Darius Garland’s comments about getting his joy back don’t add up

oINGLEWOOD, CA - APRIL 15: LA Clippers guard Darius Garland (10) celebrates after making a basket during the fourth quarter of an NBA play-in-tournament against the Golden State Warriors at the Intuit Dome in Inglewood Wednesday, April 15, 2026. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

Just a few seasons ago, it looked and felt like the Cleveland Cavaliers were going to build around Darius Garland. When he signed his max contract extension in 2022, the thought was he would wear the number 10 in Wine and Gold for a long, long time. 

But, life comes at you fast in the NBA. When Cleveland acquired Donovan Mitchell that same summer, it signaled that the team was ready to contend and envisioned a dynamic backcourt leading the way.

The fit between the two had its ups and downs. The Cavs didn’t have enough supporting pieces to surround the duo in 2023, leading to a quick playoff exit. In 2024, Garland battled a broken jaw that compromised him significantly.

2025 was the best year for the backcourt, with Garland and Mitchell both being named All-Stars and leading Cleveland to 64 wins. Unfortunately, Garland broke down in the playoffs thanks to a toe injury and the Cavs bowed out in the second round. The toe injury lingered into this past season, and Cleveland could not run the risk of another unhealthy Garland run, leading to the James Harden trade.

Now Garland is with the Los Angeles Clippers, where he has said multiple times that he is happy. Recently, he went on a podcast with Lonzo Ball, saying he got his joy back for basketball. He later elaborated saying that he’s happy to have the ball in his hands again and be the primary decision maker.

That is the part that causes me to pause.

Why? Well, I’ll give you one guess as to who led Cleveland in touches per game last year: Darius Garland with 64. He was also second in clutch time usage at about 27%

This season, his touches went up to 68 per game during his time with the Cavs, which would be four more than he had on average with the Clippers in 19 games.

What about 2023-24? It was Mitchell with 79, but Garland wasn’t far behind with 75

Even if you go all the way back to 2022-23, Garland led the team in touches with 77 per game, which was NINE more than Mitchell. He also led them in that same category in the postseason.

So, make that two coaches in J.B. Bickerstaff and Kenny Atkinson that put the ball in Garland’s hands often. Atkinson even went as far to say that Garland was the quarterback of the team’s offense and that they could not function without him, both true facts based off of last year. 

Garland also had arguably the best season of his career in 2024-25, from an efficiency and playmaking perspective. He had the keys to the offense and while he did have to share the burden with Mitchell, he is doing the same thing in LA with Kawhi Leonard. His touches have remained the same, and his usage is up a little. 

So I am not exactly sure how often Garland wants the ball in his hands to classify as “joyous.” It may be more accurate to say that injuries took his joy away in Cleveland and that would be true. Having to deal with a broken jaw that causes you to lose weight you never gained back and a nagging toe injury is not fun at all. No denying that.

At the same time though, he was given the ball, he was able to make the decisions, and he was able to be one of the primary guys on the court. That fact is indisputable. Yes, Mitchell also got his touches and usage, but it’s not like Garland had to stand in the corner and watch him work all game. 

I get that Garland may be salty that the Cavs traded him away for an aging Harden, but the fact is that the team doesn’t get to the conference finals if that trade isn’t made. They couldn’t deal with the Jekyll and Hyde act that is Garland’s health for a third consecutive postseason. It wasn’t supposed to end this way, but it was beneficial for both sides.

Jalen Brunson Picks, Predictions & Best Bets for Knicks vs Spurs Game 2 on June 5

Want to get more Covers content? Add us as a preferred source on your Google account here.

Jalen Brunson added to his legacy for the New York Knicks with a fantastic fourth quarter in the opening game of the NBA Finals, helping steal a road win from the San Antonio Spurs.

While Big Apple basketball fans start measuring for a Brunson-sized statue outside of Madison Square Garden, I’m pumping the breaks on the Jalen Brunson odds for Game 2.

Here are my best Knicks vs. Spurs predictions and NBA picks for New York's star point guard on June 5.

Jalen Brunson prop pick for Game 2

Jalen Brunson best bet: Jalen Brunson Under 25.5 points (-112 at bet365)

Taking the Under on star player props in big games is about as excruciating as waiting for your mechanic to diagnose that “creaky creaky” sound your car started making. You’re pretty sure it’s going to cost you money, but here I am... with good reason (and the van in the shop).

Brunson’s heroics in Game 1 make most forget that the San Antonio Spurs did a great job on the New York Knicks’ top scorer — at least for 36 minutes. Before scoring 13 of his 30 points on 5-for-9 shooting in the fourth quarter, Brunson was just 7-for-22 from the field and entered the final frame with 17 points.

San Antonio committed five of its 13 turnovers in the final frame, and Brunson manufactured four points of those miscues (finishing with eight total POTO). He also hit a dagger 3-pointer (going just 2-for-9 from distance) with under two minutes left, thanks to an offensive board from Mikal Bridges (Brunson finished with five second-chance points).

Cleaning up turnovers and the defensive glass will be a big focus for San Antonio tonight, as is keeping Brunson out of the paint (16 of his 30 points came inside the key). Expect Victor Wembanyama to stay closer to the rim tonight.

The Spurs will also be more selective with who guards Brunson, as he tormented most of their options. Stephon Castle spent the bulk of possessions checking him — with mixed results — while Dylan Harper and De’Aaron Fox had success in slowing him down.

Brunson’s knee isn’t on the injury report, but those soft tissue ailments hurt more in the days after. I expect San Antonio to test his mobility on both ends of the floor, with tighter on-ball pressure and screen action from San Antonio’s offense targeting the Knicks star.

Game 2 projections all sit short of 26 points for Brunson, with my number coming out just north of 24 points. That should have the Under 25.5 priced at -140 rather than -112.

There’s no quit in the Knicks, but if the Spurs do break away late and Brunson’s knee is wonky, Mike Brown could protect his superstar and be happy with a split in San Antonio.

Jalen Brunson same-game parlay

Under on Brunson points but Over on his 3-pointers. WTF? Before you screenshot and blast me on X, hear me out. HEAR ME OUT, DAMN IT!

San Antonio was doing a solid job pushing Brunson to the perimeter through three quarters, leaving him to go 1-for-8 from distance before the final frame. I expect those long-range looks to be there again in Game 2, especially considering the game script. 

Everything else is going to be tougher to come by. All the Game 2 models have Brunson coming up short of 26 points but list his 3-point makes right on the 2.5 O/U total. His nine 3PAs in Game 1 were Brunson's third-most shots from deep in the playoffs.

We’ve seen Brunson switch from go-to-scorer to playmaker when foes bring extra pressure. In the five games in which he failed to score at least 26 points, he’s dished out an average of 7.2 dimes (and played limited minutes in two of those due to blowouts). His projections for tonight bounce between 6.5 and 7+ assists.

Cash your ML bets quicker with bet365's early win payout

Take advantage of the early win payout at bet365, where any pre-game NBA moneyline bet gets paid out as a winner if your team goes up by 20+ points!

Bet Now  supimg src="https://images.covers.com/betting/sportsbooks/2/bet365.png?width=75&height=undefined" alt="bet365" width="125" height="36"/sup

Learn more about this feature, and all of bet365's offerings, with our comprehensive bet365 review.

21+. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER.

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Tigers vs. Mariners prediction: Odds, recent stats, trends, and best bets for June 5

The Tigers (25-38) open a three-game set at Comerica Park tonight against the Seatle Mariners (33-30).

 

Although their eight-game winning streak was snapped yesterday in an 8-1 loss to the Mets, Seattle has ascended to the top of the American League West over the course of the last week. Their bats have heated up to outscore their opponents by 23 runs over the last nine games. Detroit, meanwhile, continues to try and stay afloat without Tarik Skubal atop their rotation. The Tigers take the field tonight fresh off of a three-game sweep of the AL East-leading Tampa Bay Rays. Detroit scored 25 runs over the three games while allowing just 11 and only two over the past two games. Before you get too excited, though, that sweep followed three straight losses to the White Sox. Again, just trying to stay afloat.

 

The top of the order for Seattle has led the way offensively for Seattle with Julio Rodríguez and Randy Arozarena driving production. Rodríguez has been consistent for the majority of the season. He is 11-for-44 over his last 10 games with five home runs and 11 RBI. Arozarena has been right there with him. He has six homers and 26 RBI on the season. The Mariners as a team are hitting .286 over their last 10 games. Detroit has leaned on a handful of hot bats to generate offense. Rookie infielder Kevin McGonigle has been one of the team’s most productive hitters over the past 10 games, batting .371 with a .463 OBP, while Riley Greene is hitting .367 with a .986 OPS over that same stretch.

 

Tonight’s pitching matchup features right-hander Bryan Woo for Seattle against lefty Framber Valdez for Detroit. Woo takes the mound with a record of 5-3 and a 3.44 ERA along with a solid 0.96 WHIP. Valdez, on the other hand, has struggled to find consistency since signing as a free agent in Detroit this past offseason. The veteran brings a 2-4 record and 4.39 ERA to the bump tonight. At 1.32, his WHIP is less impressive than that of his counterpart tonight.

 

Lets dive into tonight’s matchup and find a sweat or two.

