It’s been nearly a week since LeBron James informed the Lakers he wasn’t going to play for them next season, but apparently, the Lakers were prepared for it.
According to NBA insider Ric Bucher, on his show “On The Ball With Ric Bucher,” the Lakers have been preparing for a life without James since they acquired Luka Doncic in 2025.
“I had to smile when it was reported that LeBron informed the Lakers that he didn’t intend to play for the Lakers next year. As if the Lakers weren’t intending for that to be the case,” Bucher said on his show. “But kudos to the Lakers for allowing LeBron to present it that way and preserve some dignity on the way out.”
Ric Bucher says the Lakers had already planned to get rid of Lebron since the Luka trade and finds it funny that Lebron tried to make it seem like he was the one that decided he was leaving and calls BS on Rich Paul saying all these teams are interested in Lebron
Bucher went on to call out James and his agent, Rich Paul, for saying that every NBA team was interested in acquiring James by saying, “If teams were interested, he wouldn’t have to reach out to them.”
LeBron James recently left the Lakers, but an NBA insider says the Lakers knew they were done with him when they traded for Luka Doncic. Getty Images
At 41 years old, James is coming off a season in which he played in 60 regular-season games, averaging 20.9 points, 6.1 rebounds and 7.2 assists. James is still playing at a high level, but his numbers were below his career average of 26.8 points, 7.5 rebounds and 7.4 assists.
“It’s a sign that LeBron and Rich are struggling with the new reality, which is LeBron simply isn’t valued the way he once was. He does not have the leverage he once did,” Bucher said. “Which is not an indictment, no one is going to invest in a player that is turning 42 years old next season and comes with the outsized attention and servicing that LeBron does.”
In 2025, the Lakers shocked the world when they announced they were trading Anthony Davis to the Mavericks for Doncic in a three-team deal that included the Jazz.
Doncic was just removed from helping the Mavericks reach the NBA Finals the season before and was in the middle of having a great year, averaging 28.1 points, 8.3 rebounds and 7.8 assists per game.
Luka Doncic has been the Lakers’ focus for a while now, according to an NBA insider. Getty Images
While James’ next destination is unknown, it won’t be with the Lakers because the team is focusing on building around Doncic.
ATLANTA — A.J. Ewing is not deterred by left-handed pitching.
The rookie homered and singled — both against lefties — to finish 2-for-4 in the Mets’ 10-9 victory over the Braves on Sunday. It marked the second time Ewing had multiple hits against left-handers in a game this season.
Ewing launched a Martín Pérez sinker for a homer leading off the third inning. The blast, which cleared the center field fence, was the first of his career that he did not pull. Ewing has five homers.
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“I think I have always been comfortable against lefties,” he said.
Ewing and Carson Benge, the two rookies in the lineup, have been success stories in a dreary season for the Mets. The 21-year-old Ewing boosted his OPS to .756 with his latest performance.
“I think we have believed he’s going to hit lefties in the long run, and it’s good to see him doing it,” interim manager Andy Green said.
New York Mets center fielder A.J. Ewing (9) reacts after hitting a home run against the Atlanta Braves during the second inning at Truist Park. Dale Zanine-Imagn Images
Francisco Lindor is expected to either DH or receive a day off Monday as the team continues to monitor his workload following his return from a calf strain.
“Hopefully, it’s the DH because we love having his bat in the lineup,” Greensaid. “But certainly, we like paying attention to his workload every day. It’s something we talked about [Saturday], and he felt good to go — it puts a good lineup on the field for us, having him at shortstop. He was on the bases quite a bit [Saturday], so it’s good to see him playing well and recovering.”
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Green indicated he likely will deploy Kodai Senga behind an opener for Tuesday’s game against the Royals at Citi Field. Senga pitched 2 ²/₃ innings in relief Friday, allowing one earned run. In his other relief appearance since his displacement from the starting rotation, he allowed two earned runs over five innings against the Phillies.
Juan Soto has reached base in 18 of his past 21 games since June 11 and ranks second in MLB among qualifiers in on-base percentage (.500) during that stretch. He’s third in OPS (1.171) and fifth in batting average (.371). Overall, he leads the NL with a .966 OPS.
Camilo Doval has an ERA of 4.67, a number that does not take into account the eight unearned runs he has surrendered in his past three games.
There are few pitchers in baseball who have been statistically friendlier to lefty hitters, who have torched a very talented right arm.
But the public belief stated both by the Yankees flamethrower and his manager is Doval’s fortunes will turn because poor luck is playing a significant part in the struggles.
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“In my career as a pitcher, I’ve never felt this good,” Doval said through interpreter Marlon Abreu after allowing two more unearned runs in Sunday’s 6-1 loss to the Twins in The Bronx. “I’m not getting the results I expect out of myself. Sometimes it’s out of your control — you execute pitches and then you don’t get the results you want.”
He had a point in the series finale, when Ryan Kreidler reached on an error by Anthony Volpe and when Luke Keaschall did not “execute a bunt,” in the words of Aaron Boone, trying to lay one down and instead popping it over Doval and toward shortstop “no-man’s-land,” the manager said. It went for a single that loaded the bases.
Yankees pitcher Camilo Doval (75) reacts during the sixth inning against the Minnesota Twins at Yankee Stadium. John Jones-Imagn Images
But Doval has not been able to limit damage when poor luck or errors strike, and he walked in one run before a sacrifice fly scored another.
“I know nobody likes hearing it, but he’s throwing the ball really well,” said Boone, who leaned upon Doval’s excellent numbers against righties and acknowledged his issues with lefties. “Obviously the lefties have hurt him. … That’s where we got to get him a little more efficient.”
Among a lengthy list of Yankees issues is Doval, who has the talent and pedigree (a 2023 All-Star) to lock down the late innings but whose ineffectiveness figures to prompt the front office to seek trade-deadline help. He has been shutdown against righty hitters — among pitchers who had logged at least 19 innings versus righties this season, Doval’s .438 OPS-against entered play ranked 13th, narrowly behind Shohei Ohtani’s .430.
But there had been only three pitchers worse against lefty hitters, Doval sporting a 1.044 OPS-against.
When Doval was at his best — during his All-Star season with the Giants — he trusted his cutter and slider against lefties, only mixing in a few sinkers.
Yankees pitcher Camilo Doval (75) throws a pitch during the sixth inning when the New York Yankees played the Minnesota Twins Sunday, July 5, 2026 at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, NY. Robert Sabo for NY Post
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With the Yankees this year, Doval’s sinker usage has spiked all the way up to 43 percent against lefties.
Asked the key to improving against opposite-handed hitters, Doval cited strike-throwing.
“You really gotta be able to execute and attack the zone against lefties. You can’t lose faith in yourself,” said Doval, who has walked five, allowed 26 hits and given up four homers in 14 ⅓ innings against lefties. “… Just want to be able to keep attacking and being as consistent as possible.”
