Edwin Diaz unveils epic 'Narco' trumpet entrance in Dodgers debut

Edwin Diaz made his debut for the Los Angeles Dodgers against the Arizona Diamondbacks on March 27, and part of the anticipation was how the All-Star closer would get to the pitcher’s mound.

With his signature, epic entrance — that's how.

Following a tradition he started in 2018, Diaz entered the field from the outfield bullpen, then headed to the pitcher’s mound to the sound of trumpets as his walk-out song "Narco" played over the stadium speakers. Diaz struck out two batters to close out the 5-4 win.

For the past three years, he did it at Citi Field as a member of the New York Mets. On March 27, he unveiled the walk-out ritual at Dodger Stadium.

Diaz told reporters in December he was looking forward to the moment after signing a three-year, $69 million contract with the Dodgers.

“It would be fun,’’ Diaz said at the time. “I think that music will get into the fans right away. That's a nice walk-up song, so I can't wait to, first game of the season, come in the ninth with Timmy Trumpet and get the W for the Dodgers."

The sound of trumpets almost always signals a triumphant moment. Diaz, the 32-year-old from Puerto, has recorded 253 saves in his nine-year MLB career, He also was named the American League Reliever of the year in 2018 and the National Reliever of the Year in 2022 and 2025.

Edwin Diaz walk-in trumpet entrance video

What to know about the entrance

Diaz started using Narco as his walk-out song in 2018. At the time, he was pitching for the Mariners, which provided a few options, according to MLB.com.

Why did he pick the song?

"The trumpets," Díaz told Matt Monagan of MLB.com in 2022. "The trumpets were unique. Something different from what everybody uses. That's why I picked it."

Released in 2017, the hit song is by Blasterjaxx, Dutch DJ and record production duo, and Timmy Trumpet, an Australian DJ/producer.

Upon joining the Mets in 2019, Diaz started using “No Hay Limite’’ as his walk-out song. But he went back to “Narco’’ in 2020 and has remained faithful to the trumpets ever since.

One rendition stands out as the most epic.

On Aug. 31, 2022, Timmy Trumpet played live at Citi Field in Queens, N.Y. when Diaz took the mound in the ninth inning against – who else? – the Dodgers.

He closed out the game for a 2-1 Mets victory.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dodgers closer Edwin Diaz sets trumpets with epic entrance in debut

Kyle Tucker helps Dodgers take late lead in 5-4 win

Los Angeles, CA - March 26: Kyle Tucker #23 of the Los Angeles Dodgers watches his RBI double as teammate Shohei Ohtani (not pictured) scores against the Arizona Diamondbacks in the seventh inning of an opening day baseball game at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Thursday, March 26, 2026. (Photo by Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

After the pomp and circumstance that came from the Dodgers’ second consecutive ring night, the Dodgers had a close affair on Friday against the Arizona Diamondbacks, pulling away late to win 5-4.

Emmet Sheehan made his first start of the season, and he made quick work of the first three Arizona hitters by striking out the side in order. The final one of the inning was initially called a ball, but Will Smith issued a challenge and the Dodgers won their first ABS challenge in team history.

Arizona began the top of the second inning by putting their first two hitters on base via a single from Gabriel Moreno and a walk to Pavin Smith. Sheehan managed to strike out Nolan Arenado and get Carlos Santana to fly out, but Alek Thomas got the Diamondbacks in front early with an RBI double that could’ve scored two, but a great relay from Kyle Tucker and Alex Freeland caught Smith at the plate. Arizona padded their lead to two as Ketel Marte launched a line drive home run to right field in the top of the third inning on a 3-0 fastball from Sheehan.

Arizona right-hander Ryne Nelson was one out away from keeping the Dodgers at bay over the first time through the lineup, but Alex Freeland got one of the two runs back with a towering home run to right field— a little thank you to Dave Roberts for adding him to the opening day roster. Shohei Ohtani and Kyle Tucker both walked against Nelson to put the potential tying and go-ahead runners on base, and Mookie Betts, who homered twice on ring night last year, crushed a go-ahead three-run home run to right-center field to give the Dodgers their third four-run inning over their first 11 innings on offense.

Sheehan struggled again in his second time facing the bottom half of Arizona’s lineup, as he allowed his second walk to Smith and a double to Carlos Santana to put the tying run in scoring position. Sheehan was pulled after tossing 83 pitches over just 3 1/3 innings of work, allowing two earned runs on five hits and two walks while striking out six. Jack Dreyer came in relief of Sheehan, and Thomas once again made the Dodgers pay with his second double of the night, this time driving in two and tying the game, but Thomas overran the third base bag going for a triple and was tagged out.

Arizona threatened to retake the lead in the top of the sixth inning, as Ben Casparius allowed two baserunners while recording just two outs in the top of the sixth inning. Dave Roberts went to Tanner Scott for the second day in a row, needing him to put away Thomas with the go-ahead run at second base. The gamble paid off, and Scott struck him out to get the Dodgers out of the jam.

Both Alex Vesia and Edgardo Henríquez tossed a scoreless inning as the bullpen kept the Diamondbacks off the board after the second double from Thomas. The Dodgers couldn’t supply anything offensively after the home run from Betts, going hitless over their next 14 at-bats against Nelson and the Arizona bullpen. Freeland snapped the hitless skid to begin the bottom of the eighth inning with a ringing double to the right-center field gap. Ohtani moved him over to third on a groundout, and Tucker lined a ball into right field past a drawn in infield to put the Dodgers back on top by a run.

This set up the perfect opportunity for Edwin Díaz to make his Dodger debut, and emerged from the left field bullpen to the blaring sounds of “Narco” by Timmy Trumpet for the first time at his new home. Díaz put the tying run on base, but struck out two and tossed a scoreless inning to pick up his first save as a Dodger and help his new squad take the series from Arizona.

The Dodgers last season started the year 8-0. They are a quarter of the way there this time around.

Game particulars
  • Home runs— Ketel Marte (1); Alex Freeland (1), Mookie Betts (1)
  • WPEdgardo Henríquez (1-0): 1 IP, 0 hits, 0 runs, 0 walks, 1 strikeout
  • LP— Kevin Ginkel (0-1): 1 IP, 2 hits, 1 earned run, 0 walks, 0 strikeouts
  • SV— Edwin Díaz (1): 1 IP, 0 hits, 0 runs, 1 walk, 2 strikeouts
Up next

The Dodgers wrap things up against Arizona Diamondbacks on Saturday before an off-day on Sunday, with a three-game series against the Cleveland Guardians beginning the following day. Tyler Glasnow makes his first start of the season against left-hander Eduardo Rodríguez.

Lakers grind out win over Nets

LOS ANGELES, CA - MARCH 27: Luka Doncic #77 of the Los Angeles Lakers looks on during the game against the Brooklyn Nets on March 27, 2026 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

An unnecessarily close game ended with the Lakers pulling away in the fourth for a 116-99 win over the Brooklyn Nets. 

The game began with LA taking control early. Luka Dončić scored seven points. LeBron James was close behind with four points. The Lakers went up by 11, prompting a Nets timeout. Out of the break, Brooklyn missed their shot attempt. 

Los Angeles was shooting 69% from the field.

After starting the game terribly, Brooklyn went on a 9-2 scoring run to make it a five-point game. Luka entered double figures with 11 points. Luke Kennard drained a triple as the quarter was winding down. 

At the end of the first, the purple and gold were up by five. 

Terance Mann started the second period by converting on a jumpshot for the Nets. Brooklyn made it a one-point game after scoring four in a row. It forced the Lakers to call a timeout. 

Out of the break, Mann knocked down a 3-pointer that put them in the lead.

LeBron and Bronny James combined for a quick seven points to tie the game. Luka knocked down his third triple of the half. He was a perfect 3-3 from behind the arc and had 19 points so far. 

