Friday night's showdown between No. 1 Duke and No. 5 St. John's tips off the fun at the Capital One Arena.
The Blue Devils, who haven't looked the part of the tournament's top overall seed in the first two rounds, may get a boost with the potential return of point guard Caleb Foster, who Jon Scheyer deemed a "game-time decision."
St. John's is coming off the high of knocking off another blue-blood, Kansas, with a buzzer-beating layup by Dylan Darling. The Red Storm's secret weapon may be Pitino, who is 12-1 in Sweet 16 games.
Tonight's winner advances to Sunday's Elite Eight where it will play the winner of Michigan State vs. UConn.
Here's what you need to know for tonight's Duke-St. John's showdown, including predictions and how to watch.
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Duke vs St John's live score
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What time is St John's vs Duke?
Time: 7:15 p.m. ET, Friday, March 27.
What channel is St John's vs Duke? How to watch, streaming info
The game is airing on CBS, streaming via Paramount+.
Blue Devils coach Jon Scheyer told reporters during a media availability Thursday that Caleb Foster is going to be a game-time decision for Friday's 7:10 p.m. ET tip-off against the 5th-seeded Red Storm.
"He's in a position where he's going to try to do that tomorrow night," Scheyer told reporters. "... He's going to give it everything he has to go tomorrow night."
Foster has been out since March 7 with a foot injury that he sustained in the final game of the regular season against North Carolina.
Rick Pitino NCAA Tournament history: When was Rick Pitino's last Sweet 16 appearance?
Rick Pitino has been to 14 Sweet 16s. His last trip to the Sweet 16 prior to this season was in 2014-15 with Louisville.
What is Rick Pitino's record in Sweet 16 games?
The St. John's coach is a remarkable 12-1 in the Sweet 16. His lone loss was in 2014 with Louisville... to Kentucky.
Cameron Boozer NBA draft stock, mock draft predictions
Boozer is widely projected as a top-3 pick in the 2026 NBA Draft. Here’s a look at where various mock drafts from major outlets have the Duke freshman going:
Cameron Boozer and his twin brother, Cayden (also a freshman for Duke) are the sons of former NBA All-Star Carlos Boozer.
Before his 13-year career in the NBA, Carlos Boozer was a standout forward for the Blue Devils under Mike Krzyzewski from 1999-2002. A member of Duke's 2001 national championship team, Carlos Boozer finished his three-year career with the Blue Devils with more than 1,500 points scored and started 93 of the 101 games in which he appeared.
Rick Pitino history vs Duke: Christian Laettner shot
on the eve of another game against Duke, the memory is still fresh for Pitino, who was the coach at Kentucky in 1992 when Christian Laettner hit a game-winning shot at the buzzer to beat Kentucky and lift Duke to the Final Four.
The flashback still seems to make him edgy. He said Sunday he was "so sick of commercials with Christian Laettner hitting that shot over and over and over."
He said friends recently convinced him to watch a show on Hulu called “Paradise” but then learned Laettner’s shot is referenced in that, too.
"That’s cruel," Pitino said.
He got his own buzzer-beater from Darling Sunday. Now it’s on to Duke in Washington, D.C.
“You win some, you lose some,” Pitino said. “And I'm hoping we can get Duke at the buzzer next to make up for that Christian Laettner shot.”
As Boilermakers coach Matt Painter exited the court at the SAP Center in San Jose, he perfectly captured the sentiment of many college basketball fans around the country:
"Holy s---," Painter said in a video captured by Eli Gehn of WTHR-TV in Indianapolis (editor's note:explicit language used).
Painter was slightly more composed when speaking about the play in Purdue's postgame news conference.
"We got a good shot there at the end," Painter said. "Braden, I thought he executed well, made the right read, and took the right shot. And perfect timing. That's what you want. You want a chance to get a stick back. If you don't, then you go to overtime.
"TK was around the basketball, and it's one of those things that happened, as coaches, you want to fill your defense, and you want the best defenders out there. Sometimes your best offense is a missed shot in those situations. You see it happen a lot, but we've also seen it where you do that and then guys make shots. You feel like, it doesn't matter as a coach either way. It's really, really difficult."
"I think when you give the ball to Braden, he can go by anybody in the country," he said. "We have plays designed for him to do that. I thought he got a good shot. Then Coach always says that it's not — a lot of times it's not the first shot that goes. They're the tip-in at the end of games. He said that my four years here, so it's kind of cool to actually experience that."
Next up for Purdue is No. 1 seed Arizona, with the West Region championship — and a spot in the Final Four — on the line. The Boilermakers and Wildcats play on Saturday, March 28 at 8:49 p.m. ET.
Sunday Night Basketball features two exciting games this week as the race for the playoffs intensifies. First, at 7:30 PM ET, it's the New York Knicks vs Oklahoma City Thunder. Then, at 10:00 PM ET, the Denver Nuggets host the Golden State Warriors in a Western Conference thriller. Live coverage begins with Basketball Night in America at 6:30 PM on NBC and Peacock. See below for additional information on how to watch both games.
Follow all of the NBA action on NBCSN and Peacock. Peacock will feature 100 regular-season games throughout the course of the 2025-2026 season.
Golden State Warriors vs Denver Nuggets Game Preview:
The Warriors remain in the Play-In Tournament picture, but a series of injuries has put their postseason hopes in jeopardy.
The team is already without Jimmy Butler, who suffered a torn ACL on January 19. Stephen Curry has been out since January 30 with right knee pain and inflammation, and most recently, Moses Moodysuffered a torn patellar tendon in his left knee on Monday night and is out for the remainder of the season.
Nikola Jokic and the Nuggets are in the playoff picture and in the mix for a top-four seed in the Western Conference. Denver has been a top-4 seed in six of the last seven seasons and has the most home playoff wins in the NBA since 2018-19.
Jokic leads the NBA in both rebounds and assists, and he is the only player in the league averaging a triple-double.
How to watch New York Knicks vs Oklahoma City Thunder:
Peacock NBA Monday will stream up to three Monday night games each week throughout the regular season. Coast 2 Coast Tuesday presents doubleheaders on Tuesday nights throughout the regular season on NBC and Peacock. On most Tuesdays, an 8 p.m. ET game will be on NBC stations in the Eastern and Central time zones, and an 8 p.m. PT game on NBC stations in the Pacific and often Mountain time zones.
Check local listings each week. Both games will stream live nationwide on Peacock. Sunday Night Basketball coverage will also be available on NBC and Peacock. For a full schedule of the NBA on NBC and Peacock, click here.
How to sign up for Peacock:
Sign up here to watch all of our LIVE sports, sports shows, documentaries, classic matches, and more. You'll also get tons of hit movies and TV shows, Originals, news, 24/7 channels, and current NBC & Bravo hits—Peacock is here for whatever you’re in the mood for.
NBA on NBC 2025-26 Schedule:
Click here to see the full list of NBA games that will air on NBC and Peacock this season.
Sunday Night Basketball features double the NBA action this week as the race for the playoffs heats up. First, at 7:30 PM ET, Jalen Brunson and the New York Knicks head to Paycom Center to take on Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and the Oklahoma City Thunder. Then, at 10:00 PM ET, the Denver Nuggets host the Golden State Warriors in a Western Conference thriller. Live coverage begins with Basketball Night in America at 6:30 PM on NBC and Peacock. See below for additional information on how to watch both games.
Follow all of the NBA action on NBCSN and Peacock. Peacock will feature 100 regular-season games throughout the course of the 2025-2026 season.
New York Knicks vs Oklahoma City Thunder Game Preview:
Sunday's game marks the second and final meeting between the two teams this season. The Thunder defeated the Knicks 103-100 on March 4 and have won their last five straight games against the Knicks.
The Knicks are looking to make their fourth straight playoff appearance, which would be the franchise's longest streak since making a run of 14 straight from 1988-2001.
After falling to the Indiana Pacers in six games in last year's Eastern Conference Finals — New York's first Conference Finals appearance in 25 years — the expectation is clear: reach the NBA Finals.
“We want to get to the Finals. And we should win the Finals. This is sports, and anything can happen. But getting to the Finals, we absolutely got to do," said Knicks owner James Dolan in January.
The Thunder have already clinched a playoff spot and look to claim the No. 1 seed in the West for the third straight season. Oklahoma City could become the first team to repeat as NBA champion since the Warriors won back-to-back titles in 2017 & 2018.
How to watch New York Knicks vs Oklahoma City Thunder:
Peacock NBA Monday will stream up to three Monday night games each week throughout the regular season. Coast 2 Coast Tuesday presents doubleheaders on Tuesday nights throughout the regular season on NBC and Peacock. On most Tuesdays, an 8 p.m. ET game will be on NBC stations in the Eastern and Central time zones, and an 8 p.m. PT game on NBC stations in the Pacific and often Mountain time zones.
