6 Takeaways from Cavs Game 6 loss to Pistons: Donovan Mitchell’s flaws are becoming more difficult to ignore

May 15, 2026; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Detroit Pistons guard Ausar Thompson (9) fouls Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell (45) while going for a loose ball during the first quarter in game six of the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Rocket Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-Imagn Images | Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

CLEVELAND — Every time you want to believe the Cleveland Cavaliers have turned over a new leaf, they show you that they haven’t.

After their most inspiring win of the Donovan Mitchell era in Game 5, they laid an egg at home, blowing the perfect opportunity to punch their ticket to the Eastern Conference Finals with a 21-point loss to the Detroit Pistons.

Now, they’ll head on the road for a do-or-die Game 7 in Detroit.

Basketball teams often take on the persona of their best player. They’re built to accent that player’s skills and cover up their weaknesses. Throw in the soft power that player typically weilds within the organization, and it’s easy to see how you get to this point.

In many ways, Mitchell’s shortcomings are a microcosm of the team’s as a whole.

When things are perfectly clicking into place, Mitchell’s individual talent — combined with the skilled pieces that by-and-large fit well around him — makes him seem like one of the best players in the world. And by extension, the Cavs can look unbeatable

The second half of Game 4 is a perfect example of this. Mitchell was scoring at will, tying the record for the most individual points in a half for a playoff game, against the best defense in the conference. The Cavs were humming and unsurprisingly also looked like a juggernaut.

However, when things have gotten rocky for Mitchell, that has also happened for the Cavs. James Harden has helped slightly change this dynamic. His stabilizing force in Game 5, combined with Evan Mobley’s skill on both ends, pulled them out of the rut. But it isn’t their jobs to do that every night at this point in their careers.

This is Mitchell’s team. It still goes as he does.

Both the Toronto Raptors and the Pistons were seemingly engineered to keep Mitchell from doing what he does best. They’ve been able to throw multiple rangy defenders at him that can match both his speed and strength in a way that no other opponent in Mitchell’s previous eight playoff runs have. This has made it difficult for him to get to his spots and leaves his scoring too dependent on a streaky jumper.

And when he has an off-night, as he did in Game 6, the whole house of cards comes tumbling down.

The Cavs played their worst basketball with Mitchell on the court. They were outscored by 25 points in the 37 minutes he played, and it felt like more in the arena.

Mitchell put it on himself to lead the team. He took a game-high 20 shots, most of which came off driving into the teeth of the defense. Mitchell’s superpower is his ability to get to the basket and finish seemingly at will. But that skill was absent yet again. Only three of his 11 attempts from the paint fell.

“I can’t dwell on it, I missed shots tonight,” Mitchell said. “Do I think some of them were tougher shots that I could’ve gotten better? Sure, but I can say that about every game. I’m not here to look at the fact I missed shots. It’s the overall force and impact on the game.”

The overall force and impact on the game were the real issues, and have been for four years now.

Mitchell has no offensive counters outside of finding other ways to score.

He isn’t a skilled distributor. Either an inability to see the correct reads or an unwillingness to make the pass has limited Mitchell throughout his career. He’s yet to record more than five assists through 13 playoff games with a paltry assist-to-turnover ratio of 1.15. That’s unacceptable for someone operating that much on ball.

Assists aren’t the only measure of whether someone’s a well-rounded offensive player. However, it’s difficult to argue that someone is if they’re consistently coming up short in this key area.

Combine that with not being an off-ball mover and being a bad point-of-attack defender, and you have a player who’s only valuable on-ball and scoring at a high clip.

These individual issues affect the whole team. It’s difficult for teammates to buy in with off-ball movement if there’s no chance they will be rewarded for their effort. Defense then becomes more difficult if you aren’t getting the energy on the offensive side of the ball. And in the end, this leads to a group that has consistently looked lifeless in the biggest moments and can’t really put their finger on why.

After the game, head coach Kenny Atkinson said that he didn’t think his team met the challenge physically. Harden was asked why they didn’t come out with intensity, and he responded with, “That’s a great question.”

When Mitchell comes out flat, the team consistently has a well. This has happened far too often in the playoffs to conclude otherwise.

Cade Cunningham’s performance was the exact opposite of what we saw from Mitchell.

He wasn’t perfect. Cunningham still turned it over seven times, which is far too many for a player that skilled. But his ability to influence the game in other ways rubbed off on his team.

The Cavs came into this game with an “ABC approach” — anybody but Cade.

Instead of trying to beat that challenge all by himself, Cunningham trusted his teammates when Cleveland double-teamed him. This resulted in eight assists for himself, but also allowed everyone else to find a rhythm. His willingness to move the ball and allow his teammates to take advantage led to Detroit’s offense clicking on all cylinders.

“You just have to make the play that’s there,” Pistons head coach J.B. Bickerstaff said.

Cunningham doesn’t let up defensively either. He’s been physical at the point of attack all series and has done a good job of making life difficult for Cleveland’s smaller guards.

Add that all up, and you have a team that’s energized on both ends and a star that is influencing the game in a wide variety of ways.

Anything can happen in Game 7.

The series isn’t yet by any stretch. Even though the Cavs blew a golden opportunity to end this series, we know that they can win in Detroit.

But that isn’t going to happen if Mitchell has another bad game like this. He simply needs to be better.

This is his chance to change the narrative.

“Everything we want is on the other side of hard,” Mitchell said. “We had an opportunity, we missed it, and we’ll have another opportunity on Sunday. That’s the mindset.”

Spurs win to move into Western Conference finals

Stephon Castle in action for the San Antonio Spurs
Stephon Castle was drafted by the San Antonio Spurs with the fourth overall pick in 2024 [Getty Images]

Stephon Castle starred as the San Antonio Spurs sealed their spot in the Western Conference finals with a convincing 139-109 win over the Minnesota Timberwolves.

Castle led the way with 32 points, while Victor Wembanyama added 19, as the Spurs clinched the series 4-2 to set up a heavyweight match-up against the top-seeded Oklahoma City Thunder.

The Spurs met the Thunder - the reigning NBA champions - five times during the regular season and finished with a 4-1 record against them.

Repeating that over the seven-game Western finals would earn the Spurs a spot in the NBA finals.

"We're not even thinking about that right now," Castle said after Friday's victory over the Timberwolves.

"The games ahead are a totally different game. They are rolling right now. They've won eight straight.

"It's going to be tough to knock them off, but we're pretty confident we can do it."

Elsewhere, the Detroit Pistons beat the Cleveland Cavaliers 115-94 to tie their series and set up a deciding game seven .

Cade Cunningham scored 21 points, while Paul Reed and Jalen Duren added 17 and 15 respectively, as the top-seeded Pistons forced a decider for the second play-off round in a row.

Detroit had trailed 3-1 to Orlando Magic in the previous round before reeling off three straight wins to take the series 4-3.

The Pistons host the Cavaliers in Detroit on Sunday to decide who will face the New York Knicks in the Eastern Conference finals.

Spurs blow out Wolves to advance to Western Conference Finals

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - MAY 15: Stephon Castle #5 of the San Antonio Spurs drives around Anthony Edwards #5 of the Minnesota Timberwolves during the fourth quarter in Game Six of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Target Center on May 15, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. 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 David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Spurs had a chance to punch their ticket to the Western Conference Finals Friday night, and they did exactly that with an emphatic 139-109 victory over the Wolves. 

