Byron Buxton's RBI double in 11th inning gives Twins a 2-1 victory over Guardians

CLEVELAND (AP) — Byron Buxton doubled off the wall in left-center with one out in the 11th inning, scoring automatic runner Matt Wallner, and the Minnesota Twins beat the Cleveland Guardians 2-1 on Saturday night.

Associated Press Minnesota Twins' Byron Buxton rounds the bases after hitting a solo home run off Cleveland Guardians starting pitcher Tanner Bibee during the first inning of a baseball game, Saturday, May 9, 2026, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Phil Long) Cleveland Guardians' Jose Ramirez watches his single off Minnesota Twins starting pitcher Joe Ryan as Victor Caratini looks on during the fourth inning of a baseball game, Saturday, May 9, 2026, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Phil Long) Minnesota Twins' Josh Bell (56) walks back to the dugout after striking out against Cleveland Guardians starting pitcher Tanner Bibee as umpire Paul Clemons, left, makes the call during the fourth inning of a baseball game, Saturday, May 9, 2026, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Phil Long) CORRECTION Cleveland Guardians starting pitcher Tanner Bibee winds up to deliver against the Minnesota Twins during the first inning of a baseball game, Saturday, May 9, 2026, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Phil Long)

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Buxton also drove in Minnesota’s first run and had its only other hit, belting his 22nd career leadoff homer on the third pitch of the game from Tanner Bibee. The Twins and Guardians each finished with two hits.

Cleveland loaded the bases with one out in the ninth and 10th, but Eric Orze (1-1) worked his way out of both jams in his 1 2/3 innings. Luis García pitched the 11th for his first save.

Rule 5 Draft selection Peyton Pallette (1-2) allowed one unearned run in two innings as AL Central Division leader Cleveland had its three-game winning streak snapped.

Buxton has 13 homers — all in his last 23 games — and is two behind MLB leaders Aaron Judge of the Yankees and Munetaka Murakami of the White Sox. Minnesota is 20-40 against the Guardians since the start of the 2022 season.

The Guardians tied it at 1-all in the fourth when José Ramírez singled off Joe Ryan, stole second base and scored on Kyle Manzardo’s hit up the middle. Ryan worked six innings, giving up two hits.

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Bibee, who has five losses and four no-decisions this season, struck out a season-high nine over six innings.

In the sixth, Bibee collided with catcher Austin Hedges when both were attempting to grab a popup by Brooks Lee. Hedges dropped the ball, Bibee was charged with the error and Lee ran to second base, but was stranded there.

The first pitch was delayed by 2 hours and 6 minutes because of heavy thunderstorms.

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Guardians RHP Gavin Williams (5-2, 3.28 ERA) pitches the three-game series finale against Twins RHP Andrew Morris (1-1, 4.96).

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Byron Buxton's RBI double in 11th inning gives Twins a 2-1 victory over Guardians

CLEVELAND (AP) — Byron Buxton doubled off the wall in left-center with one out in the 11th inning, scoring automatic runner Matt Wallne...
“Price Is Right” contestant wins largest single-game prize in show's 54-year history

A contestant on Friday's episode of The Price Is Right set a new all-time high in winnings from a single pricing game.

Entertainment Weekly Vanessa from Virginia wins big on 'The Price Is Right'Credit: CBS

Key Points

  • Vanessa from Virginia walked away with $240,150 in cash and prizes after playing Lion's Share.

  • This new record surpasses the last, set in 2010, by more than $30,000.

After more than five decades on the air,The Price Is Rightis still breaking records.

A contestant on Friday's episode of the long-running game show set a new all-time high in winnings from a single pricing game. After several wild rounds of the game Lion's Share, Vanessa from Virginia walked away with $240,150 in cash and prizes— the largest one-game haul a contestant has ever won in the CBS daytime show's 54-year history.

The retired veteran made her mark in a special Mother's Day-themed episode, with her daughter cheering her on from the sidelines.

Drew Carey and Vanessa from Virginia on 'The Price is Right'Credit: CBS

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Lion's Share, an MGM-branded game that premiered last year as a replacement for Pay the Rent, revolves around grocery price guessing.

In the game, each contestant is able to win up to five balls depending on their number of correct guesses. Balls are then dropped into a wind tunnel, which reveal hidden prize amounts. But that's not all: HostDrew Careythen commands contestants to choose between walking away with the dollar value displayed on the screen or risking it all to grow their earnings further.