Check local listings each week. Both games will stream live nationwide on Peacock. Sunday Night Basketball coverage will also be available on NBC and Peacock. For a full schedule of the NBA on NBC and Peacock, click here.
How to sign up for Peacock:
Sign up here to watch all of our LIVE sports, sports shows, documentaries, classic matches, and more. You'll also get tons of hit movies and TV shows, Originals, news, 24/7 channels, and current NBC & Bravo hits—Peacock is here for whatever you’re in the mood for.
NBA on NBC 2025-26 Schedule:
Click here to see the full list of NBA games that will air on NBC and Peacock this season.
The St. John's basketball coach has brought a team to the Sweet 16 for the 14th time in his Hall of Fame career, and has the highest all-time winning percentage among Division I coaches who have at least six trips to the regional semifinals of March Madness (92.3%, on a 12-1 record).
But as No. 5 St. John's prepares to take on No. 1 Duke in the Sweet 16 inside Washington D.C.'s Capital One Arena, one chapter of Pitino's March Madness history — from his time at Kentucky — has resurfaced: Christian Laettner's game-winning shot against the Wildcats to send the Blue Devils to the 1992 Final Four.
— CBS Sports College Basketball 🏀 (@CBSSportsCBB) March 5, 2023
Laettner's turnaround jumper, which came at the end of a perfect full-court pass from Grant Hill on the baseline, is widely regarded as one of the all-time March Madness moments in the tournament's history. And the memory of that play still stings for Pitino, even when he's least expecting it.
"I'm not big into watching 'Yellowstone' and shows like that on the iPad, but everybody is convincing me to watch this 'Paradise' (show). I was so sick of commercials with Christian Laettner hitting that shot over and over and over," Pitino said after St. John's win over Kansas. "So, OK, I'll watch 'Paradise.'"
Little did the Hall of Fame coach know that the show references Laettner in an episode.
"That's cruel. Why would my staff and friends tell me to watch (that)?" Pitino said.
Curiously, the Duke-Pitino storyline was made possible because of a game-winning buzzer beater from one of Pitino's own players, Dylan Darling, against the Jayhawks.
Now, Pitino's hoping they can replicate that against Jon Scheyer and the Blue Devils — getting back at Duke for putting him on the receiving end of one of the most seminal moments in March Madness history.
"I'm hoping we can get Duke at the buzzer next to make up for that Christian Laettner shot," Pitino said.
“You win some, you lose some. I’m hoping we get Duke at the buzzer next to make up for that Christian Laettner shot.” 😂
Rick Pitino on being on the wrong sides of buzzer beaters in the past. Also mentions the show Paradise 😂 pic.twitter.com/uG5049gZog
Friday's game won't be the first time Pitino has coached against Duke in the Men's NCAA Tournament since Laettner's shot. The two met in the 2013 Midwest Regional Elite Eight, with Pitino's Louisville Cardinals team defeating the Blue Devils en route to an NCAA championship.
Asked whether that Elite Eight win — followed by his second national championship ring — tempered his memories of Laettner's shot during his media availability in D.C. on Thursday, Pitino said he treasures that 1992 game.
"I treasure that game in so many ways. Not the loss, but the way the game was played," Pitino said. "Give all the credit in the world (to Duke). I can't escape Grant Hill, who has done seven games for me this season (on TV)."
Pitino won't be able to escape Hill on Friday either, as he'll be calling the St. John's vs. Duke Sweet 16 game on CBS alongside Ian Eagle, Bill Raftery and Tracy Wolfson. So, you can almost bet on Hill and Co. bringing up "The Shot" a time or two on the broadcast.
One reason Elliot Cadeau was drawn to Michigan as a transfer last spring was the size of the Wolverines’ starting front line, with 7-3 center Aday Mara flanked by 6-9 forwards Morez Johnson Jr. and Yaxel Lendeborg.
Being surrounded by this length and athleticism has given the more diminutive former North Carolina point guard room to dip and duck his way through coach Dusty May’s read-and-react system, where spacing and ball movement are mandatory and players are “encouraged to pass up good shots for great ones,” according to the program’s definition.
“I would say that he does an amazing job dissecting the offense,” said Michigan guard Nimari Burnett. “He makes it so much easier for us all around the court that played with him, just getting us easy shots. I'm just joyful to play with him every single game.”
Along with Mara and Lendeborg — from UCLA and Alabama-Birmingham, respectively — Cadeau has helped transform the No. 1 Wolverines into one of the best teams in the nation and the favorite to advance out of the Midwest Region for the ninth Final Four appearance in program history.
“Elliott runs the show,” Johnson said.
There have been a few hiccups along the way to Friday’s matchup in Chicago against No. 4 Alabama, including a dud in Michigan’s nonconference loss to Duke in February and a run of poor shooting performances late in Big Ten play.
But Cadeau has rebounded to play some of his best basketball in the past few weeks, including a stretch of 26 assists against just five turnovers in his past three games. That he’s done so while dealing with medical issues has made Cadeau one of Michigan’s unquestioned leaders both on the court and off.
“I think he’s really relatable in terms of where he’s from, what he’s been through,” guard Roddy Gayle Jr. said. “He’s always a guy that you can rely on. I feel like most point guards have that trait, but really, he has been someone where if someone isn’t going right, I’m able to lean on him.”
That Cadeau has remained unflappable amid his high-profile transfer from Chapel Hill and the stress of running the show for the Wolverines shouldn’t come as a surprise.
As a child growing up in New Jersey, Cadeau was diagnosed as partially deaf in his right ear. He’s had to manage asthma. As a freshman with the Tar Heels, he needed to have surgery to treat a progressive eye disorder called keratoconus, which thins the cornea and can often cause blurred vision and a sensitivity to bright lights and glare.
None of these conditions would seem to be conducive to playing point guard for a team with national championship goals, let alone playing basketball, period.
Yet these same issues have helped define Cadeau, shaping the way he approaches his role as the Wolverines’ facilitator.
“It kind of just made me feel like I just can’t make excuses,” he said after Michigan’s win against No. 9 Saint Louis in the second round.
“I have really close friends when I was growing up who are all at the highest level of the NBA, high-major basketball players, and I wanted to be just as good as them. I was trying to be better than them.
“Even though they didn’t have the same issues as me, I couldn't just make excuses about it and not be as good as them.”
Handling this adversity helped Cadeau weather a tumultuous two-year run at North Carolina, where he often became the poster child for the Tar Heels’ unrealized expectations after ranking near the bottom of the ACC in turnovers and fouls as a sophomore.
“That’s just kind of a testament to who he is,” said Gayle. “Because of everything that he’s been through, he’s able to kind of separate himself from everything that’s going on and be able to give you advice.”
And despite the challenges he’s faced to reach Friday night, Cadeau insists he’s never been slowed down by the conditions that could have easily derailed a promising career.
“There are no adjustments made,” he said. “Me not being able to hear fully didn’t really make any difference on the court, because you don’t really need hearing unless you’re listening to a play call or you’re listening to your teammates. I feel like basketball-wise, it doesn’t affect me.”
Cadeau a ‘savant’ at the controls of Michigan’s offense
Cadeau’s game has blossomed as the showrunner for one of the top offenses in college basketball. The Wolverines enter the matchup against Alabama ranked ninth nationally in scoring, fourth in field-goal percentage and fifth in assists per game.
The junior is averaging a career-best 10.1 points per game with 57 makes from 3-point range, nearly doubling his total from his final season at North Carolina. Cadeau has 28 fewer turnovers in one fewer game compared to last year while posting 5.7 assists per game, good for fourth in the Big Ten.
Cadeau has been the perfect fit for a system that needs a happy-to-share distributor, especially as Michigan looks to quickly turn defensive stops into transition.
“He’s a savant with what he’s doing,” May said. “He probably doesn’t even realize a lot of the things he’s doing because he’s so intelligent. He’s able to get us into close-out opportunities without really having to run any offense. His ability to read the floor, read the game, manipulate defenses, is incredibly impressive."
His arrival in Ann Arbor has sparked a clear increase in confidence. Cadeau has been much more willing to chase his own shot, especially given the attention paid to Michigan’s imposing frontcourt. He made three from long range against Saint Louis, helping the Wolverines take control in the first half and cruise to the 95-72 win.
Adding another outside shooter to Burnett and fellow guard Trey McKenney has made the offense even more dangerous, teammates said.
“The difference between him and last year, he was more pass-first,” Lendeborg said. “He's still pass-first now, but he's become way more of a scoring threat. You can't guard him anyway. So having to compete with him and trying to stop him when you think he's going to pass, it's good night pretty much honestly.”
Said Gayle, “It wasn’t the fact that he couldn’t, he’s just more confident in doing so. And he works really hard for it.”
This same level of dedication — one needed to fight through his medical conditions and to become a more complete and well-rounded player on both ends — has built Cadeau into an elite college point guard, and in turn made the Wolverines into a team capable of winning the second national championship in program history.
