Mariners go down with a whimper, drop game and series to A’s

Apr 21, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Mariners first baseman Josh Naylor (12) avoids a pitch in front of Athletics catcher Shea Langeliers (23) at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: John Froschauer-Imagn Images | John Froschauer-Imagn Images

For my first recap at Lookout Landing, I signed up for a Tuesday Night Against the A’s, and Tuesday Night Against the A’s I got. The Mariners fell 5-2 on Tuesday night in what can only be described as a “tough one.”

The bats just never got going for the hometown nine against Jacob Lopez, who entered the day with an ERA north of six. He went 5.1 innings, allowing two runs on seven hits, despite only generating three whiffs in 35 swings. His first and only strikeout of the day came against J.P. Crawford in the sixth — the final hitter he faced on the evening.

Luis Castillo walked the first hitter off the game in Nick Kurtz, and it did, in fact, haunt. Kurtz got a massive jump to steal second base and move into scoring position. Then, with two outs in the inning, Tyler Soderstrom took advantage of a slider left in the middle of the plate, lacing it into the right field corner for an RBI double to make it 1-0.

“I always say the leadoff walk is like a free base, because for me it’s a 70-75% chance they’re going to score,” Castillo said. “They made me battle, and unfortunately, the run scored. But it was really important to get back to myself, attack with first pitch strikes, attack every batter and get ahead, and we were able to do that.”

Castillo still gave up some hard contact, but he settled in and seemed to go as his slider did, saying himself that the pitch felt better tonight. He generated eight whiffs with that pitch alone, and 14 in total. He struck out six — five of them were the first batters he retired. The A’s had trouble stringing together hits against him to do any damage.

The Mariners got the first couple of hitters on in the third, with Rob Refsnyder and Cal Raleigh singling. A Julio Rodríguez flyout was able to advance Refsnyder to third, setting up a Josh Naylor sacrifice fly to tie the game up at one.

Castillo’s night was over after five innings, allowing two runs on five hits. The only other run allowed came on a solo shot to right by Jeff McNeil in the fourth. Though they weren’t able to do much tackling on in the early going, the A’s were pesky as usual at the plate, managing to spoil many of Castillo’s potential put-away pitches.

“The pitches were were I wanted them to be, but when you have an aggressive team like that that makes a lot of contact, they like to swing,” Castillo said. “But for me, what I took from that is those pitches they fouled off were exactly where I wanted them to be. Sometimes those are fouls, and sometimes they go for pop ups or roll outs, but for me, I knew those pitches were where I wanted.”

Raleigh showed another flash that he may be beginning to heat up, depositing a solo shot of his own into the ‘Pen — his fourth of the year — to once again tie the game at two. It was his second homer in as many days.

Every time the A’s jumped out in front, the Mariners had an answer. Well, until the third time. Then they didn’t.

Eduard Bazardo entered in the sixth inning to make his 11th appearance on the season. Back-to-back doubles from Soderstrom and Jacob Wilson to lead off the inning gave the A’s the lead right back, and this time they wouldn’t relinquish it. Bazardo would take the first regular season loss of his career.

On the brighter side of things, Mitch Garver continued to flex his ABS challenge muscles behind the plate. He notched three more successful challenges for his pitchers on Tuesday, but also lost his first appeal of the season, in the words of Aaron Goldsmith on the broadcast: “by the width of a credit card.” It registered on ABS as missing by less than a tenth of an inch.

The A’s would tack on in both the seventh and ninth, with a Shea Langeliers solo homer and a Wilson RBI single, respectively.

The Mariners failed to mount a late rally and went down quiet in the ninth. They’ll return to T-Mobile Park tomorrow afternoon for a Wednesday matinee, looking to preserve a game from the series before heading to St. Louis.

Game 2 Recap: Colorado comes back to take 2-1 win in overtime

DENVER, COLORADO - APRIL 21: Gabriel Landeskog #92 of the Colorado Avalanche celebrates after a goal against the Los Angeles Kings during the third period in Game Two of the First Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Ball Arena on April 21, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Michael Martin/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Another game at Ball Arena in this first round series against the LA Kings where the Colorado Avalanche hoped to sweep the home portion of the opening schedule. While it took until just before the clock struck midnight, the Avalanche achieved just that with a 2-1 overtime victory.

The Game

The first period was defined with cheap shots and fruitless power plays as seven minor penalties were called and the teams combined went through five power plays. No score was put on the board but Colorado did hold a 14-6 shot advantage through the first frame. Martin Nečas was the recipient of one of those cheap shots on a high hit to the head. He had to sit out for a bit but returned to the ice by the end of the period.

The start of the second period saw the Avalanche take a penalty on Quinton Byfield whilst on their own power play which was deemed worthy of a penalty shot. Scott Wedgewood stonewalled the young forward and the game remained scoreless. Right after that a pane of glass shattered behind the Kings bench and there was a lengthy delay. That loss of momentum didn’t help as it was an ugly period with only eight shots apiece and still a scoreless game after 40 minutes of play.

Some urgency that developed at the end of the second period carried over to the third as suddenly this game was ripe for either team to claim it. With under seven minutes to go in the game a goal finally found its way into the back of the net — just unfortunately it counted for the Kings. Artemi Panarin broke through on the power play just like he did late in the contest in Game 1.

Of course this game wouldn’t end quietly as Gabe Landeskog tied the score with just over three minutes to go. As the Kings are no stranger to overtime having been a NHL record 33 times in the regular season, an extra frame was needed to settle the 1-1 tie at the end of regulation. After half a period of back-and-forth action Nic Roy broke through on Colorado’s second shot in overtime to give the Avalanche the 2-1 victory.

Takeaways

It will be interesting to see if Jared Bednar chooses to ride the momentum and decline to make any lineup changes leaving Ross Colton and Mackenzie Blackwood out of action as the Avalanche hope to wrap up the series on the road.

Upcoming

The series shifts to Los Angeles with the first game on Thursday night. Puck drop is at 8 p.m. MT televised on TNT.

Mammoth Take Game 2 After Golden Knights Can’t Mount Yet Another Third Period Comeback

Historically, teams that have gone up 2-0 in the Stanley Cup Playoffs went on to win their series 87.5% of the time. After winning Game 1 by a score of 4-2, the Vegas Golden Knights entered Tuesday’s matchup with the Utah Mammoth desperate to grab a stranglehold over the series. 

Or, at least, the Golden Knights entered the first period desperate to grab a stranglehold over the series. They controlled play and outshot the Mammoth 10-7. They generated 12 scoring chances while holding Utah to four.

The Golden Knights broke the ice on the power play at 11:42 in the first. Mark Stone threw a centering pass towards the net, and it went off of Mikhail Sergachev’s skate and in past Karel Vejmelka. 

The Mammoth responded at 16:59 in the first. Noah Hanifin blocked MacKenzie Weegar’s shot on goal, but the puck took a bounce into Rasmus Andersson’s shin and into the net.

All of that first period urgency slipped away in the second. As the parade to the box continued, the Golden Knights struggled to find rhythm. The stats reflect it— the Mammoth outshot them 13-4, generated 16 scoring chances while holding Vegas to just three, and controlled 88.76% of the expected goal share.  