The Lakers were on a 14-2 scoring run.

Nolan Traore was having a nice game for the Nets with nine points. Nic Claxton was in double figures with 12. They were a big reason why it became a two-point game at halftime. Traore ended the half with a buzzer-beating triple. 

The third period began with Austin Reaves getting fouled and converting on both free throws. Noah Clowney responded with a 3-pointer on the other end. Luka helped extend LA’s lead to five. The lead went back and forth between three and five as Los Angeles struggled to build a bigger advantage.

At the 5:40 mark, Los Angeles was nursing a three-point lead. 

Ziaire Williams scored a quick four points in a row that gave them the lead again. Luka picked up his 16th technical foul, which means he will miss the next game. Williams was playing great for the Nets. He was at 15 points. 

The Nets jumped into the lead with 3:04 left in the quarter. 

Brooklyn was winning the second-chance points battle 19 to four. The Nets kept it close, but LA led by one going into the fourth quarter. Luka added to his monster night, pushing his total to 36 points.

Kennard opened the final frame with a layup for Los Angeles. LeBron connected with Jaxson Hayes for the jam on the other end. The Lakers were nursing a three-point lead until Josh Minott tried to throw down a wild dunk that went in. The Nets went up by one with 8:50 left. 

Reaves knocked down a much-needed 3-pointer.

Another triple from Reaves and a free throw from LeBron gave LA a small amount of breathing room with their lead. Luka and Reaves then took over, combining for five points to push Los Angeles’s lead to nine with five minutes left. 

Minott drained a 3-pointer to stop some of their bleeding. 

With two minutes left, LA was up by 11 when Luka and Reaves put the finishing touches on the win with back-to-back 3-pointers.

Key Player Stats

Luka finished with 41 points, eight rebounds, three assists and three steals. LeBron notched 14 points with eight assists. Reaves ended with 26 points, eight rebounds and five assists.

Rui Hachimura logged eight points off the bench. Jaxson Hayes had 10 points and eight rebounds. Deandre Ayton scored nine points with seven rebounds. 

The Lakers’ next matchup will be against the Washington Wizards on Monday at 7:00 PM PT.

You can follow Karin on Twitter at @KarinAbcarians.




Guardians fall to Mariners on Primetime

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MARCH 27: Chase DeLauter #24 of the Cleveland Guardians celebrates after hitting a home run on a fly ball to right center field during the first inning against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park on March 27, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Maddy Grassy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Can’t win them all, I suppose. Although, tonight was a frustrating game in the fashion of the summer 2025 Guardians. Gavin Williams took the mound this evening and really struggled to find the zone. He threw a measly 31% of his pitches in the strike zone, per Statcast. The good news is he generated 15 whiffs! His stuff also looked fantastic across the board, just would’ve been nice if said stuff could’ve been located in that lovely white box that appears on the television. Gavin’s sweeper, especially, looked fantastic tonight. He seems to have tweaked that pitch this offseason, and is now more consistently throwing it east-west.

Some more good news as Chase DeLauter homered AGAIN in his first at-bat tonight, an almost exact replica of his first home run in the opening night game.

Per MLB researcher Sarah Langs (@SlangsOnSports on X), DeLauter is the third player since (at least) 1900 to record 3 home runs in their first two career regular season games. The most recent player was Trevor Story in 2016.

Anyway, Gavin’s command struggles eventually came back to bite him when he surrendered a 3-run homer to Cole Young (native Clevelander, of course) in the fourth.

Speaking of struggles, the Guardians loaded the bases in the top of the 5th with only 1 out. Hoskins and Naylor walked, and Rocchio was hit by a pitch. Kwan stepped to the plate, weakly flew out to left and, well, if you didn’t watch it live, I’ll let you watch it now.

Oops!

The Guardians offense was much less fun to watch than it was last night, unfortunately. All good things must come to an end.

DeLauter did have a weird play in the field in the 3rd. Leo Rivas hit a fly ball near the foul line in right, DeLauter seemed to have caught it in his glove, but then dropped it right after. Rivas was awarded a triple.

Newly minted Guardians reliever Colin Holderman came into the game in the 6th and promptly gave up a 2-run homer. Oops!

Another newly minted Guardians reliever Peyton Pallette (Rule 5 pick from the White Sox) made his Guardians debut today, and it went far better than Holderman’s. Pitched 2 innings, struck out 2 (Donovan and Raleigh). Got both strikeouts in his first inning, and did surrender some hard contact in his second, but did not give up a hit. His stuff looked fantastic, per Thomas Nestico (@TJStats on X)

He seems to have spontaneously added almost 5 inches of ride on his fastball in his debut, which resulted in that stellar 114 stuff+ rating.

Anyway, the Guardians look to take the series lead tomorrow night with Cantillo on the mound. It’ll be Bryan Woo for the Mariners.

Winners and losers of March Madness Sweet 16: Big Ten puts 4 teams in Elite 8

It's a party of Midwest teams heading to the Elite Eight of the 2026 men's NCAA Tournament.

A record-breaking four Big Ten teams won Sweet 16 games, giving the conference more than half of the remaining teams in March Madness. It could've put five teams to the Elite Eight, but Michigan State narrowly lost to UConn 67-63.

Iowa has been the biggest surprise of the NCAA Tournament, and its historic run continued with an upset victory over fellow Big Ten foe Nebraska in the Sweet 16. First-year coach Ben McCollum and the Hawkeyes are making their first Elite Eight appearance since 1987, and McCollum has already won four career Division I NCAA Tournament games despite being in only his second season at the level.

Three No. 1 seeds — Duke, Arizona and Michigan — also punched their tickets to the Elite Eight. The Wildcats and Wolverines rolled in wins over No. 4 seeds Arkansas and Alabama, respectively, whereas the Blue Devils survived a tough matchup with coach Rick Pitino and No. 5 St. John's.

Here's a look at the winners and losers of the Elite Eight, with only four games remaining before the Final Four gets underway in Indianapolis:

Sweet 16 winners

Big Ten

The Big Ten put a record-breaking four teams — Michigan, Purdue, Illinois and Iowa — in the Elite Eight, making up half of the remaining teams in national championship contention. It's only the third time since the NCAA Tournament expanded that a single conference has had four members in the Elite Eight, joining the SEC in 2025, the ACC in 2016 and the Big East in 2009.

The Big Ten could've broke the record, too, but Michigan State fell to No. 2 UConn by four points in the Sweet 16. Overall, the conference has a 17-5 record in the NCAA Tournament, proving the conference was the best in college basketball this season.

Iowa, of course, is the biggest surprise inclusion among Big Ten teams. Michigan, Purdue and Illinois are all ranked top 10 in KenPom. The Hawkeyes proved there's still some Madness in March, though.

Caleb Foster

Caleb Foster suffered a hairline fracture in his foot on March 7 that required surgery and returned to game action in Duke's 75-70 win over St. John's in the Sweet 16. His 19 minutes off the bench against the Red Storm Devils was his first 5-on-5 action in the 20 days since suffering the injury, and he didn't miss a beat.

While he didn't return to the starting lineup, he scored 11 points — all of which came in the second half. His gutsy performance resulted in a teary-eyed Jon Scheyer after he was asked of Foster after the game.

"He had no business playing today," Scheyer said to CBS Sports' Tracy Wolfson after the game. "He was determined. That was one of the most special performances I've ever seen. He was incredible, even in the huddles what he was doing, and some big-time plays too.

"That's a leader right there and that's a guy that came through for us when we needed him the most."

Tommy Lloyd

Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd has established himself as one of the premier coaches in men's college basketball in his first four seasons with the Wildcats, accumulating a 112-33 record. However, he and Arizona had some NCAA Tournament blunders, failing to surpass the Sweet 16 in any of those four seasons.