“He’s what we want in a point guard,” May said. “He’s a guy that makes everyone on the team better.”
With their 12-game winning streak snapped, the Oklahoma City Thunder will return home and try to get right against the hapless Chicago Bulls tonight.
The Bulls have lost seven straight to OKC, and are a rough 1-6 ATS in that span — a big reason why they’re 19.5-point underdogs on Friday, March 27.
My Bulls vs. Thunder predictions and free NBA picks have OKC laying down a whipping against a less-than-complete Chicago roster.
Bulls vs Thunder prediction
Bulls vs Thunder best bet: Thunder -19.5 (-110)
The Chicago Bulls are coming off a 20-point beating at the hands of the Philadelphia 76ers, marking their highest point total (157) allowed this season. This is a team that’s seen its opponent touch 150 points twice previously.
Chicago is fourth-worst in the NBA in scoring defense, surrendering 120.8 points per game.
They’re dinged up as well, with Jaden Ivey (knee) and Jalen Smith (calf) done for the year, Anfernee Simons (wrist) doubtful, and Nick Richards (elbow) and Guerschon Yabusele (ankle) listed as questionable.
The Oklahoma City Thunder should be surly after dropping a game in Boston to the Celtics, just their second loss in 17 games following the All-Star break.
Prior to their loss to Boston, OKC had walloped each of their last three opponents by at least 20 points. This is a Top 5 scoring team in the NBA, that’s also allowed just 106.3 points per game in their last 13.
That’s a recipe for a blowout win against a banged-up Bulls team that’s playing out the string.
This might seem foolish, especially if he drops 50, but Shai is more likely to be sidelined in the fourth quarter than gunning for a career high against Chicago. He’s gone for 30+ in just five of 13 career games vs. the Bulls.
However, he’s been doling out a bunch of assists. In his last four games vs. the Bulls, SGA has had at least 10 assists three times.
Bulls vs Thunder SGP
Thunder -19.5
Gilgeous-Alexander Under 29.5 points
Gilgeous-Alexander Over 6.5 assists
Our "from downtown" SGP: SGA (almost) all the way
Gilgeous-Alexander has hit a couple of moneyballs in five of his last eight games, and in three of his last four against the Bulls.
His board work against the Bulls has been impressive, grabbing at least five rebounds in five of his last six games.
Bulls vs Thunder SGP
Thunder -19.5
Gilgeous-Alexander Under 29.5 points
Gilgeous-Alexander Over 6.5 assists
Gilgeous-Alexander Over 1.5 3-point makes
Gilgeous-Alexander Over 3.5 rebounds
Bulls vs Thunder odds
Spread: Bulls +19.5 | Thunder -19.5
Moneyline: Bulls +1200 | Thunder -2400
Over/Under: Over 239.5 | Under 239.5
Bulls vs Thunder betting trend to know
Nine of OKC's last 12 games have cashed the Under. Find more NBA betting trends for Bulls vs. Thunder.
How to watch Bulls vs Thunder
Location
Paycom Center, Oklahoma City, OK
Date
Friday, March 27, 2026
Tip-off
8:00 p.m. ET
TV
Chicago Sports Network, FDSN Oklahoma
Bulls vs Thunder latest injuries
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For the second game of their three-game Pacific Division road trip to Canada, the Anaheim Ducks traveled to Alberta to take on the Calgary Flames on Thursday evening.
The Ducks were coming off a 5-3 win against the Vancouver Canucks on Tuesday and were looking to extend their lead in the Pacific Division standings as well as extend their winning streak to four games.
Calgary came into this game with the fourth fewest points in the NHL standings, but were riding a four-game winning streak of their own. The Ducks traded forward Ryan Strome to the Flames at the NHL trade deadline earlier this month for a seventh-round pick, and this was to be Strome’s first game against his former club.
The Ducks’ lineup took a bit of a hit, as Troy Terry was ruled out of this game with a lower-body injury. Frank Vatrano was inserted into Terry’s spot on the first line. Jansen Harkins was injured early in Tuesday’s game and was also not featured in the lineup.
The Ducks recalled forward Nathan Gaucher from the San Diego Gulls earlier on Thursday, but he was scratched, as was Drew Helleson on the blueline. Ian Moore started the game as the fourth line right winger, and the remainder of the lineup remained somewhat steady to start.
Here’s how the Ducks lined up to start this game:
Kreider-Carlsson-Vatrano
Killorn-Granlund-Sennecke
Viel-Poehling-Gauthier
McTavish-Washe-Moore
LaCombe-Trouba
Mintyukov-Carlson
Zellweger-Gudas
Ville Husso got the start for the Ducks for the second time in their last three games and saved 23 of 25 shots in this one. For Calgary, Devin Cooley stood between the pipes and stopped 30 of 33.
Game Notes
The Ducks attempted to push tempo and manufacture chances early, but were thwarted by an effective Calgary forecheck, which broke up several plays with an active and effective F1 before they could build and were turned back toward Husso. As the game progressed and Anaheim generated the majority of power play opportunities, the game flow flipped, and they made safer plays up ice after going down 1-0 early in the second period.
Radko Gudas was forced out of this game with 7:38 remaining in the second period with a lower-body injury and would not return. Pavel Mintyukov blocked a shot in the seventh minute of the third period, which forced him to writh in pain on the ice until Calgary took a 2-1 lead. He returned for two shifts in the dying minutes of the game, aiding his tiring blueline mates.
At 5v5 in this game, the Ducks accounted for the majority of shots on goal (53.06%) and shot attempts (53.85%), but Calgary got shots off from better locations, accounting for 51.84% of the expected goals.
Mikael Granlund: If there were such a thing as a “veteran hat trick,” this was it. Two minutes after the Ducks surrendered yet another opening goal, Granlund finds space in the middle on the rush, uses a defender as a screen, and beats Cooley from distance.
Later, when Calgary takes a late penalty in the final five minutes of a one-goal game, Granlund gets to a spot to the right of Cooley where a perimeter rebound finds him, and he buries from a severe angle.
To finish this one off, Calgary takes another penalty in the last minute of overtime. In the final second of the extra period, he and John Carlson run a switch at the top of the left circle that puts Granlund in a one-time spot, and while fading away from the net, Granlund is able to beat Cooley from distance again, this time using Kreider’s screen in front.
With McTavish in the press box or in the bottom six of late, Granlund has stepped up offensively, utilizing his elite vision, tenacity, and hockey IQ to fill in the gaps left by a struggling young player. Granlund now has seven points (all goals) in his last four games, including five in his last two.
Power Play: Though he’s been resigned to fourth-line duties since returning from a pair of healthy scratches, McTavish has performed well on the power play and found ways to spark quality chances on the man advantage. He’s being utilized at the left flank, where he can draw toward the blueline to support his point defenseman (LaCombe) at the top of the umbrella.
From that spot, as is the case with Granlund on the Ducks’ other unit, McTavish can feed one-time attempts to the top of the umbrella. When that option isn’t available, he can attack downhill, looking for space to get his own shot off, hit the goal line release forward, find the bumper, or attempt a seam pass to the opposite flank, all plays McTavish has shown he has the ability to make from that spot.
The Ducks will wrap up their Western Canada road trip on Saturday with a matinee game against the team trailing them in the Pacific Division race: the Edmonton Oilers. This will be a true litmus test for this Ducks group and perhaps their most important game of the season to date.
The Cleveland Browns frequently restructure contracts to create more flexibility under the salary cap. The recent move to restructure Myles Garrett’s contract has generated significant discussion among fans and media about Cleveland’s long-term plans for him. This specific restructure would make it easier for the team to trade him in the near future.
Adam Schefter of ESPN reported that he spoke with the Browns, who insist they have no intention of trading Garrett, but speculation continues. There has been significant turmoil between Cleveland Garrett and others over the years. Last off-season, Garrett requested a trade before eventually signing his contract extension with the team. It wouldn’t be surprising to learn that the relationship between the two sides remains fractured.
The Browns’ choosing to trade Garrett would be a sign that they are looking to reset the roster by getting some draft picks in return. Coming off a defensive player of the year season, his value is at its highest, so the team could expect to get a nice return while he is still at the peak of his career.
On the other hand, Garrett is the best player on this roster and has been the face of this team since he was drafted in 2017. He is a fan favorite, and his departure would be upsetting for many. It’s rare for teams to encounter a talent like Myles Garrett, so they should think very carefully before deciding to part ways with him.
Let me know what you think in the comments – Should the Browns trade Myles Garrett?
Los Angeles, CA - March 26: Kyle Tucker #23 of the Los Angeles Dodgers watches his RBI double as teammate Shohei Ohtani (not pictured) scores against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the seventh inning of an opening day baseball game at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Thursday, March 26, 2026. (Photo by Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images
There is no better feeling than starting the season with a win, and that’s how the Dodgers began the 2026 season, defeating the Arizona Diamondbacks on Thursday 8-2.