 

We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

 

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

 

Game Details and How to Watch: Tigers vs. Mariners

 

  • Date: Friday, June 5, 2026
  • Time: 6:40PM EST
  • Site: Comerica Park
  • City: Detroit, MI
  • Network/Streaming: MLB.TV, Mariners.TV, Tigers.TV

 

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

 

The Latest Odds: Tigers vs. Mariners

The latest odds as of Friday courtesy of DraftKings:

  • Moneyline: Detroit Tigers (+102), Seattle Mariners (-123)
  • Spread: Tigers +1.5 (-167), Mariners -1.5 (+138)
  • Total: 7.5 runs

 

Probable Starting Pitchers: Tigers vs. Mariners for June 5

  • Tigers: Framber Valdez
    Season Totals: 67.2 IP, 2-4, 4.39 ERA, 1.32 WHIP, 54K, 25 BB
  • Mariners: Bryan Woo
    Season Totals: 70.2 IP, 5-3, 3.44 ERA, 0.96 WHIP, 68K, 14 BB

Who’s Hot? Who’s Not! Tigers vs. Mariners

  • Dillon Dingler was 6-13 in the series against the Rays
  • Gleyber Torres was 4-9 in the series against the Rays
  • Spencer Torkelson was 2-10 in the series against the Rays
  • Josh Naylor was 1-7 in the series against the Mets
  • J.P. Crawford was 3-10 in the series against the Mets
  • Luke Raley was 0-11 in the series against the Mets

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

 

Top Betting Trends & Insights: Tigers vs. Mariners

 

  • The Tigers are 31-32 on the Run Line this season
  • The Mariners are 24-39 on the Run Line this season
  • The OVER has cashed 29 times in Seattle’s 63 games this season (29-32-2)
  • The OVER has cashed 27 times in Detroit’s 63 games this season (27-32-4)

 

Expert picks & predictions: Tigers vs. Mariners

Rotoworld Bet Best Bet

 

Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700.

 

Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

 

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

 

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for tonight’s game between the Tigers and the Mariners:

 

  • Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Mariners on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Mariners on the Run Line.
  • Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total OVER 7.5
  • Team Total: Rotoworld Bet is recommending a play on the Mariners Team Total OVER 3.5 runs

 

Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff:

  • Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
  • Drew Dinsick (@whale_capper)
  • Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports)
  • Trysta Krick (@Trysta_Krick)

Flyers bring back depth center coming off consecutive 20-goal seasons in AHL

Flyers bring back depth center coming off consecutive 20-goal seasons in AHL originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Flyers agreed to terms Friday on a one-year, two-way contract with depth forward Jacob Gaucher.

The deal is worth $850,000, according to PuckPedia.com. Gaucher was a restricted free agent; he’ll remain an RFA when his new contract expires next offseason.

The 25-year-old center has given the Flyers eight games over the last two seasons. In 8:05 minutes per game, he has gone scoreless with seven shots and a 54.1 faceoff win percentage.

Gaucher has made an impressive climb in the Flyers’ organization. He started his professional career with the team’s ECHL affiliate Reading in 2022-23.

With AHL affiliate Lehigh Valley, he has put up back-to-back 20-goal seasons.

Gaucher has some good bottom-six qualities with his 6-foot-4 frame and ability to win faceoffs. He can also play on the wing. He’ll once again be a call-up option for the Flyers next season if he doesn’t crack the opening roster.

Among the Flyers’ other restricted free agents this offseason, Trevor Zegras and Jamie Drysdale are the most notable that need to be re-signed. The club also needs to decide if it’ll bring back Samuel Ersson as its backup goaltender.

Jalen Brunson’s NBA Finals moment puts spotlight on his dad Rick

One of the NBA's best guards is finally getting his chance to showcase his skills on the biggest stage, as New York Knicks star Jalen Brunson is three victories away from leading his team to its first championship since 1973.

Brunson, who scored 30 points in the Game 1 victory against the San Antonio Spurs, is the son of Knicks assistant Rick Brunson, who played for eight teams in nine NBA seasons as a point guard. The elder Brunson played in 337 NBA games and averaged 3.2 points and 2.6 assists.

The Brunson family lived in New Jersey and settled in Illinois during Jalen's high school career.

Here is more to know about Rick Brunson:

Rick Brunson's college career

Brunson, whose given first name is Eric, played four seasons at Temple in Philadelphia, leading the team to the NCAA tournament each season. He averaged 12 points and 3.8 assists per game during his college career.

NBA career

After college, Brunson was not selected in the 1995 NBA draft. He was waived twice by the Orlando Magic and the Knicks before signing as a free agent with the Portland Trail Blazers in 1997. He joined the New York Knicks in 1999 and was on the roster of the team that reached the NBA Finals. Brunson also played for the Boston Celtics, Chicago Bulls, Toronto Raptors, Los Angeles Clippers, Seattle Supersonics, and Houston Rockets.

Longtime assistant coach

Brunson ended his playing career in 2006 and was hired as an assistant coach with the Denver Nuggets in 2007. He has coached on staffs as an assistant with the Chicago Bulls, Charlotte Bobcats, and Minnesota Timberwolves, and has been an assistant with the Knicks since 2022, the same year his son, Jalen, signed a four-year, $104 million free-agent contract with New York.

In 2018, Brunson resigned from the Timberwolves amid allegations of improper conduct toward women, with the team saying that they were "committed to creating a safe work environment for our employees, partners and fans and expect our staff to lead by example," and "did not believe Mr. Brunson’s conduct was consistent with those standards.”

In 2014, he was acquitted of attempted criminal sexual assault, criminal sexual abuse, aggravated battery, and domestic battery after a massage therapist, with whom he admitted to being in an extramarital relationship, accused him of grabbing her arm and trying to perform a sex act.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Who is Jalen Brunson’s dad? Rick Brunson’s NBA career, coaching path

Where does Victor Wembanyama rank among tallest players in NBA history?

At 7-foot-4, Victor Wembanyama of the San Antonio Spurs poses unexpectedly big problems.

Say, for instance, you are a fan who runs onto the court during Game 1 of the NBA Finals. Wembanyama, 22, is going to be too big for a selfie before security drags you way

Another sizable problem is, like, how to defend the guy. We suggest prayer, and double- and triple-teams.

Some of the smaller problems involving Wembanyama − how to spell his name. Carefully, is what we recommend as you work through all 10 letters. Although it’s relatively easy to spell his nicknames – “Wemby’’ or “The Alien.’’

LeBron James referred to Wembanyama as an “Alien’’ when Wembanyama was still a French phenom who the Spurs had yet to select with the No. 1 overall pick of the 2023 NBA Draft.

Because it’s not just that Wembanyama is tall. It’s what he can do at his height and with his impossibly long 96-inch wingspan. Block shots, of course. But also dribble and shoot 3s.

"Everybody's been a unicorn over the last few years, but he's more like an alien," James said. " ... No one has ever seen anyone as tall as he is, but as fluid and as graceful as he is on the floor."

Those skills, unlike Wembanyama, are almost immeasurable.

Wembanyama is viewed as the current tallest player in the NBA. Here's how he stacks up with the tallest players in NBA history:

Tallest players in NBA history

  • Manute Bol, 7-7
  • Gheorghe Muresan, 7-7
  • Shawn Bradley, 7-6
  • Tacko Fall, 7-6
  • Yao Ming, 7-6
  • Sim Bhullar, 7-5
  • Chuck Nevitt, 7-5
  • Pavel Podkolzin, 7-5
  • Slavko Vranes, 7-5
  • Mark Eaton, 7-4
  • Priest Lauderdale, 7-4
  • Boban Marjanovic, 7-4
  • Ralph Sampson, 7-4
  • Rik Smits, 7-4
  • Victor Wembanyama, 7-4

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Victor Wembanyama ranking among tallest players in NBA history

Zach Ehrhard’s best game of the season

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 24: Zach Ehrhard #99 of the Los Angeles Dodgers during a spring training game at Dodger Stadium on March 24, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Plenty of homers but not enough wins as both the Tower Buzzers and Loons got beaten at home.

Player of the day

For the first time this year, Zach Ehrhard recorded at least three runs and just as many RBI, courtesy of a couple of home runs that helped the Comets earn their 34th win of the season, narrowly beating the Express at home.

Ehrhard hadn’t gone deep in a game at home since the 12th of April, and he hadn’t hit two homers in the same game since June of last season, when he was still in Double-A for the Red Sox.

Triple-A Oklahoma City

Having already covered Zach Ehrhard’s key role in this 5-4 win for the Comets, the other two runs were driven in by a newcomer, Alek Thomas—playing only in his second game with the Triple-A club, Thomas was moved to the cleanup spot. Shoutout to James Tibbs III, who didn’t record a hit but displayed outstanding patience, walking in three of his four PA.

Despite allowing four runs in six innings, River Ryan kept his undefeated record, earning a third win, while the highlight was Evan Phillips securing a hold already in his first rehab outing. Phillips recorded a couple of outs on 17 pitches, walking one, allowing a hit, and recording a punchout. Seeing the big league bullpen falter in a loss to the D-backs on the same day, it certainly made plenty of people miss Phillips, a potential big-time return in the not too distant future.

Double-A Tulsa

Out-homering the opposition four to none, the Drillers ran into minimal trouble securing a late lead and beating the Sod Poodles 7-3. The double play partnership of Elijah Hainline and Zack Gelof each secured a pair of RBI, and Josue De Paula carried on his on-base streak with a two-run shot in the sixth, which isn’t getting a ton of attention because it’s nowhere near Mike Sirota’s streak of 44 straight reaching safely.

Homering four times, the Drillers managed to win this game even though they didn’t record a single hit with a runner in scoring position, finishing 0 for 13. Speaking of baserunners, starter Peyton Martin delivered a quality start despite allowing 11 baserunners in six innings.

High-A Great Lakes

The Taylor show overpowered the Loons on both sides of the ball. While starter Zane Taylor tossed 7.2 scoreless innings, in which the biggest threat was the occasional walk (four of them to be exact), outfielder Devin Taylor delivered a couple of RBIs that would’ve been enough by themselves in this eventual 4-1 win for the Lugnuts.

Designated hitter Nico Perez hit his third triple of the year, and the only extra-base hit for the Loons in this one. Those three triples are already more than what Perez had in his entire minor league career coming into this season.

Single-A Ontario

Let down by their pitching staff, the Tower Buzzers couldn’t hold on to a four-run lead after three—Ontario was beaten 9-7 by a Ports team that ran at will, finishing the game with six stolen bases without getting caught once. Three of those stolen bases belonged to first baseman Jared Sprague-Lott.

