This Week in Purple: Goodbye May and hello June

DENVER, COLORADO - MAY 29: Ezequiel Tovar #14 of the Colorado Rockies has the home run jacket placed on his back to celebrate after his two-run home run in the eighth inning against the San Francisco Giants at Coors Field on May 29, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Dustin Bradford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After a promising—but still losing—April, the Colorado Rockies slid into May and… certainly had themselves a month of some kind.

It’s been a weird and rough May. The Rockies are 8-19 in May. They have just one series win for the month while polishing off the final weekend of May against a bizarrely struggling San Francisco Giants and have won consecutive games just twice. Michael Lorenzen, Kyle Freeland, and Edouard Julien have had a month from hell, the roster has suffered a glut of injuries to several key players, and top prospect Ethan Holliday (no. 2 PuRP) just got shut down for the season.

But hey. It hasn’t been all bad!

It’s important to remember that at this point last year, the Rockies were 9-49. Now at 22-37—tied with the Detroit Tigers for the worst record in the league—they have more than doubled their win total and many of the games they lose are still at least close.

Throughout the month, we’ve also seen debuts of both new Rockies and prospects. Chad Stevens and Keegan Thompson both received the call, while prospects Sterlin Thompson (no. 13 PuRP) and Welinton Herrera (no. 17 PuRP) made their Major League debuts.

There have also been some solid results on the existing big league roster. Relievers Antonio Senzatela and Jaden Hill continue to put up strong numbers out of the bullpen, first baseman TJ Rumfield is quietly one of the best rookies in the National League, and Hunter Goodman—despite his strikeout woes—continues to tear the cover off the ball when he gets a hold of one.

And then there’s Ezequiel Tovar, who is finally climbing his way out of a brutal slump to thunderous applause and late-game heroics.

Tovar has increased his walk rate, dramatically cut down on strikeouts, and is finally making strong contact with the baseball. On Friday night, he had a game to remember with a steal of home plate and two home runs, including the game winning walk-off blast. Tovar now has three home runs in May after having just one all season until recently, and getting to see him finally get to put on that incredible purple coat was a thing of beauty.

With that being said, here’s what our staff here at Purple Row had to say this week:

To Read: Rockpiles

To Read: News

Weekly Discussion Topics

Now that May is finally ending, what are your expectations or desires for June? What record do you think the Rockies will finish the month with? Do you think we’ll see any more important transactions or call-ups? Let us know in the comments!


Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

Please keep in mind our Purple Row Community Guidelines when you’re commenting. Thanks!

What do Giants fans think was the highlight of the week?

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 23: Harrison Bader #9 of the San Francisco Giants hits a grand slam at Oracle Park on May 23, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Tony Avelar/San Francisco Giants/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning, baseball fans!

Another week of San Francisco Giants baseball comes to a close today, which means it’s time for us to pick our favorite highlight of the week!

As I mentioned yesterday, I wanted to shout out two players this week and I gave yesterday’s honors to Rafael Devers for his grand slam in last Sunday’s game. Which means today’s honors go to Harrison Bader for HIS grand slam in last Saturday’s 10-3 win over the Chicago White Sox!

While the team may not be racking up the wins the way I might want them to, I cannot complain about multiple grand slams in the same week! (And yes, I know this was technically last week but I have to pre-write these so I get to include the former week, okay?)

Anyway, what was your favorite highlight of the week?

What time do the Giants play today?

The Giants wrap up this road series against the Rockies this afternoon at 12:10 p.m. PT.

Orioles minor league recap 5/31: Creed Willems walks it off

Triple-A: Norfolk Tides 8, Durham Bulls (TBR) 5 – F/10

The Tides broke a 2-2 tie in the bottom of the sixth on a Ryan Noda RBI double and José Barrero’s 11th home run of the year. The rally put them up, 5-3, then Ryan Long immediately allowed three runs in the next inning to re-tie it. That score held until the bottom of the 10th, when Creed Willems got to be the hero. He walked it off with a three-run homer to send the fans home happy.

Starting pitcher Trace Bright had his best start at the Triple-A level with a six-inning, two-run effort. He allowed five hits and two walks. He struck out five.

Box Score

Double-A: Erie SeaWolves (DET) 4, Chesapeake Baysox 0

The Baysox were held to four hits, one each from Aron Estrada, Ethan Anderson, Thomas Sosa, and Frederick Bencosme. Estrada’s hit was a double. Bencosme also worked a walk.

Luis De León pitched 4.1 innings with four hits, two walks, and six strikeouts. He allowed two runs, but just one was earned. In the fifth inning, the defense made two errors in the same play, one each by Sosa and Maikol Hernandez. It was part of a two-error game for Hernandez.

Box Score

High-A: Frederick Keys 3, Jersey Shore BlueClaws (PHI) 1

Caden Hunter made his first start for the Keys after six games with the Shorebirds. He pitched 4.1 innings with two hits and two walks. He struck out nine. Great high-A debut, Caden!

The game was scoreless until the eighth inning when Colin Yeaman (Yeah Man!) doubled with Vance Honeycutt, Elis Cuevas, and Victor Figueroa on base. That put the Keys up, 3-0. Prior to the eighth inning, they had exactly one baserunner.

Carson Dorsey pitched the final three innings and allowed one run on four hits.

Box Score

Low-A: Fredericksburg Nationals 9, Delmarva Shorebirds 6

It was another rough start for Esteban Mejia. He was knocked out of the game after five walks and just two-thirds of an inning. He was charged with four runs, two earned. His season ERA is now 8.16. The season has not gone well for him so far.

The Shorebirds scored six runs on just seven hits. They bunched four of those hits and three walks into a four-run third inning. One of those walks was from the rehabbing Enrique Bradfield Jr, who had a hit and two walks in the game. Elvin Garcia had three hits in the game and Junior Aybar picked up two.

Box Score

Today’s Schedule

  • Norfolk vs Durham, 1:05. Starter: Christian Herberholz
  • Chesapeake @ Erie, 1:35. Starter: TBD
  • Frederick @ Jersey Shore, 1:05. Starter: Yeiber Cartaya
  • Delmarva vs Fredericksburg, 2:05. Starter: Christian Rodriguez

Chicago Cubs news and notes — Happ, Imanaga, Roberts

Today’s Reflections

I don’t want to make accusations or give blame for something that I might be misreading. This is far from a scientific study, but in the full three articles about Shōta’s struggles below, there are parts of three sentences, one per article, about Jameson Taillon. And I don’t see many (if any) punishing articles like this about Taillon. Quick stat check: Shota is 0-4 in his last four games with nine HR given up, his ERA went from 2.32 to 4.37, and his FIP went from 2.81 to 4.41. Taillon is 0-3 in four games with 10 HR, ERA from 3.94 to 5.37, FIP from 5.63 to 6.56. Just, where are all the Taillon articles?

