Brennan Othmann Expresses Excitement For Fresh Start With Flames

Danny Wild-Imagn Images
Danny Wild-Imagn Images

Brennan Othmann will appear in his first NHL game since being traded by the New York Rangers on Mar. 6 in exchange for Jacob Battaglia. 

The Flames called up Othmann from the Calgary Wranglers of the American Hockey League on Saturday, and he will play for the Flames on Saturday night against the Vancouver Canucks. 

Rangers president and general manager Chris Drury once thought highly of Othmann, given that he was his first draft pick as president and general manager of the Rangers.

Despite the high expectations placed on Othmann upon being drafted, his game never quite translated to the NHL level in New York, and his play was inconsistent in the American Hockey League as well.

The 23-year-old forward spent the past two seasons getting sent up and down from the Hartford Wolf Pack of the AHL to the NHL, struggling to carve out a permanent role with the Rangers.

Over the past two seasons with the Rangers, Othmann has played a total of 39 NHL games, recording one goal, two assists, and three points.

Ahead of his Flames debut, Othmann reflected on his time with the Blueshirts and confirmed that he sought out a trade early on in the season, while expressing his excitement to get a fresh start in Calgary.

Rangers Inclined To Keep Dylan Garand Around As he Auditions For Potential Future Role Rangers Inclined To Keep Dylan Garand Around As he Auditions For Potential Future Role Dylan Garand may be auditioning to be the New York Rangers’ backup goaltender for the 2026-27 season.

“With the Rangers and that organization, I just never really got going, I just never really got an opportunity I felt like,” Othmann said. “They have a lot of high-end talent players at both right and left wing, so it was kind of hard to crack your way into that lineup over the last few years. 

“I thought it was time for a change and kind of made the decision at the start of the year and the process went on the whole season. Getting that call on the deadline day was obviously super exciting. It’s not like I didn’t want to play for the Rangers, I just wanted a fresh opportunity, fresh eyes, and a fresh organization to look at me.”

In 10 games with the Wranglers, Othmann has recorded five assists.

Moses Itauma knocks out Jermaine Franklin with big uppercut in 5th round

MANCHESTER, England (AP) — Moses Itauma delivered another devastating knockout by sending Jermaine Franklin Jr. to the canvas with a powerful uppercut in the fifth round of their heavyweight fight on Saturday.

Itauma (14-0, 12 KOs), who could soon be in line for a world title shot, staggered Franklin in the center of the ring and the referee waved the fight off as the American fell face first.

Franklin, who went the distance with former two-time world champion Anthony Joshua three years ago, had been billed as Itauma's toughest test yet.

The 21-year-old British southpaw had been dispatching opponents early — none of his previous nine opponents had made it through two rounds.

Franklin (24-3, 15 KOs) was knocked down in the third and ultimately made it to midway through the fifth at Co-op Live Arena. After the uppercut, Itauma threw one final right that seemed to graze the falling Franklin.

Itauma turned pro three years ago in a debut KO victory that lasted just 23 seconds.

The 32-year-old Franklin, a native of Saginaw, Michigan, had won his previous three bouts since his loss to Joshua in April 2023.

___

AP boxing: https://apnews.com/boxing

Luka Doncic suspended, will miss Wizards vs. Lakers game

Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic has officially received a one-game suspension and will miss the team’s upcoming game against the Washington Wizards on Monday, March 30, the NBA announced Saturday night.

Doncic received his 16th technical foul of the season on March 27, during a game in which he led the Lakers to a 116-99 victory over the Brooklyn Nets at Crypto.com Arena.

NBA rules indicate that a player or coach will automatically be suspended without pay for one game once they receive their 16th technical foul of the regular season. The player will be suspended for one regular season game for every two additional technical fouls that he receives.

Doncic nearly produced a double-double, finishing Friday's game with 41 points, eight rebounds, three assists and three steals in 39 minutes of play.

Lakers coach JJ Redick indicated after the game that he did not see what initially happened and that the team would likely appeal it.

Doncic was seen pushing Nets forward Ziaire Williams, who then retaliated by swinging his arm back and hitting Doncic in the face. Williams received his fourth technical foul of the season and will not be suspended.

“He was in my face three times,” Doncic told reporters after the game. “I just wanted to get out of there. They said I pushed (Williams).”

Doncic had previously been called for a technical foul during a game against the Orlando Magic on Saturday, March 21. It would have been his 16th technical foul, but the NBA rescinded it, allowing him to avoid a suspension and play in the game against the Detroit Pistons on Monday, March 23.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Luka Doncic suspended for 16th technical foul, out for Wizards-Lakers

2 Buffalo Sabres Make New Best Prospects List

The Hockey News' main site revealed players 11 to 20 for their latest top 100 NHL-affiliated prospect rankings. Two Buffalo Sabres prospects made this latest batch: forward Konsta Helenius and defenseman Radim Mrtka. 