The Mammoth took their first lead of the night at 14:56 in the second. Kailer Yamamoto jumped to glove down Noah Hanifin’s flip-pass and found Dylan Guenther above the left circle; Guenther ripped a one-timer past Carter Hart short-side for his first career playoff goal.

The Golden Knights found the equalizer just 1:02 later. Jack Eichel got a stick on Mikhail Sergachev’s stretch-pass attempt, and Ivan Barbashev corralled the puck at the blue line. Barbashev entered the zone, split the defense, and beat Karel Vejmelka on the backhand.

In the third period, the Golden Knights were largely unable to generate any kind of offense. Shots were 10-7 in favor of the Mammoth, and Utah controlled 70.79% of the expected goal share.

The Mammoth regained the lead at 14:00 in the third. Kailer Yamamoto backhanded a pass to Dylan Guenther, who entered the zone with speed, flew past Shea Theodore, and snapped a shot on goal. When Carter Hart made the save, Guenther got his own rebound and put it off the post. Undetected, Logan Cooley cut to the middle and scored on the third attempt.

The Golden Knights pulled Carter Hart for the extra attacker with 2:51 remaining in regulation and tried to mount yet another third-period comeback. They generated their looks, but managed only two shots on goal, and the Mammoth held on for a 3-2 win.

“I thought our first period was one of our better first periods in a while,” said Golden Knights head coach John Tortorella postgame. “We lost any type of flow in the second period. The way everything was going on, we had a good start to the third period and had some opportunities. We couldn’t score, and they found a way with some of their speed.”

Three Takeaways of the Knight

1. In Game 1, the Golden Knights were the more physical team by a wide margin and out-hit the Mammoth 51-31. For whatever reason, they just didn’t have that same edge in Game 2. It was a less intense affair, but the Mammoth had the edge tonight, 39-33.

“Being physical and playing hard… when you go out searching for it, that’s when you get burned,” said Brett Howden postgame.

2. Carter Hart was excellent tonight against the initial shot, but struggled to control the rebound. For the most part, the team in front of him did a good job of boxing the Mammoth out and preventing any second-chance opportunities. But on Utah’s game-winner, no one caught Logan Cooley crashing the net, and it cost them.

3. It’s been a long time since Hertl has scored a goal. He’s had his fair share of chances, but he just can’t seem to finish one. He’s not playing poorly– Hertl is doing the little things right, and he’s  recorded eight hits over the first two games of this series.

But he’s not scoring. And that, more than anything, continues to haunt the Golden Knights. With a chance to go up 2-0 in their second power play of the night, Hertl stared down an empty net… and sent it wide. 

Kings let late Game 2 lead slip away and lose to Avalanche in overtime

Colorado Avalanche defenseman Brett Kulak (27) knocks Los Angeles Kings left wing Trevor Moore (12) off his skates and into goaltender Scott Wedgewood (41) during the third period of Game 2 in the first round of the NHL hockey Stanley Cup playoffs, Tuesday, April 21, 2026, in Denver. (AP Photo/Jack Dempsey)
Colorado defenseman Brett Kulak knocks Kings left wing Trevor Moore into Avalanche goaltender Scott Wedgewood. (Jack Dempsey / Associated Press)

The Kings haven’t won an NHL playoff series since the last time they won the Stanley Cup, which is to say it’s been a while.

They’re halfway to another early exit after a 2-1 overtime loss to the Colorado Avalanche on Tuesday, a result that gave the Avalanche a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven series. The winning goal came from Nicolas Roy 7:44 in the extra period.

The Kings’ lone goal came from Artemi Panarin while captain Gabriel Landeskog had the other Colorado goal.

“We did play really well,” interim coach D.J. Smith said. “We’ve got to find a way to win a game. Clearly, good isn't enough. We’ve got to win a game and keep taking a piece of them and keep playing physical and give ourselves a chance to keep lengthening the series.”

Panarin gave the Kings a 1-0 lead on a wrister from the inside edge of the right circle with less than seven minutes left in regulation. It was his second power-play goal of the series and it came on the Kings’ fifth power play of the night.

It also came after the Kings got a fortunate break, with a Colorado clearing pass striking a linesman, leading to a faceoff in the Kings’ offensive end.

Read more:D.J. Smith is leading Kings in playoffs, but it's bittersweet because of who he replaced

Landeskog evened things for Colorado 3 1/2 minutes later, escaping Kings forward Scott Laughton to skate to a Martin Necas pass through the crease before pushing the puck inside the left post to send the game to overtime.

For the Kings, it marked their 34th overtime in 84 games this season, an NHL record. They lost 21 of them but Tuesday’s was the most painful, with Roy scoring on a deflection in the crease.

“We had every opportunity,” Smith said. “You’ve got to be able to close it out.”

The teams now head to Crypto.com Arena for games Thursday and Sunday with the Kings needing at least one win to extend their season.

“I expect that we'll be better at home,” Smith said.

To do that, the Kings are going to have to stop wasting the kind of opportunities they had in Denver, where they converted just two of nine power-play chances and failed to score on a penalty shot in the first two games.

The physical series turned chippy in late in Game 1 and that carried over to the start of Game 2 with a pair of scuffles, each involving more than a half-dozen players, breaking out 12 seconds apart midway through the first period. The teams combined for seven penalties in a fast-paced opening 20 minutes played with a lot of open ice.

Quinton Byfield had two chances to put the Kings on the board just more than three minutes into the second period but Colorado goalie Scott Wedgewood came up big both times.

Kings goaltender Anton Forsberg makes a save during overtime of Game 2.
Kings goaltender Anton Forsberg makes a save during overtime of Game 2. (Jack Dempsey / Associated Press)

The first came when Byfield charged Wedgewood on a breakaway, only to have the goalie stop his wrister from in close. But Avalanche defenseman Cale Makar was called for hooking Byfield from behind on the play, setting up a penalty shot. Wedgewood stopped that too.

An over-excited group of fans celebrated the two saves by breaking a pane of glass behind the Kings bench, sending the coaches scurrying and pausing the game for several minutes as workmen repaired the damage. But 16 seconds after play resumed, the Avalanche took another penalty, their sixth of seven on the night.

The Colorado penalties left the Kings with a man advantage for nearly a quarter of the game’s first 25 minutes, but their power play couldn’t take advantage against a Colorado penalty kill that ranked No. 1 in the NHL during the regular season.

“Obviously, you just want the opportunities,” forward Trevor Moore said. “Now we’ve just got to make the most of them.”

Colorado’s best scoring chance in the first two periods came on a three-on-one rush less than five minutes before the second intermission, but Kings defenseman Mikey Anderson reached in to break up the play and keep the game scoreless.

Colorado celebrates its Game 2 victory over the Kings.
Colorado celebrates its Game 2 victory over the Kings. (Jack Dempsey / Associated Press)

Sam Malinski appeared to give the Avalanche the lead on a slap shot from above the left circle 10 seconds into the final period, but after the horn sounded and the goal was put in the scoreboard, the officials correctly ruled the puck had struck the outside of the net.

