Max Scherzer's 8-year-old daughter sent handwritten note to Blue Jays hoping for Toronto return

Max Scherzer's 8-year-old daughter wanted her father back with the Blue Jays so much she wrote a letter to the team in December expressing her hope for his return to Toronto.

After the three-time All-Star agreed Wednesday to a $3 million, one-year contract, the pitcher's wife, Erica May-Scherzer, posted a copy of the handwritten note by Brooke. May-Scherzer said her daughter wrote the letter, dated Dec. 15, and asked her parents to mail it to the team.

“Dear Blue Jays,” the note began, "I am so sorry that you didn’t win the World Series. I hope that you win next time. I hope my dad is back on the team. My whole family loves spending time in Toronto with our dad. We loved the aquarium, the (CN) Tower and of course the stadium. I am looking forward to come back next season. Love, Max Scherzer daughter”

An eight-time All-Star, Scherzer is a 41-year-old right-hander with a 221-117 record and a 3.22 ERA for Arizona (2008-09), Detroit (2010-14), Washington (2015-21), the Los Angeles Dodgers (2021), New York Mets (2022-23), Texas (2023-24) and Toronto (2025). He ranks 11th on the career list with 3,489 strikeouts — 20 behind Hall of Famer Walter Johnson.

He was went 5-5 with a 5.19 ERA in 17 starts and 85 innings for the Blue Jays last season, and he made three starts in the postseason, beating Seattle 8-2 in Game 4 of the American League Championship Series. He started Games 3 and 7 of the World Series against the Los Angeles Dodgers.

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AP MLB: https://apnews.com/mlb

Celtics Top-5 Highest IQ Plays of the Week

Los Angeles, CA - February 22: Guard Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celticsis fouled by guard Luka Doncic #77 of the Los Angeles Lakers in the second half of a NBA basketball game at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles on Sunday, February 22, 2026. (Photo by Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

We’re back! Welcome to the Celtics’ Top-5 Highest IQ Plays of the Week! 

Sure, we love the high-flying dunks and the deep, off-the-dribble step-back threes, but this is a place for the under-the-radar plays that might not get the credit they deserve. The plays that get the basketball sickos and nerds out of their chairs. The plays that even YOU could make in your weekly rec league game. 

Each week, the plays will be ranked from five to one—one being the smartest—and will only be taken from games that occurred within the past week. For this week, games from February 19th to February 26th are considered. The Celtics went 3-1 this week, with wins over the Warriors, Lakers and Suns, but a loss to the Nuggets. 

5. Simple but effective patience

This play seems simple, but I love Queta’s patience and greed when it comes to finding the best available pass. After bigs get offensive rebounds, so many of them have a tendency to kick it out to the first open shooter before thoroughly surveying their options. Here, though, Neemy forgoes pitches to both White and Pritchard before eventually finding Brown for the even-more-open three. It’s about going from an okay shot, to a good shot, to a great shot. The game is slowing down for him before our eyes.

4. Timely cut

I’m not sure whether Hauser is improvising here or this is a planned cut, but it’s a heady play nonetheless. When Pritchard’s ghost screen results in a brief moment of space, it’s Sam’s defender who’s responsible for a stunt at PP. But when Hauser 45 cuts (a cut from the wing), he forces even Porzingis to spend an extra split second worrying about his rim presence, which makes the Latvian’s closeout to Vucevic worse than it should be. Imagine what this play looks like if Hauser stays—or don’t, and I’ll spell it out for you. Sam probably gets swung the ball, but Porzingis is close enough to guard both him and Vucevic with their poor spacing, forcing him into either a contested shot or a poor extra pass with bad spacing. Beautiful cutting instincts  from Hauser here.

3. Rear view contest

The Celtics played a lot of drop coverage this week—which, more than any other pick-and-roll coverage, necessitates active and intense guard defense. It forces the player defending the ball-handler to usually trail the offensive player while still somehow affecting his pull-up jump shot. On this play, White effectively trails Cam Johnson and somehow gets a rear view block—something he’s better at than probably any other NBA player— even though he gets caught on the screen. Special recovery from White. 