Helenius was given the No. 12 spot by THN, and it makes sense when noting that he has a ton of potential. The 19-year-old forward has taken a nice step forward with his play this season in the AHL with the Rochester Americans. In 51 games this campaign with the AHL squad, he has recorded 18 goals, 32 assists, and 50 points.

Helenius also played in his first nine career NHL games earlier this season, where he had one goal and four points. With this, the 2024 first-round pick has already shown promise at the NHL level. 

As for Mrtka, he was given the No. 15 spot by THN. The 18-year-old defenseman played in 43 regular season games this season in the WHL with the Seattle Thunderbirds, where he had one goal and 34 points. He also played in four games earlier this season with the Amerks, posting one assist and seven points. 

Mrtka is a prospect with a lot of potential and should be an impactful defenseman at the NHL level later down the road. 

David scores twice, Buchanan shown red as Canada battles back to tie Iceland 2-2

TORONTO (AP) — Jonathan David scored twice from the penalty spot in the second half before Tajon Buchanan was shown a red card as Canada battled back from a 2-0 deficit to salvage a 2-2 draw with Iceland in an international men’s soccer friendly on Saturday.

Buchanan was sent off in the 80th minute for an elbow to the head of Iceland midfielder Mikael Egill Ellertsson as the ball was rolling out of play.

The sequence marked the third straight game, and fourth time in the last eight, Canada has seen red.

“We’re physical, we play hard, but we’re not a dirty team,” said Canada coach Jesse Marsch, who disagreed with Buchanan’s dismissal. “I’m not worried about developing a reputation, but certainly cards like that can change momentum in tournaments.”

Orri Steinn Oskarsson had both goals for Iceland.

The 29th-ranked Canadians are preparing to co-host this summer’s World Cup with the United States and Mexico, while Iceland — No. 74 when FIFA’s last official list was released in mid-January — failed to qualify.

Oskarsson took advantage of a bad pass from Canadian centre back Kamal Miller before moving in alone and beating goalkeeper Dayne St. Clair in the ninth minute for a 1-0 lead.

The striker for Spanish club Real Sociedad doubled the advantage in the 21st after Ellertsson beat right back Niko Sigur to a ball in midfield. Oskarsson took a quick feed on the run and steadied himself before another nice finish.

Canada got one back in the 67th minute when David coolly buried a penalty after Buchanan was fouled by Ellertsson. The striker for Italian giants Juventus added his second of the afternoon from the spot in the 76th when substitute Daniel Jebbison was also taken down in the area before Buchanan was sent off.

Canada now turns its attention to Tuesday’s match against No. 47 Tunisia in another exhibition game with plenty on the line for players looking to secure roster spots or impress with the World Cup some 75 days away.

Canada opens its tournament June 12 in Toronto against the winner of a European playoff set for Tuesday between No. 13 Italy and No. 66 Bosnia-Herzegovina. The Canadians will then travel west to face Qatar on June 18 and Switzerland on June 24 at B.C. Place Stadium in Vancouver.

“Every moment we’re together right now is an opportunity to make a continued impression, a lasting impression,” Marsch said. “But I don’t want them to feel so much pressure on them. I want them to just continue to try to put to practice the things that we want to see.”

___

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

Caissie's tie-breaking single in 8th lifts Marlins to 4-3 win over Rockies

MIAMI (AP) — Owen Caissie had three hits, including a go-ahead RBI single in the eighth inning and the Miami Marlins beat the Colorado Rockies 4-3 on Saturday.

Liam Hicks homered and drove in three runs, while Agustin Ramirez singled twice and walked for the Marlins.

Otto Lopez, who was hitless in first seven at-bats of the season, singled against Rockies reliever Jaden Hill (0-1) to start the eighth. López stole second and raced home when Caissie hit a line drive to centerfield.

Calvin Faucher (1-0) pitched a scoreless eighth and Pete Fairbanks closed with a perfect ninth for his second save.

Hicks hit a two-run homer in the fifth that chased Colorado starter Michael Lorenzen and tied it at 3-all.

Pitching for his sixth club in 12 seasons, Lorenzen allowed seven hits, struck out four and hit two batters over 4 1/3 innings. The 34-year-old Lorenzen signed a free-agent deal with Colorado in the offseason.

Marlins starter Eury Pérez struck out eight in seven innings of three-run ball. Pérez gave up five hits and walked one.