Five minutes later Byfield fanned on a loose puck in the crease, allowing Wedgewood to roll over and clear it from in front of the open net.

Now the Kings come home, where they won six of their final seven regular-season games, the only loss coming in a shootout. But they haven’t beaten the Avalanche anywhere this season and if they have to at least once in the next two games to avoid their seventh straight first-round playoff exit.

“Thought we played better tonight,” Moore said. “So we’ve to to try to just take the positives and get to L.A. and play a good game.”

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Kings’ Defensive Gem Wasted As Avalanche Steal Game 2 In Overtime

In what was one of the wildest games we've seen so far in the postseason, the Los Angeles Kings entered Game 2 in Denver in what was as big a game for the Kings, looking to tie the series 1-1.

As it turns out, LA suffered a heartbreaking road overtime defeat after a back-and-forth effort, resulting in a 2-1 loss. The Kings were exceptional on defense, led by Anton Forsberg, Mikey Anderson, and Mathieu Joseph, holding the Avs to two goals, but once again couldn't score on offense, leaving the door open for Colorado to strike. 

Arguably, it was the greatest defensive performance we've seen from the Kings this season, with 23 hits, 26 blocked shots, and Colorado going 0/3 on the power play. LA was making all the plays on defense to try to steal this game, but they couldn't hold on late.

 Late Push Not Enough As Kings Fall To Avalanche In Game 1 Late Push Not Enough As Kings Fall To Avalanche In Game 1The Kings did enough defensively to hang around, but a lack of offensive support and Colorado’s scoring down the stretch proved to be the difference in a tight Game 1 loss.

The Kings wanted to play physical, and we got it against the Presidents' Trophy winners. The game had no flow in the first period, several minor penalties, and scrums in the first 14 minutes of regulation. 

Once again, both teams were very slow offensively, especially on the power play, missing easy shots that should have gone in. LA and Colorado combined for five power plays in the first period and converted on zero of them. 

The physical play and hits were there, making it hard for either team to generate good looks. Trevor Moore had a very good look early in the game after finding himself alone for a chance to give LA the lead, but Avs goaltender Scott Wedgewood made a nice save to stop the goal. 

Both goaltenders did an excellent job in the first period, especially on the power play, killing the opposing team's scoring chances. Even with the Avalanche having more shots on goal, the Kings had plenty of chances to score, but once again were struggling to capitalize after getting timely stops. 

For the second straight game, we ended the first period scoreless. LA did a good job of increasing its physicality and taking big hits against the Avalanche, despite being outshot 14-6 after 20 minutes. 

To open the second period, at the 16:48 mark, Colorado was on the power play, and Quinton Byfield stole the puck for a breakaway rush by himself against Wedgewood, but came up short after an extended glove save to stop the breakaway goal. 

LA continued to miss opportunities on offense, with its defense coming up big; the offense needs to start capitalizing on those key turnovers and stops at some point. 

The game continued to get physical. LA did a good job getting hits, especially Mathieu Joseph, who already had six hits midway through the second. Certainly, it was his best game with the Kings this season. 

LA's defense continued to make big stops, especially on the 3-on-1 with the Avs having a chance to score, but Mikey Anderson got a stick on Martin Necas to kill the play. In the last few minutes of the period, the Avs had good chances to score, but credit Anton Forsberg, Drew Doughty, and Mikey Anderson for playing their role on defense.

After 40 minutes, the game remained 0-0. Great effort from the Kings defensively in that period to keep the Avs off the scoreboard, but LA still was struggling to capitalize on offense. 

At the 19:50 mark of the final period, Colorado thought they had scored a goal, but the puck landed on the outside of the net, overturning the goal. LA kept dodging serious bullets with the Avs struggling to score, but so was LA, leaving the door wide open for Colorado to score. 

The tension was so high that the referees were just letting both teams play, without calling penalties. 

Finally, at the 6:56 mark, LA scored the first goal of the game to take a 1-0 lead. It was the breadman, Artemi Panarin, scoring the power play goal on a one-timer goal, the biggest goal of Panarin's time with the Kings. 

Definitely the best all-around game we've seen from the Kings this season, especially in a hostile playoff environment on the road. 

But it was clear at one point the Avs would strike back, and they did. At the

But it was clear at one point the Avs would strike back, and they did. At the 3:35 mark, Colorado got a very good look at the net after great puck movement. The open look secured a goal for captain Gabriel Landeskog to tie it 1-1. 

After a gritty last two minutes of regulation, we were headed to overtime in Denver for extra periods. Credit LA for the effort on defense, holding the No. 1 offense in hockey to just one goal.  

In overtime, the Kings once again had an opportunity to seal this game and tie it 1-1 after forward Samuel Helenius had an easy shot with Wedgewood losing his stick, but another clutch save by Wedegwood killed the chance.  

The Avalanche sealed the game in the extra periods, capitalizing on LA's missed chances to win and take a 2-0 series lead. Center Nicolas Roy cleaned up the rebound and put the puck just under the legs of LA to win a gritty game. 

Key Stats

Despite the loss, credit the Kings' defense for playing an excellent game throughout regulation. To hold the league's best offense to just two goals was special. 

Anton Forsberg, starting in his second playoff game, was exceptional, finishing with 34 saves on 36 shots. Artemi Panarin, for the second straight game, scored a goal, the only King so far to score in the playoffs. 

Mikey Anderson and Mathieu Joseph were also great in this game defensively, combining to finish with eight hits and eight blocked shots. 

Tough loss for the Kings and an opportunity to secure the split, now they're headed home trailing 2-0. 

Game 3 will be on Thursday, 7:00 PM PT at Crypto.com Arena. 

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Atlanta, New York tied 1-1 heading to game 3

New York Knicks (53-29, third in the Eastern Conference) vs. Atlanta Hawks (46-36, sixth in the Eastern Conference)

Atlanta; Thursday, 7 p.m. EDT

LINE: Hawks -1.5; over/under is 216.5

EASTERN CONFERENCE FIRST ROUND: Series tied 1-1

BOTTOM LINE: The Atlanta Hawks and the New York Knicks are in a 1-1 series tie in the Eastern Conference first round. The Hawks defeated the Knicks 107-106 in the last matchup on Tuesday. CJ McCollum led the Hawks with 32 points, and Jalen Brunson led the Knicks with 29.

The Hawks are 27-25 against Eastern Conference opponents. Atlanta is 20-26 against opponents over .500.

The Knicks have gone 35-17 against Eastern Conference opponents. New York ranks fourth in the Eastern Conference with 45.6 rebounds per game led by Karl-Anthony Towns averaging 11.9.

The 118.5 points per game the Hawks average are 8.4 more points than the Knicks give up (110.1). The Knicks are shooting 47.8% from the field, 0.4% higher than the 47.4% the Hawks' opponents have shot this season.

TOP PERFORMERS: Jalen Johnson is averaging 22.5 points, 10.3 rebounds and 7.9 assists for the Hawks. Nickeil Alexander-Walker is averaging 20.2 points and 3.4 assists over the last 10 games.