2. Keeping everyone on their toes

As accurately presented by Bill Simmons on a recent podcast, Boston’s pathway to dominance this season has followed a clear formula: Brown+White+Pritchard+guys who work hard. But how do you find guys who will consistently play with above-average intensity and effort? You make nobody feel fully safe and comfortable in their role, and you randomly start Ron Harper Jr. over players who have regularly been in the rotation. Mazzulla’s willingness to shake things up and keep guys on their toes has been refreshing and fun, and I think it has forced players like Scheierman, Walsh, Gonzalez, and Hauser to do the little things if they want to stay on the floor, which has, in turn, made them better players. Baylor is all of a sudden an elite defender and rebounder? 

1. Hugo’s rising confidence

I like a couple of things that Gonzalez does on this highlight play. First, I appreciate the fact that he immediately extra-passes the ball to Harper Jr. without spending even a split second  considering a shot or drive—this gives Ron more time to operate and make a decision. Then, Hugo backpedals along the arc, giving Harper Jr. more space and forcing more difficult closeouts for both Podziemski and Porzingis, which then allows Gonzalez to attack space and show us some of what he has been working on with the developmental coaches.

Billy Gillispie won't return to coach Tarleton State next season

Tarleton State basketball is moving on from coach Billy Gillispie, according to multiple reports on Friday, Feb. 27.

Gillispie, 66, has been Tarleton State's coach since 2020, and has led the school to a 78-74 record in five seasons. The former Texas A&M, Kentucky and Texas Tech coach has been sidelined since Jan. 15 due to health issues.

Gillispie has dealt with myriad health-related problems in recent years. He was diagnosed with kidney failure in 2017 before receiving a transplant, and also missed the 2023-24 season at Tarleton State after undergoing a blood pressure-related procedure. He also cited health issues after resigning from Texas Tech in 2012, his lone season at the school.

Gillispie was placed on temporary administrative leave Oct. 3, 2025, due to an anonymous complaint being filed to the school. He has faced concerns in the past for how he treated players across other jobs.

Associate head coach Glynn Cyprien has been Tarleton State's acting head coach during Gillispie's absence. The Texans are 14-15 this season.

Gillispie led UTEP to an NCAA Tournament appearance in 2003-04 before being hired by Texas A&M, which he led to the Sweet 16 in 2006-07. He spent two seasons at Kentucky from 2007-09 but failed to advance past the first round of the NCAA Tournament before being fired.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Tarleton State basketball moving on from Billy Gillispie as head coach

Mets at Cardinals: Spring training lineups, broadcast info, and open thread, 2/27/26

Port St. Lucie, Florida: New York Mets' players Juan Soto (left) and Freddy Peralta share a laugh before opening day game against the Miami Marlins, February 21, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Alejandra Villa Loarca /Newsday RM via Getty Images) | Newsday via Getty Images

Mets lineup

  1. Carson Benge – RF
  2. Juan Soto – LF
  3. Christian Arroyo – 3B
  4. Jose Rojas – 1B
  5. Hayden Senger – C
  6. MJ Melendez – DH
  7. Vidal Brujan – 2B
  8. Jackson Cluff – SS
  9. Nick Morabito – CF

SP: Freddy Peralta

Cardinals lineup

  1. JJ Wetherholt – DH
  2. Jose Fermin – SS
  3. Nolan Gorman – 3B
  4. Nelson Velazquez – LF
  5. Ramon Urias – 2B
  6. Thomas Saggese – CF
  7. Pedro Pages – C
  8. Nathan Church – RF
  9. Blaze Jordan – 1B

SP: Quinn Mathews

Broadcast info

First pitch: 1:05 PM ET
Radio: Cardinals Radio Network, KMOX 1120 AM/104.1 FM

GDT: Ryan Pepiot makes his spring debut

PORT CHARLOTTE, FL - FEBRUARY 19: Ryan Pepiot #44 of the Tampa Bay Rays poses for a photo during the Tampa Bay Rays photo day at Charlotte Sports Park on Thursday, February 19, 2026 in Port Charlotte, Florida. (Photo by Mike Carlson/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Ryan Pepiot takes the hill the today as he makes his first appearance of the Spring.

There will be local radio coverage of the game today by the Rays.

