Sparta, Ky.
Matt Kenseth grabbed the lead with six laps remaining but soon pitted for fuel to hand the top spot back to Keselowski, who had just enough gas in reserve to edge Carl Edwards by .175 seconds in a tense finish. Keselowski’s tank eventually ran dry and he needed a tow to victory lane.
Ryan Newman was third, followed by Kurt Busch and then Tony Stewart in fifth in his final Kentucky race. The three-time series champion is retiring after this season.
Keselowski led 75 laps on his way to his second straight win and fourth of the season.
Newton, Iowa
Pagenaud, the series points leader, qualified with a two-lap time of 185.886 mph and gave Team Penske its 500th pole across all forms of motorsports.
Josef Newgarden will join Pagenaud on the front row.
Helio Castroneves, Pagenaud’s teammate, will start third, followed by rookie Max Chilton and Charlie Kimball.
San Martin, Calif.
The 19-year-old Ko became the youngest woman to win a major last year at the Evian Championship and followed that up by winning the ANA Inspiration this spring. Now she’s in contention for her first U.S. Open title after failing to make the top 10 in her first four appearances.
Eugene, Ore.
Gatlin qualified for his third Olympics, and Lagat is going to the Games for the fifth time.
Gatlin ran the 200 in 19.75 seconds to nudge out LaShawn Merritt by .04. Also making it was Ameer Webb, who finished ahead of high-schoolers Noah Lyles and Michael Norman.
Joining Lagat at 5,000 meters are Hassan Mead and Paul Chelimo. Former Dartmouth College athlete Ben True, a 2008 graduate, placed fifth (13:36.40), 0.48 seconds behind Chelimo.
Allyson Felix made it through her semifinal and will be in the eight-woman 200-meter final today.
The 110-meter hurdles title went to Devon Allen, who runs track and plays wide receiver for the Oregon Ducks. Ronnie Ash and Jeff Porter took the other spots, but left out were three Olympic veterans: David Oliver, Jason Richardson and defending champion Aries Merritt.
Chicago
The match was a tuneup before next month’s Olympics. World Cup star Carli Lloyd returned for the first time since suffering a knee injury in April, playing part of the second half after entering as a substitute.
Solo, who also earned her 150th international victory, has been piling up shutouts for the U.S. for more than 16 years. Her first came in an 8-0 win over Iceland in Davidson, North Carolina, in April 2000. South Africa was the 29th country she has held scoreless.
She’s blanked both Canada and Mexico 10 times during her career. Ten shutouts have come in the World Cup and six in the Olympics.
Foxborough, Mass.
Nguyen opened the scoring in the third minute for the Revs (5-7-7). He chest-trapped a failed clearance and volleyed it into the upper-left corner for his fifth goal of the season.
A pair of Crew defenders inadvertently ran into each other in the 71st minute, creating a wide-open look which Kei Kamara easily finished to cap the scoring against his former team.
Columbus’ Will Trapp scored an own goal on a botched clearance attempt that gave the Revolution a 2-0 lead in the 34th minute.
The Crew (3-7-7) got on the board in the 42nd minute when Ola Kamara scored his eighth goal in 11 games.