The Dodgers used a pair of four-run innings in the bottom of the fifth and seventh innings to erase their brief deficit against Arizona, and Kyle Tucker began the rally in the seventh with an RBI double to give him his first hit in a Dodger uniform. He later scored on a Mookie Betts single and finished the night 1-4 with a double, a walk and an RBI.
Tucker spoke with Bob Costas at NBC about getting his first game as a Dodger under his belt and about playing for a team that has their aspirations set on a third consecutive championship.
“It feels great,” Tucker said. “It started off well tonight. The audience— the fans coming out to and supporting us— is unbelievable… There’s some phenomenal players on this roster. They love the city of L.A. and try to do the best for everyone that comes out and supports us.”
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Will Smith ended his night on Thursday the same way he ended the 2025 World Series— with a home run. Smith’s home run capped off the second four-run inning for the Dodgers, and the All-Star catcher finished 2-4 with three RBI.
“It’s a really tough lineup,” Smith said. “You got guys that can slug, guys that can get on base. There’s no off at-bats for the other team. There’s no easy outs and we take pride in that, whoever’s on the roster. It should be a really fun year. We started off 1-0 and that was the goal today.”
Miguel Rojas has now played in the final opening day of his 13-year playing career, going 1-4 with a run scored in Thursday’s victory. Rojas found out only on Tuesday that he was given the start at second base, noting that he wasn’t expecting any favors from Dave Roberts, notes Maddie Lee of the Los Angeles Times.
“I didn’t know if ‘Thank you’ was the right thing to say because it’s something I earned,” Rojas recounted before the Dodgers’ 8-2 win Thursday against the Diamondbacks. “It’s not something that I asked for as a favor. So I was just kind of speechless.”
Welcome to Inside the Suns, your weekly deep down analysis of the current Phoenix Suns team. Each week the Fantable — a round table of Bright Siders — give their takes on the Suns’ latest issues and news.
Fantable Questions of the Week
Q1: Currently, the Suns have a 95% chance of ending up in the Play-In tournament. Between the other most likely play-in teams (Clippers, Trail Blazers, Warriors), which is the team you would least prefer to play against?
GuarGuar: I’d least like to play against the Clippers in the Play-In, but that seems like who our first game matchup is going to be. Ty Lue always has some unique defensive game plans against us, and I think he could junk up our offense. No Harden or Zubac is big, but they still are performing very well, and Kawhi has been at an All-NBA level.
Diamondhacks: The fan in me would rather skirt playoff-tested coaches and superstars. The pretend-coach in me is more concerned with team pace, because we’ve notably struggled vs so-so (i.e., Play-In caliber) squads who play fast.
NBA Pace Rankings 2025-26
1st – Miami 2nd – Atlanta 3rd – Chicago … 8th – Portland 18th – GSW 28th – LAC
So, if Avdija is “back” healthy and pushing the pace, I’d be most averse to Portland.
Ashton: I am not using metrics here, but more of which game would I be most entertained to watch? For me, that is the GSW. This is not based on current playoff/seeding projections, but if the implosion of the Warriors happens during a Suns game, okay, cool. Keep in mind, I am a Steve Kerr fan.
Then we get to spend the summer reading about all the possible trades that GSW can do to get younger. End of an era type stuff.
Yeah, Beat LA light and I like some of the youth movement out of Portland, but GSW and the Suns would pull the TV ratings.
OldAz: Easy. Golden State. Basically, to face the Warriors, either the Warriors have to get hot down the stretch and make up 2-3 games to finish in 8th, or the Suns have been passed by both Portland and the Clippers to finish in 9th, of that the Suns have lost game 1 of the play in and now face elimination against the Warriors after losing game 1. The Warriors are also a team that historically have stepped it up in the playoffs after underwhelming regular season performances. If Curry and a green are healthy, and especially in option #1 they are on a hot streak, then I would want no part of them.
Rod: I’m going with the Clippers here mostly because I think they’re the most unpredictable team of the bunch. In the last few weeks, they beat the Knicks and the Timberwolves (by 25 points), then lost to Sacramento and New Orleans (twice), and then beat Milwaukee by 33 after barely squeaking by Dallas in an overtime game.
Whoever it turns out to be, I just hope that the Suns bring their A-game to the court that night.
Q2: According to Gambo, Dillon Brooks could be back early next week, possibly in time for Monday’s game against Memphis. When he returns, would you put him right back into the starting lineup or bring him in off the bench at first?
GuarGuar: I’d bring Dillon right back into the starting group when he gets back. We miss his defense and toughness greatly, and his fearlessness when it comes to creating his own shot. His intensity has been missed during this stretch of close losses.
Diamondhacks: The best usage decisions are typically informed, so I’d defer to someone intimately familiar with the team’s competitive and personal dynamics. Maybe someone who spends a lot of time communicating with, motivating, and analyzing the leveraged performance of the personnel in question? I mean for a living and with demonstrated success.
Hmmm…if only there was such a person. Gosh, I can’t imagine who that might be.
Ashton: I would get Brooks off the bench as soon as medically possible to start working off the rust and to start his motor mouth for technical fouls. This will play heavy with what Q3 is asking, in which case, if he’s good to go, then start him for the last few games.
He is going to have some frustration to work off with his pending driving misdemeanors. And if he thinks he has faced stiff defenses in the past, wait until he pleads (legal disclaimer: Innocent until proven guilty) out and runs up against the Arizona Department of Transportation. No Rolls-Royce for you, Dillon the Villain, and we are not talking about playing with RO. I will be surprised if my paragraph makes it past the editors and the SBNation legal team, but this is Scottsdale we are talking about. All professional athletes should be warned about visiting Scottsdale.
Royce may be the first option to start, but I still would like to see more of Fleming.
OldAz: I would personally already be starting Fleming at the 4 and this would really be asking if Brooks would return to start at the small forward position in place of Allen. The answer in that case would still be “yes” because I want the remaining games to work with that bigger front line. However, back in the real world, where Ott is unwilling to play his bigger wings at the start of games, I would also go back to Brooks because at least he plays big. I would again bench Gillespie or Allen and play Brooks with Onealle because this group has played along the front line together more so far this year.
Rod: I do believe that a game or two coming off the bench would probably be good for him until he gets his game legs and his rhythm back. The quicker those things return should be the guide as to when he returns to the starting lineup and the minutes he plays. At this point, I don’t see a big need to rush him back into the starting lineup or play him big minutes until he’s proven he’s ready for those things.
Q3: If the Suns wind up locked into a certain playoff/Play-In seed before the season ends, should they consider resting certain players in their final few games?
GuarGuar: I definitely think if we are locked into the 7 spot, we should rest a couple of guys a game or two before the Play-In. But I want us to have an established rhythm first before we do that. If we haven’t gelled yet with everyone back, I think getting game reps would be more beneficial than sitting out games out of caution.
Diamondhacks: Sure. Rest and recovery are essential for any successful athlete, and all resource managers consider it. They’re always ‘considering’ it. Every game. Every single run. Individual Suns who look tired or worn out to me on a semi-regular or cumulative basis include Gillespie, Allen, O’Neale, and Booker. Basically, our minutes leaders who trend older or less ‘athletic’ and who also tend to deliver the lion’s share of team value. Perhaps Goodwin as well, although he never really looks tired.
Ashton: It seems like the Suns have been “resting” players all season long due to injuries. What a turnstile that has been. Honestly, it is bad when the first thing I look at before a Suns game is the injury report. It has detracted from what has been an above-average season.
So, the pundits are saying the Suns are locked into a playoff season and most likely the seven seed. With all the injuries, I see zero reason not to rest players if that is the case. Silver can’t complain about the Suns tanking for a draft pick, and yes, the quality of the game sucks for the fans in attendance.
But more playing time for the rookies? Sign me up.
OldAz: Maybe in the last game, but otherwise I would just scale back the minutes for Booker to around 25 minutes for a few games so that he is fresher but still in rhythm come playoff time. Maybe the same for Gillespie who has played a lot of minutes this year. Beyond that, Green needs to keep playing to build rhythm and consistency, and everyone else’s minutes would be dictated mainly by getting and staying healthy.
Rod: Considering their bad luck with injuries this season, I’d say yes. If there are a few games at the end of the season where winning or losing won’t have any effect on their playoff/Play-In position, risking another injury to one of their key players just doesn’t seem particularly smart. I’m not certain whether I’d sit all the starters or just restrict their minutes and give the bench guys plenty of playing time in those games, though. Maybe playing the starters just enough to keep them from getting rusty without wearing them down might be the best way to go.
As always, many thanks to our Fantable members for all their extra effort this week!