First pitch against the Toronto Blue Jays is at 1:05 at Charlotte Sports Park

Today’s highlight package is from September 14-16, 1999 when the Devil Rays took on the Seattle Mariners

Spring Training Game #8: Baltimore Orioles vs. Pittsburgh Pirates

Baltimore Orioles vs. Pittsburgh Pirates, February 27, 2026, 1:05 p.m. ET

Location: LECOM Park, Bradenton, FL

How to Listen: 93.7 The Fan, 100.1 FM, AM 1020 KDKA, Sports Net Pittsburgh app SNP 360


The Pittsburgh Pirates are at home today against the Baltimore Orioles looking to grab a win in Spring Training.


Please remember our Game Day thread guidelines.

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BD community, this is your thread for today’s game. Enjoy!

At age 40, Taj Gibson is back in the NBA, getting two-year contract with Grizzlies

At age 40, Taj Gibson is back in the NBA.

The 16-year NBA veteran has agreed to a two-year veteran minimum deal with the Memphis Grizzlies, the team announced.

Memphis was looking for some veteran leadership in the locker room after Kyle Anderson agreed to a buyout (he is set to sign in Minnesota after he clears waivers, according to reports, but coach Chris Finch said Thursday night he could not comment on that). The second year of Gibson's contract is non-guaranteed.

Gibson played 37 games last season in Charlotte and 20 the season before that, split between the Knicks and Pistons, but was without a contract for this season. He is a highly respected locker room presence.

Gibson joins a Memphis team entering a rebuild after trading away Desmond Bane and Jaren Jackson Jr. for draft picks, and while they listened to offers for Ja Morant, a trade expected to happen in the offseason.

Spring Training Game Thread: Twins vs Pirates

BRADENTON, FL - FEBRUARY 26: Pittsburgh Pirates second baseman Nick Yorke (38) throws out at first base Minnesota Twins center fielder James Outman (30) on February 26, 2026, at LECOM Park in Bradenton, Florida. (Photo by Brian Spurlock/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

First Pitch (CT):12:05
TV: Twins.TV
Radio: WCCO 830/The Wolf 102.9 FM/Audacy App
Know Yo’ Foe: Pinstripe Alley

What to watch: Oops, all catchers!

Lineups

TwinsYankees
SP: Marco RayaSP: Luis Gil
1. Byron Buxton, CF1. Ben Rice, 1B
2. Trevor Larnach, RF2. Jasson Dominguez, LF
3. Luke Keaschall, 2B3. Paul DeJong, 3B
4. Victor Caratini, 1B4. JC Escarra, C
5. Ryan Jeffers, DH5. Max Schuemann, 2B
6. Brooks Lee, SS6. Spencer Jones, CF
7. Austin Martin, LF7. George Lombard Jr., SS
8. Gio Urshela, 3B8. Yanquiel Fernandez, RF
9. Alex Jackson, C9. Marco Luciano, DH

Dodgers at Giants spring training travel roster

Feb 22, 2026; Peoria, Arizona, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Michael Siani against the San Diego Padres during a spring training game at Peoria Sports Complex. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

The Dodgers take on the San Francisco Giants on Friday in Scottsdale, with Yoshinobu Yamamoto making his second start of the spring, and his last outing before departing to join Team Japan for the World Baseball Classic.

Lineup

The Dodgers have a split-squad day with two games on Saturday, which means several regulars aren’t making the trip to Scottsdale on Friday.

Alex Freeland SS
Santiago Espinal 2B
Dalton Rushing C
Nick Senzel 3B
Keston Hiura DH
Ryan Ward LF
James Tibbs III 1B
Zach Ehrhard RF
Michael Siani CF

Other pitchers

40-man-roster pitchers Edgardo Henriquez and Paul Gervase are slated to pitch on Friday, as are non-roster invitees Ryder Ryan, Adam Serwinowski, and Luke Fox.

Up from minor league camp are .Roque Gutierrez (wearing number 88), Christian Romero (90), Christian Suarez (91), and Nicolas Cruz (92).

Other position players

Everyday non-roster outfielders Josue De Paula, Zyhir Hope, Kendall George, and Chris Newell are on the trip, as are catchers Seby Zavala and Nelson Quiroz.

