STANTON HITS 46TH HOMER IN VICTORY Pinch-hitter Ichiro Suzuki hit a tiebreaking three-run homer in the seventh inning, Giancarlo Stanton added his major-league-leading 46th homer, and the Miami Marlins beat the Phillies, 12-8, in the opener of a doubleheader in Philadelphia.

SOCCER

Barcelona Suing Neymar for Bonus

Barcelona is suing the Brazilian striker Neymar for the 8.5-million-euro ($10 million) bonus it paid him for signing a contract he later broke to join Paris St.-Germain on a world-record transfer. Barcelona said that it wants Neymar to pay back the bonus for a contract in October 2016 that tied him to the club through 2021. It also wants an additional 10 percent interest.

Neymar was able to leave Barcelona earlier this month after P.S.G. paid €222 million ($262 million) to trigger a release clause included in his contract. The club is demanding that P.S.G. pay the money if Neymar cannot.

NAPOLI ADVANCES IN CHAMPIONS LEAGUE Napoli produced its second 2-0 victory over Nice in a week to reach the Champions League group stage for a second successive season. José Callejón and Lorenzo Insigne scored in the second half to secure Napoli’s 4-0 aggregate win in the French Riviera. Only one side in action was eliminated after winning the first leg. Hapoel Be’er Sheva’s 2-1 advantage over Maribor was wiped out by the Slovenian side winning the second leg, 1-0, at home to advance, 2-2, on away goals.

WATFORD OUSTED FROM LEAGUE CUP Marco Silva’s promising start as Watford manager came to a halt when that Premier League team was knocked out of the League Cup by second-tier Bristol City, 3-2. It was the only Premier League casualty, with the other six top-flight teams in action advancing from the second round against opponents from lower divisions.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

ESPN Pulls Broadcaster Because of Name

ESPN has removed an announcer from its broadcast of the University of Virginia’s first football game next month because the sportscaster shares the name of a Confederate general whose statues are being taken down across the country.

The network announced late Tuesday that Robert Lee, who calls about a dozen college games a year for ESPN, would no longer participate in the Sept. 2 game in Charlottesville, Va., the quiet college town that became the center of violent clashes this month during a white supremacist gathering.