Canadiens Lose To Hurricanes, Who Were The Better Team On The Night

After taking a 1-0 lead in the Eastern Conference Final over the Carolina Hurricanes on Thursday night, the Montreal Canadiens were hoping to emulate what the Vegas Golden Knights did on Friday night and take a 2-0 lead on the road. If the Canes appeared rusty in the first period of Game 1, it wasn’t the case in Game 2.

Rod Brind’Amour’s men got out of the gate in a hurry and displayed the full extent of their relentless brand of forecheck, which seemed to take the Canadiens by surprise a bit.

Fast And Furious First

The first frame was played at high speed; at times, it looked as if the Hurricanes had five Speedy Gonzaleses on the ice. After 20 minutes, Carolina had 14 hits to the Canadiens’ seven, despite having much of the puck possession. The Canes also dominated in the faceoff department, winning 64% of their draws and leading in shots 7-2. Still, the period ended on a 1-1 tie.

There were a couple of cautionary tales on the ice for Juraj Slafkovsky. Early on, he passed the puck right in front of Jakub Dobes’ net, and it was nearly intercepted. Then, in the dying seconds, he made yet another no-look back pass that led to a two-on-one odd-man rush. Luckily for the power forward, there was no damage done, but he must play a smarter game.

For all the Canes’ possession, though, they only manage to score once, and it was on a weak shot that deflected to get past Dobes. The kind of goal a goalie hates because it’s not going in at high speed, but there was nothing he could do. Josh Anderson tied up the score less than 10 minutes later on yet another great Phillip Danault play.

Being Disciplined

Referees do not tend to call a lot of penalties in the playoffs. Still, when they do call one, they tend to even things out at the first opportunity they get, which is exactly what happened in the first frame when Jayden Struble was given a roughing penalty for taking down Andrei Svechnikov after the whistle. The Canes player went down easy, but that’s to be expected in the playoffs.

Dobes also got an interference call for interfering with Mark Jankowski as he was going around the net, but the Canes had been pressuring the Habs, and that was just the goalie trying to land a hand. His play around the net in these playoffs has been highly useful for the Habs, but that was his fourth penalty of the postseason. The rookie netminder displayed nerves of steel when a stick got stuck in his skate, and he managed to calmly thread it out, without play being stopped, as if it was just business as usual.

Alexandre Texier took the worst penalty in the dying seconds of the middle frame. After Nick Suzuki missed a golden opportunity to score the equalizer, the Frenchman was given two minutes for slashing K’Andre Miller, but it could have been worse. The move was reminiscent of a Brad Marchand play on Alexei Emelin back in the day, not the kind of Marchand move you want to draw inspiration from.

Playing The Game That’s In Front Of You

The Canadiens did manage to tie the game at 2-2 before the end of the third frame once again through Anderson, but they didn’t last long in overtime. Montreal tried to keep up its momentum by attacking at the start of overtime, but they weren’t doing it the right way.

The fourth line, made up of Zachary Bolduc, Kirby Dach, and Oliver Kapanen, had possession and was about to enter the offensive zone. Instead of putting the puck in deep, Kapanen rushed his play, which Jalen Chatfield intercepted. He sent the attack the other way, catching the Canadiens off guard as Mike Matheson and Noah Dobson were on their way to the bench to change. It was a two-on-two, but Dobson didn’t have the speed necessary to close down Nikolaj Ehlers, who scored his second of the game. It’s worth mentioning that his first goal was a fantastic individual effort on which he beat both Cole Caufield and Lane Hutson.

After the game, Martin St-Louis was asked about having his fourth line on the ice early in overtime. Why are you asking me that? To which the journalist replied that he was asking because it was early and the fourth line was on, St-Louis gave him a Shane Wright-worthy stare before saying, “Yeah, they were there.” It will be interesting to see if Kapanen’s mistake costs him his spot in the lineup. We’ve seen the coach stand by Dach when it was his mistake that cost the game.

While the result will be disappointing for the Canadiens, they can take solace from the fact that the Hurricanes brought their A-game in this second duel, and they weren’t blown away. Montreal still took them to overtime and is coming back to town with a 1-1 tie, having taken home-ice advantage away. Game 4 is set for Monday night at 8:00, and it promises to be an interesting evening at the Bell Centre.


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One Potential Flyers Free Agent Target Nobody Is Talking About

If the Philadelphia Flyers are going to block one of their prospects on defense, they may as well lean in and make a big-ticket signing to truly justify it.

Much has been made about the availability of Tampa Bay Lightning defenseman Darren Raddysh, who is set to hit the free agent market after scoring 70 points in 73 games for the Stanley Cup contender this year.

The problems with Raddysh, though, are that he will turn 31 in February and has enjoyed his NHL success with the benefit of playing on an already-established power play that features talents like Nikita Kucherov, Brayden Point, Jake Guentzel, and Brandon Hagel.

Raddysh is a good player, to be clear, but there are risks that might make the Flyers averse to a big-money signing there.

Elsewhere on the free agent market, though, will be Vegas Golden Knights defenseman Rasmus Andersson, who nobody seems to be talking about at all.

Andersson, 29, is on the older side as well, but has been doing it for longer on Calgary Flames teams that were both good and, well, not good at all.

The Swede can be a power play quarterback if needed, too, scoring three goals and 40 total power play points between the 2021-22 and 2022-23 seasons with the Flames.

Despite being a relatively average 6-foot-1, 200 pounds, Andersson plays with some nastiness, and while he does come with his warts, is in the upper-echelon of offensive defensemen around the NHL.

The point totals don't reflect that, but he generates tons of chances for himself and others, uses his legs effectively to transport the puck

As for the warts, though, we can look at JFresh Hockey's HockeyStats.com, which visualizes all of AllThreeZones's microstats for us.

Andersson struggles quite a bit in his own end at times; he ranks in the ninth percentile in pass exits, and he's even worse defending the rush with a third-percentile placement in prevention of possession zone entries.