With their backs against the wall, Minnesota changed its defensive scheme to start the game. Instead of playing Gobert against Wemby straight up, the Wolves put him on Castle instead, allowing the Stifle Tower to sag off the Spurs guard and defend the interior. Well, Castle responded by hitting three wide-open triples en route to a 14-point quarter where he shot 5-6 from the field. Defensively, San Antonio also withheld their usual doubles on Ant, but did send help to other players who didn’t expect it coming. 

Offensively, the Spurs played as one. Wemby’s gravity allowed San Antonio’s shooters to get wide-open looks, helping them start 5-11 from three. The three-headed monster in the backcourt also got easy drives to the rim, allowing Fox and Harper to shoot a combined 6-7 from the field. It certainly helped that Minnesota lost confidence in Gobert’s offense, pulling him early in favor of Naz Reid, who hit two early threes to lead all Wolves scorers. Unsurprisingly, Minnesota couldn’t score in the paint due to Wemby’s presence, and after starting 8-15 due to hot shooting, the Wolves then went 2-16 and allowed the Spurs to go on a 20-0 run to start the second quarter, going up 56-27.  

However, this is a game of runs, and we were all reminded of that shortly after. The Wolves answered with a 34-18 run of their own, cutting the Spurs’ lead down to just 13 heading into halftime. Unsurprisingly, Ant was the catalyst, driving fearlessly and finishing around Wemby multiple times while drawing a key foul that led to three points right before the buzzer. 

Still down by double digits, the Wolves switched their defensive scheme once again, putting Gobert back on Wemby. This is when the Spurs rebuilt their original lead, as the good guys went back up by 25 just a few minutes into the third. It was much of the same story, as San Antonio’s shooters remained hot and the guards got to the rim at will, since Gobert sat for large stretches again. Minnesota didn’t manage to go on another run, and the second half was so uneventful that the benches cleared not even halfway through the fourth, with the biggest storyline being that Ant shook hands with the Spurs before the game even ended.

Game notes

  • The Spurs are peaking at the exact right time. After an upset in game 1, San Antonio outscored Minnesota by 99 in games 2-6, and only lost game 4 by 5 points with Wemby logging just 12:29. More importantly, the Spurs have experienced fewer and fewer offensive lulls as the playoffs have gone on, and if that continues, the team will be virtually impossible to stop. 
  • We are seeing Harper and Castle both take leaps in front of our eyes. They’ve been spectacular all season, but to play at an even higher level in the playoffs is something else. I certainly did not expect Castle to shoot so well from three, even if most were wide open, nor did I think that Harper’s defense was so advanced that he was arguably the best matchup on Ant. Along with Fox, any of the Spurs’ three guards can play at an All-NBA level any night, which is what championship-level teams need from their second options. 
  • Speaking of Castle, he is now shooting 44% from three in the playoffs. It makes increasingly less sense for opponents to put their bigs on him, though I still expect OKC to do it since they play two bigs in Chet and Hartenstein. His shooting might be the single biggest X-factor in the Conference Finals. 
  • Fox left the game with a minute left in the first half due to an ankle injury. He did return to start the second, though, and didn’t look any worse for wear, finishing the game with 21 points on 8-10 shooting.
  • Spurs, OKC, Western Conference Finals. The first of what should be many clashes for perhaps the rivalry of this generation, and a matchup between two teams with dynastic potential. These are two teams that can become all-timers, and are also the only ones who can prevent the other from doing so. Strap in, folks: this will be the best series of the entire postseason. 

Play of the game

This is why you never test Swipa!

Next game: @ OKC on Monday at 7:30CDT

With the series ending in 6, the West finals will officially start Monday. Go Spurs go!!!

Spurs beat Timberwolves to advance to Wester Conference finals vs. Thunder

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Stephon Castle, who scored 32 points, drives past Anthony Edwards during the Spurs' 139-109 Game 6 series-clinching win over the Timberwolves on May 15, 2026 in Minneapolis, Image 2 shows Victor Wembanyam, who scored 19 points slams home a dunk over Julius Randle during the Spurs' Game 6 series-clinching win over the Timberwolves

MINNEAPOLIS — The San Antonio Spurs were well on their way to the Western Conference finals in the fourth quarter when Minnesota Timberwolves star Anthony Edwards went down to their bench to briefly offer his congratulations.

The young Spurs left no doubt they’re already a serious NBA title contender.

Stephon Castle had 32 points and 11 rebounds to highlight another dominant performance from the backcourt, and Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs romped past the Timberwolves 139-109 on Friday night to finish in the second-round series in six games.

Stephon Castle, who scored 32 points, drives past Anthony Edwards during the Spurs’ 139-109 Game 6 series-clinching win over the Timberwolves on May 15, 2026 in Minneapolis. Getty Images

“I just tip my hat to them,” Edwards said. “They were just the better team.”

De’Aaron Fox added 21 points and nine assists and rookie Dylan Harper had 15 points off the bench for the Spurs, who set their franchise postseason record for 3-pointers made by going 18 for 38.

They will face defending champion Oklahoma City in Game 1 on Monday night. The Thunder swept their first two series.

“Of course we’re confident, but we need to keep the right confidence level,” Wembanyama said. “Right now, I’m not even thinking about it. I’m just thinking about recovering.”

Wembanyama, who bounced back from his stunning Game 4 ejection with 27 points, 17 rebounds, five assists and three blocks in the Game 5 blowout, was well-guarded by the Wolves in Game 6 and had a quiet 19 points in 27 minutes. But he still served as a constant defensive deterrent in the paint, and he dutifully joined the Spurs in transition whenever they had the opportunity to run — which was often.

The size, smarts and shooting touch of the Spurs guards were too much for the Wolves, who predictably had their hands full with the 7-foot-4 Wembanyama.

Victor Wembanyam, who scored 19 points, slams home a dunk over
Julius Randle during the Spurs’ Game 6 series-clinching win over
the Timberwolves. Getty Images

Castle made his first five 3-pointers and finished 11 for 16 from the floor. Fox was 3 for 3 from deep, and Julian Champagnie made four 3s among his 18 points for the Spurs, who outscored the Wolves by a whopping 97 points in the series and never once trailed by double digits. The Spurs breezed by Portland Trail in five games in the first round.

“It shows that we already gained a little bit of experience from our short playoff time,” Wembanyama said. “I feel like we put ourselves in the best conditions, as simple as that.”

Anthony Edwards had 24 points on 9-for-26 shooting for the Wolves, who got another spark from reserves Terrence Shannon (21 points) and Naz Reid (18 points) but were again flustered by the Spurs and their relentless switch-heavy defense. Julius Randle had just three points on 1-for-8 shooting.

“It just felt like we kind of ran out of bullets as this series went on,” coach Chris Finch said.

This no-show in the elimination game might’ve felt familiar to Wolves fans, who’ve otherwise enjoyed an unprecedented run of success in the playoffs over the last three years.

Minnesota trailed by 33 points at halftime in a 30-point loss at Oklahoma City in the Game 5 ouster in the Western Conference finals last year and were down by 29 points at the break to Dallas in losing the Western Conference finals in 2024 in a 21-point loss in Game 5.

Analyzing potential Mets starting pitching replacements following Clay Holmes injury

For the first seven weeks of this trying 2026 season, Clay Holmes was the least dramatic thing about the New York Mets

He pitched like the ace they needed as the aces they planned for, Freddy Peralta and Nolan McLean, worked through minor inconsistency. He pitched into the sixth inning in seven of his first eight starts, never taxing a bullpen often needed to carry a heavier load as Kodai Senga and David Peterson took their turns. 

