Lauren Price: ‘I want to win as much money as I can, build a legacy for boxing in Wales and get out safe’

The IBF and WBC welterweight champion on returning to the ring, boxing politics and her imminent wedding

A year ago, on a historic night for boxing when an all-women card of fights was held at the Royal Albert Hall last March, Lauren Price produced an imperious headline performance which should have led to a series of even more prestigious bouts. Her dominant display in outclassing the venerable Natasha Jonas appeared to be the ideal launching for a new stage of Price’s career as the IBF and WBC world welterweight champion.

But when she finally steps back into the ring on Saturday night in Cardiff to defend her titles against Stephanie Piñeiro Aquino, the little-known Puerto Rican challenger, almost 13 months will have passed since that high point. Only frustration and inertia have followed.

Continue reading...

Fantasy Baseball Closer Report: Lucas Erceg steps up for Royals, Paul Sewald secures closer role in Arizona

Welcome back to the Fantasy Baseball Closer Report. The first week of baseball provided us with some early saves targets to go after, including Lucas Erceg, Jordan Romano, and Paul Sewald. Other ambiguous situations, like the Rangers and Rays, gave us more questions than answers. We'll break it all down as we run through my weekly closer rankings and end with some middle relievers making an early impression.

⚾️ Baseball is back! MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

2026 Fantasy Baseball Closer Rankings

▶ Tier 1

Mason Miller - San Diego Padres
Edwin Díaz - Los Angeles Dodgers
Cade Smith - Cleveland Guardians
Andrés Muñoz - Seattle Mariners
Jhoan Duran - Philadelphia Phillies

There's not much movement in the top two tiers as it's far too early to overreact to anything. Miller worked around a walk while striking out two batters to earn his first save against the Tigers on Saturday. He then recorded the final out of the eighth against the Giants on Wednesday and finished out the game with three strikeouts for a four-out save. That's five strikeouts to one hit and one walk over 2 1/3.

Díaz struck out two and worked around a walk for his first save as a Dodger on Friday against the Diamondbacks, then converted his second on Saturday with a clean frame. He then pitched the ninth with a four-run lead on a rainy night in Los Angeles on Tuesday and surrendered a run before closing it out.

Smith converted his first save of the season on Opening Day, striking out one in a clean inning against the Mariners. His next two outings didn't go as well, giving up a run to blow a save and earn the win on Saturday before giving up two runs with a four-run lead in a non-save situation against the Dodgers on Monday.

Muñoz pitched on back-to-back days against the Guardians over the weekend, both in non-save situations. He worked a scoreless inning with a four-run lead in his first outing, then gave up three runs, two earned, in extras to take the loss on Saturday.

In Philadelphia, Duran recorded the final two outs to record his first save of the season on Opening Day, then gave up two runs, one earned, in extra innings to take the loss on Saturday against the Rangers. He bounced back with a pair of scoreless innings on Tuesday and Wednesday for a win and a save. Duran has thrown eight sweepers and six knuckle curves and induced a whiff on all 14 pitches so far.

▶ Tier 2

Devin Williams - New York Mets
David Bednar - New York Yankees
Aroldis Chapman - Boston Red Sox
Daniel Palencia - Chicago Cubs
Ryan Helsley - Baltimore Orioles

Williams struck out two in a non-save situation on Saturday against the Pirates, then converted his first save chance against the Cardinals on Monday, tossing a scoreless frame with a strikeout. With another scoreless appearance on Wednesday, he's struck out four with one hit and two walks through three innings. And for the Yankees, Bednar worked back-to-back saves in the team's opening series against the Giants with a pair of scoreless outings, then battled through some trouble on Wednesday, giving up one run before holding on for a four-out save.

Chapman also has two appearances under his belt, working two scoreless innings against the Reds with one save. In Chicago, Palencia is still waiting for his first save opportunity. He's made two scoreless appearances, collecting two strikeouts over two innings in non-save situations. And Helsley has looked great so far. He struck out the side on Opening Day for a save against the Twins, then picked up his second save with a scoreless inning on Sunday. He's struck out four with no walks through two outings.

▶ Tier 3

Jeff Hoffman - Toronto Blue Jays
Raisel Iglesias - Atlanta Braves
Pete Fairbanks - Miami Marlins
Trevor Megill - Milwaukee Brewers
Emilio Pagán - Cincinnati Reds
Ryan Walker - San Francisco Giants
Kenley Jansen - Detroit Tigers

Hoffman is looking great in the early going. He collected four strikeouts while giving up one run and falling in line for a win on Opening Day, then worked three scoreless outings, including his first save against the Athletics on Sunday. Hoffman has struck out ten batters with zero walks across four innings of work.

Iglesias has made two scoreless appearances, though both have come with a four-run lead in non-save situations. He's still clearly ahead of Robert Suarez, who has made all three of his scoreless outings in the eighth inning.

The first mover in the rankings, Fairbanks, jumps a few spots with his solid start on the mound. He's made three scoreless appearances, converting two saves with five strikeouts and no walks. Megill also moves up a bit. He converted a save on Sunday, then gave up one run to take the loss against the Rays on Monday. His movement here is based on the early usage, as it appears manager Pat Murphy has saved Megill for save situations while using Abner Uribe in the eighth inning in both of his outings. That can change, but early indications suggest Megill will be used as the primary closer.

