Angels 5, Cubs 4: Matthew Boyd is perfect

The Cubs lost to the Angels 5-4 in Tempe Thursday, but the big story of this one was Cubs left-hander Matthew Boyd. Boyd had allowed five hits in less than two innings in his first spring start earlier this week.

Thursday afternoon in Tempe, Boyd was much better. He retired all nine Angels he faced — many of them expected to be on their Opening Day roster — and struck out three. He threw an efficient 34 pitches (23 strikes) and here’s how he struck out Mike Trout:

Boyd had seven swings-and-misses and looked really sharp. This is likely his last outing before heading to Team USA for the World Baseball Classic. Team USA is having a workout next Monday in preparation for an exhibition game against the Giants in Scottsdale next Wednesday. Then they will head to Houston to begin WBC pool play against Brazil a week from tomorrow.

The Cubs took an early lead on doubles by Jefferson Rojas and Dylan Carlson in the first inning, although Carlson got himself picked off second to end the inning.

Then the Cubs added a pair in the second. Chas McCormick doubled and went to third on a single by James Triantos. McCormick then scored on a sac fly by Pedro Ramirez. A double by Justin Dean and walk drawn by Scott Kingery loaded the bases, and the Cubs’ third run scored when Michael Busch was hit by a pitch.

Unfortunately, Jaxon Wiggins got knocked around in an inning and a third of work. He faced 10 batters and six of them had hits. The Angels scored one off Wiggins in the fourth and four in the fifth to take the lead, with five runs overall charged to Wiggins. So Wiggins’ first spring outing was… not one he’ll want to remember, except for learning purposes.

After that a lot of the Cubs regulars departed. Riley Martin took over in the sixth and there was a brief delay while Craig Counsell and the Cubs trainer had a look at Martin after a pitch, but Martin stayed in the game. He threw a scoreless sixth.

Minor league plate umpire Louie Krupa had four calls challenged in this game and all four were overturned.

And that’s pretty much it from this game. Dylan Carlson had two hits and is 4-for-8 in the early spring going with three walks. It’s really hard to tell whether Carlson or McCormick has the “lead” in the fourth outfielder race, given the very small sample size. You can be sure, though, that both will get more opportunities, especially with Pete Crow-Armstrong departing soon for the WBC.

The Cubs return to Sloan Park Friday afternoon to take on the Cleveland Guardians. Game time Friday is 2:05 p.m. CT. Edward Cabrera will make his first spring start for the Cubs, and Logan Allen will go for Cleveland. No TV or radio coverage for Friday’s game.

Homer happy Dodgers remain undefeated

There were a lot of firsts in Thursday’s game against the Chicago White Sox, and all of them were good and promising.

Tyler Glasnow had his first outing of the season and is just another starter that looks like they are in mid-season form. He struck out the side first inning and had a ground out and two more K’s in the second inning.

Glasnow started the day with a two-inning/30 pitch limit. Since he finished the second inning with 29 pitches, he came out to start the top of the third where he gave up a base hit and called it a day.

Most promising was his fastball velocity. Last year, Glasnow’s fastball velocity averaged 95.7mph. In the first inning of Thursday’s game, it was sitting at a 97.1 average. Overall, for his 33 pitches, he averaged 96.7mph.

After his outing, Glasnow remarked that the uptick in velocity is something he had been working on over the offseason and has been very intentional about it. He feels like his mechanics are in a much better place and is feeling fully healthy. All that and the addition of 20 pounds on Glasnow’s long frame having him looking like he’s in a great spot to start the season.

In his first start of the season, Max Muncy grounded out to third in the first inning, followed by line drive base hit in his next at bat. He ended up going 1-3 on the day.

Muncy talked to reporters after the game and commented on why some of the older Dodgers are taking a slower approach in Spring Training. He noted that there was a conversation with several players, and it was “give your body as much rest as possible” mentality going into the season. The Dodgers have had to start back-to-back seasons with trips across the Pacific and have played more postseason games than any other team in the last two seasons. A slow start for the veterans is well deserved.

Blake Treinen also had first outing of spring where he set the White Sox down 1-2-3, with two strikeouts and a groundout using only 15 pitches.

The team finally broke their home run drought, with Will Smith hitting the first home run of Spring Training. He was followed later in the game by Keston Hiura and Hyeseong Kim who went back-to-back with solo homers of their own.

