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Texas Rangers lineup for June 6, 2026 against the Cleveland Guardians: starting pitchers are Jack Leiter for the Rangers and Tanner Bibee for the Guardians.
Texas squares off once again against the Guardians at the Shed. With a righthander on the mound for Cleveland, we have a somewhat more normal looking lineup for the Rangers. Kyle Higashioka starts behind the plate once again.
The lineup:
Pederson — DH
Seager — SS
Jung — 3B
Nimmo — RF
Langford — LF
Duran — 2B
Burger — 1B
Carter — CF
Higashioka — C
6:35 p.m. Central start time. Rangers are -120 favorites.
One of Hawk Harrelson’s (many) favorite sayings was, “It’s not who you play, it’s when you play ’em.” It’s both, of course, but at least Hawk was half-right in this case.
The “when you play ’em” part is a split for the White Sox against the Phillies — the unlucky part being that the Phils have turned their season around since Don Mattingly took over as manager, the lucky part being somehow scheduling a series in Philadelphia where they won’t face either Christopher Sanchez or Zack Wheeler.
Instead, today the Phillies will send out rookie righthander Andrew Painter, who has a lofty 5.74 ERA and has allowed 64 hits in 53 1/3 innings. Painter had been doing better of late — until he ran up against the Dodgers last time out and gave up four runs in 3 1/3 innings, including two homers. Given how the ball soared out of the park last night, a propensity to surrender long fly balls looks to be a bit of a problem.
The White Sox counter with an opener strategy, with lefty Bryan Eisert getting the start ahead of Sean Burke, presumably because Eisert’s a lefty and so are the two sluggers in the top three spots in the Philly lineup. That’s not as clear-cut a decision as it might seem: While Bryce Harper has pretty normal platoon splits, Kyle Schwarber is crushing southpaws to the tune of a 1.002 OPS.
The announcing crew has taken to calling the pitcher who follows an opener “bulk reliever,” which sounds like a constipation remedy but in this case means Burke. The righty has a 3.72 ERA (3.33 FIP) and was solid last time out, giving up just one run in 5 1/3 innings (though that was against the lowly Tigers).
Painter will face a Sox lineup with only two hitting from the right side, which means without Randal Grichuk, who had two homers last night before being pinch-hit for by … Andrew Benintendi:
Eisert/Burke will take on a Phillies lineup led by Schwarber, who leads the majors with 23 dingers.
First pitch is scheduled for 3:05 p.m. Central on a scorcher in Philadelphia, sunny and 90°, with any fly ball to right a candidate for making the seats given wind gusts to 27 mph heading that direction.
Usual broadcast suspects, except John Schriffen is off to go announce UFC fights somewhere, which seems more his speed. Maybe with luck, he won’t come back.
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There were questions about whether the Nats offense was heading for a lull after the Marlins sweep. They made sure to let the world know that this offense is not going anywhere with a 14 run performance last night. Now they will look to build on that effort and attempt to secure a series win in the desert.
With a lefty on the mound, Blake Butera will make some lineup adjustments. Andres Chaparro will get his first start in a while, playing in favor of Luis Garcia Jr. at first base. James Wood will be in the DH spot today. That means Daylen Lile will be in left, Jacob Young in center and Dylan Crews in right. Curtis Mead will be back at third base following a day off. Keibert Ruiz will be back behind the plate and hitting 9th. Zack Littell had a strong May and will look to continue that in June.
With a righty on the mound, the D-Backs will make some adjustments too. Pavin Smith will be in the lineup as the DH, which pushes Tommy Troy to left and Ryan Waldschmidt to center. Gabriel Moreno will be behind the plate after getting a day off yesterday. Eduardo Rodriguez has had a huge bounceback this year, but he relies on command rather than overwhelming stuff.
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Game Info:
Stadium: Chase Field
Time: 4:10 PM EST
TV: Nationals.TV
Radio: 106.7 The Fan
After last night, the Nats need to keep their foot on the gas and push to get above .500. Getting a quick series win would be a great way to prove that the Marlins series was just a fluke. Follow along in the comments down below and let’s go Nats!
The Arizona Diamondbacks made the following roster moves. The D-backs’ 40-man roster is at 40.
Strowd left the game with what Torey Lovullo called a “dead arm”, but the fact he’s not immediately going on the IL is, hopefully, good news. Lovullo said today that the pitcher is alright “so far,” but will continue to be evaluated. Given he threw 32 pitches, it’s likely he would have needed a day or two off anyway. Also, Taylor Clarke should be back tomorrow, and one imagines Abner will be going back down, especially after his terrible performance last night.