From minor league camp are Austin Gauthier (01), Sean McClain (02), Jose Izarra (03), Joe Vetrano (96), Kyle Nevin (93), and Yeiner Fernandez (04).

Pistons vs Cavaliers preview: Send a message to Cleveland’s bigs

DETROIT, MI - OCTOBER 27: Jalen Duren #0 of the Detroit Pistons dunks the ball as Jarrett Allen #31 of the Cleveland Cavaliers plays defense during the game on October 27, 2025 at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, Michigan. 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 2025 NBAE (Photo by Chris Schwegler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Unfortunately, these potential Detroit Pistons statement games keep turning into who’s available games. The Pistons take on the new-look Cleveland Cavaliers tonight, but this won’t be the team Detroit might see in a seven-game series.

Cleveland’s best player, Donovan Mitchell, is out tonight with a groin designation. Cleveland’s new addition, James Harden, is questionable with a thumb injury. Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley are critical Cavs pieces; they are two of the best rim protectors in basketball. While that’s true, those guards are the reason many see Cleveland as a legit threat.

Detroit will be without its backbone in Isaiah Stewart again tonight. With those pivotal pieces potentially missing tonight’s game, this probably isn’t a true statement game, but there is one message the rugged Pistons can send to Allen and Mobley.

Game Vitals

Where: Little Caesars Arena, Detroit, Michigan

When: Friday, February 27, 7:00 pm EST

Watch: ESPN or Fan Duel Sports Network Detroit

Odds: Detroit (-6)

Analysis

This could be another individual statement game from Jalen Duren. When the Oklahoma City Thunder ruled out Chet Holmgren and Isaiah Hartenstein on Wednesday, Duren did exactly what he was supposed to do on the offensive end.

Duren made the Thunder look like those 8th graders in his early hoop mixtape. Dominating Allen and Mobley the same way would be very impressive. Duren has that in him; he went straight through Victor Wembanyama a few nights ago.

It would have been a fun matchup seeing Cade Cunningham guarding Mitchell or Harden. Blocks and steals aside, Cade is showing qualities of an elite defender.

We knew he was solid or good on that end, but he has a shot to be a premier two-way threat at his best. The size, willingness to slide his feet, and constant engagement on that side separate him from star guards like the Cavs have.

Former Piston Dennis Schröder and Keon Ellis were other in-season Cavalier additions. Both are listed as day-to-day and questionable tonight. Those two add to the Cavs’ depth. Schroder can change the pace in a playoff matchup, and Cleveland is +16.6 with Ellis on the floor. He’s always been an impactful scrapper who’s had good shooting stretches.

The Cavs have other snipers who can get going. Sam Merrill has been one of the league’s top flame throwers this season. He’s shooting 46 percent on over seven 3-point attempts. Merril erupted from deep, going 9/10 against the Washington Wizards earlier this month.

The Pistons obviously aren’t the Wizards. It’s hard to find a team that rotates on the perimeter better than Detroit does. Before even needing to get into rotation, Merrill and the other Cavs role players will need to get by the sturdy Pistons perimeter defenders — no easy task.

Detroit’s role players match up nicely with those Cavs role players. Ron Holland, Javonte Green, and Paul Reed are not the preferred matchups for NBA players. You’re in for a long night of active hands and constant bumps if any of those three are assigned to you.

That nonstop pressure is a team-wide trend on both sides of the ball for Detroit. Cleveland could get beat up in the paint even though they’ll trot out a massive frontcourt.

Detroit averages the second-most points in the paint, and Cleveland has the fifth-best points in the paint team defense. Per PBP stats, opponents shoot 50 and 52 percent with Allen and Mobley at the rim, respectively.

Duren, Cade, the scrappy role players, and the perimeter drivers can show the Cavs why they’re different tonight. Maybe the star guards don’t suit up for Cleveland, but Detroit can still send a message to Cleveland’s double-big lineup.

Lineups

Detroit Pistons (43-14): Cade Cunningham, Duncan Robinson, Ausar Thompson, Tobias Harris, Jalen Duren

Cleveland Cavaliers (37-23): Dennis Schröder (?), Sam Merrill, Jaylon Tyson, Evan Mobley, Jarrett Allen

Question of the day

Has Detroit’s offensive paint dominance or team defense been more impressive?