Quotes of the Week
“We just have to keep growing, keep building and I think we’re competing hard. We’re just haven’t gotten over that hump. Yes, we’re getting there. We’re learning. When we’re the more physical team it puts us in a better situation.” – Devin Booker
“Roll the ball out, whoever’s in the rotation, whoever’s out there, let’s get it. It would be nice to be healthy, though but soon as that ball gets tossed in the air we aren’t thinking about it.” – Jalen Green
“Just knowing that I can go out there and compete with these guys and that just builds confidence for me.” – Rasheer Fleming
“If I’m passing up shots, it’s not doing really any good for our team. No matter who is out there, I got to be aggressive, especially when I first catch the ball because that’s the most open I’ll be.” – Collin Gillespie
“You’ve got to kind of earn your respect in the league.” – Collin Gillespie
“We don’t really dwell too much on what happened yesterday. That’s part of the NBA.” – Jalen Green
Suns Trivia/History
Grayson Allen’s first three-pointer vs Denver was the 1000th of his NBA career and his 2nd was his 500th playing for the Suns (his career total now stands at 1004, 503 for the Suns). His total of 503 three point makes for Phoenix is 10th on the Suns’ All-Time leaders list.
Collin Gillespie is just 7 three-point makes away from surpassing Quentin Richardson as the Suns’ All-Time leader in threes made in a single season. Richardson set the record (226) back in 2005. With 195 makes this season, Royce O’Neale is currently 8th on that list and, while it’s extremely unlikely that he could catch up to Collin by the end of the season, with 11 more makes he could move up as high as 3rd on that list, passing both Grayson Allen (2024) and Raja Bell (2007) who are currently tied for that position with 205 makes each.
Players Averaging Over 25.0 PPG & With A Defensive Field Goal Percentage (DFG%) Under 45.0% In The 2025-26 NBA Regular Season :
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander — 31.5 PPG & 42.8 DFG%
Jaylen Brown — 28.6 PPG & 42.8 DFG%
Giannis Antetokounmpo — 27.6 PPG & 43.4 DFG%
Kevin Durant — 26.0 PPG & 42.4 DFG%
Devin Booker — 25.5 PPG & 43.6 DFG%
(From Stat Defender/@statdefender)
On April 3, 1994, Kevin Johnson scored a season high 42 points and dished out 17 assists while playing 45 minutes in a 108-98 non-OT win over the Denver Nuggets. He did not make a single 3-point shot in the game but was 14-16 from the FT line.
On April 3, 2002, the Suns lost 89-83 – in an overtime game – to the Philadelphia 76ers. It is the lowest point total by the Suns ever in an overtime game. Curiously, the Suns 2nd lowest point total in an overtime game (84 points) was in an 84-83 overtime WIN against Minnesota on Feb. 26, 2013.
This Week’s Game Schedule
Saturday, March 28 – Suns vs Utah Jazz (7:00 pm) NBATV Monday, March 30 – Suns @ Memphis Grizzlies (5:00 pm) Tuesday, March 31 – Suns @ Orlando Magic (4:00 pm) Thursday, April 2 – Suns @ Charlotte Hornets (4:00 pm)
This Week’s Valley Suns Game Schedule
None.
The Valley Suns’ regular season is over and they did not qualify for the G League playoffs.
Important Future Dates
March 31 – 2026 NBA G League Playoffs begin April 12 – Regular season ends (All 30 teams play) April 13 – Rosters set for NBA Playoffs 2026 (3 p.m. ET) April 14-17 – SoFi NBA Play-In Tournament April 18 – NBA Playoffs begin
CHICAGO,IL - JULY 2: Flags are displayed before a game between the Boston Red Sox and the Chicago Cubs on July 2, 2022 at Wrigley Field in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Billie Weiss/Boston Red Sox/Getty Images) | Getty Images
We’ve given you plenty of Brewers preview content this week (and all month), but let’s take a more detailed (but still Brewers-fan-centric) look around the rest of the division and see what the teams who are trying to knock the Brewers off their perch are bringing to the table this year.
We’ll go in alphabetical order (which just so happens to be the order in which I think they’ll finish), with a rating out of 10 on the threat level they pose to the Brewers this year, as determined by your humble author, who still thinks Milwaukee should be regarded as the favorite.
Chicago Cubs
The Cubs are viewed by essentially every major media outlet as the favorite in the National League Central. The headline additions for the Cubs are third baseman Alex Bregman (who signed a five-year, $175 million deal) and starting pitcher Edward Cabrera, who came over from the Marlins for a package headlined by top prospect Owen Caissie. The Cubs also added several bullpen pieces, most notably Hunter Harvey, Phil Maton, and Hoby Milner. (They also signed Shelby Miller, but he may not pitch at all in 2025 after he needed Tommy John surgery after a late-season injury with the Brewers last year.)
On the way out, the big Cubs loss was Kyle Tucker, who of course signed with the Los Angeles Dodgers. But they also watched several bullpen arms go, including a couple who were quite good for them in 2025 (Brad Keller, Drew Pomeranz).
Chicago has been widely praised for the signing of Bregman, who is viewed as one of the league’s best clubhouse presences, plays good defense, and is a solidly above average hitter. Bregman, though, turns 32 in a few days, and played only 114 games in 2025, so that’s something to keep an eye on. And while Bregman has been a good player over the last six years, he hasn’t been a legitimate star since 2018 and 2019, when he had back-to-back top-five MVP finishes.
Bregman’s signing should help, but we need to look at it through the prism of who he “replaced,” Tucker. Even in what was viewed as a “down season” at times, Tucker put up a 143 OPS+ in 2025, made the All-Star Game, and earned 4.6 WAR in 135 games, a better rate than the 3.5 WAR Bregman earned in 114 games. Tucker is also three years younger than Bregman, and has been unequivocally better over the past five seasons.
Bregman is a good pickup for the Cubs, but he’s a step down from Tucker, and I don’t know why this isn’t being more widely considered.
As for Cabrera, he was quite good in 2025 (3.53 ERA/3.83 FIP, 3.13 K:BB in 137 2/3 innings) in his age-27 season. The question, really, is whether that’s who Cabrera is now or whether the significant control problems that plagued him from 2022-2024 will rear their head. Prior to 2025, Cabrera had made 63 career appearances (61 starts) and thrown 294 innings and walked over five batters per nine. That’s a huge number over such a large sample; for instance, the highest BB/9 among qualified starting pitchers in 2025 was Gavin Williams at 4.5. Jacob Misiorowski only walked 4.2 batters per nine in the big leagues in 2025.
Of course, the fact that Cabrera substantially lowered that rate over a large sample (last year was the first time he’d thrown more than 100 innings in his career) is encouraging. Cabrera does have good stuff—he sits around 97 with his fastball and had some of the better offspeed stuff in the league last year, according to Statcast. But if I were a Cubs fan, I’d be nervous watching his walks, at least early in the season.
Chicago should also be helped this season by the return of Justin Steele, who had surgery on his UCL about a year ago. He’s pitching again, but the Cubs just placed him on the 60-day IL, so he obviously won’t be back for at least a couple of months. Steele was one of the league’s best pitchers in 2023 and more-or-less replicated those results (although in a smaller sample) in 2024, but made only four starts before his injury in 2025.
The infield is good: alongside Bregman, Dansby Swanson and Nico Hoerner (my pick for the league’s best second baseman last season, and who the Cubs just signed to a lucrative extension) are both excellent defensive players who can hit a bit, and Michael Busch, who was the hitter in Chicago’s lineup who scared me the most in last year’s NLDS, looks to be the real deal, at least as long as he’s facing right-handed pitching.
Pete Crow-Armstrong leads the outfield, but we’ll have to see how he adjusts this season. After exploding out of the gate and making himself a Bonafide MVP candidate by mid summer, PCA struggled badly in the second half of the season and finished with a .287 on-base percentage. There are real, nearly existential questions about his plate discipline, but he did hit 31 homers and steal 35 bases last year, and if nothing else he’s a dynamic player who provides true A+ defense in center field. Ian Happ, Seiya Suzuki, and Matt Shaw are all players who should help, while Dylan Carlson and Michael Conforto are looking to get their careers back on track.
Threat level: 7/10. The Cubs won 92 games in 2025, and went five with the Brewers in the NLDS. They’re well-funded. They have some star power, and maybe the best everyday infield in the game (though I wouldn’t want to be the one writing the checks in 2029, when Bregman and Swanson will be 35 and Hoerner 32 and they’ll make something like $75m combined). But I still see problems with the pitching staff, and while the narrative out there seems to be that Chicago greatly improved this offseason, I don’t really see it. They should win 90-ish games again and they certainly could usurp the Brewers at the top of the division, but I think the universal consensus that they will is a little bizarre, frankly.
Cincinnati Reds
The Reds won 83 games in 2025 and snuck into the playoffs, where they lost two lopsided Wild Card games to the Dodgers. They’re a team with some intriguing talent, but the health of their pitching staff is in question at the beginning of the season and that’s a problem.