Anyway, the main topic is a question Chicharron asked in last night’s recap: “Are the D-Backs on their way to setting an MLB record for most innings pitched in a season by position players?” Of course, that kinda depends on your definition of “position players”. Does Shohei Ohtani count? I mean, he certainly is a position player. The list of teams with most position player appearances on the mound is dominated by two-way players. The top pair are the Brewers in 2003 and 2004, with 42 and 33 respectively. But all 75 of those were by Brooks Kieschnick, who appeared as an outfielder, DH and pinch-hitter for Milwaukee too. Rick Ankiel and Ohtani also appear in the top ten.
The “true” record since the D-backs entered the league probably belongs to the 2022 Tigers, who used a position player on twelve occasions to pitch twelve innings, Cody Clemens appearing seven times. The only other team to reach double digits might be a surprise: the 2022 Dodgers, who won 111 games. Hanser Alberto pitched 11 innings for them – but just two of those were in blowout losses, the others seeing him come in with at least an eight-run lead. The D-backs so far are at five appearances and 5.2 innings after Adrian Del Castillo’s outing. So the pace is there, but last night was the first such since April, when James McCann pitched in four games. Stay tuned, folks…
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You don’t want to make declarative statements midway through a series.
The job is nowhere near finished, even if history and all logic suggests that a team who’s had the most dominant 13-game winning streak in the history of basketball won’t suddenly go 1-4 with three remaining games at home.
Knicks fans have waited 53 years for this, they can wait another week or two to fully celebrate.
You always look for defining plays, stretches, or sequences to describe a series. Not everyone is going to be tuned into these games, and future generations will only have highlights to go off of. So naturally, we look for compelling moments and stories to tell the story to future generations to come.
What will it be for this series? That’s not entirely set in stone, but the final minute of Game 2 showed you everything you need to know about why the Knicks are in firm control of the NBA Finals, heading into potentially the greatest atmosphere in sports history at the World’s Most Famous Arena on Monday.
To set the stage, the Knicks led by 14 points with just over six minutes to go. They were one point away from the game being mathematically over, by Knicks standards. Since the 2023 playoffs, the Knicks are 124-1 when they lead by 15+ points in the second half, the best record in basketball. The one loss… we don’t have to talk about.
But hitting the 14-point glass ceiling couldn’t protect them. The Spurs went on a remarkable 14-0 run that put the vice grip on the Knicks’ offense, scoring on 9 of 10 possessions. At one point, they even held a two-point lead on a go-ahead and-1 layup by Victor Wembanyama.
The comeback was complete. The crowd was alive. The Knicks and their fans were stunned. In almost every other circumstance, the Spurs win that game.
But they didn’t, and that’s why we’re here. Experience matters.
The Knicks have lived through this game before. Multiple times.
Game 5 against the Sixers in 2024.
Game 3 against the Pacers in 2024.
Game 6 against the Pistons in 2025.
Game 1 against the Pacers in 2025.
Game 2 against the Hawks less than two months ago.
They know what it’s like to be in the shoes of a favorite who’s bottling a big lead in a potential series-defining game. They’ve won some, they’ve lost some.
They also know what it’s like to be the Spurs in that spot. The way it felt to come up short on brilliant late rallies in Game 6 against Miami in 2023 and Game 3 earlier this year. To have your heart ripped out at the last second.
They also have the experience of getting the job done in the Spurs’ shoes. Games 1 and 2 in Boston, Game 3 in Indiana. They’re battle-tested for any experience you throw them into.
Meanwhile, for San Antonio, how much experience do they have at this stage? Outside of De’Aaron Fox and Harrison Barnes, pretty much nothing.
They overcame big first-half deficits in a weird series against Portland. They overcame 0-1 and 1-2 deficits against Minnesota. They outexecuted OKC in two clutch games to open and close that thrilling Western Conference Finals. But in terms of clutch situations, they didn’t have nearly enough experience there.
It took the Knicks several dozen games of playing every single type of series, matchup, and game against a multitude of opponents for them to gain the composure they currently have. Young teams like the Spurs rarely have that fortitude.