Rasmus Andersson's microstats card. (HockeyStats.com)
Rasmus Andersson's microstats card. (HockeyStats.com)

Andersson does almost everything else at a high-to-elite level, and when we consider that both he and current Flyers defenseman Travis Sanheim have been deployed as pseudo-No. 1 defensemen, putting those together as a pair becomes an attractive idea.

Undoubtedly, whether it's Raddysh or Andersson, the Flyers will have to make room for a newcomer, trading defense for offense and more than likely moving on from Rasmus Ristolainen.

That's a risk they will have to take in order to reach the next step in their rebuild, though.

Fortunately, they stumbled upon Dan Vladar, who will certainly sign a lucrative contract extension with the Flyers at some point in the near future.

And, speaking of Vladar, the Flyers' emerging vocal leader in the locker room and on the ice can help make an Andersson signing possible.

Vladar, of course, played with Andersson on the Calgary Flames for four seasons from 2021 to 2025.

It's worth noting that Garnet Hathaway is another secret agent the Flyers could have working for them, as he played with Andersson on the Flames and AHL Stockton Heat from 2016 to 2019.

Lately, it's become more and more known how appealing a destination the Philadelphia Flyers are for other players, and few on the team could speak to that more right now than Vladar and Hathaway, who always have nothing but good things to say about the team, the city, the fans, and the organization.

All signs point to the Flyers making a splash this offseason, be it through trade or free agency, but Andersson should certainly be in the mix with some Flyers connections and a productive NHL career through various circumstances under his belt.

5 Players Outside Top 5 For Blackhawks To Consider Trading Down For

The Chicago Blackhawks have the fourth overall pick in the 2026 NHL Draft. There are a lot of players for them to consider there, depending on what the three teams ahead of them (Toronto Maple Leafs, San Jose Sharks, & Vancouver Canucks) decide to do. 

If all of the players that the Blackhawks truly want within that top four are already off the board, there is a different direction they can take. Plenty of prospects with similar ceilings will be available in the back half of the top ten. The Blackhawks could gain another asset by trading down 5-8 slots. 

There will be a handful of players drafted later in the first round who end up being standouts. Are the Blackhawks willing to take a risk like that to gain in the long term? One of these five players may be worth the gamble: 

Viggo Bjork

Viggo Bjork is one of those players who may end up being drafted higher than anyone thought, but he is not touted the way that his countryman, Ivar Stenberg, is. Perhaps he should be. At best, he’s still likely to be just the fourth or fifth forward selected, and there are a handful of defensemen to go in the top ten as well. If the Blackhawks wanted Bjork after seeing his SHL, World Junior, and World Championships performances, they probably can’t go down too far. 

Ethan Belchetz

Ethan Belchetz had a strong point per game type of season with the Windsor Spitfires in 2025-26, which set him up to be a mid-first round pick in the NHL Draft. He will challenge himself by playing college hockey with Michigan State in 2026-27, which will be great for his development as a winger with aspirations of making it to the NHL. If Chicago moved back to draft a player like him, you’d think that they vision him playing wing alongside one of their current young centers. 

Oscar Hemming

Oscar Hemming is a highly skilled Finnish-born player who had an interesting season. He came over during the 2025-26 season to play 19 games with Boston College, and he’s set to play the full season there next year. Should the Blackhawks select a player like Hemming, they’d be getting a forward who may end up being a center one day. It’s always good to have forwards who can play multiple positions in the organization. 

Wyatt Cullen

Wyatt Cullen is the son of former NHL player Matt Cullen, who had a long career playing big roles on good teams. The younger Wyatt may be even more skilled at this stage of the development. After playing a significant role in the United States National Team Development Program, Cullen is ready for the next stage. For him, it will be the University of Minnesota after being drafted somewhere in the middle of the NHL Draft’s first round. By adding him, the Blackhawks would continue their run of drafting fast players who can create offense at will with their speed. 

Tynan Lawrence

For a while, Tynan Lawrence of Boston University was in the conversation for the second overall pick. His stock has recently fallen just a little bit, but he will still be selected in the top-15. With the Blackhawks looking for more scoring down the middle, Lawrence is someone to think about if trading down is their mindset.

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10 Takeaways from Cavs Game 3 loss to Knicks: The gap between these two teams has never felt wider

CLEVELAND, OH - MAY 23: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers looks on during the game against the New York Knicks during Game Three of the 2026 Eastern Conference Finals on May 23, 2026 at Rocket Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by David L. Nemec/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Cavaliers are a vastly different team now than they were three years ago. Yet, here they are in a similar spot they were then: Losing to the New York Knicks in the playoffs in humiliating fashion. Just this time, it’s in the Eastern Conference Finals instead of the first round.

And somehow, the gap feels wider now. Or at least it has through three games.

The Knicks outclassed the Cavs in nearly every area, as they came away with a 121-108 Game 3 victory in a contest they never trailed in. They now have a 3-0 lead with a chance of ending Cleveland’s season on Monday.

It’s clear who’s been better through three games. The Knicks are just a complete basketball team in a way that the Cavs aren’t.

Offensively, they have a better understanding of how they want to attack their opponent. They’re lethal at all three levels. That variety means they aren’t overly reliant on the three-ball or getting to the free-throw line.

Each starter can pass, dribble, and shoot at an average level or better. If you sell out to stop one, there’s someone behind them capable of making you pay for it.

They aren’t without deficiencies defensively. Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns are both below-average defenders for their position, but the team compensates for that well.

The Knicks know how to keep both from being on an island defensively. The player they’re trying to hide is comfortable hedging and then recovering back to his man, while the more adept defender fights through the screen. That’s something you need to be proficient at if you know your opponent is going to try to single someone out.

But more than that, they have principles that guide them defensively. They’ve relentlessly tagged the roller and have sold out to stop interior passes and easy looks around the rim. That can make them susceptible to outside shots, but hasn’t thus far this postseason.

This stands in stark contrast with the Cavs.

Cleveland doesn’t have those same guiding principles on either end. They’re too willing to take the path of least resistance. That has allowed the Knicks to bait the Cavs into taking the shots they want them to offensively (threes) and attacking the guys they want to defensively (James Harden).