Lloyd and Arizona squashed that narrative against Arkansas in the Sweet 16, defeating the Razorbacks 109-88. The Wildcats were able to score 109 points despite making just five 3-pointers after shooting 64% from the field.

Arizona is playing like one of, if not the best team in college basketball right now.

Trey Kaufman-Renn

Purdue forward Trey Kaufman-Renn saw his scoring average dip from 20.1 points per game last season to 14.3 this season. He's shown up big for the Boilermakers in the NCAA Tournament regardless, proving he still has "it" when it matters.

The 6-foot-9 senior scored a buzzer-beater tip-in to give Purdue a 79-77 win over No. 11 Texas in the Sweet 16, avoiding an upset against the surging Longhorns. He finished the game with 20 points and eight rebounds on 8-of-10 shooting, after scoring 19 against Miami and 25 against Queens in the first round.

Kaufman-Renn has been wildly efficient in the postseason, as far back as scoring 20 points on 10-of-15 shooting in Purdue's Big Ten Conference Championship win over No. 1 Michigan prior to the NCAA Tournament. His re-emergence has been huge for the Boilermakers' chances at getting back to the Final Four.

Sweet 16 losers

Houston offense

Houston narrowly fell to Florida in the national championship game last season, and brought back three stars along with two potential NBA first-round picks in Kingston Flemings and Chris Cenac Jr. However, an offensive cold spell doomed the Cougars against Illinois in the Sweet 16.

Making their seventh consecutive Sweet 16, Houston was held to an abysmal 34% mark from the field in its 65-55 loss, making just 22 of its 64 shots. The Cougars' defense held a stout Illinois offense in check, one that ranks No. 2 nationally in KenPom's adjusted offensive efficiency this season.

Still, it wasn't enough to get back to the Final Four, leaving Houston heading into next season still seeking its first-ever national championship under legendary coach Kelvin Sampson, one of the best coaches to have never won a title.

Joshua Jefferson-less Iowa State

Iowa State won't get to see how far it could've gone with star forward Joshua Jefferson, after the senior forward suffered an ankle injury in the opening minutes of the Cyclones' first-round win over East Tennessee State. He missed out on Iowa State's win over Kentucky in the second round and was unable to get ready for its 76-62 Sweet 16 loss to No. 6 Tennessee.

Jefferson, a second-team All-American, averaged 16.4 points with 7.4 rebounds and 4.8 assists per game this season, making him one of the best all-around players in college basketball. His presence was missed against the Vols, who finished with 16 offensive rebounds and outrebounded Iowa State 43-22 overall.

It's an unfortunate ending for Iowa State's veteran trio of Jefferson, Tamin Lipsey and Milan Momcilovic, who have started nearly every game for the Cyclones the past two seasons. Jefferson and Lipsey end their college careers with 232 regular season starts, while Momcilovic will likely lead the program as a senior next season.

Alabama

Alabama was on fire in the first half against No. 1 Michigan in the Sweet 16 on March 27, even leading the Wolverines 49-47 in the first half. The Crimson Tide came out of halftime and were dominated the rest of the game, however.

Alabama made nine 3-pointers in the first half and was led by star guard Labaron Philon Jr., who scored 19 points in the first 20 minutes before finishing with 35 points with seven rebounds and four assists. The shooting went cold as it was outscored by Michigan 43-28 in the second half, as the Crimson Tide were held to a 5-of-23 mark from 3-point range and only 10 field goals in general.

The Crimson Tide were close to pulling off an upset, but ultimately won't be heading to the Elite Eight for the third consecutive season.

Nebraska fans

Nebraska fans took over Oklahoma City for its first-ever wins in the NCAA Tournament against Troy and Vanderbilt in the first weekend. Cornhuskers fans arrived in droves for their Sweet 16 game against Big Ten foe Iowa in Houston, but to no avail after Nebraska lost in heartbreaking fashion to the Hawkeyes.

Nebraska led for all but 2:10 of regulation, which happened to be the final moments of the game. The Cornhuskers also had only four players on the court following a timeout, which led to a massive 3-point play for Iowa's Alvaro Folgueiras, which ultimately sealed the game.

Nebraska ultimately leaves March Madness as winners in 2026, laying the groundwork for where the program can go in the future. However, it squandered an opportunity to keep its run going against Iowa, which it already defeated once this season in conference play.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Winners of losers of men's NCAA Tournament Sweet 16

Bagley scores 26 points and Mavericks snap a 5-game skid in a 100-93 win against Trail Blazers

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Marvin Bagley III scored a season-high 26 points off the bench and Cooper Flagg had 24 to lead the Dallas Mavericks past the Portland Trail Blazers 100-93 on Friday night, snapping a five-game skid.

Naji Marshall had 19 points and five steals for the Mavericks, who had dropped seven of their previous nine games on the road and bounced back from a 142-135 loss at Denver on Wednesday night.

Bagley, who had his most points since scoring 25 last April, shot 11 of 14 from the field, including 3 of 5 from 3-point range, and had nine rebounds. Flagg had four steals for Dallas.

Jrue Holiday scored 23 points and Deni Avdija had 20 points and nine rebounds for the Trail Blazers, who had their two-game winning streak stopped and fell below .500 at 37-38. Portland, which has clinched a playoff spot and is currently in ninth place in the Western Conference, had won five of its previous six to get back to .500 for the first time in over two months.

Donovan Clingan had 17 rebounds and six points for the Trail Blazers.

The game was tied at 92 with 2:25 remaining after Holiday made a 3-pointer, but the Mavericks sealed the victory with an 8-1 run to end it. Bagley had a layup and a dunk to start the run and Marshall and Brandon Williams combined to make four free throws.

Up next

Mavericks: Host Minnesota on Monday night.

Trail Blazers: Host Washington on Sunday night.

AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

Wizards at Warriors final score: Washington loses Bay Area battle, 131-126

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 27: Gui Santos #15 of the Golden State Warriors dribbles against Will Riley #27 of the Washington Wizards in the fourth quarter at Chase Center on March 27, 2026 in San Francisco, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Eakin Howard/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Washington Wizards kept things interesting Friday but fell short 131-126 against a similarly undermanned Golden State Warriors squad at Chase Center.

The Wizards, fresh off a streak-snapping win over the Indiana Pacers, looked ready to roll over in the first quarter. Washington’s offense was stuck in the mud early and could only muster six points halfway through the period. The good guys trailed 38-25 through the first.

Will Riley and Bilal Coulibaly kept Washington close in the second quarter. The pair combined for 17 of the Wizards’ 35 points in the period as the Warriors led 72-60 at the half.

Coulibaly kept things going to start the third quarter, scoring the team’s first 10 points to key a 16-4 run that knotted the game up at 76. The bench mob followed Bilal’s lead to help Washington take a 94-92 advantage into the final period.

The Wizards were smelling a winning streak with a 111-106 lead at the 6:18 mark, but the Warriors countered with a 16-2 run that buried the D.C. boys for good.

Riley put up another efficient offensive outing with a team-high 22 points on just 12 shots to go along with 5 rebounds and 5 assists. The confidence he has offensively at this point is night and day compared to how he looked early in the season.

Coulibaly finished with 21 of his own, while Bub Carrington added 16 points and 5 assists.

Washington’s West Coast trip continued on Sunday against Deni Avdija and the Portland Trail Blazers.