But Friday night, he succumbed to whatever relentless force keeps pulling Mets onto the injured list whenever this team threatens to start getting in rhythm. The broken fibula he suffered on Spencer Jones’ comebacker will keep him out for “a long time,” according to Carlos Mendoza, though the Mets had no timetable immediately after the game. He had no spin about how the Mets proceed now, either.  

“It’s a huge blow,” Mendoza said. “He’s been one of the most consistent guys that we had in that rotation. Yeah. It’s a big blow.” 

Logistically, the loss of their steadiest starter in a season that has already required them to tap into minor league depth makes the Mets’ potential climb back to contention even more complicated. They began the year with promising starting pitching depth. By late May 15, they were running out. 

Senga is on the injured list. Sean Manaea is pitching out of the bullpen, scraping for innings where he can find them and hoping he pitches well enough to prove he deserves more. His bullpen colleague Tobias Myers is a former starter, but he has pitched so well that he has been promoted from mop-up duties early to keep-it-close duties recently. His first 10 outings were multiple innings. His last four — all of his work in May — have been one inning or fewer. 

“At the moment, I’m [not stretched out to where I could start]. Maybe 35, 40 pitches,” said Myers, noting that no one had approached him about how the Holmes news might affect him yet. 

Of course, they hadn’t. The news was so jarring that when someone asked Mendoza whether Triple-A righty Jonah Tong might be an option, the normally patient manager interrupted. 

“We don’t know,” he said. “We don’t know. It’s too early.” 

Tong, who was called up last year but has spent the beginning of this season trying to expand and hone his arsenal in Triple-A, is part of the pitching depth that reassured the Mets about their chances prior to this season. But Tong has been inconsistent, and at times wholly ineffective: He allowed six earned runs on five hits and three walks while recording just five outs Thursday. 

His Syracuse Mets teammate Jack Wenniger, on the other hand, has a 1.08 ERA and more strikeouts than innings pitched in seven starts. The 24-year-old last pitched May 12. 

Wenniger, a sixth-round pick, has never carried the same expectations as Tong. And despite his sparkling headline numbers, he is walking nearly five batters per nine innings while benefiting from an anomalously low .237 batting average on balls in play. Still, results as good as his do not happen fully accidentally. 

Perhaps by Saturday, the Mets will probably have a better idea of their short-term plans. They will not, however, have many more long-term answers. Because as they sit eight games under .500, just 44 games into the season, chaos remains the only constant.

Kurtz Blasts the A’s to a 5-2 Victory Over the Giants

May 15, 2026; West Sacramento, California, USA; Athletics first baseman Nick Kurtz (16) hits a home run against the San Francisco Giants during the fifth inning at Sutter Health Park. Mandatory Credit: Ed Szczepanski-Imagn Images | Ed Szczepanski-Imagn Images

The Athletics and Giants opened their three-game series on a beautiful Friday night in front of a strong crowd at Sutter Health Park. The A’s prevailed 5-2 thanks to another solid start from starting pitcher Aaron Civale, first baseman Nick Kurtz’s latest game-changing blast and a makeshift bullpen that bent but did not break.

A’s Waste Early Scoring Chance

Civale tossed a scoreless first, retiring the first three Giants hitters in order. Giants’ pitcher, Tyler Mahle, matched his counterpart. A’s left fielder Tyler Soderstrom hit a two-out double before Mahle struck out designated hitter Brent Rooker to complete a clean first inning of work.

A’s Take 1-0 Lead!

In the bottom of the second, Athletics’ third baseman Zack Gelof walked With two outs, shortstop Darell Hernaiz blooped a single to right field, moving Gelof from first base to third. Jeff McNeil roped his ninth double of the season to the right field fence. Gelof easily scored; however the Giants worked a defensive relay to perfection to throw out Hernaiz at home plate. With Kurtz on deck, the A’s maybe should have put the stop sign on there to give their slugging first baseman a chance with two on and two outs.

Civale responded with a seven-pitch shutdown inning, quickly turning things back over to his offense.

Giants Tie the Game

Giants’ second baseman Luis Arraez led off the fourth inning with a solo home run to right field, his first of the season and as a Giant. With two outs, San Francisco’s left fielder Heliot Ramos and shortstop Willy Adames got back-to-back hits off of Civale. The A’s pitcher escaped that jam by getting the Giants’ designated hitter Bryce Eldridge to hit a sharp line out to McNeil at second.

Bolte: Good and Bad

In the bottom of the fourth, A’s center fielder Henry Bolte lined a single to center. He has now recorded a hit in his first three MLB games. Bolte was thrown out attempting to steal second to end that frame.

Giants Jump in Front

In the fifth, the Giants took their first lead of the game. Center fielder Harrison Bader hit his third home run of the season, a solo blast to left field. After allowing two singles, Civale wiggled out of that tough situation by retiring Matt Chapman and Rafael Devers to keep his team’s deficit at one.

Churn More Butter!

A’s right fielder Lawrence Butler led off the bottom of the fifth with a single to right. He advanced to second on Hernaiz’s sacrifice bunt. McNeil singled to left just in front of the diving Ramos, advancing Butler to third with only one out. That brought up Kurtz, who extended his on-base streak to 38 games in a big way. The “Big Amish” put his team back in front with a three-run home run to left center, his eighth of the season and third in as many games.

A’s Add Another Run

The A’s were not done against Mahle. Shea Langeliers and Rooker blooped singles to right field. With two outs, Bolte lined an RBI single to left field, scoring Langeliers for the A’s fourth run of the inning.

Bolte continues to impress since his promotion, contributing on offense and defense. That was Mahle’s last inning of his outing, which quickly devolved as he failed to protect his team’s lead.

A’s Bullpen Shuts the Door

A’s right-handed reliever Joel Kuhnel replaced Civale in the sixth. Civale had another solid outing, aside from the two mistake pitches that resulted in home runs. Despite only striking out two and giving up a fair amount of hard contact, he was able to limit the damage and keep his team in the ballgame. Kuhnel pitched a scoreless inning, getting the next two hitters out after Adames had doubled with one out.

Left-handed reliever Jose Suarez made his A’s debut in the seventh inning. He did not take long to put himself in a tough situation as Bader singled and then Arraez doubled. Somehow Suarez escaped that situation by striking out Chapman and getting Devers to groundout to first baseman Kurtz. Those two Giants continue to struggle, which is particularly problematic given both players’ high salaries. The Giants finished the game 0-for-7 with runners in scoring position and ten left on base, a sign they had plenty of chances to score, but failed to capitalize.

Right-hander Luis Medina pitched a much less stressful scoreless eighth inning for the Athletics, continuing his stellar recent work in relief. He has gradually worked his way into higher-leverage opportunities and now sports a 1.62 ERA in his first season post Tommy John surgery.

Last but not least, left-hander Hogan Harris came in for the ninth inning save opportunity. Unlike yesterday, the A’s held on for the victory. Harris got two quick outs, gave up Arraez’s fourth hit of the game and then rebounded to retire Matt Chapman to secure the Athletics 5-2 victory and collect his third save of the season.

Things got rocky late for the A’s bullpen, but they were able to protect the lead, securing Civale’s fifth win of 2026 and getting this rivalry series off to the right start.