*means autoplay on, (directions to remove for Firefox and Chrome). {$} means paywall. {$} means limited views. Italics are often used on this page as sarcasm font. The powers that be have enabled real sarcasm font in the comments.


I have no idea who the media is going to jump on after Friday night ….. :


Or it’s the coaching:

  • Tyler Courtney (Last Word On Sports): Is Cubs Coaching Pressure Starting To Build in 2026?. “While the team has had multiple 10-game winning streaks, those have not told the whole story of the season. Much of the blame has been on the coaching staff for various reasons.”

Then let’s throw some more stuff at the wall and see if it sticks:



Food For Thought:

Chester Arthur Burnett (June 10, 1910 – January 10, 1976), better known by his stage name Howlin’ Wolf, was an American blues singer, guitarist and harmonica player. He was at the forefront of transforming acoustic Delta blues into electric Chicago blues, and over a four-decade career, recorded blues, rhythm and blues, rock and roll, and psychedelic rock. He is regarded as one of the most influential blues musicians ever.

Burnett became a protégé of Delta blues musician Charley Patton in the 1930s. In the Deep South, he began a solo career by performing with other notable blues musicians of the day. By the end of the decade, he had established himself in the Mississippi Delta. Burnett was recruited by A&R man Ike Turner to record for producer Sam Phillips in Memphis. His first record “Moanin’ at Midnight” (1951) led to a record deal with Chess Records in Chicago. Between 1951 and 1969, six of his songs reached the Billboard R&B chart.

Please be reminded that Cub Tracks and Bleed Cubbie Blue do not necessarily endorse the content of articles, podcasts, or videos that are linked to in this series.

Guardians News and Notes: My Kingdom For Some Runs

CLEVELAND, OH - MAY 30: Cleveland Guardians left fielder Stuart Fairchild (17) makes a catch for an during the fifth inning of the Major League Baseball game between the Boston Red Sox and Cleveland Guardians on May 30, 2026, at Progressive Field in Cleveland, OH. (Photo by Frank Jansky/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Tell ya what, I am kinda tired of watching the Guardians not score runs.

They lost to the Red Sox 9-1 yesterday. Travis Bazzana has a 150 wRC+. Everybody else could use to step it up.

Angel Martinez has foot inflammation and will get an MRI today. Stuart Fairchild looked real bad but he’ll have a chance to show he can hit a lefty or two today.

Matt Seese and Nick Karavolos talked over the latest CBA proposals on the Disgusting Baseball Podcast.

AROUND MLB:
The White Sox won again over the Tigers, and the Royals and Twins lost.

Will MLB add new teams? One owner thinks expansion would be 'stupid'

They had a lavish press conference in Sacramento this week featuring balloons, baseball caps, politicians and even future Hall of Fame manager Dusty Baker, letting Major League Baseball know they have the money, the land and the passion to be part of their exclusive club.

They have a star-studded staff of advisors in Nashville, an office constantly pumping out press releases, and even though they have no actual ownership, already chosen a team name.

They have already started seeking investors in Vancouver. They have everything set but the shovels in the ground in Salt Lake City.

Everywhere you turn, whether it’s in Charlotte, Portland, Orlando or Montreal, there’s a clamoring to be prepared the moment MLB announces it is ready to expand.

Well, what if everyone is wasting their time?

The Tampa Bay (Devil) Rays and Arizona Diamondbacks were MLB's last two new franchises in 1998.

What if, after all of these years of hype and promises, MLB is not ready to expand in 2031, 2032 or 2033?

What if expansion simply doesn’t happen?

USA TODAY Sports asked a handful of MLB owners and owners and executives for their take on the potential of expansion, speaking on the condition of anonymity due to the ongoing nature of the situation.

“I don’t think it’s going to happen, I really don’t," one longtime MLB executive said.

Said one owner: “Expansion would just be stupid."

Said another owner: “It’s not anything that’s being discussed right now, I know that."

Indeed, expansion has not been addressed in the early collective bargaining agreement talks between MLB and the players union. It’s expected to be tabled until after a CBA agreement is reached.

So, once there’s a new CBA, whenever that is, just why wouldn’t there be expansion?

The players union would love it, with 52 new jobs coming to MLB. The owners would love it, with expansion fees for each team expected to be perhaps $3 billion.

Commissioner Rob Manfred would love it, wanting expansion as part of his legacy, and already on record wanting to add two more teams before he leaves office in January 2029.

“When people want your product," Manfred said last week on the Pat McAfee Show, “I think it’s kind of incumbent on you to try to figure out a way if you can deliver that product to them."

The schedule makers would love it, knowing it’s much easier to comprise a 162-game schedule featuring 32 teams than 30. And the players would love it, with expansion bringing massive realignment, reducing travel and the frequent cross-country flights.

Yet, as several owners and executives say, the biggest problem with expansion is that it doesn’t make sense financially.

“Why would we want to subsidize two more small-market teams?" one executive said. “I don’t understand it. The economics don’t add up."

There’s no need to look further for evidence than the two Florida teams when MLB expanded in 1993 with the Miami Marlins and Colorado Rockies, and again in 1998 with the Tampa Bay Rays and Arizona Diamondbacks.

The Marlins, who won two World Series titles in their first 10 years, have finished last or next-to-last in National League attendance in all but one year since 1998. The only time they’ve drawn more than 2 million fans since 1997 was when they moved into their new ballpark in 2012.

The Rays, who have won two American League pennants and have been to the postseason nine times since 2008, have finished last or next-to-last in AL attendance 21 years, drawing more than 2 million fans only in their 1998 inaugural season.

So, guess who’s been subsidizing these teams, with MLB executives estimating that the Marlins alone have received about $4.5 billion in revenue sharing from the central fund since their birth into MLB.

How does that investment look to their fellow owners with the Marlins and Rockies paying just $95 million in expansion fees, the Diamondbacks and Rays paying $130 million, with none of the teams among the revenue sharing payees?

So now, with Manfred wanting every team to share their local TV revenue, and new national TV contracts coming in 2029 that MLB estimates could be worth $250 million per team, do owners really want to cut out two more slices of that pie and hand the money over to the new teams?

The two expansion cities will likely be low-revenue teams with small TV markets, but they would be sharing the same national TV revenue pie as the Dodgers, Yankees and the other big boys.