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That's exactly what Vanessa did, and after very little deliberation. Continued correct guesses yielded more prize balls, which revealed more earnings, eventually loading her up with $227,500 in cash. A luxury trip to Morocco valued at $12,650 ultimately brought her total up to $240,150.

Vanessa's win clears the previous record by a wide margin. In 2016, contestant Christen Freeman won $210,000 in the game Cliffhangers, and also walked away with a steam iron, portable heater, and drink mixer.

Vanessa may be the biggest winner when it comes to earnings from a single game, but her $240,150 total is no match for the overall killing that one contestant made in a 2019 episode.

Michael Stouber left the roller coaster ride of an episode with a grand total of $262,743 in cash and prizes. That included $202,000 from a game of Plinko, a nearly $30,000 Showcase win, an equivalent value Nissan Sentra S, a $1,475 diamond bracelet, and more.

The Price Is Rightairs weekdays on CBS and streams on Paramount+. Check your local cable provider for exact airtimes.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

“Price Is Right” contestant wins largest single-game prize in show's 54-year history

A contestant on Friday's episode of The Price Is Right set a new all-time high in winnings from a single pricing game. Key P...
Savannah leaders dish on the state of small business locally

Savannah Mayor Van Johnson stood on the stage inside the Savannah Civic Center Ballroom and asked attendees if they had a business card. If so, raise them in the air, he said.

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Then he told the room of over 100 small business owners and leaders to exchange cards with someone else. It was the launch of the 2026 Mayor’s Small Business Conference.

Each year small business professionals around Savannah and Chatham County attend the event, which in recent years has been accompanied by a reverse trade show with larger employers, to network and learn about resources for small business growth. The conference is always accompanied by a state of small business discussion, where leaders from varying sectors discuss the opportunities and challenges facing them.

Here are a few takeaways from this year’s state of small business.

More:Gulfstream invests $5 million in Georgia education for talent pipeline

Economic growth stronger than projected, opportunities exist

Savannah Mayor Van Johnson delivered opening remarks at the 2026 Mayor's Small Business Conference on May 6, 2026.

Georgia Southern’s Fuller E. Callaway Professor of Economics Michael Toma delivered an overview of the regional economy and how small businesses fit into that picture.

The regional economy has been anchored in recent years by what Toma calls two “overlays:” growth in logistics driven by the Georgia Ports Authority and growth in manufacturing driven by Hyundai Motor Group’s Metaplant America in Bryan County.

Through the first quarter of this year, regional employment growth would be relatively flat without growth in logistics and manufacturing, Toma said.

“The data is finally catching up with growth that we're seeing in our electric vehicle industry and Hyundai and the ecosystem around that,” Toma said. “…That’s really good because those two sectors are fundamentally supporting our regional economy right now.”

Georgia Southern’s Fuller E. Callaway Professor of Economic Michael Toma delivered an overview of the regional economy at the 2026 Mayor's Small Business Conference on May 6, 2026.

For small businesses, the number that employ less than 100 employees increased 4.4% from last year. But that was driven primarily by business over that threshold shrinking to below 100.

Small businesses with fewer than 20 employees grew at about a 1% clip, which is about two-thirds the growth rate of overall employment in the regional economy, Toma said.

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Toma added that companies which employ over 1,000 people grew at a 3% rate. That creates opportunities for small business to pursue support and complementary services for the growing sectors of the economy, he said.

State of Black Business

Moncello Stewart, president of the Greater Savannah Black Chamber of Commerce, is a lifelong Savannahian who serves on the board of several volunteer and community service organizations.

Greater Savannah Black Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Moncello Stewart delivered remarks on the state of Black business ownership.

He summed it up succinctly.

“We’re growing, but we’re also being tested,” he said.

Stewart said he sees more people starting business every day but added the community has recently lost “several prominent Black-owned businesses.” Those businesses were community anchors and points of legacy, he said.

Stewart shared a statistic that Black businesses make up about 3% of employing firms nationally. Locally, that number is about 7%, he said. The strength of existing Black businesses compared to the national share shows the challenge isn’t starting businesses, but sustaining them and scaling them, he said.

The Greater Savannah Black Chamber has been working to strengthen community ties, including with faith-based organizations, and creating business clubs to help with succession planning.

“We understand that business growth is tied to trust, relationships and consistent support,” he said.

Stewart also said there is greater opportunity to engage Savannah's Black businesses in the tourism sector through contracts, partnerships and visibility. "That's not just a challenge, it's an opportunity," he said.

