See wild play that earned Giants manager Tony Vitello his first ejection

Jerar Encarnacion reached first base on an error, until he didn't.

San Francisco Giants manager Tony Vitello took exception and earned the first ejection of his MLB career in the process.

In the bottom of the seventh inning in Sunday's 5-2 loss to the New York Mets at Oracle Park, Encarnacion chopped a sinker from Mets pitcher Huascar Brazobán into the infield and took off toward first base. Brazobán fielded the ball and fired it to first baseman Mark Vientos, who couldn't hang on as the ball plopped out of his glove and hit the ground.

But first base umpire Nestor Ceja called Encarnacion out anyways, declaring that he failed to stay inside the runner's lane. The call itself though, was controversial because umpires usually only make it when a runner interferes with the ball or the throw, which Encarnacion did neither of.

“Jerar was on the grass,” Vitello told reporters postgame. “You’re not going to be automatically out for being on the grass only if the (umpire) sees that the runner impedes the throw. The throw didn’t hit the runner.”

Vitello immediately confronted Ceja on the field, the veins in his neck popping as he got in the ump's face and delivered an expletive-filled rant that's sure to get a lip reading from Jomboy in the next few days. Ceja entertained Vitello for a while, standing in front of him with his arms crossed as the two exchanged words before Ceja ultimately sent Vitello packing for the rest of the game.

“I said one last thing, just out of frustration or being all fired up. That was complete nonsense,” Vitello said. “I think it was misinterpreted a little bit. When you’re on the field that long, and you’re not a player, you’re probably out of place a little bit.”

As Vitello walked back through the dugout and into the clubhouse, he received pats on the backside in support from several of his players.

The last time Vitello had been ejected was just under a year ago on May 4, 2025 for arguing balls and strikes while he was coaching at the University of Tennessee.

Through the first 10 games of the season, the Giants are 3-7 under Vitello. The Mets, meanwhile, improved to 6-4 with Sunday's win.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Giants manager Tony Vitello ejected for first time in MLB career

Dusty May staying at Michigan, taken out of North Carolina coach search

Dusty May will be the coach at Michigan beyond Monday's Men's NCAA Tournament championship game.

In a statement to Tony Garcia of the Detroit Free Press, part of the USA TODAY Network, Wolverines athletic director Warde Manuel put speculation and rumors around May as North Carolina's potential next head coach to bed.

It had been reported by multiple outlets on April 5 that May, a reported top candidate in the Tar Heels' search, had told Michigan he was not looking to take a different job.

"We had a great conversation about his future at Michigan and my commitment to him, his staff and his team," Manuel told the Detroit Free Press on Sunday evening. "Thrilled to have him continuing to lead our men's basketball team and to have Anna [his wife] and his family remain in Ann Arbor.

"His focus and mine is on the game Monday night versus UConn."

May fielded multiple questions about his name being tossed into the North Carolina job search at the Final Four in Indianapolis, but never named the Tar Heels directly in his responses.

"After last year, I decided I'll never respond to any job speculation. I had already agreed to terms with Michigan, was 100% done, and I made the comment that I was flattered about a certain job opening because of my background, and that was misconstrued, so I just decided I'm never going to comment on any job that I don't have," May said on Friday, April 3 in a media availability.

"I think it's well documented how happy I am at Michigan. Obviously, my private life, my personal life, my family, their happiness is very important. I love it at Michigan, but you'll never hear me comment on any other job unless Michigan lets me go, and then I'll comment on every job."

In two seasons under May, the Wolverines have quickly jumped back up to the top of the Big Ten standings. Last season, Michigan improved its win total by 19 games under May from a year prior and made it to the Sweet 16, where it lost to Auburn.

This year, the Wolverines have been one of the top programs in the country for much of the season. He led the program to the Big Ten outright regular season title and a No. 1 seed in the Big Dance for the fourth time in program history.

As noted by USA TODAY, May signed a new contract with Michigan in February 2025, just under a year after he became the Wolverines' next coach. His current deal is through the 2030 season, according to his contract obtained by USA TODAY Sports.

His base salary for the 2025-26 season was $4.6 million and will see an increase to $4.85 million next season if his current deal doesn't change, which seems likely to happen after the type of season the Wolverines have had.

Monday night's national championship game at 8:50 p.m. ET inside Lucas Oil Stadium against No. 2 UConn will be the first May has coached in, and the program's first since they lost to Villanova in 2018. The Wolverines cruised through their Final Four semifinal over No. 1 Arizona, even with Yaxel Lendeborg sustaining multiple injuries and playing through them.

Should the Wolverines win April 6, it will be the first men's basketball title for the Big Ten in over two decades, with the last one coming from their in-state rival, Michigan State, in 2000.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dusty May staying at Michigan, won't seek UNC basketball or other jobs

Flyers top Bruins 2-1 in OT, inch closer to playoff return

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Porter Martone capped a fantastic first week in the NHL with a power-play goal in the NHL to put the Philadelphia Flyers even closer toward ending a miserable playoff drought with a 2-1 overtime victory over the Boston Bruins on Sunday.

The 19-year-old Martone — who just wrapped his season at Michigan State — is just the boost the Flyers needed down the stretch to earn that coveted playoff spot. His first career NHL goal in his fourth game put the Flyers into third place in the Metropolitan Division with five games left for them this season.