What the Dodgers did not have their first of, however, was a loss. They beat the White Sox 7-6 to remain the only undefeated team in spring. Does this mean anything? Of course not but it makes it a lot more fun.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto will have his second outing of the spring on Friday against the San Francisco Giants, before heading out to join Team Japan for the World Baseball Classis.

The Yankees’ bullpen is benefiting from internal competition

DUNEDIN, FL - FEBRUARY 24: Jake Bird #59 of the New York Yankees pitches during the spring training game against the Toronto Blue Jays at TD Ballpark on February 24, 2026 in Dunedin, Florida. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees’ bullpen has a little bit of everything. It has All-Star fireballers, sinker specialists, a splitter maestro, a couple of guys who rely on finesse rather than pure stuff, a pitch-to-contact lefty, and a few flawed, but talented arms vying for a couple of spots. It’s not hard to see that a few guys, barring an unexpected turn of events, have a spot locked up already. This is the case of David Bednar, Camilo Doval, Fernando Cruz, and Tim Hill. One has to think that Ryan Yarbrough and Paul Blackburn will be in there, as well.

After that, there are as many as six or seven pitchers with at least an outside chance of making the roster, not to mention the fact that the team usually takes a long look at the post-spring training cuts to add names, as well. The likes of Jake Bird, Cade Winquest, Kervin Castro, Osvaldo Bido, Ángel Chivilli, Brent Headrick, and Yerry De Los Santos are actively competing to see who makes the roster, and most of them are looking good if we combine their offseason, their early-camp work, and the first few days of Grapefruit League games.

It’s still February, though, so it’s too early to even think about who makes the roster of this group and who gets left behind. What we are seeing, however, is that at least a couple of interesting names from that list could be on the outside looking.

Just because of the assets invested in them, one can conclude that Winquest, as a Rule 5 Draft pick, and Bird and Chivilli, as trade pieces that required the organization to give away prospects, could have a leg up in the competition. It’s important not to rule out a guy like Headrick, though, owner of a 3.13 ERA and 30 strikeouts in just 23 innings with the Bombers last year. His swing-and-miss stuff could definitely boost the Yankees’ bullpen and give it another lefty to complement Hill.

Yes, there is still the feeling that the Yankees are one or two quality relievers short of boasting a high-flying bullpen, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t talented hurlers in the organization with enough juice to win a spot and contribute.

Bird himself is a solid bounce-back candidate after last year’s disaster, and he has thrown 2.1 scoreless innings this spring with no walks and three strikeouts. Chivilli has big fastball velocity and two breaking balls, his changeup and slider, that had a whiff rate over 40 percent last year. Sometimes, it’s a matter of bringing in guys one or two adjustments away from unlocking the full extent of their potential, and Chivilli could be that guy.

And if the Grapefruit League ends and the Yankees are still not happy with their group of arms for the bullpen, they can always review other teams’ cuts and bring in a useful pitcher. That’s exactly how they got Yarbrough last year, and he went on to put up a 4.36 ERA in 64 frames in 2025 with long stints of dominance. On top of it all, the Yankees’ relief corps could also get some reinforcements in the form of starters, if and when Gerrit Cole, Carlos Rodon, and Clarke Schmidt rejoin the rotation. The first two are expected back in April, while Schmidt is more of a second-half play.

Other unexpected names might join the bullpen mix eventually, such as Carlos Lagrange. Yes, pitching coach Matt Blake revealed on Wednesday that moving him to relief is a possibility later down the road.

There are multiple avenues for a great bullpen, and having several talented guys taking the ball in spring training and showing off the improvements they made in the postseason in a healthy competition is definitely one of them. The Yankees may not have a top-five bullpen this year, but internal competition is strong and that’s always a positive.

Nottingham Forest v Fenerbahce: Europa League knockout round playoff, second leg – as it happens

Two goals from Kerem Akturkoglu put Forest under pressure, but Callum Hudson-Odoi’s goal calmed things and they saw out a 4-2 aggregate win

On the telly, they’ve just been discussing James McAtee, and I’m looking forward to seeing how he does tonight. City are now in that spot United were under Alex Ferguson, where clubs buy their players because they know the standard can be too high for good ones to make it and respect the managers who keep them around. He’s got a lovely touch and decent vision, but does he have the ability to impose that? We don’t yet know.