Rasheer Fleming is proving he belongs in the Suns rotation right now

PHOENIX, AZ - FEBRUARY 26: Rasheer Fleming #20 of the Phoenix Suns drives to the basket during the game against the Los Angeles Lakers on February 26, 2026 at Mortgage Matchup Center in Phoenix, Arizona. 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 Barry Gossage/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

There are wins that feel like oxygen, and then there are wins that feel like you can finally unclench your jaw. Thursday night against the Los Angeles Lakers was the latter for the Phoenix Suns, a game that washed over the fan base and let everyone breathe a little deeper as they look ahead to Sacramento on Tuesday. When you do not play again for a few days, a performance like that lingers in the best way. It rides shotgun with you through the weekend. It hums in the background while you mow the lawn or rewatch possessions on League Pass.

Injuries have reshaped the rotation, and when that happens, space opens up. Minutes are not handed out, they are claimed. Opportunity sits there waiting for someone with the nerve to grab it. On Thursday night, that someone was Rasheer Fleming, the rookie out of Saint Joe’s. He stepped into his window and looked comfortable doing it. He did not float through the game. He impacted it. And on a night when Phoenix needed contributions from everywhere, he answered the call.

When you see Rasheer Fleming step onto an NBA floor, your eyes do not have to work very hard to understand the intrigue. He looks the part immediately. 6’9”. A 7’5” wingspan that seems to blot out light. 240 pounds on a frame that carries it with ease. When he extends those condor arms into a passing lane or rises to contest at the rim, it is not a mild inconvenience for the offense. It is a problem that has to be solved in real time.

This season has not been about rushing him. It has been about building him. He arrived raw, the kind of prospect who makes you lean forward in your seat during Summer League and whisper to yourself that if it ever clicks, watch out. You could see the outlines of something meaningful in Vegas, yet on the offensive end, he would drift, processing a half-second late, thinking through reads instead of reacting to them.

Time has a way of sanding down those rough edges. Reps in the G League matter. Film sessions matter. The unglamorous minutes matter. And with each stretch of action, he has started to look more comfortable, more decisive, more in tune with where he is supposed to be and when he is supposed to be there.

There is also the draft context that lingers in the background. A second round pick, yes, although taken 31st overall, which is as close to the first round as you can live without technically being invited to the party. That slot carries its own subtle message. It says the league saw something. It says the gap between him and the traditional first-rounder was thin. Three spots behind Ryan Dunn the year before, which is less a separation and more a technicality.

Now the physical gifts that made you believe are starting to align with the on-court feel. And when that happens, when body and brain begin to sync up, that is when a developmental project starts to look like a rotation player in the making.

What we witnessed on Thursday felt like another mile marker in Rasheer Fleming’s growth chart. It was another reminder that this stretch of opportunity for the young guys is something you cannot properly measure with a box score or a spreadsheet. Development does not move in straight lines. It moves in minutes, in trust, in moments that stack on top of each other until a coach starts to lean your direction without hesitation.

Fleming had logged 266 minutes entering the matchup with the Los Angeles Lakers. That is not nothing, although it is not a featured role either. Lately, the runway has been longer. He has approached 20 minutes in five of the last six games he has appeared in, including Thursday night, and those minutes have not been accidental. They have been intentional.

Jordan Ott has started to weave him into the fabric of the game earlier, slipping him into the rotation in the first quarter, letting him feel the tempo while the contest is still finding its shape. It gives Phoenix a different look, more length, more switchability, and more chaos on the defensive end. It asks the opponent a new question.

Thursday followed a familiar script at first. Fleming checked in with 4:22 left in the opening quarter. That timing tracks. He entered with 3:15 left in the first against the Boston Celtics. He stepped in with 4:59 left in the first against the Portland Trail Blazers. The pattern is there.

What shifted against the Lakers was the leash. In prior games, his first stint had a defined endpoint. Against Boston, he exited with 6:22 left in the second quarter. Against Portland, his run ended at the start of the second. On Thursday, after the mandatory mid-quarter timeout, Ott let him stay out there. He kept Rasheer on the floor.