While it wasn’t enough for the win, Harlan secured three of Ontario’s seven RBI without leaving the yard. Joendry Vargas and Landyn Vidourek were the ones to homer for the sixth and third time this season, respectively.

For his outstanding work in May, Harlan was elected not only the Tower Buzzers’ but also the California League’s Player of the Month.

Transactions

Right-handed pitcher Evan Phillips began a rehab assignment with the OKC Comets. Shortstop Bryan Gonzalez Garcia was sent to Single-A while catcher Francisco Espinoza was placed on the 7-day injured list.

Thursday’s scores

  • Oklahoma City 5, Round Rock 4
  • Amarillo 3, Tulsa 7
  • Great Lakes 1, Lansing 4
  • Ontario 7, Stockton 9

Friday’s schedule

  • 4:05 p.m. PT: Great Lakes (Brooks Auger) vs. Lansing (Ryan Magdic)
  • 5:05 p.m. PT: Oklahoma City (TBD) vs. Round Rock (TBD)
  • 5:05 p.m. PT: Tulsa (Peter Heubeck) at Amarillo (Adonys Perez)
  • 6:35 p.m. PT: Ontario (TBD) vs. Stockton (Cole Miller)

Mets close out west coast schedule with three in San Diego

May 27, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; San Diego Padres player Fernando Tatis Jr. comes off the field during the sixth inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Petco Park. Mandatory Credit: Denis Poroy-Imagn Images | Denis Poroy-Imagn Images

The New York Mets (27-35) say goodbye to the West Coast time zone with one final three-game set in California, this time against the San Diego Padres (32-29). This will be the first meeting between the two clubs in 2026 after the Padres took four of six last year, including all three at Petco Park. Since 2015, the Mets have lost 20 of 34 games they’ve played at Petco Park, although they’ve played San Diego to a .500 clip (16-16) overall in that stretch.

The Mets entered the series having lost five straight at Seattle’s T-Mobile Park, while the Mariners entered on a six-game winning streak overall. All the ingredients were there for the Mets to have a bad time, and for the most part they did with losses in the first two games (3-2 on Monday in ten innings, 8-3 on Tuesday), but they salvaged the finale with an impressive 7-1 win on Wednesday to halt their Seattle losing streak and end the Mariners’ eight-game winning streak.

The offense was a real sore point in the first two games, with all five runs coming via the homer. In Game 1, they managed just two hits—a Marcus Semien solo homer and a Jared Young solo shot. On Tuesday, the lone positive was Carson Benge collecting the first two-homer game of his young career as he continues to impress since the start of May. New York, who managed just nine runs over their seven-game losing streak in Seattle—you may remember that the Mets were swept there in 2024 while scoring just one run across the three losses during their mid-August slump—erupted for seven runs in the lineup thanks to a balanced offensive attack that was led by Bo Bichette’s first four-hit game as a member of the team. It was one of the more complete efforts they’ve had in a while, with seven of the nine starters picking up at least one hit. In addition to Bichette’s great game, AJ Ewing picked up three hits, while Jared Young and Luis Torrens each contributed two hits in the victory.

It seems like every time Bichette hits a real rut, he puts together one big game to temporarily silence the doubters. Following an 0-for-16 stretch, the team’s (momentary) shortstop strung together four hits, scored a run, and drove in three. It was a nice reprieve, but he’s still been one of the biggest hindrances in the lineup. He remains in the two-hole despite the struggles, and it’s fair to wonder when it might be time to start moving him down, especially to give guys like Ewing (who has also struggled, to be fair) some more time near the top of the lineup. This could give a young kid with speed some opportunities to create more runs for the club, but it remains to be seen if anything changes with the lineup.

Semien, who homered again in the first game, has been red hot as of late, even after coming off an 0-for-5 in the win. The biggest strength in his game so far has been his ability to drive in runs, as his numbers with runners in scoring position have been better than most of his teammates. With men in scoring position, Semien is slashing .340/.379/.420 with a 127 wRC+ in 50 at-bats this season. Comparatively, he’s hitting just .181/.235/.268 with a 45 wRC+ with nobody on base. At the very least, Semien is capitalizing when presented with an opportunity to contribute, even if his overall numbers are not good for the year. Since the start of the weekend series against the Marlins, he’s hitting .286/.348/.619 with two homers and a 171 wRC+ in the six games. Hey, it’s progress?

One player who has made very little progress as of late is Mark Vientos, who is putting together another poor showing after a great 2024 campaign, which has proven to be an outlier in an otherwise unimpressive major league career. On the year, Vientos is hitting .219/.254/.380 with a 78 wRC+ and a -0.6 fWAR in 53 games. Overall, he has been one of the least productive players in the sport, as his fWAR is ahead of only Marcell Ozuna in terms of qualified hitters in 2026. With Jorge Polanco on the rehab trail and set to resume first base duties if all goes well, Vientos’ spot on the roster could soon be in doubt. Beyond his inability to hit, he is also very slow and does not play any position well on the field. For more on Vientos’ shortcomings, I would direct you to Lukas Vlahos’ tremendous and comprehensive piece.

As one final aside, this will be the final time this season that the Mets have to play on Pacific Coast Time. In fact, the team does not go beyond the Central Time Zone again in 2026, and won’t unless they make a miraculous run to the postseason. It’s been a grueling and confusing schedule for New York, who had a six-game swing in St. Louis and San Francisco immediately after their opening weekend series, then returned home for six before heading straight out to Los Angeles and Chicago. Following a nine-game home stand, they again went out west for nine with Los Angeles (of Anaheim), Colorado, and Arizona. Following some recent travels within their division, they again embarked out west for Seattle and San Diego. I can only speculate as to what the schedule-makers were thinking here, but whatever it was, it wasn’t smart! It’s no excuse for the team’s poor play, but the constant ping ponging across the country has done little to help their efforts when most other teams have made no more than two west coast trips so far in 2026. On the bright side, this means they should, theoretically be more well-rested for the “stretch run”, should they not be too far out of it.

Whereas the Mets played a team in Seattle that was on a winning streak, they find San Diego on a downward trajectory as they enter the series on a five-game losing streak. After losing their last two games in May to the Nationals, they started June by getting swept in a three-game series against the Phillies. San Diego has now dropped into a second-place tie with the Diamondbacks in the National League West, 7 1/2 games behind the first-place Dodgers. They also find themselves out of the playoff picture, a half-game back of the third NL Wild Card spot.

San Diego, as an offense, is not performing all that much better than the Mets have been this season. In fact, both lineups enter play today with an 87 wRC+, though the Mets have scored 16 more runs (251) than the Padres (235). The Padres, to date, have scored the fewest runs as a team in all of baseball.

Much of that is due to the underperformance of the team’s core of stars, headlined by Fernando Tatis Jr. He enters this series hitting .270/.340/.323 with just one home run and a 94 wRC+ in a team-high 60 games, though he leads the club with a 1.1 fWAR. Then there’s Manny Machado, who is really struggling, hitting just .174/.262/.357 with a team-low 76 wRC+ among qualified hitters. This is all despite leading the team with 11 home runs, 29 runs scored, and 34 runs batted in. The team also recently DFA’ed Nick Castellanos, who was dead last on the club with a -0.8 fWAR and had a 53 wRC+ before being jettisoned off the roster. On a positive note, Ty France has had a solid season in San Diego, slashing .286/.328/.527 with a team-high 141 wRC+ and a 1.0 fWAR in 41 games.

Their pitching hasn’t been doing all that much better. Their rotation has a 4.55 ERA and a 4.44 FIP ( both 22nd in MLB). Just about the one area they excel at is relief, so if they have a lead late, it’ll be hard to come back. Their bullpen enters action with a 3.18 ERA, which is fourth best in baseball. This is mostly due to Mason Miller’s incredible performance this year, as the closer sports a sparkling 0.72 ERA with 17 saves and 49 strikeouts in 25 innings. Earlier this year, he had a 34 2/3 inning scoreless streak, the eighth-longest scoreless streak for a reliever since 1961.

Friday, June 5: Christian Scott vs. Michael King, 9:40 PM EDT on WPIX

Scott (2026): 30.1 IP, 38 K, 16 BB, 1 HR, 2.97 ERA, 3.10 FIP, 75 ERA-

It was a long time coming, but Scott finally earned his first major league victory in his 16th major league start. Scott was solid once again in his victorious effort, matching his season high with eight strikeouts while walking two and allowing one earned run on five hits over his five innings. Scott has been really strong in his last two starts, allowing just the one run over 10 2/3 innings, but both came against an offensively-challenged Marlins team, and the Padres will present a bigger challenge for the right-hander.

King (2026): 68.0 IP, 65 K, 29 BB, 6 HR, 3.18 ERA, 3.83 FIP, 81 ERA-

King’s numbers overall on the season are quite strong—among qualified National League starters, he’s 12th in ERA, 13th in HR/9 (0.79), 16th in K% (23.8%), 17th in bWAR (1.1), and 18th in FIP. However, his last two starts have not been good, with both resulting in losses. His last time out, he allowed five earned runs on five hits over six innings against the Nationals, a start that saw him walk one and strike out a season-low two batters. Prior to that, he allowed four earned runs on five hits in a season-low 3 2/3 innings against the Athletics. In that outing, he matched a season high by walking four batters and struck out four. Walks have been an issue for King, who has the second-worst BB% (10.6%) among qualified NL starters, trailing only Robbie Ray of the Giants.

Saturday, June 6: Nolan McLean vs. Griffin Canning, 10:10 PM EDT on SNY

McLean (2026): 66.1 IP, 77 K, 24 BB, 8 HR, 4.21 ERA, 3.79 FIP, 107 ERA-

McLean’s last start was encouraging, in so far as he didn’t give up seven-plus runs. However, there were still some reasons for concern. He allowed just one earned run on two hits over five innings, with the one run representing the fewest he’s given up in a start since May 8. The issue is that he walked a season-high five batters and only struck out two, which is decidedly not what you want from your budding ace. The positive that he was able to limit the damage, but he was constantly battling traffic and throwing stressful pitches. McLean remains a work in progress but is still one of their better options.