Pagán recorded four outs and gave up a solo homer with two strikeouts in a non-save situation on Saturday, then locked down a save on Sunday against the Red Sox. He was then roughed up a bit in a non-save situation on Tuesday, giving up four runs against the Pirates.

Walker got some work in on Friday, recording one out while working around a hit and a walk against the Yankees. He pitched the next day again in a non-save situation, tossing a clean inning with a strikeout. Walker got his first save chance on Monday and gave up two runs before holding on for the save. Meanwhile, Jansen struck out the side to lock down his first save on Friday against the Padres before giving up the lead on a solo homer Tuesday in Arizona.

▶ Tier 4

Paul Sewald - Arizona Diamondbacks
Josh Hader/Bryan Abreu - Houston Astros
Seranthony Domínguez - Chicago White Sox
Dennis Santana - Pittsburgh Pirates
Riley O'Brien/JoJo Romero - St. Louis Cardinals
Jordan Romano - Los Angeles Angels
Lucas Erceg - Kansas City Royals
Griffin Jax/Garrett Cleavinger/Bryan Baker - Tampa Bay Rays
Robert García/Chris Martin - Texas Rangers

Now we're getting into the committee and questionable situations. Though Sewald makes a jump to the top of this tier with his early performance. Manager Torey Lovullo indicated that Sewald could be the reliever he leans on in the ninth out of the gate. So far, he's held true to that. Sewald has made three scoreless appearances, including striking out the side against the Tigers on Tuesday for his second save.

Filling in for the injured Josh Hader, Abreu hasn't had the best start as the Astros' closer. He got some work in with a five-run lead against the Angels on Saturday and surrendered three runs. Abreu then got the call for a save chance on Sunday and gave up one run and recorded one out before Bryan King stepped in to close it out. Abreu was summoned with another three-run lead on Wednesday. Hader continues to ramp up his throwing progression, but has yet to face live hitters, something he hopes to do by mid-April. He'll likely remain out until at least May, meaning Abreu will have to get right, or the Astros may need to figure out a new plan for the ninth.

Domínguez pitched a scoreless inning in a non-save situation on Saturday, then came out for presumably a four-out save on Sunday before giving up two runs to blow the lead and take the loss. Still, Domíguez figures to have a fairly long leash when it comes to save chances.

Santana has yet to see a save opportunity despite making four scoreless appearances. He's given up one hit and two walks with two strikeouts over four innings of work. With Santana unavailable after pitching three times in four days, Gregory Soto got the call for Wednesday's save chance against the Reds, working a clean inning with two strikeouts.

Stanek worked the Cardinals' first save chance, loading the bases before holding on for the save on Opening Day. He blew the following opportunity two days later and has since worked the seventh inning in two straight appearances, while O'Brien picked up a save Tuesday and pitched the ninth in a tie game against the Mets on Wednesday. O'Brien has tossed 4 1/3 scoreless innings with four strikeouts and no walks. There's a good chance he just takes hold of the closer role, with JoJo Romero working the occasional ninth if there's a group of left-handed hitters up.

Romano is getting his chance to run with the closer role for the Angels. He's made three appearances, picking up two saves with four strikeouts over 2 2/3 scoreless innings. It's hard to trust Romano after two injury-riddled down seasons, but you take the saves while they're there. That also applies to Erceg, who takes over as the Royals' closer after Carlos Estévez was placed on the 15-day injured list with an ankle injury. Estévez might not have been long for the job, anyway. His velocity remained way down in his long outing in which he surrendered six runs in a loss. Erceg hasn't exactly been overwhelming, but he will get the chance to earn some saves during Estévez's absence, if not longer. He's already 2-for-2 after locking down his second on Wednesday against the Twins.

Jax seemed due for a bounce-back season after a 4.23 ERA last year masked his elite skillset. That's going to be hard to do given the start he's off to in the early going. Jax surrendered five runs, three earned, without recording an out in the eighth inning of a tie game against the Brewers on Wednesday. He's given up five earned runs with just one strikeout over four appearances. Cleavinger hasn't been so sharp so far, either. He's given up two runs with four walks and three strikeouts over 2 1/3 innings. Kevin Kelly has the team's only save so far, while Bryan Baker has been sharp over his two outings. To put it simply, this is a mess and will likely remain that way for the entire season.

From one mess to another, neither García nor Martin has recorded a save for the Rangers yet. Instead, Tyler Alexander has converted the team's first two saves of the season. García and Martin remain the favorites for saves, albeit in a matchup-based committee.

▶ Tier 5

Clayton Beeter - Washington Nationals
Cole Sands/Taylor Rogers - Minnesota Twins
Hogan Harris/Mark Leiter Jr./Justin Sterner - Athletics
Victor Vodnik - Colorado Rockies

Beeter has the only save of the season for the Nationals. Manager Blake Butera hasn't necessarily used him as a traditional closer, with his outings coming in the sixth, tenth, seventh, and eighth innings. He recorded the final two outs in the eighth on Wednesday against the Phillies with a two-run lead, then left with one out and a runner on in the ninth before PJ Poulin and Cole Henry combined to blow the save in the team's extra-innings loss.

We really have just one data point to work with for the Twins situation. Sands got the team's first and only save so far, striking out two batters in a scoreless inning against the Orioles on Saturday. He should earn more looks in the ninth inning if he continues to be effective, but it remains a fluid situation. Just as the Athletics and Rockies remain situations you'd rather have no part of.