Flyers fans erupted when Martone capitalized on the man advantage — courtesy of David Pastrnak’s hooking penalty — with 2:29 left in OT.

The Flyers needed this win to get in Eastern Conference playoff position for the first time since Jan. 12.

The Bruins tied the score 1-1 only 35 seconds into the third period when Pavel Zacha knocked one past Dan Vladar on the power play for his 29th goal of the season.

Christian Dvorak took a perfect touch pass from Martone, the Flyers’ 2025 first-round draft pick, and finished a 2-on-1 with a wrister past Joonas Korpisalo for the early 1-0 lead. Still buzzing from the early goal, Flyers fans erupted only moments later when Travis Konecny and Boston’s Charlie McAvoy briefly scrapped near the net.

SENATORS 6, HURRICANES 3

OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) — Brady Tkachuk scored twice and Ottawa beat Carolina to move into the second wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference.

Ottawa moved a point ahead of the New York Islanders for the last playoff spot with five games left. The Senators are five points behind Boston for the first wild card.

Carolina leads the East, two points ahead of Tampa Bay. The Hurricanes missed a chance to clinch the Metropolitan Division.

Both teams were playing the second half of back-to-back games, with Ottawa scoring twice in a 3:42 span in the third to take a 5-2 lead.

Shane Pinto made it 4-2 on a power play, beating Frederik Andersen to the short side. Ridly Greig then won a race to the net and, while Andersen made the initial save, the side was wide open for Tkachuk to bury his second of the game.

Carolina’s Taylor Hall wristed a shot past Linus Ullmark with 2:30 remaining to make it 5-3, but Claude Giroux added an empty-netter for Ottawa.

WILD 5, RED WINGS 4

DETROIT (AP) — Kirill Kaprizov completed the sixth hat trick of his NHL career on the power play with 1:51 remaining to lead Minnesota to a win over Detroit.

The Wild led 4-1 before allowing Detroit to score three times in the third period and tie it. A penalty on Patrick Kane paved the way for Kaprizov to score his third goal of the game.

The Red Wings led the Atlantic Division and were tied for the most points in the Eastern Conference the morning of Jan. 25, with a 12-point playoff cushion. They’ve lost 12 of 20 games since to fall out of a spot with five left to play.

Matt Boldy and Mats Zuccarello each had an assist on the go-ahead goal. Vladimir Tarasenko and Boldy each scored for the Wild after Albert Johansson had a goal in the first.

J.T. Compher, Axel Sandin-Pellikka and Kane scored on Filip Gustavsson to rally back. Gustavsson finished with 18 saves, while Detroit’s Cam Talbot allowed five goals on 20 shots.

PENGUINS 5, PANTHERS 2

PITTSBURGH (AP) — Rickard Rakell scored twice, Sidney Crosby had a goal and two assists and Pittsburgh beat Florida.

The teams faced off Saturday night and the Penguins beat them 9-4, eliminating the two-time defending Stanley Cup champions from playoff contention.

Rakell scored his first goal for the Penguins with 48 seconds left in the first period on the power play, assisted on by Crosby and Evgeni Malkin. His second came with 1:52 left in the second period.

Bryan Rust and Elmer Soderblom also scored for the Penguins. Carter Verhaeghe and Cole Schwindt each scored for the Panthers.

Home sweep home: 3-0 win gives Sox first home opener sweep since 2004

Apr 5, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago White Sox pitcher Davis Martin (65) reacts after the top of the third inning against the Toronto Blue Jays at Rate Field.
Davis Martin pitched a masterful game, for his second win in two tries. | Matt Marton-Imagn Images

By golly, they actually did it!

For the first time since 2004, the White Sox have swept their home opening series, by virtue of a 3-0 win over the Blue Jays. It what might have been Chicago’s cleanest game of the season so far—no errors, no baserunning mishaps, and most importantly, not a single blemish on any pitcher’s stat line.

What a difference three games makes, as the team’s calamitous 1-5 start somehow feels distant in the rear view mirror. For those thinking about it, it took until May 15 for the Sox to engineer their first three-game win streak of the 2025 campaign. Maybe things really are different this time.

It was a banner day for the Davis Martin Hype Train, of which I have considered myself the Engineer since late 2024. The righty delivered the Sox first true quality start of 2026 — Sean Burke’s outing Friday would have counted, had he actually started — and gave the team’s bullpen a much-needed breather as he moved to 2-0 on the season. Martin’s stuff was as crisp as we’ve seen it all year, sitting a solid 95 mph with his heater today after living in the 92-93 mph range his last couple times out. He made use of all six of his pitches against a dangerous Blue Jays lineup, and with the exception of a third inning that saw Martin escape a bases-loaded jam, Toronto just couldn’t quite time anything up, ultimately touching him for just four hits in his six innings of work.

This is essentially what the best of version of Martin looks like. The stuff isn’t overwhelming — it never has been — but there’s more than enough of it that, if he’s clustering his fastballs to the arm side and breakers to the glove side, he can give you a quality start and a win any day of the week. Having this many pitches clustered over the middle of the plate might seem less than ideal, but when those pitches are an even mix of four-seamers, sinkers and cutters, hitters are still going to have difficulty finding a barrel unless they know exactly what’s coming.

