
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