Forest actually did pretty well to keep as many players as they did after last season – and getting £52m+£3m for Anthony Elanga was a remarkable piece of business. I’m not sure Anderson will still be around after the summer, whereas Gibbs-White has a contract – but there surely comes a point at which players don’t trust Marinakis with their careers and just want to up sticks from the upheaval.

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Mets 5, Astros 0: Nolan McLean shines in exhibition win

Sep 8, 2025; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; New York Mets pitcher Nolan McLean (26) throws a pitch during the fourth inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images | Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

The Mets cruised to victory in a road game as they visited the Astros in West Palm Beach this afternoon, and Nolan McLean was unsurprisingly the star of the show in his first spring training appearance.

  • McLean struck out six, walked one, and gave up just one hit in four scoreless innings of work.
  • Robert Stock was nearly as impressive as McLean, as he blanked the Astros for three innings himself as he took over for McLean. And he struck out six batters without walking anyone and gave up just one hit.
  • Anderson Severino and Ben Simon threw a scoreless inning each to finish the shutout.
  • Tyrone Taylor hit a three-run home run early in the game as he got the start in center field.
  • Marcus Semien went 2-for-3 with a run scored and a run batted in.
  • Bo Bichette went 1-for-3 with a double.

The Mets’ next Grapefruit League game is set for 1:05 PM EST tomorrow as they visit the Cardinals in Jupiter. Freddy Peralta is set to make his spring training debut in that one, and your only option for tuning in will be the Cardinals’ radio broadcast if you are so inclined.

Yankees ride explosive first inning to victory over Braves

TAMPA, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 26: Jazz Chisholm Jr. #13 celebrates with Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees after Chisholm hit a two-run home run in the first inning against the Atlanta Braves during a Grapefruit League spring training game at George M. Steinbrenner Field on February 26, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The main offseason talking point concerning the Yankees has concerned the phrase “running it back.” Is it a good thing? Is it the greatest misstep in franchise history? Well, a nearly Opening Day-vintage Yankee lineup looked more than ready to do damage this afternoon, as they plated five runs in the first inning en route to a 7-3 victory over the Braves. Jazz Chisholm Jr., Paul Goldschmidt, and Spencer Jones hit home runs, while Elmer Rodríguez provided three more quality innings on the mound.

If you blinked, you may have missed Rodríguez’s first inning. He got Brett Wisely to pop to left on his first pitch of the afternoon, induced a grounder to first from Nacho Alvarez Jr. two pitches later, then got Triple-A Scranton alum Dom Smith on a check-swing tapper in front of the mound. The whole affair took seven pitches.

Unlike his first start, the Bombers gave Rodríguez substantial run support in the home first. Chisholm faced old friend Carlos Carrasco with two men out and Aaron Judge on first, and sent a sky-high drive out to right field. In right field, long-ago Baby Bomber Ben Gamel had a shot to make the catch, but it bounced off the top of the wall and into the stands for a two-run homer.

Goldschmidt and Austin Wells kept the inning alive with consecutive base hits, giving Ryan McMahon a run-producing opportunity. Carrasco kept getting to the precipice of leaving the inning, but strike three was elusive. From 0-2 down, McMahon worked the count full, then slashed an opposite-field double down the line to plate both runners and double the Yankee lead.

McMahon also made third on an errant throw to the cutoff man. That only made the trot home easier when José Caballero spanked an offering from alliterative new pitcher Shay Schanaman in a similar spot for a double of his own. All run-producing hits came with two strikes and two outs. Ninth-place hitter Seth Brown finally popped out to conclude the frame.

After such a quick top half and lengthy bottom half, it could have been easy for Rodríguez to lose his command a bit in the second inning. Not so for the steady righty, who struck out the leadoff hitter Gamel. After a nice pick from McMahon at third, Rodríguez got DaShawn Keirsey Jr. to swing through a low fastball to retire the side.

Carrasco went right back out in the second thanks to the myriad delights of spring training. Go figure, he retired the top of the Yankee order on eight pitches. That included a backwards-K on Judge, who unsuccessfully challenged the third strike pitch. Much hay has been made about low strikes on Judge, but he certainly had no case there.

Rodríguez got into a jam in the third, allowing runners on the corners with one out. Back-to-back brilliant changeups struck out Wisely, then faced Alvarez with a chance to wiggle out unscathed. But a 1-2 sinker caught too much plate, and Alvarez roped it to right for a double to score both baserunners and end Rodríguez’s scoreless spring. He rebounded quickly to retire Smith and preserve a 5-2 lead.