If the Yankees had plenty of options already on the 40-man roster in Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre, perhaps they would demote Doval and allow him to work on his command against lefties at the lower level.
Given the state of the team, Boone did not sound as if such a move would happen.
“The bottom line is he’s got to be part of our solution here,” Boone said. “We’re up against it a little bit from an attrition standpoint.”
The Cavaliers reportedly are looking to bring a James family reunion back to Cleveland.
According to NBA insider Jake Fischer, the Cavaliers are keeping an open roster spot for Bronny James so that they can lure LeBron James this offseason.
Per The Stein Line, “One conspiracy whisper making the rounds: They want to make sure that they have open roster spots to be able to trade for the Lakers’ Bronny James in the event that they are able to welcome Dad back as a free agent signee.”
Reports indicate the Cavaliers are interested in trading for Bronny James to lure LeBron James. NBAE via Getty Images
LeBron has had two stints with the Cavaliers. The first was when he was drafted in 2003 and stayed until 2009. The next happened between 2014 and 2018.
His first stint in Cleveland was a special time for LeBron, as he quickly became the most decorated player to don a Cavaliers jersey. He and his wife, Savannah, had the arrival of Bronny in 2004, when LeBron was 19 years old.
When LeBron left Cleveland in 2018, two years after he helped the organization win its first NBA title in franchise history, Bronny was starting to make a name for himself as a basketball player, emerging as a top young talent at Sierra Canyon in Thousand Oaks. Bronny went on to play college basketball at USC.
Bronny was drafted in the second round by the Lakers in 2024.
The James family made NBA history that season when the LeBron and Bronny became the first father-son duo to play together, a moment LeBron said he would never forget.
If LeBron is serious about reuniting with his former team, the chance to play with his son where it all started could be intriguing enough to lure him back to Cleveland.
LOS ANGELES (AP) — Manny Machado hit a three-run homer, Jackson Merrill and Fernando Tatis Jr. added RBI singles, and the San Diego Padres snapped their eight-game losing streak with a 5-2 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers on Sunday.
JP Sears (2-1) threw five scoreless innings of one-hit ball as the Padres ended their longest skid since 2013 and avoided a four-game sweep at the hands of the back-to-back World Series champions with their first victory since June 26. The win was San Diego’s second in its last 13 games at Dodger Stadium.
Four-time MVP Shohei Ohtani had an RBI single on his 32nd birthday for the MLB-leading Dodgers, who lost for only the second time in nine games.
Dodgers catcher Eliézer Alfonzo made his major league debut in extraordinary circumstances, playing the first six innings after Latin American media reports earlier Sunday indicated his sister and stepmother had been confirmed as victims of Venezuela’s earthquakes last month.
Padres manager Craig Stammen and infield coach Ryan Goins were ejected by plate umpire Nick Mahrley only three pitches into the game. Goins was yelling from the dugout when Mahrley tossed him, and Stammen got the boot after subsequently coming onto the field to argue.
Miguel Rojas’ two-out single in the fifth was the Dodgers’ only hit off Sears, who struck out five in his third start this season.
Emmet Sheehan (4-6) couldn’t get out of the fifth for the Dodgers, but yielded only one run on three hits.
Sung-mun Song drew a walk and scored on Tatis’ infield single before Machado’s 407-foot shot to center off Kyle Hurt. The homer was the 18th for Machado, who is nonetheless batting .189.
Alex Freeland and Ohtani singled in the Dodgers’ first runs later in the seventh.
Mason Miller pitched the ninth for his 22nd save and first since June 22, thanks to the Padres’ slump.
Up next
Eric Lauer (4-5, 4.84 ERA) looks to stay unbeaten since joining the Dodgers’ rotation in May when they open a home series with the Colorado Rockies on Monday night.
Walker Buehler (5-4, 4.61 ERA) takes the mound at Petco Park on Monday night when the Padres open a series with the Arizona Diamondbacks.
Dodgers catcher Eliezer Alfonzo walks in the dugout during the seventh inning of a 5-2 loss to the San Diego Padres on Sunday at Dodger Stadium. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)
As the announcer called out his name in the lineup, Eliezer Alfonzo hugged fellow Venezuelan Miguel Rojas before the catcher walked down the dugout to greet his teammates and coaches. The two had written messages on their caps in silver ink: On Alfonzo’s, “EyP, RIP,” the initials of his stepmother Patricia and his younger sister Eliana. On Rojas’, a cross was drawn next to “Alfonzo” and below “Fuerza Matatan.” In other words, stay strong, Matatan, the nickname given to Alfonzo’s father, the former major league catcher Eliezer “El Matatán” Alfonzo.
An unimaginable weight rested on his shoulders when Alfonzo stepped into the batter’s box to a standing ovation. Alfonzo’s stepmother and sister were reportedly found dead after the earthquakes in Venezuela last month.
Alfonzo went 0-for-2 in an otherwise quiet Dodgers 5-2 loss to the Padres, though even in that performance, he found moments to reflect. His sister, he said after the game, had a dream that she refused to tell him until it came true.
“I’m pretty sure the dream was something about this. I wish she was alive to watch me play in the big leagues,” Alfonzo said. “But I know she’s in God’s side now, and she’s gonna protect me, and she’s gonna enjoy every moment that I’m gonna have.”
He honored his family’s loss by playing as if his sister were sitting in the stands. Because if she were here, he said, she would be yelling from the stands, “Hit the ball hard!”
The Dodgers catcher had previously clung to hope that the two, who had been reported missing, would be found. His father had searched tirelessly for them, his hope bolstered when he found the family’s dog alive. Alfonzo’s father stayed in the country, searching, when the Dodgers called his son to let him know he’d join the team.
The series finale with the Padres should’ve been a happy day. Most players who have toiled in the minor league system debut in front of applauding friends and family. Instead, Alfonzo’s first appearance, the culmination of nine tireless years, was somber , stricken by the grief overshadowing what should’ve been a joyous moment in the Dodgers’ to the Padres.
“After today, it’s going to really hit him,” Roberts said. “All of us feel for him and his father, who I know, their family. It’s devastating.”
Alfonzo never considered not playing today, despite the personal tragedy. He’s spoken with his brother and his father in Venezuela, who asked him to play in the series finale for his sister. His agent, girlfriend and teammates, like Rojas, also helped Alfonzo approach the game calmly.
“What happened, unfortunately, is out of my hands and part of life,” he said in Spanish. “Only God knows why they happen. I went out there to honor my sister and my stepmother, and give my best in a difficult moment. Unfortunately, we couldn’t get the win, but you have to keep moving forward.”
Rojas, who spoke through reddened, teary eyes after the game, knows the family well. He learned from and played against Alfonzo’s father in Venezuelan winter ball. And, in a country struck by tragedy, this loss felt close to home.