On the hitting end, this was the definition of a “chip away” effort. The Sox got on the board in the very first inning. Chase Meidroth’s embrasure of his role as a top-of-the-lineup spark plug got things going to a great effect, leading off the contest with a double before coming around to score on a Miguel Vargas single that turned into a triple thanks to a terrible read by Jays left fielder Nathan Lukes:

A few innings later, Lenyn Sosa rewarded Will Venable for finally having the guts to let the Sox leading home run hitter from *checks notes* eight months ago face a right-handed pitcher, as a double against Austin Voth doubled Chicago’s lead after Eric Lauer was chased from the game earlier in the inning:

The final offensive strike of the day came an inning later, in similarly non-explosive fashion, as Austin Hays continued a solid start to his Sox tenure with a single to drive in Luisangel Acuña (who had a nice day himself, reaching base twice and swiping his fourth bag).

In other notable action, welcome to the big leagues, Mr. Tanner Murray! The 26-year-old didn’t reach base in either of the first two plate appearances of his big league career. But Murray had his moment in the spotlight nonetheless, saving a run in the early going with a fantastic defensive stop — and equally impressive pick from Munetaka Murakami, whose play at first base has taken just the slightest amount of heat in recent days — that had Davis Martin appropriately hyped up, it seems:

Bryan Hudson gave us all a scare with a pair of hits allowed in the seventh inning. But in a refreshing change of pace from earlier in the weekend, Jordan Leasure managed to work around it, retiring all four of the hitters he faced. With Seranthony Domínguez having pitched on back-to-back days and apparent backup closer Jordan Hicks also unavailable, Chris Murphy got the ball to close things out. He did so with little difficulty, earning the second save of his big league career.

The Good Guys remain at home for their next series, a three-game set against the Baltimore Orioles, who are off to another disappointing start and are probably the South Siders’ only competition for the most dramatic fall from grace in the post-COVID baseball era. In a fascinating twist, Grant Taylor has already been announced as the opener for Monday’s game, his third “start” in four games, while the Orioles have yet to announce a starter. No matter who it is, we’ll see you there!


The Washington Nationals bullpen ruin the vibes again in a frustrating loss

CHICAGO, IL - MARCH 26: Cionel Pérez #51 of the Washington Nationals looks on during the game between the Washington Nationals and the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on Thursday, March 26, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Geoff Stellfox/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Nats lost in a way that looked a lot like their final game of the Phillies series. It is also the kind of loss we have seen a lot in the last year. The Nationals bats were up for the fight, but they were let down by a bullpen that is not big league caliber.

This is a game the Nats really needed to win. It was a getaway day for the Dodgers, who had a lot of their starters sitting. The Nats also managed to take a 6-1 lead. That should be plenty of cushion, but not for this bullpen. Today proved that changes are necessary in the bullpen, and the Nats will need to churn through a lot of guys to find something resembling competence. 

The game felt like it would be a feel good game, even if there was a feeling of dread in the back of your mind. Offensively, the Nats continued to look good, and even James Wood got in on the fun. In this series, the Nats scored 17 runs against a great pitching staff, but came away with nothing to show for it.

Back to Wood though, I liked his at bats today. Obviously, the homer was great, and it was a classic Wood opposite field shot. However, the way he was attacking pitches and balancing patience and aggression was good for the most part. We will need to see more before he is officially back, but today was a step in the right direction.

A lot of these guys are locked in offensively, and it sucks that they are getting overshadowed by an atrocious pitching staff. CJ Abrams, Luis Garcia Jr. and even Jorbit Vivas are excelling right now, but it is tough to talk about them.

The story right now is pitching. In the first two games, the starters were the main culprits, but the bullpen laid an egg today. Foster Griffin was actually very good for a second straight start. The only run he allowed came on a solo homer to Shohei Ohtani, which is something that can happen even to the best of pitchers.

His pitch count got high, so he was only able to give the Nats five innings. You could already sense trouble in the 6th inning, when PJ Poulin allowed a two-run homer to make the game 6-3. To Poulin’s credit, he stopped the bleeding and gave the Nats another inning in the 7th.

It was now a three run game, and Cionel Perez came in to try and preserve the lead. He totally imploded, failing to get an out and allowing four runs. Perez, who looked so sharp in Spring Training, looks much more like the guy who posted an ERA over 8 last year. 

On the season, the lefty has now allowed 6 runs in 2.2 innings. He just did not have it today, and did not give the Nats a chance. You have to wonder how much longer he will get to turn things around, and if the Nats make bullpen moves before tomorrow’s game.

Even without considering the poor performance, the Nats could use a fresh arm. Butera was non-committal when I asked him if changes were coming to the bullpen. For the sake of Nats fans’ sanity, I would hope for some changes.

This series was a real reality check after the Nats promising start. They have now lost five in a row. The boys cannot allow this to spiral and need to bounce back against a more manageable opponent in the St. Louis Cardinals. This was a tough one, but hey it is just game 9 out of 162.

Senators beat the Hurricanes 6-3 to move into the second wild-card spot in the East

OTTAWA, Ontario (AP) — Brady Tkachuk scored twice and the Ottawa Senators beat the Carolina Hurricanes 6-3 on Sunday night to move into the second wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference.

Ottawa moved a point ahead of the New York Islanders for the last playoff spot with five games left. The Senators are five points behind Boston for the first wild card.