Ezequiel Tovar’s two-run homer in the fourth put the Rockies ahead 3-1.

TJ Rumfield gave Colorado an early lead with a solo blast in the second.

The Marlins tied it on Hicks’ sacrifice fly in the third. Xavier Edwards hit a one-out single and advanced to third on Ramirez’s single. Hicks then drove in Edwards with a fly ball to deep right.

Miami loaded the bases against Lorenzen with two out in the second before he retired Graham Pauley on a groundout.

Saturday’s attendance of 10,160 at loanDepot park was a significant drop from the 32,459 that attended the opener.

Up next

José Quintana will start the series finale for the Rockies on Sunday against Max Meyer in the season debut for both starters.

__

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Lakers’ Luka Doncic suspended for 1 game by NBA after his 16th technical foul

NEW YORK (AP) — Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic was suspended one game without pay by the NBA for receiving his 16th technical foul of the season, the league announced Saturday.

Doncic, the NBA's scoring leader, got whistled for a double technical foul during the third quarter of the Lakers’ 116-99 victory over Brooklyn on Friday night.

The Nets’ Ziaire Williams was celebrating an offensive foul called against Doncic by gleefully screaming in Doncic’s personal space. When Doncic reached out to push Williams’ arm, Williams responded with a backhand swipe across Doncic’s face.

Under NBA rules, a player or coach is automatically suspended without pay for one game when he receives his 16th technical foul during the regular season. For every two additional technical fouls during that regular season, they will be automatically suspended without pay for an additional game.

Doncic, who scored 41 points against Brooklyn, will serve his suspension on Monday when the Lakers host the Washington Wizards.

“He was yelling in my face three times,” Doncic said after the game. “I just wanted to get out of there. It’s a double tech, of course. What can I say? I didn’t even talk. I just wanted to get out of there. (The referee) said my push was exaggerated, which (it) was obviously not. I don’t know what else to say.”

Officials reviewed the incident before issuing technical fouls to both players.

Doncic already had a technical rescinded last week after he was whistled for a verbal altercation with Orlando’s Goga Bitadze. The league didn’t announce why it was rescinded, but Doncic said Bitadze insulted his family in Serbian — and Bitadze denied it.

___

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

'The Gold and Blue is who I am': Ryan Johansen Reflects On Time With Predators Upon Retirement

It's been three years since Ryan Johansen donned a Nashville Predators jersey, but he said his time in Nashville meant "everything" to him.

"Nashville is me. It's who I am. It's the best thing that has ever happened to me in my life," Johansen said. "I met my wife here, I started a family here and I played most of my career here. We did awesome things here as a team. The memories are everlasting." 

On March 19, Johansen announced his retirement from the NHL after 14 seasons, seven of which were spent in Nashville. In his time as a Predator, Johansen recorded 362 points (110 goals and 252 assists) in 533 games played and 48 points (17 goals and 31 assists) in 61 playoff games.

During the Predators' game against the Montreal Canadiens on Saturday, Johansen will be honored for his time with the organization. 

Johansen debuted with the Predators on Jan. 8, 2016, against the Colorado Avalanche in Denver after being traded by the Columbus Blue Jackets. He remembers the moment vividly. 

"I knew I had to win that first face off cause Lavy (Peter Laviolette) told me that I was starting," Johansen said. "It was so much fun playing with Mike (Fisher), Shea (Weber), Pekks (Pekka Rinne), Jos (Roman Josi). You know those guys. They're the best humans in the world." 

His time in Nashville also included the Predators' run to the Stanley Cup Final, the first time the organization had gotten that far.

"I haven't thought of something that would top that (the 2017 SCF run)," Johansen said. "Coming home from practice, before games and just seeing my yard littered with 'Go, Preds, Go,' and 'Go 92' and the way this town rallied around each other and supported us." 

Apr 12, 2018; Nashville, TN, USA; Nashville Predators center Ryan Johansen (92) Nashville Predators left wing Viktor Arvidsson (33) Nashville Predators left wing Filip Forsberg (9) and Nashville Predators right wing Craig Smith (15) celebrate after a power play goal during the second period against the Colorado Avalanche in game one of the first round of the 2018 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Bridgestone Arena. Mandatory Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images
Apr 12, 2018; Nashville, TN, USA; Nashville Predators center Ryan Johansen (92) Nashville Predators left wing Viktor Arvidsson (33) Nashville Predators left wing Filip Forsberg (9) and Nashville Predators right wing Craig Smith (15) celebrate after a power play goal during the second period against the Colorado Avalanche in game one of the first round of the 2018 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Bridgestone Arena. Mandatory Credit: Christopher Hanewinckel-Imagn Images

He also elaborated on his relationship with Fisher, whom he had the chance to reconnect with when Fisher came back into town this weekend. Johansen called Fisher the most important figure in his hockey career and one of the biggest in his life. Fisher even officiated Johansen's wedding. 