Brunson is averaging 26 points and 6.8 assists for the Knicks. OG Anunoby is averaging 2.6 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Hawks: 6-4, averaging 117.7 points, 43.6 rebounds, 27.6 assists, 8.7 steals and 5.0 blocks per game while shooting 48.1% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 111.7 points per game.

Knicks: 6-4, averaging 110.7 points, 43.0 rebounds, 25.8 assists, 8.1 steals and 3.5 blocks per game while shooting 48.8% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 106.2 points.

INJURIES: Hawks: Jock Landale: out (ankle).

Knicks: None listed.

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

Cleveland visits Toronto with 2-0 series lead

Cleveland Cavaliers (52-30, fourth in the Eastern Conference) vs. Toronto Raptors (46-36, fifth in the Eastern Conference)

Toronto; Thursday, 8 p.m. EDT

LINE: Cavaliers -3; over/under is 219.5

EASTERN CONFERENCE FIRST ROUND: Cavaliers lead series 2-0

BOTTOM LINE: The Cleveland Cavaliers visit the Toronto Raptors in the Eastern Conference first round with a 2-0 lead in the series. The Cavaliers won the last matchup 115-105 on Monday, led by 30 points from Donovan Mitchell. Scottie Barnes led the Raptors with 26.

The Raptors have gone 33-19 against Eastern Conference opponents. Toronto is 7-4 in one-possession games.

The Cavaliers are 33-19 against Eastern Conference opponents. Cleveland is seventh in the Eastern Conference with 44.4 rebounds per game led by Evan Mobley averaging 9.0.

The Raptors average 114.6 points per game, 0.8 fewer points than the 115.4 the Cavaliers give up. The Cavaliers are shooting 48.2% from the field, 1.5% higher than the 46.7% the Raptors' opponents have shot this season.

TOP PERFORMERS: Brandon Ingram is averaging 21.5 points, 5.6 rebounds and 3.7 assists for the Raptors. RJ Barrett is averaging 19.4 points over the last 10 games.

James Harden is averaging 23.6 points and eight assists for the Cavaliers. Mitchell is averaging 20.0 points over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Raptors: 4-6, averaging 115.8 points, 38.9 rebounds, 29.8 assists, 8.3 steals and 4.0 blocks per game while shooting 51.8% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 112.4 points per game.

Cavaliers: 8-2, averaging 120.7 points, 43.2 rebounds, 27.3 assists, 8.5 steals and 4.2 blocks per game while shooting 51.1% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 116.0 points.

INJURIES: Raptors: Immanuel Quickley: day to day (hamstring).

Cavaliers: Thomas Bryant: day to day (calf).

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

Minnesota, Denver meet with series tied 1-1

Denver Nuggets (54-28, third in the Western Conference) vs. Minnesota Timberwolves (49-33, sixth in the Western Conference)

Minneapolis; Thursday, 9:30 p.m. EDT

LINE: Nuggets -1.5; over/under is 234

WESTERN CONFERENCE FIRST ROUND: Series tied 1-1

BOTTOM LINE: The Minnesota Timberwolves host the Denver Nuggets in game three of the Western Conference first round with the series tied 1-1. The Timberwolves defeated the Nuggets 119-114 in the last matchup on Tuesday. Anthony Edwards led the Timberwolves with 30 points, and Jamal Murray led the Nuggets with 30.

The Timberwolves are 9-7 against the rest of their division. Minnesota ranks eighth in the Western Conference with 50.3 points per game in the paint led by Edwards averaging 11.0.

The Nuggets are 11-5 against the rest of their division. Denver scores 122.1 points and has outscored opponents by 5.2 points per game.

The Timberwolves are shooting 48.1% from the field this season, 1.3 percentage points higher than the 46.8% the Nuggets allow to opponents. The Nuggets average 14.2 made 3-pointers per game this season, 2.1 more made shots on average than the 12.1 per game the Timberwolves allow.

TOP PERFORMERS: Julius Randle is averaging 21.1 points, 6.7 rebounds and five assists for the Timberwolves. Ayo Dosunmu is averaging 13 points and 3.2 assists over the past 10 games.

Murray is averaging 25.4 points and 7.1 assists for the Nuggets. Nikola Jokic is averaging 23.4 points over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Timberwolves: 5-5, averaging 117.9 points, 40.9 rebounds, 25.9 assists, 8.3 steals and 5.8 blocks per game while shooting 48.3% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 116.8 points per game.

Nuggets: 9-1, averaging 127.5 points, 48.1 rebounds, 31.0 assists, 7.2 steals and 4.2 blocks per game while shooting 49.4% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 117.3 points.

INJURIES: Timberwolves: None listed.

Nuggets: Peyton Watson: out (hamstring).

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

White Sox slugger Munetaka Murakami putting on historic HR show

PHOENIX — Well, maybe Munetaka Murakami won’t have a difficult time making that transition from Japan to Major League Baseball after all.

In the meantime, is he ever making a whole lot of teams look foolish for ignoring him in free agency.

Murakami made more history Tuesday night by homering for the fourth consecutive game in the Chicago White Sox’s 11-5 rout over the Arizona Diamondbacks — a 434-foot shot —going where no Japanese player has ever gone before.

He is not only the first Japanese-born player to hit nine homers in his first 23 games, but also the first player since at least 1900 to produce nine homers and more than 20 walks in the first 23 games of a career.

The only Japanese players who have ever homered in four consecutive games at any juncture in their career are three-time MVP Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Chicago Cubs All-Star outfielder Seiya Suzuki.

Murakami, 26, is looking just like the dude who was Nippon Professional Baseball’s premier slugger, breaking the legendary Sadaharu Oh’s single-season home run record with 56 homers as a 22-year-old, and winning two MVP awards.

Sure, the season is just three weeks old, but the strikeouts and swing-and-miss rates that spiked since his historic 2022 season, with teams concerned whether he’d make enough contact to even provide power, now are regretting that they allowed the White Sox to virtually steal Murakami with a modest two-year, $34 million contract.

Murakami is soft-spoken and humble about his early heroics, saying he simply is happy that he’s contributing, but his bat is doing a whole lot of talking.

Murakami is hitting .234 with nine homers — just one behind MLB leader Yordan Alvarez of the Houston Astros — with 17 RBI and a .978 OPS. He has struck out 33 times in 97 plate appearances, but he has also walked 22 times, giving him a .398 on-base percentage.

He is everything the White Sox could have imagined, and much more.

“He puts himself in a real good position every single pitch,’’ White Sox manager Will Venable said. “He’s on time. He sees the ball well.  … We’re seeing real good plate discipline. Obviously, the power is incredible. Continues to improve defensively. I think I may be slowing him down a little bit on the bases. He always wants to get out and steal some bases. But he’s just a guy that’s getting more and more comfortable every day.

“Obviously, he’s having a lot of success.’’

Murakami indeed is looking quite comfortable these days, hitting four homers for a combined 1,705 feet. He reached base four times Tuesday, including his 434-foot blast off Diamondbacks starter Merrill Kelly, his MLB-leading third homer this season traveling 113 mph or faster off his bat.

It certainly brought back memories of his 432-foot blast off Kelly in the 2023 World Baseball Classic championship game over USA.