“Everybody in Venezuela loves his dad,” Rojas said. “It’s really tough right now to put into context and to put into words. Just for him to be here today and making the decision that he was going to fulfill his childhood dream of playing in the big leagues, thinking about that and thinking about them and what happened over there and what his dad has to be going through right now by himself in Venezuela, it’s really tough.
“For me, I’m just going to support the whole family and especially Eliezer, because I know how hard it is to play like that. It’s been hard for me. Nothing happened to one of my family members, but as soon as I heard the news about them, it hit me as hard as if it were my family. I consider Eliezer Alfonso Sr. one of my close friends in baseball.”
In a way, playing baseball helps bring happiness to those going through tragedy, Rojas said. He knows because he’s lost both his parents, but his family still asks him to play.
“This is how I make a lot of people happy in my family and people who know me,” he said. “This is not just my job. This is who I am.”
Against the Padres, Rojas helped break a five-inning hitless streak for the Dodgers (59-32), who lead MLB in batting average (.265), with a single in the fifth. However, by then, the team had already found itself in a hole.
Emmet Sheehan gave up an RBI single to Padres’ center fielder Jackson Merrill in the fourth inning. In the fifth, he pitched himself into a jam, giving up a successive walk and double that put two runners in scoring position. With no room for error, Sheehan was quickly replaced by Jack Dreyer, who escaped the inning scoreless.
Sheehan (4-6) has now had five straight starts that lasted no more than five innings. But, having given up only one earned run in the series closer to the Padres (44-45), Sheehan’s start could be viewed as a step in the right direction: only three hits and five strikeouts.
“I thought the first three innings were great,” Roberts said. “They really were. I thought the stuff was up, he was on the attack, you’re getting the swing-and-miss, getting the soft contact, he was great.”
However, emotions remained high on both sides. San Diego’s manager Craig Stammen and coach Ryan Goins were ejected three pitches into the game after arguing a check-swing call. The ejection seemed to spark the Padres back from a season-high eight-game losing streak, though the Dodgers didn’t make the win easy at times.
The pressure ratcheted up in the sixth when Shohei Ohtani and Andy Pages worked walks off Yuki Matsui, who replaced JP Sears. The Padres switched pitchers again before Mookie Betts’ two-out at-bat, and the move paid off. Betts hit a routine flyball, and the inning — and the Dodgers’ momentum — ended.
After scoring in the fourth, San Diego extended its lead in the seventh courtesy of Fernando Tatis Jr. and Manny Machado. Tatis Jr. beat out a throw from Rojas to Freddie Freeman, driving in one run. And though the Dodgers challenged, the call was upheld. Then, two batters later, reliever Kyle Hurt threw a four-seam fastball down the middle of the plate, and Machado rocketed the pitch to the center field wall beyond the grasp of a leaping Pages.
The Dodgers clawed back two runs in the seventh. Alex Freeland drove in one on a line-drive RBI-single. Ohtani added another one. Neither was enough to win, though it ensured the Dodgers weren’t blanked.
Shohei Ohtani loses his bat during the third inning Sunday. (Eric Thayer / Los Angeles Times)
Still, the game’s result seemed minuscule when stacked against Alfonso’s personal tragedy and the earthquake’s destruction in Venezuela. And, as the country and its people begin to piece together the full toll of the destruction amid the rubble, the notion of playing baseball seems absurd in the wake of such tragedy.
“It’s not always easy, but sometimes getting on the field, competing, life goes to the wayside,” Roberts said. “And you can just compete and do your job, and that’s sort of a blessing. But yeah, to play every day, and to have to perform, it’s pressure in itself.”
But for the men who have only known how to play baseball since they were young, there’s little else to do.
“That’s the worst feeling, feeling selfish of being here and playing, and we look out there like we’re having fun and we’re laughing,” Rojas said. “At the end, when I put my head to bed after everything is over, after the show is over, it’s really hard to go to sleep. I’m pretty sure a lot of Venezuelans are going through the same thing.”
After eight straight losses, and five in a row to the Dodgers in the last two weeks, the Padres had evidently had enough.
Three pitches into Sunday’s game, manager Craig Stammen and infield coach Ryan Goins were ejected for arguing a check-swing call against Fernando Tatis Jr. –– a seemingly performative outburst to fire up their slumping squad.
Whatever the intended effect, it appeared to work for the Padres, who managed to salvage something from this nightmarish four-game series at Dodger Stadium with a 5-2 win over the Dodgers.
Padres manager Craig Stammen got ejected in the first inning Sunday against the Dodgers. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
For most of the late-afternoon contest, the game moved as excitingly as the upper-deck shadows across the infield.
Neither team had a hit through the first three innings. The scoring wasn’t opened until an RBI single from Padres outfielder Jackson Merrill in the fourth. And even then, the proceedings lacked little in the way of excitement or intrigue.
Dodgers starter Emmet Sheehan only lasted 4 ⅓ innings, limiting the damage to just the one run despite an inefficient 96-pitch outing.
Padres left-hander JP Sears, meanwhile, reversed his scuffling form after entering the day with a near-7.00 ERA, holding the Dodgers scoreless over a five-inning outing in which he didn’t allow his first hit until a Miguel Rojas single in his second-to-last at-bat.
The Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani celebrated his 32nd birthday Sunday by going 1-for-3 with an RBI. AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill
Finally, the Padres pulled away in the seventh, tagging Dodgers reliever Kyle Hurt with four runs –– including three on a back-breaking blast from Manny Machado.
The Dodgers got two runs back in the bottom of the seventh, on RBI singles from Alex Freeland and Shohei Ohtani, but got no further.
For one day, at least, the Padres had something to celebrate against their NL West rivals.
What it means
In the grand scheme, not much.
The Dodgers (59-32) remain 14 games clear of the Padres (44-45), who climbed back into a tie for second place in the division.
They maintain the winningest record in baseball and all but certain odds of another NL West crown.
What they did miss out on was what would’ve been their first four-game sweep of the Padres since 2009. Still, by taking three games this weekend, they’ve not only bolstered their division lead but clinched the head-to-head season series in the rivalry, as well.
The Padres’ Jackson Merrill and Manny Machado celebrate Machado’s home run Sunday against the Dodgers. AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill
Who’s hot
Stammen and his coaching staff sure seemed to be.
Amid the Padres’ season-long losing streak, they looked ready to jump on the first even somewhat questionable call from the umpires Sunday, immediately barking out from the dugout when Tatis wasn’t granted a check-swing call in the game’s first at-bat.
First, Goins got tossed from his seat on the bench.
Then Stammen, San Diego’s rookie manager, got himself rung during an on-field confrontation.
Tatis went on to strike out in the at-bat, and Sheehan kept them quiet for a while after that. But eventually, the Padres gave Stammen something to smile about back in his office,
Who’s not
Tommy Edman was a late scratch from the Dodgers’ starting lineup Sunday, after getting hit by a pitch in his surgically repaired right ankle the night before.
However, manager Dave Roberts downplayed the severity of the issue before the game, saying he was “not too concerned.”