That detail matters. Coaches show belief in increments. An extra rotation. A few more possessions. Trust revealed not in words, but in substitution patterns. And on a night when Phoenix needed energy and length and a little bit of fearlessness, the rookie was given more room to breathe, which is how growth becomes real.

Ott saw the disruption. He saw Rasheer Fleming make life uncomfortable for Luka Doncic and LeBron James, and when that timeout hit, he did not reach for the substitution pattern he had been following in previous games. He let it ride. Why? Because Fleming earned it.

That is the ecosystem this roster is trying to build. Minutes are not gifted. They are claimed. You want to stay on the floor? Prove you belong there. On Thursday, Fleming proved it. His defense was active, physical, and aware. He used every inch of that wingspan to crowd air space, to shade driving lanes, to bother pull-ups. Disruption is his entry point into this league. If he hangs his hat there, the rest can grow around it.

The body has always been ready. The question was always whether the athletic gifts would align with the mental processing. That alignment is starting to show. He anticipates screens instead of reacting late. He navigates contact with balance. He keeps his hands high to deter passes, to alter sight lines, to make scorers think twice. These are not accidental habits. They are learned behaviors, signs that the game is slowing down for him.

Offensively, the confidence is creeping in as well. The three-point stroke looks clean, repeatable, unhurried. He went 2-of-3 from deep on Thursday night, stepping into those looks without hesitation. The season number sits at 27.6%, which tells part of the story. The recent stretch tells another. He is 7-of-17 over his last five games, good for 41.2%, and those attempts have come within the flow of the offense.

For a young player, that blend of defensive impact and growing offensive comfort is how you carve out a role. Fleming is beginning to understand that, and more importantly, he is beginning to show it.

There is one layer you would still like to see him peel back.

When the ball finds Rasheer Fleming above the break, the first instinct is often to keep it moving, to swing it to the next option, to stay within the structure of the offense. There is value in that. It shows discipline. It shows he understands the scheme. Yet there are moments when you want him to pause for half a beat, read the defender in front of him, and consider that the advantage might be his.

Attack.

Not every possession. Not recklessly. Not in a way that hijacks flow. Although when an athlete with his physical abilities catches the ball in space, there is room to explore. We saw a glimpse of it when he rolled off of a screen towards the cylinder in the third. It worked. The defender gave ground. The lane opened. The finish followed.

That is the next frontier in his development. Trusting that his length can carry him past contests. Trusting that when he extends toward the cylinder, his length creates angles that most players cannot erase. He might surprise himself with how unblockable he can be once he commits to the drive.

It is a small adjustment, although an important one. Growth in this league often lives in those in-between decisions, the choice to swing the ball or seize the moment. For Fleming, learning when to turn a catch into pressure on the rim feels like the next step in a journey that is already trending upward.

“We always tell him he has no idea how good he can be,” Collin Gillespie said of Fleming after the game.

I am grateful he had the runway to play through mistakes, to settle in, to leave fingerprints on the game. I am also grateful the front office resisted the urge to chase a veteran power forward on the trade market or in the buyout aisle to soak up those reps. They stayed committed to the developmental arc, trusting that when the window opened, it would belong to someone like Rasheer Fleming. Thursday night, the window opened, and he stepped through it.

This is what patience looks like. You draft a player 31st overall, you invest in the reps, you live with the uneven stretches, and you allow the growth to compound. When opportunity arrives, it does not feel foreign. It feels earned.

As I have said before, growth is linear. It climbs, it dips, it steadies, it climbs again. The next matchup might not fit him as cleanly. He might run into a coverage he has not solved yet. He might have to process something new on the fly and learn in real time how to counter it. That is not a setback, that is the curriculum.

Development in the NBA is not about perfection. It is about exposure. See it once. Adjust. See it again. Respond quicker. Fleming is in that phase now, gathering experiences, stacking possessions, building a foundation that will support the next leap.

Gamethread 2/27: Marlins at Phillies

CLEARWATER, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 26: Bryson Stott #5 of the Philadelphia Phillies hits a home run during the first inning of a spring training game against the Washington Nationals at BayCare Ballpark on February 26, 2026 in Clearwater, Florida. (Photo by Mark Taylor/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Here are the lineups for the split squad game you can watch. For the Phillies:

For the Marlins:

And, if you’re interested, here is who is on the road.