“I was able to image the pitcher a lot better because I did face him in the WBC,’’ Murakami said. “The time I hit in the WBC was a fastball, but today was a [89-mph] changeup. But I was really happy that I was able to hit it for a home run.’’

What pleases Murakami more than anything, he says, is that his home runs have helped ignite the White Sox offense. They’ve scored 33 runs in their four games on this trip, winning three of them.

“We’re very much connecting from the top to the bottom in the lineup,’’ he said, “and I think it’s just really important that we really continue as a team to get good results. I hope we can keep doing that.’’

The Diamondbacks, one of several teams that had interest in Murakami but were not a finalist in the bidding, could only sit back and admire the show, feeling a tinge of jealousy.

“He was on a lot of people’s radar screens,’’ Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo said. “We knew there was a special player there. I’ve been watching him closely, and I’ve been a fan of his.

“He’s going to be a pretty special player.’’

Follow Bob Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Munetaka Murakami homers in fourth consecutive game for White Sox

Murakami stays red hot as White Sox pour it on in 11-5 victory

Munetaka Murakami smashed his fourth home run in four games, kicking off a back-to-back-to-back homer parade in the second. | (Getty Images)

After a truly insane nine innings of baseball, the White Sox (9-14) won their second game in a row, taking the first game of the series against the Diamondbacks (13-10), 11-5. The South Side bats were on fire, the pitching was solid, and the defense was making diving plays all over the place — it would probably be easier if I told you what didn’t happen. It’s been a minute since I was this excited watching the Chicago White Sox play baseball, so bear with me as I am still slightly in shock.

Outhitting the D-backs 14-8, the Good Guys smashed six of those for extra bases: a double, triple, and four home runs. Although they exploded for 11 runs, they did still manage to go 2-for-12 with runners in scoring position and left nine on base, but we’re not talking about that right now. Nearly everyone got a hit, except for Everson Pereira and Reese McGuire, who still managed to drive in at least one run. There was so much offensive production from this team tonight that half of the lineup (five batters) produced multi-hit games.

Sean Burke mostly cruised through his start and was able to maintain control, though the same couldn’t be said for righthander Merrill Kelly. The Good Guys nearly batted through the order in the top of the first, and they wasted no time pouring runs on Kelly and the Diamondbacks, dropping a four-spot to give Burke plenty of cushion before he even threw a pitch. The Sox immediately caused trouble to start the game with consecutive base hits from Andrew Benintendi and Munetaka Murakami, and Miguel Vargas walked to load the bases. Keeping his momentum up from Sunday after mashing a long ball, Colson Montgomery squared one up and ripped a two-run double to center to give the South Siders a two-run lead, 2-0. They tacked on two more after a sacrifice fly from Everson Pereira, and Sam Antonacci drove in his first major league run with an RBI triple to make it 4-0, Good Guys.

If you thought the first inning was fun, the second was even better. Murakami continued to showcase his prowess at the plate and kicked off a two-out rally by smashing his fourth home run in as many games, joining some solid company as just the third Japanese-born player ever to homer four games in a row. Have a freaking week, Mune:

Tweet from Sarah Langs highlighting that Munetaka Murakami is the only player in MLB to have hit a home run at 113+ mph three times.

To really pour salt into Kelly’s gaping wound, Vargas followed up Mune’s moonshot with a line drive homer to left, and Montgomery clobbered a 440-foot tank to center to give the Sox a seven-run lead.

BACK.

TO BACK.

TO-BACK!

With seven runs to work with, Burke simply just had to lock in and throw strikes, and he pretty much did just that. It also helped that the South Siders added an eighth run in the top of the fifth on a Reese McGuire sacrifice fly. Burke had gotten into some hot water in the bottom of the first, but cleaned up after himself. Ketel Marte drove a leadoff base hit, making it to second a few moments later on a wild pitch to get into scoring position. A swinging bunt pulled Burke over to the first base line, and he was able to tag the runner and get the double play at the plate to end the inning as Marte was trying to sneak a run in.

Burke was otherwise scoreless through three and was efficient overall in his six innings. Geraldo Perdomo tripled to begin the fourth and subsequently scored on an RBI ground out for Arizona’s first run of the game. Just two runs allowed on five hits — including a solo home run from Alek Thomas in the fifth — and one walk while striking out three. Burke has now lowered his ERA from 4.43 to 4.10.

To help Burke and the pitching staff out, the defense was also excellent and definitely helped keep some Arizona runs from scoring, especially as the ninth inning got a little dicey. Antonacci had made a nice sliding catch out in left, and Pereira was all over the place, laying out twice for two different balls to rob a couple of base hits, making the catches flawlessly. This play, especially in the seventh, was key to shutting down any momentum that the Diamondbacks were building up, as this almost surely would have been a triple had Pereira not caught it:

Out of the bullpen, Lucas Sims tossed a hitless inning thanks to Pereira bailing him out, as the two baserunners reached base on balls, though he did strike out one. For the final two innings, righthander Osvaldo Bido made his first appearance in a White Sox uniform, picked up on waivers after being designated for assignment by the Atlanta Braves last week. Bido walked two batters but was otherwise decent in the eighth, and he fortunately didn’t have to worry too much about the lead since the South Siders tagged on three more runs in the ninth.

After checking his first MLB RBI off the list earlier in the game, Antonacci decided to cross off his first major league homer: an inside-the-park home run. The rookie ripped a ball down the left field line that ended up sort of hitting the ball boy, but Lourdes Gurriel Jr. gave up on the play, likely thinking that it would be called a ground-rule double or interference. Who knows.

Since the top of the inning was weird, the bottom half had to follow suit. Arizona started to rally, and it seemed like the game wasn’t ever going to end. Will Venable clearly didn’t want to go to the bullpen for a couple of outs with a nine-run lead, and I can not blame him for that, but Bido was struggling to throw strikes, and when he did, the D-backs were really starting to catch up to him. After two base hits, he gave up a garbage-time three-run bomb to Ildemaro Vargas, who extended his hitting streak to 19, right in the nick of time. Though Bido walked a couple more batters, he eventually was able to get out of it to close out the game, officially crediting Burke with his first win of the season.

Logan Cooley scores late as the Mammoth beat the Golden Knights 3-2 to even playoffs series

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Utah Mammoth at Vegas Golden Knights

Apr 21, 2026; Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; Utah Mammoth center Logan Cooley (92) takes a face off against the Vegas Golden Knights during the first period of game two of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at T-Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

LAS VEGAS — Logan Cooley scored off a rebound with six minutes left to give the Mammoth a 3-2 victory over the Vegas Golden Knights on Tuesday night, and they will head back to Utah with a split of the first two games in their first-round playoffs series.

Game 3 of the best-of-seven series is Friday night in Salt Lake City.

Cooley, a 21-year-old from Pittsburgh, is the youngest U.S.-born player to scored a goal in each of his first two playoff games.

It's the first playoff victory for the Mammoth since the organization relocated from Arizona two years ago.

This was the Golden Knights' first regulation defeat under coach John Tortorella (8-1-1).

Dylan Guenther had a goal and assist for the Mammoth, MacKenzie Weegar scored and Kailer Yamamoto finished with two assists. Karel Vejmelka recorded 19 saves.