Lo and behold, Edman came in as a pinch-hitter during the Dodgers’ seventh-inning rally, though did not stay in from there to play defense.
In more encouraging Dodgers injury news Sunday, Ohtani returned to the lineup after a one-day absence with tightness in his biceps. Roberts said the Dodgers will continue to monitor the injury, but that the two-way star was already feeling “back to normal.”
Up next
The Dodgers continue this 10-game, pre-All-Star-break homestand by welcoming the Rockies to town on Monday. Eric Lauer (4-5, 4.84 ERA) will start the opener against Rockies left-hander Kyle Freeland (2-7, 7.25 ERA).
Nick Robertson, who was acquired by the Penguins from the Toronto Maple Leafs on July. 1, was one of 15 players who filed for arbitration. Jason, his brother on the Dallas Stars, also filed for arbitration.
15 players have filed for arbitration:
Bourgault, Xavier (Ottawa Senators) Dach, Kirby (Montreal Canadiens) Drysdale, Jamie (Philadelphia Flyers) Greaves, Jet (Columbus Blue Jackets) Jefferies, Alex (New York Islanders) Krebs, Peyton (Buffalo Sabres) McMichael, Connor (St. Louis…
Robertson had his best NHL season in 2025-26, finishing with 16 goals and 32 points in 78 games. He has scored double-digit goals in back-to-back-to-back seasons and will try to make it four in a row when the 2026-27 season starts in September.
Robertson is very familiar with Penguins president/general manager Kyle Dubas since the latter drafted him when he was the GM in Toronto. Dubas selected Robertson in the second round of the 2019 NHL Draft.
The Penguins will try to get a contract done with Robertson before his arbitration date.
Jul 5, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; San Diego Padres first baseman Ty France (25) greets third baseman Manny Machado (13) after he hit a 3-run home run in the seventh inning against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images | Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images
After shutting out the Padres on Saturday, the Dodgers couldn’t rally back from down five as they dropped Sunday’s contest 5-2, helping San Diego snap their seven-game losing streak.
Both Emmet Sheehan and JP Sears were nearly untouchable over their first three innings of work, only allowing one walk while holding each other hitless. San Diego broke through against Sheehan in the top of the fourth, as Manny Machado worked a one-out walk before Gavin Sheets singled to break up the no-hit bid and put runners on the corners. Jackson Merrill broke the scoreless ice with a two-out RBI single to give San Diego their first run since Friday, and Sheehan needed 28 pitches to end the inning.
San Diego knocked Sheehan out in the fifth inning after Luis Campusano walked for the second time and Fernando Tatis Jr. sprayed a double down the right field line. Jack Dreyer came in to help extinguish the rally, as he got out of a bases-loaded jam with two outs.
Although Sheehan only logged 4 1/3 innings on 96 pitches, the right-hander was tagged for just one run for a second consecutive start against San Diego. Sheehan now has a 1.94 ERA over his last two starts, helping to bring his season ERA down to 4.91.
The lefty Sears entered Sunday’s start with an ERA at 6.97 over his first two starts. Sears flirted with a no-hitter up until the fifth inning when Miguel Rojas lined a single up the middle to end the bid. Sears managed to complete five innings of scoreless work, registering his best start at the big league level since being acquired from the Athletics last year.
The Dodgers managed to get both the tying and go-ahead runners on base with a pair of walks against Yuki Matsui in the bottom of the sixth inning, the the opportunity was wasted as Bradgley Rodriguez got out of the inning unscathed.
San Diego got an insurance run on an RBI single from Tatis in the top of the seventh against Kyle Hurt, and Machado broke the game open with a three-run home run to center field to give the Padres a 5-0 lead. It was Machado’s 26th home run hit as a Padre against his old team, passing Hall of Fame outfielder Dave Winfield for the most home runs hit against the Dodgers in franchise history.
The Dodgers ensured that they wouldn’t suffer the same fate as San Diego did on Saturday, as singles from Alex Freeland and the birthday boy Shohei Ohtani gave the Dodgers a pair of runs. Andy Pages had a chance to tie the game with two on and two out, but Adrián Morejón got him swinging to end the threat.
Morejón remained in for the eighth inning, holding the Dodgers in check, before Mason Miller retired the side in order to put San Diego back in the win column for the first time since June 26.
Shohei Ohtani couldn’t celebrate his birthday with a win, but the two-way superstar went 1-3 with an RBI and a walk. Ohtani is now a career .138 hitter (4-29) on his birthday.
Freddie Freeman’s on-base streak came to a close after 19 games, going 0-4 on Sunday.
Eliezer Alfonzo made his big league debut on Sunday, as the switch-hitter went 0-2 before Tommy Edman pinch hit for him in the bottom of the seventh.
The Dodgers kick off the final week of the first half with a three-game home series against the Colorado Rockies beginning Monday (7:10 p.m. PT, SportsNet LA). Eric Lauer faces Kyle Freeland.
SACRAMENTO, CA - JULY 5: Hunter Sallis #55 of the Brooklyn Nets plays defense during the game against the Milwaukee Bucks during a 2026 NBA California Classic game on July 5, 2026 at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, California. 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 Rocky Widner/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
The Brooklyn Nets don’t have offensive or defensive coordinators, but it’s been widely known around HSS Training Center that he’s a guy whose forte is stopping the other team from scoring, whether in practices or at the end of games. As Brooklyn’s Summer League head coach in Sacramento and Las Vegas, that’s what to expect and in the two games so far in the California Classic, that’s been what has drawn attention.
In both the last minute loss to to the Sacramento Kings Saturday night and Sunday afternoon’s 89-69 win over the Milwaukee Bucks, announcers were buzzing about how the Nets defense was thwarting the other squad particularly with physicality.
Sunday’s win was particularly gratifying for Gaitley for a number of reasons. It was a homecoming. He had worked for the Kings before joining Jordi Fernandez in Brooklyn and although there was good defense played against Sacramento and Darius Acuff through most of the game Saturday, in the end, they blew a lead and walked off the court a loser. Not so on Sunday. The Nets after a slow start got out in front early and just kept rolling. By games end, Gaitley’s charges had held Milwaukee to 24-of-74 shooting, 32.4%.
The difference: “They did a better job with second chance points but as far as clearing the glass, we did pretty good.” Defense was the only improvement, either…
Nets Coach Gaitley on the team's improvement: "Big offensive improvement. We also talked about sharing the ball,22 assists. 22 assists on 35 made field goals."
The Nets had 8 total assists against the Kings yesterday.
And perhaps the most gratifying part of the big win was who Gaitley did it with. No Mikel Brown Jr., Egor Demin, Ben Saraf, Drake Powell, Danny Wolf, Joshua Jefferson, Tyler Bilodeau, Chaney Johnson! Who’s left you might ask. Well, Gaitley started with a hodge-podge of Exhibit 10s —Ben Humrichous, a 6’9” sniper and Duke Brennan, a 6’10” big — plus a trio of G League vets — John Ukamadu, a 6’5” wing who played for the Motor City Cruise; Hunter Sallis, a 6’4” guard who played for the San Diego Clippers (who’s also James Harden’s cousin) and Dwight Murray Jr. a 6’0” point guard from the College Park Skyhawks. Not the A list.