Thankfully for Rodríguez, the Yankees offense came to play today. Paul Goldschmidt got one of those runs right back by taking Elieser Hernández deep to left for his second home run of the spring.

Camilo Doval got some work in the fourth inning replacing Rodríguez, whose line closed at three innings, two earned runs on two hits, four strikeouts, and a walk. Doval was greeted rudely by Gamel, who connected for a home run to right field to restore the three-run margin. Doval pitched around a pesky Keirsey, who stole second and took third on a wild pitch.

Rule 5 draftee Cade Winquest was called upon to pitch the fifth, as this hodgepodge Braves lineup tried to find its footing. They started well, picking up consecutive singles against Winquest, but the righty forced a key double play before setting Smith aside for a scoreless frame. He grabbed two more outs in the sixth without incident before being relieved. It looks like the Yankees would love to use him in a multi-inning role; that flexibility would be useful, especially considering that some of the Yankees’ rotational arms aren’t famous for pitching deep into ballgames.

No February party at Steinbrenner Field without a nuke off the bat of Spencer Jones. However you feel about his chances to stick in the majors, his power remains tantalizing. And with his new Shohei Ohtani-style toe tap, he looks the part. This particular blast traveled 401 feet out to right field and into the parking lot, giving the Yankees a 7-3 lead in the seventh.

That would be our final score from Steinbrenner Field, as Michael Arias retired the Braves in order in the ninth to seal the Yankees’ fifth win of the Grapefruit League schedule.

Tomorrow, Luis Gil will leapfrog Carlos Lagrange and make his second start of the spring as the Yankees hit the road to face the Twins. Cole Sands will be his opponent, with first pitch set for the usual 1:05 pm ET timeslot on the Gotham Sports App.

Box Score

Carlos Carrasco, Braves backups get beaten up by Yankees

Feb 26, 2026; Tampa, Florida, USA; Atlanta Braves starting pitcher Carlos Carrasco (59) throws a pitch during the first inning against the New York Yankees at George M. Steinbrenner Field. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images | Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

The Braves didn’t really intend to make Thursday afternoon’s exhibition contest in Tampa a competitive one — they sent a bunch of backups as their position player contingent, gave Carlos Carrasco the start, and had a pitching slate of “guys who complete innings because the regular crew can’t add a full month of workload to their ledgers and hope to survive the season.”

It went basically as expected against a lineup that started with a bunch of Yankees regulars.

Carlos Carrasco was, well, kind of what you’d expect against a lineup with a bunch of Yankees regulars. He walked Aaron Judge, gave up a cheapie lofted-down-the-line homer to Jazz Chisholm Jr., and then got knocked around, ball-in-play variety. The Braves lifted him when it was 4-0 and fill-in Schay Schanaman was greeted with another double that made it 5-0.

Carrasco actually came back to pitch a clean second, where he struck out Judge on an ABS-confirmed changeup that was very plainly in the zone. Still, it wasn’t exactly a resurgent outing for the veteran, given the 1/1 K/BB ratio, the early exit, and the fact that was mostly just tossing it over to get whacked in his first inning of work.

The rest of the Atlanta pitching slate was pretty boring: Elieser Hernandez, Taylor Scott, Austin Pope, and Anthony Molina. Hernandez ate three innings, striking out just one batter (but walking none), though he was taken deep by Paul Goldschmidt. A few innings later, Spencer Jones absolutely obliterated Austin Pope’s mislocated 93 mph four-seamer for a majestic 400-plus-foot blast to right. All in all, Atlanta pitching had just a 4/2 K/BB ratio and got tagged for three longballs — but none of these guys are really in the running to make the roster or serve as anything other than emergency depth in 2026, so whatever.

Offensively, the Atlanta backups-slash-fringy-guys-that-maybe-make-the-roster-if-someone-else-gets-hurt at least had a few nice moments. Nacho Alvarez Jr. knocked in a couple with a hard-hit grounder double down the right-field line. Ben Gamel absolutely unloaded on a pitch from Camilo Doval for a no-doubter solo shot. Chadwick Tromp reached base twice (though he was thrown out — maybe — trying to stretch his hit into a double). Yankees pitching put together an 11/1 K/BB ratio, which isn’t necessarily surprising given the lineup the Braves sent over to Tampa.

