The San Jose Earthquakes ran their unbeaten streak to five Saturday night after a 0-0 draw with the New England Revolution in coach Bruce Arena’s return to Foxborough, Mass.

Arena, who coached New England from 2019-23, replaced San Jose goalie Daniel after halftime with Earl Edwards Jr., who made 15 starts in goal for the Revolution from 2021-24. Edwards finished with two saves while completing the shutout.

Aljaz Ivacic had his sixth shutout of the season for New England as the Revolution have allowed 10 goals this season, tied with Vancouver for fewest in MLS.

Cristian Arango (lower leg) and Cristian Espinoza (rest) did not play for San Jose. Arango — whose nine goals this season are second in MLS (Philadelphia’s Tai Baribo has 10) — went off in the 31st minute of a 3-3 tie with Miami on Wednesday. Espinoza had his streak of 122 consecutive games come to an end. It was the third longest in MLS history behind goalkeeper Luis Robles (183 for the New York Red Bulls from 2012-18) and midfielder Chris Klein (141 from 2005-09 for the Kansas City Wizards, Real Salt Lake and Los Angeles Galaxy).

San Jose (5-6-3) — unbeaten in four straight in MLS play and five overall — has five wins, a loss and two ties since a 1-0 loss to Charlotte on March 15.

COLLEGE SOFTBALL

Stanford broke a pair of program records Saturday while steamrolling host Oregon 14-1 to advance to today’s Eugene Regional final.

The Cardinal (42-11) blasted four home runs — one each for Joie Economides, Allie Clements, River Mahler and Jade Berry — and pitchers Alyssa Houston, Zoe Prystajko and Kylie Chung held No. 16 Oregon to just one run on three hits.

Clements and Emily Jones each drove in three runs to help Stanford set a school record for most runs scored in a postseason game. Stanford’s nine-run uprising in the sixth inning led to the eight-run rule being imposed after Oregon went scoreless in the bottom of the inning.

Stanford will face the winner of Saturday night’s consolation bracket — either Oregon or Weber State — today at 12:30 p.m., needing a win in two possible tries to clinch a berth in the super regionals. Should the Cardinal lose the first game, a second game would take place 35 minutes later to determine the regional champion.

Chung got the start in the circle, but gave way to Houston with two on and two out in the first. Houston recorded a strikeout to escape the inning. The sophomore finished with the victory, tossing 4 1/3 innings of two-hit, scoreless relief.

Meanwhile, Cal played faced Omaha in an elimination game in the Norman (Okla.) Regional late Saturday night. The Bears (36-20) began the day with an 11-2 loss to No. 2 Oklahoma (47-7). Sooners star slugger Kasidi Pickering had a huge day, going 3 for 3 with two home runs and six RBIs.

Santa Clara (32-21) saw its first ever NCAA Tournament berth end with a 9-4 loss to Grand Canyon on Saturday in a Tucson (Ariz.) Regional game.

— Jon Becker

HORSE RACING

Journalism won the 150th running of the Preakness Stakes, coming from behind down the stretch to make good on the lofty expectations of being the odds-on favorite in the middle leg of the Triple Crown two weeks after finishing second to Sovereignty in the Kentucky Derby.

Finishing first in a field of nine horses that did not include Sovereignty but featured some of the best competition in the country, Journalism gave trainer Michael McCarthy his second Preakness victory. It is Umberto Rispoli’s first in a Triple Crown race, and he is the first jockey from Italy to win one of them.

Gosger was second by a half-length after getting passed by Journalism just before the wire. Sandman was third and Goal Oriented fourth. Journalism went 1 3/16 miles in 1:55.37.

Journalism thrived on a warm day that dried out the track after torrential rain fell at Pimlico Race Course for much of the past week. Those conditions suited him better than the slop at Churchill Downs in the Derby.

Sovereignty did not take part after his owners and trainer Bill Mott decided to skip the Preakness, citing the two-week turnaround, and aimed for the Belmont on June 7.

TENNIS

Jasmine Paolini took advantage of the crowd’s support and beat Coco Gauff 6-4, 6-2 to become the first home player to win the Italian Open in 40 years.

With top-ranked Jannik Sinner to play Carlos Alcaraz in the men’s final today, Italy could earn its first sweep of the Rome singles titles.

The last Italian woman to win the open was Raffaella Reggi in 1985 in Taranto. The last local man to raise the trophy was Adriano Panatta in 1976.

“It doesn’t seem real to me,” Paolini said. “I came here as a kid to see this tournament but winning it and holding up this trophy wasn’t even in my dreams.”

HOCKEY

The United States blew a three-goal first-period lead before beating Germany 6-3 at the ice hockey world championship.

Conor Garland’s power-play goal 4:50 into the third period proved to be the winner as the Americans moved into a tie with the Czech Republic, each with 11 points, trailing Group B leader Switzerland by two points.

Tage Thompson, Frank Nazar, and Drew O’Connor scored early as the U.S. took a 3-0 lead with 5:43 left in the first period.

Germany pulled even with three goals in the second period.

After Garland’s go-ahead goal, Logan Cooley made it 5-3 with 3:29 to go and Clayton Keller scored into an empty net with 1:53 left.

In Stockholm, the Sharks’ Macklin Celebrini had a goal and two assists while Sidney Crosby and Nathan MacKinnon struck twice each as Canada shut out Slovakia 7-0 to stay perfect after five games.

NFL

Antonio Brown was briefly detained by police early Saturday following an altercation in which gunshots were fired outside a celebrity boxing event in Miami, according to the former NFL star and video posted to social media.

Miami police confirmed in a written statement that officers responded to the area at about 3 a.m. after receiving an alert from the gunshot-detection system ShotSpotter. Officer Kiara Delva, a department spokeswoman, said police questioned several people but made no arrests. No injuries were reported.