Coming off the bench another Exhibit 10: Dion Brown, another wing at 6’4” from St. Louis and 6’9” Dain Dainja who along with Brennan supplied the heft needed for the physicality.
It was Humrichous who supplied the scoring early. Brooklyn went down 12-4 early, not surprising considering how new they were to each other. At that point, the Illinois product who played with Keaton Wagler last season, decided the game was his, reeling off three straight threes. The rout was on…
Former Illinois forward Ben Humrichous showed off his shooting ability for the Brooklyn Nets in their Summer League win
Humrichous, who mostly came off the bench in Illinois, talked about how grateful he is for the opportunity.
Humrichous on the Nets' 1st Summer League win: "All the glory to God.Such a fun opportunity to go out there & play for the Nets organization today.Really proud of our team's effort,the way that we that we guarded,the way that we shared the ball the way that we made Hustle plays.” pic.twitter.com/Wyd1ZnPbyB
Like the rest of the benchwarmers turned winners, the Summer League is going to be key to their futures and not just the three draft picks and three Exhibit 10’s. The leagues are among the most scouted in the NBA. Teams from Europe and Asia in particular are looking for talent…
Coach Dutch Gaitley on how the team's play in Summer League impacts them staying with the team:
"I think what we're trying to do here is we're trying to put them in the best position to be successful & whether that's with Brooklyn or whether that's with another ball club.” pic.twitter.com/fuoRAVrG9C
Humrichous was one of five Nets in double figures. He and Sallis finished with 15 each, Murray Jr. had 14 and the two bigs, Brennan and Dainja had 10 each, Brennan adding 12 boards for a double double. The two dominated underneath.
Next up
The back-to-back-to-back ends Monday night at 8:00 p.m. ET with a game vs. the Warriors. According to Gaitley, it looks like that the Nets will be at full force and that includes Brown Jr.
“That is above my pay grade. I think the plan is that he is going to play; but I don’t make the final decisions,” said the head coach.
PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JUNE 16: A general view of the 2026 All Star Game sign during the game between the Miami Marlinsi and the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on June 16, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Jasen Vinlove/Miami Marlins/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Back in March, we posed questions around way-too-early All-Star Game roster predictions, asking which Rockie (or, optimistically, Rockies) you thought would represent the club in Philadelphia, whether Hunter Goodman would be a repeat All-Star, and which surprise players from around the league would make or miss the Midsummer Classic.
The results from the various fan voting phases trickled in this week before the final rosters were announced yesterday. As expected, league-wide fan voting was not kind to the Rockies. As the early balloting results came in, only two Rockies finished in the top 10 at their positions: Goodman (5th among catchers) and Troy Johnston (9th among designated hitters). Even then, they were hundreds of thousands of votes behind the positional leaders.
By the time things progressed to Phase Two voting, the National League roster was almost exclusively full of Dodgers, Braves, and Phillies, with a National and a Met joining that group. Goodman wasn’t able to secure one of the top two slots, despite ranking first among all catchers in home runs, total bases, runs scored, slugging, and extra-base hits, and second among NL catchers in hits and RBI. However, after the dust settled and final rosters were announced, Goodman secured his second straight All-Star nod.
The full AL and NL All-Star rosters for the 2026 MLB All-Star game 🤩
The Rockies are among 12 teams sending only their one required representative. The Braves, Dodgers, and Phillies lead the MLB with five representatives each. The Yankees, Rays, and Blue Jays are just behind, leading the American League with four All-Stars each.
There are lots of new names joining All-Star week. In the AL, 15 of 32 players are making their first All-Star appearance, with 11 newcomers of the 32 selected in the NL. Players like the Nick Kurtz, Kevin McGonigle, Jordan Walker, and Sal Stewart are among that group.
The field isn’t without some early controversy or intrigue. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. has already announced that he’ll skip the All-Star game, citing a desire to focus on his team first. He’s dealt with back tightness over the last month and has struggled on the season, posting a career-worst .699 OPS and just four home runs this season. Aaron Judge got a starter spot, and although he had a strong start to the year, he hasn’t played since early June and is still dealing with an injury.
Plenty of familiar faces are returning to the game, with guys like Aroldis Chapman, Chris Sale, Mike Trout, Freddie Freeman, Bryce Harper, and, of course, Shohei Ohtani each adding another selection.
With the full rosters out, how are you feeling about the 2026 All-Star Game?
Which All-Star selections are you most surprised by or disappointed in?
Who was snubbed around the league? Do you think a second Rockie should have made the cut as a reserve?
There’s still buzz around Goodman representing Colorado in the Home Run Derby. So far, Rays third baseman Junio Caminero is the only confirmed participant. Do you think Hunter will get the call? Who else do you think will fill out the Derby field?
May 27, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Brewers left fielder Jackson Chourio (11) looks on as center fielder Garrett Mitchell (5) and right fielder Sal Frelick (10) celebrate a 2-1 win over the St. Louis Cardinals in the nine inning at American Family Field. Mandatory Credit: Michael McLoone-Imagn Images | Michael McLoone-Imagn Images
The Milwaukee Brewers are set for a big five-game, four-day series in St. Louis this week, as they’ll take on the Cardinals in an NL Central battle. After a rainout in early May, the two teams will have a makeup doubleheader on Tuesday, meaning we’ll get to see a rare five-game series.
Milwaukee currently sits atop the division at 55-33, as they’ve gone 6-4 in the first 10 games of their current 18-game, 17-day stretch that wraps up with the All-Star break. On the other side, the Cardinals sit in third place at 47-40, though they’re just 1.5 games back of the Cubs after taking two of three against them at Wrigley this weekend. They’re also currently sitting in the final NL Wild Card spot, tied with the Marlins (who technically are just behind them based on win percentage).
The biggest injury news for Milwaukee is the loss of right-hander Brandon Woodruff, who exited after another shoulder injury on Saturday in Arizona. He’s currently listed as TBD, but it’s not looking great for Milwaukee’s veteran leader. Fellow pitchers Joel Kuhnel (TBD), Logan Henderson (possibly this series), Brian Fitzpatrick (2027), Coleman Crow (July), Rob Zastryzny (July), Carlos Rodriguez (late July), DL Hall (late July), Quinn Priester (2027), and Angel Zerpa (2027) are also out, with outfielder Brandon Lockridge (late July) still the only position player on the IL.
The Cardinals have stood as one of the healthiest teams in baseball this season — their current IL is exactly one player long, with infielder Ramón Urías (the older brother of Luis) out since May with an elbow injury. Right-hander Dustin May is considered day-to-day with an ankle contusion, but he’s still expected to make his next start here against Milwaukee.