Utah Jazz vs Denver Nuggets: Player Grades

DENVER, COLORADO - MARCH 27: Ace Bailey #19 of the Utah Jazz passes the ball after a collision against Cameron Johnson #23 of the Denver Nuggets in the second half at Ball Arena on March 27, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. 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 Dustin Bradford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Now THIS is how I like the Utah Jazz to lose basketball games; have the lead most of the game, find success with defense and energy, and barely lose at the very end when the other team finally remembers that they’re going up against a bunch of G-Leaguers and rookies. The Jazz were the easier team to root for throughout the night. They were more physical, more assertive, more vibrant, while the Nuggets meandered through the motions all night, only winning it at the end with sheer firepower. It’s especially nice when these tanking games are close – evaluation is easier and more important when the guys are playing in high-leverage situations, and when the other team cares about the win as well. So how did the youngsters stack up the former champion (and honestly, pretty disappointing) Denver Nuggets? Spoiler alert – there was a lot to like.

Ace Bailey – B

After starting the game off with 3 first quarter fouls, it took Ace a little while to regain the momentum that’s been propelling him to potentially All-Rookie team heights the past few weeks. He finished the game with 5 fouls, and a lot of them weren’t pretty, either; his youth and unrestrained desire to make an impact on the game was definitely visible. There were some beautiful moves, strong displays of athleticism, and star-esque shots here and there, but on the whole? Ace fouled too much and passed too little.

Kennedy Chandler – A-

Kennedy sort of reminded me of 2026 draft prospect Tyler Tanner in this game – obviously undersized (the Nuggets announcers theorized 5’10) but just a dynamo on both ends of the court. The Nuggets point-of-attack defenders could not stay in front of Chandler all night, essentially rolling out a red carpet every time he dribbled the ball into the half court. On the other end, Chandler was only given 1 steal in the stat sheet, but he must’ve had triple that number of deflections; his fingerprints were all over this game. Sometimes he struggled with rotations (the Nuggets got quite a few open threes to end the game) but this was an impressive game from the 10-day player.

Kyle Filipowski – A

I originally had Filipowski listed with a lower grade – it seemed that a lot of the teams best moments happened without him on the court – but then I reconsidered; Filipowski was only off the court in those moments because Will Hardy knew that if Flip was playing the Jazz’s steadily growing lead would quickly accelerate its development. He felt like he was a step above the rest of the team offensively, able to get to his spots whenever and wherever he wanted. This was a common theme throughout the game, but Filipowski seemed to see red when Jokic was guarding him.

Elijah Harkless – A-

All Elijah needed to do to solidify an A grade (something I’m sure he really cares about) was not have one of the worst offensive games of his Jazz tenure. Inversely, this might be Harkless’s magnum opus of defensive outings, and that’s saying something. The Nuggets could not complete two successful passes in a row while Harkless was on the court – his hands were here, his hands were there, his hands were everywhere. Once again, he battled valiantly in the post against Jokic, and was a key reason Nikola had 7 ugly turnovers tonight. Even more than that, Harkless set the tone of one of the most fun Jazz games of the season. That won’t get counted in the stat sheet, but his influence was just about as all-encompassing as possible.

John Konchar – A

This was, by my money, clearly Konchar’s best game while donning the Utah purple and white. An efficient 16 points, a loud 8 rebounds, and constant, nagging activity on both ends of the court. Players who play like Konchar did tonight are found on every contending team in the league, because they can bring so much value without touching the ball. These are the types of games that endear a player to a fanbase; hustle is a necessary ingredient if you want to be remembered a decade after you leave the team. I’m hoping that Konchar sticks around, because he’s currently on the trajectory to be inducted into the “Utah Jazz deep role player Hall of Fame”, alongside heroes like Trevor Booker and Kris Dunn.

Bez Mbeng – B-

Bez wasn’t as in-your-face as some of our other defensive stalwarts were this game, but he fit the tone of the Jazz either way. I worry that the offense is just too far behind his defense for him to carve out a consistent role in the NBA – for example, Harkless wasn’t great on that end tonight but Mbeng was just invisible. But, your grade can only dip so far when it’s clear that your defense alone is changing the game. The Jazz might’ve set a season record in deflections tonight, and Mbeng was a big part of that, so I can’t drop the grade below a B-.

Brice Sensabaugh – B+

I don’t think there’s a non all-star, non blue-chip prospect in the league who gets more glowing reviews from opposing announcers than Brice Sensabaugh. While we didn’t see much of Brice during the big Jazz run of the 2nd half, his dynamite 1st half shot-making kept the Jazz in it and perhaps made the later momentum possible. He’ll never be a stalwart defender, but I don’t care what anyone says – his activity level on that end has been very slowly but nonetheless steadily improving as the season has progressed. There were some bad shots tonight (it wouldn’t be the Brice we love without them), but he made some! A cool 6 assists as well – this was not a shabby night for the 3rd year microwave scorer. Still, I’m glad that the team finished the game without him. He might’ve made for some more cohesive offensive sets as the team stalled in the final 5 minutes, but it was good for the other guys to learn how to function without this go-to guy.

Oscar Tschiewbe – B

I can’t justify the grade going too high with only 12 minutes of action, but those 12 minutes popped off the screen. He played like he was back at Kentucky again – 4 offensive rebounds in only a quarter of playtime is a skill you can hang your hat on. The defense was unfortunately rough. It’s hard to figure out exactly what his role looks like on a winning team as a shorter center who can’t anchor a defense, but he’s a fun guy to have around to gobble up rebounds and set bruising screens.

Cody Williams – A

Williams benefitted the most from the Nuggets horrendous half court defense. Even with a weak handle and sometimes-lackluster burst, Williams blazed past Nuggets defenders, both off the catch and on the roll. This has been said before, but the weight and strength that Williams has put on throughout the season is really remarkable – it went from being his most glaring weakness to now a key part of his developing game on both ends. The Jazz scored their most paint points of the season against the Nuggets, and that would’ve been impossible without each and every bench-press rep that Cody has sweated out as the season has gone on. The wingspan seemed longer than normal, the ball flowed whenever he caught it, he was quick in transition – these are the games that will make Cody Williams a playoff contributor as soon as next year.

Lakers beat Nets, but Luka Doncic is facing suspension again after 16th technical

Los Angeles, CA - March 27: Lakers guard Luka Doncic, #77, reacts to a referee's call.
Lakers star Luka Doncic reacts to a referee's call during the second half of a 116-99 win over the Brooklyn Nets at Crypto.com Arena on Friday night. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

For the second time in less than a week, Luka Doncic faces a one-game suspension because of technical foul accumulation.

Only a week after Doncic’s 16th technical foul was rescinded by the NBA, the Lakers superstar picked up another one in a 116-99 win over the Brooklyn Nets on Friday and is in line to miss the Lakers’ next game against the Washington Wizards on Monday.

In the third quarter with the Lakers trailing by one against the lowly Nets (17-57), Doncic was called for an offensive foul against Nic Claxton as the Lakers (48-26) were trying to inbound the ball after a dunk by Ziaire Williams. After the Lakers turnover, Williams and Doncic appeared to exchange words with Doncic pushing Williams aside with one hand. Williams then flailed his arms behind him and slapped Doncic in the throat.

Read more:Luka Doncic scores 43 as road weary Lakers hold off late Pacers rally

“He was yelling in my face three times,” said Doncic, who finished with 41 points, eight rebounds and three assists in the win. “I just wanted to get out of there. … I didn't even talk. I just wanted to get out of there. And they said I pushed. My push was exaggerated, which was obviously not [the case].”

Both were assessed technical fouls with 5:12 remaining in the third quarter, and Williams’ hit was reviewed for a possible flagrant, although it was not upgraded.

The NBA requires players to sit out for one game without pay after their 16th technical foul of the season. But Doncic avoided that fate after the NBA rescinded the foul that would have forced him to the bench for a critical road game last week. Lakers coach JJ Redick said the Lakers will try to appeal Doncic’s latest foul but he did not see what happened on the play.