Canning (2026): 27.2 IP, 27 K, 15 BB, 6 HR, 7.16 ERA, 5.59 FIP, 183 ERA-

Canning has had a rough year in San Diego after performing relatively well with the Mets last year before suffering an Achilles injury that prematurely ended his time in New York. He’s yet to win a game while picking up four losses in his six games since debuting on May 3 for the Padres. His best outing was his season debut, as he limited the White Sox to one earned run on three hits while striking out a season-best seven. Since then, he’s allowed at least three earned runs in each of his five starts, including back-to-back outings in which he was tagged for six earned runs. He’s given up 28 hits and been charged with 22 earned runs in 27 2/3 innings while walking 15 and striking out 27. His last time out, he lost to the Nationals while giving up three earned runs on six hits over five innings.

Sunday, June 7: TBD (Likely Sean Manaea) vs. Randy Vásquez, 4:10 PM EDT on SNY

Manaea (2026): 39.0 IP, 42 K, 16 BB, 4 HR, 5.08 ERA, 3.82 FIP, 129 ERA-

The Mets have not announced Sunday’s starter, which will likely be an opener with Sean Manaea taking on the bulk of the work in the middle innings. This worked well for the left-hander and the Mets his last time out, as he enjoyed more success than he has in any single outing this year. Manaea, who did not factor in the decision, allowed just one earned run on one hits, with one walk and four strikeouts. Aside from a solo homer, he was fairly spotless. The five innings also represents a season high.

Vásquez (2026): 65.1 IP, 50 K, 18 BB, 9 HR, 3.31 ERA, 4.32 FIP, 84 ERA-

Vásquez has been enjoying his best numbers since joining San Diego in 2023 as part of the Juan Soto trade. He’s had some mixed results, especially to end May, when he allowed seven earned runs on 14 hits over his final tow starts to the Dodgers and the Phillies, both resulting in losses. He rebounded his last time out to limit Philadelphia to two earned runs on five hits over five innings, though he did not factor in the decision in an eventual loss. He does have one start in which he shut out the Rockies for seven innings, and another where he shut out the Mariners over six frames. Arguably his best start of the year was his debut outing on March 28, when he scattered two hits over six shutout innings against the Tigers, a start that also saw him punch out a season-high eight hitters.

A Brief Flames Stint Is Keeping Jagr's Wild Stanley Cup Final Teammate Streak Alive

There are hockey legends in professional hockey, and then there's Jaromir Jagr.

As the NHL's second all-time leading scorer with 1,921 points, his career totals could have been higher if he had not lived through several NHL lockouts and had not spent a few seasons in the KHL.

Despite not skating in the league since the 2017-18 season, Jagr, who continues to play professionally in his native Czechia at 54, remains connected to the Stanley Cup Final through one of hockey's most bizarre streaks.

A former teammate of Jagr's has appeared in every Stanley Cup Final since 1980.

For those unaware of this wild statistic, Jagr played for the Pittsburgh Penguins, New York Rangers, Washington Capitals, Philadelphia Flyers, Dallas Stars, Boston Bruins, New Jersey Devils, Florida Panthers, and Calgary Flames. After 36 seasons of professional hockey, Jagr laced his skates with hundreds of teammates. 

A few years ago, fans discovered the streak and have tracked it ever since, checking in every June to see whether another former teammate will keep Jagr's streak alive.

Which Former Flames Are Playing in the Stanley Cup Final?Which Former Flames Are Playing in the Stanley Cup Final?The 2026 Stanley Cup Final is upon us, which means fans of the Calgary Flames still have former players to cheer for. Who are they?

This year, because Jagr skated 22 games with the Flames during the 2017-18 season, he teamed with Rasmus Andersson (Vegas Golden Knights) and Mark Jankowski (Carolina Hurricanes), including setting up the latter's first NHL goal. Today, those two are facing off against one another in the Final, pushing Jagr's impossible streak to 46 seasons.

Here's a look at some of the teammates who played in the Stanley Cup Final since 1980 and played with Jagr at some point in their careers.

* Indicates that Jagr won a Stanley Cup with this teammate. 


The 2027 Stanley Cup Final is still a year away, but fans will be scanning rosters on Opening Night to see which of Jagr's former teammates are still active, hoping this strange streak will be extended for another year.

Knicks Bulletin: ‘You never know what’s going to happen’

SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS - JUNE 03: Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks reacts during the fourth quarter against the San Antonio Spurs in Game One of the 2026 NBA Finals at Frost Bank Center on June 03, 2026 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. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

You wake up one morning and all of a sudden the Knicks have won 12 consecutive games…

… the latest of them, Game 1 of the freaking NBA Finals.

Here’s more Bulletin material than I’ve ever put together in a single piece. Enjoy while patiently waiting for tip-off later today.

Mike Brown

On Knicks fans taking over in San Antonio:

“Our fans have been fantastic. They have been fantastic on the road, and to see them around San Antonio, to hear them in the arena…“

On telling the offense to adapt to Wembanyama’s positioning on defense:

“We are trying to keep it as simple for our guys as possible. And they have to take advantage of where Wemby is because he’s just so impactful defensively.”

On the team’s resilience late in games:

“These guys are resilient, man. They get better as the game goes along. They really try to pay attention to the details that we are throwing at them. They try to bring energy and multiple efforts while being physical without sending them to the free throw line. And then, they know we’ve got to play fast. You’re playing against good teams now, and you can’t go against a set defense all the time. We’re down double digits tonight, and we were also down double digits Game 1 against Cleveland, and for our guys just to stay with it is huge because anything can happen in a 48-minute game as long as you stay the course.”

On Brunson fighting through injuries in Game 1:

“I’m too emotional when I get caught up in injuries, so when he got hurt and he went out, [I said], ‘Jose, let’s go.’ And I was about to throw Tyler Kolek in the game, too. Jalen came back, tough as nails, and to me he didn’t seem like he had any effect afterwards. I haven’t talked to our medical people. He didn’t look like it was bothering him down the stretch, and so I think he’s OK.”

On Jose Alvarado stabilizing the team:

“He was huge. We talked about it during our film session. I pointed it out before we got started. When Jalen went out the game, he came in, and he kind of stabilized us because we were floundering a little bit. He got us into our offense. He was really, really good defensively. He’s always into the game. He’s always present. So for him to be able to come and hold down the fort the way that he did was much needed.”

On Josh Hart’s Game 1 impact:

“When you look at what he shot from the field, you wouldn’t think that he was probably the most impactful guy on the game. He was huge. He helped us with our pace. … He guarded a lot of different guys. … He rebounded the basketball. He was great on the weak side defensively. He impacted the game in so many different ways for us.”

On Mitchell Robinson’s Game 1 effectiveness despite his injury:

“He caught a lob. He was still a vertical threat. If you don’t pull in to tag him, it’s a dunk, and when he rolls like he rolls and creates that weak side to pull in, our guys have to spray the basketball. And then defensively, I thought he was pretty good, defensively, as well, trying to rebound, keeping those guys off the glass.”

On Karl-Anthony Towns’ defensive presence against Victor Wembanyama:

“KAT has been really present with everything that we’re doing. When you’re present, you give yourself a chance to really lock into the small details that are in front of you. He’s done that at a really high rate. Last night he was really good in transition defensively. Probably one of the best he’s been all season. The coverages, he was really good. Wemby, man, obviously iconic player, you’re not going to stop him, you hope he misses. You got to throw different people, different coverages at him. You got to try not to send him to the free-throw line. We sent him to the free-throw line 13 times, but KAT himself did a pretty decent job of trying to lead with his chest while being physical. Again, I think it’s all due to him wanting to do whatever he can to help the team while being present.”

On challenging Towns and the team defensively:

“I had to challenge everybody, not just him. I challenged everybody, probably individually, a handful of times, and the team. KAT is smart. He’s got a good feel. He’s got better feet than what you think. He’s long. He’s long and he’s strong. Those combinations bode well for a guy defensively. It’s just about embracing it and staying present while understanding what the small details of your job should be.”

On staying focused on the task at hand during the Finals:

“We have to keep taking it one game at a time and stay present and see what happens.”

Karl-Anthony Towns

On not feeling comfortable being up in the Finals:

“I don’t think of anything like that, the 1-1, 2-0. I just think it’s 0-0. The next game is the most important game of the year, so just continue to stay in the present, not worry about what the future may look like, not worry about what we’ve done in the past. Just cancel all that out and just worry about the present. [Friday] when we step on the court should be the same determination, desperation, energy level and physicality needed for a win.”

On New York City’s vibes through the Finals run:

“It’s something in the city. You feel that energy in the city; the grit, the grind, the hard work you’ve got to put in to make in the city. I think we reflect all our fans and lifestyles and what it takes to make it in New York City when we step on the court with a Knicks jersey.”

On embracing his defensive role:

“I just want to impact winning. Whatever the team needs me to do to impact winning and to help us get over the hump and get that win on that night, I’m willing to do. Last night was a night where a lot of things happened. Jalen got hurt, changed my role. Jalen came back, I had to change my role again. Throughout the game, you’re changing your role three, four times. But whatever my role is, I’ve got to be the best at it and impact winning. I thought last night I did a good job of whatever my role was called to be, and I wanted to be a star in that role.”

On Brunson’s clutch shot and injury scare:

“With the ball in his hands, I’m never surprised. I tell you, that last shot, I think it was a shoot floater, that was nasty. I ain’t going to lie. When we all saw him limp off, we were worried not only because he’s Jalen Brunson but more because he’s our brother, and we are a family in our locker room. We want to — [we were] just worried about his health. But when we were on the court, and I saw him walking back out to the bench, it was a relief feeling just to know he’s safe. That was really at the end of the day all we care about is his safety.”