Jake Bauers leads the Brewer offense with 16 homers this season, driving in 54 and scoring 51 runs as he’s slashing .266/.363/.498. Jackson Chourio ranks second on the team with 13 homers, followed by Brice Turang at 12. William Contreras, Garrett Mitchell, Christian Yelich, Sal Frelick, Gary Sánchez, Andrew Vaughn, and David Hamilton also fit in as regulars, with Joey Ortiz and Cooper Pratt mostly splitting time at shortstop and Blake Perkins serving as a baserunning/defensive sub. As a team, the Brewers are hitting .255/.337/.398 (.735 OPS ranks 11th), with 83 homers (28th), 449 runs (fifth), and 84 steals (tied for sixth).
Jordan Walker continues to have a great breakout season, as he’s hitting .292/.352/.529 with 20 homers, 18 doubles, 67 RBIs, 54 runs, and 11 steals just beyond the halfway point. Alec Burleson, Iván Herrera, and NL Rookie of the Year frontrunner JJ Wetherholt also have double-digit homers. Nathan Church has also had a quietly solid season, as has 29-year-old rookie Bryan Torres. Masyn Winn, Lars Nootbaar and Pedro Pagés are also regulars, with José Fermín, Nelson Velázquez, Jimmy Crooks, and Blaze Jordan serving in depth roles. As a team, the Cardinals are hitting .248/.325/.397 (.722 OPS ranks 16th), with 99 homers (tied for 19th), 403 runs (15th), and 56 steals (18th).
The Brewer bullpen is led by closer Trevor Megill as well as the Vulture, Aaron Ashby, and setup man Abner Uribe, all of whom have been solid this season. Chad Patrick had a nice bounce-back week after a rough month of June, Jared Koenig continues to be a fairly reliable lefty, and Drew Rom, Grant Anderson, Craig Yoho, and Garrett Stallings round things out. As a staff, the Brewers have a 3.35 team ERA (first), including a 3.24 starter ERA (first) and a 3.48 bullpen ERA (fourth). They’ve struck out 865 batters (second) over 790 2/3 innings.
Closer Riley O’Brien leads the way for St. Louis’ bullpen, with 22 saves in 26 chances this year. JoJo Romero, George Soriano, and Justin Bruihl all rank among team leaders in appearances and have sub-3.70 ERAs over roughly 40 innings apiece. Ryne Stanek has also tossed 33 2/3 innings, though he has a 3.72 ERA. Matt Svanson sits in a low-leverage role with a 6.69 ERA over 37 2/3 innings, and Max Rajcic has made just six appearances totaling nine innings with five runs allowed. As a staff, the Cardinals have a 4.14 team ERA (14th), including a 4.15 starter ERA (12th) and a 4.14 bullpen ERA (16th). They’ve struck out 654 batters (28th) over 776 2/3 innings.
Probable Pitchers
Monday, July 6 @ 6:45 p.m.: LHP Shane Drohan (3-2, 3.12 ERA, 3.18 FIP) vs. RHP Michael McGreevy (3-7, 3.12 ERA, 4.31 FIP)
Drohan has been a solid presence in the rotation, though he still has a 4.09 ERA over seven starts (33 innings) compared to a 1.82 ERA over 10 relief appearances (24 2/3 innings). Overall, this year, he has a 3.12 ERA, 3.18 FIP, and 59 strikeouts over 57 2/3 innings. He took a no-decision on Wednesday against the Reds, allowing two runs on six hits and a walk while striking out seven over 5 2/3 innings. Drohan faced the Cardinals in both of the previous series this season, both times in a relief role. He’s totaled 3 1/3 innings, allowing one run on two hits and a walk with two strikeouts.
McGreevy, 26 this week, has a strange season stat line, with a 3-7 record and 4.31 FIP but a much better 3.12 ERA. He’s struck out just 60 batters over 95 1/3 innings, and the Cards have lost each of his last four outings. In those losses, he’s 0-2, but he still has a solid 3.52 ERA and 11 strikeouts over 23 innings. McGreevy’s only appearance against Milwaukee came in late May, when he got roughed up for five runs on seven hits and three walks, striking out six over four innings in a loss.
Tuesday, July 7 @ 1:15 p.m. (Makeup of May 5): RHP Jacob Misiorowski (9-4, 1.47 ERA, 1.96 FIP) vs. RHP Dustin May (5-6, 4.80 ERA, 3.37 FIP)
Misiorowski is fresh off being named an All-Star over the weekend, as he sits at 9-4 this season with a 1.47 ERA, 1.96 FIP, and 156 strikeouts across 104 innings. He’s coming off arguably his worst start of the season, going five innings against the Reds and allowing five runs (currently one earned, though the Reds have appealed the error ruling) on five hits (two homers) and no walks while striking out 10 on just 82 pitches. Miz has made four career starts against St. Louis, going 2-1 with a 3.05 ERA and 24 strikeouts over 20 2/3 innings. That includes a win in a seven-inning, one-run performance back in late May.
May, a former third-round pick by the Dodgers, has looked really good at times this year, but he’s looked really bad of late. While he has a 4.80 ERA and 3.37 FIP with 78 strikeouts over 84 1/3 innings this year, he’s had a really strange recent run. After tossing 15 shutout innings in wins over the Mets and Padres (including a complete game, one-hit shutout against San Diego), he’s totaled just 2 2/3 innings in his last two outings against the Royals and Braves, allowing 11 runs on 11 hits and three walks, though St. Louis won both of those games in high-scoring affairs. May has made two career starts against the Brewers, totaling 8 2/3 innings with an 0-1 record, 2.08 ERA, and 12 strikeouts. That includes his lone appearance as a Cardinal, which came back in May as he went seven no-hit innings before taking the loss when he gave up two runs (one earned) on two hits and a hit by pitch.
Tuesday, July 7 @ 6:45 p.m.: TBD vs. TBD
Neither team has announced a starter for the second half of Tuesday’s doubleheader, with it seeming possible we’ll be looking at the 27th man for both squads. For Milwaukee, that likely means Robert Gasser. Gasser, 27, has made seven starts in the majors this year, with a 1-3 record, 4.54 ERA, 4.99 FIP, and 36 strikeouts over 35 2/3 innings. The left-hander looked solid in his last three starts before being sent to the ACL Brewers, totaling 17 1/3 innings with five runs allowed on 13 hits and four walks, striking out 17 against the Guardians, Braves, and Reds. Gasser has made two starts against St. Louis, going 1-1 with two runs allowed over nine innings, striking out six.