The biggest issue is Hunter Greene, their best pitcher, who made only 19 starts last year but pitched to a 2.76 ERA (166 ERA+) and struck out 11 batters per nine while walking only 2.2. Greene is one of the hardest throwers in the league—he averaged 99.5 on his fastball last year, higher even than Misiorowski—and has been one of the best pitchers in baseball while on the mound over the last two seasons. But he needed surgery to remove bone chips from his elbow earlier this month, and isn’t expected back in the big leagues until July, and of course any sort of elbow injury for a guy who throws in triple digits is alarming. The Reds probably need Greene in order to be good enough to make the postseason, and I’m not sure they’re going to get enough of him.
Andrew Abbott, Brady Singer, Nick Lodolo, and Chase Burns round out what is hypothetically one of the best five-man rotations anywhere in baseball. Abbott had a 2.87 ERA in over 165 innings last season, and while there are some concerns that he’s outperforming his peripherals, he’d still be a well above-average pitcher even if his ERA ticked back closer to his FIP.
Lodolo has shown a lot of promise, but he’s also struggled at times to stay on the mound. He made only 28 starts between 2023 and 2024, and while he did appear in 29 games last season, he missed some time in August. He’s dealing with a blister that landed him on the IL to start this season, which isn’t exactly what you want.
Singer doesn’t bring many durability concerns; he’s topped 125 innings in each of his five full seasons and hasn’t thrown less than 153 since 2021. Singer isn’t going to be a star but he’s as reliable an innings eater as you’re likely to find in 2026. Burns is electric, and debuted to much fanfare last season, when in 43 1/3 innings he struck out 67 batters. He was a top-25 overall prospect prior to last season, and figures to be one of the most exciting young pitchers in the league.
Speaking of exciting, on the other side of the ball the Reds boast one of the most dynamic players in baseball, Elly De La Cruz. Over his first three seasons, things have been kind of all over the place, as you’d expect for a player with so much raw talent in his early 20s—for instance, in 2024 he stole a league-leading 67 bases and hit 36 doubles, 10 triples, and 25 homers, but also struck out a league-leading 218 times. His offensive game took a slight step back in 2025. But he’s still very young—he just turned 24 in January—and Reds fans have every reason to believe that this athletic freak with real power and good defensive tools (he’s rated as not bad, but not great at shortstop so far) will be a star for years to come. Heck, Keith Law even picked him for NL MVP.
There’s also a prime bounceback candidate in Matt McLain, a new (old) guy with potential for 50 homers in Eugenio Suárez, and a big-time prospect in Sal Stewart. Noelvi Marte occasionally looks like a star, though a steroid suspension threw a pretty big wrench in his career. TJ Friedl is pretty good. But this isn’t an overwhelming lineup unless a lot of things go right.
Threat level: 5/10. There are some interesting pieces here, and the rotation, at full health, is loaded. But will we ever get that rotation at full health? That remains to be seen, and while I like some parts of this lineup I’m not thrilled about others. I’ve also got questions about the bullpen. The skeleton of a good team is here, but I’m not sure they’ll be able to put it together this year.
Pittsburgh Pirates
The Pirates are a trendy pick to improve greatly, and I saw them in multiple “bold predictions” columns and segments for “will make the playoffs in 2026.” Let’s even give them the benefit of the doubt and ignore (at least, mostly) the first game of the season, in which Paul Skenes didn’t even make it out of the first inning.
Yes, they have Skenes, and his dud of a start notwithstanding (Skenes was charged with five runs but should’ve gotten out of the first with only a run in; his center fielder, Oneil Cruz, made two awful plays in a row that cost the team at least three runs) he might be the best pitcher in baseball, and is certainly the best pitcher in the National League.
My big question here is: how far does one starting pitcher get you in an era where starting pitchers rarely throw even 200 innings?
That question is kind of central to the Pittsburgh Pirates problem. Their offense should be better this year, but that’s a low bar—they were dead last in 2025, 60 runs behind the third-worst Cleveland Guardians. Their offense in 2025 wasn’t just bad, it was atrocious. So what’d they do to address it? They traded for Brandon Lowe (who homered twice off Freddy Peralta on Opening Day), which should help a bit, and they signed Ryan O’Hearn, who had a good 2025 season, and they also signed Marcell Ozuna, who can still hit, I think.
There are a couple of problems here, though. First, none of those guys is at a stage where you’d expect them to get any better. In July, O’Hearn will turn 33 and Lowe will turn 32. Ozuna is 35, and while he was still an above-average hitter in 2025, he took a pretty major step back from the previous two seasons. The other issue here is defense. Lowe played second base today, while O’Hearn was in right field and Ozuna played the only position he can play: designated hitter. Lowe was one of the worst defensive second basemen in baseball last year, while O’Hearn has kind of mixed defensive numbers. But Pittsburgh is also going with Cruz in center—which, if early returns are any indication, is not going to go well—and while Ke’Bryan Hayes wasn’t helping their league-worst offense, he was one of the best defensive players in the league (he was traded to Cincinnati at least year’s trade deadline). Pittsburgh ranked a healthy ninth in defense in 2025. Their offense should be better in 2026, but they might give most of those runs back on the other side of the ball.
Might Konnor Griffin, the game’s top prospect, solve a lot of these issues? Yes, it’s certainly possible. As soon as the Pirates are certain they’ll get that extra year of service, I’d expect to see Griffin in the majors, and he’ll be in instant mega-upgrade over Jared Triolo at short. Griffin can handle himself defensively and has major offensive upside. He could be a star even this year.
But that’s one guy. This lineup still sent out Triolo, Spencer Horwitz, Nick Gonzales, and Henry Davis on Opening Day, not to mention the boom-or-bust Cruz and Bryan Reynolds, who despite his escapades against the Brewers, was a below-league-average hitter in 2025 (and who is also now on the wrong side of 30). In the rotation, there is some promise, but a lot of that is tied up in Bubba Chandler, who has only 31 major league innings, and Jared Jones, who can’t stay healthy (and is on the 60-day IL to start the season, meaning a late-May debut at the earliest). The bullpen looks like a weakness.
Threat level: 2/10. I don’t see it. The Angels had Shohei Ohtani and Mike Trout and couldn’t make the playoffs. I don’t see the Pirates doing it with Skenes and Griffin.
St. Louis Cardinals
The Cardinals are doing a full rebuild for the first time I can ever really remember. They haven’t lost less than 70 games in a full, 162-game season since 1981. 1981! They didn’t even have Ozzie Smith yet in 1981. (The Cardinals did go 53-61 in 1994 and 62-81 in 1995, but those weren’t quite full seasons due to the strike.)
I’d say that streak is certainly in jeopardy this year. St. Louis traded Willson Contreras and Sonny Gray to the Red Sox, Nolan Arenado to the Diamondbacks, and Brendan Donovan to the Mariners. Donovan and Contreras were, by WAR, the Cards’ two best players last year. Gray was their best starter. Arenado had a rough, injury-plagued season, but he’s still Nolan Arenado.
The Cardinals are not trying to hide that they aren’t really trying to compete this year. John Mozeliak, who’d been at the helm of the front office since 2007, stepped down at the end of his contract after last season and was replaced by Chaim Bloom. The new leadership clearly demonstrated that they weren’t attached to any of the team’s veteran players, nor to winning, for that matter. Strange, for this team.
There are some interesting pieces. JJ Wetherholt is one of the league’s top prospects, and hit a homer in his major-league debut on Thursday. He could win Rookie of the Year. Masyn Winn is a defensive wizard. Victor Scott II is very fast. Lars Nootbaar has an interesting Statcast page. Iván Herrera is a good player.
But guys like these are interesting pieces, not foundational ones, at least not at this point in their career. The pitching staff might be a disaster. There’s not much else to it. I know I said in our division predictions the other day that I thought they’d win 71 games… but I don’t think they’re going to do that, actually.
Threat level: 0/10. It’s hard to ignore what 37 years of life on this Earth have told me about Cardinals Devil Magic, but they’re gonna be bad.
KANSAS CITY, MO - MARCH 27: Vinnie Pasquantino #9 of the Kansas City Royals takes the field during introductions prior to the game between the Cleveland Guardians and the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium on Thursday, March 27, 2025 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
A couple of social media posts from yesterday
Indeed.
But then I saw this and did an “awwww”:
Spent my last @MLB Opening Day at The K with my friend, Buck O’Neil in 2006. He’d missed getting into the HOF in Feb. by one vote and the @royals honored him! Buck passed away in Oct. after speaking at the HOF in July on behalf of 17 other Negro Leaguers who were selected! pic.twitter.com/7geCHOQPjf
Fourteen MLB.TV or Royals.TV teams have wire cams this season, including the Royals. However, what makes Kansas City stand out is that the Royals are one of two teams to have a wire cam and a drone. The other team to have both is the Milwaukee Brewers.