Mark Stone and Ivan Barbashev scored for the Golden Knights, with Jack Eichel picking up the primary assist on each. Carter Hart, who stopped 26 shots, suffered his first loss under Tortorella in Vegas after winning his first seven starts.

With the score tied at 2 in the waning minutes of regulation, Guenther took a shot off the rush, got his own rebound and then hit the puck off the post. Cooley was waiting there, knocking in the puck to pull the Mammoth even.

The teams traded goals in each of the first two periods.

After Stone scored in the first period on a shot that went off Utah defenseman Mikhail Sergachev's skate, the Golden Knights, for the second game in a row, had an unforced error in which the puck ended up in their net. Weegar was credited with the goal after the puck went off two Vegas defensemen — Noah Hanifin's stick and Rasmus Andersson's shin — into the open net.

Guenther delivered a shot from the left point in the second period for the Mammoth, before Barbashev answered 1:02 later by weaving through the slot to put in a backhand.

For St. Louis Blues, Harsh Reality Is They Must Change One Aspect More Than Any Early In A Season

ST. LOUIS – The St. Louis Blues tried their darndest. Oh, did they ever.

They tried to overcome near impossible odds to break the door down to the Western Conference playoff race for a second straight season.

But in the end, it was just too much to overcome this year. Living on the edge, in the end, is not the way to go, to be honest.

The Blues got into the tournament as the second wild card in large part to a franchise-record 12-game winning streak, and even then, they squeaked in past the Calgary Flames by winning on the final day of the regular season and getting in on the first tiebreaker with one more regulation win (32-31).

They were 14 points out of the wild card heading into the Olympic break but were able to get as close as three points as late as April 5 but finally ran out of steam, before finishing this season 37-33-12, four points behind the Los Angeles Kings.

So why are the Blues of the past two seasons so good late but so poor early?

“It’s kind of hard to say what really caused it,” Blues forward Jordan Kyrou said. “I think that’s something as a team internally, we’ve got to talk to each other about and find out as a group and then obviously down the stretch after the break, we kind of found our footing a little bit. We started to play kind of how we wanted as a team and kind of to our identity.”

Let’s look at the numbers by month of the past two seasons:

* October – 8-13-2

* November – 12-10-5

* December – 13-12-3

* January – 9-16-1

* February – 7-4-2

* March – 22-4-3

* April – 9-4-2

So October-January, the team is 42-51-11, and once the clock turns and they go to February-April, the Blues are 38-12-7.

And after bulldozing their way into the playoffs last season and expectations rising to a level of at least competing for the playoffs once again. And losing in the fashion that they did in Game 7 of the first round against the Winnipeg Jets, there should have been a summer’s worth of motivation to come in with their skates on fire.

It never happened.

“Disappointing I would say,” Blues general manager Doug Armstrong said. “I thought we were, based on the second half of last season and then the playoffs, I thought we had progressed to a spot where we would be more competitive out of the gate. Obviously our first half of the season was not to the standard that we had hoped for, made us re-assess our short term and maybe medium-term plans, not our long-term plans. I would say that I thought that we would be a better team.”

Coach Jim Montgomery added, “Poor start, and then I would say not being able to find solutions early enough to be able to get on the right path was very frustrating, for everybody involved, and we all need to be significantly better. We all need to change and affect change within ourselves, and that’s not easy to do, whether it’s your training habits, it’s your attitude, it’s your mindset. All of those things need to be different for us to get off to a better start. It’s two years in a row that I’ve been accustomed to what’s happened here. I don’t know what happened in the two years prior to that, but they were non-playoff years as well. Getting off to a better start and trying to find the attitudes and the mindsets that we’ve had in the last two months of the season in the last two years, not because of results, but because the mindsets and the attitudes were significantly different.”

Montgomery used a word there that’s key to everything: attitude.

Why is it that this particular group, and it likely won’t look exactly the same as the one that ended the season against the Utah Mammoth, doesn’t view October-January games like it does February-April?

Those games mean the same on Oct. 28 mean exactly the same as the ones played on April 5, and that’s attitude, and until that changes, the Blues are going to be the same group that disappoints early, gets the fans’ hopes up late, only to more times than not, come up short.

“Attitude’s the most important thing,” Montgomery said. “All of us have to be willing to do the right things on a consistent level and it’s got to be an attitude of, I believe it’s a Truman quote that it’s not who gets the praise but it’s the common good of the group that succeeds. It doesn’t matter who gets the credit for the success. It matters who’s doing the work together to create the success, and that needs to be the attitude by everybody, and I’m not just talking players.

“I don’t care of you drive the Zamboni. Drive the Zamboni the best way that you can and make sure you don’t miss a line. Those are the kind of attitudes that we’ve got to make sure everyone’s having.”

Armstrong agreed.

“Yeah, there has to be a reckoning of what happened and how it happened and make sure it doesn’t happen again,” he said. “I’m not talking about the wins and losses, it’s just our attitude of how we came to work every day. I shared with some people today, the groups that I have worked with that have had success loved the grind. They loved the challenge. They loved the adversity. They couldn’t wait for it. They thrived under it. They wanted someone to punch them in the mouth so they could respond. That’s what you’re seeing (from) 16 teams playing now that had that and we are not one of them today.”

So how do they change it?

“I think it’s preparation, but I think guys got to truly sink into that,” said Blues forward Dylan Holloway, who ripped off 34 points (14 goals, 20 assists) the final 25 games of the season. “It’s not that guys aren’t prepared, per se. Everybody’s working all summer, everyone’s training hard, but I think more mentally, it’s kind of like, ‘OK, we start on this day’ like mentally. I think mentally we’ve got to take it back a little bit and truly like be mentally prepared for the season because like you said, we got off to two slow starts. But for me, it’s not like this team doesn’t have the capability to be an elite team, to be a playoff team. It’s just kind of finding that consistency more and the start’s huge.”

The Blues never had more than a four-game winning streak this past season. That’s part of the consistency that was missing for large swaths. Last season, they were the last team to reel off a three-game winning streak. This season, they never won more than two games in a row until the first of three four-game streaks starting March 1-6.

The harsh reality of having to sit at Enterprise Center this past Saturday and think about why they failed really set in.

“I think it starts with training camp,” Armstrong said. “And it’s going to be interesting because we’re all going into a new training camp format. We’re down to four (preseason) games, it’s two weeks, there’s a lot of pressure on the players to show up in great shape. The nagging training camp injuries you see are going to bleed into the first and second week of the season now. So players are going to have to skate harder in the summer, they’re going to have to take care of themselves, they’re going to have to have leadership practices that are almost NHL practices. You can’t have sore groins and sore backs like you could when Bernie [Federko] was playing. You have to show up ready, so I think that’s going to be a main focus and then I think respecting the league. Understand that it’s a very difficult league and if you’re not prepared mentally and physically to play, you’re going to fall back and I think our mental toughness has to improve. Our ability to turn the page quickly, I think we hung onto things organizationally too long and they dragged into the second game, the third game, and then I think we didn’t get grounded quick enough after a couple of wins. It felt like it took us five years to win multiple games in a row there for a while. We didn’t have that mental resolve that playoff-caliber teams have.”