The Greater Savannah Black Chamber is hosting aBlack Business Expo on Aug. 1at the Savannah Convention Center. Stewart said the expo is the largest south of Virginia.

Evan Lasseter is Savannah and Chatham County government reporter for the Savannah Morning News. You can reach him at ELasseter@savannahnow.com.

This article originally appeared on Savannah Morning News:Savannah's state of small business shows growth opportunities

Savannah leaders dish on the state of small business locally

Savannah Mayor Van Johnson stood on the stage inside the Savannah Civic Center Ballroom and asked attendees if they had a business card...
From spitting fans to frontman feuds: How Iron Maiden survived decades of drama

In the summer of 1984, following a concert at Poland’s Hala Arena,Iron Maidenwent out for a drink. Rejecting the quietude of the hotel bar, the English party decamped for Klub Andria, a local discotheque, which that evening had been booked for a wedding party attended by 300 Poles. After partaking of grape and grain, in game spirits, the English musicians duly accepted an invitation to clamber onstage.

The Telegraph Steve Harris

Documented in shaky camcorder footage in the documentary feature filmIron Maiden: Burning Ambitionis the sight of Maiden playingSmoke on the Wateron a cramped dais at a matrimonial gathering behind the Iron Curtain. It is one of only two clips I can find of the band playing a live version of a song written by anyone other than themselves.

As bassist and group leader Steve Harris puts it, towards the top of the film: “We were picking up fans from the first gigs we did because we played our own material… There’s no way I would go onstage and play something I didn’t like. I’d rather sweep the streets. In fact, I did.”

The steely philosophy of their east-London council worker has served the group well. Along with a catalogue of evidently attractive songs, Iron Maiden’s innate integrity has been a magnet for a vast army of fervid admirers. I’ve wracked my brains, and I can’t think of a group with a more dedicated audience. As Chuck D, bandleader of Public Enemy, puts it inBurning Ambition, “This group created their own universe.”

Iron Maiden's Dave Murray, Steve Harris, and Adrian Smith performing in 1983

As well as interviewing band members past and present, the film (directed by Malcolm Venville) trains its lens on the fans themselves. In what is a far cry from the days when metal was the preserve of the under-represented, in 2026, all human life is here. Keeping company with a few recognisable faces – the actor Javier Bardem, Lars Ulrich fromMetallica, Rage Against the Machine guitarist Tom Morello – the devotees featured include soldiers, academics, cops, psychiatrists, military historians, financiers and more.

Feuds and flights

Only occasionally does the action err on the overfamiliar. The story of singerBruce Dickinsonflying the band around the world in their own plane – Ed Force One – has been shown before, in the 2009 featureIron Maiden: Flight 666. Even as a mere admirer, meanwhile, I was aware that Dickinson and Harris almost came to blows after a gig at Newcastle City Hall, in 1982, during which the singer took issue with the bassist’s determination to stand in the spot normally reserved for a frontman. If I know this stuff, the film’s target audience certainly will.

WhereBurning Ambitionexcels is in its portrayal of a band whose sheer bloody-mindedness inspires devotion in listeners who recognise that, here at least, the compromises of life need not apply. Whatever the weather, Maiden follow their own star. While other metal greats have tweaked their act to suit changing times – Metallica going “greasy” in the wake of grunge, Slayer down-tuning their guitars in response to nu-metal – this most resolute of statesmen looks only inward for inspiration.

“I put a barbed-wire fence around the band, creatively,” Rod Smallwood, the group’s redoubtable West Yorkshire-born manager, says towards the top of the film. To this day, the frontier remains impregnable.

UnlikeAC/DCor theRamones, though, Maiden are willing to challenge their audience. Out on the road in 2006-07, for example, the band played their then-current album,A Matter Of Life And Death, in its entirety. At the end of the set, space was made for just five older songs.

I recall seeing Maiden at Wembley Arena in 1993, at a time when it was known that Bruce Dickinson would be leaving the band at the end of the tour. Recounting what sounds like a perfectly miserable experience, inBurning Ambition, drummer Nicko McBrain says that he “used to watch [the singer], every night, knowing that he didn’t want to be there. I hated him for that.” Equally forthright, Harris described several of Dickinson’s performances on the tour as being “f---ing awful”.

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Drummer Nicko McBrain

Perhaps inevitably, the band struggled without their notable frontman. (To be fair, Dickinson struggled as a solo artist, too.) Determined to endure, Maiden scooped up Blaze Bayley, the frontman with the Tamworth group Wolfsbane, whose own shot at the big time had reaped a scant harvest. Not even an EP with the unbeatable titleAll Hell’s Breaking Loose Down at Little Kathy Wilson’s Place– released on Rick Rubin’s Def American label, no less – could save Wolfsbane. Acting on the advice of his band’s manager, who told him the group was going nowhere, the singer changed horses.