Relievers on the rise/Stash candidates

Erik Sabrowski (LHP) - Cleveland Guardians

Sabrowski has slotted in as the Guardians' primary setup man behind Cade Smith. He's already up to four holds after recording the final out of the eighth inning against the Dodgers on Wednesday, striking out Shohei Ohtani. The 28-year-old left-hander has struck out six over 3 2/3 innings after posting a 1.84 ERA with 42 strikeouts over 29 1/3 innings last season. He'll issue a fair share of walks, but the strikeout stuff is impressive. And if he's working directly behind Smith in a setup role, he'll be in line to record plenty of holds.

Keaton Winn (RHP)/Caleb Kilian (RHP) - San Francisco Giants

Winn and Kilian, former starting pitching prospects, have looked excellent pitching out of the Giants' bullpen, working their way up the leverage ladder into setup roles. Winn is up to three scoreless innings with six strikeouts, one walk, and no hits allowed. Meanwhile, Kilian has opened some eyes with a big jump in velocity, averaging 98.6 mph, up from about 94 mph he's previously exhibited as a starter. He's pitched 2 2/3 clean innings with two strikeouts. The 28-year-old right-hander was once a highly touted starting pitching prospect who was traded from the Giants to the Cubs in the Kris Bryant deal that sent Bryant to San Francisco in 2021. Kilian was released by the Cubs a year ago and picked up by the Giants over the offseason. Ryan Walker is coming off a shaky season, and a new managerial regime is calling the shots for the Giants. So, Winn and Kilian could be names to watch over the season should Walker struggle to close out games.

Diamondbacks 1, Tigers 0: No Foolin’ Sweep

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - APRIL 01: Zac Gallen #23 of the Arizona Diamondbacks delivers a pitch against the Detroit Tigers at Chase Field on April 01, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/Getty Images) | Getty Images

There’s always a worry that a team will come out flat the day after an emotional victory like last night’s come-from-behind win. That’s why it’s important to have a strong performance from your starting pitcher – particularly with this team’s bullpen – and Zac Gallen delivered exactly what the team needed. Unfortunately, he was lined up against the two-time Cy Young winner in Tarik Skubal who continues to show why he’s one of the best starters in the game right now. It’s rare that Opening Day starters square off outside of what should be a national holiday, but that was the case today across the league. And we were treated to a taut, well-played, defensive and pitching masterclass that the D-Backs narrowly took.

Thankfully though, Skubal wasn’t perfect. One of the few mistakes he made all afternoon opened – and closed – the scoring when Corbin Carroll launched a fastball above the zone that just snuck over the centerfield fence to give the D-Backs a 1-0 lead in the very first inning. The D-Backs created plenty of traffic throughout the game – there were only two innings where they didn’t have at least one baserunner – but they failed to capitalize on any of them. Instead, Skubal did what any starting pitcher would like to do: he induced weak contact and allowed his defense to work behind him by dialing up three separate double plays that extinguished rallies before they even started.

For his part, Gallen was up to the pitching duel, matching Skubal’s scoreless innings step for step. He leaned a little more heavily on his knuckle curve over his slider to great effect, collecting a pair of whiffs on the pitch. But even better, Gallen also leaned on his defense – far from a team strength the last two years – as he had just two strikeouts across his six innings. In fact, there were only eight strikeouts total from each team, landing in the lower-third of strikeout totals for games so far this season. Instead, there were defensive gems on both sides that kept the offense off the board. Crucially, Gallen ended his outing with an incredible show of athleticism and quick thinking. With the tying run at third after a one out triple from Kevin McGonigle, Gleyber Torres smacked a ball ticketed for right field that Jose Fernandez snagged out of the air and immediately threw to third to double up McGonigle and end the inning. It was a heads up play that you can’t always expect from a player who’s in his second career big league game, but Fernandez has already shown a level head for big moments and demonstrated it again today.

In classic baseball fashion, after a deflating sweep at the hand of the hated Dodgers to open the season, the D-Backs returned home to sweep the AL Central favorites with a dynamic offense, excellent defense, and just enough pitching to make it all hold up. It’s easy to live and die with the results of each game and I’m certainly prone to that kind of vacillating feeling throughout the season, but it’s always worth remembering to take a deep breath and remind yourself that it’s a long season and your confidence can change drastically on a day-to-day basis.

Minor League Recap: Clippers Mash Three Home Runs In 6-1 Win

GOODYEAR, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 19: Kahlil Watson #71 of the Cleveland Guardians poses for a portrait during photo day at Goodyear Ballpark on February 19, 2026 in Goodyear, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It was a fun day for the Clippers. We saw Kahlil Watson go 2-4 with a 413 foot bomb off of a 98 mph fastball. Stuart Fairchild also hit two HRs of his own. Juan Brito continues to destroy AAA pitching. After his 2-4 performance today, he is now hitting .400 with a 1.085 OPS on the season thus far. He should probably get an opportunity with the big league club soon.

It was a great day for the Clippers pitching staff as well. Trent Denholm struck out 8 batters in 6 innings while allowing just one run on two hits. We also got to see Daniel Espino and Franco Aleman throw scoreless innings.

This will be the last minor league recap that features just one team, as Thursday, April 2nd will be opening day for all the Guardians affiliates. I cannot wait to watch some minor league baseball this season.