“Those teams certainly won’t be paying money into revenue sharing," one owner said, “so it will be less money for everyone else.  What’s the added benefit, to get more fans engaged? I’m not sure expansion will drive fan engagement in either market. So, we’ll see what happens once our labor deal is done.

“But I really don’t understand the logic for expansion, at least not yet."

Around the basepaths

– While MLB owners will gather Tuesday and Wednesday in New York as labor talks have begun, several owners believe that if this becomes a long, drawn-out work stoppage that threatens games in 2027, the X-factor could be sitting in the White House.

“If we miss spring training, I could see Donald Trump getting involved," one owner said. “He could say, 'Gentlemen, enough is enough. I want a deal. And I want it by the end of the week. Or else.'"

– While owners insist there are a number of teams losing money, at least on paper, no one is losing more money each year than Steve Cohen with the New York Mets.

Yet, while the Mets may have annual operating losses in excess of $200 million, guess who’s going to become even a much richer owner?

Yep, Steve Cohen, thanks to an $8 billion casino project that will be built next to Citi Field.

“Cohen never would have gotten the casino if he didn’t have the team," one owner said, “so it really worked out well for him, no matter how much money he loses with the Mets."

– Perhaps the biggest surprise in MLB’s initial proposal to the players union is that teams would equally share their local TV contracts, meaning that the Dodgers, who receive an average of $334 million a year, would be earning the same as the Milwaukee Brewers, who receive about $25 million a year.

Yet, the caveat is that owners will agree to sharing their local TV deals only if there is a salary cap.

– If the players union gets their way with a $3 million minimum for salary-arbitration eligible players, the free-agent market could be flooded with a whole lot of non-tenders. There were 77 of 160 players who settled their arbitration cases last season for less than $3 million.

– If there was a hard salary cap of $245.3 million in MLB, the Dodgers could have a problem on their hands, considering that Yoshinobu Yamamoto (2035), Shohei Ohtani (2033), Mookie Betts (2032) and Blake Snell (2029) are all signed to massive contracts through at least 2029.

The Marlins, on the other hand, could have to go on a massive spending spree if there’s a $171.2 million salary floor. They have only $5 million on their books after this season, and have had a $100 million payroll once during Bruce Sherman’s eight years as owner.

– The Philadelphia Phillies made quite the shrewd move this spring when they tacked on three more years with Cristopher Sanchez’s six-year, $107 million contract extension, leaving the Cy Young candidate under team control through 2033.

Sanchez will attempt to go where only Orel Hershiser and Don Drysdale has gone before with a 44 ⅔-inning scoreless streak, needing to pitch just 2 ⅔ innings shutout innings in his next start this week to move into third place on the all-time scoreless streak. Orel Hershiser has the MLB record with 59 consecutive shutout innings in 1988, with Drysdale at 58 innings in 1968.

– Can you imagine how good the Dodgers would be if they didn’t trade an 18-year-old prospect by the name of Yordan Alvarez to the Houston Astros for reliever Josh Fields in 2016?

Alvarez, scouts and baseball executives will tell you, may be the greatest all-around hitter they’ve seen since Barry Bonds, with his teammates now even calling him Barry. He went into Saturday slashing .301/.415/.641 with a league-leading 1.056 OPS, with 20 homers and 39 RBIs.

“There is a level of intelligence and calm through his at-bats that I have never, ever seen in my career,” Astros manager Joe Espada told reporters.

– It’s amazing the Padres have a winning record, let alone the fourth-best record in the NL. The Padres team headed into the weekend hitting just .218, the lowest batting average by a team this late in a season since the 1968 Baltimore Orioles.

– The Marlins sold 15% stake in the franchise to pay down debt, with the deal valued at $1.55 billion, $300 million more than the original purchase price in 2017.

– The postseason scenario that leaves Fox executives in a cold sweat at night?

A Milwaukee Brewers-Tampa Bay Rays World Series.

It would also be MLB’s worst nightmare in labor talks, proving that small-market teams can be on the ultimate stage without a salary cap.

– The Dodgers already have six reliable starters, even with Tyler Glasnow and Blake Snell on the IL, but just in case someone falters, River Ryan is lighting it up at Triple-A Oklahoma City. He is yielding a 2.05 ERA, striking out 29 while walking only three batters in 22 innings.

– Even though Tampa Bay Rays shortstop Wander Franco won’t have to serve time in prison in the Dominican Republic with a judge in the Dominican Republic finding Franco “criminally responsible’ for abusing a minor, but immigration attorneys believe that he still will never be approved for a visa to play in the United States, preventing the Rays for having to pay the $160 million he’s owed.

– While the Boston Red Sox continue to struggle, their former pitchers had quite the week:

Chicago White Sox rookie David Sandlin giving up a home run to Minnesota Twins leadoff hitter Byron Buxton on the second pitch of his major-league debut, only to then retire 18 consecutive batters, becoming the first White Sox pitcher to achieve the feat since at least 1900 in his first career start.

Kyle Harrison pitched six shutout innings for the Milwaukee Brewers against St. Louis, lowering his ERA to 1.57.

And Atlanta’s Chris Sale beat the Red Sox at Fenway Park to go 8-3 with a 2.01 ERA.

– Dodgers starter Blake Snell, who was placed on the 60-day IL this past week, has pitched only 64½ regular season innings since signing his five-year, $182 million contract before the 2025 season.

– New York Mets broadcaster Ron Darling called out today’s MLB coaches knowing that many are afraid to criticize players for fear of losing their jobs.

“I don’t understand it,” Darling said after Mets pitcher David Peterson failed to back up a play. “It really tells me that coaches don’t have as much influence on the players as they think they have, because someone should rip someone at some point, but they don’t, because they don’t want to upset anyone."

– Twenty years ago, there wasn’t a single team hitting below .250.

In 2016, there were nine teams hitting below .250.

Today, there are a whopping 26 teams.

– Oh, where have the complete games gone?

Fifty years ago in 1976, starting pitchers threw complete games 28.3% of the time, according to Codify Baseball.

  • 1986: 14.9%
  • 1996: 7%
  • 2006: 3.1%
  • 2016: 1.8%
  • This year: 0.4%

– Kansas City Chiefs all-pro tight end Travis Kelce is the latest star athlete from a different sport to become a minority owner in MLB, purchasing a piece of the Cleveland Guardians.

Chiefs teammate Patrick Mahomes owns part of the Kansas City Chiefs.

NBA Hall of Famer Magic Johnson has a minority stake in the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Future NBA Hall of Famer LeBron James had a stake in the Boston Red Sox through his investment in Fenway Sports Group.