The Knicks are surrendering open threes, and the Cavs still can’t make them pay.

Before the game, both coaches talked about the open three-point looks the Cavs generated through the first two games.

Cavs head coach Kenny Atkinson preached wanting his team to stick to the process. “Keep taking them,” Atkinson said after mentioning the three-point looks his team took in Game 2 were in the 93rd percentile.

Meanwhile, Knicks head coach Mike Brown said that his team needed to “do a better job” of contesting open looks. “We’ve gotten a little lucky. They’ve missed some shots.”

That luck continued. The Cavs overall went just 12-41 (29.3%) from three. On the series, they’ve now missed 89 triples and are shooting below 30%.

It’d be one thing if this were a normal defensive game plan, but the Knicks are simply daring the Cavs best shooters to beat them, and they inexplicably aren’t. That includes Harden and Donovan Mitchell who combined to go 4-17 from beyond the arc.

“We gotta make shots,” Harden said. “We haven’t really made a shot since the first quarters in Game 1.”

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Fatigue may have something to do with the missed shots. The Cavs haven’t had consecutive off days for three-and-a-half weeks now. Tired legs inevitably make it more difficult to shoot. But that isn’t an excuse that you could really use, considering what came before.

Cleveland had golden opportunities to win Games 4 and 6 against the Toronto Raptors, and didn’t come out with the force needed in Game 6 against the Detroit Pistons. Taking care of a few of those winnable games would’ve given them more rest, so this wouldn’t have been an issue.

“We did it to ourselves, we can’t be mad now,” Mitchell said.

You pay for every mistake that you make in the playoffs, either in the moment or in the future. Cleveland’s previous errors are catching up to them now against a team they need to be playing at or near the top of their game to beat.

You aren’t going to win many playoff games when your best player has the worst plus/minus in the game.

The Cavs lost the minutes Mitchell played by 22. This is the fourth time he’s been a -10 or worse this postseason, and they’ve lost each of those games.

The holes in Mitchell’s games are showing through in this postseason, but particularly in this series. When the outside shot isn’t falling, his only counter is to get to the basket. That has allowed him to still put up respectable scoring numbers. Although the impact on the game isn’t what it needs to be.

There’s more to basketball than just scoring. He hasn’t made consistent enough efforts at defending, rebounding, or playmaking for others to be a positive contributor in those areas. That’s part of why he hasn’t been able to carry lineups without Harden (-7.3 net rating, 23rd percentile).

Mitchell is being outplayed by Brunson for the third time in the postseason dating back to their time in the Western Conference. Both are similar from a talent perspective as undersized scoring guards. But Brunson is better at all the little things that show through in the postseason.

Brunson’s ability to set up his teammates (14 assists in Game 2), compete defensively, and attack in the midrange are all things that Mitchell doesn’t consistently have in his game. That versatility has allowed him to elevate his groups on days he doesn’t have it going as a scorer.

It was easy to see where the Cavs went wrong when they fell on their face three years ago. That group was inexperienced and didn’t have enough outside shooting to be functional in the postseason.

This team is considerably better. You don’t luck your way into being a conference finalist. However, figuring out the next step forward is more difficult, especially for the most expensive roster in the league that doesn’t have many additional levers to pull.

There’s no simple solution to this. LeBron James deciding to come back home and signing for far below market value would help, but it doesn’t necessarily fix everything given he’ll be 42 at this time next year. There would still be holes defensively, and the offense wouldn’t be smooth with multiple ball-dominant players.

Pivoting further by moving more integral pieces is easier said than done. Would you really want to trade Evan Mobley, one of the few Cavaliers who’s elevated his game in the playoffs? Does it make sense to further break up the nucleus of one of the most successful eras in franchise?

At the same time, it’s dangerous to continue betting on a group that has shown the same flaws in multiple postseason runs. That includes deciding whether or not to give Mitchell a further extension this summer.

Firing Atkinson would be the simplist solution. It’s easier to get rid of the coach than it is the team. But I’m not sure this is a coaching issue when we saw this group go seven games with the previous fall guy.

The gap between who the Cavs are and who they want to be is wider than it’s been since Mitchell was traded over. And there’s no easy answer for any of this.

The Cavaliers are one loss away from what could be an unpredictable summer.

LeBron James 2026 free agency: 6 potential landing spots for 'The King'

LeBron James will be an unrestricted free agent beginning this July.

He will have his say in where he wants to play during the 2026-27 NBA season, if he chooses to play another year, which would be his 24th, extending his NBA record.

James provided a timeline on which a decision could be made, but speculations are leaning that he'll play another season.

ESPN senior insider Shams Charania joined the Rich Eisen Show and shared what he knew about James' potential decision.

"Lebron is 41 years old, just finished his 23rd season, (and is) gonna take the next few weeks to figure out exactly how he wants potentially his final year to play out," Charania said. "All the indications I've gotten over the course of year is that he's going to play one more season."

So, say James does opt for a 24th and final NBA season, or maybe beyond 24, there's expected to be a number of teams clamoring for his services.

"The one thing I do know is that multiple contenders are already kind of sort of circling here," Charania said. "If LeBron is really going to hit the open market and decide and have a true free agency, he's not going to have a shortage of teams that feel like, 'Listen, we'll go get LeBron, we'll plug him in as their starting power forward or small forward, and, like, "Let's go try to win a ring.'"

Here are potential contenders and landing spots for James if he leans towards that decision in the upcoming months:

LeBron James 2026 free agency: Potential landing spots

Here are possible teams that James could land with for the 2026-27 NBA season.

Los Angeles Lakers

The Los Angeles Lakers are the obvious team James signs with. He's spent his previous seven NBA seasons with the Lakers and in that stint has won an NBA championship, Finals MVP, and helped the franchise back to being a perennial postseason contender.

Whether James feels that the team has enough to get to the mountaintop of another championship is probably what he's waiting to see, Charania said.