For the Cardinals, the only real potential option on their non-active 40-man roster is right-hander Hunter Dobbins, who last pitched at Triple-A Memphis on June 30. Dobbins, 26, was acquired in the Willson Contreras trade with the Red Sox over the offseason. He’s made four appearances (two starts) for St. Louis, going 1-0 with a 3.63 ERA, 4.38 FIP, and 19 strikeouts over 17 1/3 innings. He’s also been solid with Memphis, going 5-1 with a 3.79 ERA and 44 strikeouts over 59 1/3 innings in 12 starts this year. Dobbins actually faced the Brewers while with Boston last year, going three innings in relief with two runs allowed on three hits and three walks, striking out one.
Wednesday, July 8 @ 6:45 p.m.: LHP Kyle Harrison (8-1, 2.82 ERA, 3.00 FIP) vs. RHP Andre Pallante (10-5, 3.60 ERA, 3.91 FIP)
Harrison, who was snubbed an All-Star selection (my money is on him getting picked as a replacement), has looked fantastic in his first season in Milwaukee, easily his best in the majors. Across 16 starts, Harrison is 8-1 with a 2.82 ERA, 3.00 FIP, and 99 strikeouts over 79 2/3 innings. The left-hander got roughed up a bit in a no-decision on Friday night in Arizona, allowing three runs on five hits and a walk while striking out three, though Milwaukee would go on to win in extras. His only appearance against St. Louis came back in May of this year, when he tossed six scoreless frames with four hits and no walks, striking out two.
Pallante, 27, already has a career-high 10 wins through 17 starts this season, while pitching to a 3.60 ERA and 3.91 FIP with 70 strikeouts over 95 frames. He went 5 2/3 scoreless innings in St. Louis’ 17-1 blowout win against the Cubs on Friday, allowing five hits and a walk while striking out a pair. A familiar foe of Milwaukee, Pallante is 0-3 against them across 16 appearances (four starts), with a 5.45 ERA and 22 strikeouts over 38 innings.
Thursday, July 9 @ 6:45 p.m.: TBD vs. RHP Kyle Leahy (7-4, 3.86 ERA, 4.09 FIP)
Following the injury to Brandon Woodruff over the weekend, his spot in the rotation is now a bit of a black hole. The good news, however, is that the Brewers seem to expect that right-hander Logan Henderson is close to returning. With that in mind, we’ll assume he makes his return here. Henderson, 24, has been great on a big-league mound across parts of two seasons, going 5-1 with a 2.23 ERA, 2.73 FIP, and 63 strikeouts over 48 1/3 innings. Shelved since late May, he made a pair of rehab appearances over the last couple of weeks, totaling 6 1/3 innings with Triple-A Nashville and allowing two runs on four hits and two walks while striking out 11. This would mark his first career appearance against St. Louis.
Leahy, 29, is a former reliever-turned-starter who has found a bit of success here in his third full MLB season. He’s approaching his career high in innings, as he went 88 frames last year and is at 86 1/3 through 17 starts in 2026. He has a 3.86 ERA, 4.09 FIP, and 73 strikeouts for the Cards, and he’s earned the win in each of his last two appearances. In those games, he went 10 total innings against the Cubs and Marlins, allowing one run on five hits and five walks while striking out 11. Leahy is 2-1 in nine appearances (one start) against the Brewers, with a 3.06 ERA and 17 strikeouts over 17 2/3 innings. That includes a 5 1/3-inning outing back in early May, when he allowed one run on six hits and two walks while striking out five to pick up the victory.
How to Watch & Listen
Monday, July 6: Brewers TV; listen via radio on the Brewers Radio Network (620 WTMJ in Milwaukee)
Tuesday, July 7 (Game 1): Brewers TV; listen via radio on the Brewers Radio Network (620 WTMJ in Milwaukee)
Tuesday, July 7 (Game 2): Brewers TV; listen via radio on the Brewers Radio Network (620 WTMJ in Milwaukee)
Wednesday, July 8: Brewers TV; listen via radio on the Brewers Radio Network (620 WTMJ in Milwaukee)
Thursday, July 9: Brewers TV; listen via radio on the Brewers Radio Network (620 WTMJ in Milwaukee)
Prediction
The Cardinals have looked a bit better over the last week after a mediocre month of June, while the Brewers continue to hold their own atop the NL Central. Give me Milwaukee to take three of five.
Vintage Red - March 7, 2011 - Vol. 64, Issue 19 - Ken Campbell
It should come as no surprise that even Nicklas Lidstrom’s attempts at humor are understated. For 19 seasons now, he has probably never brought a single person out of his or her seat, save for the four times the Detroit Red Wings have won the Stanley Cup since he joined them in 1991. His greatness is not measured in flashy end-to-end rushes, bone crushing hits or spectacular plays. It is measured in a consistent excellence that no player in the history of the league has achieved. It is measured in durability, respect and an attention to detail that is mind-boggling. Almost nothing about his game has changed since he joined the Red Wings and it could be argued that no player, ever, has played as well as Lidstrom is playing right now this late in his life.
Lidstrom turns 41 in April. There are players who have played far longer than Lidstrom has and there are others who have been better. But no player has combined excellence and longevity, save perhaps Gordie Howe, who scored 103 points and was third in NHL scoring when he was Lidstrom’s age.
“There are two things I don’t remember Nick Lidstrom ever doing,” said Hall of Fame coach Scotty Bowman, who guided the Wings for nine of Lidstrom’s 19 seasons. “I don’t remember him ever falling to the ice and I don’t remember him ever getting caught and leaving his partner with a 2-on-1.”
You’d have to think Bowman is gilding the lily just a wee bit, but you get the idea. Lidstrom isn’t the perfect NHL player, but he’s about as close as you’re going to get, on and off the ice.
Actually, Lidstrom is becoming a lot of things these days. First, he has locked down the role vacated by Joe Sakic as the most respected player in the NHL. Secondly, he has worked his way into Gordie Howe-Steve Yzerman territory when it comes to the all-time greatest Red Wings and, particularly if he wins his seventh Norris Trophy this season, has entered the debate, along with Bobby Orr and Doug Harvey, as the game’s greatest ever defenseman. Really.
A seventh Norris this season would tie him with Harvey and put him one behind Orr. It would also make him the only player in league history to win a major individual award in a season in which he was 40 years old for the entire campaign. (Jacques Plante shared the Vezina with Glenn Hall in 1969, but turned 40 mid-season.) If he finishes first or second in Norris voting this season, he’ll join Ray Bourque as the only player to accomplish that feat 10 times. Being what Red Wings coach Mike Babcock calls “a genetic freak,” has allowed Lidstrom to be far more durable than Orr ever was. And even though he plays much the same way Harvey did, he has never had the self-destructive tendencies that shortened Harvey’s NHL career and his life.
“How many years did Orr play?” Babcock said. “You know what I’m saying to you? There gets to be a point where Mario, his best season was almost as good as Wayne’s best season. But the difference is, Wayne did it forever. To me, there’s something to that.”
But perhaps the most impressive aspect of Lidstrom’s career is that he has been consistently among the top defensemen in the league regardless of the style of play.