Every generational talent has to go through adversity. LeBron didn’t make the Finals until 2007 and was swept. Michael Jordan paid his dues against the Celtics and Bad Boys Pistons before breaking through in 1991. Shaq ran into Hakeem in 1995. Even when Kobe Bryant and Magic Johnson lifted the Larry O’Brien Trophy in their early 20s, they did it with a tremendous veteran co-star.
Back to the game itself, the 2025 Clutch Player of the Year finally snapped out of whatever had been tormenting him by casually nailing a Dirk fadeaway to tie the game back up at 104. The Spurs came back down and Wemby threw up a brick on a long two on the baseline.
Back with the ball, Brunson once again tried to isolate on the unanimous Defensive Player of the Year… and missed. With 14 seconds left, the Spurs had the ball. The game was in their hands.
But the inexperience showed again.
Wembanyama looked off Stephon Castle initially, leading to the second-year guard believing the 7’5” behemoth was going to call his own number as he did in Oklahoma City. Instead, he felt the basketball hit off his back, resulting in an instant blooper of a turnover that resulted in Brunson going to the line for free throws (the only time in the second half by the entire team, excluding Anunoby’s, which needed to be overturned by replay, btw). Oh yeah, did I mention that Mitch Johnson elected not to call a timeout?
Brunson only went 1-for-2, meaning the Spurs would have eight seconds to make one shot and tie the series up. Fox, who was in a real groove in the second half, got the inbound and drove, but instead of shooting, he kicked it to Wemby.
It could’ve been as easy as a Fox mid-range with the 7’5” French native crashing the glass for a putback at the buzzer, but instead, Wembanyama pulled up from the elbow and missed again. The hubris, the inexperience, the lack of late-game awareness.
All of it had the Spurs staring down the barrel of a 0-2 deficit going on the road. They walked into the locker room not only dejected, but laboring. Fox, Castle, and Dylan Harper all got banged up in the fourth quarter. Wemby has been visibly gassed all series long after playing a career-high 120 minutes over his last three games.
The biggest obstacle for the Spurs might not even be the deficit and the circumstances; it might be their body clocks. You can have all the youth in the world, but when you’re heading into your 103rd game of the season, you need to have the callouses to survive.
Harper and Castle are one or two years removed from playing 35 games a year in college. All the other important players, even if they are conditioned to 82-game seasons, have never experienced a deep playoff run. When the best-case scenario now has you playing 4-5 more physical games while suffering from a conditioning, experience, and fatigue disadvantage, that’s not a good sign.
You know who it is a good sign for? The Knicks. Good thing we’re all Knicks fans, right?
The start of NHL free agency is getting closer, as it is now less than one month away. Between now and then, the Chicago Blackhawks will have some decisions to make when it comes to their pending free agents.
When looking at Chicago's roster, they have three pending unrestricted free agents (UFAs) who could not be back on the team next season. Let's go over each of them now.
Last month, Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman reported that the Blackhawks have made Ilya Mikheyev's signing rights available for trade. With this, there is certainly a real chance that he won't be back with Chicago next season.
However, when noting that Mikheyev is a key part of the Blackhawks' forward group and penalty kill, it would also be understandable if they continue to try to extend, even with his signing rights being available. In 77 games this season with the Blackhawks, he had 18 goals, 36 points, and a plus-2 rating.
With the Blackhawks having many young and promising defensemen in their pipeline, it would not be particularly surprising if they let Matt Grzelcyk walk into free agency. The Massachusetts native was a decent veteran defenseman for Chicago this season, posting 12 assists in 69 games. Yet, the Blackhawks should be looking for an upgrade on their blueline this summer.
Sam Lafferty's return to the Blackhawks was uneventful this season. He was scratched often by Chicago and had just two points in 29 games. With this, it would not be surprising in the slightest if the Blackhawks don't bring back Lafferty this summer.
BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Gerry Meehan, one of the Buffalo Sabres' first players who went on to an influential role as the team’s general manager, has died. He was 79.
The Sabres announced Meehan’s death on Saturday after being informed by a member of his family. The team said he died Friday. The cause of death and where Meehan died were not immediately available.
Meehan was from Toronto but essentially adopted Buffalo as his hometown as a player and eventual executive. As GM, he was responsible for acquiring eventual hall of famers Dominik Hasek, Pat LaFontaine, Alexander Mogilny and Dale Hawerchuk spanning the late 1980s and early 1990s.
His introduction to Buffalo came after splitting his rookie NHL season between Toronto and Philadelphia in being selected by the Sabres in the 1970 expansion draft.