"The where, the how much of it all, like that, that's all obviously going to be a factor. Is it going to be LA? That's got to be probably his preference if he wants to be home, and you know, as far as where his home base is now," Charania said. "And the Lakers have made it clear that they want him back, and so we'll see how that mutual potential interest culminates over the next month or so."

Family has a big impact. His wife and kids will want him close. His son, Bryce, is at Arizona and James will want to be close to attend games in the winter. His eldest son and teammate, Bronny, surely has enjoyed his pops being alongside his young NBA journey.

All signs lead to the Lakers, but there are other contenders that make sense.

Los Angeles Clippers

The next-door neighbor, who happens to be "little bro," would like a word with Mr. James. The LA Clippers would be a viable option for James; playing for the team in Inglewood means he and his family wouldn't have to leave Southern California.

He can enjoy all the perks of SoCal, while remaining home. Legacy-wise, winning a championship for the Clippers would be unheard of.

The Clippers do have interesting pieces to combine with Darius Garland, Benedict Mathurin, Kris Dunn and maybe Bradley Beal is back healthy. Add James into the mix and they might make noise. They will need depth at the center position but Yanic Konan Niederhauser is due for a breakout year, a pick-and-roll game between him and James would accelerate his development.

Golden State Warriors

Ah, yes. The dream duo of Stephen Curry and LeBron James. We've seen glimpses of what that would look like throughout All-Star games but it was on its best display during the 2024 Paris Olympics.

The Golden State Warriors have actually contacted the Lakers multiple times regarding James' availability, obviously to no avail. Now that James has the power to exercise his preferred destination, if he wanted to play with Curry in the Bay Area, he could. But it might come with a drastic pay cut.

San Francisco is an hour flight away. While joining forces may draw scrutiny, the bigger issue is the Warriors being a borderline playoff team.

Hypothetically, think about whether a combination of James, Curry, with Jimmy Butler and Draymond Green would be the start of a team ready to contend with the likes of San Antonio or Oklahoma City.

Cleveland Cavaliers

This would be a nice touch to end his career, where it all began as a kid from Akron, Ohio, who lived his NBA dreams for his nearby team, the Cleveland Cavaliers. It would be a fairytale ending to get the Cavs back to another championship. James wants to be on a contender, well Cleveland is in the Eastern Conference Finals, something that hasn't happened since James was leading them.

Now, they have Donovan Mitchell, James Harden, Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen. It seems they're missing a small forward, power forward type of player. Plug in James, and you legitimately have an unstoppable force in the East.

The only thing is that Cleveland is not Los Angeles.

"I'm 41 years old. It's two cities I do not like playing in right now. That's Milwaukee and that's Memphis. What is the problem?" James said. "I don't like going home either. [...] And I'm from there...people are ridiculous."

Safe to say that Cleveland is off the table, but 2016 will always serve a special place in James' heart.

Brand Risk 14 live blog: Michael Beasley vs. Lance Stephenson

INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA - MARCH 28: Lance Stephenson #6 of the Indiana Pacers and Trae Young #11 of the Atlanta Hawks battle for a loose ball in the fourth quarter at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on March 28, 2022 in Indianapolis, Indiana. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Dylan Buell/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This is the Brand Risk 14 live blog for Michael Beasley vs. Lance Stephenson, the influencer MMA fight on Saturday night at the UFC APEX in Las Vegas.

Drafted second overall in the 2008 NBA draft, Beasley is a longtime professional basketball player, playing 11 years in the NBA, and several more years in international leagues. Beasley last played in 2022 for the Shanghai Sharks, and now turns his attention to the combat sports world, taking on a former NBA rival in the process. The two have some history, competing against each other in Big3 basketball and playing a game of 1-on-1 against each other for $100,000 last year.

Chosen in the second round of the 2010 NBA draft, Stephenson followed a similar career path to Beasley, playing over 10 years in the league, bouncing among different teams, with some international stints as well. Known for his chaotic and pestering playstyle, Stephenson looks to bring that same sort of energy to his first MMA fight.

Check out the live blog for Michael Beasley vs. Lance Stephenson below.

Preamble

This event sure has been something. A lot of weirdness, and Ray J even acting real weird after losing his fight, like they were trying to do something.

Anyway, let’s watch some former NBA players fight.

Pre Fight

If nothing else, at least both Stephenson and Beasley are former professional athletes and in good shape. That has not been the case for many of the bouts tonight. And both men look like they’re ready to actually get into a fight. But we will see.

Round 1

Beasley looks much taller but already the difference can be seen between these two. Beasley is feinting a lot and then lands a sharp left hand at range. But Stephenson charges in gets a body lock, lifts and takes Beasely down. Beasley going for a guillotine choke but he definitely doesn’t know how to do that.

Stephenson breaks free and Beasley rolls and Stephenson to the back as Beasley rolls! He grabs the rear-naked choke! Stephenson doesn’t have any sort of control here, but Beasley has no clue what he’s doing and Stephenson has a choke in! He squeezes and there’s the tap!!

Official Decision

Lance Stephenson def. Michael Beasley via submission (rear-naked choke) — 1:26, Round 1.

Post Fight

“Practicing getting choked and getting choked ain’t the same!” – Michael Beasley.

Beasley then says he’ll box but he’s not playing with “that choking shit” again.

Stephenson then says he’s from the hood, and they joke around with Beasley fake punching him.

Then Stephenson says Beasley beat him in 1-on-1, he won the fight, so “next time we’ll do something he wants to do.”

That was silly but kinda fun.

Diamondbacks 5, Rockies 4: Good Enough!