Carolina leads the East, two points ahead of Tampa Bay. The Hurricanes missed a chance to clinch the Metropolitan Division.

Both teams were playing the second half of back-to-back games, with Ottawa scoring twice in a 3:42 span in the third to take a 5-2 lead.

Shane Pinto made it 4-2 on a power play, beating Frederik Andersen to the short side. Ridly Greig then won a race to the net and, while Andersen made the initial save, the side was wide open for Tkachuk to bury his second of the game.

Carolina’s Taylor Hall wristed a shot past Linus Ullmark with 2:30 remaining to make it 5-3, but Claude Giroux added an empty-netter for Ottawa.

Dylan Cozens and Tim Stutzle also scored for Ottawa, and Ullmark stopped 25 shots. Defenseman Jake Sanderson played his 300th NHL game. He had an assist.

Logan Stankoven and Andrei Svechnikov also scored for Carolina, and Andersen made 25 saves.

Up next

Hurricanes: Host Boston on Tuesday night.

Senators: Host Tampa Bay on Tuesday night.

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Knicks entering final chance to quiet worrisome trend before playoffs

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows New York Knicks guards Josh Hart and Jalen Brunson on the court, Image 2 shows New York Knicks guard Landry Shamet (44) shoots over Chicago Bulls guard Josh Giddey (3)

Monday represents an unwanted milestone for the Knicks.

It marks one month since they beat a team above .500. Their last such win came against the Nuggets in Denver on March 6. Since then? They’ve gone 0-5 against teams with winning records. All of those games were on the road against the Lakers, Clippers, Hornets, Thunder and Rockets.

Monday starts a final four-game stretch against teams above .500 to close the regular season, beginning in Atlanta against the Hawks, followed by home games against the Celtics, Raptors and Hornets.

Josh Hart #3 of the New York Knicks and guard Jalen Brunson #11 of the New York Knicks speak on the court during the first half at Madison Square Garden, Friday April 3rd, 2026, in New York, NY. Jason Szenes for the New York Post

“For us, I think it’s just making sure we’re locked in and focused,” Josh Hart said after practice Sunday. “Obviously this is a good little stretch to end the season to make sure we’re as sharp as we can be going into the playoffs. The past is the past, nothing you can do about it now. Our focus is on tomorrow being 1-0 against playoff teams, and then we move on to the next one, and then we want to be 1-0, and then we want to move onto the next one and be 1-0. Nothing in the past really matters. It’s about what we do moving forward that we’ll be judged on and what we judge ourselves on.”

Those five losses are sandwiched between seven- and two-game winning streaks against teams well below .500 and, for the most part, tanking. And they are part of a growing concern that the Knicks have struggled against higher quality opposition for a while now.

The NBA, this year more than ever, has clear haves and have-nots in team quality. A few wins or blowouts over bottom-feeders composed of youngsters or G-Leaguers don’t quell the alarm bells regarding how the Knicks fare in real tests.

And it’s not just the results that are troubling, it’s how the Knicks lose. Their offense becomes more stagnant and Jalen Brunson-heavy. There are particularly bad starts to games, which they might be able to overcome against lowly teams but find much harder to overcome against quality teams. Their transition defense is shoddy, betraying so much of their improvement on that side of the ball in the second half of the year.

“You gotta give Charlotte, Oklahoma City and Houston credit, they played well,” coach Mike Brown said. “I said it postgame, we did not play well in some areas. … We didn’t play well in those three games and we deserved to lose, as much as you hate to say it. And hopefully we’ll play better going forward because we’ve got a couple of teams above .500, so we’ll see.”



Beyond simply being above .500, all four of the Knicks’ remaining opponents will be Eastern Conference playoff or play-in teams. One thing Brown acknowledged is that they don’t want to show these potential playoff opponents everything and that they want to keep a few looks in their back pocket to unleash during the postseason.

It creates a weird dynamic this final week.

Knicks guard Landry Shamet puts up a shot as guard Josh Giddey #3 of the Chicago Bulls defends during the first half at Madison Square Garden, Friday April 3rd, 2026, in New York, NY. Jason Szenes for the New York Post

“It’s a challenging stretch that not a lot of people talk about,” Landry Shamet said Sunday. “This last stretch of the season, these last few games, you’re kind of gearing up for the playoffs, you know what you’re building for, but you gotta be here and locked in each night, each team, each challenge in front of you. I think it’s more about approaching each game with the right mentality. Make it more about us than who we’re playing. We’re working on something bigger and building for something bigger, keeping that top of mind while still taking each game seriously and approaching them as you should.”

Last year, the Knicks’ struggles against top opposition in the regular season — particularly with the Celtics — didn’t really translate to the postseason. But they should not just be ignored or considered meaningless.

Just relying on everything changing once the playoffs start is a risky mindset.

“It’s not something you can just flip a switch in the playoffs and say, ‘OK the playoffs are here, let’s go out there and do our thing,’ ” Hart said. “We gotta make sure that we take these next four games as serious as we can, make sure we lock in mentally and physically to what the game plan is and to what this team wants to do moving forward and execute.”

Four more games means four final chances for the Knicks to quiet a worrying narrative that has recently begun hovering over them.

Hurricanes drop back-to-back to desperate Senators 6-3.