And it speaks to why Garcia has become who he is, a pillar of the Royals, despite a future in baseball that was somewhere between improbable and unfathomable a decade ago.
Back then, maybe the only thing measurably clear about the then-16-year-old’s stature was his meager weight. When longtime Royals executive Rene Francisco told me a few years ago that Garcia had been 127 pounds, Garcia smiled and simply said “one hundred twenty-eight.” And when Picollo put it at 130 pounds last December after the Royals signed him to a contract extension, Garcia again smiled and said … 128.
The outfield is more tweaked than overhauled this year — Kyle Isbel is now likely in a platoon with Lane Thomas in centerfield, and while Starling Marte appears more prepared to serve as a designated hitter, he’s still capable of playing there. Jac Caglianone is back after some rookie-year struggles, though those struggles were only at the big-league level. And the Royals have added Isaac Collins.
That group doesn’t include a middle-of-the-order addition they would have liked to make — the Royals avoided sacrificing their financial future or prospect future to acquire a power bat — but it still should be better.
“The distance and the height of the fence, both of those factors were part of how we did our research,” Picollo said. “With every foot you brought the fence in, it had an effect on fly balls. And for every, I’ll say, 6 inches you brought the fences down, it had an effect as well. So with our algorithms, our R&D (research and development) department, we were able to figure out what we were trying to accomplish with our field overall, whether it’s the height of the fence or the distance of the fence.
“We were trying to get the park to still play really below league average. We didn’t want to get to the point where it’s league average. We want it to play fair. So we had a sliding scale that essentially measured every foot you brought the fences in, and every 6 inches you brought the fences down, and where we landed was in the range that we were trying to accomplish.”
At KCUR, Halle Jackson reports on life at the Truman Sports Complex after the teams leave:
“The easy process is to just sign up a data center, make the county a bunch of money and call it a day. But I want Jackson County to think bigger,” LeVota said. “I want that area to be a vibrant, economically driven space that contributes to the financial engine of the region and for the benefit of Jackson County residents for years to come.”
The county released renderings that show potential jumping-off points for the sports complex’s future. Shopping, tennis courts, an amphitheater and more take the place of parking lots. One rendering even shows Arrowhead Stadium renamed and redeveloped into “Arrowhead Downs,” a horse racing facility.
The AL Central is something I’ve obviously discussed a ton, so I won’t waste a ton of internet ink on it, but I think the Tigers are the best team and the Royals are the second-best team. So that of course means I’ll be wrong and the Guardians with their lineup held together by bubble gum that’s been under a desk for a week will win 95 games and run away with the thing. I do think the Twins continue their sell-off and end up worse than the White Sox.
Meanwhile, at Into the Fountains, Craig Brown writes about the Royals setting their roster:
All of this movement meant that Drew Waters, who was out of options, was designated for assignment. He finishes his Royals career hitting .234/.300/.369 in 684 plate appearances spread over four seasons. Beyond a brief early showing back in ’22, there just wasn’t enough there. And if you couldn’t push your way into the starting outfield mix on this club the last couple of seasons, that’s going to be a problem. He’s still 27 and is a switch hitter. He will hook on with some team and maybe even find himself back on a major league bench in the not too distant future.
Unfortunately, Lange and Falter are both out of Minor League options. Thus, to keep them on the 40-man roster, they both need to be on the active roster. While they haven’t had great Spring Training campaigns by any means, they certainly did enough to merit longer looks, even if there may be marginally better options in Triple-A, like Luinder Avila, Steven Cruz, and Ryan Bergert.
At this time of the year, the “option” game often carries a bigger weight, especially since teams do not want to lose possible MLB contributors for nothing on the waiver wire or in free agency. Thus, Lange and Falter will get a little more time at the beginning of the season to show if they can find their roles on the Royals’ pitching staff this season, and, perhaps, beyond.
On a final little note, I wonder if Darin would ever do one of those ignominious years. Like “This Date in Royals History – 2004 Edition”. This was the Best Opening Day! This was the Grimsley/Harvey game (amusingly, one of the “next up on YouTube” clips is “Shocking Plane Crashes and Mistakes Caught on Camera”). This was the Chip Ambes game. This was the end of the 19-game losing streak. Think about it, Darin!
Ever since they moved Opening Day to Thursday, I like to do a little look in at all of the games around the league for OT.
Pirates at Mets – First game of the day was broadcast over the air on NBC. Good deal! A Brandon Lowe homer in the first gives the Pirates a 2-0 lead. That’s all Paul Skenes should need, right?
Pirates fans out here getting kicked in the nads in the first inning of Opening Day.
Oneil Cruz misplays not one, but two fly balls leading to 4 Mets runs. Skenes and his 67.50 ERA don’t make it out of the first. New Mets ace Freddy Peralta gave up 4 runs across 5 innings but the Mets offense kept producing, en route to an 11-7 win.
White Sox at Brewers – The revamped White Sox were no match for Jacob Misiorowski. His 11 strikeouts were a Brewers Opening Day record. But the Brewers weren’t done, as four relievers added 9 more Ks, “tying the modern Major League mark for strikeouts in any nine-inning game since at least 1900.” Miz was also just the 7th youngest pitcher to get double-digit strikeouts on Opening Day. Looking at the box score, I think I’m also impressed that 11 different White Sox struck out; it wasn’t just a couple golden sombreros and a couple other guys.
Tigers at Padres – Hyped Tigers prospect Kevin McGonigle had himself an MLB debut. His first major league hit was a 2-run double. He would tack on 3 more, going 4 for 5 with a pair of doubles, 2 runs, and 2 RBIs. A 2.000 OPS? Not bad, rook. Tarik Skubal was locked in, giving up only a single, unearned run in 6 IP. The Tigers lineup combination of Torkelson-McGonigle-Dingler… kindof makes me giggle. It sounds like a trio that suited up for the Boston Beaneaters. That said, they went 7 for 14 with 5 R and 6 RBI so they’ll probably make me eat my words later this season.
Nationals at Cubs – Pete Crow-Armstrong and Nica Hoerner have both signed 6-year contract extensions this week. But today belonged to the Nats. Joey Wiemer, who spent time in Omaha after arriving in the Brady Singer for Jonathan India swap, homered and collected 2 more hits and a walk. Going from a .603 OPS last year in AAA to 3.000 today. Not bad. Gametime temp at Wrigley this afternoon? A blustery 49 with 22 mph winds.
Twins at Orioles – Looking at the box score, nothing really jumped out, so I’m going to let MLB’s Jake Rill help me with this one: “In many ways, Thursday was truly Day One of what Baltimore believes could be a new era of O’s baseball. There was a new jumbo videoboard in center field at Camden Yards, a new superstar at first base (Pete Alonso), a new manager in the dugout and new faces all around.” Trevor Rogers went 7 scoreless. The O’s picked up a pair in the 7th, going single-single-sac fly-single-flyout-single, and held on for a 2-1 win.
Red Sox at Reds – Remember when Cincy got to host the first game of Opening Day? We should go back to that. The Reds have an Opening Day parade in downtown and treat the day like a holiday. Like we all should. As for the game, Garrett Crochet and Andrew Abbott traded 0s through 6 innings. But then the Red Sox plated 1 in the 7th and 2 in the 9th. Former Red (and Royal) Aroldis Chapman got the save.
Angels at Astros – This was another game that was scoreless through 6. José Soriano went for the Angels while Hunter Brown pitched for the Astros. Can we get just a couple more healthy seasons out of Mike Trout, enough to get him to 500 home runs? After 3 walks, he hit an absolute bomb to break the scoreless tie and the Angels went on to win 3-0.
Rays at Cardinals – If this game didn’t have a 6th inning, it would have been a ho-hum 1-1 snoozer. However, games do, indeed, have a 6th inning. In the top of that frame, Tampa batted around and then some, putting up a 6-spot. However, the Cardinals answered with 8(!) of their own, capped off with 2 sacrifice flies, and an Alec Burleson home run. After giving up 5 ER in 0 IP, poor Ian Seymour of the Rays has an ERA of, checks notes: infinity.
Rangers at Phillies – This seemed like a nice, easy win for Philadelphia. Kyle Schwarber homered in the 1st, Alec Bohm homered in the 5th, and Cristopher Sánchez threw 6 scoreless. Former Royal Jonathan Bowlan and a reliever named Zach Pop got to pitch an inning. It was 5-0 going into the 9th. But then the Rangers put 3 on the board in the 9th and had the tying run up to bat. However, Evan Carter grounded out to end the game.
Guardians at Mariners – Is-not-a-Royal Brendan Donovan became the first Mariner in franchise history to lead off the season with a home run. Dominic Canzone, of WBC Team Italy fame, added a pair of bombs for the M. However, it was not enough. Rookie Chase DeLauter had 2 home runs for the Guardians in his MLB regular-season debut (he played in last year’s playoffs). Cleveland won 6-4.