Bruce Dickinson

“I saw an interview with him, and there was a line at the end where he said, ‘I feel like Dorothy inThe Wizard Of Oz,’” Bruce Dickinson once recalled. “I thought, ‘That’s really sweet – I know exactly how you feel.’ So, I painted up two bricks [yellow] and sent them to him.” Flush for the first time in his life, the new frontman bought himself a second-hand Jaguar.

Unsold tickets and unhappy fans

From the off, though, Bayley was on a hiding to nothing. In its most startling moment,Burning Ambitionfeatures footage of audience members spitting on both the singer and Harris (a trespass doubly insulting given the bassist’s trenchant disdain for punk). As the group’s fortunes continued to dip, just five years after performing to almost 19,000 people at the Spectrum, in Philadelphia, Maiden drew a crowd of just 500 in 1996 at a less-than-half-full Electric Factory in the centre of town.

“There were some great moments [during those years]”, drummer McBrain says inBurning Ambition, “but there were many that weren’t”. Twenty-seven years after being fired, with remarkable dignity, Bayley says that “it doesn’t matter if I’m there or not. The world is a better place with Iron Maiden in it.” (In a typically classy move, Bayley was invited to the premiere ofBurning Ambitionin Leicester Square this week. Later this year, along with Maiden themselves, the singer will be inducted into theRock & Roll Hall of Fame.)

Blaze Bayley (centre) joined the band for the Leicester Square premiere of Burning Ambition

Slogging through these fallow years, with typical fortitude, Iron Maiden simply refused to concede defeat. In 1999, following a rapprochement between two estranged camps, Dickinson met with his former bandmates at a yacht club in Brighton. “I want to play big gigs again,” the singer said – at this time, guitarist Adrian Smith, who left in 1990, also rejoined the group – after which the reunited band repaired to the pub.

The plan worked; Dickinson got his wish. In 2001, Maiden headlined Rock In Rio in front of an audience of a quarter of a million people. (The bill for the group’s famous performance at the same festival, in 1985, was topped by Queen.) Remarkably, their fortunes have continued to rise. This summer, for the first time, the group will play stadiums in the United States. A forthcoming appearance at Knebworth, in July, places them in the company ofLed Zeppelin, Genesis, Deep Purple andPink Floydin the most exclusive VIP room in all of rock ’n’ roll.

A stronger-than-ever relationship with fans

Rather than being irked that their audience once deserted them, instead, the group seems justly proud that the relationship with their fans is stronger than it was during their first flush of success. Today, Bruce Dickinson addresses vast crowds that might otherwise be divided by generation, class and race, with words that should – but somehowdon’t –sound glib. It doesn’t matter who you are, he tells them, “We’re one f---ing family”.

Bruce Dickinson of Iron Maiden speaks during a conference as part of the CCXP Mexico 2026 at Centro Banamex on April 24, 2026 in Mexico City, Mexico

As it goes, I reckon it’s about as close as it gets. In an age of frankly scandalous ticket prices, entry to Knebworth costs a relatively modest £127. Unlike Metallica, whose top-tier packages atthe Sphere, in Las Vegas, will set you back $5,500 (about £4,300), Maiden don’t dirty their hands with grubby VIP bundles. Instead of being fleeced for money, respected constituents pay their dues in devotion.

As the group’s members step towards their eighth decade, of course, time might also be a factor. With each passing year, the odds thatthiswill be the last time to see the group in concert only increase. But if the endisin sight, one needs binoculars to see it. Iron Maiden aren’t ready to run to the hills just yet.

“It looks like we’re taking next year off,” Harris recently said. “Personally, I didn’t want to, but that’s just me. I’m just one of six people, despite what people might think. They don’t just do as they’re told. Otherwise, we’d be doing stuff next year, too.”

Iron Maiden: Burning Ambition is in cinemas now

From spitting fans to frontman feuds: How Iron Maiden survived decades of drama

In the summer of 1984, following a concert at Poland’s Hala Arena,Iron Maidenwent out for a drink. Rejecting the quietude of the hotel ...
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Did you pay attention to the top headlines in Arizona this week? Now is the time to test your skills with this week's azcentral.com news quiz, covering stories from May 1-7, 2026. Best of luck!

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