Johansen also expressed excitement to visit children at the local hospital and how the opportunity goes beyond the game. 

The biggest difference for Johansen in coming back to Nashville is that he won't be on the ice tonight, but is thrilled about the opportunity to watch the game as a fan. 

"With ending my career and going onto my new chapter, it's so exciting to be a fan again and cheer these guys on," Johansen said. "Now that things have calmed down a bit in my life a bit, I can't wait to show up here a lot more and be involved."

Marlins 4, Rockies 3: Rumfield and Tovar both went yard, but soft contact sinks Rox

Mar 28, 2026; Miami, Florida, USA; Colorado Rockies first baseman TJ Rumfield (7) rounds second base after hitting a solo home run in the second inning against the Miami Marlins at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Jim Rassol-Imagn Images | Jim Rassol-Imagn Images

The Rockies once again fell to the Marlins in a one-run game. This one was marred by a lot of soft contact and weird breaks on both sides of the ball. But there were also some offensive highlights from TJ Rumfield and Ezequiel Tovar, who both his home runs early.

Unfortunately, it wasn’t enough and they came on the losing end of another close one.

However, maybe you can take some solace in this:

Michael Lorenzen had a solid outing

Michael Lorenzen made his Rockies debut today and it was an up-and-down outing. He ended up going 4.1 innings, allowing three runs on seven hits with four strikeouts. He didn’t walk any batters, but all three runs were scored by Liam Hicks. The first one came on a sacrifice fly in the third, and the other two on a two-run second-deck homer in the fifth right before Lorenzen was lifted.

Overall, Lorenzen did induce a lot of weak contact, but there were a lot of weird breaks and hops that led to hits (more on that later). But he also pitched his 1000th career inning today, which is quite the accomplishment!

TJ Rumfield, come on down!

Rumfield made quite the impression during spring training, winning both the first base job outright and the Abby Greer Award for spring training MVP. And he has not yet shown signs of slowing down.

Yesterday, Rumfield made his MLB debut and recorded his first MLB hit in the ninth inning on a broken bat single. Today, he one-upped himself by hitting not only his own first-career home run in the second inning, but the Rockies’ first homer of the season:

And he also made sure to show his versatility by making an outstanding defensive play the very next inning.

Tovar Time!

Tovar was feeling a little overshadowed, so he hit his own two-run home run in his next at-bat in the fourth to not only put the Rockies back on top of the Marlins, but also to give them a little insurance:

Good, bad and weird breaks

The fourth inning got a little weird for the Rockies. First, Griffin Conine hit a single that bounced off the corner of second base and over Tovar’s head into center field. Then, two batters later, Graham Pauley singled after a desperation swing didn’t quite pull it foul. It bounced just in front of the third base bag, and Kyle Karros didn’t have a chance. Luckily, though, Lorenzen struck out Jakob Marsee to end the threat and complete that 1000th inning.

That said, the Rockies got a good break in the fifth when Edouard Julien hit a double — his first Rockies hit — and then Pérez attempted to pick him off, only to throw it to the right of the second baseman and into center field. Julien advanced to third, but unfortunately Hunter Goodman hit a fly ball to left to end the threat.

In the seventh, Karros hit a line drive to the third baseman. Luckily, it hit the ground first so he was able to leg it out and was marked safe at first, but there was a force at second to get pinch runner Ryan Ritter. And then Julien struck out to end the inning.

Ye Olde 7-6-3 double play

And in the bottom half of the inning, they turned a hugely unorthodox 7-6-3 double play. Augustín Ramírez had walked and Hicks hit a high fly ball to left, but then Ramírez attempted to steal second and overran the bag. And because of that, Tovar was able to pick him off on his way back to first.

Unfortunately, though, the dagger came in the eighth on another single by Owen Caissie, who went 3-for-4 with the RBI to put the Marlins up 4-3. The rest, as they say, is history.

Up Next

The Rockies will look to avoid the sweep yesterday in South Beach before they head north of the border to take on the reigning AL-champion Toronto Blue Jays. José Quintana will face off against Max Miller.

First pitch is at 11:40am MT. See you then!


Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

Please keep in mind our Purple Row Community Guidelines when you’re commenting. Thanks!

'Regular-Season Rick' is winning in March. Rick Barnes won't gloat about it, though

CHICAGO – Rick Barnes is getting the last laugh.