Boeser has hat trick, last-place Canucks overcome blowing 4-goal lead to beat NHL-leading Avs

Marcus Pettersson scored with 5:39 remaining, Brock Boeser had a hat trick and the last-place Vancouver Canucks blew a four-goal lead before beating the NHL-leading Colorado Avalanche 8-6 on Wednesday night.

The Canucks, who entered the game 58 points behind the Avalanche, scored in all sorts of ways, including 29 seconds into the game, short-handed, on the power play and into an empty net to snap a six-game slide.

They led 6-2 in the second only to see Colorado tie it up with 6:02 left. Just 23 seconds later, Pettersson knocked in his first goal since November. Boeser sealed it by lining the puck down the ice and into an empty net.

Teddy Blueger scored twice, while Max Sasson and Jake DeBrusk also added goals to spoil a night in which Nathan MacKinnon became the first player this season to reach 50 goals. Vancouver took advantage of the Avalanche juggling their defensive pairings with Cale Makar sidelined by an upper-body injury.

Kevin Lankinen made 24 saves.

KINGS 2, BLUES 1, OT

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Trevor Moore scored 1:56 into overtime to lift Los Angeles to a victory over the St. Louis.

Adrian Kempe also scored for the Kings, who moved into the second wild-card spot in the Western Conference — one point ahead of San Jose and Nashville. Anton Forsberg made 23 saves, including one in overtime, for Los Angeles, which stopped a four-game losing streak at home.

Robert Thomas scored the only goal for the Blues on a deflection with 3:53 left in the third period to send it to overtime. Jordan Binnington stopped 24 shots in the loss, including two in the extra period. St. Louis is now four points behind Los Angeles for the second wild-card spot.

SHARKS 4, DUCKS 3

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — Macklin Celebrini tied the game with less than two minutes to play then assisted on Alexander Wennberg’s winning goal with 31 seconds left to complete a four-point game as San Jose beat Anaheim.

With two goals and two assists, Celebrini now has 40 goals and 105 points this season, moving him past Erik Karlsson (101 points in 2022-23) for the second highest single-season point total in franchise history behind Joe Thornton’s 114-point effort in 2006-07.

The 19-year-old Celebrini also now has 17 games this season with three or more points, second among teenagers in NHL history only to Wayne Gretzky, who had 19 in 1979-80.

Will Smith had a goal and two assists for the Sharks and Yaroslav Askirov made 28 saves.

Trevor Moore’s overtime goal lifts Kings to 2-1 win over Blues and into playoff position

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Trevor Moore scored 1:56 into overtime to lift the Los Angeles Kings to a 2-1 victory over the St. Louis Blues on Wednesday night.

Adrian Kempe also scored for the Kings, who moved into the second wild-card spot in the Western Conference — one point ahead of San Jose and Nashville. Anton Forsberg made 23 saves, including one in overtime, for Los Angeles, which stopped a four-game losing streak at home.

Robert Thomas scored the only goal for the Blues on a deflection with 3:53 left in the third period to send it to overtime. Jordan Binnington stopped 24 shots in the loss, including two in the extra period. St. Louis is now four points behind Los Angeles for the second wild-card spot.

Moore sped up the right side, outskated Jonatan Berggren, centered the puck and snapped a shot past Binnington for the victory. Anze Kopitar and Drew Doughty assisted on the goal.

With the Kings leading 1-0, Thomas went to the front of the net and Philip Broberg's shot deflected off Thomas' skate and past Forsberg to tie it.

After a scoreless first period, Jared Wright nearly put the Kings ahead midway through the second, but his goal was waved off for goaltender interference.

Los Angeles got one that counted on Kempe's power-play goal on a wrister with 3:01 left in the second period to put the Kings up 1-0.

Up next

Blues: Play at Anaheim on Friday night.

Kings: Host Nashville on Thursday night.

—-

AP NHL: https://www.apnews.com/hub/NHL

Los Angeles Kings Pass Nashville Predators For Final Wild Card Spot Ahead Of Matchup

Thursday's game between the Los Angeles Kings and the Nashville Predators just got a lot more important. 

After losing three straight games and leaving six points on the table, the Predators have been passed by the Kings in the Western Conference Wild Card race with eight games left in the regular season. 

The Kings picked up a massive 2-1 win over the St. Louis Blues on Wednesday, another team trying to move up in the Wild Card race, to bump their season total to 78 points. Nashville has 77 points. 

To add salt to the wound, the San Jose Sharks also tied the Predators in points following their 4-3 win over the Anaheim Ducks. The Sharks have the tiebreaker as they have played one fewer game than the Predators. 

Winnipeg is also now a point behind Nashville after an overtime win against Chicago, 4-3, on Tuesday. Seattle also trails Nashville by two points. 

Thursday is another massive day, with the Predators getting a chance to take back the Wild Card spot if they defeat Los Angeles on the road. If Nashville loses, Winnipeg can pass the Predators with a win over Dallas, and the Sharks can do the Same with a win over Toronto. 

Seattle can also tie the Predators in points if it defeats Utah. Another loss could really set Nashville back in the playoff race. 

The Western Conference Wild Card race has been heavily criticized for the quality of the teams competing for the final spot. All six teams have a win percentage hovering just above 50%.  

While Los Angeles is the only team among the six that doesn't have more than 30 regulation losses this season, the Kings have an NHL record 19 overtime losses. 

For Nashville, the games in this final road trip are critical. It faces Los Angeles twice (Thursday and Monday), San Jose (Saturday) and Utah (April 9). Coming home for the final three games of the season, the Predators see the Sharks once more.