Tomorrow, the Braves will host the Red Sox, and the newly-sworded Chris Sale will get another tune-up against his erstwhile club.

What Spring Training Numbers Should Matter To Nationals Fans?

WEST PALM BEACH, FL - FEBRUARY 23: Washington Nationals outfielder Dylan Crews (3) runs to third base before scoring a run during a MLB spring training game against the Philadelphia Phillies at CACTI Park of the Palm Beaches on February 23, 2026 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Doug Murray/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Spring Training is the time of the year where players knock off the frost from the offseason and prepare for the 162 games marathon that is the regular season. For hitters, it means getting used to seeing big league velocity and breaking balls, as well as getting live fielding reps, and for pitchers it means tinkering with new pitches and refining old ones. While the majority of baseball fans understand that stats during Spring Training don’t necessarily matter all that much, it can still be difficult to not overreact when a player is struggling, especially very close to Opening Day.

An example of a player who currently has the Nationals fanbase anxious is Dylan Crews, who went 0-2 with 2 strikeouts and an error in last nights game to bring him to 1-7 on the spring. To some, this start to the spring for Crews isn’t worth discussing, as he could be working on any number of things to improve his approach for the season, which means some hiccups now. For others, this start is concerning because it is a continuation of the struggles we’ve seen from Crews for quite some time against big league pitching.

So, what numbers that come from Spring Training should fans pay attention to, and which ones should they just throw out? It’s important first to understand that early in the spring, especially in a year like this one for the Nationals where it’s an entirely new coaching staff, players are going to struggle.

Stars like James Wood and CJ Abrams aren’t going to be hitting at their usual clip for a few weeks or so, and that’s because they’re likely being challenged by this new coaching staff to try new things at the plate, such as a more refined plate approach for Abrams or pulling more fly balls for Wood. In general, it’s best to just ignore statistical performance in Spring Training, as there is no proof of any significant correlation to regular season success, but especially this spring, when every player has something new they are attempting to add or change in their game.

What fans should care about during games this spring is for players to make sharp improvements in categories such as exit velocity or metrics, as those are quantifiable ways to show an improvement in their game which could translate to the rest of the year. A recent example of this is Ben Rice, first baseman for the New York Yankees, who put himself on the radar last Spring Training by eclipsing his previous career high exit velocity multiple times in one spring.

Whether it was by adding strength to his frame or a mechanical adjustment, this boost gave the Yankees the confidence to make him their Opening Day first baseman, and he’s done nothing but rake since for them, with one of the cleanest batted ball profiles in the sport.

Pitching wise, fans should be on the lookout for pitchers adding new pitches to their arsenals or making velocity or movement improvements to their other ones, as those are skills which could translate to regular season action, unlike their ERA in those spring outings. An example of this would be to watch out for Cade Cavalli and his new sweeper, which he did not debut quite yet in his first, or for another Nat to come out and add a few more MPH on their fastball than they’d previously had.

If there’s one piece of advice I could give, it would be to not worry too much about how players are performing over the course of the next month. One month of games where these hitters take 2 at bats or starters pitch 2 innings is not a large enough sample size to draw any conclusions from, especially when almost all these players are trying new things that they hope to incorporate into their game come April. Leave the overreactions for Opening Day, and enjoy baseball being back for the next few weeks.

St. Louis Cardinals Game Recap – 2.26.26 – Astros at Cardinals

Today’s lineup | photo by ORSTLcardsfan

Recap disclaimer – this may be more a random observations list than a specific blow-by-blow of the game. Spring training results are unimportant, right? It’s the process, after all.

Pre-Game Notes

From my wanderings around the back fields. And introductory tour of the media service room, et. al., as I picked up my press pass.

  • Pitching plan – Liberatore starts today, to be followed by Shuster, Romero, Raquet, Romero
  • I note that Dobbins is out of the rehab group and in with a pitching group now. Suspecting he has gotten full clearance then?
  • Herrera at DH, Sags in LF today
  • Bit of a local connection to this game … a kid from my neighborhood, Kellen Strahm, is starting RFer for the Astros. Total trivia … he was the QB for Sheldon High School (we put 5 kids through there) just before … Justin Herbert (you may have heard of him), another neighborhood kid. Kellen made a couple nice catches out there.