Diamondbacks at Dodgers – This was the late game and it just finished a little bit ago. The Dodgers bazillion dollar lineup hit a couple of homers, Yamamoto shoved in his season debut, and LA won 8-2.
I got the first game of Spring Training and now I get the first day of the regular season. I don’t care that it’s a repeat.
SARASOTA, FL - MARCH 20: Trey Gibson #35 of the Baltimore Orioles pitches during the game between the Boston Red Sox and the Baltimore Orioles at Ed Smith Stadium on Friday, March 20, 2026 in Sarasota, Florida. (Photo by Scott Audette/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
It’s a brave new world for the Orioles’ farm system.
After years of the Orioles’ position player prospects outshining their counterparts on the mound, the tide has started to change in the upper minors. At Triple-A Norfolk in particular, there’s an impressive array of pitching prospects who appear poised to contribute to the Orioles sometime in the near future.
The Tides begin their 2026 tonight with a three-game series against the Nashville Sounds. Let’s take a look at the break-camp roster for the Orioles’ Triple-A affiliate:
Catchers
Silas Ardoin, Maverick Handley, Sam Huff, Creed Willems
The Tides listed Ardoin, Handley, and Willems on their opening roster on Tuesday, but since then the O’s have sent the veteran Huff to the minors as well. Four catchers seems like overkill, so someone is likely going to be the odd man out. The only prospect among the group is Willems, the Orioles’ eighth-round pick in 2021, who is coming off a solid season at Double-A Chesapeake (16 HRs, .779 OPS). MLB Pipeline ranks him as the club’s #19 prospect. The 22-year-old will get a chance to test his bat at the Triple-A level, but if the Orioles need a third catcher at some point, they’d likely go with Huff or Handley, who both have major league experience.
Infielders
José Barrero, Ryan Noda, Bryan Ramos, Willy Vasquez, Luis Vázquez, Weston Wilson
After the original Norfolk break-camp roster listed only Noda and Vasquez, the O’s sent a slew of other infielders to Triple-A when they made their final cuts before Opening Day. These guys are minor league journeymen; there are no actual prospects here. Vázquez, who broke his hand after getting hit by a pitch in the Orioles’ penultimate exhibition game, won’t be available for a while. Wilson, a former Phillie, was a candidate for the Birds’ utility infield spot before being reassigned on the final day. So too was Ramos, a waiver claim from the Cardinals who was out of options. Ramos cleared waivers yesterday and will stay in the organization.
Outfielders
Enrique Bradfield Jr. (Camden Chat’s #7 prospect), Jud Fabian, Jhonkensy Noel, Will Robertson, Reed Trimble
Norfolk’s best position-player prospect is in the outfield, where Bradfield will hope to improve upon his 10-for-56 performance in a 15-game sample at Triple-A last year. The 24-year-old’s blazing speed and elite defense are MLB-ready right now, but he’ll need to show a little more on offense before the O’s are comfortable subjecting him to major league pitching. Bradfield figures to make his Orioles debut at some point this season, but whether it’s as a regular starter or as a defensive replacement off the bench will hinge on how he performs at Norfolk.
Another intriguing name here is Trimble, a former top-30 O’s prospect whose career has been sidetracked by injuries. Between left shoulder surgery in 2021 and a hamstring injury in 2024, he has never played more than 90 games in any of his four professional seasons. He is incredibly good at one thing, though: stealing bases. Trimble is a perfect 61-for-61 in stolen base attempts in his minor league career. The Orioles added him to the 40-man roster this past winter to protect him from the Rule 5 draft, so they must think the 25-year-old still has some promise.
A fellow former top-30 prospect, Fabian, has all but stalled out at Triple-A, posting a .628 OPS since arriving in Norfolk in 2024. The second round of the 2022 draft, in which the Orioles selected both Fabian and the since-released Max Wagner, was not one of Mike Elias’s finest efforts. Rounding out the Tides’ outfield group is Noel, a.k.a. “Big Christmas,” who hits prodigious dingers every so often but doesn’t do much else.
Pitchers
RHP Jose Espada, RHP Cameron Foster, RHP Nestor German (#11 prospect), RHP Trey Gibson (#5 prospect), RHP Jackson Kowar, RHP Dean Kremer, LHP Andrew Magno, RHP Chayce McDermott, RHP Enoli Paredes, LHP Cade Povich, RHP Albert Suárez, LHP Josh Walker, RHP Levi Wells (#16 prospect), RHP Cameron Weston, RHP Brandon Young
Oh yeah, here’s the good stuff. In a stark contrast to last year, the Norfolk rotation is stacked with prospects. Gibson, German, and Wells make for a stellar trio of homegrown right-handers, all drafted (or in Gibson’s case, signed as an undrafted free agent) and developed by the Orioles. We’ve been waiting for a Mike Elias-drafted starting pitcher to make it to the majors, and it will likely happen this year. Gibson is the closest to MLB ready, though his eight-game debut at Triple-A last year was a struggle (8.90 ERA). Trey will take the mound for the Tides’ opener tonight.
I still can’t believe that Dean Kremer is back in Triple-A. I mean, I understand why it happened, but it’s just weird. Other than rehab stints, it’s his first time in the minors since 2021. His stay is expected to be short, as he’ll probably be back in the majors once the O’s need to give extra rest to their other starters, or if one of them gets hurt. It speaks to the Birds’ improved rotation depth that they didn’t have room for an essentially MLB-average starter like Kremer. And Povich and Young, who combined for 32 mostly unimpressive starts for the Orioles last year, will also serve as depth if needed.
Meanwhile, if there’s any hope for former top pitching prospect Chayce McDermott, he’s running out of chances to show it. The O’s converted him to relief last season and he performed well at Triple-A, only to cough up eight runs in just two appearances in the majors. He’s been passed on the bullpen depth chart by guys like Espada and Foster, who were part of the Birds’ bullpen competition in spring training, as well as Kowar, the hard-throwing righty who cleared waivers yesterday. The veteran Suárez returned to the O’s on a minor league deal and will likely be one of the first up when the Orioles need another arm.
SAN DIEGO, CA - MARCH 26: Kevin McGonigle #7 of the Detroit Tigers runs to second base after hitting a double in the top of the third inning during the game between the Detroit Tigers and the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on Thursday, March 26, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Rob Leiter/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
When the Detroit Tigers confirmed that young infielder Kevin McGonigle had made their Opening Day roster, the expectations could not have been higher.
Yet somehow, one of Major League Baseball’s top prospects managed to exceed them in his first game.
McGonigle roped the first pitch he saw on Thursday for a bases-loaded, two-run double, and added three more hits on the afternoon to finish the day 4-for-5 with two runs batted in, and two runs scored. In the process, he became just the third-youngest player with four or more hits on Opening Day in the last century of MLB action.
“What a debut,” manager A.J. Hinch said after Detroit’s 8-2 win. “He can hit.”
Hinch penciled McGonigle into the sixth spot in Detroit’s lineup, starting him at third base. He came to the plate with the bases loaded in the top of the first inning, and jumped on the first pitch he saw, a 91-mph cutter on the inside part of the plate. He laced that down the right-field line, bringing two teammates home on the very first pitch he saw:
“I was nervous, but it’s weird — I feel like right when I started my load to hit, it just went away,” McGonigle said after the game. “I felt great out there. Very confident. Looking to keep that same mindset going.”
McGonigle certainly had that same mindset in his second at-bat, which came in the top of the third inning. After falling down 0-2 in the count after missing on a fastball and taking a curve for the second strike, he battled back to even the count at 2-2. That’s when McGonigle jumped on another fastball on the inner half of the plate, roping a line drive off the top of the wall in right field:
While he just missed his first MLB home run, his head-first slide into second ahead of the throw from Fernando. Tatis Jr. gave him his second double in two at-bats.
He reached on an infield single in the fifth, and then popped out to third in the seventh, recording his first MLB out. But McGonigle had one more at-bat in the game, as he came to the dish in the top of the ninth.
That’s when he laced a single to right center for his fourth hit of the day:
“He won’t be as nervous as that at-bat, and if that’s the nervous version of him, we’re in for a fun year,” Hinch said. “I like the fact he was aggressive on his pitch. Obviously a big hit to open up the game a little bit and give us some breathing room. That set the tone for a really good day for him and for us.”
McGonigle was the youngest Tigers player named to an Opening Day roster since Omar Infante in 2003. And as noted above he became the third-youngest player in the last 100 years of MLB action to record four or more hits on Opening Day.
The only two players younger? Ken Griffey Jr. and Delino DeShields Jr., both of whom accomplished that feat on Opening Day in 1990.
“[I told myself] it’s just another game,” McGonigle said. “I kept that mindset, and I’m looking forward to keeping that going.”
It might have felt like just another game to McGonigle. But it certainly did not to Tigers fans.
To them, it felt like the future. And a very bright one at that.