Montgomery wasn’t around for the off-season going into the 2024-25 season but was last year. It was his first full camp as the coach and understands when players report, there will be no easing into camp.

“There’s a couple of things you can do. I’ve always been a coach that looks to get the team off to a … pace is really important in camp, I’m just talking about training camp,” Montgomery said. “I think training camp bleeds into … players got to do their work to be in great shape and be ready to go and having done improvements in their games on their own in the summer because they’re not under our guide at that time. When you start the year, training camp, I always believe you build the whole, which means five-man groups and you get off to pace and you start to build the details and habits within that. The finer points, they have to teach individuals. You build that as you go along. So you start with a whole, then you build the small parts, and then you go back to the whole. That has usually driven a lot of success, but I would say my last two training camps, that hasn’t happened. So now I’m going to be looking at those habits and details starting with the small parts and that requires a lot more gruntwork, a lot more grind on the players. It means camp’s going to be harder, but that’s the way it needs to be. We need to change things in order … to affect change, you need to change. So that’s the things I’m looking at to affect change.

“After being done with the year-end meetings with the players and getting their perspective on some of the questions that you guys are asking, I’m asking them pointedly, ‘What will they do to affect change?’ I told you guys that. Then I’ve got to start looking for assistant coaches. Then it’s going to be working a lot with ‘Steener’ on how we see the team, not only playing, how we’re going to make our team have a better camp. All those things, him and I need to discuss ad nauseum because it’s really important that we have a great summer. In order to have a great start, you have to have a great summer. It starts right away. For us, that’s this week.”

The players get the long off-season to reflect but they’ve really got to dig into it and understand that the status quo isn’t nearly good enough.

“I think we’ve all got to really reflect on it,” said Blues forward Robert Thomas, who also ended the season on fire with 31 points (14 goals, 17 assists) in 22 games. “Obviously it’s been something that’s happened the last two years in a row. I think a lot of opinions and stuff should be kept private and handled inside. After those conversations happen, I think we can all come together and kind of voice our opinions and plans on how we’re going to change that.”

And just just change one thing, it’s change plenty, because early this season, goaltending was poor, defensive play was poor, the offense was lacking consistency and special teams were bad.

“Obviously everybody strives to get into the playoffs and go for a run,” Blues defenseman Philip Broberg said. “Obviously sitting here, it’s disappointing. We didn’t get (off) to a good start to the season and then we kind of got going. But I think it was pretty disappointing to not make the playoffs for sure.”

But as much as the Blues need to change with their attitude towards Game 1 to 84 – yes, 84 next season, Holloway wants to make one thing clear.

“Our culture in the room is amazing,” he said. “I feel like everybody’s friends with everybody, everybody talks to everybody. The guys go for dinner with everybody. It’s a rare thing to have as tight of a group as we do. It was weird like that to start. I feel like everybody thought that we were going to get off to a hot start and it was just going to continue from where we were last year and then when that didn’t happen, it was kind of a shock to everyone. It took us a little bit to get it back together and then when we did, you can see how good hockey that we did play. I think the goal going into next season is to find that right away.”

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Lakers beat Rockets in Game 2 with a new Big Three

Lakers forward LeBron James elevates for a double-pumpiing reverse dunk during Game 2 on Tuesday night.
Lakers forward LeBron James elevates for a double-pumping reverse dunk during the third quarter of Game 2 on Tuesday night. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Do the Lakers have a new Big Three?

LeBron James, Marcus Smart and Luke Kennard are putting in their bid to make it so.

They did the heavy lifting for the Lakers, combining for 76 points, 16 rebounds and 16 assists to carry the Lakers to a 101-94 win over the Houston Rockets in Game 2 of the Western Conference playoffs Tuesday night at Crypto.com Arena.

James had another near triple-double with 28 points, eight rebounds and seven assists to help the Lakers take a commanding 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven series. He capped his night with a two-handed dunk with 55.3 seconds left to make sure the Lakers didn’t blow a 15-point lead they built in the first half.

Lakers guard Marcus Smart, sprawled on the court, steals the ball from Rockets forward Kevin Durant during the first quarter.
Lakers guard Marcus Smart, sprawled on the court, steals the ball from Rockets forward Kevin Durant during the first quarter of Game 2. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Smart had 25 points, seven assists and two rebounds while his defense was outstanding once again. Smart, who was eight-for-13 from the field, drilled a big-time three-pointer late in the fourth quarter to give the Lakers an eight-point lead.

Kennard had 23 points, six rebounds and two assists. His two free throws with 14.3 seconds left capped the scoring.

And once again, the Lakers showed their clutch genes, this time doing so with Luka Doncic (Grade 2 left hamstring strain) and Austin Reaves (Grade 2 left oblique muscle strain), sitting on the bench injured.

The Lakers had the best clutch record in the NBA during the regular season, going 22-8 in games when the score was within five points in the final five minutes. The Rockets on the other hand, went 22-23 during clutch moments, ranking 16th in the league.

Read more:Luke Kennard provides a jolt of Luka magic, helping the Lakers beat the Rockets

“We all got to pick up our play,” James said. “When you’ve got two big guns out like we have, we all got to pick up our play. And that's all it's about. We’re all just trying to contribute, make contributions in all facets of the game, pick up our play. Obviously, we're missing Luka and missing AR, so we’re just trying to seize the opportunity. That's all.”

Kevin Durant returned to play after missing Game 1 because of a right knee contusion, and he was sharp early on, scoring 20 points in the first half. But Durant had just three points in the second half and he had nine turnovers for the game.

With the Rockets hosting Game 3 on Friday night, James said he found no comfort in how the Lakers defended Durant.

“None. That just makes him even madder going into Game 3. No satisfaction,” James, who played 39 minutes and 12 seconds, said. “You know, we did our job. We did that. But the guy's a first-ballot Hall of Famer and he's going to make way more great plays than not. So, we don't have no satisfaction. That game is over and done with, but it's still a tall challenge.”

Lakers guard Luke Kennard takes the ball from Rockets forward Kevin Durant during Game 2.
Lakers guard Luke Kennard takes the ball from Rockets forward Kevin Durant during Game 2 of their first-round playoff series at Crypto.Com Arena on Tuesday. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

The starting backcourt of Smart and Kennard, starting in place of Doncic and Reaves, had the kind of first-quarter scoring display Doncic is known for delivering.

Smart had 14 points in the first 12 minutes, shooting five for seven from the field and three for four from three-point range. Kennard had 10 points in the first, shooting four for six from the field and two for three from three-point range.

"Whether those guys are here or not, obviously we would love for them to be here,” said Smart, who played 35:29. “They elevate us to a whole other level, right? And we understand that. But they're not and there's nothing we can do about it but step our game up for those guys."

During the regular season, Doncic, Reaves and James were the Big Three for the Lakers.

But James has two new mates to help the cause, and Smart and Kennard are holding it down.

It started in Game 1, when James, Smart and Kennard combined for 61 of the Lakers’ 107 points, 14 rebounds and 24 assists.