Last week, Doncic avoided a suspension after the NBA rescinded the foul that would have forced him to the bench for a critical road game against the Eastern Conference-leading Detroit Pistons. Doncic is slated to miss Monday's game against the Wizards, who have lost 17 of their last 18 games and have the third-worst record in the Eastern Conference (17-56). 

Lakers star Luka Doncic reacts to a referee's call during the second half Friday against the Brooklyn Nets.
Lakers star Luka Doncic reacts to a referee's call during the second half Friday against the Brooklyn Nets at Crypto.com Arena. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

Doncic picked up his first 16th technical foul last week against the Orlando Magic after getting into an argument with Orlando forward Goga Bitadze. Doncic claimed Bitadze directed a vulgar comment about Doncic’s family in Serbian toward the Lakers star guard. Bitadze refuted the story, saying it was actually Doncic who said the curse word out loud first and that he was only repeating what he heard.

The NBA rescinded both fouls upon review the following day.

Doncic, the NBA’s leading scorer, has scored 30 points or more in 12 consecutive games, the longest such streak in his career. He has 43 30-point games this season, tying Elgin Baylor and Jerry West for sixth-most in a season by a Lakers player. He has scored 40 points or more in the last 12 games.

Against the Nets, Austin Reaves finished with 26 points, eight rebounds and five assists and LeBron James had 14 points, eight assists and six rebounds.

Before the game, Redick said the Nets game would be like playing on the road since the Lakers had spent almost two weeks away from Crypto.com Arena and had returned home in the wee hours of Thursday morning from Indianapolis.

Lakers guard Austin Reaves celebrates after shooting a three-pointer against the Nets in the second half Friday.
Lakers guard Austin Reaves celebrates after shooting a three-pointer against the Nets in the second half Friday. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

The challenge was to find the energy to play, which wasn't a problem for Doncic, who had 24 points in the first half. Doncic was nine for 15 from the field in the first half and four for six from three-point range in 20 minutes. He finished shooting 15 for 25 from the field as the Lakers shot 54% from the floor. They shot 44% (11 for 25) from three-point range.

That the Lakers were facing a Nets team with the second-worst record in the NBA didn’t matter.

That the Lakers were facing a Nets team had lost nine of its last 10 games didn’t matter.

That the Lakers were facing a Nets team that’s last in the league in scoring (106.3 points per game) didn’t matter.

Lakers center Deandre Ayton, left, blocks a shot by Brooklyn Nets guard Nolan Traore.
Lakers center Deandre Ayton, left, blocks a shot by Brooklyn Nets guard Nolan Traore in the first half Friday. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

What mattered to the Lakers was finding a way to win as the regular season winds down.

“I felt like we were a step slow,” Redick said. “And I told the guys at halftime, 'This is our seventh game of the road trip. Anytime you come back, there's a day in between, that's just you're in another city until you can get adjusted to the time zone and you get a couple days break.’ So the next two [off] days will be good for us.”

Notes: Lakers broadcast analyst Stu Lantz missed Friday night’s game against the Nets because of health issues. Derek Fisher, who won five NBA titles with the Lakers, took over Lantz’s role for the game. Public address announcer Lawrence Tanter also missed the game because of a health matter. Jason Barquero filled in for Lantz. “The entire Lakers organization is wishing Lawrence all the best in his recovery, and we look forward to welcoming him back soon,” the team said in a statement.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Widow of iconic Phillies broadcaster Harry Kalas incensed over team rebranding ballpark area: ‘They betrayed him’

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Harry Kalas in a red jacket, yellow shirt, and yellow tie with blue polka dots, arms outstretched on a baseball field, Image 2 shows A look at the Statue of the late broadcaster Harry Kalas of the Philadelphia Phillies prior to a game against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Citizens Bank Park on August 17, 2011 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Harry Kalas

The Phillies are making a polarizing change.

Harry the K’s, an area in left field at Citizens Bank Park that opened with the stadium in 2004, had been serving as a tribute to longtime announcer Harry Kalas.

But, according to The Philadelphia Inquirer on Friday, the team has sold the naming rights of the area to Ghost Energy.

Phillies announcer Harry Kalas throws out a ceremonial first pitch before the game vs. the Braves. Sports Illustrated via Getty Ima

His widow told the outlet that her late husband, who called Phillies games for almost four decades, was “betrayed.”

“Taking down that sign takes away everything he did for the city,” Eileen Kalas told The Inquirer. “I think they betrayed Harry. It’s not about me. It’s about what they’re doing to Harry. I think they betrayed him for everything he did for them.”

A look at the Statue of the late broadcaster Harry Kalas of the Phillies before a game against the Diamondbacks at Citizens Bank Park on Aug. 17, 2011. Getty Images

According to the Philly outlet, the team declined to comment on the controversy.

Eileen Kalas told The Inquirer that the Phillies paid her $20,000 a year to use Kalas’ likeness.

She will be paid once more this season, since the Phillies missed their deadline to break the contract for 2026, but she will not be paid in 2027.

Phillies fans view the casket of Harry Kalas before their game against the Padres on April 18, 2009 at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia. Getty Images

According to The Inquirer, the Phillies will continue celebrating wins by showing a clip of Harry Kalas singing “High Hopes” on the stadium video board, though Eileen acknowledges that the Phillies will not be able to play the song unless she is paid for 2027.

“They’ll say, ‘Eileen Kalas got rid of it. She’s money hungry,’” she said to The Inquirer. “That’s what they always said. Flip it on me … I don’t mind if they have things. They just have to pay for it. It’s intellectual property. They know that.”

She later added: “They go, ‘Oh, we’re still going to have the statue.’ What are they going to do with the statue? I’ll take it. I’ll send in a truck, pick it up, and get it out if they want that out, too.”

Harry Kalas was the team’s long-time play-by-play announcer from 1971 to 2009 until his death on April 13, 2009, months after the Phillies won the 2008 World Series.

Eighth-inning walks spoil solid start from Michael King, Padres lose to Tigers, 5-2

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 27: Ty France #4 of the San Diego Padres tosses his bat after striking out to end the second inning against the Detroit Tigers at Petco Park on March 27, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The highly regarded San Diego Padres bullpen failed to live up to expectations when the Padres faced the Detroit Tigers at Petco Park on Friday. Jeremiah Estrada entered the top of the eighth inning with San Diego clinging to a 2-1 lead. He was unable to protect the one-run margin, instead he allowed three walks and a single, while recording two outs before manager Craig Stammen replaced him on the mound with the game tied, 2-2.

Wandy Peralta needed just one out to keep the game deadlocked with the Padres coming to the plate in the bottom of the inning. However, Peralta allowed a two-out, two-run double to rookie Kevin McGonigle, who was playing in just his second MLB game. Peralta then allowed a single to Dillon Dingler before finally recording the third out of the inning on a pop out by Matt Vierling, but the damage was done and San Diego dropped its second game of the season to Detroit by the score of 5-2.

Michael King started the game for the Padres and allowed just one run on one hit with four walks allowed and six strikeouts. King left the game with a runner on and a 1-0 lead. Adrian Morejon came in for King and allowed just one hit, but that led to a run for the Tigers which tied the game 1-1. Morejon got the final out of the sixth and worked a clean seventh to setup the eighth inning for Estrada.

The game started with a highlight play in center field by Jackson Merrill in the top of the second inning. Merrill went back to the wall and jumped to make the catch to take a home run away from McGonigle. The play ensured the game remained scoreless. Merrill then doubled to lead off the bottom of the second inning, but back-to-back lineouts from Miguel Andujar and Ramon Laureano, followed by a strikeout from Ty France left him stranded.