Milwaukee Bucks starter Giannis Antetokounmpo is part of the Milwaukee Brewers’ ownership team.

– Oh, what a difference just two years can make.

The Chicago White won their 30th game of the season Friday evening on Miguel Vargas’ walk-off homer against the Detroit Tigers.

They didn’t win their 30th game in 2024 until Aug. 16, when they were 30-93, and outscored by 251 runs on their way to baseball futility.

–The Rays made one of the greatest acquisitions of the offseason when they signed veteran pitcher Nick Martinez to a one-year, $13 million contract.

You may soon see him on the national stage pitching in his first All-Star Game.

Martinez, 35, is 5-1 with a 1.62 ERA, becoming the oldest pitcher to yield two or fewer runs in his first 11 starts in a season in modern baseball history.

– The Detroit Tigers have had their share of rough seasons, but this one may be the most disappointing in their recent franchise history.

They went into the season as a serious World Series contender.

They enter June as one of the worst teams in baseball, completely falling apart after Tarik Skubal’s elbow surgery, going 4-19 entering Saturday. They are 22-36, with only the Colorado Rockies having a worse record.

They have yet to win back-to-back games since Skubal went down.

– The Phillies’ right-handed hitters are a mess, hitting a major-league low .217 with a .315 on-base percentage and .585 OPS.

They will be on the lookout for a right-handed hitter at the trade deadline, but no, Mike Trout will not be coming to Philadelphia. He still is owed $148.46 million after this season, and has a full no-trade clause.

– The Athletics pitching staff has to keep reminding itself that they have only 1 ½ seasons left in Sacramento.

Their staff is yielding a 5.45 ERA at hitter-friendly Sutter Health Park this year compared to a 3.39 ERA on the road.

The A’s, who were 10-16 at home entering Saturday, have been outscored by a staggering 52 runs.

They are 17-14 on the road where they have outscored their opponents by 21 runs.

– Future Hall of Famer Mookie Betts is the latest player to delete his social media accounts with ugly comments from fans berating him for his early-season struggles, ignoring the fact he has helped the Dodgers win three World Series titles since his arrival.

“There’s so much hate out there,’’ Betts told Katie Woo of The Athletic. “It’s kind of unbelievable. …It’s like, how can you go cheer and then go and be so negative to somebody. But that’s the world today, and it just sucks sometimes. It’s not like I’m out here trying to sabotage the team.’’

Follow Bob Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB expansion plans may not come to fruition as owners bash expansion

Sunday’s Brotherhood Playoff News & Links

OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA - MAY 30: Dylan Harper #2 of the San Antonio Spurs battles for the ball against Jared McCain #3 of the Oklahoma City Thunder during the third quarter in Game Seven of the NBA Western Conference Finals at Paycom Center on May 30, 2026 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Jared McCain and the Oklahoma City Thunder lost Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals to Mason Plumlee and the San Antonio Spurs Saturday night, 111-103.

McCain scored 12 points for the Thunder but Plumlee did not get in the game.

However, Plumlee is now the last member of the Brotherhood who may get a ring this year. San Antonio will play the New York Knicks in the Finals, and while we felt pretty certain earlier that the winner of the Western Conference Finals would be a heavy favorite, New York is playing very well. And don’t overlook this: the Spurs are the youngest team ever to get to the Finals.

The Knicks, by contrast, are a much more experienced team. Josh Hart is 31, Karl-Anthony Towns is 30, Jalen Brunson and Mikal Bridges are 29, while Mitchell Robinson, OG Anunoby and Jose Alvarado are 28.

But as we saw in this series, Victor Wembanyama is the future. He can still be shoved around, but at 7-4 and 235, he’s quite thin and can still be bullied.

This should be another very compelling series. Hopefully, Plumlee gets a ring when it’s over, which would give him permanent bragging rights over brothers Miles and Marshall. All three won national championships at Duke, but only Mason has a chance of winning an NBA championship.

Go to the DBR Boards to find Blue Healer Auctions || Drop us a line

Plaschke: Memo to Arte Moreno: Sell your fallen Angels

Angels owner Arte Moreno stands on the field before a game in 2023.
Arte Moreno has owned the Angels for 23 years, his stewardship taking a World Series champion to the worst record in baseball this season while missing the playoffs for more than a decade. (Ashley Landis / Associated Press)

He showed up 23 years ago as the lovably grounded steward of one of baseball’s soaring sports franchises.

Remember the first thing Arte Moreno did as Angels owner? He lowered the beer prices!

“I’m not going to think about it,” he said boldly and decisively. “I’m going to.”

The second thing he did was hand out sombreros in honor of his Mexican heritage and status as the first Latino majority owner in America’s major professional sports.

“Being Mexican American, I’d like to reach out to Mexican Americans,” Moreno said. “But also to everyone.”

The third thing he did was answer a question about the Dodgers with a question.

Angels fans wave signs and urge owner Arte Moreno to sell the team during a recent protest at Angel Stadium.
Angels fans wave signs and urge owner Arte Moreno to sell the team to an ownership group willing to invest more in winning during a pregame protest Saturday at Angel Stadium. (Joaquin Ruiz / For The Times)

“Who?” he said, “The Angels won the World Series. We are the No. 1 baseball team in the world. There is no reason for us to look over our shoulders.”

It was the most delightful introductory news conference I’ve ever attended, Moreno saying all the right things, doing all the smart things, and ultimately embracing his new purchase’s greatest asset.

“My responsibility is to take care of the Angel fan,” he said. “My job is to make sure we live up to the tradition. My job is to make people comfortable here.”

Twenty-three years later, those first impressions have long since been replaced by lasting erosions.

On nearly every weighty promise, with the exception of those beer prices, Arte Moreno has failed.

Take care of the Angels fans? Those fans profanely chant at him, loudly protest against him, universally despise him.

Read more:As critters and losses pile up, Angels fans call for owner Arte Moreno to sell team

Make sure the team lives up to its tradition? He has taken a glittering inherited World Series championship culture and frittered it into an unrecognizable lump that is undeniably the worst in baseball, 11 straight years out of the playoffs, 10 straight sub-.500 seasons, nobody that bad.

Make people comfortable at Angel Stadium? The only way that is happening now is if Moreno isn’t there.

Arte, please, listen to your customers, heed your record, recognize the inherent sadness of a 79-year-old man being chased out of his own home.

Sell the team.

You’ll make a ton of money while escaping a ton of heat. You can buffet your ownership legacy by handing this civic jewel to someone who will appreciate it. The reputation rehabilitation that once worked for Shelly Sterling in selling the Clippers to Steve Ballmer, it can work for you.