Not that Barnes would ever gloat or call out those who had the knives out for him. He's far too nice for that. But after years of being criticized and, in some cases, mocked for not being able to win in March, Barnes has Tennessee in the Elite Eight for the third consecutive year.

You know what other coach can say that? Duke's Jon Scheyer. That's it. Out of the 350-plus schools that have NCAA Division I men's basketball teams, only Barnes and Scheyer have made it this far in each of the past three years.

But Barnes can't coach in the NCAA Tournament.

"Do I wish we could have won national championships and all that?" Barnes said Saturday, March 28. "All I can tell you is we just stay in the arena."

The Volunteers play top-seeded Michigan on Sunday, March 28, for what would be Tennessee's first-ever trip to the Final Four.

Rick Barnes' struggles in March

The knock on Barnes' record in March has a long history. The 71-year-old is in his fourth decade of coaching, at five schools, but has made only one Final Four. He's had tremendous talent — Kevin Durant, T.J. Ford, LaMarcus Aldridge and Grant Williams, to name a few — but that didn't translate into NCAA Tournament success.

He didn't get past the second round when he had Durant. He only made two Elite Eight appearances in 17 seasons at Texas. He routinely got upset by lower-seeded teams, perhaps none worse than Tennessee's loss as a third seed to 11th-seeded Michigan in the second round of the 2022 tournament.

"Did I make mistakes back then in coaching in this tournament? Certainly, I think I did," Barnes said. "Probably putting way too much pressure on guys and maybe changing up what we did maybe too much. Or, honestly, maybe and probably doing too much as opposed to doing less.

"But I will never take away from those (teams) because I know how hard they worked."

Do not take this to mean Barnes has mellowed. He has not. As congenial as he is off the court — try and find anyone to say a bad word about him as a person, I dare you — he tells kids when he recruits them he's going to work them hard and demand the sun, the moon and the stars from them and, on that, he overperforms.

"Our practices are demanding," Barnes said. "... Our job is to help these guys reach their ultimate goal. They all want to be pros. They all want to be. We don't want to be the ones that look back and say we didn't do our part. We want to look back and say we did everything we could for them and the time with us was the greatest time they ever had in their life."

Rick Barnes thrives in NIL era

What has changed is the game. Which makes it all the more ironic that Barnes is hitting his stride now.

Listen to almost every veteran coach, especially those of Barnes' vintage, and they'll rail about what's happened to college basketball and how the influx of money has poisoned the game. They'll say reforms are needed and warn of doom if they don't come.

Barnes, on the other hand, is actually enjoying this era. To him, it's more honest.

"It's easier today than it was back then," he said. "You can recruit a guy now for a week and get him. You know what I mean? `Hey, what's the number?'"

Though this Volunteers team is almost entirely new from the one that lost to Houston in the Elite Eight last year, Tennessee is not a collection of hired guns. Even today, Barnes believes that when a player transfers, it's because the recruitment process was flawed. He is honest about the way he runs his team and the expectations he has with everyone who comes through his door, whether they're a blue-chipper like Nate Ament or a role player like Troy Henderson.

When Barnes was recruiting Ament, in fact, he showed the McDonald's All American a clip of Durant scoring 32 against Kansas despite an ankle injury that had him visibly limping. If Ament wasn't prepared to give that kind of effort, Barnes told him, Tennessee wasn't the place for him.

"The last thing I said to him was, if you choose to do this, it's going to be the hardest thing in your life, and there's going to be days you're not going to like me very much," Barnes recalled. "But when it's all said and done, you'll understand all of it."

Chance to change narrative

Rather than chafing against that tough love, Barnes' players embrace it. Or, rather, embrace Barnes.

Tennessee has never made it to the men's Final Four — it made it to the Elite Eight only one other time before Barnes arrived — and the Volunteers want nothing more than to be the team that makes history.

But they also want it for Barnes. They know the narrative around his postseason success. Or lack thereof. They know the term "Regular-season Rick" isn't a compliment. Make it to the Final Four after these Elite Eight appearances, and the narrative changes.

Especially this team, a sixth-seed that has already knocked off the No. 2 (Iowa State) and No. 3 (Virginia) seeds in the Midwest Region.

"It would mean a lot just knowing how hard he works and how much he has poured into the program," Bishop Boswell said. "I don’t know if anyone deserves it as much as he does, because he’s put the hours in, the time in and the energy. So to be able to get that done for him would be amazing.”

Barnes wants to beat Michigan not because he feels he has something to prove. He's secure in his career and what he's accomplished, regardless of what anyone else thinks. But the goal of every game is to be better, to have the performance reflect the work that's been put in in practice.