Jalen Brunson

On Knicks fans in San Antonio:

“Our fans, they’re amazing – my family and I, we’ve felt the love since day one. They’ve been nothing but supportive. I would not take them for granted.”

On Josh Hart’s energy:

“His energy is relentless; it doesn’t stop – he eats candy all the time. He’s a big kid with an absurd amount of energy.”

On the Knicks chemistry:

“It’s all about coming together and figuring out what we have to do to be better. The chemistry that we have is still continuing to grow and that allows us to play better.”

On trusting his instincts in crunch time:

“You never know what’s going to happen. Plays are going to happen, and you can’t really script what’s really going to go on.”

On pulling off another monster comeback in Game 1:

“It’s a position we obviously don’t want to be in, but it’s always a next-play mentality. We have to control the things that we can control and our team is going to go on runs. Things are going to happen, and somehow we bounce back. We continue to find a way and just kind of keep chipping away. We knew one play was not going to bring us all the way back but we just kept chipping away.”

Mikal Bridges

On the mindset heading into Game 2:

“We got to be better, and I know we will be in Game 2. Our biggest game is our next game because it’s our next game. That’s how we look at it. It’s always just 1-0 if you win. After that game, it’s back to 0-0. I don’t know if we look at it eight straight, nine straight, seven straight [wins], whatever it is. We look at it, win this game, after that it’s 0-0, learn what you got to do better for the next game.”

On responding to adversity after falling behind big in Game 1:

“You don’t want to play from behind, but I think it’s just when adversity hits, who are you going to be? I think when adversity hits, we’re a tough team mentally and physically. So just keep staying the course and just keep fighting no matter what.”

On Towns’ growth with the Knicks:

“He’s been unbelievable.”

On Brunson’s toughness:

“He’s got that mental toughness and he’s going to fight no matter what.”

On his early days at Villanova with Josh Hart:

“He was a bully when I first got to campus. I had nothing wrong with him. He didn’t like me at the beginning. There might have been a little fear of a 6-foot-6 lanky kid who was looking pretty solid. I think he had a little fear factor.”

OG Anunoby

On Jalen Brunson’s confidence:

“Jalen, whoever he plays against, he’s a great player. No matter who he plays against, he always has the same confidence in himself.”

On the Knicks’ defensive approach to dealing with the Spurs:

“We just tried to be physical. We don’t want people to be comfortable.”

On shooting the minute he find any space:

“Whenever I feel I have any space, I’m always ready to shoot. Just like any other.”

Mitchell Robinson

On playing in the NBA Finals:

“This is what we play for – I’ve been here 8 years”

On Brunson’s clutch moments:

“We’ve seen it numerous times, we get hype – when he starts doing that, we cheer him on”

On what to expect from the Spurs in Game 2:

“A desperate team”

Josh Hart

On what fuels his energy:

“Humility and a willingness to sacrifice…I found it with prayer and my faith. When you have a group of guys that have that, that breeds a championship culture.”

On Brunson’s fan interaction:

“I didn’t really see it… He’s always pretty calm, composed. I’m sure the fan said something crazy to get him going.”

On Jose Alvarado’s journey and presence:

“Willing to work, had a chip on his shoulder… On the bench, he’s up, he’s talking. You have the ultimate confidence in someone like that.”

On Brunson being underrated:

“He’s still underrated in the league. He keeps proving people wrong.”

On forcing Wembanyama to contest shots to open gaps inside:

“The biggest thing, you want to get shots up. It doesn’t matter what shot you get up, just get it on the rim. With Wemby contesting it, now he’s out of the play and someone like (Mitchell Robinson) is down there by themselves.”

On sacrificing in the Finals spotlight:

“It takes humility and just a willingness to sacrifice. We’re in the NBA Finals. There’s millions of people watching. It’s easy to get wrapped up in human nature of wanting to get recognition, wanting to score the ball, wanting to show people what you can do on the biggest stage. That’s not everyone’s calling and not everyone’s assignment. I know for me, that’s not really my assignment. … When you have a group of guys that have that willingness to sacrifice and that humility, that breeds a championship culture.”

On the Nova Knicks brotherhood:

“It’s something that is surreal. Whenever you’re in college and in that locker room, you know the goal is the NBA. You know the percent chance of you all being on the same team is slim, if not none. It’s something you talk about and dream about, but you know the reality is almost impossible. The fact that it actually came to fruition is super cool because I know the time that these guys put in and I know where their hearts are. We already share a bond and (are) brothers for life, and this is just another step. Obviously, this isn’t the ultimate goal, but you just keep adding memories. These are memories that we’ll have for a lifetime.”

Jordan Clarkson

On Rick Brunson’s message during Game 1:

“[He said] just leave the refs alone, focus on what we’ve gotta get done, and that’s what we can control. Those are uncontrollable situations that we’re in. We just wanna come in here, keep continuing to put our will in the game and stay locked-in.”

Landry Shamet

On fighting back from deficits:

“We’ve put ourselves in situations where we’ve got to fight back from a deficit, and we did that, and we chipped away. We started focusing on ourselves and doing the right things. And slowly but surely, that led to us cutting the deficit and ultimately getting the win. [The Spurs] played great through the majority of the game and put us in a tough spot, but you know, we found the resolve to figure it out late. So that’s encouraging but we’ve got to clean some stuff up.”

On Knicks fans traveling in the postseason:

“Knicks fans have shown throughout the regular season and obviously in the playoffs that they are willing to travel, and it definitely shows up, makes a difference. We notice it.”

Jose Alvarado

On seeing Brunson head to the locker room in Game 1 and stepping up in his absence:

“(My first thought is) He better come back. My second thought is, this is what I do. I wasn’t scared of the moment. This is something I live for, and I just want to take advantage of it and do what the team needs.”

On challenging Victor Wembanyama one-on-one:

“I don’t fear nobody. He’s a great player, he’s going to block shots regardless of what you do. That one went my way.”

Miles McBride

On Brunson’s playoff focus:

“Every year he continues to be more locked in”

On trying to pull Wembanyama out of the paint:

“If you’re able to pull him out of the paint, you have to take advantage.”

On staying focused in a hostile road environment:

“Honestly, [he said] we’ve just gotta stay solid. We can’t let that get in the way of what we’re trying to accomplish. We’re in a hostile environment, and there’s a human aspect to it all, so we’ve just gotta stay solid and play our game.”

On locking in when trailing:

“I’d say you start keying-in on details that got you put in that hole. And usually for us, it’s never been about an Xs and Os thing. It’s about getting to the loose balls, getting to an offensive rebound here or on the other end cutting with force and playing off the ball a little bit more and getting guys involved. So it’s things like that.”

On Mike Brown’s approach to the Knicks’ second unit:

“Opportunity was the main thing. He’s putting a lot of guys in different spots and he’s just allowing us to be us. We can play at a high level. I feel like a lot of guys can be starters at different places. We’re all happy here, we’re happy to impact the game at such a high level.”

Mitch Johnson

On adapting to the Knicks’ schemes within a long series:

“We’ve been consistent in that regard. I think one thing we have learned in our three series is that series are long. Games are long. Things shift quickly, whether that’s health, who’s playing well or hot, quote/unquote, at the time. Teams at this stage typically have shown the ability to evolve on the fly and improve within a series. That’s how you see these series go back and forth, and these teams make great adjustments and take advantage of those.”

Victor Wembanyama

On losing Game 1 and the team’s mindset:

“Really, I think the reason we lost that game isn’t even technical. It’s not even technical, tactical. We need to approach the game with a better mental state. We just need to play our game. We just need to be normal. We don’t need to do anything incredible.”

On the Spurs’ resilience:

“It’s very reassuring. We know we’re not here by chance. We’ve been through some weird situations. Yes, it’s reassuring to know that these guys, the 18 guys we got, are built this way, are resilient.”

Stephon Castle

On not overreacting to Game 1:

“I think Vic said it best. I don’t think we have anything to be too worried about. Obviously, we feel like we’re the better team. We didn’t play well, still had a chance to win, so… If we take one thing from that, just going back to being ourselves, focusing on the right things.”

On settling into another playoff series they already trail:

“We’ve been down in a series before. I think Coach Mitch (Johnson) said it best. Really all playoffs, it’s taken us more than a half to get settled into the game. Yeah, just trying to be ourselves.”

On isolation and shot selection issues through Game 1:

“It could have been that. I think, for the most part, we didn’t make the extra pass as much as we usually do. We settled a lot more than we usually do. I think coach preaches a lot: try and find better each possession, try and find the best shot. I think we got satisfied with, probably, a decent look, knowing that we can make those kind of shots. I think we got satisfied with that a lot more than we usually do throughout the year. I think it cost us.”

On still having a chance late to beat the Knicks:

“Even playing like that, not playing the way we wanted to, we still had a chance to win.”

Larry Brown

On recruiting Jalen Brunson in high school:

“I recruited Jalen in high school when I was coaching SMU and watched him play in high school. I watched him take a mediocre high school team and win the state championship. So you can’t measure what that kid is about. You can say the same in a lot of ways with Chauncey. When he was young, he was super athletic. But as he got older, he was super smart. He figured it out.”

On Karl-Anthony Towns’ defensive growth:

“Towns, I thought, is maybe not the defender that can carry you to a championship. But he has really, really sacrificed and tried to guard. And I think that’s been one of the keys. … A lot of teams went after Towns and during this stretch I think he’s made unbelievable sacrifices to try to guard, try to rebound, try to do the right thing. And that has been really important.”

Ashley Howard

On Josh Hart’s competitiveness at Villanova:

“The Josh Hart you guys see now, he was that from Day 1. He was fierce, tough, nasty and a competitor. Lo and behold, what ends up happening is that you get a Mikal Bridges who is a young freshman and was committed the whole year to improving his body, doing skill work and watching film. His game day was practice. His game day was against Josh Hart, this dude who we all knew was the toughest and nastiest on the floor. He made Mikal better.”