The center went on to set up the franchise’s first goal in a two-assist outing in Buffalo’s first game. Meehan later became the team’s captain before being traded to Vancouver in October 1974.
Upon completing his 10-year NHL career and two games with Cincinnati of the World Hockey Association in 1978-79, Meehan returned to Buffalo to earn a law degree before joining the Sabres' front office in 1984 under general manager Scotty Bowman.
In replacing Bowman as GM during the 1986-87 season, Meehan oversaw numerous franchise-changing moves, including Mogilny’s defection from the Soviet Union in 1989. Meehan and Sabres player development director Don Luce traveled to Sweden, where Mogilny was competing in a tournament, and covertly ushered him back to North America.
Mogilny referred to Meehan as “my guiding light when I came into the NHL” during his induction speech last year.
In a statement released by the league, NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman referred to Meehan as a “pillar of the franchise.”
“As shrewd and successful as he was on the ice and in the front office, Meehan had a significant impact on countless players and executives in recent years as a generous mentor and advisor,” Bettman added.
With Mogilny, Meehan rebuilt the Sabres by acquiring Hawerchuk in a trade with Winnipeg in 1990. A year later, Buffalo sent Pierre Turgeon to the New York Islanders to acquire LaFontaine, who would post a 148-point season playing alongside 76 goal-scorer Mogilny in 1992-93.
Meehan then oversaw what is considered among the NHL’s most one-sided trades, acquiring Hasek from Chicago in 1992. Buffalo gave up Stephane Beauregard and a fourth-round draft pick to land a player who would go on to become a two-time Hart Trophy-winner as NHL MVP and win six Vezina Trophy’s as the league’s top goalie.
Meehan’s tenure as GM ended following the 1995-96 season and he remained an active member of the Sabres Alumni Association.
As a player, he had 180 goals and 423 points in 670 career games, rounded out by stops in Washington and with the Atlanta Flames.
He is survived by his wife, Mirella, their children Dan, Adam and Kate, and grandchildren Christian, Alexander, Nathan and Juniper. Funeral arrangements were not immediately available.
___
AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/stanley-cup and https://apnews.com/hub/nhl
The Philadelphia Flyers will have to wait a little longer to see one of their top goalie prospects, with a new opportunity in the KHL on the horizon.
On Saturday, it was announced that Flyers goalie prospect Egor Zavragin had officially been traded by SKA St. Petersburg, alongside defenseman Yegor Zelenov, to Metallurg Magnitogorsk in exchange for defenseman Alexei Maklyukov.
Zavragin, 20, had fallen out of favor with new SKA head coach Igor Larionov in the latter's first season with the team, resulting in Artemi Pleshkov and Sergei Ivanov dominating the share of KHL playing time.
As a result, the Flyers' 2023 third-round pick spent much of his season playing in the MHL and VHL, Russia's second-tier men's league and top junior league, respectively.
Now that Colorado Avalanche goalie prospect Ilya Nabokov will be moving over to North America full-time, Zavragin will have the opportunity to play regular KHL games going forward.
Zavragin's new counterpart, Alexander Smolin, played 35 games for Metallurg last season, going 23-8-2 with a 2.33 GAA, .915 save percentage, and one shutout.
Zavragin, while being younger than Smolin and playing on a worse team, went 5-7-0 with a 2.63 GAA, .919 save percentage, and one shutout in his 12 games of limited action.
On the heels of Zavragin getting a fresh start in an environment more conducive to his development, Hockey News Hub reports on X that the 20-year-old will extend his contract in the KHL another year, lasting until May 31, 2028.
The Flyers could have gotten their young goalie to come over to North America as soon as this time next year, but with a contract extension in the cards, that is now unlikely.
Truthfully, the Flyers aren't likely to be upset with this development, either, as it gives Zavragin a chance to make up for what is effectively a lost year of development that he spent playing against lower tiers of competition instead of the KHL.
Flyers general manager Danny Briere recently told NHL.com's Adam Kimelman at the NHL Scouting Combine that the Flyers "feel our prospect goalies need a little bit more time still," in regards to extending Dan Vladar.
We can deduce that, with a Vladar extension looming and further potential additions to the goalie group, the Flyers are in no rush to have Zavragin, Aleksei Kolosov, Carson Bjarnason, and anyone else they may draft this year turn into NHL goalies on the hop.