If there's a regret about those NCAA Tournament losses, it's that.

"I just want us to be the best we can be. I want us to be the best version that we can. If we're good enough, we're good enough," Barnes said.

"We've got one philosophy: Let's get a little bit better today. Let's just be better today than we were yesterday," Barnes added. "And if we can build on that each day, we're good enough to get to our goals, we'll get there."

Just don't expect Barnes to gloat about it.

USA TODAY's Ehsan Kassim contributed to this report.

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

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Rick Barnes flipping the narrative on his March Madness record

Iowa vs Illinois Elite 8 game delayed by blaring horn: 'Like a torture chamber'

Houston, we have a problem.

The Elite Eight matchup on Saturday, March 28 between No. 9 seed Iowa and No. 3 Illinois had to be paused with 7:43 remaining in the first half of their 2026 NCAA Tournament game at the Toyota Center in Houston because a buzzer from the scoreboard hanging over the court in the arena would not stop blaring.

Game and NCAA officials gathered around the scorer's table to try to resolve the issue. Eventually, the scoreboard was completely shut off, stopping the noise.

After 11 minutes, it mercilessly stopped and action resumed, with the Hawkeyes holding a 22-20 lead. While the jumbotron remained off, officials used an airhorn from the scorer's table.

While the game was stopped, players from both teams remained on the court shooting.

It’s a sound that TBS play-by-play broadcaster Kevin Harlan compared to “a torture chamber.”

“It’s what Jim Carrey said in ‘Dumb and Dumber’ — it’s the most annoying sound in the world,” TBS analyst Robbie Hummel said.

The Houston Rockets' regular in-house crew are operating the game clock, scoreboard and shot clock for Sweet 16 and Elite Eight games being held at the venue. The technical issue wasn't the fault of a clunky, out-of-date piece of technology, either. The Rockets installed the 6,200 square-foot display ahead of the 2025-26 NBA season.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness: Blaring horn forces delay in Iowa vs Illinois Elite 8 game

Jays Win 11 Inning Thriller, 8-7

TORONTO, CANADA - MARCH 28: Dylan Cease #84 of the Toronto Blue Jays pitches against the Athletics during the first inning in their MLB game at the Rogers Centre on March 28, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Mark Blinch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This one was dramatic. Dylan Cease looked excellent in his Blue Jays debut, which is great news. The offence took a while to get going but lead big rallies when they were needed. And the Bullpen collapsed early and then kept it interesting but ultimately did enough.


Cease cruised through the first two innings, giving up just a line drive single to Tyler Soderstrom in the first. He got into a minor jam in the third, walking Nick Kurtz with two outs and giving up a single to Shea Langeliers to put Kurtz on third, but he struck out Soderstrom to escape. He struck out the next six A’s, cruising into the sixth with a 1-0 lead. A lead off walk to Kurtz and a one out double from Soderstrom tied the game, though, and then Brent Rooker reaching on a fielder’s choice knocked him out of the game. The final line was one earned on three hits and two walks over 5.1 innings pitched, with a dozen Ks. He and Kevin Gausman became the first teammates since 1901 to punch out at least 11 in a team’s first two games of the season. Braydon Fisher cleaned up from there, getting a double play ball to preserve the tie.

Meanwhile, the offence struggled with Jeffrey Springs. Vladimir Guerrero jr. worked a two out walk in the first, but then got himself thrown out trying to stretch to third on Kazuma Okamoto’s ground ball single, wasting what would prove to be a rare scoring opportunity. A double play erased a Daulton Varsho single in the second. Their first run off Springs came in the third. Myles Straw and Andres Gimenez lead off with back to back singles, and George Springer crushed a double to left. It was one of those that might have scored two if it were hit more softly, but Soderstrom was able to field it on one hop off the wall and hold Gimenez at third. Two batters later, Okamoto worked a walk to load the bases, but Alejandro Kirk grounded out softly to end the inning. They went down in order in the fourth and fifth. Vlad walked to open the bottom of the sixth, and Springs got Okamoto to pop out before being lifted from the game. A Kirk ground out off reliever Mark Leiter jr. advanced Vlad to second, and a softly lined Varsho single cashed him in, putting the Jays in front 2-1.

The seventh went poorly. Mason Fluharty was hit by two comebackers from his first two batters, leaving the game with an injury at that point. Brendon Little took over and struck out his first batter, but then he forgot to check the runners, allowing a double steal to put men on second and third. Denzel Clarke dribbled one back to the mound and reached on the fielder’s choice, tieing the game at two with two on. Little walked Kurtz to load the based, and then gave up a grand slam to Jay killer Langeliers, putting Oakland out front 6-2. He did get the next batter swinging while John Schneider got another pitcher warmed up. Tommy Nance took over and struck out his man to end the inning there.