San Diego scored the first run of the game off Detroit starter Framber Valdez, who was making his first start with the Tigers. Manny Machado opened the inning with a double down the line and into the left field corner. Merrill then beat out a close play at first base on a ground ball, which allowed Machado to move to third base and put runners on the corners with no outs. Andujar came through with an RBI-single on a sharp ground ball that kicked off McGonigle’s glove at third base and deflected to Javier Baez at shortstop. Baez saw he did not have a play at first base and held onto the ball and the Padres took a 1-0 lead.

San Diego scored its second run of the game in the bottom of the sixth inning. Merrill worked a one-out walk and Andujar flied out for the second out of the inning. An errant throw by Detroit catcher Dingler trying to back-pick Merrill at first base, sailed into right field and Merrill advanced to second base. Laureano followed with a double off the base of the wall in right field that allowed Merrill to score from second base to give the Padres a 2-1 lead.

San Diego will look to avoid a season-opening sweep against Detroit on Saturday at 5:40 p.m.

Tigers 5, Padres 2: Welcome back, eighth-inning heroics!

Mar 27, 2026; San Diego, California, USA; Detroit Tigers third baseman Kevin McGonigle (7) hits a two-run single during the eighth inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park. Mandatory Credit: David Frerker-Imagn Images | David Frerker-Imagn Images

The first game of the season was a smashing success: rookies mashing, pitchers dazzling, and a can of whoop-butt was opened right off the hop. Would the Tigers be able to duplicate their early success in San Diego on Friday night too? Well, it took a few innings to come to fruition, but just like we’ve seen in the past couple of years, these Tigers seem to have a taste for late-in-the-game comebacks at their best, with a clutch hit from a rookie being the fatal blow in a 5-2 Tigers win.

Making his regular-season Tigers debut was Framber Valdez, the biggest offseason pickup for Detroit. After eight solid seasons in Houston, the last four of which were very good, he came north to reunite with his former manager and maybe pick up a little more hardware, hopefully? In that four-year stretch he averaged a 3.21 ERA (127 ERA+, 3.29 FIP), 1.159 WHIP, a bit below 192 IP, 8.8 K/9IP and 2.3 BB/9IP. He’s also been great at keeping the ball in the park, averaging a scant 0.7 HR/9IP, even pitching half his games in whatever that park in Houston’s called these days, which has tended to favour the hitters a bit.

Facing Valdez tonight was Michael King, who’s in his third year in the Padres’ rotation after a few years spent mostly in the Yankees’ bullpen. He’s been no slouch lately either; in two seasons in a brown uniform he’s sported a 3.10 ERA (134 ERA+, 3.65 FIP). He’s also averaged just over 10 K/9IP, so let’s just say he’s been a solid acquisition for the Padres.

In the top of the second Kevin McGonigle hit a rocket to centre, but Jackson Merrill climbed the wall and took the rookie’s first major-league home run away.

I mean, that’s a pretty short wall, but you gotta tip your cap to any dinger-robbery. Merrill, of course, came up first in the bottom of the second and bashed a double to right, but a pair of lineouts and Valdez’s first strikeout got him out of the inning. He was giving up some solid contact, which isn’t exactly what you want to see.

The Padres got on the board in the fourth: Machado doubled to left, Merrill pushed him up to third with an infield single, and another infield single by Miguel Andujar scored him. A flyout put runners on second and third with one out, and Valdez was in his first jam of the night. Merrill took off from third on a grounder to Javier Báez and got cut down at the plate, leaving runners at the corners; Jake Cronenworth then struck out on a curveball in the dirt, ending the threat and the inning with limited damage.

In the top of the fifth the Tigers had two runners on with none out via a walk and a hit-batter. But then Parker Meadows struck out, Báez grounded out, and Kerry Carpenter struck out on some nasty changeups from King, and that was that.

Gleyber Torres walked to lead off the sixth, which was the end of King’s night. The very-tough Adam Morejon came on, and pinch-hitter Jahmai Jones grounded into what looked like a sure double-play, except a bobble by Machado put two runners on. But then Riley Greene actually did ground into the ol’ twin-killing, leaving Torres on third with two outs. Would the Tigers squander yet another opportunity? They actually would not, as Spencer Torkelson laced a single to left-centre to score Torres and tie the game.

But then Torkelson was thrown out trying to steal — you gotta be aggressive, I guess — and that ended the inning.

Colt Keith, who came into the game in the bottom of the sixth, made a nifty diving play on the first batter he saw on a screaming, 100-mph liner to third. With two outs and Merrill on first, Dillon Dingler tried to back-pick him after he stumbled, but Dingler airmailed the throw into right field; Merrill advanced to second and scored on a double by Ramón Laureano, the Padres retaking the lead 2-1. Ty France then struck out to end the inning, so yet again Valdez limited the damage after a run had scored with more quite possible.

Enmanuel De Jesus, who had a great WBC with Venezuela, took over for Valdez in the seventh, and gave up yet another Padres infield single. But then De Jesus got a pair of strikeouts and a flyout to right, and hey, that was a pretty nice return to the Major Leagues by EDJ after spending two years in South Korea. I’m going to call him EDJ whenever I can, and I hope it catches on.

Jeremiah Estrada, the second normally-lethal arm out of the Padres’ pen, came on in the eighth and with one out walked Carpenter, Torres and Keith to load the bases; his command was clearly off. That brought up Greene, who softly singled to shortstop — holy moly, how many infield singles can a game have?! — to bring home Carpenter and tie the game. Torkelson struck out, Estrada was dispatched in favour of Wandy Peralta, and McGonigle came to the plate for a lefty-lefty showdown. Peralta kept pouring fastballs inside and then a nasty slider down and away, but McGonigle kept fouling them off, one after another. On the tenth pitch of the at-bat he singled to right, driving in Torres and Keith to put the Tigers up 4-2.

What an epic at-bat by McGonigle in a clutch situation; this is his second game amongst the tall buildings, let’s not forget. Dingler then promptly atoned for his previous miscue by also singling to right, scoring Greene for a 5-2 lead. Vierling popped out to third to end the inning, but it’s worth noting that the Padres’ new manager, Craig Stammen, went to Peralta rather than the always-nasty Mason Miller. Who knows how that inning would’ve turned out if Miller was on the mound? Luckily, second-guessing managers is fun and absolutely free, so have at it, folks.

Kyle Finnegan was called upon for the bottom of the eighth, and Machado walked. But Merrill popped out to second, Andujar and Laureano struck out, and just think what a solid Finnegan could do for this Tigers bullpen. A fan can dream.

Kenley Jansen and his Fabulous Cutters made their Tigers debut tonight, to pitch the ninth and earn the save. What’d he do? Struck out Gavin Sheets, struck out Cronenworth, struck out Old Friend™ Nick Castellanos. I could get used to this.

Final score: Tigers 5, Padres 2

That McGonigle At-Bat

Let’s take a look at that.

Follow that pitch sequence: up and down, in and out. Six foul balls. One mistake in the zone, kaboom, game-changing hit. Plus, take a look at that video clip above; his swing is powerful but both controlled and balanced. I’m in luuuuurve, everyone.

Notes and Numbers

  • Wenceel Pérez, who didn’t make the Tigers out of Spring Training, hit a home run in Toledo tonight. Where was that earlier in March? Sheesh.
  • Did you see Mike Trout clubbed a monster home run on Thursday night, and crushed a screaming line-drive homer on Friday night? Did you know Mike Trout is still playing? I didn’t, but I’m glad he is. From 2012 through 2016, he averaged 9.4 WAR per season. That’s just absolutely bananas.
  • On this day in 1845, Wilhelm Röntgen was born in what is now northern Germany (but was part of Prussia back then). You may know him as the discoverer of X-rays in 1895. Quite a handy guy to have around, I’d think.