Preview

Tomorrow, these two teams will duke it out in the middle game of this three-game set. Right-hander Luis Severino is scheduled to pitch for the hosts. Through nine starts, the 32-year-old is 2-4 with a 4.07 ERA and a 1.52 WHIP. He has pitched well in his last two outings, only to get tagged with the loss in each game. Hope he has another strong performance tomorrow as the A’s seek to win the series. The Giants will counter with young right-hander Trevor McDonald, who enters his third start with a 1-0 record and a 2.92 ERA, It should be another exciting matchup tomorrow evening.

Mariners fall behind, get chased down by Mason Miller in 2-0 loss

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MAY 15: Mason Miller #22 of the San Diego Padres reacts after getting the final out to beat the Seattle Mariners 2-0 at T-Mobile Park on May 15, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Olivia Vanni/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Mariners waited too long, and Mason Miller eventually caught up with them.

The Padres shutout the Mariners 2-0 in Friday’s series opener in Seattle. The win gives them the second ever Vedder Cup, tying the all-time series at one apiece. Emerson Hancock pitched well, working around a bit of hard contact to get through six innings with the game still reach. But the Mariners’ lineup was lifeless for 7 2/3 innings, starting their day just in time for Miller to end it.

Hancock was a bit of a mix, picking up six strikeouts on 14 whiffs. He was rarely in trouble over his six innings of work, allowing just one run on five hits. But the contact he allowed was often quite hard. The Padres smacked 11 batted balls with exit velocities greater than 95 mph. Those just so happened to turn into nine outs.

That’s because the Mariners defense, particularly the middle infield, was actually quite good. They entered the day next to last in the majors in defensive run value, and I’m not sure there’s been a game this year that struck me as well-played in the field. This one did. (Of course, I wrote this before J.P. Crawford threw away a grounder of modest difficulty in the ninth inning. I was trying to say something nice about this game, and now I can’t.)

In the second inning, Hancock loaded the bases with a trio of singles — his one real jam of the day. Hancock got Sung-Mun Song to hit a hard grounder to Crawford at short stop, who raced to second, tagged the bag, and made a leaping throw to first to get out of it. This reminded me of the old, er, young J.P., with that slick sling and flare.

Hancock picked up a pair of strikeouts to begin the third. Then he served up another hard grounder, this time to Fernando Tatis Jr. The ball nearly got through the infield, but Cole Young made a nice back hand play, getting the ball to first with a jump throw. Young would make another nice play in the ninth, leaping to snag a soft liner and save a run.

Gavin Sheets walked with one out in the fourth on a sweeper that Hancock yanked and threw way, way behind Sheets all the way to the backstop. Sheets then stole second and would later score on a double from Miguel Andujar.

“Well, how did Sheets get on?” Hancock said after the game, when asked about the double. “I mean that’s what it comes down to. Free bases, an early jump, early break to steal second, and a really good two strike pitch but a good hitter puts a good swing on it, it’s one run – it’s that small of a margin. One walk ends up scoring in a close game and that’s the difference between a win and a loss.”

For as good as Hancock has looked at times this year, he seems to occasionally lose the grip on that big bender. This time it came back to hurt him, but it’s a small thing, especially when it’s the only walk of the day.e

In the fifth, Song hit a chopper over the mound to leadoff the inning. Brendan Donovan ranged over and fired the ball to first. Josh Naylor made an awkward lunge for the throw and took his foot off the bag. Song was safe after review. It proved no matter, as Hancock picked up another 6-4-3 double play on the next batter.

That was kind of the game for Hancock. Again, he got a solid number of whiffs and tons of awkward swings. He continued to look like the new version of himself. But he lived in the zone with his fastball and the Padres swung hard. I think this is another good example of an outing where he can still be quite effective even when he’s not at his absolute best. It’s certainly helpful when the defense steps up behind him.

Cooper Criswell got the eight inning and gave up a run on two singles and a groundout, making the game 2-0. But it didn’t really matter because even one run proved too much for the Mariners lineup.

Yes, the Mariners got shut out at the plate. They ultimately picked up seven hits and three walks, but that kind of overstates how much offense they generated. Their only real threat came in the bottom of the eighth when Donovan singled and Julio walked with one out. Josh Naylor nearly took the lead with a barrel deep to center, but it was tracked down. That was actually the third hard hit out to the warning in center field for the Mariners on Friday, and they did swat 12 hard hit balls. It just wasn’t enough.

“If we have a process that gets balls on the barrels, we’re doing something right,” Dan Wilson said after the game. “But we also want to get balls that fall. We’ll just keep grinding away.”

The Padres acknowledged the threat after Naylor’s near-homer and took the appropriate action, bringing in the cyborg Miller for a four-out save.

The Mariners actually put up a bit of a fight. Randy Arozarena exploded his bat and dropped a ball just beyond the mound to load the bases with two outs. And Connor Joe worked a full count- hey, that’s something. But Joe struck out, ending the threat. 

In the ninth, Crawford drew a leadoff walk, and Young dunked a single. Miller countered with three more strike outs and the game was over. It’s, frankly, kind of impossible to string hits together against Miller, who lowered his FIP to -0.22 in the outing. He’s having simply the most dominant reliever season in history. The Mariners only mistake was letting him in the game. If there’s a silver lining, it’s that he probably won’t pitch Saturday after throwing 34 pitches to get four outs.

“He’s pitching very well,” Wilson said postgame. “He’s got great stuff — I think he hit 103 (mph) tonight — and to be honest, I thought the at-bats we put up against him were really strong, to load the bases there and have a couple of at-bats that went very deep, and the guys kept fighting all the way to the end. Those at-bats were tough, and that’s what you love to see. But he’s definitely touch, and scoring early was what we needed to do.”

The season series — the Vedder Cup — goes to the Padres. The Mariners will look to even this particular three-game set Saturday.

Stephon Castle gives the Spurs 32 points in a 139-109 blowout to eliminate Timberwolves in Game 6

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Stephon Castle had 32 points and 11 rebounds to highlight another dominant performance from the San Antonio backcourt, and Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs raced past the Minnesota Timberwolves 139-109 on Friday night to win the series in six games.

De’Aaron Fox added 21 points and nine assists and rookie Dylan Harper had 15 points off the bench for the Spurs. They will face defending champion Oklahoma City in Game 1 of the Western Conference finals on Monday night. The Thunder swept their first two series.

Wembanyama, who bounced back from his stunning Game 4 ejection with 27 points, 17 rebounds, five assists and three blocks in the Game 5 blowout, was well-guarded by the Wolves in Game 6 and had a quiet 19 points in 27 minutes. But he still served as a constant defensive deterrent in the paint, and he dutifully joined the Spurs in transition whenever they had the opportunity to run — which was often.

The size, smarts and shooting touch of the Spurs guards were too much for the Wolves, who predictably had their hands full with the 7-foot-4 Wembanyama.

Castle made his first five 3-pointers and went 11 for 16 from the floor. Fox was 3 for 3 from deep, and Julian Champagnie made four 3s among his 18 points for the Spurs, who outscored the Wolves by 97 points in the series and never once trailed by double digits.

Anthony Edwards had 24 points on 9-for-26 shooting for the Wolves, who got another spark from reserves Terrence Shannon (21 points) and Naz Reid (18 points) but were again flustered by the Spurs and their relentless switch-heavy defense. Julius Randle had just three points on 1-for-8 shooting.

This no-show in the elimination game might’ve felt familiar to Wolves fans, who’ve otherwise enjoyed an unprecedented run of success in the playoffs over the last three years.