The Jays rallied a little in the bottom half. Jesus Sanchez, getting his first game action of the year pinch hitting for Straw, took a curveball off the toe. Andres Gimenez hit a single into right that knocked Leiter out of the game in favour of Elvis Alvarado. He got the first two Jays out, but Vlad grounded a single through the second base hole to bring Sanchez in, cutting the deficit to three. Okamoto battled but eventually struck out swinging to prevent them from getting more.

Nance returned and worked a 1-2-3 top of the eighth. Alvarado lost the plot in the home half, walking Kirk and Varsho to lead it off. Hogan Harris got the call to face Ernie Clement. He got him to fly out, but it was deep enough for Kirk to tag and move to third. Sanchez then reached well into the right hand batter’s box to poke one halfway up the third base line and Kirk beat the throw home, making it 6-4 and putting the tieing run on base. Gimenez ripped a one hopper up the middle to move it into scoring position and cut the gap to one. Springer popped out, but Barger worked a walk to load the bases for Vlad and knock Harris out. Vlad got jammed a little on a Michael Kelly slider in and lined it directly to second base for the third out.

Tyler Rogers got a soft grounder and a pair of Ks in the top of the ninth. Man he makes it look easy when he’s on. Kelly got Okamoto looking on a fastball several inches outside that Okamoto opted not to challenge, which might have cost them had Kirk not launched the second pitch he saw over the home bullpen to tie the game at 6. Varsho broke his bat on a soft line out to first. Ernie Clement slapped a single into right to put the go ahead run on, but Sanchez hit a hard grounder right to Kurtz at first to send it to extras.

Louis Varland pitched around Langeliers leading off the 10th, then erased him with a double play ball from Soderstrom. That advanced the Manfred man to third, though, and allowed him to score when Rooker slapped a grounder against the shift into right. He got Jacob Wilson swinging to get out of the inning only down one. Gimenez hit a soft liner off Scott Barlow leading off the bottom half that dropped in front of Soderstrom. Jesus Sanchez was caught in between before deciding to try to go to third. He just barely beat the throw, and then Gimenez stole second to put the tieing and go ahead runs in scoring position. One batter later, Addison Barger hit a towering fly right to the wall in right centre. It was caught, but was plenty deep for Sanchez to tag and score to tie it. The A’s opted to walk Vlad to pitch to Okamoto, who popped out to send it to the 11th.

Spencer Miles made his MLB debut in the 11th. In spite of only having appeared in 10 pro games in his career to date, he made a veteran play right away, fielding a come-backer and catching the automatic runner hung up between second and third for the first out. Then he punched out (the other) Max Muncy for his first career K, issued a walk, and got a can of corn to right to end the inning. About as solid a debut as you could ask for for a reliever. Luis Medina struck out Kirk and intentionally walked Varsho. That brought Clement to the plate. He worked the count full, although to my eye it sure looked like he went around on ball three. He got the call, though, and lined the next pitch into left for the walk off hit.


Jays of the Day: Andres Gimenez put up a 0.77 which, combined meaning more than a quarter of his career offensive WPA has come in the last two games. Stay hot, Andres. Spencer Miles (0.13) earns his first every Jay of the Day (and his first MLB Win, but that kind of pales in comparison, doesn’t it?). Fisher (0.18), Kirk (0.47), Varsho (0.24), and Clement (0.16).

Less so: Fluharty (-0.18) qualifies, but I’m not going to add insult to injury. So we’ll blame it all on Little (-0.46). Springer (-0.25), Vlad (-0.15), Okamoto (-0.31), and Varland (-0.3) also had the number


We’ll be back tomorrow to wrap up the series. Eric Lauer will take on Luis Morales. First pitch is set for 1:37pm ET.

Washington Nationals trade for White Sox infielder Curtis Mead

CLEVELAND, OHIO - SEPTEMBER 13: Curtis Mead #29 of the Chicago White Sox runs out a fly ball during the first inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field on September 13, 2025 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

If it was not already obvious, Paul Toboni is going to make a lot of moves this season. The latest one just happened, when he traded for Curtis Mead of the White Sox. Mead is an Australian infielder who split time between first base, second base and third base with the White Sox last year.

Interestingly, Mead was actually traded for Cristopher Sanchez back in 2019. For a while, it looked like the Rays had done it again, as Mead’s stock soared while Sanchez struggled. However, we now know that the Phillies fleeced the Rays.