Rinkside Recap: League-leading Avs fall to league’s worst Canucks 8-6

DENVER, CO — It was first vs. worst tonight at Ball Arena, and we were in the barn to offer live and in-depth coverage!

The Avalanche would go at it without stud-defender Cale Makar, who sustained an upper-body injury in Colorado’s last contest against the Calgary Flames.

Vancouver came to town looking to get back into the win column after dropping their last six games. It was a team with a -90 goal differential vs. a team with a +93 goal differential. What could go wrong?

Turns out the answer to that question was a lot, with Vancouver establishing an early lead, netting a shorthanded goal, then full-on taking over, averaging three goals a period through two frames and holding off Colorado’s third-period comeback effort to walk out of Ball Arena with 2 points.

The Game

The puck dropped, and twenty-nine seconds later, Max Sasson would net a goal for the Canucks that beat Blackwood via the five-hole.

It would take just about a minute for Nathan MacKinnon to announce his arrival as he hit the brakes upon entry, watched a Canuck lose his skates and fly by, before creating enough space to rip home a wrister. MacKinnon’s tally would make 50 on the season and put him just one goal shy of his previous career high of 51 goals.

The Avalanche would get its first power play of the evening, but it only resulted in the worst-case scenario. Vancouver would take a 2-1 lead after the Avalanche allowed the 13th shorthanded goal against.

The Canucks would find another way to score this time on a power play of their own. Jake DeBrusk was left all alone in the slot and logged his 17th of the season, with 14 of those coming on the power play. Just like that, it was 3-1 Canucks.

Frustration among the fanbase started to set in, but Gabe Landeskog would ease the pain after he deflected Brent Burns’ point shot past Kevin Lankinen, bringing his side back to within one goal at 3-2 Vancouver.

The period would end with Vancouver on the power play, and Colorado would kill the first 26 seconds and head to the locker room.

The second period would start with Colorado killing off the rest of Vancouver’s man-advantage, but that wouldn’t stop the Canucks from extending their lead to two goals after Teddy Blueger was alone in front and beat Blackwood via the five-hole yet again to bring the score to 4-2 in favor of the visitors.

Nick Blankenburg was thrust into the lineup tonight with Cale Makar tending to his wounds and had a tough night.

He sank too deeply to the point where he was into the crease, and Blackwood, who couldn’t do anything to stop what basically turned into a screened two-on-none. Brock Boeser would log that tally, and another five minutes later, bringing the score to a whopping 6-2 Canucks.

Finally, Jared Bednar pulled MacKenzie Blackwood.

Sam Malinski would get one back for Colorado before the second period ended. Vancouver challenged for goalie interference, but the challenge was unsuccessful despite Jack Drury making contact with Kevin Lankinen outside the blue paint.

We’d head to the second intermission at 6-3 Canucks.

We did have a little scare right before the second period let out, with Martin Necas getting hit away from the play and going down in a heap. He would stay down and immediately head off to the room despite the remaining time in the period.

Fortunately, he would return for the third period, but seemed to be reaching for his wrist, which has been an area of concern this season.

The Avalanche wouldn’t go quietly into the night.

Scott Wedgewood was asked if this game felt out of reach before the third, and he responded, “Never with this team.”

Parker Kelly would log his 19th of the season just 116 seconds into the third and final frame, and the comeback and whale watch were on! It was a two-goal game at 6-4 with essentially the entire third period left for the Avalanche to mount a comeback.

Next, it was Brent Burns’ turn as his point one timer, assisted by Brock Nelson, went straight in, and the tide officially had shifted.

It was Sam Malinski who set Ball Arena off with his game-tying goal (6-6) with just over five minutes left in the game. Unfortunately, that goal would quickly be answered by Vancouver’s Marcus Pettersson, who gave Vancouver a 7-6 lead.

Colorado did make a push to get things under control in this game, and had they started as they finished, they would have beaten the Canucks handily.

Takeaways

The slow start tonight should have been more anticipated, as it’s typical for a team to come out flat after putting up 5 plus goals in the first half of a period. That said, there’s no excuse for starting so poorly against the league’s worst team and giving up a shorthanded goal to a historically bad penalty kill unit.

It was pretty clear that the freedom of having nothing to play for benefited the Canucks, who likely had no problem getting up to play the best team in the league. In a season where you are -90 in goal differential, you have to take it game by game, and tonight, Vancouver passed the test.

This wasn’t a great performance by the Avalanche defensively, but MacKenzie Blackwood also looked a little lost at times. It’s feeling more and more clear that Scott Wedgewood is the number one goalie in Colorado these days.

When Bednar was asked if he was concerned with not knowing who the starter is so close to playoff time, he quickly snapped, “No.”

It’s been abundantly clear that Colorado can ill afford to lose a defender from its group of six, as Nick Blankenburg hasn’t looked great and, in a game against the league’s worst team, struggled. I don’t know that the Avalanche have a set-and-forget 7D.

Jared Bednar was clearly not pleased in the post-game presser and made no excuses for his club. When asked what went wrong, he responded, “The list is too long.”

Brock Nelson had an item that likely landed on the list, saying, “Couple unfortunate bounces where they end up with two-on-ones with some pretty clear looks that we’d like to not give up.”

Upcoming

The Avalanche will head to Dallas for a matinee contest against Mikko Rantanen and the Stars on Saturday.

Let us know what you thought of this contest in the comments!

