Pop it, lock it, polka dot it
From The GIST (hi@thegistsports.com)
It’s Friday!
From No. 8 CanWNT’s Olympic tuneup friendly vs. No. 12 Australia tomorrow at 3 p.m. ET to Sunday’s 3 p.m. ET UEFA Euro 2024 final between No. 8 Spain and No. 5 England (and our Scroll previewing the match), it’s about to be a footy-filled weekend.
- No better way to kick it off than with today’s newsletter.
— The GOAT Serena Williams, spitting straight facts while hosting the ESPYs and serving with every changeover last night. She’s not like us.
Wimbledon
🎾 For so long, London
The GIST: Twelve days, 672 matches, and countless strawberries and creams later, the Wimbledon Championships — the penultimate Grand Slam of the season — are coming to a close, but not before history is made on the grass.
The men’s singles semis feature familiar faces: No. 5 Daniil Medvedev and reigning Wimbledon champ No. 3 Carlos Alcaraz meet today at 8:30 a.m. ET for a rematch of last year’s semifinal, which Alcaraz won in three sets.
- While the reigning champ has been tested throughout the tourney, Medvedev also needed five sets to beat No. 1 Jannik Sinner in the semis. It’s really anyone’s match in the quest to reach Sunday’s championship.
- Meanwhile, Serbian No. 2 Novak Djokovic walked over to a record-tying 13th Wimbledon semi, where he’ll face Italian No. 25 Lorenzo Musetti, who outlasted American No. 13 Taylor Fritz in five sets to reach his first-ever Grand Slam semifinal.
The women’s singles will see a different champ for the eighth straight year: There must be something in the Italian water because Italy’s No. 7 Jasmine Paolini finds herself in rare company, reaching back-to-back Grand Slam finals. The 28-year-old survived the longest Wimbledon women’s semifinal, a grueling two-hour, 51-minute three-set win over Croatia’s Donna Vekić yesterday.
- She’ll face Czech No. 31 Barbora Krejčiková, who came back from a set down to defeat the 2022 Wimbledon champion and heavy tournament favorite, Kazakhstan’s No. 4 Elena Rybakina in an inspiring three sets.
- It all comes down to tomorrow’s final, where either Paolini or Krejčiková will win their first-ever Wimbledon title. Simply smashing.
Copa América Third-Place Game
🇨🇦 On the stroke of twelve
The GIST: Their carriage may have turned into a pumpkin after their semifinal loss earlier this week, but No. 48 CanMNT’s Cinderella story isn’t over just yet. They can still make a statement in tomorrow’s 8 p.m. ET third-place game against No. 14 Uruguay.
New head coach (HC) Jesse Marsch makes immediate impact: The red and white have more than exceeded expectations in their Copa América debut, making remarkable strides under new HC Marsch, who’s helmed the CanMNT for only seven games.
- And while scoring goals is still a big concern for the Canadian contingent — they’ve buried just two in their five Copa games — Marsch’s focus on player buy-in while championing a more aggressive style of play is already paying dividends on the international stage.
The battle for bronze: A short-handed Uruguayan side is expected to take the pitch tomorrow, while the Canadians could be without superstar defender Alphonso Davies due to a leg injury.
- Canada will reportedly shuffle their lineup either way, giving younger players, like 18-year-old defender Luc de Fougerolles, pivotal international experience before the 2026 FIFA World Cup.
- Can the Canadian debutantes join Honduras and Mexico as the only non-South American squads to clinch a top-three Copa finish? It’s certainly a tall task, but upsets have been the Canucks’ M.O. all tourney.
Copa América Final
🏆 Kicking and screaming
The GIST: The 2024 Copa América final is set, pitting defending Copa and World Cup champs No. 1 Argentina against No. 12 Colombia, a squad that’s unbeaten in their last 28 matches. This one has epic written all over it.
- Here’s what to know before Sunday’s 8 p.m. ET kickoff.
Colombia boasts offensive firepower: Though they squeaked by No. 14 Uruguay 1–0 in Wednesday’s low-scoring (but high tension) semi, Los Cafeteros bring the juice on offense, posting a tourney-leading 12 goals in five matches.
- That goal production runs through midfielder James Rodríguez, who has a Copa-best six assists. They’ll certainly need his craftiness to overcome Argentina, who handed Colombia their last loss back in February 2022.