Pre-game w/ Oli

  • On camera
    • Sags – will get some time in left and center.
    • Walker – sees/hears more productive and mature communications, positive on his direction
    • Spring culture … overall this is a more connected group, many in the same boat and will play together for a while
  • Off camera – way more informal
    • Talked super utility role – Zobrist/Figgins/et.al., personality, staying and being ready for multiple positions, more intentional about fitting this role now than before. Once a guy realizes he is not going to be that everyday guy at a single spot, then the drive to stay drives a guy to adapt
    • Update on Herrera throwing … throwing to all bases. Good carry on his throws. Getting better. Hope to DH today, catch on Sunday.
    • Discussed six-man rotation logistics through spring. Will need backfield games to do this.
    • Urias should be on the field tomorrow for his first spring exposure.

Game Observations

  • Libby looked pretty well. 51 pitches in 3 innings. Command was not totally sharp (typical for February). Ball seemed to being coming out of his hand really well. Used a good variety of pitches.
  • Walker got plenty of business in right. Continues to look more fluid out there. Displayed a strong arm.
  • Winn with a couple nifty defensive plays. We’ve come to expect that as routine from him. He seems to be moving well after off-season knee surgery.
  • Romero dispatched the Astros quickly in the 4th.
  • Pozo golfs a wind-aided homerun. There is a new 2-deck club area built around the LF foul pole that appears to introduce some new wind dynamics down there. LFers beware!
  • Burleson crushes a 3-run HR.
  • Late inning power, with a lot of pop from Jon Jon Gazdar boosted the Cardinal offense.

Post-Game Notes

  • Final score 9-4 Cardinals. 4 home runs (Pozo, Burleson, Crooks and Gazdar).
  • Raquet, Blewitt and Shuster each game up runs in relief. Moreno had pretty nice 9th inning.
  • The catcher Yerzy seemed pretty strong defensively, especially his arm. I haven’t seen him before, but will watch for more now.
  • Game temp in the high 70’s. A few clouds, but a great day all around.

Canadiens: The Anniversary Of A Big Trade

With the trade deadline fast approaching, now seems like a good time to look back at some of the trades that have had a big impact on the Montreal Canadiens’ franchise, and Tuesday was the 19th anniversary of such a trade. When Bob Gainey traded Craig Rivet to the San Jose Sharks for a stay-at-home defenseman and a first-round pick at the upcoming draft on February 25, 2007, he probably didn’t think it was a trade that would allow the organization to land one of the cornerstones of the franchise eventually.

Of course, the blueliner was a good friend of the Canadiens’ captain at the time, Saku Koivu, as evidenced by the fact that he injured him in the Stanley Cup playoffs in 2006 while play-fighting at the team’s hotel, and he was important for the team, but he wasn’t untouchable. He had become a mainstay on the Habs’ blueline in the previous seasons, setting career-highs in points and assists in his last complete season wearing the Sainte-Flanelle, when he put up 7 goals, 27 assists, and 34 points. That performance convinced the Sharks to include their first-round pick in the deal, but at that point, nobody knew for sure where that pick would land.

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The Sharks ended up making the playoffs, while the Canadiens didn’t, and San Jose’s first-round pick turned out to be the 22nd pick overall. Gainey and co. used it to select American winger Max Pacioretty out of the USHL, where he had picked up 63 points in 60 games.

After the draft, he played one season at the University of Michigan, scoring 39 points in 37 games, then moved to the AHL for the following campaign and even played 34 games with the Habs that very year. He split the next two seasons between the AHL and the NHL before coming into his own during the 2011-12 season, putting up 65 points in 79 games. Pacioretty blossomed into a reliable goal scorer for the Canadiens, posting five seasons of 30+ goals, and was even voted team captain in September 2015.

As for Josh Gorges, he spent parts of eight seasons in Montreal, playing 464 career games with the Canadiens. He recorded 13 goals, 75 assists, 88 points, 606 hits, 1.042 blocks, and a plus-34 rating. His steadying presence on the blueline and his leadership made him an important player for the Habs, and he was an alternate captain for two seasons before being traded to the Buffalo Sabres in the summer of 2014 for a second-round pick after blocking a trade to the Toronto Maple Leafs.