Celebrini ties it late then sets up Wennberg's winner as the Sharks beat the Ducks 4-3

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — Macklin Celebrini tied the game with less than two minutes to play then assisted on Alexander Wennberg's winning goal with 31 seconds left to complete a four-point game as the San Jose Sharks beat the Anaheim Ducks 4-3 on Wednesday night.

With two goals and two assists, Celebrini now has 40 goals and 105 points this season, moving him past Erik Karlsson (101 points in 2022-23) for the second highest single-season point total in franchise history behind Joe Thornton’s 114-point effort in 2006-07.

The 19-year-old Celebrini also now has 17 games this season with three or more points, second among teenagers in NHL history only to Wayne Gretzky, who had 19 in 1979-80.

Will Smith had a goal and two assists for the Sharks and Yaroslav Askirov made 28 saves.

Troy Terry scored 4:04 into the third period to give the Ducks a 3-2 lead.

Celebrini tied it with 1:39 to play.

Ryan Poehling and Alex Killorn also scored for Anaheim, which has lost three straight games but remains atop the Pacific Division. Drew Helleson had a pair of assists and Lukas Dostal made 16 saves and also got his first assist of the season on Poehling's goal.

The Ducks played without their leading goal scorer, Cutter Gauthier, who suffered an upper-body injury in Monday night's 5-4 loss to Toronto.

Nathan Gaucher made his NHL debut for the Ducks. He was selected 22nd overall by Anaheim in the 2022 draft.

San Jose now has a 2-1 lead in the four-game regular-season series between the teams.

Up next

Ducks: Return home to play St. Louis on Friday night.

Sharks: Host Toronto for the third game of a six-game homestand on Thursday night.

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Dodgers start slow at the plate

LOS ANGELES, CA - APRIL 01: Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Kyle Tucker (23) walks back to the dugout after striking out during the MLB game between the Cleveland Guardians and the Los Angeles Dodgers on March 28, 2026 at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, CA. (Photo by Brian Rothmuller/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

LOS ANGELES — The Dodgers have gotten off to a good start because they are 4-2, but in spite of a an offense that has been unable to get off to good starts in games.

They have yet to score in the first or second innings this season, and the first time through the batting order through six games have just nine hits in 49 at-bats, with a home run, double, and five walks, hitting just .184/.259/.265.

“We haven’t gotten off to a good start. In a majority of our games, the opponent has scored first. It just seems like the first three innings, we’re not getting much production, and nothing much going on. Then as we get into the game, we start to threaten a little more,” manager Dave Roberts said. “Maybe we get on the road and get a chance to strike first.”

The Dodgers trailed 2-0 in all three games against the Arizona Diamondbacks but managed to win all three. They trailed 4-0 in the first and last games against the Cleveland Guardians, falling to score until the ninth inning of both losses.

The Dodgers put up three four-run innings against the Diamondbacks in their first 11 innings of the season, but in the 39 innings since, they only scored 11 runs. Gavin Williams struck out 10 in seven scoreless innings for Cleveland on Wednesday night, keeping with a recent theme. Over the last four games, the opposing starting pitchers have allowed only two total runs, one earned to the Dodgers, with 24 strikeouts in 22 innings.

OpponentPARunsSLGBBK
Diamondbacks10316.4221115
Guardians1027.344629

“The amount of strikeouts is a little concerning,” Roberts said. “We’re striking out at quite a clip. But I think it will level out, it will balance out.”

Andy Pages had three of the five Dodgers hits in Wednesday’s loss, and is off to a great start, hitting .429/.429/.619. His nine hits are most on the team by far. Freddie Freeman, whose home run in the ninth inning was the only run on Wednesday, and Teoscar Hernández, are tied for second on the team with five hits thus far, through six games.

“Andy’s been great, since spring training. He’s one of the guys who’s carried us,” Freeman said. “He looks great, on both sides of the ball. Hopefully the rest of us can join him on Friday.”

The Dodgers are off Thursday, then play the Washington Nationals to start a six-game road trip.

“Offensively most of our guys are struggling,” Roberts said. “It’ll be good to get on the road, get an off day, and go from there.”

“I think you could talk to every one of us, and say we wish we had a better offensive first week, but I think our offense is inevitable,” Freeman said. “Anytime anyone goes into that box, anything can happen. We have a really good lineup, we’re just not hitting yet. It’s a long season, it’s just the first week. We’ll be fine.”

Braves News: Draft prospects, Chris Sale flu game, more

Apr 1, 2026; Cumberland, Georgia, USA; Atlanta Braves pitcher Chris Sale (51) pitches against the Athletics during the first inning at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images | Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

We were reminded of three people we are lucky to have on Wednesday: Chris Sale, Drake Baldwin, and Matt Powers. Chris Sale wasn’t his best self and had a major velocity dip to start the game, but he worked through 6.0 innings of 1 run ball to deliver a series victory for Atlanta. Drake Baldwin continued his torrid start to the season at the plate as he is having something closer to a sophomore surge than a sophomore slump early on in the season. Meanwhile, Matt Powers continues to be a tremendous asset to Braves fans as our very own draft expert, writing up an absurdly extensive and thorough update on college draft prospects who might be of interest for the Braves in the first three rounds and how they have performed so far in the first half of the college system.

Braves News

Our in-house draft expert Matt Powers gave a Braves-centric look at college draft prospects about halfway through the college season.