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MAY 23: Ketel Marte #4 of the Arizona Diamondbacks celebrates after hitting a two run home run against the Colorado Rockies during the fourth inning at Chase Field on May 23, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Ah, Zac Gallen. Our one-time ace, more recently our collective repository of remarkably persistent hopes and dreams and aspirations of the “he just needs to get his mojo back and he’ll be an ace again!” variety, our late-breaking $25 Million Dollar Man (with some money deferred, of course) as we got ready to set sail for the 2026 season. Yes. Zac. I’m never thrilled, and always nervous, when I pull a Gallen start for a Saturday recap. I would say that it’s because you never know what you’re going to get with Zac these days, but I don’t actually think that’s true at this point. The truer way of putting it is that we’re going to get the same thing we always get—a handful of really stellar innings which remind us of the sort of pitcher he once was on a consistent basis, but punctuated (and punctured) by at least one complete loss of focus and competence that leads to some quantity, often a substantial quantity, of runs crossing the plate for the opponent. It’s sad, and it’s a bummer, but at this point it simply is what it is, and who Gallen is as a pitcher at this stage in his career.

To be fair, tonight was one of his better outings in 2026, though a big part of that may be that Torey Lovullo kept the leash short. Gallen was up against Michael Lorenzen tonight, who came into the game sporting an ERA above 7, while Zac’s was in the mid-5 range, so I wasn’t terribly worried. And for the first three innings, Gallen did the business, and did it admirably. He pitched around a one-out single in the top of the first to retire the side with only nine pitches thrown. In the second, he retired the Rockies in order with only eight pitches thrown. He needed a whopping 19 pitches in the top of the third, but that was mainly because, rather than recording quick outs he struck out the side in order instead, and strikeouts are always more pitch-count-intensive.

Lorenzen, meanwhile, looked shaky at the start, surrendering a Ketel Marte single and a Corbin Carroll double to put our first two batters in scoring position with nobody out to begin the bottom of the first, but managed to wriggle off the hook thanks to a Geraldo Perdomo grounder to first, a Nolan Arenado grounder to third that allowed the Rockies to throw Marte out at the plate, and then a weak Ildemaro pop-up into shallow center for the third out. In the second, he retired the Diamondbacks in order, which made me wonder if he was starting to settle in.

He wasn’t. Ryan Waldschmidt led off the bottom of the third with s line-drive single to left, flipping the lineup over for Ketel Marte, who then walked. Corbin Carroll struck out for the first out of the inning, but Perdomo lined a single to left of his own that scored Waldschmidt, and Nolan Arenado followed with a double into the gap in left center that brought home both Perdomo and Arenado:

Neither Vargas or Gabriel Moreno could do anything to get Nolan around, but we’d drawn first blood, and put up a crooked number at that. 3-0 D-BACKS

As often seems to the case these days with Gallen, though, the offense staking him a lead seemed to mess up his mojo and throw him off-kilter, and while he still seemed to be throwing the same sort of stuff and taking the same approach as he had through the first three innings, the Rockies greeted him with rather different results to open the fourth. The first four batters of the inning reached against Zac, thanks to a single to left, a single to right, a walk to load the bases, and then a single to right-center that scored Hunter Goodman, who had led off the inning. Ezequiel Tovar then grounded to short, but Perdomo’s only play was to get the force at second base, allowing another Rockie to cross the plate. Gallen then walked his second batter of the inning to reload the bases, but thankfully pulled himself together enough that he was able to end things without further damage with a strikeout and a pop-up to Perdomo. 3-2 D-BACKS

In a happy turn of events, though, our offense came back out in the bottom of the fourth and immediately got back the two runs Gallen had just coughed up. With one out, Tim Tawa, who was playing left field tonight with Lourdes Gurriel, Jr. hitting the IL this afternoon, grounded a single into left, and one out later Ketel Marte continued his offensive resurgence by hitting the first pitch he saw in his third time facing Lorenzen for an absolute moonshot that just about reached the concourse behind the right field bleachers:

So the lead was back into safer territory again. 5-2 D-BACKS

Gallen, for his part, took what was given to him this time and put up a zero in the top of the fifth, pitching around a two-out walk. Brandon Pfaadt, however, got up and started warming in the bullpen around this point, which was likely just as well because after Lorenzen put up a zero of his own in the bottom of the fifth, Zac surrendered a leadoff single to Colorado left fielder Troy Johnston to kick off the sixth inning. Johnston promptly stole second and was then advanced to third on a Tovar grounder to first, and that earned Gallen the hook as Torey went to the bullpen and brought in Pfaadt. And Pfaadt did his job, recording the final two outs, though Johnston did score from third to narrow the lead again. 5-3 D-BACKS

Lorenzen’s night was done, so the amusingly named (for Snakepit members of a certain vintage, anyway) Keegan Thompson came out of the Rockies’ bullpen and proceeded to pitch two and two thirds innings. They weren’t the cleanest you’ve ever seen, as he dealt with multiple baserunners in each inning that he worked, but he put up zeroes, which is of course what matters. Pfaadt did the same in his half of the seventh, but surrendered a leadoff home run to start the eighth, followed by a single that sent him to the showers and brought in Kevin Ginkel to once again clean up someone else’s mess. Ginkel did so admirably and with a minimum of drama, thankfully. 5-4 D-BACKS

And that was pretty much that. Our offense did nothing of significance in the bottom of the eighth, and Paul Sewald came out to pitch the top of the ninth for us in a one-run game, and shut things down by inducing a flyout to center and a flyout to right before finishing with style and panache by striking out Hunter Goodman, arguably Colorado’s best hitter, on five pitches to put this one win the books, and the win column, for the good guys.

Win Probability Added, courtesy of FanGraphs

The Majestic Redwood: Ketel Marte (4 AB, 3 H, 2 R, 2 RBI, 1 HR, 1 BB, +23% WPA), Kevin Ginkel (1 IP, 0 ER, 1 BB, +21% WPA)
The Mighty Sequoia: Paul Sewald (1 IP, 0 ER, 1 K, +16% WPA)

We had a very lively and well-attended Gameday Thread tonight, with an impressive 337 comments at time of writing. Many comments went Sedona Salmon, but none attracted enough comments to truly run away with it, so I’m more than pleased to bestow tonight’s Comment of the Game on gzimmerm, for this simple statement that actually I think goes a long way toward explaining some of the recent positive change in the team’s fortunes:

You are not wrong, and I for one have been enjoying seeing the young Baron prove that day after day after day as he embarks upon his young career.