OTTAWA, CANADA - APRIL 05: Tim Stützle #18 of the Ottawa Senators celebrates his first period goal against the Carolina Hurricanes with Fabian Zetterlund #20 at Canadian Tire Centre on April 05, 2026 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Chris Tanouye/Freestyle Photography/Getty Images) | Getty Images

When the pregame hype reel was released on social media for Sunday’s game against Ottawa, the sight of Nicolas Deslauriers walking in and his jersey being hung ended up being a signal that Carolina was prepared to have at least one player sit out. It turns out two players didn’t make the trip to Ottawa—Jordan Staal and Jordan Martinook—and the effort on the ice showed that the Canes had moved into preservation mode as Ottawa ran away with the game 5-2.

The loss means that Carolina failed to clinch the Metropolitan Division as Pittsburgh won in regulation for the second day in a row against a Florida team that has given up on the season.

Ottawa meanwhile was looking to at least salvage some points to stem the bleeding from dropping four of their last five and take advantage of other results during the day to stay in the Wild Card 2 spot and inch closer to Boston in the first spot.

The game started well for the Hurricanes, as Carolina reacted to losing their Power Play Goal games streak on Saturday by starting a new one. The Canes earned the penalty when Seth Jarvis went down the ice on a breakway and was held by Jordan Spence to the point where he ended up in the goalie net, hitting the cross bar. Jarvis was OK, and on the ensuring power play a red hot Nikolaj Ehlers was able to get close to the net, thread a great pass over to Logan Stankoven who potted it to put the Hurricanes up 1-0.

Once that power play was finished, though, the Senators basically took control of the game. There wasn’t a period where the Senators were outshot by the Canes, and less than two minutes after Stankoven gave Carolina the lead Ottawa tied it back up on a Power Play goal of their own by Dylan Cozens. Less than a minute later, Tim Stützle took advantage of a misplay on the puck, skated in on goalie Frederik Andersen, and made a great move at the crease to push the puck by the goalie to give the Senators a 2-1 lead.

Carolina still had some fight, though, as the first period wound down. Carolina was able to keep possession of the puck in the Ottawa zone in the last few seconds, and when a shot went toward Linus Ullmark he was unable to fully cover it in sight of the referee and Andrei Svechnikov kept batting at the puck to get it into the goal and knot the score right at the end of the period.

The good vibes for the Canes were over after that, though, as Ottawa took control of the game. Brady Tkachuk provided the dagger 8:33 into the period with a tip in from a point shot by Artem Zub. While Carolina didn’t surrender another goal in the second, the mood and play on the ice indicated that the Canes went into self-preservation mode.

The third period put the final nail in the game when Carolina was unable to take advantage of another power play, and Shane Pinto would score a few minutes later to put the game out of reach for Ottawa at 4-2. The rest of the goals were window dressing as Tkachuk made it 5-2, and then Taylor Hall finally got his 300th career goal late in the period to bring Carolina back to within two. The goal came with some netfront presence by the veteran, and it did give Carolina a shred of hope with a little over two minutes left.

The Hurricanes would pull Andersen and try to stage a rally, but Claude Giroux nailed the empty net, and Carolina heads back home with their winning streak snapped at three, 6-3.

Ullmark was able to make 25 saves on 28 shots playing the second night in a row after backstopping the Senators against Minnesota on Saturday. Andersen was a victim of the missing stalwarts of Staal and Martinook, making 25 saves on 30 shots.

Carolina heads back to Raleigh to face off against another desperate playoff team in Boston on Tuesday night for their last regular season home game. They’ll once again have a chance to clinch the division, and this time they’ll so without keeping an eye on Pittsburgh as the Penguins somehow scored three days off and won’t play again until Thursday.

Arizona Diamondbacks 6, Atlanta Braves 5: Eggs-ellent!

PRODUCTION - 27 March 2025, Berlin: An Easter egg and chocolate eggs lie in bowls and on a table. Photo: Hannes P. Albert/dpa (Photo by Hannes P. Albert/picture alliance via Getty Images)

Record 5-5. Pace: 81-81. Change on 2025: 0.

The D-backs blew leads of 3-1, 4-3 and 5-4, but managed to prevail in the bottom of the tenth inning. Ketel Marte swatted the first pitch he saw over the head of the Atlanta right-fielder, driving in Manfred Man Jorge Barrosa from second for our first walk-off win of the year. That gave them a split of the four games against the Braves, despite being outscored 25-10 overall. It also returned the team to .500, and Arizona now gets a day off tomorrow, to rest before a tough upcoming road-trip to the East coast.

Brandon Pfaadt started this game, and it was another underwhelming experience. He seemed to be throwing an inordinate number of curveballs in the early going. But it didn’t help in the first, as new nemesis Drake Baldwin homered off a thigh-high sinker with one out in the top of the inning. However, the Answerbacks showed up, tying the game in their half. Ketel Marte led off with a double to left, and productive outs proved to be productive. Marte advanced on a groundout to second by Corbin Carroll, and Geraldo Perdomo was able to get the run in from third with a sacrifice fly to left, making it 1-1.