Sell the team.

You made Shohei Ohtani disappear, you made Mike Trout anonymous, you made bright hopes vanish by betting on broken former stars like Albert Pujols and Josh Hamilton and Vernon Wells and Anthony Rendon.

Shohei Ohtani bumps fists with Angels owner Arte Moreno
Angels two-way star Shohei Ohtani is honored by owner Arte Moreno, who presented him with the team awards as most valuable player and pitcher of the year in 2021. (John McCoy / Getty Images)

Now it’s time for you to go.

Sell the team.

The experts will say the Angels should not be sold until a new labor agreement is signed, potentially increasing their value. C’mon, the worst franchise in baseball still has an estimated worth of $2.75 billion, a 1,400% increase from the $183 million Moreno originally invested.

Wouldn’t it be worth it to sell as soon as possible before the stands empty and the chants grow and commissioner Rob Manfred gets involved?

Just ask Frank McCourt what happens when a commissioner gets involved.

Sell the team, and here’s guessing at least one local titan would be interested, that being Rams owner Stan Kroenke. Under the daily leadership of Kevin Demoff, Kroenke’s well-run Rams have joined the Dodgers as this city’s two premier sports operations, and just think about what SoFi Stan could do with a storied baseball franchise in baseball-loving Orange County.

The Angels were once the Rams. Heck, the Angels were once the Dodgers.

Angels owner Arte Moreno signs autographs and poses with fans with the Angel Stadium halo in the background.
Angels owner Arte Moreno signs autographs and poses with fans as he attends Angel Fest in 2004. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

Moreno, who declined to be interviewed for this column, bought the Angels shortly after they won the 2002 World Series, and watched them win five American League West titles in the next seven years, twice finishing one step from the World Series.

But, following the 2007 season, the great Bill Stoneman retired from his general manager position and the direction of the club slowly began to change. Moreno, once satisfied with being just another suds-loving die-hard, became more involved in player acquisition while surrounding himself with inexperienced general managers who struggled along with him.

Every time Moreno tried to make a big splash, he wound up soaking wet. Pujols couldn’t reverse aging. Hamilton couldn’t stay clean. Wells couldn’t play, period.

In a brief moment of clarity in 2014, they won the West, but were swept out of the division series by the Kansas City Royals as Pujols and Trout combined to go three for 24.

They haven’t sniffed the playoffs since while undergoing seemingly constant leadership changes that have allowed their culture to slowly rot.

The team has gone through four different general managers since Stoneman, and five different managers since Mike Scioscia left the team eight years ago, and this lack of stability points directly at the owner who just can’t let people do their job.

An owner, by the way, who several years ago personally canceled a trade that would have brought them the Dodgers’ Andy Pages.

But nothing is more damning to the Moreno era than the handling of arguably the greatest player in baseball history. When Ohtani joined the Dodgers two seasons ago everyone celebrated him as the new kid in town, yet he had previously played in Anaheim for six years! It’s as if those six years never existed! This, even though Ohtani spent them alongside a guy who was once nearly as accomplished.

Read more:Letters to Sports: Angels have a strange way of showing they're 'very competitive'

Ohtani and Trout never synced their skills between various injuries and surgeries, but still … years from now historians will still marvel how two of the greatest players ever could play together for a half dozen years and never once step on an October stage.

Only in Anaheim. Then, to complete arguably one of the most wasted tenures in the history of sports, Ohtani was unconscionably allowed to walk to Chavez Ravine as a free agent with the Angels getting nothing in return.

They should have traded Ohtani during his final season there, but Moreno wanted to squeeze every last dollar out of his marketing power. Then, once Ohtani became a free agent, he reportedly would have considered returning to Anaheim, but Moreno wouldn’t match the Dodgers offer.

The departure of Ohtani for zero prospects, zero young stars, nobody … seriously damaged the remaining shreds of trust between their many loyal fans and the team.

That bond was further strained this winter when the Angels settled a wrongful death lawsuit filed by the family of the late Angels pitcher Tyler Skaggs, who died in 2019 of a drug overdose. The settlement was reached during jury deliberations after a trial that jurors later indicated showed the Angels’ negligence. The jurors were simply trying to determine the amount of punitive damages when the settlement was announced.

The belief that the Angels could have done more to save Skaggs’ life was yet another giant crack in Moreno’s crumbling foundation.

As a final insult in this downward spiral, this spring Moreno amazingly told the Orange County Register that for his fan base, winning wasn’t their priority.

“They want affordability,” Moreno said. “They want safety, and they want a good experience when they come to the ballpark. Believe it or not, winning is not in their top five.”

The Angels have since contextualized that quote to point out that Moreno was talking about what fans were seeking in deciding to attend a specific game, not about their fandom in general. And over the years, even his biggest critics have acknowledged that Moreno is a hardcore fan who wants to win.

But, again, still, the sound bite sizzled. Winning not in the top five? Are you kidding me?

To be fair, the Angels’ fan experience is still generally outstanding. Parking is easy, food is good, ushers are nice, it has the potential to be great fun. Then again, there was a recent rodent infestation in a concession stand, painting even the best parts of their operation as Mickey Mouse.

All told, the Angels are a glorified minor league team with no apparent vision and no obvious hope for the future and not worth the money at any price.

Arte Moreno has taken a crown jewel and turned it into a punch line.

The Halos have gone to halo, the Big A is now the Big L and, somewhere, a rally monkey weeps.

Sell the team.

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Mets Daily Prospect Report, 5/31/26: Guzman goes long

PORT ST. LUCIE, FLORIDA - MARCH 19, 2026: Randy Guzman #39 of the New York Mets bats during the third inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the Tampa Bay Rays at Clover Park on March 19, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

Triple-A: Syracuse Mets (28-27)

ROCHESTER 5, SYRACUSE 3 (BOX)

Syracuse rallied late but came up short, ultimately unable to come back from Jack Wenninger’s rough outing. Errors from Christian Pache and Nick Morabito didn’t help matters either.

Double-A: Binghamton Rumble Ponies (18-32)

BINGHAMTON 4, PORTLAND 3 (BOX)

Another walkoff win for the Rumble Ponies, this time in regulation. Chris Suero scored the winning run, stealing third then scampering home on a throwing error. Vincent Perozo went deep in the win, while the rehabbing Jorge Polanco struck out twice in his two plate appearances.