Minnesota trailed by 33 points at halftime in a 30-point loss at Oklahoma City in the Game 5 ouster in the Western Conference finals last year and were down by 29 points at the break to Dallas in losing the Western Conference finals in 2024 in a 21-point loss in Game 5.

Dodgers lean on three homers and eight pitchers to end losing streak vs. Angels

ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA - MAY 15: Andy Pages #44 of the Los Angeles Dodgers watches.
Andy Pages hits a three-run home run in the fourth inning of the Dodgers' 6-0 win over the Angels at Angel Stadium on Friday night. (Scott Strazzante / Getty Images)

The Dodgers opened MLB rivalry weekend with a blast — three to be exact — in a 6-0 win over the Angels on Friday at Angel Stadium.

The Dodgers also achieved something last year's World Series-winning team couldn't — they beat the Angels. The Angels had won seven consecutive games against the Dodgers, the franchise's longest winning streak against its crosstown rival.

This time, however, the Dodgers (27-18) took command. The Dodgers' lineup lit up Angels starter Jack Kochanowicz’s fastball. Andy Pages hit a three-run home run and Max Muncy hit his 12th homer of the season on the next at-bat to break a scoreless game in the fourth inning. Both home runs came off four-seams Kochanowicz left hanging too far over the center of the plate.

Read more:Dodgers' Blake Snell returns to injured list with loose bodies in his left elbow

During Pages’ at-bat, a pitch ricocheted off Angels catcher Logan O’Hoppe's left hand. Playing in his first game since returning from the injured list, O'Hoppe stayed in the game despite appearing to be in pain. He left in the sixth because of irritation in his left wrist — the same wrist he fractured on April 25.

In the sixth, Teoscar Hernández tacked on two more runs with an opposite-field home run after an errant sinker from Kochanowicz. The 33-year-old wore a big smile after he crossed home and was showered in sunflower seeds. Hernández had gone 23 days without a home run.

Shohei Ohtani also put together good at-bats. He walked and had a double, but he also struck out twice.

Dodgers pitcher Will Klein delivers during the first inning against the Angels at Angel Stadium on Friday.
Dodgers pitcher Will Klein delivers during the first inning against the Angels at Angel Stadium on Friday. (Mark J. Terrill / Associated Press)

Freddie Freeman was notably absent. Roberts texted Freeman a couple nights ago and told him he would give him Friday off. Freeman, ever the competitor, tried to get Roberts to reconsider, but the Dodgers manager held firm.

"Just in the middle of 13 in a row, I felt this was a good day to kind of sit and watch a ballgame,” Roberts said before the game. “He’s been doing great. He’s trended in the right direction the last couple weeks. But I still feel that it’s still the right thing to give him a day.”

Will Klein opened for the Dodgers after Blake Snell was placed on the injured list because of loose bodies in his left elbow. The Dodgers recalled left-hander Charlie Barnes to take Snell’s place on the active roster.

Read more:Swanson: Dave Roberts made the right call giving Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani a rare day off

The quick pivot didn’t affect the Dodgers much Friday. The team relied on eight pitchers — Klein, Edgardo Henriquez, Blake Treinen, Wyatt Mills, Kyle Hurt, Alex Vesia, Jack Dreyer and Barnes — to complete the game. No one ate up more innings than Klein, who struck out two and surrendered one of the two hits the Dodgers gave up across two innings.

Barnes closed out the game. He induced two quick infield groundouts before walking Zach Neto. Bryce Teodosio flied out to Kyle Tucker in right field to end the game.

The Dodgers now have a chance to do something last year's team couldn’t: win a series against the Angels (16-29).

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Pistons dominate 2nd half to beat Cavs and force Game 7

CLEVELAND (AP) — Cade Cunningham scored 21 points and the top-seeded Detroit Pistons dominated the second half, beating the Cleveland Cavaliers 115-94 on Friday night to force a Game 7 in their Eastern Conference second-round series.

The decisive game is Sunday in Detroit.

Jalen Duren had 15 points and 11 rebounds while Daniss Jenkins also scored 15 for the Pistons, who have won four games this postseason when facing elimination.

They were down 3-1 to Orlando before winning the last three to advance out of the first round.

Cunningham made five 3-pointers as the Pistons went 16 of 36 from beyond the arc. Duncan Robinson, who missed Wednesday’s Game 5 with a lower back injury, had four 3-pointers and scored 14 points off the bench.

Paul Reed also had 17 points as Detroit’s reserves outscored Cleveland’s 48-19.

James Harden scored 23 points for Cleveland, which suffered its first home loss of the postseason. Donovan Mitchell and Evan Mobley scored 18 apiece.

SPURS 139, TIMBERWOLVES 109

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Stephon Castle had 32 points and 11 rebounds to highlight another dominant performance from the San Antonio backcourt, and Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs raced past Minnesota to win the series in six games.

De’Aaron Fox added 21 points and nine assists and rookie Dylan Harper had 15 points off the bench for the Spurs. They will face defending champion Oklahoma City in Game 1 of the Western Conference finals on Monday night. The Thunder swept their first two series.

Wembanyama, who bounced back from his stunning Game 4 ejection with 27 points, 17 rebounds, five assists and three blocks in the Game 5 blowout, was well-guarded by the Wolves in Game 6 and had a quiet 19 points in 27 minutes. But he still served as a constant defensive deterrent in the paint, and he dutifully joined the Spurs in transition whenever they had the opportunity to run — which was often.

The size, smarts and shooting touch of the Spurs guards were too much for the Wolves, who predictably had their hands full with the 7-foot-4 Wembanyama.

Castle made his first five 3-pointers and went 11 for 16 from the floor. Fox was 3 for 3 from deep, and Julian Champagnie made four 3s among his 18 points for the Spurs, who outscored the Wolves by 97 points in the series and never once trailed by double digits.

Anthony Edwards had 24 points on 9-for-26 shooting for the Wolves, who got another spark from reserves Terrence Shannon (21 points) and Naz Reid (18 points) but were again flustered by the Spurs and their relentless switch-heavy defense. Julius Randle had just three points on 1-for-8 shooting.

Subway Series opener, loss of Clay Holmes exemplifies dichotomy of Mets-Yankees seasons

The ball went off Spencer Jones’ bat at 111.1 mph and ricocheted off Clay Holmes’ lower leg toward the first base foul line. At the time, as the Yankees rookie hustled down the line for a hit, Jones had no idea he’d broken Holmes’ fibula.

But he did recall this: “It sounded loud.”

After the game, a game in which Cam Schlittler dominated the Mets en route to a 5-2 win for the Yankees at Citi Field Friday night, Jones seemed surprised to see a crowd of reporters gather at his locker. He hadn’t heard the damage his liner had done to Holmes, not to mention the Mets’ season, and he seemed stunned when a reporter relayed the news to him.

It hit hard in part because Holmes is one of the good guys in the sport, one who has pitched for both the Mets and Yankees, and perhaps even more so because Jones considers him a friend, one with whom he works out in the offseason in Nashville.

“I didn’t know,” he said quietly. “I’m sorry to hear that. He’s a tough guy. He went back out there and pitched on a broken leg. That’s incredible.”

Indeed, that may be the most stunning part of all. Holmes not only pitched to five more hitters in the fourth inning, after the Jones liner, allowing no runs, but told Carlos Mendoza in the dugout he was fine and went back out for the fifth inning, striking out Cody Bellinger before showing signs of the fracture with his delivery that forced the manager to take him out of the game.

Mendoza seemed practically sick to his stomach as he announced the injury in the interview room, and didn’t try to downplay it in the slightest.