3 notes after the Mavericks’ ugly 100-93 win at the Portland Trail Blazers

PORTLAND, OR - MARCH 27: Marvin Bagley III #35 of the Dallas Mavericks drives to the basket during the game against the Portland Trail Blazers on March 27, 2026 at the Moda Center Arena in Portland, Oregon. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Cameron Browne/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

No one wanted to win Friday’s game between the visiting Dallas Mavericks (24-50) Portland Trail Blazers (37-38) at Moda Center, but eventually someone had to. The Mavericks pulled the unlikely 100-93 win out of their hat amidst 16 combined fourth-quarter turnovers as the game got sloppier and sloppier down the stretch.

Cooper Flagg had 24 points and four steals in the win but scored just four of those after halftime. Marvin Bagley III notched a new season-high scoring mark with 26 points and nine rebounds to lead the Mavericks to victory off the bench. Bagley also helped limit Portland big man Donoval Clingan to just 2-of-9 shooting on the defensive win. Jrue Holliday led the Blazers with 23 points in the loss.

The Dwight Powell to Cooper Flagg connection was in full effect from the moment the ball was tipped. Flagg made a clever little back cut on the Mavericks’ second possession of the game and Powell got it right to him for an easy hoop to start the game. The next time down, Powell was on the receiving end of a pick-and-roll run to perfection between himself and Max Christie, and the Mavs were up 4-0 less than two minutes into the game.

Flagg scored six points in the game’s first four minutes on three makes in his first four attempts from the floor, including a running dunk in transition on a quick outlet pass from Naji Marshall. His incredible versatility at age 19 has been on display since the All-Star break and his return from a foot injury, when he’s become the only player in the NBA to average more than 20 points, seven rebounds, six assists, a steal and a block per game.

His closely contested up-and-under move midway through the first quarter tied the game, 14-14, for his fourth make. Two possessions later, Flagg found Bagley for a runner in the lane to give Dallas a 16-14 lead. Bagley scored on the offensive glass the next time down to put the Mavs back in front, 18-16. Christie and Klay Thompson knocked down the Mavericks’ first two 3-pointers on the next two possessions to extend their lead to double digits, up 26-16, and force a timeout by Blazers acting head coach Tiago Splitter with 3:09 left in the first.

Thompson’s first-quarter 3-ball put him at 174 made from distance off the bench this season, surpassing a Mavericks’ team record set two years ago by Tim Hardaway Jr.

Bagley was a menace for the Mavs as Dallas scored 20 paint points in the first quarter. He turned down a 3-point attempt for an open driving lane and a vicious slam to give him 11 points in the opening stanza and put Dallas ahead 32-22 with 57 seconds remaining. It was Bagley’s highest-scoring quarter of the 2025-26 season, and he did it on 5-of-7 shooting from the field.

Flagg picked up right where he left off in the second. He scored on an unstoppable drive in transition with 9:10 left before halftime to put the Mavs up 35-28, then nailed a jumper and the ensuing free throw on a 3-point play the next time down. He scored on another jumper through contact two possessions later to give the Mavericks a 40-30 edge with 8:15 left in the second. His athleticism and killer instinct are joys to watch as he sharpens his many knives late in his rookie campaign.

The Mavs continued to pour it on in the second, more than doubling up Portland in paint points through the game’s first 20 minutes, before coming back to earth a little bit in the final four minutes of the frame. Flagg piled up 20 points on 7-of-11 shooting in the first half, and the Mavericks took a 56-51 lead into the break. Portland outscored the Mavs 14-2 to end the second half, as Dallas shot 0-for-6 in the final 4:18 of the second quarter and turned the ball over three times.

The Blazers took their first lead of the game since early in the first quarter with 7:55 left in the third, 66-64, on Toumani Camara’s putback of his own missed airball, which should have been called a travel but was not. Portland outscored the Mavericks 27-12 in that nine-plus minute stretch that started with just over four minutes left in the second.

Bagley scored his first points since that 11-point first quarter on a corner 3-pointer in response to put the Mavericks back in front, 67-66, the next time down. His shooting touch has been a pleasant surprise since he arrived in Dallas in a deadline-day deal that sent Anthony Davis to the Washington Wizards in February. Bagley’s putback the next time down put him at 16 points and seven rebounds midway through the third, and he hit a turnaround to make it a person 7-0 run with 5:20 left in the third. Dallas led 71-66 at that point.

Bagley hit his third 3-ball of the game from near the top of the key with 2:31 left in the third to give the Mavs a 76-70 edge, getting to within one point of his season-high scoring mark of 22 points with a quarter still to play. He appeared to hurt his arm while setting a screen the next time down the floor. Dallas limped into the fourth holding onto a 79-76 lead.

The fourth quarter was downright ugly, as Portland turned the ball over four times in the first four minutes, allowing the Mavs to build the lead back up to seven points. Neither team built much momentum until Flagg leaked out in transition and received an over-the-shoulder pass from Ryan Nembhard for a quick slam to put Dallas up 85-78 and force a Portland timeout with 6:40 to play.

Flagg and Bagley: The post-Duke effect

Is it just pure coincidence that both Flagg and Bagley had strong performances after their Duke Blue Devils outlasted the St. John’s Red Storm earlier in the evening in the NCAA Tournament’s Sweet 16 to get to the team’s third-straight Elite 8?

Flagg, of course, was part of the Duke team that bowed out last year in the Final Four. He played in 37 games for the Blue Devils, scoring 19.2 points, pulling down 7.5 rebounds and shooting 38.5% from 3-point range in his only college season. Bagley played 33 games for Duke during the 2017-18 season, averaging 21 points, 11 boards and shooting better than 39% from 3-point land as the team reached the Elite 8 that year.

The Mavericks whose college teams are still alive in this year’s NCAA Tournament have been sporting their college colors in pre-game shootarounds. As of Friday night, Brandon Williams, who played at Arizona, is the only other Maverick whose college team is still alive. His Wildcats beat Daniel Gafford’s Arkansas Razorbacks on Thursday, 109-88 in a Sweet 16 matchup.

Mavs offense: Good, then bad, then just good enough

The Mavericks have been quietly humming on offense in their last five games. Dallas had scored at least 120 points in regulation in each of their last four games coming into Friday’s game in Portland, and shot 13-of-25 (52%) from the field in the first quarter at Portland.

Flagg was the initiator early on before Bagley led the bench unit to a strong close to the first. The Mavs were making hay off Blazers turnovers to help build their early lead, taking a 12-1 scoring advantage off opponent miscues in the opener. It’s made for some unexpectedly exciting basketball as we trudge through the March doldrums in a lost season.

All it takes is one bad stretch to hand it all back, though, and that’s what we saw to end the first half on Friday. The Blazers, who are in the thick of the battle for Western Conference play-in positioning, went on a 14-2 run to end the first half and climb back into the game.

But Dallas had an answer each time the Blazers threatened. Bagley was a big part of that, and so was Flagg, but Portland’s penchant for giving the ball away at the worst moments on Friday was the biggest culprit. The Blazers coughed it up 24 times on Friday in the loss.

It had to happen sometime

Finally, a clutch win. Flagg made the little plays the Mavericks needed down the stretch, while Bagley made the two biggest buckets of the game after Portland went on a little 7-0 run to tie the game at 92-92 on Holliday’s third 3-pointer of the game with 2:25 left to play.

Brandon Williams found Bagley on a cut underneath the basket to break the tie with 2:04 left in the game, and then Williams’ fifth assist of the game found Bagley, who scored on a dunk after a pump fake in close with 40 seconds on the clock to put Dallas up 96-92.

The Mavs have been cheeks in clutch games all year. They had to win a close one at some point. And with seemingly every game going down to the wire, the Mavericks made just enough plays down the stretch to beat a Blazers team that turned the ball over 24 times and missed 10 free throws on their home floor.

Golden Knights’ Goaltending Collapse Puts Kelly McCrimmon In The Spotlight

For the first time in franchise history, the Vegas Golden Knights will finish a season with more losses than wins.