High-A: Brooklyn Cyclones (16-33)

BROOKLYN 8, WILMINGTON 1 (BOX)

An absolute shellacking by the Cyclones in this one. Homers from Mitch Voit and John Bay highlighted an eight-run outburst, more than enough to support Irving Cota and Tanner Witt’s piggy-backed outing.

Single-A: St. Lucie Mets (24-26)

ST. LUCIE 6, BRADENTON 3 / 10 (BOX)

Annoyed they missed out on the extra-inning fun on Friday, St. Lucie got in on the action with a 6-3 win over the Marauders. The Mets had a 2-0 lead that they blew in the seventh and eighth, but they managed to score four in the top of the tenth on a triple, a fielder’s choice, a single, and an RBI groundout. Christian Rodriguez gave up a run but made the lead stand up in the bottom half. Randy Guzman was the offensive star, homering and driving in two as part of a three-hit day.

Rookie: FCL Mets (9-9)

NO GAME (SCHEDULE)

STAR OF THE NIGHT

Randy Guzman

GOAT OF THE NIGHT

Jack Wenninger

Orioles news: Hope lives again

BALTIMORE, MD - MAY 30: Pete Alonso #25 of the Baltimore Orioles runs to first base after hitting a walk-off RBI single in the ninth inning during the game between the Toronto Blue Jays and the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on Saturday, May 30, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Alyssa Piazza/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Hello, friends.

We were right on the verge of the Orioles really kicking us in the teeth there, weren’t we? If they followed up on sweeping the Rays by losing the first three games to the Blue Jays all in extremely excruciating fashion, that would have started to feel like the season was over again. No way they could come back from that, could they? Then, another miracle comeback and they managed a 6-5 walkoff win over the Blue Jays. Check out Andrea’s recap of the game for more of the lovely totals.

It’s extra fun that the Orioles pulled off the bulk of the rally against Jeff Hoffman, the reliever who went out of his way to beef with them not long ago. This was probably because the Orioles backed out of signing him to a contract two offseasons previously over medical concerns. In some ways, that attempted contract is another indictment of Mike Elias’s free agent judgment. Hoffman has largely stunk with the Jays, a 4.44 ERA not counting yesterday’s disaster.

The Orioles still need to find a way to win today in order to salvage a series split. That would have been a decent outcome even before the series began, and after the way the first two games went it feels essential in some ways, for the team to show that they can pick themselves back up after a pair of morale-draining (at least for many fans) losses.

Don’t forget that this is a weird start time game of 12:15. That’s because this one will be on the streamer Peacock. If you don’t subscribe, tough luck! You can’t watch the Orioles today. Maybe you can still get the radio broadcast. Kyle Bradish is set to start for the Orioles, with righty Spencer Miles starting for the Jays. Miles has been used mostly in relief but it’s been a 3+ inning bulk role, so they might be looking to use him for starter-ish innings instead of merely as an opener.

This team has its share of problems. It has also shown that, at least on the basis of a game or three here and there, it can overcome enough of its problems to win. Can they manage this consistently enough to ascend closer than two games back in the wild card race? That’s the question that stands before them until they either win enough to answer yes or lose enough to make it clear that the answer is no. Although many of their losses have made it feel like the answer must be no, so far they have done just enough to hang around on the periphery.

I think we can all agree we haven’t seen the best possible version of these guys. There’s just no guarantee the best version will ever show up or stay for long if it does.

Orioles stuff you might have missed

Orioles rotation must show more than flashes (The Baltimore Sun)
The jumping-off point for this article was specifically Trevor Rogers’s start from Friday’s game. You could just as easily make the same comment about the offense and the bullpen. And also the defense, which hasn’t even really shown flashes.

Brandon Young’s new splitter grip: From drawing board to the mound in just days (Steve on Baseball)
This is a free one on Steve Melewski’s Substack. It’s a little early to say that Young’s new splitter grip is a definite improvement, but the initial results have been encouraging.

Updating on Helsley and Cano (School of Roch)
The closer will be starting a rehab assignment soon. It won’t fix all of the Orioles problems to have him back. It should help stabilize the bullpen a bit. Hopefully! As for Cano, he doesn’t think there’s anything lingering from Wednesday.

Birthdays and Orioles anniversaries

In their 59th game of the 2025 season, the Orioles beat the Mariners, 5-1, to raise their record to 23-36 for the season. This was the fourth straight win in what ended up being a six game winning streak. Tomoyuki Sugano allowed one run in seven innings, and for the hitters, Adley Rutschman led the way with three hits and two runs scored. The Orioles are four wins ahead of those guys. It would be nicer if that was more like seven or eight. Hopefully they get to that point eventually.

There are a few former Orioles who were born on this day. They are: 2024-25 pitcher Matt Bowman, 1988-92 outfielder Joe Orsulak, and 1976-86 pitcher Tippy Martinez. Today is Martinez’s 76th birthday, so an extra happy birthday to him.

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday to you as well! Your birthday buddies for today include: poet Walt Whitman (1819), actor Clint Eastwood (1930), Led Zeppelin drummer John Bonham (1948), and rapper DMC (1964).

On this day in history…

In 1669, notable historical diarist Samuel Pepys ceased keeping his diary, claiming his eyesight had grown too poor – though Pepys lived until 1703. His diary is famous for chronicling both the Great Fire of London and the Great Plague of London.

In 1889, a dam failed near Johnstown, Pennsylvania, leading to the deaths of over 2,200 people as the water raced down through the town.

In 1921, white supremacists in Tulsa, Oklahoma began a two-day terror campaign that killed at least 39 Black people and destroyed what was, at the time one of the wealthiest Black communities in the country, dubbed “Black Wall Street.”

In 2005, an article in Vanity Fair revealed the identity of Watergate’s “Deep Throat” – W. Mark Felt, who at the time of Watergate was Deputy Director of the FBI.

**

And that’s the way it is in Birdland on May 31. Have a safe Sunday. Go O’s!

Game 60 Preview: Tigers hope they can prevent a White Sox sweep on Sunday

It is a terrible time to be a Detroit Tigers fan, clear and simple. After a 7-1 loss to the Chicago White Sox at Rate Park on Saturday afternoon, the team has just six wins in May and is burying themselves in the league cellar before summer even begins.

On Sunday, AJ Hinch will send right-hander Keider Montero to the mound to try and prevent a sweep at the hands of their hated intradivision rivals. The 25-year-old has been solid filling in the void for Justin Verlander but has struggled recently, putting up a 6.46 ERA and 6.72 FIP over his last three starts, stretching across 15 1/3 innings with a win, a loss and a no-decision in a team loss.