“It’s a huge blow,” he said.

There wasn’t much else to say. Only Juan Soto spoke in a group interview in the Mets clubhouse, and he’s not one to throw compliments around for sound bites, so when he praised Holmes as “one of the hardest workers I’ve seen in my career,” it told you much the pitcher’s teammates were feeling for him.

So on a night when much of the Subway Series buzz died quickly at Citi Field as quickly as the Yankees took an early 3-0 lead and Schlitter shut down the Mets’ offense, it was hard not to compare and contrast the sights and sounds from the two clubhouses, as well as the state of the Mets’ and Yankees’ seasons.

The Yankees room was full of noise, smiles, and good vibes after the win. They haven’t played well lately, but there’s no question this team knows it’s going to the postseason, with Ben Rice emerging as a masher to ride shotgun for Aaron Judge, and Schlittler continuing to make a statement as the early AL Cy Young Award favorite.

“It’s really something to watch him pitch,” Rice said.

On the other side, you got the sense that the shock of losing Holmes was settling in through the clubhouse.

Just when the Mets were finally showing signs of life, with the sweep of the Detroit Tigers this week, they lost the guy who has been their best pitcher this season, a dominant force in his own right.

In truth, it’s hard to see how they recover from this one, especially with all of their other injuries, considering there is no telling yet how soon the likes of Francisco Lindor, Jorge Polanco, Luis Robert Jr. and others will be back.

As it is, their better play over the last couple of weeks was difficult to measure. For four straight series, the Mets played teams that were each in long losing streaks, playing their worst baseball of the season, and the 5-4 record on their nine-game road trip actually felt like a disappointment.

But then came the energy and hope that came with A.J. Ewing’s call-up, and the sweep of the Tigers finally offered evidence that perhaps the Mets aren’t as bad as they’ve played this season.

In that respect, this Subway Series loomed as a litmus test of sorts. The Yankees have been slumping themselves, but if the Mets could play well against them this weekend, it would validate the Tigers sweep to a degree and further their momentum.

Well, one game down, and maybe they can shrug it off to the brilliance of Schlittler, who is shutting everybody down this season.

They have two more games to prove they’ve raised their game against more hittable starters in Carlos Rodon and Ryan Weathers.

Yet suddenly it’s not just the offense that is the problem, but a starting rotation that has a huge hole in it, due to the Holmes injury.

Holmes, Nolan McLean, and Freddy Peralta were the only reliable starters for most of the first several weeks of the season. David Peterson has been better lately, but only when used after an opener, for whatever reason, in relatively short stints. And Christian Scott offers promise but plenty of uncertainty.

Even with Ewing and Carson Benge providing a spark, these Mets need pitching depth and a fair amount of dominance to have any chance of winning with the consistency it will take to get back into contention.

Soto, for one, didn’t want to believe the reality of the Holmes injury.

“We’re going to miss Clay for maybe a month,” he said. “Hopefully less.”

Nobody wanted to tell him a broken fibula likely means Holmes will miss three months or so.

By then, the trading deadline will have come and gone, and at the moment, that feels like a day that will be significant for these Mets for all the wrong reasons.

San Antonio vs. Minnesota, Final Score: Castle and Spurs close out Wolves 139-109, advance to West finals

May 15, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) dunks the ball past Minnesota Timberwolves forward Jaden McDaniels (3) in the first half during game six of the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Target Center. Mandatory Credit: Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images | Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images

Stephon Castle (hitting his first five threes consecutively) put up his most impressive shooting night of his young career and his team responded emphatically to Minnesota’s one extended push at the end of the first half. A Spurs squad that was primed for this closeout opportunity out-shot (56% to 38%) and out-rebounded (60-29) the Wolves in a dominant performance – all while throwing a block party (13 to 2) – before Anthony Edwards helped stage Minnesota’s one comeback try late in the second quarter. San Antonio’s starters doubled up their Wolves’ counterparts 101-50 in this decisive victory.

San Antonio’s Castle (32 points, 11 rebounds, and 6 assists) and De’Aaron Fox (21 points, 9 assists, and 2 blocks) supplied the necessary leadership and playmaking to win Game 6 decisively. Dylan Harper (13 points and 5 rebounds) again performed beyond his years. Victor Wembanyama (19 points, 6 rebounds, and 3 blocks) seemed content playing the facilitator role. Carter Bryant (3 points and 6 rebounds) capitalized on his important minutes and kept Spurs’ possessions alive while shortening Minnesota’s at the same time.

Until Anthony Edwards (24 points and 3 steals) got going later on, Naz Reid (18 points and 7 rebounds) and Terrence Shannon (21 points) valiantly kept Minnesota in the game. Jaden McDaniels (13 points and 3 assists) made his contributions in a third quarter where San Antonio outshined the Wolves 36-23. Julius Randle was a non-factor.

Wembanyama, Castle, and Castle combined to hit six of their first eight shots, including a driving lay-up for Fox, and two threes for Castle. Of large concern were two ticky tack fouls committed by Fox and Castle, and a touch foul on Vassell that gifted Edwards an and-1. Edwards, operating against single coverage, was able to knock down a relatively easy seven points. Spur irritant Reid hit his first three shots to bring Minnesota within five. Castle (14) and Fox (9) figured strongest in helping San Antonio stay safely ahead, but Reid’s 10-point outburst prevented a blowout from occurring.

San Antonio pieced together a 20-0 run to start the second period that resembled the closing flourishes the 2003 titlists did to their opponents than the fireworks that they had eliminated Portland with. Shannon put up a quick five points, and Reid’s and-1 shaved the 29-point deficit to 21. After several minutes of the teams trading baskets, Edwards took the offense into his own hands and the Wolves bit into the Spurs lead. Fox, after helping stabilize San Antonio in the closing minutes, suffered a lower body injury, and the team held onto a 13 point lead.

Fox pleasingly returned to action to start the third, and put up a handful of points. In anticipation of another Wolves run, San Antonio forced two unforced turnovers on Edwards and Reid. Despite the sustained moments of Minnesota scoring throughout the quarter, the Spurs truly anchored themselves on defense to crate the necessary distance with finality. Once the Wolves resorted to surges of 1:1 play, San Antonio ran a lay-up line around and over the bedraggled Wolves.