The bottom of the second saw Carlos Santana gets his second single of the year, therefore avoiding the dishonor of lowest batting average by a D-back through ten games. However, he tweaked his groin earlier in the at-bat – not even on a swing – and was clearly hobbling as he was going down the line to first. He was lifted from the game, replaced at first by Ildemaro Vargas. But if an IL stint is needed – and it didn’t look good – it’s going to be interesting. Because the Diamondbacks literally do not have any other healthy position players on the 40-man roster. Jordan Lawlar, Tyler Locklear, Pavin Smith and Lourdes Gurriel are all hurt.

Today, at least, this proved to a blessing in disguise. The next time that spot came up, in the bottom of the fourth, two men were on base: Carroll had singled and Nolan Arenado walked. Vargas then drove them both in with a two-run triple into right (above). I feel fairly confident in saying that Santana would not have done that. Not least because since the start of 2020, he has hit precisely one triple in 3,133 plate appearances. That gave the D-backs a 3-1 lead. However, Pfaadt was unable to hold it. Three hits, a walk and a wild pitch, while recording only one out, let the Braves tie things up, and one out later, Pfaadt’s day was over.

The final line for Brandon: six hits and two walks over 4.2 innings, with three runs (all earned allowed) and just two strikeouts. The last is perhaps the most immediate matter of concern. In 10.2 innings of work, Pfaadt has struck out just five batters: that 6.75 ERA seems earned. He will get one more start, with the news today that Merrill Kelly needs an additional rehab appearance. But when Kelly is pronounced fit to return, on the evidence of the first two spins around the rotation, it would probably be Pfaadt, and not Michael Soroka, who makes the transition to pitching long relief out of the bullpen.

Thereafter, it was a case of punch and counter-punch. In the sixth inning, Carroll singled, stole his first base of the year and eventually scored on Arenado’s first RBI of the year, making it 4-3. But Nolan then blotted his copy-book with an error in the seventh, while trying to look the runner on third back to the bag. That extended the inning, allowing that runner to score: 4-4. The Answerbacks answered back immediately again, on a Jorge Barrosa double, followed by a Carroll triple (above): 5-4. Kevin Ginkel pitched a scoreless eighth, but three straight hits off Jonathan Loaisiga, in to save the game (because Paul Sewald pitched Friday and Saturday) blew that lead.

Indeed, it could have been worse than just a tying, but Loaisiga then avoided further damage from a situation of two on, with nobody out. This took Arizona into extras, and all the was left in the bullpen for the D-backs was either Taylor Rashi or Andrew Hoffman. Torey Lovullo went with the former, and the key play came with one out, after the Manfred Man had been advanced to third. The Diamondbacks had their infield in, and it paid off as a hot smash (102 mph) off the bat of Mauricio Dubón, was smothered by Perdomo. He looked the runner back, threw to first for the second out, and Rashi finished off the inning, putting up an invaluable zero.

Ketel Marte: one pitch (above). Any questions? It was Marte’s first walkoff hit in almost seven years, and gave him two doubles on the day. Carroll had three hits – all coming off left-handed pitchers – while Arenado and Vargas each reached base twice, with a walk and a hit. Credit must also go to the bullpen. While they were credited with a pair of blown saves, they allowed one earned run over 5.1 innings of work. Taylor Clarke and Ryan Thompson worked in addition to those mentioned above. While their collective ERA is still 6.50, it’s worth noting that half of the 26 earned runs they have allowed belong to Joe Ross and James McCann.

Click here for details, at Fangraphs.com
Eggs Benedict: Corbin Carroll, +33.5%
Eggs-ultation: Marte, +33.4%; Vargas, +22.6%; Rashi, +14.0%; Clarke, +13.4%; Ginkel, +12.2%
Rotten Egg: Jonathan Loaisiga, -19.5%
Walking on Eggshells: Tawa, -18.0%; Pfaadt, -12.7%; Thompson, -10.4%; Fernandez, -10.2%

An interesting decision about who should get the SnakePit W today. Unofficially (based off the Fangraphs figures, which are slightly different from Baseball Reference), this game goes to Carroll. The hitters picked up +53% in total, while the pitchers combined for -3%. But Carroll and Marte are so close at the top, that we will have to wait for the B-R results tomorrow morning. Meanwhile, in the Gameday Thread, we went past two hundred comments, with today’s winner being chwalter. While there were more-rec’d comments, this was the most relevant to the outcome!

All told, given how this series started, I’m more than happy to walk away with a split, and the team back at .500. Fingers crossed they will come back from this nine-game road-trip to the Mets, Phillies and Orioles no worse than one game below even. Things get under way at City Field on Tuesday, with Zac Gallen on the mound for the Diamondbacks, facing Freddy Peralta.

Stay Up Late With Rockets At Golden State

HOUSTON, TX - APRIL 3: Alperen Sengun #28, Amen Thompson #1, Reed Sheppard #15, and Kevin Durant #7 of the Houston Rockets looks on during the game against the Utah Jazz on April 3, 2026 at the Toyota Center in Houston, 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 (Photo by Logan Riely/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Houston Rockets vs Golden State Warriors

April 5, 2026

Location: Chaste Center, San Francisco, CA

TV: NBC/Peacock,

Radio:KBME Sports Talk 790 / KLTN 102.9 (en español)

Online: NBC/Peacock, Rockets App, SCHN+

Time: 9:00pm CST

4-6: Chart

Apr 5, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Seattle Mariners pitcher Jose A. Ferrer (45) throws against the Los Angeles Angels during the fourth inning at Angel Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images | Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images

Angels 8, Mariners 7

Reese’s eggs: Cole Young, .37 WPA

Black jellybeans: José Ferrer, -.34 WPA

Game thread comment of the day:

Guardians 6, Cubs 5: Wonky relief work ruins a good Shōta Imanaga outing

The Cubs had three home runs in this game, the second time they’ve gone deep three times in the early going in 2026. Matt Shaw, Dansby Swanson and Ian Happ homered for the Cubs.