On paper, Zavragin's new move should benefit both him and the Flyers long-term.
Location: Truist Park, Atlanta, GA
Broadcast: KDKA AM/FM, Sportsnet
Pitching Matchup: Braxton Ashcraft (5-2, 2.77 ERA) vs. Spencer Strider (3-1, 3.77 ERA)
The Pittsburgh Pirates are on the road today against the Atlanta Braves looking to grab a win.
Please remember our Game Day thread guidelines.
BD community, this is your thread for today’s game. Enjoy!
I don’t particularly care for people who say, “I’ll be honest with you,” after I’ve had an hour-long conversation with them about their family, work, or the car they’re trying to sell me. So you were lying this whole time? You don’t have two kids, and this car has NO WHEELS? But that being said, I’ll be honest with you: I was fully expecting the San Antonio Spurs to win Game 2 so that on the heels of the overreactions from Game 1, I was hoping to careen in the complete opposite direction and declare this Spurs team the greatest team to ever walk the Earth if that final shot from Victor Wembanyama went through the hoop.
But. We’re here, and I’m committed to the bit. Let’s panic some more.
10. Even the Knicks alums outnumbered the Spurs alum. I saw the great George Gervin sitting behind the great David Robinson, and I saw my personal G.O.A.T. Manu Ginóbili stop by the Inside the NBA booth. But then I also noticed former Knicks players in attendance like Walt Frazier Jr., Patrick Ewing, Allan Houston, and Billy Baldwin. Sure, Billy Baldwin wasn’t a Knick, but there’s so many Baldwin brothers that you can’t tell me that at least one of them suited up for the team at one point or another. And yes, I know (as the graphic below illustrates), apparently there were other notable Spurs alums like Tim Duncan and Danny Green in attendance, but we’re overreacting remember? So facts and evidence or any reasonable arguments have no place here.
9. The average price of gas in the United States is $4.22 per gallon. This particular overreaction is related to basketball because as number 10 above suggests, even millionaire celebrities and former professional athletes are flocking down to San Antonio because the cost of living is so high in New York.
“I threw that one away. I messed up … Am I going to regret it? Yes, of course. Am I gonna use that to fuel me and to fuel us next game? Absolutely.”
Yes, Victor Wembanyama, we hope you do use that to fuel you and fuel your team for the next game. But I suggest a rewards card, coupons, or something because gas prices are more insane than that almost comeback down 14 points with about 6 minutes remaining.
8. Luke Kornet has too many jobs on this team. Let’s list them out: official pregame salsa dancer, grab any and every single rebound that ever existed, did exist, will exist, and might exist (yes, even theoretical rebounds) whenever his feet touches the floor, block every shot in his orbit, beyond his orbit, even ones in black holes (yes, we expect him to defy physics and reach into a super compact astronomical body where even light cannot escape—but he better come back out with a block or a steal). And he’s supposed to do all of this in 5 – 7 minutes per game. Got it? Good. Do it again!
7. The NBA needs more father/assistant coaches of players getting into on-court ruckuses with opposing team players. I’m not saying there’s not enough distractions during a Finals game, but given the entertainment value and to help cope with big losses, I feel like we could use more drama during these games. There’s a certain uncle I remember from the Spurs’ past who would might be suited for such a kerfuffle between relatives adjacent to their family members who happen to be professional athletes and other professional athletes.
6. The nuns are back in. I would like to apologize for what I said about not needing the nuns after Game 1. Our boys are down 0-2. At this point, we need more nuns, more monks, more Jedi, whatever divine intervention or universal power that will will this team back to the victory column. Baby Yoda (Grogu) is only 53 years old? So that means he’s too young to have allied himself with an NBA team yet. Let’s play the celebrity card against the Knickerbockers and recruit Pedro Pascal (who grew up in San Antonio!) to influence Grogu to swear allegiance to the Spurs before those evil Sith Lords from Madison Square Garden sink their claws into him.
I’m waaay past shock, panic, and anger. I’m at the bargaining stage where if “The Force” can get the Spurs two wins on the road in NYC then sign me up for a lifetime of dressing in robes and living in mud huts in the swamp. I mean, I’ve been to Florida—I can handle it.
5. The Spurs are not spoiled enough.
We’re kind of like spoiled kids,” he said. “For some of us, it’s our first season and we’re already in the Finals. We don’t fully realize it yet. And to me, the team that appreciates the position we’re in the most will be the one that wins.”