Houston forward Kevin Durant passes the ball under pressure from Lakers forward Rui Hachimura and center Jaxson Hayes.
Houston forward Kevin Durant passes the ball under pressure from Lakers forward Rui Hachimura and center Jaxson Hayes Tuesday night at Crypto.com Arena. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

“We know throughout the game we’re going to have the ball in our hands the most, us three,” said Kennard, who played 41:58. “Again, it’s just playing within the flow of the game when we can. Seeing what adjustments they made earlier in the game and just trying to find ways to beat it. I thought we did a good job of staying poised and under control overall. … But, like I said, us three, we know we’re going to have the ball the majority of the time when it comes down to it and we have to be aggressive and look for the right play each time.”

Etc.

When asked about a report saying Reaves has progressed to one-on-one court work and what Doncic is able to do, Lakers coach JJ Redick said, “Yeah, no update on the timeline for either of those guys.”

“Austin has started a return-to-play [plan,] but we don't have any timeline update for him,” Redick added. “And then Luka I think is gonna start some court work here soon. But again, no update on timeline.”

Redick was asked if Reaves returning to play meant he is starting some support work.

“Yeah. But he, again, it's an upper-body injury versus a lower-body injury, so it's different things,” Redick said.

Redick was asked one last time what return-to-play progression looks like for Reaves.

“That's above my pay grade,” Redick said.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Lakers topple Rockets in Kevin Durant’s return to take 2-0 series lead

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows LeBron, who had a game-high 28 points, goes up for a dunk during the Lakers' 101-94 win over the Rockets in Game 2 of their first-round series on April 21, 2026 in Los Angeles, Image 2 shows Kevin Durant looks to grab a loose ball as Marcus Smart defends during the Lakers' Game 2 win over the Rockets in Los Angeles

The Rockets had their best player back in the lineup against the Lakers on Tuesday night after he sat out of Saturday’s Game 1

But even with Kevin Durant available and having a hot start, Game 2 played out similarly to the playoffs series-opener, with the Lakers beating the Rockets 101-94 at Crypto.com Arena to take a two-game lead in the best-of-seven first round series. 

Durant led the Rockets with 23 points, six rebounds and four assists after missing the first game of the series because of a right knee contusion.

But the Lakers once again stifled the Rockets’ offense.

And they were able to get just enough offense out of their own team, which remained without injured star guards Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves, to pick up a pivotal victory before going on the road for the next two games of the series.

“There’s a natural flow to series where the team that wins [Game 1] can relax a little bit and the team that loses comes out and plays with more desperation,” coach JJ Redick said. “Our guys at least matched their sense of desperation. Our second efforts, all that stuff. You’ve got to win a bunch of little fights, that can be your catch position, that can be your screens, that can be creating separation, that can be boxing out. But this team requires you to win a bunch of little fights.” 

LeBron James scored a team-high 28 points to go with eight rebounds and seven assists. Luke Kennard had 23 points and six rebounds, while Marcus Smart stuffed the stat sheet with 25 points, seven assists and five steals.

What it means

The Lakers have a 2-0 series lead over the Rockets, the first time they’ve done so since winning the 2020 NBA Finals against the Heat.

Since the NBA moved to a 16-team playoff format in 1984, teams that go up 2-0 in a series under the 2-2-1-1-1 home/away pattern have a 245-23 record (91.4% winning percentage of the series).

“It means nothing,” James said. “The series is not won until you win four. It’s the first to four.”

LeBron, who had a game-high 28 points, goes up for a dunk during the Lakers’ 101-94 win over the Rockets in Game 2 of their first-round series on April 21, 2026 in Los Angeles. NBAE via Getty Images

Turning point

When Smart knocked down a corner 3 to give the Lakers a 95-87 lead with 2:23 left in the game. 

The shot was not only Smart’s fifth 3-pointer, but gave the Lakers breathing room late.

Smart also picked up a crucial steal against Durant, who had nine turnovers, before assisting James on a dunk to give the Lakers a 99-92 lead.

Kevin Durant looks to grab a loose ball as Marcus Smart defends during the Lakers’ Game 2 win over the Rockets in Los Angeles. Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

MVP: Marcus Smart

Smart made five of the Lakers’ 13 3s and made big plays on both ends of the floor throughout Tuesday. 

His scoring total was the third time he reached at least 25 points in a playoff game, which he last did during the 2020 Eastern Conference Finals when he had 26 points in a Game 1 loss to the Heat.

Smart’s playoff career-high is 27 points.

“To be able to be back on this stage again,” Smart said, “making the plays that I’m making with these guys, with this team, this organization, I’m just grateful.

Stat of the game: 9

That was the number of turnovers Durant had on Tuesday, which tied a career high for the most giveaways he’s had in a playoff game

Including Tuesday, Durant’s turned the ball over nine times in a playoff game three times.

Up next

The Lakers-Rockets series will move to Houston for the next two games, with Game 3 taking place on Friday at Toyota Center. 

Giants jump on reigning World Series MVP Yamamoto early, beat Dodgers 3-1

SAN FRANCISCO — Jung Hoo Lee and Rafael Devers each hit RBI singles in the first inning that held up to support starter Landen Roupp, and the San Francisco Giants beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 3-1 on Tuesday night.

Shohei Ohtani went hitless with a pair of strikeouts over his initial three at-bats before a seventh-inning single that extended his career-best on-base streak to 53 games, tied for second place on the Dodgers' franchise list with Shawn Green. On the 3-1 pitch from Erik Miller before his single, Ohtani challenged thinking it was a ball, but the called strike was upheld to make it full count.

Roupp (4-1) struck out seven, walked five and allowed one run on one hit over five innings against the big-spending Dodgers. He struck out the side swinging in order in the third, including Ohtani’s second K of the game — a sign to manager Dave Roberts how much he wanted to keep the on-base streak alive.

Ryan Walker, San Francisco's sixth pitcher, pitched a 1-2-3 ninth with two strikeouts for his second save after blowing his first opportunity Saturday at Washington. The Dodgers were held to three hits.

Casey Schmitt added a sacrifice fly in the three-run first as the Giants won for the fourth time in five games while outscoring opponents 23-15 after beginning the season 6-12.

It began pouring rain for a stretch in the bottom of the sixth inning, but the game went on as fans in the sellout crowd of 40,066 sought cover.

World Series MVP Yoshinobu Yamamoto (2-2) gave up three earned runs on six hits over seven innings with four strikeouts and two walks.

Los Angeles center fielder Alex Call was checked on by an athletic trainer in the bottom of the first after making a running catch on Schmitt's sacrifice fly and collided straight into left fielder Teoscar Hernández. Lee followed with an RBI single to make it 3-0 after Devers' single started the scoring.

Freddie Freeman rejoined the Dodgers from the paternity list after welcoming daughter London on Sunday and went 0 for 2 with two walks.

The Giants placed rookie Daniel Susac on the 10-day injured list with right elbow ulnar neuritis and is expected to miss up to three weeks.

Up next

RHP Ohtani (2-0, 0.50 ERA) pitches the middle game of the series Wednesday night for Los Angeles opposite Giants RHP Tyler Mahle (0-3, 7.23).