Mike Nardi

On Hart and Bridges competing in practice:

“Any time Josh got his shot blocked and there was a change of possession, the next time Mikal got the ball, whether it was on the break or chasing him down or within the half court, it was like big brother versus little brother. Josh tried to send a message. We all believe that helped lead to Mikal becoming who he is. They were competing every single day.”

Walt Frazier

On counting Brunson out early in Game 1:

“He had his poor shooting and he was hobbling around, went to the locker room. I counted him out, man. I thought, ‘He’s not coming back.’ And all of a sudden he got a second wind. That’s why he’s the reigning Mr. Clutch. And that’s why this team is where they are.”

On Brunson fighting through pain:

“Jalen kept struggling through it, and you could see he was hurting. Kudos to the coach for keeping him out there and thinking Jalen can still get it back. I just think it’s a season of destiny for them now. Everything is falling into place.”

Charlie Ward

On teasing big-head Brunson as a child:

“Larry used to talk about Jalen’s head being bigger than his body and used to mess with Rick about that all the time. Jalen was small back then.”

Larry Johnson

On waiting for this Knicks moment:

“I’ve just been waiting because we were bad for a long time. Instead of coming to the Knicks, Kevin Durant went to Brooklyn. And of course, LeBron [James] did his little thing [opting for Miami in 2010]. It was a while to get stars to come here. Amar’e [Stoudemire came to the Knicks], and then we got [Carmelo Anthony]. But I don’t think we were ever [close] to winning the chip. I’m thinking the time is now, even if they lose this Finals, they’re still on the verge of winning the chip. It’s been fun watching these guys and most of us, especially that ’99 season, remember little Jalen [Brunson] running around.”

On his initial skepticism about the Knicks’ coaching change:

“I was a little skeptical because I’m a big time Thibodeau fan. I don’t know if anybody can deny what they’re doing now. [But] if they win this championship, it’s somewhat similar to that Golden State era. [Former Warriors head coach] Mark Jackson built that foundation and then Steve Kerr took it over.”

Patrick Ewing

On the 1999 Finals loss:

“That definitely hurt. It hurt me more than the [1994 Finals] loss to [the Houston Rockets] – the fact that I was not able to play.”

On the city’s reaction to a potential 2026 title:

“You see the way the city is reacting right now. They might burn the city down.”

On Jalen Brunson’s makeup:

“He has thick skin. To be a star in New York, you can’t let the pressure bother you. You got to block out the noise. Everything comes in circles. We waited our turn. We tried to do different things to get our guys back to this point [by chasing stars in the past]. But I thought when they brought Jalen onto the team, he is New York basketball through the way that he carries himself, the way that he performs.”

On watching Brunson grow up:

“I look at pictures of [Jalen] and my daughters when he was little, them carrying him around on their backs. And now he’s carrying the team. The rest of the guys are doing their part, carrying the whole city on their backs.”

On Brunson’s legacy and rooting for him:

“This is a kid that I’ve known since he was 2. I played with his dad. I want him and the team to be as successful as they can be. I’m not worrying about who is the greatest Knick of all time. I’m just enjoying the ride. Now I can sit back and enjoy the show, whereas back then I was focused on trying to get the job done. Hopefully, these guys will be able to do it.”

Spike Lee

On New York City’s energy around the Finals:

“New York City is on fire, no pun intended. It’s amazing. People are smiling, talking to strangers, wearing orange and blue – what sports can do. We’ve got a squad, we’ve got a coach, and basketball is New York City’s game.”

Isiah Thomas

On Brunson being capable of winning a title:

“Jalen is absolutely good enough to win it all. As small players, we tend to get overlooked even though we’re always beating bigger players. In people’s minds there seems to be some height and weight requirement to win a championship. Jalen won (an Illinois) state title in high school. He won two national titles in college, and now he’s in the NBA Finals. He’s just a winner. People say, ‘Well, Jalen’s not as good as this one or that one,’ but when you put him between the lines with those guys, his teams win and those guys’ teams lose. What the hell are we doubting Jalen for? People say he doesn’t have the height or body type, but he beats all the people who do have those things.”

On Brunson’s skill set against Wembanyama:

“But nobody in my lifetime ever had to face a person like Jalen has to face in Wemby. Wemby is such a unique talent that the entire basketball community is trying to figure out what his weaknesses are. With big shot blockers, you have to shoot it earlier, shoot it before they get there, and shoot it higher. Jalen can do that against Wemby because he can play and score from anywhere. He’s got the footwork and he can play inside, mid-range, from the 3-point line. Jalen has got it all. He’s the total package, and he can neutralize people who are bigger than him.”

Kendrick Perkins

On the Spurs’ problem against the Knicks:

“Imma tell the Spurs fans this, y’all got a problem…y’all have a serious problem. The Defensive Player of the Year got exposed last night. Imma say this. Yes, Towns played the best defensive game of his life last night, but offensively, he showed the world that Wemby can’t guard him. He is a matchup problem for the Spurs. The way his ability to stretch the floor, and then he showed his versatility by his ability to put the ball on the floor and get to the basket. He was going through Wemby’s chest. He wasn’t shying away from physicality. And when they decided to put a smaller player on him, guess what the Knicks did? They searched him out. Here we go, go to you. And when Wemby came to double, he was dropping no-looks, he was dropping passes, he was finding shooters.”

Paul Pierce

On the Knicks being under more pressure to win the Finals:

“Who is under the most pressure to perform in the finals? It is clearly the Knicks. They haven’t won a championship in 50-plus years. They haven’t been to the finals in over 26 years. The mecca of basketball is New York. Do you see what the streets look like? When I tell you the weight of the world is on [the] New York Knicks backs.”

Kevin Garnett

On Wembanyama being too emotional after just winning the WCF:

“He’s crying in the motherf–ing Western Conference finals. That was too emotional for me. He got four more games to try to get. You gotta go through the Finals now. You still gotta be even-keeled right here.”

Stephen A. Smith

On taking credit for the Knicks’ Finals run:

“I deserve some credit, so I’m gonna take it… when I called the Knicks out, I almost had a stroke. You understand, on national television. They didn’t lose since.”

Jeremy Lin

On the Spurs’ late-game plan:

“The focus for sure is the second half where they were minus-17, but specifically even in the fourth quarter, I didn’t love the late-game offensive game plan. It was too much Wemby ISO. It just seemed like everything was difficult, everything was hard, everything was contested.”

On the need for the Spurs to create better looks for Wembanyama:

“Can we get him in more spontaneous, impulsive actions? Can we get him in some pin-downs? Can he set more screens? Can guards come set screens for him? It felt like every time down the floor they were giving him the ball, and KAT [Karl-Anthony Towns] was doing a great job of playing defense, and Wemby was tired. So how are they able to create different actions so that the Knicks aren’t seeing the same thing every single time?”

On the Spurs’ bench production:

“Another piece that’s really important is Keldon Johnson, who played only eight minutes—Sixth Man of the Year—a lot of minutes went to Harrison Barnes. I’m not sure what’s happening there, but there is going to be a different level of production that needs to be had from other players stepping in. Dylan Harper obviously had an amazing game, but we need Keldon Johnson.”

Shaquille O’Neal

On Wembanyama’s need to adjust:

“You’ve got to do a better job of making adjustments. Yeah, San Antonio definitely has to. Coach said we’ve got to get Victor the ball a little bit more inside. And for Victor, he’s got to play better. The way he played, 6-for-21 is not going to get it done. Ten threes is not going to get it done. You have to make some mental adjustments.”

On Brunson exceeding expectations:

“They did it by effort, a lot of guys played well. Shoutout to Hart – 15 rebounds. KAT played well with 18 [points]… Brunson had his moment in the third quarter where he took over. I admit before the game, Game 1 is always a feel-out game. I was anxious to see how he was going to do against those tough four defenders – he just showed me, Kenny and Chuck that he’s ready for the lights. He’s ready for the big lights.”

On the Knicks winning by committee:

“Third quarter and fourth quarter he carried a little bit but the others for the Knicks definitely stepped it up. Again, shoutout to Hart with 15 rebounds, Shamet hit some timely threes first half. They all played well. Alvarado. They did it by committee and that’s how you win championships, by committee.”

Adam Silver

On Donald Trump attending Game 3:

“I’d say the President, of course, is welcome to attend Game 3. And this President, Donald Trump, before he ever ran for office, he was a big Knicks fan.”

On using sports as common ground:

“I think sports, in particular, is something where we can emphasize what we have in common, not what pulls us apart, that it creates a sense of belonging. We’re seeing that in New York, and I think President Trump is very much a New Yorker, and I’m thrilled that yet another New Yorker wants to participate in the enthusiasm and the joy around this Knicks team.”

On the failed peace efforts between Charles Oakley and James Dolan:

“It is a shame in that I tried, Michael Jordan tried, too, as you said, to broker peace between Charles and Jim Dolan. Our efforts were unsuccessful. I think it’s unfortunate for the NBA that this is an ongoing situation. But as you know, it’s currently wrapped up in litigation. I tried my best. So I don’t really see anything else I can do at the moment.”

Elephant Rumblings: A’s Road Trip Off to a Strong Start

Jun 4, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Oakland Athletics catcher Shea Langeliers (23) celebrates with left fielder Tyler Soderstrom (21) and center fielder Henry Bolte (33) after hitting a two run inside the park home run against the Chicago Cubs during the sixth inning at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: Matt Marton-Imagn Images | Matt Marton-Imagn Images

Happy Friday A’s Fans! Hope everyone’s week has been going well so far.

The Athletics have had more success this week, once again showcasing better performances on the road than at West Sacramento’s Sutter Health Park. They got the weeklong road trip started with a series win over the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field. They were in prime opportunity to get the sweep, but suffered a bullpen collapse, resulting in a walk-off loss to end the series against the Cubs.