Three straight lottery picks that are panning out so far? Boring. Five titles in six finals trips that span over a consistent-never-miss-the-playoffs, multi-decade benchmark of excellence? Wake me up when we win ten titles in row. Wembanyama is wrong here. We need to be more spoiled. It’s not enough if the other fan bases become extremely annoyed with us, it needs to extend to other sports like football, fútbol (soccer, for you domestic heathens), cricket, and other species like dolphins, crickets, and penguins. They all need to be annoyed at how much winning the Spurs are obtaining.
4. Playoff scars are too gruesome. Yeah sure, the Oklahoma Thunder (the latest version) went through it in 2024 when they lost to the Dallas Mavericks before breaking through last year. But the Mavericks made it to the Finals that year with a young team! And they (checks notes) lost to the Boston Celtics (the latest version), who had their own long list of heart-breaking playoff losses. For every young team that magically made it to the Finals or close to getting to the finals on their first run with a specific squad and superstar (e.g., Thunder, Mavericks, Pacers, these Spurs), there was another team with their own playoff scars that were either more experienced or had better injury luck (like the New York Knicks).
It happens, but I don’t want it happen. It’s mentally taxing. Instead of playoff scars, can we just get playoff “boo boos,” orange slices, and maybe a birria taco? Are we still at the bargaining stage? In exchange for two wins on the road in NYC for the Spurs, can we send all the birria tacos to Manhattan AND I’ll move to Florida?
3. Victor Wembanyama might need contacts, goggles, LASIK, or is still suffering from that concussion from round 1.
“I’m still very blurry, and that’s the whole problem. I need to have more poise, more control over the game.”
Blurry? Sir, what do you need because I know people who know people who can get you giant sports goggles so big that it would make Horace Grant blush. I mean Wembanyama did shoot 52% from the field, which was a marked improvement from Game 1’s 29% field goal percentage. So I guess when he meant “blurry” he was talking about poise and control over the game, the very thing he elaborated on in the second sentence of that quote. No one said reading comprehension was important outside of the SATs anyway. That would be insane.
2. The Spurs are too mature for their age. Speaking of insanity, that late turnover by Wembanyama was complete bonkers. What made it more crazy for me was how quickly Wembanyama accepted responsibility, apologized, and also how calmly Stephon Castle dapped him in the chest and (presumably) told him it’s OK, or to presumably tell him that it was actually his fault. It matters whose fault it is because it was a huge blunder, but it also didn’t matter because the game wasn’t over, and they almost won it anyway. ALMOST BEING THE OPERATIVE WORD. But. You get what I’m saying.
I mean what, I’m supposed to believe that with about 10 seconds left in Game 2 of the NBA freakin’ Finals that a 22 year old and a 21 year old handled that big of a turnover during the most crucial part of the most important game they’ve ever played (so far) in their professional lives with the maturity of Van Halen and David Lee Roth reuniting after decades of animosity?
Where’s the yelling? Where’s the blame game? Where is that photo of LeBron James with two arms outstretched as he incredulously gawks at J.R. Smith during the 2018 Finals?
If the actual players on the floor are more poised and calm even in the face of mistakes, why couldn’t us fans be as zen? Because that’s what we do: we’re freaking out, man.
1. Desperate times call for desperate mentalities.
“It’s not the first to win two … We just have to come out with a mentality of just being more desperate.”
OK so I really like this quote not because Dylan Harper said it but because Dylan Harper said it as convincingly as his play on the court has been. The fans seem pretty desperate. I’m told no car horns were honked throughout the burrows of San Antonio. At least Spurs-related honking. There’s always honking on 1604 because it’s more of a mosh pit for cars than a major highway.
At least the players are saying the quiet part out loud. They have to be desperate because us couch riders are already there.
Game two in Houston is set to get going as the Athletics hope to get back in the win column against their division rivals. The squad fell last night in the series opener but the team can right the ship with a win in the second game of this weekend series in Houston.
We got an MLB debut today as right-hander Kade Morris will be getting the ball for the very first time in the big leagues. The A’s prospect finally got the call after steadily climbing the minors over the past couple of years. He’d had a solid season in the hitter-friendly PCL but now he’ll be tasked with taking on a major league lineup for the first time. The 23-year-old is a ground-ball machine and that should play up in the Astros’ ballpark.
The A’s lineup this afternoon:
The usual lineup full of the regulars today. Carlos Cortes is leading off, leaving Lawrence Butler on the bench. Against a right-handed pitcher. Take that for what you will.