Chris Sale completed his flu game with 6.0 innings of 1 run ball, sealing a series victory at home against the Athletics.

Atlanta hasn’t blown the doors off to start this season, but they have taken care of business and won their first two series.

MLB News

The Royals placed Carlos Estevez on the IL with a foot contusion from being hit by a Michael Harris comebacker before giving up six runs to allow a Braves comeback.

Baseball’s top prospect Konnor Griffin is reportedly deep in talks with the Pirates on an extension.

Fangraphs’ Ben Clemens took a self-described nerdy look at the ABS system early in the season.

Charge season ends in dissapointing loss to Go-Go

CLEVELAND, OH - NOVEMBER 15: Darius Brown II #10 of the Cleveland Charge passes the ball during the game against the Wisconsin Herd on November 15, 2025 at Cleveland Public Auditorium 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 2025 NBAE (Photo by Nate Manley/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Charge’s magical season came to an end with a 126-123 loss to the Capital City Go-Go in the first round of the NBA G League playoffs. The Charge fought hard, but an inability to grab crucial rebounds late ultimately did them in.

Point guard Darius Brown II was the only constant in a Charge season that was characterized by six NBA call-ups. And in many ways, he’s symbolic of why this season has been so successful for the team. His steady hand at the point allowed various roster configurations to work. He was doing so again against the Go-Go until his body finally gave out.

In the first quarter, he bloodied his knee diving for a loose ball. In the third, he hurt his hamstring after being fouled. And midway through the fourth, he rolled his ankle while forcing an eight-second violation.

By the end of the game, Brown could hardly move, but that didn’t keep him from making a positive impact on the game. He hustled back to stop a fastbreak layup with a minute and a half left in a three-point game. Then, he converted a fastbreak layup of his own to make it a one-point game.

Brown wouldn’t use that as an excuse. “Everyone is playing through something,” he said. But most aren’t gutting it out like he was.

“It just says everything about who he is,” head coach Eli Kell-Abrams said. “He’s been in a walking boot for a month, and the way he’s been able to fight through pain, fight through adversity, fight through off-court stuff and still not make it about him, and be able to galvanize and lead the group is really impressive.”

The Charge had a chance to win what was a back-and-forth game late. In the last minute, they missed two crucial defensive rebounds and had two bad turnovers. The Go-Go took advantage of those miscues to put the game away.

“It’s one of the tough things about a single-elimination tournament,” Kell-Abrams said. “Sometimes, if you just don’t have it, you don’t have it. I think defensively we weren’t able to guard the ball and rebound, which we knew were going to be big keys to the game.”

Cleveland didn’t have an answer for Alondes Williams. He poured in 39 points and four assists while going 12-21 from the field. This included contributing 24 in the second half to help the Go-Go erase a seven-point deficit at the break. Former Cleveland Cavaliers two-way player Chris Livingston also supplied 27 points and nine rebounds in the victory.

The Charge were led by 25 points from Brown on 8-15 shooting to go along with 10 assists and seven boards. Cavs two-way player Olivier Sarr finished with 22 points on 8-10 shooting with four rebounds and a block.

Even though this wasn’t the way the Charge wanted the season to end, they aren’t going to remember this season for what happened on Tuesday.

“A couple missed helps, a couple tough switches, and a couple of offensive rebounds shouldn’t define what’s been one of the most successful years in Charge history,” Kell-Abrams said. “With the development we’ve had, headlined by Tristan Enaruna. … We knocked the development part out of the park.”

The Charge did knock that out of the park. They had six call-ups (seven if you want to count Nae’Qwan Tomlin, who didn’t play with the Charge, but started on a two-way deal). That includes losing Killian Hayes, who was having an MVP-caliber season, before he was signed by the Sacramento Kings.

Kell-Abrams attributes Brown for being a big reason why they were able to keep things on the rails and attract more talent — like Riley Minix, Malaki Branham, and Sarr — to replace the guys they lost to call-ups.

“[The G League] encourages you to be selfish,” Kell-Abrams said. “You think points will get you called up. You think, ‘How many shots am I getting?’ And D.B. says, ‘You know what, I’m going to pass the ball. I’m going to pass the ball in a league that doesn’t want to.’ And that’s why everybody wants to come play with him. That’s why we were able to get Riley Minix here to play with him. That’s what we were able to get Malaki Branham…Olivier Sarr. Like, these guys want to come be here.”

While many will remember this season for the on-court success that the Charge had, Brown will remember it for how special this group was.

“The stuff I remember most is always the stuff off the court,” Brown said. “I’ll just remember things from after team dinners, going out to Top Golf or doing stuff like that with the staff and everybody. That’s the stuff I’ll remember more than anything we did on the court, although that was very successful.”

Before the season, Kell-Abrams laid out two goals. He wanted to develop NBA talent and be successful on the court. He did both. The Charge finished with their second-best winning percentage for a regular season in their history and had numerous players called up. This was a successful season, even though it didn’t end how they wanted it to.

“Forty-eight minuts of not our best basketball doesn’t define us,” Kell-Abrams said.