The majority of the A’s roster has performed better on the road. The pitching staff has performed particularly well, posting a noticeably lower ERA away from home. Take left-hander Gage Jump, for example. He surrendered four runs on nine hits in his first MLB start at home before tossing seven innings of one-run ball against the Chicago Cubs on the road. However, the team’s bullpen remains shaky regardless of where the A’s play.

 The A’s look to continue their stellar road form during this weekend’s three-game series against the division-rival Houston Astros. The last time these two teams met in Houston, Nick Kurtz launched four home runs in a historic performance that helped secure American League Rookie of the Year honors.

Right-hander Jack Perkins will make his first start of the season in the series opener. In 17 relief appearances, the 26-year-old is 2-2 with a 5.46 ERA and three saves. He has struggled recently and is now set to join the rotation following a series of injuries and ineffective performances among the club’s other starting pitchers. His performance will determine whether this is a one-time spot start or the beginning of a permanent role in the rotation.

On Saturday, A’s right-handed pitching prospect Kade Morris is lined up to make his first MLB start. He faces a stiff test against a lineup that includes Yordan Alvarez and Jose Altuve. Will Morris sink or swim?

Sunday, the A’s wrap up the road trip with left-hander Gage Jump on the mound, looking to follow up his quality start at Wrigley with another solid outing. From the other dugout, A’s hitters will face Astros right-handers Peter Lambert, Tatsuya Imai and Mike Burrows.

Can the A’s make it two straight series wins? What are your expectations for this upcoming series in Houston?

A’s Coverage:

MLB News and Interest:

Best of X:

With voting now underway for the 2026 MLB All-Star Game, Athletics fans should get behind catcher Shea Langeliers as well as first baseman Kurtz, both of whom are emerging as legitimate All-Star contenders.

After playing three games against the Houston Astros this weekend, the A’s will spend next week in Las Vegas, hosting the Milwaukee Brewers and Colorado Rockies at the stadium of the A’s Triple-A affiliate, the Las Vegas Aviators.


Athletics’ 20-year-old left-handed pitching prospect, Wei-En Lin, has been dominant at Double-A. It will be fascinating to see how he handles the jump to Triple-A when he inevitably gets promoted, hopefully sooner rather than later.

Braves Minor League Recap: Cade Kuehler K’s Eight

Campbell pitcher Cade Kuehler pitches during the NCAA Baseball Tournament Knoxville Regional between the Tennessee Volunteers and Campbell Fighting Camels held at Lindsey Nelson Stadium on Saturday, June 4, 2022. Utvcampbell0604 0183

The Atlanta Braves affiliates played four close games, all defined by impressive starting pitching and late runs deciding the outcome. Cade Kuehler had a particularly impressive day with eight strikeouts and 23 whiffs generated, but he was far from the only headlining pitcher. Herick Hernandez made his return to Columbus with a four inning masterpiece, and down in Augusta Derek Vartanian continued to be one of the fringe prospects who has impressed early this season.

(30-30) Gwinnett Stripers 3, (24-36) Norfolk Tides 4

Box Score

Statcast

  • Jim Jarvis, 2B: 0-5, .304/.402/.439
  • Rowdy Tellez, 1B: 0-3, BB, .262/.366/.488
  • Anthony Molina, SP: 5 IP, 4 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 8 K, 4.37 ERA

The Stripers did a great job of opening up a lead against the Tides on Thursday, but failed to add on in the latter half of the game, leaving the bullpen with the tall task of protecting a slim lead. Gwinnett had a comfortable going early at the plate and opened up a lead on a double from DaShawn Keirsey Jr. in the second inning, a lead they would hold for most of the game. They added a couple of more runs on a single from Maverick Handley in the fourth inning, giving the pitching staff a solid lead to work with over the five innings, though that would dwindle quickly across the coming frames. Following the Handley single the offense completely disappeared for the last half of the game. Jim Jarvis had an 0-5 performance at the plate with three strikeouts, putting an end to a strong stretch of play for him over his past five games. Jarvis hadn’t had a multi-strikeout game in two weeks prior to this performance and hadn’t had three strikeouts in a game since May, but this was probably the worst he has looked at the plate in any individual game this season.

Anthony Molina started this game on a heater, because despite giving up some solid contact the Tides struggled to actually get the barrel to the ball consistently. Molina threw a ton of strikes and his secondaries were all effective at getting whiffs in this game, and he was particularly sharp in a stretch between the second and third innings where he recorded five strikeouts and a pop out across a six batter span. However Molina had some moments where he struggled to keep breaking balls down in the strike zone, and that bit him in a huge way in the fifth inning. Molina hung a curveball right over the heart of the plate to Tommy Pham, who hit an absolute tank for a three-run home run that spoiled an otherwise stellar start. Molina left after that fifth inning, and that was the start of the real trouble for the Stripers. Victor Mederos had all kinds of trouble with his command in this one, both missing badly out of the strike zone and right over the heart of the plate with concerning frequency. The Tides took advantage and notched three hits and the tying run in the game off of him in the sixth inning, though he managed to escape a jam thanks to a big strikeout of Sam Huff and he got a second opportunity to pitch in the seventh. Mederos kept it together for a few batters but made some mistakes with two outs and gave up another run that stuck him and the Stripers with the loss.

Swing and Misses

Anthony Molina – 17

Victor Mederos – 4

Connor Thomas – 3

(25-27) Columbus Clingstones 5, (27-26) Rocket City Trash Pandas 3

Box Score

  • Patrick Clohisy, CF: 2-4, .253/.320/.420
  • David McCabe, 1B: 2-5, RBI, .266/.370/.539
  • Adam Zebrowski, C: 1-4, HR, .267/.343/.544
  • Herick Hernandez, SP: 4 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 5 K, 1.52ERA
  • Luis Vargas, RP: 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB. 2 K, 6.11 ERA

Herick Hernandez is finally back and healthy with the Clingstones, and once again he looked strong on the mound for them with four impressive innings. Hernandez’s command was shaky-though that may not necessarily be a sign of rust for him-yet he managed to continue his pattern of great pitching this year as Rocket City had no real answer to finding solid contact against him. Hernandez wasn’t sharp enough with his fastball to get the level of swing-and-miss we have seen out of him in past outings, but the carry on that four seam fastball led to a lot of lazy fly outs mixed with enough whiffs to keep the lineup moving and avoid too many balls in play. Hernandez’s command will continue to be the big red flag for his profile, but his stuff is so nasty it sort of hasn’t mattered yet. He’s managed to make this jump to Double-A and improve his strike-throwing and walk rate slightly while actually getting more whiffs than before, and there is a lot more consistency with his command on the field even if it’s not at the level it needs to be yet. The bullpen nearly got themselves into real trouble in the innings after Hernandez left, allowing three runs in the sixth and seventh innings, but the fifth inning explosion by the offense was enough for them to hold on. Luis Vargas got back on track with one of his better relief appearances this spring, and even though the overall numbers are ugly he is missing bats and control is a bit better than last season, so progress is being made despite the glacial pace it seems to come at for him.

The Clingstones could not figure out Angels 2025 third-rounder Nate Snead the first time through the lineup, as he blanked them across the first four innings of this game to keep pace with Hernandez. Then the hits started to tumble out in the fifth inning and they did not stop until Snead was chased from the game with only one out recorded. Patrick Clohisy looked good at the plate and broke the scoreless tie with a base hit, and the Clingstones put up a four spot with five hits off of Snead. After he left they went right back to their quiet ways with the bats, though Adam Zebrowski did make a loud addition in the seventh inning. He showed off his strength with a long solo home run into the right-center field gap to add a bit of insurance on, and so far he has had a huge week at the plate since coming back down from Gwinnett. All four of his hits in the past three games have been extra base hits.

Swing and Misses

Herick Hernandez – 8

Luis Vargas – 5

(29-25) Rome Emperors 5, (21-31) Greenville Drive

Box Score

  • Isaiah Drake, RF: 1-5, 2B, .262/.339/.425
  • John Gil, SS: 1-3, BB, RBI, .262/.373/.419
  • Eric Hartman, LF: 1-4, RBI, .291/.363/.558
  • Cade Kuehler, SP: 5.1 IP, 1 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 4 BB, 8 K, 3.71 ERA

Cade Kuehler has made an impressive turnaround to his season over the past month, and delivered his most dominant start of the year despite having a rough command day relative to recent standards. Over his past five games Kuehler has turned it up, both getting a high swing-and-miss rate (33.5%) while not sacrificing strike-throwing or allowing the home runs that plagued him early in the season. Two of those did not carry over well into this game. Kuehler missed the plate more often than he has across his strong stretch of play, which did cause some trouble for him, but these hitters struggled to make any contact against him so it didn’t matter. The only exception to that was a rather huge one, when they tried to run him out for the sixth inning and he struggled. He walked the first hitter then left a breaking ball right over the heart of the plate which got crushed for a two-run home run, ending his no-hitter and shutout in one swing. Otherwise, Kuehler got 23 whiffs on 43 swings, was forcing a ton of infield pop ups, and mostly cruised even through the occasional walks.

No Emperor had a big breakout day at the plate, though with steady production throughout and one big swing from Cody Miller they put up enough runs to take the game in extra innings. Miller put the Emperors on the board in the fourth inning following a leadoff walk to Dixon Williams, taking a fat slider and pulling it for his sixth home run of the season. Miller is still struggling to find consistent impact at the plate but officially seems over the whiff issues that defined his early struggles this season, with a stretch now of nine games in which he only has six strikeouts. His current season numbers are the high water mark for him since May 12th, and given that he is hitting the ball harder and making consistent contact I expect to watch them continually drift up. Isaiah Drake led off in the fifth inning with a hot swing, hitting a hard line drive down the right field line that stayed fair and bounded over the wall for a ground-rule double. Drake would take advantage of a wild pitch to advance to third base, and John Gil lifted a fly ball that was deep enough to allow Drake to score and extend the lead to 3-0. The issue that faced the Emperors was a lack of ability to string hits together. That was the case throughout the game, but in the 9th inning Miller reached on a wild pitch on a strikeout, creating a sliver of hope in a game that had swung in Greenville’s favor and had them leading 4-3. It got down to two outs after a couple of ground outs, but with the last gasp of breath Colby Jones hit a pop up into shallow right field, which pittered off of the glove of the sliding right fielder and fell harmlessly for a lucky RBI double. In extra innings John Gil got himself on the board with a one out base hit, bringing up Eric Hartman who only needed to get one into the outfield to score Dalton McIntyre from third base. He did just that, walking the game off with a sacrifice fly.