All eyes on Lionel Messi to lead Argentina: He missed one game due to injury, but the typically prolific Messi has just one goal in the tournament — perhaps the captain’s been saving them for when Argentina has the chance to clinch their third international title in three years?
- That said, La Albiceleste are in good hands on defense, having allowed just one goal all Copa behind World Cup hero goalkeeper Emiliano Martínez’s stellar play. Instant classic on deck.
⛳ There’s a three-way tie atop The Amundi Evian Championship leaderboard after yesterday’s opening round, with Scotland’s Gemma Dryburgh, Sweden’s Ingrid Lindblad, and Thailand’s Patty Tavatanakit in contention for the LPGA’s fourth major of the season.
🏀 Former Toronto Raptor Jontay Porter pled guilty on Wednesday amid the betting scandal that resulted in his permanent ban from the NBA.
🚴 Eritrea’s Biniam “sprint king” Girmay won his third Tour de France stage yesterday while Slovenian cyclist and two-time winner Tadej Pogačar leads the event after 12 stages. Onward and literally upward.
🏌️ American Justin Thomas leads the field at the Genesis Scottish Open following yesterday's first round, while last year’s champ Rory McIlroy is currently in eighth place and has some ground to make up in order to defend his title. The action continues from the land of unicorns this morning.
🇨🇦 The Canadian men’s basketball team lost 86–72 to Team USA in Wednesday’s pre-Olympic hoops showcase. Saving their best stuff for Paris.
🏉 Team Canada’s Olympic women’s rugby sevens roster dropped on Wednesday, highlighted by captain Olivia Apps who’ll look to lead the red and white to the podium after their ninth-place finish in Tokyo.
⚾ Fresh off a series win over the San Francisco Giants, the Toronto Blue Jays conclude the first half of the season in the desert, taking on the reigning National League champions, the Arizona Diamondbacks, tonight at 9:40 p.m. ET.
Together With The GIST
🏅 The road to Paris: A conversation with CanWNT’s Adriana Leon
Our first conversation dropped yesterday, and features gold medal–winning CanWNT star Adriana Leon discussing the red and white’s rivalry with the USWNT (spicy!), how she prioritizes her mental health, and so much more. Here’s a sneak preview:
🤺 On the CanWNT vs. USWNT rivalry: “We're so matched up with them and it could be anyone's game…I think evenly matched is always the greatest rivalry. We always want to beat them. I would love to play them in Paris at the final. That would be epic.”
😴 On prep: “We like to sleep, that's kind of a fun fact. A lot.” In fact, she gets at least nine hours a night. Jealous.
🇫🇷 On Paris: “This Olympics is going to be completely different from the last one we experienced over in Tokyo..and we know all eyeballs will be on women’s soccer.” Can’t wait.
Listen to the full episode today and subscribe for even more athlete interviews to come.
💪 How to support female athletes in male-dominated sports
Attend this month’s CPKC Women’s Open. The world’s best female golfers competing for a coveted title? At a gorgeous course? With sky-high vibes? Say less.*
🔥 What to watch
Tennis icon Serena Williams on Hot Ones. See if the 23-time Grand Slam champ can beat the heat while spilling the tea.
📺 What to stream
Land of Women. Starring Angel City FC investor Eva Longoria, the new miniseries follows three generations of women who flee to Spain to hide from hit men. Comedy gold.
*P.S. This is a sponsored post. Par-tee.Take Your Pick
Consider your Friday night plans confirmed because Diana Taurasi’s Phoenix Mercury take on Caitlin Clark’s Indiana Fever tonight at 7:30 p.m. ET. The young, scrappy, and hungry Fever came out on top 88–82 a couple weeks ago — who do you think will win tonight?
Today's email was brought to you by Lauren Tuiskula, Marga Sison, Lisa Minutillo, Rachel Fuenzalida, and Briana Ekanem. Editing by Laura Pastore, Emily Ohman, Emma Leishman, Rachel Fuenzalida, and Lindsay Jost. Fact-checking by Parul Kanwar. Ops by Lisa Minutillo and Marga Sison. Ads by Katie Kehoe Foster and Alessandra Puccio. Managing edits by Lauren Tuiskula. Head of content Ellen Hyslop.