He was great when the style was wide open during the early 1990s. He was even better during the dead-puck era and has won half of his Norris Trophies since the lockout, when restrictions on obstruction created the new NHL and made the game faster than it has ever been.
Lidstrom has played about 450 games in the “new” NHL and has probably handled the puck in his own end about 5,000 times. He has received two minor penalties in all that time for shooting the puck over the glass. He does hook a lot more now, averaging 7.5 hooking penalties per season now compared to 2.3 before the lockout. He averages 2.5 tripping penalties a season now, 2.2 holding penalties and 2.2 interference penalties a season, all of which are close to double what he did before the lockout.
Lidstrom used to play 30 minutes a game and now he’s down to about 23. But those 23 minutes he plays are often the most important of the game. When the Red Wings are faced with a 5-on-3 against, Lidstrom is out there. He runs the power play and the penalty kill, consistently goes up against the opponents’ top lines, is on the ice when the Red Wings are either protecting a one-goal lead or looking for the tying goal late in the game and logs more ice time than anyone on the roster.
“He’s an effortless skater,” said Detroit GM Ken Holland. “He’s always going to have that hockey sense and that patience with the puck. He’ll have that when he’s 65. But what he can do at age 40 that other people can’t do is skate. You have all these kids coming into the league and it’s probably faster than it has ever been and the pace of the game doesn’t affect him at all, not one bit.”
It has been said of Lidstrom that he’s usually thinking six or seven plays ahead of the rest of the players on the ice. Red Wing players sometimes make a game in practice of trying to get the puck over Lidstrom’s stick and he simply bats them down and smiles. Bowman remarked that in the new NHL, guys who play the point on the power play have more time and space with the puck than any other player on the ice because forwards now back off from the point and collapse down to block shots instead of applying pressure. That’s what Bowman thinks has made Lidstrom so successful, particularly on the power play, in the post-lockout NHL.
“When I started to coach, the wingers covered the points and when Bobby Orr was playing in Boston, we always tried to put a guy there,” Bowman said. “I’m not sure that wouldn’t be a good strategy the way Lidstrom handles the point. I’m not sure I wouldn’t take a guy and try to eliminate him. He’s that good.”
TAMPA, FLORIDA - MARCH 21, 2026: Owen Murphy #91 of the Atlanta Braves throws a pitch during the second inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the New York Yankees at George M. Steinbrenner Field on March 21, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images
With Martín Pérez very likely heading to the IL after having injured his forearm getting hit with a comebacker and Carlos Carrasco also likely to receive yet another DFA, there’s a spot that’s available in Atlanta’s pitching staff at the moment. As it turns out, the Atlanta Braves may be turning to a rookie who would be in line to make their big league debut if called up.
Consensus top 10 Braves prospect Owen Murphy is apparently heading to Atlanta, according to sources who are informing our very own Gaurav Vedak.
Per source I’m hearing Owen Murphy will be headed to Atlanta.
Last pitched July 1st – 6IP 2H 0R 1BB 7K Dominant, unique 4s FB that sits 91-93 but high spin and 19-22” IVB. Huge whiff generating pitch when at the top of the zone.
As Gaurav mentioned in his post, Murphy would be on regular rest so the timing makes sense. It also makes sense from a performance standpoint, as Murphy has performed pretty well at the Triple-A level so far this season. He’s thrown 60.1 innings over 11 starts and has recorded a 3.88 ERA (81 ERA-) and a 4.27 FIP (90 FIP-) with the Gwinnett Stripers so far this season. His last start was a solid one as well — Gaurav mentioned the stats from his last start and here’s some video to go along with it as well.
We’ll see if/when the Braves decide to make the move official but for now, it does seem like Owen Murphy is getting a ticket to The Show and if all goes well, he might be sticking around for a bit while Martín Pérez makes his recovery. We’ll see what happens!
May 10, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Anaheim Ducks defenseman Pavel Mintyukov (98) during the third period against the Vegas Golden Knights in game four of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Honda Center. Mandatory Credit: Corinne Votaw-Imagn Images
Corinne Votaw-Imagn Images
ANAHEIM, Calif. — Defenseman Pavel Mintyukov has agreed to five-year contract extension worth $36 million with the Anaheim Ducks, a person with knowledge of the negotiations told The Associated Press.
The person spoke on condition of anonymity Sunday because the Ducks didn’t announce the financial terms of their deal through the 2030-31 season with the 22-year-old Mintyukov. The promising Russian blueliner was a restricted free agent this summer after recording 17 goals and 52 assists over 204 games in his first three NHL seasons.
The Ducks belatedly got this pricier-than-expected deal done with one of their most important young players only two days after they blundered into a precarious situation with their cornerstone center.
Leo Carlsson signed a five-year, $90 million offer sheet with Philadelphia last Friday, which means the 21-year-old Swede is likely to be the NHL’s highest-paid player next season for the Flyers or for the Ducks, who can match the offer or receive four first-round draft picks as compensation. Anaheim must decide by Friday.
Either way, the development is a public embarrassment for Ducks general manager Pat Verbeek, whose antagonistic, foot-dragging attitude in negotiations with his young core finally cost him dearly.
Either he will lose one of the NHL’s top young centers, or Carlsson will eat up much more of his salary cap room than would have been necessary if Verbeek had done a deal at any point in the past year. Carlsson’s front-loaded, $18-million-per-year offer from the Flyers is much more than he was expected to receive, and more than Carlsson had already said he would accept.
Mason McTavish, Trevor Zegras and Jamie Drysdale all held out in recent years when Verbeek’s hardline tactics dragged the negotiations into training camp — and while they all eventually signed, Verbeek has since traded all three young players.
Mintyukov’s deal was worth more than he was expected to get by most NHL observers, but the Ducks didn’t say whether another team had signed Mintyukov to an offer sheet. No NHL team immediately announced it had used the same tactic with Mintyukov that Flyers general manager Daniel Briere is using to attempt to sign Carlsson.
Verbeek also must still sign breakout star Cutter Gauthier, who scored 41 goals for the Ducks last season before reaching restricted free agency.
Anaheim still has enough cap room to do a deal with Gauthier, who isn’t eligible to receive an offer sheet from another team. But the combined size of these now-inflated deals for Mintyukov, Gauthier and likely Carlsson means Verbeek won’t have any room to make additional improvements to his roster, and will almost certainly have to offload salary.
Verbeek also has lost four key defensemen — captain Radko Gudas, Jacob Trouba, John Carlson and Olen Zellweger — in the past month while adding only journeyman Nick Jensen as a probable replacement.
Verbeek’s mistakes have dampened the good feelings coming off an impressive season by the Ducks, who ended their seven-year playoff drought and then eliminated the back-to-back Western Conference champion Edmonton Oilers in the first round with an exciting young core under coach Joel Quenneville.
Mintyukov was the 10th overall pick in the 2022 NHL draft. While he has the potential to become an elite two-way defenseman, he hasn’t yet developed the consistency or the scoring acumen to match the size of his contract extension.