Despite entering the year with a roster built around elite talent, headlined by players such as Jack Eichel and the high-profile addition of Mitch Marner, the Golden Knights have struggled to meet expectations. A 4-3 overtime loss to the Edmonton Oilers on Thursday night at T-Mobile Arena only added to a season defined by inconsistency, missed chances, and an inability to close out tightly contested games.

Goaltending Instability And The Root Of The Problem

One of the clearest issues throughout the season has been goaltending. While not the only reason for the team’s struggles, it has consistently been one of the most significant factors limiting Vegas from performing at its usual level.

Ted Orion said it best: "You can't win games if you can't play defense." Vegas can score, but stopping them is an issue.

To understand how things reached this point, it’s worth looking back at how the goaltending situation has evolved over the past few seasons.

The Golden Knights weren’t always unstable in net. In 2023, they captured the Stanley Cup with a more dependable structure in goal. However, Logan Thompson suffered a lower-body injury late in that season.

During his absence, Vegas turned to a rotation that included Laurent Brossoit, Adin Hill, rookie Jiří Patera, and midseason acquisition Jonathan Quick. Although Thompson was unavailable for the playoffs, he remained part of the championship team, and his name was eventually engraved on the Stanley Cup alongside his teammates.

The following season opened with Thompson and Hill sharing the net as a tandem. That arrangement changed when Hill dealt with a series of lower-body injuries, which allowed Thompson to step into the starting role. After some early inconsistencies, Thompson’s play improved notably following the Winter Classic, where he began to settle into a more consistent rhythm.

Heading into the playoffs, Thompson was named the Golden Knights’ starter and responded well early, helping Vegas win back-to-back games against the Dallas Stars on April 22 and 24. But as the series progressed, momentum began to shift. Thompson dropped the next two games, and while he delivered a strong performance in Game 3 with a career-high 43 saves, it came in a losing effort.

Logan Thompson deserved better. Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie
Logan Thompson deserved better. Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie

Facing pressure, the Golden Knights made the decision to turn to Adin Hill for Game 5. The move carried risk, largely based on Hill’s prior success as the goaltender who helped backstop the team to a Stanley Cup. The hope was that he could recapture that form and provide a spark.

Instead, the decision didn’t deliver the desired result. The change disrupted the stability in net, and Vegas was unable to regain control of the series, ultimately falling to the Stars in seven games.

Following the season, Thompson requested a trade, and the Golden Knights honored that request by sending him to the Washington Capitals during the 2024 NHL Entry Draft in exchange for two third-round picks.

Fallout And The Current State Of The Position

Since that move, the Golden Knights have struggled to find consistent goaltending. Adin Hill has endured the worst season of his career, ranking near the bottom of the league statistically with a 9-9-4 record, a 3.07 goals-against average, and a .868 save percentage.

In contrast, Thompson has thrived in Washington, emerging as one of the league’s top goaltenders. He currently ranks 2nd among 94 goaltenders, posting a 25-20 record, a 2.40 goals-against average, and a .914 save percentage. The difference in production has only intensified scrutiny around the decision to move on from him.

The organization also added Carter Hart, who arrived under the shadow of the Hockey Canada sexual assault investigation. His season, however, has been hampered by injuries and uneven play, and he has not been able to provide the stability the team was hoping for. Akira Schmid has filled in as well, but his performance has largely reflected that of a depth option rather than a true starter, further highlighting the uncertainty in net.

Hart making a save against the Oilers. Credit: Walter Tychnowicz
Hart making a save against the Oilers. Credit: Walter Tychnowicz

Entering the season, Vegas believed Hill and Hart would anchor the position. That plan has not materialized, and goaltending has become one of the team’s most pressing concerns.

Attention has naturally turned toward general manager Kelly McCrimmon. While he remains a respected executive and a Stanley Cup-winning architect, the current shortcomings—especially in goal—have raised legitimate questions. Accountability comes with the job.

Ultimately, McCrimmon is tasked with finding a solution. Whether through internal development, roster adjustments, or future acquisitions, the Golden Knights need to stabilize the goaltending position if they hope to return to contention.

Not every gamble works out, and when they don’t, the consequences can be significant. In professional sports, results drive everything. If McCrimmon is unable to guide the team back to consistent success, changes within the organization may eventually follow.

Armour: My apologies, Big Ten. I was wrong to doubt you

CHICAGO – I owe you an apology, Big Ten.

I said after the Big Ten tournament the conference still didn’t have a team capable of winning the NCAA men’s title. That Michigan wasn’t all it was hyped to be. That Yaxel Lendeborg wasn’t the factor a Player of the Year candidate should be.

Don’t I look stupid now. That’s a rhetorical question. Of course I do. I was wrong about all of it.

The Big Ten will have half the teams in the Elite Eight, with Michigan, Illinois, Iowa and Purdue still alive. Iowa, a ninth seed, is playing as well as anyone left. And Michigan? They’re not as good as initially advertised.

They’re better.

As for Lendeborg, all he did was suck the life out of Alabama with 10 points, four rebounds, three assists and two steals in the first 7:51 of the second half. He’d finish with 23 points, 12 boards, seven assists and two steals in top-seeded Michigan’s 90-77 win on Friday, March 27.

“I think we're the best conference in the country,” Lendeborg said. “It was pretty much a dog fight almost every night. And it definitely helped us out.”

Big Ten's title drought

A Big Ten team hasn’t won the national men’s title since Michigan State’s Flintstones back in 2000. It’s not that the conference hasn’t had its chances. It has. Plenty of them. Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Michigan State, Ohio State, Purdue and Wisconsin have all played in the title game, with the Wolverines doing it twice.

But all of them seemed to be built more to survive the Hunger Games that is the Big Ten season than hang with the best from the ACC, SEC and Big East.  

Not this year. Rather than cannibalizing each other, it’s sharpened them.

“College basketball has been cyclical forever. Hopefully this is a long cycle for us in the conference,” Michigan coach Dusty May said.

The money that’s pouring into college athletics now is a factor. The Big Ten schools making a run this March haven’t flinched when it comes to finding the cash necessary to support top-tier programs.

But the addition of the West Coast teams — UCLA, USC, Oregon and Washington — has also helped, May said.

“We're developing a different type of basketball identity,” he said. “I do think some of the newer coaches have brought a different flavor. I think at times it seems the Big Ten is kind of cut and paste. You know, you turn on one game and it looks pretty much like the other three that are going on at the exact same time. Just wearing different color jerseys.”

The Big Ten is still rough and tumble. If you don’t have a couple of bruises after a conference game, you haven’t left the bench. But the days of first-team-to-40-wins are over.

Not the Big Ten of old

The Big Ten teams can play with pace. Any pace. You want to run and gun? They’ll grab their track shoes. You want to slow it down? They can work the shot clock.

They can hit 3s and they can score in the paint. And, of course, they can play defense.

Take Michigan. As tenacious as it is defensively — the Wolverines held the highest-scoring team in the country to 28 points in the second half — it’s got plenty of flash. It shot nearly 50% from 3-point range, and Lendeborg made a defender look silly with his step-back 3 to start the second half.

And when Big Ten teams are playing anybody else, it’s like the training wheels have been taken off.

“Today I felt like the game was a lot more free-flowing. Not many times did I get chucked while I was trying to cut,” Lendeborg said. “It definitely helps me out. It definitely makes me slow the game down a lot more. I can find more reads than I would in the Big Ten.”  

It's the same for the rest of the Big Ten teams. Purdue, Iowa, Illinois — they still have old-school sensibilities but without the stodginess. At this point, any one of them can win it all.

Only a fool would think otherwise.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Big Ten proving me wrong in March Madness. I owe it an apology