So tomorrow we go for the series victory, and our sixth win in the seven games of this homestand. The Rockies are bringing lefthander Jose Quintana to the party, and we are countering with the inimitably Ryne Nelson. First pitch is scheduled for 1:10pm AZ time. I hope you can join us!

As always, thanks for reading, and as always, go Diamondbacks!

Game Four Preview: San Antonio Spurs vs. Oklahoma City Thunder

After stealing home court advantage with a thrilling victory in Game One, the San Antonio Spurs had it taken away from them in a Game Three loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder. Now the stakes are even higher in Game Four, as the Spurs try to avoid going down 3-1 in the Western Conference Finals.

So far, the Thunder have made the most impactful adjustments in the series. They’ve put a big man on Victor Wembanyama to keep him from dominating the paint, played with a lot of physicality on both ends, and relied on their bench scorers to hit open shots when Shai Gilgeous-Alexander faced double teams. Now, after losing two games in a row, the Spurs will need to counter OKC’s counters to even up the series.

They’ll try to do it at seemingly full health. De’Aaron Fox and Dylan Harper avoided the injury report for Game Four, but remain hobbled as they both deal with lower-body injuries. Meanwhile, the Thunder will be without Ajay Mitchell and potentially Jalen Williams, removing two important ball-handlers who support SGA.

Only 15 teams have come back from a 3-1 deficit in the NBA Playoffs (including two this year). Tying the series at 2-2 significantly increases the Spurs’ odds of making the NBA Finals. They’ll need all hands on deck to do that in front of their home crowd.

San Antonio Spurs (1-2) vs. Oklahoma City Thunder (2-1)

May 24th, 2026 | 7 PM CT

Watch: NBC / Peacock | Listen: WOAI (1200 AM)

Spurs Injuries: No injuries to report.

Thunder Injuries: Thomas Sorber – Out (knee), Ajay Mitchell – Out (calf), Jalen Williams – Questionable (hamstring)

What to watch for:

Bench scoring

The Thunder’s bench outscored the Spurs’ bench by 53 points in Game Three. San Antonio’s bench unit has been largely ineffective in the series so far. Keldon Johnson has struggled to score for the majority of the playoffs. Harper is dealing with an injury. Luke Kornet is constantly attacked at the rim. No one else has stepped up to provide a spark when the starters sit. For most of the season, the Spurs were seen as a deep team. Their depth is getting exposed against OKC. The Spurs’ bench doesn’t have to outscore the Thunder’s backups to win the series, but they can’t be completely played off the floor. Just a slight improvement in their play would go a long way toward tying the series.

Guarding SGA

So far, the Spurs’ strategy for guarding the Thunder’s star guard has been to get the ball out of his hands and make someone else beat them. That strategy backfired in Game Three, as Gilgeous-Alexander made the Spurs pay by swinging the ball to shooters for open threes. The Thunder shot 17-38 (45%) from three in Game Three, and most of those were lightly contested. Perhaps the adjustment for Game Four is making SGA beat the Spurs with one-on-one scoring. San Antonio can use multiple defenders to guard him one-on-one to avoid foul trouble, but they don’t need to send multiple bodies at him every time he crosses half-court. It’s a simple adjustment, but it could help them avoid the three-point barrage they saw in Game Three.

Playing fast

San Antonio has been at its best this postseason when they are getting out in transition or pushing the ball ahead after a miss. Their offense has slowed down majorly against the Thunder. They aren’t turning OKC. over, and are getting bogged down in a half-court game that better suits the Thunder. Even if they aren’t able to get steals to get easy buckets in transition, the Spurs have to speed up the game to give themselves a better chance. That means pushing the ball quickly after misses and makes, looking to attack the rim before the Thunder get set.

Mikal Bridges' play one of biggest reasons Knicks sit one win away from NBA Finals

CLEVELAND - A few notes from the Knicks’ Game 3 win over the Cavaliers...

BALANCING ACT

All five starters in double figures. The top two scorers on the other team turning it over 11 times. Twenty-seven assists on 43 made field goals. Starters combining for 11 steals. 

The Knicks’ 10th straight win was a true team effort, and it featured strong contributions from the players Leon Rose and the front office acquired during the Jalen Brunson era. 

Brunson, obviously the biggest move, had 30 points on 19 shots. Josh Hart – traded for a first-round pick and Cam Reddish – had 12 points, nine rebounds, five assists and four steals. Karl-Anthony Towns – traded for Julius Randle, Donte Divincenzo and a first-round pick – had a game-high seven assists and 0 turnovers in 36 minutes. OG Anunoby – acquired for a package that included RJ Barrett, Immanuel Quickley and a second-round pick – had 21 points, seven rebounds and four assists. 

But arguably the biggest contribution came from the player acquired in the most controversial trade of the Rose era. 

Mikal Bridges had 22 points, six rebounds, two assists, three steals and two blocks in Game 3. 

Bridges’ play is one of the driving forces behind the Knicks’ 10-game playoff win streak, and it's one of the biggest reasons they are one win away from their first NBA Finals appearance in 26 years. 

“He’s all about winning. Everything else doesn’t matter for him. I think that’s why he’s playing well right now,” Hart said late Saturday night. “Because he’s not focused on shots, touches, those kinds of things. He’s focused on how can I help this team win? I’m not surprised. Because that’s the player he is. I’ve seen him since he was 17. That’s the kind of person that he is.”

Bridges has been uneven in his first two regular seasons with the Knicks, but he had great moments in the postseason last year (big defensive plays against Boston and timely scoring in New York’s two comeback road wins to open the series). And he’s followed up with another stellar postseason this spring. 

After struggling on offense in the first three games against Atlanta, Bridges has been on a tear. In the nine wins prior to Game 3, Bridges was averaging 16 points on 67 percent shooting (49 percent from beyond the arc). 