Let’s talk about it.

2026 Mets Season Preview: Matt Turner is another lefty relief option

PORT ST. LUCIE, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 19: Matt Turner #90 of the New York Mets poses for a photo during the New York Mets Photo Day at Clover Park on February 19, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Rich Storry/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It has been a few years since the Mets were active in the major league portion of the Rule 5 Draft. However, in 2025 they were active in the minor league portion, claiming three pitchers: Justin Armbruester, Aaron Rozek, and Matt Turner.

Turner, an 11th round draft pick for Cleveland in 2017, is a Miami native entering his age 27 season. Turner was named one of the organizational All-Stars in 2019, after his first season above rookie ball. After reaching Double-A Akron in the Guardians org in 2023, he’s bounced around a bit as of late after electing free agency after the 2023 season.

After playing in independent ball and a spell in the Mexican Pacific Winter League, Turner signed with the Rockies ahead of the 2025 season. He pitched for both Double-A Hartford and Triple-A Albuquerque, faring far better outside of the thin air of the Pacific Coast League. All told in 2025, Turner put up a 5.79 ERA across the two levels, making four starts and 37 relief appearances. His strikeout rate was just over one per inning, but he walked five per nine innings. He managed to limit home runs, which in the PCL can be quite the challenge,

Turner was signed by the Yankees to a minor league deal early in the offseason, which was followed up by the Mets’ claiming him in the Rule 5 Draft. So far this spring, Turner has pitched in two games, tossing a scoreless inning in each appearance. He’s walked two, struck out two, and given up one hit.

The Mets clearly saw something in him to both claim him from the Yankees and give him and invitation to big league camp. Being so new to the system, we don’t have a ton of information about Turner, but he’s looked good in his first two appearances. With King of Spring Training still not officially underway, Turner has a chance for the crown and, potentially, a spot in the Mets’ bullpen at some point later this year. +

Cadillac names its first F1 car after Mario Andretti in 'ultimate compliment'

SILVERSTONE, England (AP) — Cadillac is naming its first Formula 1 car in honor of 1978 champion Mario Andretti, who calls it the “ultimate compliment” ahead of the team's inaugural race next week at the season-opening Australian Grand Prix.

F1's new 11th team announced on Friday its car will be the MAC-26, short for Mario Andretti Cadillac, for the most recent American F1 champion.

“Naming our first chassis MAC-26 reflects the spirit Mario carried into Formula 1 and the belief that an American team belongs on this stage,” said Dan Towriss, chief executive of Cadillac Formula 1 Team Holdings.

“His story embodies the American dream and inspires how we approach building this team every day.”

Andretti is an ambassador for the General Motors-backed Cadillac team, whose F1 entry originated with a bid fronted by his son Michael under the Andretti Global name.

The original bid was rejected by Liberty Media, the commercial rights holder of F1, amid prolonged wrangling. Michael Andretti stepped aside and the entry was restructured with Towriss at the helm and an increased role for GM.

“Racing has been the joy of my life. It is the ultimate compliment that Cadillac Formula 1 Team sees those years as meaningful and worthy of recording with this honor,” Mario Andretti said in a statement.

“I cherish the opportunity that it gives me to have a lasting board with F1 and am genuinely appreciative of everyone who continues to acknowledge my part in racing history.”

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AP auto racing: https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

Texas Rangers lineup for February 27, 2026

SURPRISE, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 20, 2026: Alejandro Osuna #19 of the Texas Rangers bats during the fifth inning of a spring training game against the Kansas City Royals at Surprise Stadium on February 20, 2026 in Surprise, Arizona. (Photo by David Durochik/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

Texas Rangers lineup for February 27, 2026, against the Chicago White Sox.

Spring keeps springing along, and the Rangers have a spring-y lineup today for their game at the White Sox. This is especially true since Josh Jung has been scratched due to hamstring soreness and Corey Seager is under the weather, with Skip Schumaker saying, per the beats, he may miss a few days.

MacKenzie Gore gets the start.

The lineup:

Carter — CF

Burger — 1B

Seager — SS

Smith — 2B

Helman — LF

Osuna — RF

Herrera — C

Perich — DH

Hanson — 3B

2:05 p.m. Central start time.