The last time Montero faced the Southsiders was last year on Sept. 5, when he surrendered two runs on four hits (one home run) and a walk while striking out a pair over 3 1/3 innings in a 9-6 loss.

He will be up against fellow righty Sean Burke, who has been solid — but a bit wild — in his third major league campaign. The 26-year-old’s last outing was a seven-inning effort that saw him surrender a pair of runs on three hits and two walks while striking out eight Minnesota Twins in a 5-3 11-inning loss.

Funny enough, Burke’s last start against Detroit last summer on June 5 yielded similar numbers. He threw seven frames of two-run ball on seven hits (one home run) and one walk while striking out five in a 3-2 victory that took 10 innings.

Here is how the two match up on Sunday.

Detroit Tigers (22-37) vs. Chicago White Sox (31-27)

Time (ET): 2:10 p.m.
Place: Rate Field, Chicago, Illinois
SB Nation Site:South Side Sox
Media: Detroit SportsNet, MLB.TV, Tigers Radio Network

Game 60: RHP Keider Montero (2-3, 4.09 ERA) vs. RHP Sean Burke (2-3, 3.90 ERA)

PlayerGIPK%BB%GB%FIPfWAR
Montero1055.017.66.832.74.180.7
Burke1160.021.76.435.13.401.4

MONTERO

BURKE

Phillies news: Daniel Robert, Max Lazar, Munetaka Murakami

May 30, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Philadelphia Phillies shortstop Trea Turner (7) warms up before the game against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images | Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

I’m generally ambivalent about the City Connect uniforms, but the Dodgers’ version has to be one of the worst ones out there right now. Why would Freddie Freeman have a uniform that has an “05” on it instead of just “5”?

On to the links.

Phillies news:

MLB news:

Open Thread: Spurs shoutout their fans after claiming the Western Conference Finals

SAN ANTONIO, TX - MAY 19: Julian Champagnie #30 of the San Antonio Spurs talks to the media on May 19, 2026 at the Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. 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 (Photos by Jim Poorten/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

After last night’s Game 7 victory in Oklahoma City, Julian Champagnie reminisced about honking and driving with the fans after the Spurs elimintaed the Portland Trail Blazers in the first round of playoffs.

“Yeah, I mean, my wife had told me she was like, ‘you know, they honk,’ I mean, they honk, she’s like, ‘they honk downtown,’ I might as well go see it. I want to go see it earlier when we won, but I figured, let’s win a series, and then I can go down there and kind of just see what’s going on, but it was great. The energy is crazy. I’m, I’m, I’m a little pissed at me, not over there right now, and see what’s going on, because I’m in downtown right now too. But energy is great, and I love the fans. We love you guys to them, right? We love you guys. We don’t go this far without you guys. We’re looking forward to seeing you guys in the finals in San Antonio and in New York, but yeah, we don’t get this far out, you guys. Shout out to y’all too. Y’all have just as much of a part in this as we do.”

De’Aaron Fox also had some kind words for the fans.

“Probably one of the most loyal fan bases that you’ll ever be around in any sport. And me being from Texas, I’ve actually gone to a Finals game in San Antonio when they played Miami, I’m seeing that the crowd can be like seeing how loud it can get. It’s just we’re continueing to get better every day and we’re bring a championship back to San Antonio.”

The Spurs, who really enjoy spending time with each other, branched out in their gratitude, The fans weren’t the only ones called out for their support. Victor Wembanyama shared some admiration Gregg Popovich, who visited the locker room after the Game 3 loss and spoke to the team.

Dylan Harper also shared gratitude for Pop. El Jefe spoke directly to the rookie guard and Harper credits him with getting refocued for his Game 6 output. He scored 18 points, with 6 rebounds and four assists. In the closeout, he scored 12 points including a clutch 3-pointer that helped the Spurs secure the win.

Spurs will host the New York Knicks on Wednesday in their first Finals appearance in a dozen years. The Spurs/Knicks Finals harkens back to 1999, when the two met and the Spurs won their first NBA Championship. Coincidentally, that 1999 series was the last time the Knicks made it all the way to the NBA Finals.


Welcome to the Thread. Join in the conversation, start your own discussion, and share your thoughts. This is the Spurs community, your Spurs community. Thanks for being here.

Our community guidelines apply which should remind everyone to be cool, avoid personal attacks, not to troll and to watch the language.

NBA adjusts its lottery balls, Mazzulla Ball for the win — The Week in Green

May 10, 2026; Chicago, IL, USA; Mark Tatum the NBA Deputy Commissioner and Washington Wizard (left) guard John Wall pose for photos after Wizards won the 2026 NBA Draft Lottery at Navy Pier. Mandatory Credit: David Banks-Imagn Images | David Banks-Imagn Images

Well, after years of faffing about, the NBA has finally implemented a major overhaul of the draft designed to discourage tanking.

It is quite complex, and yet, in some ways, quite simple-minded.

The gist is that the highest odds for the number one pick will no longer be held by the team with the worst record.

Instead, the teams with the fourth through tenth worst records in the draft will have the highest odds of getting the first pick.

Teams will not be allowed to land the number one pick in back-to-back years (this has happened twice in NBA history, not counting the 2017 draft in which the C’s traded their number one pick to the Sixers, giving them back-to-back number one picks).

Teams will not be allowed to have top five picks in three consecutive years.

The odds have also been significantly flattened overall.

Finally, the bottom three teams will have two lottery balls, the fourth through tenth teams will have three lottery balls, and the eleventh through sixteenth teams will have one ball each.

I am not a fan of making the lottery this complex, but if the league is going to go into this, I think they need to actually make it more complex.

I don’t like flat odds for the number one pick running from positions four to ten. I don’t like that drop off from tenth to eleventh. This is an area where the league certainly has the ability to add a gradient rather than a drop off.

Now, I’ll grant you, this reform package had to be sold to team owners, who are, I suspect, short of attention span for a lot of these things, so adding a smoother gradient by increasing the number of lottery balls was possibly a non-starter because it would take too long to explain (in fact, I think the lottery rules already take too long to explain, but, hey, in for a penny, in for a pound).

In my scheme, you wouldn’t have a setup with 21 balls for 4-10, 6 balls for 1-3, and 6 balls for 11-16 (total 33 balls). You’d do the setup the same way it’s done now, with balls numbered 1-14 and four number combinations that are mapped out to percentages that scale more smoothly.

I think it’s rather problematic that the tenth worst team has a better chance of landing the top pick than the third worst team.

That brings us to the oddly named ‘relegation zone.’

Frankly, it’s unnecessary.