In the Cleveland series, he’s played excellent team defense and has done a remarkable job defending James Harden

“It's a lot of reps. A lot of time,” Bridges said of his experience guarding Harden. “And I'm grateful he was in the West when I was in the West so I got to line up against him a lot of times.”

At least for the next few days, you won’t hear many Knick fans complain about the five first-round picks the club sent to Brooklyn to acquire Bridges. The veteran wing has solidified his status as a playoff riser, and he’s not concerned about the outside expectations that surround his play. 

“There’s nothing he can do about it. He didn’t call Leon and say, ‘Yo this is the trade package’, you know what I mean? He got put into this situation and he hit the ground running,” Hart said. “We wouldn’t be here without him. Last year, you can look – how many games has he won for us in terms of getting stops, down the stretch, steals, blocks, big shots, he’s won games in every single way for us and that’s why we want him, that’s why he’s here.”

RUNNING PLAY

The Knicks put pressure on a tired Cavs team by pushing the ball in transition. They also were the more physical team again in the series. Cavs coach Kenny Atkinson knows the Knicks are executing a gameplan by doing so. 

“Listen, there’s no big mystery,” Atkinson said after Game 3. “Our guys have played 50 percent more minutes than them. If I’m the opposing coach, I’m like, “Man, get these guys, run these guys, wear them out, be super physical.” It’s a good strategy. But we were not sharp in transition. We weren’t sprinting back like we should tonight.”

BEEN HERE BEFORE

Many of the 2024-25 Knicks are still with the team. That continuity has proved valuable in the postseason.

Just knowing what it takes, especially losing it, too.  Learning from that,” Bridges said. “That always sticks with you. It helps you know you got to be real grateful to be in these moments, don't take it for granted, and take every possession by possession. And don't skip a possession, don't skip a play. Go out there and give all you got. Because it's not easy to get here, and you're not going to get here all the time.”

Rampant Knicks beat Cavs to close in on NBA Finals

The New York Knicks' Jalen Brunson shoots the ball as he is challenged by the Cleveland Cavaliers' James Harden
Jalen Brunson (left) has been a key figure for the New York Knicks this season [Getty Images]

The New York Knicks swept aside the Cleveland Cavaliers to move within one win of their first NBA Finals since 1999.

The 121-108 victory at Rocket Arena means they lead the Eastern Conference finals 3-0 and can wrap up the series at the same venue on Monday (01:00 BST, Tuesday).

No NBA team has overcome a 3-0 deficit in a play-off series in NBA history.

The Knicks are on a franchise-record run of 10 straight play-off victories, winning by an average margin of 22.5 points.

Jalen Brunson scored 30 points and Mikal Bridges 22 for the third seeds, who never trailed against the Cavaliers.

"We feel - and we always have felt - the sky is the limit with this team," said Karl-Anthony Towns, who finished with 13 points, eight rebounds and seven assists.

Evan Mobley scored 24 points, Donovan Mitchell 23 and James Harden 19 for the Cavaliers.

The winners will meet the San Antonio Spurs or the Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA Finals, starting on 4 June.

The Thunder lead 2-1 in the Western Conference finals before game four in San Antonio on Sunday (01:00 BST, Monday).

Will This Montreal Canadiens Forward Face Supplemental Discipline For His Blatant Spear?

There was a bit of a dirty play that went down as the second period came to a close in Game 2 of the Eastern Conference Final between the Carolina Hurricanes and the Montreal Canadiens.

As the horn sounded, Montreal forward Alexandre Texier looked over at  Hurricanes defenseman K'Andre Miller and intentionally speared him in the groin.

Normally, per the NHL rulebook, that action should have automatically resulted in a five-minute major and a match penalty to Texier, however the Game 2 officials (Gord Dwyer and Kelly Sutherland) reviewed the play for a major and actually downgraded it to a two-minute minor for slashing instead, something Carolina coach Rod Brind'Amour vehemently disagreed with.

"Clearly that's a spear," Brind'Amour said. "There's not a person that can tell you that it wasn't. Played the game long enough to know that when you look at a guy and... [gestures a spearing motion]. That's a spear."

It doesn't really get more egregious than what Texier, who you can clearly see on video turns to make sure he's gets Miller right where he wants to, did, so I have no idea how the officials simply let it go.

I guess they didn't want to influence a close game, but that's just a play you cannot let happen.

Hopefully the Department of Player Safety takes a look at it, but knowing them, it's hard to believe that they'll actually take a proper stance on anything when it actually comes to player safety and upholding the rulebook.

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Landry Shamet comes up big with three game-sealing 3-pointers for Knicks

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Landry Shamet celebrates with Knicks great John Starks after their 121-108 Game 3 win over the Cavaliers on May 23, 2026 in Cleveland

CLEVELAND — The Cavaliers were still somewhat hanging around.

They had cut their deficit to 10 with 9:15 left in the fourth quarter and were trading baskets with the Knicks. A run could have made things interesting.

But Landry Shamet drilled three straight 3-pointers for the Knicks, who extended their lead to 14 points as a result. And that was mostly that.

Landry Shamet celebrates with Knicks great John Starks after their 121-108 Game 3 win over the Cavaliers on May 23, 2026 in Cleveland. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Shamet finished with 14 points on 4-for-5 shooting from 3-point range in the Knicks’ 121-108 win over the Cavaliers in Game 3 on Saturday night at Rocket Arena to take a 3-0 series lead. And when he was in the game, he primarily guarded Donovan Mitchell and did an admirable job.

“Landry was huge,” coach Mike Brown said. “And then on the other end of the floor, he’s gotta match up with a guy like Donovan Mitchell, who is a tough cover for anybody. You’re not gonna stop him but you gotta work your tail off. Landry’s trying to work.”

There was a time, not too long ago, when Shamet was out of the rotation. Jose Alvarado had replaced him. But OG Anunoby’s absence in Games 3 and 4 of the second round against the 76ers opened the door for Shamet, and he has completely capitalized on his opportunity.

He was key to the Knicks’ historic comeback in Game 1. Now one win away from the NBA Finals, it seems he’s re-established his place.