Observations

  • Edwards went down to the Spurs huddle to congratulate the team in its entirety with eight minutes remaining. Okay, I like him.
  • The pre-game walkup interview with a player is a nice snippet for halftime of the opening game – Johnson was the guest tonight with Cassidy Hubbarth.
  • Stan Van Gundy stated late in the opening half that “Fox has 13 points on perfect shooting.”
  • Simmons (on his podcast this morning) listed Devin Vassell and Julian Champagnie (21-for-63 from 3 together) as one of his five (he paired them together) players to watch heading into Game 6 – noting that ‘you can beat San Antonio if they miss their threes.’ The pair teamed up for five triples tonight.
  • Two memorable second quarter moments – 1) Harper looked down Reid and calmly knocked down a straightaway three, and 2) Castle backed down Conley the full 20 feet from the 3-point line to the box and willed a double-pump banker over the grizzled veteran.
  • Champagnie’s three first quarter misses were ‘off,’ ‘oof,’ and ‘woof.
  • I don’t think Terrence Shannon is nearly the great defender he thinks he is. Not every contact on defense has to result in a charge.
  • When things don’t go his way, Randle is easily the most clear ‘I just can’t even’ guy in the league.
  • My dad would have started singing Dean Martin’s “Let’s Put Out the Lights and Go to Sleep’ at the start of the fourth quarter.
  • Sequence of the Game #1: On transition halfway through the opening stanza, Johnson got stood up by Edwards deep in the paint, pumpfaked somewhere between 9-18 times, and then lofted a feather to Wembanyama for a Nerf-lob.
  • Sequence of the Game #2: With the first San Antonio possession of the second period looking doomed, Harper found Champagnie as a release valve crosscourt, and then the forward whipped a pass to the rookie for a nifty lay-up.
  • Sequence of the Game #3: As part of a 16-0 run to start the second, and after a missed Bryant free throw, he somehow came down with his own carom. The ball pinged around to what the viewers might have thought would end with a Wembanyama triple, but he re-directed the ball patiently to a waiting Vassell at the top for a swish. After Wembanyama deterred an Edwards floater at the other end, Castle rewarded Bryant for his hard work with a beautiful lob to the rookie.
  • Sequence of the Game #4: To close out that now 20-0 run in the second, Bryant wrested an offenisve rebound away from a Wolves player, and whipped a dime to Harper on the left baseline for a spinning lay-in.
  • Sequence of the Game #5: After McDaniels doinked a third-quarter dunk attempt, Fox had more than enough time at the other end to gauge and knock down a catapult three to make it 102-76.

Game Rundown

Champagnie’s first shot fell very short, but Castle – with Gobert assigned on him – tossed a lob to Wembanyama and followed that with a three from above the break. Fox opened things with a three and a contested lay-up around Dosummu. Unlike Champagnie, Vassell hit his first three attempt. Castle’s second three put the Spurs up ten. The referees – surprise, surprise – missed a left elbow by Randle into Wembanyama’s back, and the Wolves forward drew a foul on Johnson seconds after. Harper made his first lay-up, and Castle’s and-1 put San Antonio up 11. Reid made an instant impact – his eight points caving in the Spurs’ deficit. Castle’s third three stalled out Reid’s personal run. A tip-in by Kornet caused Ian Eagle to declare ‘cleanup on Aisle 7!“ Fox’s two baskets stunned Minnesota enough to get San Antonio to 36-27 after one.

Reid finally missed from distance, which coincided with an brazen Spurs run. Wembanyama received a leakout pass from Fox and Edwards was whistled for a shove on the superstar’s dunk. Wembanyama then converted a lay-up over Edwards fromBEHIND THE BACKBOARD to make it 43-27. Castle ripped an offensive rebound over Reid and Dosummu and converted a manly and-1. Bryant looked like a veteran glue guy – particularly on defense and the boards. It took a difficult Shannon and-1 to finally end the Spurs’ 20-0 detonation. Shannon put up a 9-point microburst, and Conley’s second three brought the Wolves within 18. Kornet and Vassell swatted away Shannon’s next two tries. Edwards caught fire late in the frame and Fox appeared to tweak his ankle with 80 seconds left. Champagnie saw four free throws go in, which aided him with a corner three late in the half, and San Antonio led by 13 at halftime.

Fox, visibly hobbled, returned to action and hit a corner three to start the third. McDaniels responded with his first field goal. Wembanyama swatted away a Gobert dunk attempt, and then tossed in a lefty Duncan over his fellow Frenchman to push the lead back out to 18. Fox encouragingly guided home a 16-foot floater. The Spurs’ assertiveness was rewarded with the foul bonus in less than five minutes. Vassell answered McDaniels’ three with one of his own, while Shannon and McDaniels attacked the basket at-will. Castle’s fourth three looked confident, and his fifth three kept the San Antonio at 20. After Gobert missed a 18” hook, Harper glided to the other end and banked in a lay-up. Harper also appeared to rattled Edwards with a cool demeanor and handle. San Antonio went to the fourth up 110-84.


For the Wolves fan’s perspective, please visit Canis Hoopus.

Player Grades: Cavs vs Pistons Game 6 – Donovan Mitchell has to step up

CLEVELAND, OH - MAY 15: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers drives to the basket during the game against the Detroit Pistons during Round Two Game Six of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 15, 2026 at Rocket Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. 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 Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers couldn’t close out their series with the Detroit Pistons. Now everything is on the line Sunday night.

All grades are based on our usual expectations for each player.

Donovan Mitchell

18 points, 4 rebounds, 3 assists, 1 steal, 3 turnovers

The Cavs are waiting for Mitchell to be a superhero again. He took a giant step backwards in the last two games, struggling in Game 5 and bringing that into tonight. He couldn’t find any luck inside the arch, shooting 4-14 on two-point attempts and opting for difficult floaters instead of drawing contact to get to the line.

Mitchell had 3 assists and 3 turnovers tonight. His assists per game have been cut in half since the regular season, and he’s yet to even hit that average in a single playoff game. That’s not sustainable for long-term success.

Grade: F

James Harden

23 points, 7 rebounds, 4 assists, 4 steals, 8 turnovers

Harden’s isolation scoring and foul-drawing have gone a long way to ensuring the Cavs never fully let go of the rope. He’s stabilized them throughout the postseason, even if his carelessness with the ball can contribute to some of their opponent’s runs.

The Cavs leaned on Harden in the third quarter. He repeatedly got to the line and put Cleveland in the bonus with five minutes remaining. That extra effort is the only reason the Cavs lost that quarter by 11 points instead of 20 or more.

Ultimately, this team wasn’t built for Harden to carry them. He’s supposed to be the cherry on top. Other players needed to step up.

Grade: D

Evan Mobley

18 points, 6 rebounds, 2 assists, 2 steals, 2 blocks

Mobley will get dinged for the things he didn’t do tonight, but truthfully, he gave enough for them to win this game. His all-around impact was comparable to the previous two games, with Mobley contesting shots and racking up four stocks.

On offense, he was aggressive, going towards the basket and got to the line eight times. He only made half of his attempts from the charity stripe, so we can knock him for that. But most of the problems that plagued the Cavs tonight were not Mobley’s fault.

Grade: C+

Jarrett Allen

13 points, 8 rebounds, 1 assist, 1 steal, 1 block

Allen, for the most part, did his job tonight. It wasn’t anything phenomenal, but he cleaned the glass and protected the rim while finishing nearly every touch given to him on offense.

The Cavs could have used a more active game from him on either end of the floor, though there was nothing too out of the ordinary here. Allen was solid.

Grade: C

Dean Wade

3 points, 3 rebounds

Wade finally hit a shot for the first time since Game 3, attempting two triples in a span of 30 seconds and connecting on one from the corner. In typical Wade fashion, he didn’t take another shot the rest of the night. He’s truly tested the limits of how often you can play a player who refuses to look at the basket on offense.

Grade: D

Max Strus

6 points, 8 rebounds

Strus gives as much effort as anyone in the NBA. His non-stop hustle contributed to some of the most important plays of the night. He grabbed 8 rebounds, 3 offensive, and worked relentlessly to get under Cade Cunningham’s skin. A better shooting night (2-7 from deep) would have made this another classic game from Strus.

Grade: B

Dennis Schroder

0 points, 3 assists, 2 rebounds, 3 turnovers

Schroder had 3 turnovers in his first six minutes tonight, including a double-dribble and traveling violation. You can’t afford those types of mistakes in a closeout game.

Grade: D

Sam Merrill

10 points, 1 rebound, 1 assist

Merrill looked like he was going to find his stride tonight. He connected on two of his first three three-point attempts and even got downhill for a tough layup in the third quarter. But Merrill missed his next two three-point attempts and wasn’t able to help the Cavs when they were being pounded on the defensive glass.