If the three worst teams are given equal odds of getting the top pick as the teams that finish fourth through tenth in the lottery ranking, there is already no incentive to tank!

Mind you, I don’t think that the lottery odds should be flat from one to ten, but if that’s how the NBA is going to play it, then it makes no sense to pretend that teams are still going to try to be awful in search of more lottery balls.

All you’re doing now is punishing extremely bad teams.

Now granted, extremely bad teams tend to squander their picks, so maybe this isn’t such a big deal, but it seems rather silly that a bad team with the third worst record in the league is going to get robbed of a lottery ball because they weren’t good enough to finish fourth.

The NBA is basically just running an experiment at this point, though. The new lottery rules are only approved until the 2029 season, so we’re going to get three bites at this apple to see how it tastes.

Mazzulla wins Coach of the Year

Honestly, this seemed a foregone conclusion after the C’s got bounced in the first round.

It had too much humor mixed with chagrin to be anything other than a “consummation devoutly to be wish’d,” It was the perfect epitaph — or coffin lid, perhaps — for a season that began in gloom and ended the same way.

Of course, Mazzulla was going to win an award that he publicly scoffed at rather than pilot the C’s into the later rounds of the playoffs.

Did he deserve it?

Well, that depends. If you’re the kind of person who thinks that Jaylen Brown only had a Second Team All-NBA season, then you’re dang right Mazzulla deserved a Coach of the Year nod.

If you rate Brown and the C’s supporting cast higher, then I think you can make arguments for other coaches, but the league’s media in general seem to think rather poorly of the talent on the C’s team, and that makes their regular season achievements look more and more like brilliant coaching, and less like the expected performance of great players.

But that’s not the real question.

The real question isn’t whether Mazzulla deserves it, it’s whether the award should be given to a single individual.

I tend to think that Mazzulla is right, and that it should be a staff award.

Why?

Because, for example, Mazzulla isn’t single-handedly responsible for the marked improvement of Neemias Queta, and the marked improvement of Queta was a major factor in the C’s overachieving regular season.

SACRAMENTO, CA – JANUARY 1: Head Coach Joe Mazzulla of the Boston Celtics coaches Neemias Queta #88 during the game against the Sacramento Kings on January 1, 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 Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Rocky Widner/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

I mean, I think Mazzulla sets a tone, and he’s very good at getting players to buy into their roles—and the flexibility and sacrifice that those roles occasionally require—but he’s not working with Neemias day in and day out to make him a better player.

It’s the rest of Mazzulla’s staff that helped these guys become better players, players that Mazzulla can put his trust in.

The league has given Mazzulla an award for being smart enough to trust these guys, and it’s given Stevens an award for assembling the roster, and both of them have been awarded for assembling the coaching staff, but what about the coaching staff itself?

I mean, if a big part of the awards for Executive of the Year and Coach of the Year hinge on the work of the coaching staff, then they should be recognized as well.

Throughout basketball, coaching staffs have grown in size and importance. We’ve come a long way from the days where Red used to roam the sidelines by himself.

Boston, MA – December 19: Boston Celtics assistant coach Tony Dobbins, head coach Joe Mazzulla, and assistant coach Sam Cassell react to a technical foul call on Mazzulla in the fourth quarter. (Photo by Andrew Burke-Stevenson/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) | Boston Globe via Getty Images

It’s time, I think, to dispense with the cult of the ‘romantic genius’ in coaching, to stop looking at coaches as ‘auteurs,’ and to start looking at the position as an essentially collaborative one.

Yes, head coaches need to have the last word and the loudest voice at the table; they need to have the confidence to lead and they need to be decisive.

But these days, there is so much going on with analysis, with player development, and with game prep, that the NBA really should acknowledge that the achievements of a team that are currently attributed to the coach should be attributed to coach and staff.

In any case, Mazzulla’s response to winning the award is exactly what you would like to see.

It shows that he’s deeply aware of the work that his staff puts in, and the dividends that work has paid out.

Ultimately, the NBA might follow Joe’s suggestion, but given how long it took them to reform a lottery system that’s been abused for decades, I’m not holding my breath.

Kelly Olynyk Is Back in the NBA Finals

OKLAHOMA CITY, OK - MAY 30: Victor Wembanyama #1 and Kelly Olynyk #8 of the San Antonio Spurs talk after the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder during Game Seven of the NBA Western Conference Finals on May 30, 2026 at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

No matter what the outcome from this Western Conference Finals was going to be, a proven seven-foot big man from the Gonzaga Bulldogs program was going to end up on the winning side of this all-time Western Conference Finals series. A matchup between the Oklahoma City Thunder’s Chet Holmgren and the San Antonio Spurs’ Kelly Olynyk. How cool is that?

Yes, Olynyk doesn’t show up in the box score compared to the much younger, much more influential Holmgren in the future basketball landscape. His impact won’t appear to the naked eye, but his San Antonio teammates in the locker room and during a huddle in a hostile road environment understand what he brings to the table. An experienced journeyman who has been around the block throughout his 13-year NBA career.

Olynyk has now reached the biggest NBA stage for the second time. His first chance at a ring fell short as a member of the Miami Heat against the Los Angeles Lakers during the 2020 COVID-version of the NBA Finals.

With his No. 13 jersey hanging in the rafters of the McCarthey Athletic Center, Olynyk was the early start of a proud Canadian-American citizen turned Gonzaga success story. Impactful players like Kevin Pangos, the Nembhard brothers, were paved a path by the 2013 consensus First Team All-American.

Our neighborhood friends from the North always have guys, and coach Mark Few’s rotating staff over the years are continuously aware of it because of Olynyk.

As for Holmgren, his chance at a title repeat has failed. Oklahoma City doesn’t play a fun form of entertaining basketball with all the flopping, understood. But Holmgren also didn’t put together a full stretch of physical and energetic defensive stances against the now face of the league, Victor Wembanyama. Holmgren’s presence was nearly non-existent in the Game 7 loss at home in the PayCom Center. Thunder’s Isaiah Hartenstein was more of the primary ask to be the potential ‘stopper’ for Wembanyama throughout this entire Western Conference Finals.

Holmgren, only 24 years old with already 226 games under his belt, is still on track to be the most accomplished talent to have ties to Spokane, Washington. Even more than the firstborn and raised poster child, John Stockton, who never could reach the mountain top with the Utah Jazz.

All I ask from Olynyk in the NBA Finals… Please, no more ankle socks. It’s a strange basketball attire decision, especially on that worldwide platform. All love, of course.

Arden Cravalho is a Gonzaga University graduate from the Bay Area… Follow him on X @a_cravalho