The 25 year old Mead was a top prospect at one point, but has struggled to translate his offensive game to the MLB. He will get a chance to do that now with the Nats. It is unclear if he will go right to the big leagues, but I assume he will get a shot at one point.

While Mead is not a great defender, he gives the Nats a versatile piece. He played 31 games at first base, 29 at third base and 17 at second base. I am curious to see what the Nats do with all these utility infielders. It is clearly something they covet, but they have a bit of a log jam now. Jose Tena’s time in DC could be coming to an end soon. He is firmly a DFA candidate now.

Tena was not the man DFA’d though. That was Jake Eder, who the Nats just acquired at the deadline last year. I would not be surprised if Eder cleared waivers and stayed in the Nats organization.

Mead was actually a player who I thought would be a good fit with the Nats when he got DFA’d. Paul Toboni is clearly searching for upside, and Mead’s pedigree gives him that. He has mashed in the minors, with an .878 OPS in over 1,500 career MILB AB’s.

If at least some of that hitting ability can translate to the big leagues, the Nats could have a steal on their hands. However, with over 150 career MLB games, the chances of Mead recapturing that prospect magic he had are fading. 

In exchange for Mead, the Nats had to give up Boston Smith, who was a sixth round pick in the 2025 draft. Smith was a senior sign who put up massive numbers at Wright State University. He is a catcher, but his defense is fringy at best. 

Hopefully Mead can make an impact for the Nats and play all over the infield for them. We are going to see a ton of these kinds of moves. If guys like Mead and Vivas produce, they will stick around, but if they do not, the Nats are more than happy to replace them.

Atlanta Braves vs. Kansas City Royals Game Thread: March 28

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - MARCH 27: Maikel Garcia #11 of the Kansas City Royals steals second base against Ozzie Albies #1 of the Atlanta Braves during the third inning of the home opener at Truist Park on March 27, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Braves look for their first series win of the season, while the Royals look to score a run and get their first overall win. I kinda hope neither of the latter happens, for obvious reasons.

Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

  • Fewer ads
  • Create community posts
  • Comment on articles, community posts
  • Rec comments, community posts
  • New, improved notifications system!

Game thread II – Royals at Braves

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - MARCH 27: Salvador Perez #13 of the Kansas City Royals hits a single against the Atlanta Braves during the second inning of the home opener at Truist Park on March 27, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The best part about starting the season a day later than almost everyone else is that we don’t have to wait through an off-day to get the taste of a dud out of our mouths. Sure, the Royals had a pretty awful offensive game paired with a mediocre pitching effort in last night’s match, but tonight’s could (and probably will) go better!

The Royals will have Michael Wacha on the mound. While Michael does not have the upside of Ragans, he also comes with far less variability. Per a Royals press release, Wacha has allowed three runs or fewer in 23 of 29 road starts over his career with KC. That’s pretty good! You can refine that even further using the FanGraphs splits tool to discover that he’s allowed two or fewer in 16 of those 29 starts, so more than half the time. The last time he faced Atlanta was in 2023 with the Padres, but he went six shutout innings with ten strikeouts and only one walk. It’s easy to feel confident the Royals will get a competent outing from Wacha today.

Atlanta will counter with Reynaldo López. López missed most of last year with an injury, so it’s hard to know what he’ll do tonight. Like last night’s starter, Chris Sale, he spent a large chunk of his earlier career in Chicago with the White Sox so he’s faced the Royals many times. But the most recent outing was in 2024 when he pitched six innings of one-run ball against the Royals B-Squad following their post-season clinch party the night before. In Spring Training, he made five starts to the tune of a 4.15 ERA. But his fastball velocity was way down. In 2024, he averaged 95.5 MPH, but this spring, he was down to 91.3. It’s safe to wonder if he’d even be in the rotation at all had Atlanta not suffered a bevy of injuries this March. Whatever concerns we’re all feeling about Carlos Estévez, at least we aren’t currently considering him our second-best starter.

Lineups

This lineup seems a bit more like what we should expect for most of the season. Kyle Isbel will make his season debut; Jac Caglianone got in as a pinch-hitter but will get his first start; Carter Jensen is still the DH but will bat fifth instead of ninth. I wonder if we could have expected Michael Massey to get the start over Jonathan India if he were healthy, but he’s not. Hopefully, he gets better soon, and hopefully, this version of the lineup does a bit more damage than what we saw last night.

Don’t forget tonight’s game is the first of 13 scheduled national games for the Royals. This one will be broadcast on Fox. Fingers crossed that competing with the Yankees/Giants broadcast that’s taking up more of the United States attention means that we won’t be subjected to John Smoltz tonight.