As for the Astros, they’ll counter our rookie starting pitcher with their own “rookie” in Japanese right-hander Tatsuya Imai. The 28-year-old high-priced offseason acquisition had a tough start stateside plus a stint on the IL with arm fatigue but has returned and looked solid overall in four starts since being activated. He’s been sharp in his two most recent outings as well, pitching 12 innings and allowing just two runs. The A’s bats will need to figure it out against an unknown enemy if they want to get the win today.
And Houston’s starting nine:
Time to get back into the win column. Let’s go A’s!
Follow the Game:
Watch:
Athletics – NBCSCA
Listen:
Athletics – Talk 650 KSTE, A’s Cast
The Orioles have won 10 of their last 14 games and are just two games under .500. With their win last night, they have pulled ahead of the Blue Jays to take sole possession of third place in the American League East. They sit 1/2 game back of the third Wild Card spot. The team in the last spot, the Rangers, have the same number of wins as the Orioles.
It’s dangerous to have too much hope because this team has let us down many times before. But the longer this stretch of good play goes on, the easier it is to feel good. And with Kyle Bradish on the mound today, it’s even easier to think we could see another win.
After a clunker to kick off the month of May, Bradish kicked off a fantastic five-start run in which he pitched to a 1.72 ERA with 30 strikeouts in 31.1 innings. His last start of May came against these very Blue Jays, and he pitched seven innings with on unearned run allowed. On May 2nd, his ERA was 5.04; it is now 3.44. I am excited to say that Kyle Bradish is back.
The Orioles will face opener Brayd0n Fisher today, a righty relief pitcher with a 2.82 ERA and sub-1 WHIP. He’s pitched in 32 games this year but has made just two appearances as an opener. Against the Yankees, he pitched 1.1 innings. He faced five batters and struck out four. Against the Marlins, he pitched a scoreless first with one hit allowed.
If you’re wondering about the health of Samuel Basallo, you’re not alone. Basallo exited yesterday’s game early with abdominal soreness. Craig Albernaz told reporters today that Basallo is still being evaluated, but hopes to avoid a trip to the Injured List. In the meantime, Sam Huff has been activated from the taxi squad. Weston Wilson was DFA’s to make room.
Orioles lineup
Taylor Ward (R) DH
Gunnar Henderson (L) SS
Adley Rutschman (S) C
Pete Alonso (R) 1B
Coby Mayo (R) 3B
Leody Taveras (S) CF
Colton Cowser (L) RF
Blaze Alexander (R) LF
Jackson Holliday (L) 2B
Blue Jays lineup
George Springer (R) DH
Nathan Lukes (L) RF
Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (R) 1B
Jesús Sánchez (L) LF
Ernie Clement (R) 2B
Brandon Valenzuela (S) C
Kazuma Okamoto (R) 3B
Andrés Giménez (L) SS
Myles Straw (R) CF
Let’s go O’s!
The player who almost spoiled one of the great NBA playoff hot streaks of all time is in awe of the Knicks’ run to 13 straight victories.
Hawks star CJ McCollum, who was well on his way to being the next memorable Knicks’ playoff villain after three games of the first-round series, shared a message along with the highlight of his jump shot to lift the Hawks to a 109-108 victory on April 23.
“Sick,” McCollum wrote on X early Saturday. “Knicks have been a different team since this moment.”
McCollum taunted the Madison Square Garden crowd with big shots and gestures as the Hawks stole Game 2 of their series against the Knicks. Then he hit the game-winner in Game 3 in Atlanta to give the Hawks a 2-1 series edge.
The Knicks haven’t lost since, winning three straight to close out the Hawks, sweeping the 76ers and Cavaliers, and taking a 2-0 lead in the NBA Finals with back-to-back wins in San Antonio.
McCollum faded in the final three games of the Knicks-Hawks series. Josh Hart, his former Trail Blazers teammate, took the main assignment of defending McCollum, whose averages dipped to 11.3 points on 39.5 percent shooting from the floor over three straight losses.
McCollum had been bargaining to join the likes of Michael Jordan, Reggie Miller, P.J. Brown and Trae Young as Knicks’ playoff tormentors.
The Knicks’ last possession of their most recent loss ended with a turnover by Jalen Brunson. In the Finals, Brunson has shaken off two poor shooting games to become the first player since at least 1971 to score the final go-ahead points in the last two minutes of back-to-back games, per ESPN.