Unfortunately, the result was the same as the other time they homered three times (a 6-3 loss to the Nationals). This time, it was a 6-5 loss to the Guardians, giving them a split of the Sunday doubleheader and a loss in the series.

The game began like the first game had been all along — scoreless, with the teams seemingly not able to hit anything.

Shaw’s home run in the third gave the Cubs the lead [VIDEO].

The Cubs extended their lead to 3-0 in the sixth. With one out, Carson Kelly singled. One out later, Swanson smacked his first home run of the season [VIDEO].

Meanwhile, Shōta Imanaga was mowing down Guardians hitters. He had allowed just two hits and a walk through five innings, then Steven Kwan doubled leading off the sixth. That was it for Shōta, who had a nice outing, throwing 92 pitches (62 strikes). Here’s more on Imanaga’s afternoon [VIDEO].

That was a good outing from Imanaga and he did not allow a home run. So, progress!

Ben Brown relieved Imanaga and, to be frank, was just awful. He couldn’t throw strikes — only 22 in 42 pitches — and allowed two walks, two hits and a sacrifice fly in the sixth, one of the runs charged to Imanaga, and Cleveland tied the game 3-3.

Brown was better in the seventh, retiring the side 1-2-3. I am still beginning to wonder what spot Brown actually has on this team. He’s clearly being used in a long relief role. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn’t. It’s very early in the season, but so far, the Cubs pen, a strength last year, has been shaky.

Happ, who was having a terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day, led off the eighth for the Cubs.

He had struck out the first six times he batted Sunday afternoon — all four times he batted in Game 1 of the doubleheader against the Guardians and the first two times in the nightcap. That was followed by a fly out in the sixth, making him 0-for-7 on the day.

Happ homered in his eighth PA of the day, his fourth long ball of the young season [VIDEO].

Facts about Happ’s six whiffs from BCB’s JohnW53:

Ian Happ struck out six times, something a Cub had done 165 times before in back-to-back games. A Cub has had  seven strikeouts 27 times and eight strikeouts eight times.
Twenty-seven of the 165 with six whiffs also hit a home run, including two who homered twice: Byron Browne, in 1966 and Sammy Sosa, in 2000.
But only five before Happ struck out six times in a doubleheader, and none of them hit a homer:
Hank Sauer, 1951 (9 PA, 1 for 9, double)
Dee Fondy, 1953 (8 PA, 2 for 8, single and double)
Bobby Morgan, 1957 (9 PA, 2 for 9, single and double)
Billy Cowan, 1964 (10 PA, 2 for 10, two singles)
Derrek Lee, 2024 (9 PA, 1 for 9, double)

Unfortunately, Jacob Webb could not hold the lead in the bottom of the eighth. CJ Kayfus hit a one-out homer off Webb to tie the game, and then a single, walk and another hit gave Cleveland a 5-4 lead. So far — and yes, I realize it’s early — the signing of Webb isn’t looking too good.

Ethan Roberts, up as the 27th man for the doubleheader, relieved Webb. The first hitter he faced, Austin Hedges, singled to drive in a run to make it 6-4. That run, unfortunately, turned out to be really important for the Guardians.

Cade Smith came on to throw the ninth for Cleveland. And the Cubs rallied off him with two out, scoring a run and getting the tying and lead runs to scoring position.

Smith got Pete Crow-Armstrong on a fly to short right and struck out Moisés Ballesteros. Then Nico Hoerner and Alex Bregman walked. Happ singled in Hoerner to make it 6-5 [VIDEO].

Scott Kingery ran for Happ and took second on defensive indifference.

But Carson Kelly struck out to end the game [VIDEO].

Give the Cubs credit, at least, for not folding with two out in the ninth and at least putting together a rally. But they are going to have to revisit some of the bullpen structure. So far, only a few of the relievers have been reliable.

Some doubleheader facts from John:

This is the first time since at least 2015 that the Cubs have alternated losses and wins through nine consecutive games.
….
The Cubs have not swept a doubleheader on the road since Sept. 11, 2015, when they won at Philadelphia, 5-1 and 7-3. They are 6-12 in games of nine subsequent twin bills on the road, including today. Today was just the third time they won Game 1. The two others both were at Cincinnati, on Aug. 29, 2020, and Sept. 1, 2023.

The Cubs move on to Tampa Bay, where they will open a three-game series against the Rays Monday afternoon. It’s the Rays’ home opener and first game back at Tropicana Field, which has been renovated after the roof was destroyed in Hurricane Milton in October 2024.

Jameson Taillon will start for the Cubs and Shane McClanahan will go for the Rays in the series opener. Game time Monday is 3:10 p.m. CT and TV coverage will be via Marquee Sports Network.

Nets give away key lottery opportunity with comeback win over Wizards

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Nets guard Nolan Traore (88) shoots past Washington Wizards Leaky Black during the first half at Barclays Center, Sunday, April 5, 2026, in Brooklyn, NY.