Swing and Misses 

Cade Kuehler – 23

Riley Frey – 5

(30-24) Augusta GreenJackets 2, (19-35) Delmarva Shorebirds

Box Score

  • Tate Southisene, SS: 2-3, BB, RBI, .302/.432/.508
  • Luis Guanipa, CF: 0-4, .306/.353/.510
  • Derek Vartanian, SP: 6 IP, 5 H, 2 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 6 K, 3.94 ERA

The GreenJackets put up a disappointing offensive performance, save for Tate Southisene who had a couple of hits in the game to extend his hitting streak to nine games. Southisene has been unquestionably fantastic for the GreenJackets at the top of the order, and really put them in a great position to win this game late. In the eighth inning Augusta only trailed 2-0, and Southisene came to the plate with a couple of men on and drove a sharp single through the right side. With still no outs in the inning and two runners on there was a huge opportunity for Augusta to at least tie the game. but it wasn’t meant to be. Luis Guanipa popped out into shallow center field keeping all of the runners at bay, and in a critical spot Juan Mateo popped out to the infield for the second out. Michael Martinez then grounded out and the Shorebirds put one out for two runs in the top of the ninth to seal the game. Nick Montgomery did add on with a home run in the ninth inning, but the bottom of the order didn’t have the firepower to drag Augusta back into the game.

It’s rather a shame, too, that Augusta’s bats had a down evening because Derek Vartanian 100% pitched well enough to deserve a win in this game. Coming off of his worst outing of the season Vartanian bounced back and commanded the ball much better, and the Shorebirds hit ground ball after ground ball to help him advance through the lineup with ease. He’s been consistently around the 25% whiff rate range, which is where he was today, and has produced loads of weak ground balls to keep offenses from being able to put up runs. In the first inning an errors by Luis Guanipa allowed a runner to get to third base and score a quick one against Vartanian, but other than that one unearned run he was in full control of this game for the first four innings. A bunt single in the fifth inning and an inside out double that rolled down the left field line accounted for the only other run he allowed.

Swing and Misses

Derek Vartanian – 10

Lewis Sifontes – 8

Diamondbacks News: Ketel Marte walks it off again

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - JUNE 04: Ketel Marte #4 of the Arizona Diamondbacks has gum thrown on him by Gabriel Moreno #14 after hitting a walk-off home run against the Los Angeles Dodgers during the ninth inning of the MLB game at Chase Field on June 04, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Diamondbacks defeated the Dodgers 3-2. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Diamondbacks News

(Burn City Sports) How Ketel Marte’s big swing vs. Dodgers puts him on the verge of D-Backs’ history

With one out in the bottom of the ninth, the All-Star wasted no time in his at-bat, connecting on Dodgers closer Tanner Scott’s 97-mph fastball low in the zone and launching a 431-foot home run to left field, securing the D-Backs’ 3-2 victory and a series split.

Marte now owns the most walk-off hits in MLB this season with three. He’s just one walk-off hit away from matching the franchise record of four, shared by Paul Goldschmidt (2013), Justin Upton (2011) and Alex Cintron (2005).

(SI.com) Ildemaro Vargas Received Gift From Max Muncy After Scary Collision

Vargas had been pulled from the game in the fifth inning, following a collision with Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy. A ground ball was hit down the right field line, and pitcher Ryne Nelson, assuming it was a foul ball, did not cover first.

That led to both Vargas and Muncy running full speed at the bag. They crashed into each other, and both spent time down on the ground being tended to by trainers. Thankfully, they both walked off the field on their own power.

(Sporting News) Diamondbacks’ Corbin Carroll creating MLB history vs. LHP

Arizona Diamondbacks right fielder Corbin Carroll continues chasing a unique MLB record.

In 1922, Hall of Famer George Sisler registered an all-time best .472 batting average during 153 at-bats against left-handed pitchers. Corbin entered Wednesday night’s matchup against the visiting Los Angeles Dodgers batting .411 in 73 at-bats against left-handers.

(Sporting News) MLB insider reveals Diamondbacks trade plan involving specific type of hitter

According to MLB insider Ken Rosenthal of The Athletic, the Diamondbacks are planning to target one specific type of hitter at the deadline.

“The Diamondbacks expect to pursue a left-handed first baseman/DH type at the deadline, people briefed on their plans say,” Rosenthal writes.

MLB News

(CBS Sports) Yankees slugger Aaron Judge has stress fracture in rib, expected to miss significant time

The New York Yankees will be without franchise slugger and two-time reigning American League MVP Aaron Judge for weeks and perhaps months. The club announced on Thursday that Judge — after multiple examinations and initial fears about the possibility of thoracic outlet syndrome — has been diagnosed with a stress fracture of the first rib on his right side.

(Yahoo! Sports) Blue Jays’ Chad Dallas makes jaw-dropping behind-the-back snag to escape trouble in memorable MLB debut

Toronto Blue Jays reliever Chad Dallas announced himself with an insane play in his MLB debut against the Atlanta Braves on Thursday.

In the third inning, Dallas allowed an infield single to Ronald Acuna Jr., followed by a steal to second base. The pitcher gave up another single to Mauricio Dubon and Matt Olson’s sac-fly brought home Acuna Jr. Ozzie Albies flied out to right field. Dubon reached second as Dallas walked Michael Harris II. A wild pitch from Dallas put Dubon at third.

(ESPN) Manny Machado says Padres ‘frustrated’ amid offensive woes

“People are frustrated. The fans want us to win games. So do we. We’re more frustrated than anybody,” Machado told MLB.com after the Padres’ 6-4 loss to the Philadelphia Phillies on Thursday. “We want to turn things around. Everybody on this ballclub is trying to do that. So, we’re going to keep working, just knowing that we’re still in a good position, even though we’re playing like dog s—.

[Ed. Note] Good.

Mariners News: Cal Raleigh, Aaron Judge, and Brayan Bello

May 30, 2026; West Sacramento, California, USA; New York Yankees right fielder Aaron Judge (99) prepares to go back out for the bottom half of the sixth inning against the Athletics at Sutter Health Park. Mandatory Credit: Neville E. Guard-Imagn Images | Neville E. Guard-Imagn Images

Good day everyone, and happy Friday!

The M’s play an early afternoon game today, facing off against the Tigers at 3:40pm PT — set your reminders!

Also, don’t forget to go vote for the Mariners in the first round of All-Star voting! Who’s got your vote on the National League side this year?

In Mariners news…

  • Cal Raleigh will kick off a rehab assignment with the Everett AquaSox on Sunday before heading to Tacoma on Tuesday, where he will play at least all of next week. The team will reassess his progress at that point.
  • The Mariners announced that they will host an alumni home run derby after August 7th’s game against the Rays. The group of participants sure is…something to behold.
  • Daniel Kramer checked in with Colt Emerson to see how he’s adjusting to the big leagues in advance of the team’s east coast swing.
  • Over on The Feed, Eric Sanford asked what you think Colt Emerson’s ceiling is as a big leaguer.

Around the league…

Astros Legends Series 22: J. R. Towles

HOUSTON, TX - APRIL 09 : J.R. Towles #46 of the Houston Astros against the Florida Marlins in a MLB game on April 9, 2011 at Minute Maid Park in Houston, Texas. The Marlins won 4 to 3. (Photo by Thomas B. Shea / Getty Images) | Getty Images

J.R. Towles is one of two Astros to have driven in 8 runs in a contest, sharing that distinction with Yuri Guerriel.  We catch up with the former catcher in our 22nd installment of our Legends Series.    

Q:  What do you remember about your debut on September 5th, 2007 against the Brewers in Milwaukee?

A:  I remember flying first class (laughs).  Honestly, I was just looking forward to it.   I didn’t know what number I would be, I was just looking forward to seeing the field.    It was a whirlwind event.    

It was awesome that my locker mate was Lance Berkman because I had been cheering him on for so long and now all of a sudden, I get to share a locker with him which was incredible at the time.   

Q:  Were you surprised you got into that first game late?

A:  Yeah.   I wasn’t expecting to get in but we were losing by several runs, so I went down to the bullpen to start getting familiar because I hadn’t caught any of those guys.   I didn’t have time to get nervous.   I was just there.    

I didn’t get nervous until they told me that I would start in five days and I would catch Wandy Rodriguez.    

Q:  Was Wandy an underrated pitcher?

A:  He was underrated, no doubt.    He was sneaky with his pitches, and his breaking ball was really good.   

Q:  A few weeks later, you drove in 8 runs in a game.  How crazy was that?

A:  I catch myself thinking about that.  It gets brought up every year, which is pretty cool.   My kids are a little bit older now, 15, 14 and 11, and they get to start seeing things and when they bring my name up on TV, it’s fun for them.    

Q:  How good was Roy Oswalt’s stuff when you caught him?

A:  Roy was electric.   I enjoyed catching him.   He was a small-town guy like me, so us country boys had a lot of good talks in the clubhouse.   His slow curveball was something else.   

Q:  You are still in the area, what are you up to now?

A:  Just north of Tomball, I’m coaching a team which I’ve been doing for a few years, and now I’m taking my national registry for an EMT, and I’ll be starting firefighting school on July 11th.    

I hope to get hired in the fall in Magnolia.    There are some similarities in terms of lifestyle, the firehouse and being around your teammates is similar to a clubhouse, having that camaraderie.    I’m looking forward to it.