De’Aaron Fox tried to get in Brunson’s head late in Game 2 with a face-to-face staredown after committing a foul along the sideline, but Brunson didn’t take the bait. His father, Knicks assistant coach Rick Brunson, wasn’t having it.
Scoring was at a premium in Friday night’s series opener, with both Roki Sasaki and Reid Detmers permitting nothing crossing home plate on their watch. It took until the ninth inning, when Freddie Freeman took old friend Kirby Yates deep for the only run of the game, and a walk-off winner.
It was Freeman’s fifth walk-off hit with the Dodgers in the regular season, and his first home run. But you might remember that the first baseman has also authored two of the most famous World Serieswalk-off home runs in history as well. All told, Freeman has 20 career walk-off hits in the regular season and postseason, putting him in very rare company.
Freeman hit the second Dodgers walk-off home run this season, joining Max Muncy, who capped off a three-homer night to beat the Texas Rangers on April 10, also a Friday night contest.
Baseball Reference has full play-by-play data dating back to 1910, and in the 117 seasons in the database the Dodgers have hit 224 walk-off home runs, a tad under two per year on average. Since moving to Los Angeles, they’ve averaged about 2.4 walk-off homers per regular season.
But of those 224 walk-off home runs, only nine have been solo shots to finish off a 1-0 win. All have been in Los Angeles.
Only once did the Brooklyn Dodgers hit a walk-off home run in a 0-0 game. On May 2, 1955 at Ebbets Field, Carl Furillo took Gene Conley of the Milwaukee Braves deep in the 12th inning, but that was a two-run shot that also scored Jackie Robinson. Conley started that game for Milwaukee and went the whole way, as did winning pitcher Carl Erskine with his 12 scoreless frames. Furillo pushed Brooklyn’s record to 16-2, on their way to a 22-2 start and a runaway pennant on their way to the franchise’s first World Series championship.
There were a few multi-run home runs in Los Angeles to decide a 0-0 game. On April 26, 1972, Willie Crawford beat the Montreal Expos with a two-run shot. Dave Hansen in 1993 set a franchise record with 18 pinch-hits, one of them a walk-off grand slam on June 28 to beat the San Francisco Giants 4-0.
The first Dodgers walk-off home run to win a 1-0 game came in the first year of Dodger Stadium, on June 19, 1962, when Tommy Davis took Bob Gibson deep en route to his first of two batting titles.
Freeman’s 1-0 walk-off winner was the first by the team since Yasmani Grandal did in the Arizona Diamondbacks on May 3, 2015 in the 13th inning, the latest in the game any of these home runs were hit. The Russell Martin home run on August 13, 2006 finished off a classic 10-inning tilt on ESPN Sunday Night Baseball featuring Greg Maddux needing only 68 pitches in his eight scoreless innings in a duel with future Dodger Jason Schmidt when he still had intact shoulder ligaments.
Five of these nine 1-0 home runs came in extra innings.
| Player | Date | Opponent | Pitcher | Inning |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tommy Davis | Jun 18, 1962 | Cardinals | Bob Gibson | 9th |
| Eric Karros | Sep 20, 2000 | D-backs | Byung-Hyun Kim | 9th |
| Gary Sheffield | May 12, 2001 | Braves | Matt Whiteside | 9th |
| Paul Lo Duca | Sep 27, 2002 | Padres | Jeremy Fikac | 10th |
| Russell Martin | Aug 13, 2006 | Giants | Vinnie Chulk | 10th |
| Matt Kemp | Jun 1, 2010 | D-backs | JC. Gutiérrez | 10th |
| Yasiel Puig | Jul 28, 2013 | Reds | Curtis Partch | 11th |
| Yasmani Grandal | May 3, 2015 | D-backs | Evan Marshall | 13th |
| Freddie Freeman | Jun 5, 2026 | Angels | Kirby Yates | 9th |
The Dodgers’ last two games have been decided on walk-off home runs, with a loss on Thursday before Friday’s win. Los Angeles still has not played an extra-inning game this season, the only MLB team in 2026 who has yet to play beyond nine innings.
Freeman, by the way, after Friday night now has 2,495 career hits and 973 extra-base hits. He’s only five hits shy of becoming the 102nd member of the 2,500-hit club, and 27 extra-base hits away from becoming just the 40th player with 1,000 extra-base hits.