This was the definition of a blown opportunity.

With a chance to pull even with the Wizards atop the lottery standings, the Nets instead pulled out a come-from-behind 121-115 win that saw them consigned to third place.

The Nets are two full games behind Washington and a game behind the Pacers, pending their tilt vs. Cleveland. They’ll host Milwaukee on Tuesday and the Pacers two nights later, with huge tanking ramifications in each.

The Nets (19-59) are 2 ¹/₂ games ahead of the Jazz and two ahead of the Kings, who played the Clippers at home on Sunday.

Nets guard Nolan Traore (88) shoots past Washington Wizards Leaky Black during the first half at Barclays Center, Sunday, April 5, 2026, in Brooklyn, NY. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

The Nets (19-59) were two games ahead of the Jazz and Kings, pending Utah’s game against OKC and Sacramento’s tilt vs. the Clippers.

They trailed a skeleton Wizards crew 105-101 after Jamir Watkins’ 3-pointer with 3:50 left. But the Nets reeled off eight unanswered points to seize the lead for good, part of a game-breaking 14-3 run.



Nolan Traore — who’d been fighting through the rookie wall — had 10 of his team-high 23 points in that Nets blitz to lead the comeback.

His 3-pointer made it 105-105 with 2:56 left, and his layup capped the 8-0 spurt. Traore’s final 3 off a Jalen Wilson feed made it 115-108 with 1:15 left.

Drake Powell (4) shoots one Washington Wizards forward Anthony Gill (16) during the first half at Barclays Center, Sunday, April 5, 2026, in Brooklyn, NY. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

“He did a great job,” said Jordi Fernández. “He’s a big reason why we won this game, especially towards the end.”

It remains to be seen how much the win costs them in the lottery. But for the struggling Nets, it felt sweet on Easter Sunday.

Josh Minott (15 points, three blocks, two steals) gave the Nets a 17-point lead in the first quarter, before they gave it up with a shaky second and third.

But they settled in for a clean fourth, their 13-0 edge in points off turnovers the difference.

“We just had a collective mindset to be better than what we did in the third quarter,” said Wilson. “I feel like we got away (from our plan), let them get comfortable. Give any team confidence in the NBA, it can be a tough game.”

But we were able to get them to turn the ball over a lot and capitalize on that.”

Wilson finished with 19 points, five rebounds and four assists.

Will Riley scored 30 for the Wizards, who suited up just eight players and dropped their sixth straight to fall to 17-61.

But Washington moved 1½ games clear of the Pacers and two ahead of Brooklyn.


Ben Saraf, Terance Mann (right patella tendon soreness/left Achilles) and Noah Clowney (left ankle) were ruled out, with Michael Porter Jr., Egor Dëmin, Nic Claxton, Danny Wolf, Ziaire Williams and Day’Ron Sharpe already sidelined.

But not to be out-tanked, the Wizards played without Anthony Davis (finger), Trae Young (back/right quad), Justin Champagnie, Bilal Coulibaly, Kyshawn George, Tre Johnson, Alex Sarr, Cam Whitmore and D’Angelo Russell.

Former Rockets coach Mike Dantoni to be inducted into Basketball Hall of Fame

Mike D’Antoni, who served as head coach of the Houston Rockets from 2016 until 2020, is headed to the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame.

The news was first reported by John Gambadoro of Arizona Sports 98 in Phoenix, where D’Antoni coached the Suns from 2003 until 2008.

“An important figure in the evolution of modern basketball who elevated the game through his uptempo, space and pace philosophy that helped redefine offensive strategy… emphasizing ball movement, shooting, and efficiency and shaping the analytics-driven era of the sport — known as Seven Seconds or Less,” Hall of Fame officials wrote in the announcement.

In the previous 2016-17 season, D’Antoni won NBA Coach of the Year honors after leading the Rockets to a 55-27 record — a 14-win improvement relative to the previous season under a different coaching staff.
D’Antoni finished his Houston tenure (2016-17 through 2019-20) in the No. 2 spot in both categories, trailing only Hall of Fame coach and two-time NBA champion Rudy Tomjanovich. He’s easily the top coach in Rockets history by winning percentage (217-101, .682). D’Antoni holds the best winning percentage in Houston Rockets history at .682 (217–101).Dantoni led the Rockets to a franchise-best 65-17 record in the 2017-18 season, where he was named NBA Coach of the Year for the second time in his career, and during his four seasons with Houston, the Rockets reached the playoffs each year, often battling as a top contender in the Western Conference.

Those Houston years included a memorable 2017-18 campaign in which the Rockets (65-17) finished with the most wins of any NBA team, and it remains a franchise record to this day. As the star player and centerpiece of D’Antoni’s high-powered offense, James Harden easily won league Most Valuable Player (MVP) honors.

Although none of D’Antoni’s teams won an NBA championship, they were close on several occasions. The 2017–18 Rockets, who were possibly just one Chris Paul hamstring injury away from overthrowing the Golden State Warriors, were on that list.

As it stands, they did enough to ensure that D’Antoni’s legacy would be honored and acknowledged in Springfield, Massachusetts, as a member of the 2026 Hall of Fame class. The dates of the enshrinement weekend are August 14–15, 2026.