Grade: C

Dodgers lose Blake Snell but slug 3 homers in bullpen game shutout win

May 15, 2026; Anaheim, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers center fielder Andy Pages (44) is greeted by teammates after hitting a home run during the fourth inning against the Los Angeles Angels at Angel Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn Images | William Liang-Imagn Images

It was a short trip down the 5 Freeway to Anaheim to start the nine-game road trip, but the Dodgers had to battle on without Blake Snell in the series opener. The bullpen and the offense stepped up to shut down the Angels in the series opener Friday with a 6-0 win.

The Dodgers used eight pitchers who combined for nine shutout innings of work. On the other side, the offense powered three home runs in the first game of the Freeway Series for their third straight win.

There was an umpire belt buckle delay before first pitch, but home plate umpire Jim Wolf’s mic was finally secured. Shohei Ohtani offered his belt advice as well.

Ohtani entered the game having two straight days off at the plate, but right-hander Jack Kochanowicz struck him out with his sinker to start the series. Kochanowicz also struck out Mookie Betts.

Klein served as opener for the Dodgers, and he didn’t disappoint in his first major league start. The 2025 World Series hero struck out two in two innings pitched and allowed just one hit to Josh Lowe.

Hyeseong Kim got the Dodgers their first base hit against Kochanowicz with two outs in the top of the third. The offensively struggling Ohtani got another opportunity at the plate with a runner on. Ohtani drew a walk to give the Dodgers consecutive base runners. Betts grounded out to first base to end the inning and strand two.

Edgardo Henriquez took over for Klein in the third and got back-to-back strikeouts including a whiff of the swinging variety from Mike Trout.

Pages and Muncy have carried the team offensively this season, and their back-to-back home runs in the top of the fourth at the Big A was a microcosm of what these two sluggers have done.

Pages went into the game 3-for-24, but he unloaded for a 407-ft. three-run home run to center field on a 3-0 count. The Dodgers finally broke through with the big hit to make it 3-0 for the first lead of the series.

Then Muncy went deep thereafter, and the lead increased to 4-0.

Ohtani collected his 200th career double to lead off the fifth inning. The Dodgers bullpen shut down the Halos offensively, but their defense made some impressive plays to save runs.

Teoscar Hernandez took a Kochanowicz sinker deep to the opposite field for his first home run since April 15. The two-run homer gave the Dodgers a commanding 6-0 lead. Finally, Hernandez got sunflower seeds thrown in his face in celebration of his big hit.

Old friend Kirby Yates shut down the Dodgers in order in the seventh.

Blake Treinen, Wyatt Mills, Kyle Hurt, Alex Vesia, and Jack Dreyer all stepped up out of the Dodgers bullpen and contributed to the shutout win.

While Muncy and Hernandez continued to have good nights with another walk and base hit, Dalton Rushing’s frustrations continued. Ryan Johnson struck him out swinging, and both runners were stranded.

Charlie Barnes made his Dodgers debut in the bottom of the ninth to close it out, the eighth pitcher of the night for the Boys in Blue.

Friday particulars

Home runs: Andy Pages (10), Max Muncy (12), Teoscar Hernandez (5)

WP — Edgardo Henriquez (2-0): 1 IP, 1 hit, no runs, 2 strikeouts (17)

LP — Jack Kochanowicz(2-3): 6 IP, 7 hits, 6 runs, 4 strikeouts, 2 walks (96)


Up next

The Freeway Series continues Saturday at (6:38 p.m., SportsNet LA).Justin Wrobleski (5-1, 2.42 ERA, 0.99 WHIP) looks to continue his impressive season on the mound thus far for the Dodgers. José Soriano (6-2, 1.66 ERA, 1.05 WHIP) toes the rubber for the Angels. 

Spurs, 139, Timberwolves 109: That’s All Folks

SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS - MAY 12: Anthony Edwards #5 of the Minnesota Timberwolves looks on from the bench during the fourth quarter against the San Antonio Spurs in Game Five of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Frost Bank Center on May 12, 2026 in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

And just like that, it’s over.

The Minnesota Timberwolves came into Game 6 of their Western Conference Semifinal series against the San Antonio Spurs to replicate their series from two years ago against the Denver Nuggets and force Game 7. Instead, they repeated a different kind of history.

For the third straight year, the Timberwolves’ season ends with a blowout. Two years ago, it was a 21-point loss to the Dallas Mavericks. Last season, they lost to the Oklahoma City Thunder by 30 points. Tonight, it was 30 points at the hand of the Spurs.

It was clear right from the opening tip that the Wolves were in trouble. Amid countless defensive miscommunications and inept offensive possessions, the Wolves fell behind by 29 points early in the second quarter in a game they needed to win to keep their season alive.

Minnesota did put together a 34-18 run to close the first half and cut the San Antonio lead to 13 points, but the success was short-lived as the Spurs resumed drubbing the Wolves coming out of halftime, going up by as many as 28 points in the third quarter.

The Wolves would fall by a final score of 139-109. Anthony Edwards finished the game with 24 points on 9-26 shooting. Rudy Gobert didn’t score a single point, missing all four of his shots. Julius Randle wrapped up his awful second-round performance playing less than 24 minutes while scoring just three points on 1-8 shooting.

The habits a team has during the regular season will always show up during the playoffs. The Wolves, by their own admission, didn’t take the regular season seriously, and it’s shown up in this series. When they needed to make adjustments, they couldn’t.

The Wolves did “flip the switch” and were fantastic against the Nuggets, and if they had drawn a different matchup or been in the Eastern Conference, they could have made it to the Conference Finals or NBA Finals.

To win 4 straight playoff series, though, you have to be able to solve all the different matchups thrown your way and play with consistency from night to night and series to series. You can’t pick up that mentality during the playoffs; it has to be ingrained in who the team is. The work for that starts in the regular season.

In this series, the Wolves saw their mentality and game plan focus go in and out as the series went along. They were never able to solve their offensive issues when Victor Wembanyama was on the court, and got beat down the court numerous times by the Spurs after made baskets.

Ultimately, the Timberwolves were just outgunned in this series. It’s difficult to have confidence that they would have won this series if they were fully healthy, but with Edwards far from 100 percent and Donte DiVicenzo going down, advancing past the Spurs was also going to be an incredibly difficult task.

Unlike previous seasons, this offseason brings with it a ton of uncertainty for the Timberwolves. This Wolves team seems primed for a shakeup around Edwards, as it appears the team has hit a ceiling with the frontcourt pairing of Randle and Gobert.

The Wolves have been incredibly successful of late, making the Playoffs each of the last five seasons and winning at least one playoff series in each of the last three. It’s been the most successful era, while simultaneously being a step behind the best team or two in the league.

To get over the hump and win the championship, Minnesota will need to put together a team that is even better than the one they’ve had this past half-decade. It’s a tall task, but with a superstar like Edwards and surrounding young pieces like Jaden McDaniels and Naz Reid, the Timberwolves have the hard part figured out.

For now, Minnesota will have to stew with a third consecutive embarrassing blowout in an elimination game.


Up Next

The offseason is here. We here at Canis Hoopus will have you covered for all things Timberwolves this summer through the Draft, Free Agency, Summer League, and every move that is made in the coming weeks and months.

For everyone here at Canis, we want to say thank you for following our coverage of the Timberwolves this season and look forward to providing even more this offseason and next season.

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