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Shamet played 28 minutes Saturday. Alvarado played just four minutes, and Jordan Clarkson logged three minutes.

Even Miles McBride, normally a rotation staple, had half of Shamet’s workload with 14 minutes.

New York looks to clinch conference finals against Cleveland in game 4

New York Knicks (53-29, third in the Eastern Conference) vs. Cleveland Cavaliers (52-30, fourth in the Eastern Conference)

Cleveland; Monday, 8 p.m. EDT

LINE: Knicks -1.5; over/under is 217.5

EASTERN CONFERENCE FINALS: Knicks lead series 3-0

BOTTOM LINE: The New York Knicks look to clinch the series over the Cleveland Cavaliers in game four of the Eastern Conference finals. The Knicks defeated the Cavaliers 121-108 in the last matchup on Sunday. Jalen Brunson led the Knicks with 30 points, and Evan Mobley led the Cavaliers with 24.

The Cavaliers are 33-19 against Eastern Conference opponents. Cleveland ranks eighth in the league with 28.3 assists per game led by James Harden averaging 8.0.

The Knicks are 35-17 against Eastern Conference opponents. New York ranks third in the Eastern Conference shooting 37.3% from 3-point range.

The Cavaliers' 14.3 made 3-pointers per game this season are only 0.4 more made shots on average than the 13.9 per game the Knicks give up. The Knicks are shooting 47.8% from the field, 1.4% higher than the 46.4% the Cavaliers' opponents have shot this season.

TOP PERFORMERS: Mobley is scoring 18.2 points per game and averaging 9.0 rebounds for the Cavaliers. Donovan Mitchell is averaging 27.5 points and 4.9 rebounds over the last 10 games.

Brunson is averaging 26 points and 6.8 assists for the Knicks. OG Anunoby is averaging 1.9 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Cavaliers: 4-6, averaging 106.7 points, 39.1 rebounds, 21.9 assists, 7.5 steals and 5.4 blocks per game while shooting 45.1% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 109.7 points per game.

Knicks: 10-0, averaging 122.2 points, 43.3 rebounds, 27.8 assists, 8.9 steals and 4.2 blocks per game while shooting 53.8% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 99.7 points.

INJURIES: Cavaliers: None listed.

Knicks: None listed.

___

The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Karl-Anthony Towns returns as offensive ‘hub’ for Knicks and Cavaliers have no answers

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Karl-Anthony Towns shoots during the first quarter against the Cleveland Cavaliers on May 23, 2026

CLEVELAND — Point center Karl-Anthony Towns returned Saturday night in Cleveland.

Unlike in the series opener, the Cavaliers had no answer for the Knicks’ play-making big man.

This was the Towns who shredded the 76ers and Hawks, creating opportunities for his teammates with pinpoint passing.

Cleveland had an answer for the Knicks running offense through Towns for most of Game 1, forcing coach Mike Brown’s team to adjust.

They went back to Towns the distributor in Game 3, and it worked.

The multi-talented center had 13 points, eight rebounds, seven assists and three steals, keying the Knicks’ 121-108 victory in Game 3.

The win moved them to within one of the franchise’s first berth in the NBA Finals since 1999.

Karl-Anthony Towns shoots during the first quarter against the Cleveland Cavaliers on May 23, 2026. Getty Images

“KAT, he was our hub offensively: seven assists, zero turnovers,” Brown said. “He was really good for us offensively and defensively with three steals.”

Towns has been a big part of this franchise-best 10-game playoff win streak.

With the Knicks trailing the Hawks in the first round of the playoffs 2-1, Brown tweaked the offense to go through Towns and take advantage of his passing ability.

The Cavaliers solved it in Game 1, and the Knicks responded by leaning on Jalen Brunson.

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But they have been able to adjust on the fly, and with the Cavaliers paying extra attention to Brunson, they went back to Towns as a facilitator.

“We do a great job of adjusting as the game goes along. I have to always be able to adapt to what the game needs from me to win the game,” said Towns, a team-high, plus-23 in 36 minutes.

“In the first half, it needed me to be a scorer, very aggressive, get to the basket, shoot the ball well and get points. Second half, they adjusted and we adjusted and I had to adjust. The adjustment was more being the hub, making the right passes, getting my teammates involved. … I continue to just feel out the game. The game will tell me what to do.”

Mets’ Freddy Peralta a mixed bag in first seven-inning outing of season

Saturday’s outing was a bit of a mixed bag for Freddy Peralta

The right-hander did well to save the Mets' bullpen by completing seven-full innings for the first time this season, but he was knocked around a bit by the Marlins. 

Peralta allowed four runs on two walks and a season-high eight hits in a 4-1 loss

Half of those runs came via the long ball, as Miami's breakout slugger Liam Hicks jumped him for a pair of solo shots to right-center in the bottom of the third and the fifth. 

Peralta’s now allowed eight homers to start the season, four of which have come over his last three times out. 

“I never want to give up homers, but it happens,” he said. “The second one I made a big mistake on the curveball, I shook on the pitch and should've executed better, but it happens and I just learn from it.”

The veteran righty did rebound nicely following that second blast, as he retired nine of the final 10 batters he faced to close his longest outing of the season on a high note.

He also set season-highs in pitches (108) and strikeouts (nine).

Despite the shaky showing in the book, Carlos Mendoza liked what he saw from the top of the the rotation arm.

“I thought he was better than the line score, to be honest,” the skipper said. “That second inning a couple of grounders found holes, the breaking ball for the homer, but overall he goes seven innings and he competed.”

Peralta kept the Mets within striking distance, but the offense didn't do him any favors, as they managed just one run in the ninth on three hits and three walks against Max Meyer and Miami’s bullpen. 

As has been the case for the majority of the season to this point, the continued struggles putting runs on the board left the Mets’ starter with a razor thin margin for error. 

They've been held to one run or less a league-worst 14 times this season. 

"You just gotta keep going,” Carlos Mendoza said. “You can’t sit here and feel sorry for yourself, yeah we get frustrated at times, but you just gotta continue to go.”