Royal bats shine on a dreary night, beat Minnesota 13-9

KANSAS CITY, MO - MARCH 30: Kyle Isbel #28 of the Kansas City Royals takes the field prior to the game between the Minnesota Twins and the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium on Monday, March 30, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Mikayla Schlosser/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The bottom third of the Kansas City lineup has taken care of business for the second consecutive game, but in much more spectacular fashion tonight. Scoring started in the second with two out and no one on when Jac Caglianone hit a 110.1 mph rocket to center for a double. Collins hit the next ball 110.9 mph to top Jac and bring him home on another double followed by a Kyle Isbel RBI single. He then stole second and Maikel Garcia hit a hard to field ball off of Brooks Lee’s glove at short to score the third run on the inning. That was just the beginning.

Another run scored in the 3rd on a popup to third by India that the fog hid from Royce Lewis.

And another came the next inning after Cags, Collins, and Isbel all reached again and Garcia hit a sac fly. The rain really got going as KC batted 11 in the 6th. Walks, HBPs, errors, and a Jonathan India grand slam brought seven more runs and a $25,000 Sonic Slam winner. The rest of the game was hampered significantly by the weather but without any extended stoppage of play. At 12-1, it looked like the Royals would cruise to victory.

Jac, Isaac, and Kyle combined to go 8 of 11 with a BB and HBP reaching base in all but 3 of their 14 plate appearances. Isbel tacked a solo shot on in the 7th to finish the dominant performance off for the bottom of the order. All of the starting 9 at least reached base with Carter Jensen sneaking a single in during the 8th to join in on the fun, but it was the back of the lineup that carried the load today.

On the pitching side, Noah Cameron was very sharp to begin the night, especially the first two innings. He through a first pitch strike to each of the first six Minnesota batters but did seem to lose some command in the 4th and 5th innings. He got through that 5th despite giving up a lot of hard contact and was pulled with a final line of 5IP, 4H, 1BB, 1ER, and 5K and the win. That is a solid start to his sophomore campaign.

Daniel Lynch, Alex Lange, and Brady Falter all struggled to find the zone a bit with Lynch giving up 3 runs in the 7th, Lange 2 in the 8th before Cruz came in and finished the inning, and Falter 3 in the 9th. There were a lot of walks and hit batters from both teams due to the wet baseballs, so I would not read too much into their less than spectacular performances. It did make the game look closer than it felt and even ended up in a save situation that brought in Lucas Erceg to seal the deal.

There were also a ton of ABS challenges, 9 out of 11 were overturned and the Royals only went one for two. Since the game was not very close, none of these mattered all that much in the end. Still, it was a busy day for the new system and a very high success rate.

In the end, the Royals move to 3-2 on the year. They are above .500 and going for sweep against the Twins tomorrow. There is a bit more rain in the forecast again and that 1:00 pm start time is definitely in jeopardy.

Guardians win the Dodgers series

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 01: Gavin Williams #32 of the Cleveland Guardians throws against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the fifth inning at Dodger Stadium on April 01, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Gavin Williams was unbelievable today. I could end the recap right here and pretty adequately sum up the events of tonight’s rubber match. He was in full control of the game for basically all seven innings. This performance from Gavin vindicates all of us loyal Gavin Williams believers who truly know that this domination is what he can do every single time he takes the mound. I have no notes for his performance which, if you’ve read any of my articles before, is rare. He had every single pitch working for him, and completely silenced the best lineup in baseball. He kept his fastball in the upper half, and sequenced it beautifully with his cutter & breaking pitches. He was getting his sinker to jump into the outer-third against righties all night. He was getting chase, and generated 16 (SIXTEEN) swings and misses. Truly a spectacular performance from him. This is exactly what I want him to do (within reason) every night. This performance showcases exactly why he can be not just a Cy Young finalist, but a legitimate contender to win it. Just look at this beautiful chart (obtained from the lovely Thomas Nestico, @TJStats on X, as always).

To the offense! Daniel Schneemann got the fun started with a true do-it-yourself run. He doubled, then stole third and, on a throwing error from Will Smith, waltzed home. Arias followed that up with a missile to center.

It was more-or-less quiet until the 8th, when our sleeping giant finally woke up.

(By the way, why on EARTH did Dave Roberts bring in a lefty for Jose? With Manzardo right behind him, why would you pitch to the guy who notoriously nukes lefties. I get it’s Tanner Scott, but why even take the risk?)

Anywho, Shawn Armstrong got himself into some trouble in the 8th, giving up a single and double to Hernandez and Pages, respectfully. He struck out Alex Freeland for the second out, and was then replaced by Erik Sabrowski to face Shohei Ohtani. Erik Sabrowski, if you weren’t already aware, is an unbelievable talent. On the majority of teams in MLB, he would be their best reliever. He came in and got Ohtani out on three pitches, two of which were out of the zone.

For reference, Sabrowski has generated whiffs on 46.2% of pitches this year (per @TJStats). FOURTY-SIX. Insanity. He’s a monster.

Cade Smith came on in the 9th and, well, wasn’t as sterling as is expected of him. Gave up back to back barrels to Freddie Freeman and Will Smith. Freeman’s, unfortunately, left the park. That was the Dodgers’ only run tonight. Cade has been a little iffy to start the year, but hopefully he gets back on track when the team comes back to Cleveland on Friday.

If you haven’t already (and are able), get tickets to watch the Guardians this homestand. Among the highlights: Opening Day festivities on Friday, Chase DeLauter’s (regular season) Cleveland debut, and last, but not least, Jose has a chance to sit atop the Guardians’ franchise games played leaderboard on Monday if he plays every game. A lot to watch for, so please turn out.

By the way, 4-3 against two World Series contenders to start the year.

Pretty good.

See you on Opening Day!