If that were all the Canadiens got in the Rivet trade, it would still have been a good return, but when the organization decided to move on from Pacioretty and the Vegas Golden Knights came knocking, Marc Bergevin got Tomas Tatar, Nick Suzuki, and a 2019 second-round pick in return. While Suzuki wasn’t the player Bergevin was after, he wanted Cody Glass; he ended up being a fantastic acquisition.

Four years later, Suzuki was named the 31st captain in Canadiens history, and three and a half years after that, he wore the Maple Leaf at the Milano-Cortina Olympics. Playing for Team Canada and filling in for Sidney Crosby after he was injured, he showed the world just how complete a player he is on the greatest stage of them all. Last season, after being snubbed for the 4 Nations Face-Off, he carried the Canadiens to the playoffs, and he’s now on pace for having the best season of his career. He’s become the driving force behind the Canadiens’ surge in the standings. No one has played a bigger part in the Habs entering the next stage of their rebuild, and it still feels like the best has yet to come for Suzuki.

The captain is currently in the fourth year of his eight-year contract. If this new iteration of the Canadiens is to end their 33-year Stanley Cup Championship drought, Suzuki will be the one to raise the Cup above his head first and finally send a new championship banner to the Bell Centre rafters. Who would have thought the Habs would get that kind of player from the Rivet deal?


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Joel Quenneville reaches 1,000 victories, joining Scotty Bowman in elite club for NHL coaches

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Joel Quenneville’s 1,000th career victory as an NHL head coach was so dramatic that he almost had to be reminded of the milestone when the clock finally hit zeros on the Anaheim Ducks’ 6-5 comeback win.

When Quenneville stood at center ice with his wife, his daughter and his entire team for a postgame photo moments later Wednesday night, he allowed himself a moment out of the hockey grind to appreciate history.

“I wasn’t prioritizing the number,” Quenneville said after joining Scotty Bowman in the most exclusive hockey coaching club. “I just wanted to play well tonight and find a way to win. That was the motivation, and it turned out to be a very special one as well.”

His Ducks rallied to beat two-time defending conference champion Edmonton in their return from the Olympic break, overcoming a pair of two-goal deficits and another one-goal deficit during their frenetic four-goal third period.

Cutter Gauthier scored the winner with 1:14 to play, and Anaheim hung on for its NHL-leading eighth multigoal comeback win during its first year under Quenneville, whose players all gathered at the bench to mob their coach after the whistle.

“It was an important game for us in a lot of ways,” said Quenneville, who has the second-place Ducks in the Stanley Cup playoff race for the first time since 2018. “They had the puck a lot more than we did, but at the same time, I thought we found a way to win a game. It had other meanings, but to me it was the importance of where it put us in the standings, and coming out of the break, the momentum that we could get off a win like tonight.”

The 67-year-old Quenneville received some fine bottles of wine and cigars among his postgame gifts, but he planned to celebrate just with a beer.

The second member of the 1,000-win club took a long time to join Bowman, who got his 1,000th with the Detroit Red Wings on Feb. 8, 1997 — just a month after Quenneville coached his very first game with the St. Louis Blues.

Quenneville reached the mark in his 1,825th game of a career highlighted by three Stanley Cup championships with the Chicago Blackhawks. Bowman finished his career in 2002 with 1,244 victories in 2,141 regular-season games, also winning nine Stanley Cup titles as a coach.

“He’s from a different league when I look at his company,” Quenneville said about Bowman, who was a senior advisor of hockey operations to his son, general manager Stan Bowman, during the Blackhawks’ successful run under Quenneville.

“I think he’s lonesome up there, the number he’s at,” Quenneville added. “I had Scotty and Stan in Chicago together. We had some great wins, and he’s got a lot of Cups. He’s been very successful in the game. ... I’m happy to be getting the opportunity back in the game and be around a team like we’ve got now.”

Quenneville has made a successful return to the NHL this season in Anaheim after a four-year absence from the league following his resignation from the Florida Panthers in late 2021 over his inaction during the Blackhawks’ sexual abuse scandal 11 years earlier.

Quenneville’s NHL ban was lifted in July 2024, and the Ducks hired him one year later to take over a struggling franchise with no playoff appearances in seven consecutive seasons. Anaheim (31-23-3) has vaulted into the thick of the Western Conference playoff race in its first season under Quenneville, who has led his teams to the playoffs in 20 of the 22 NHL seasons he finished behind a bench.

When asked if there were times when he wondered whether he would have a chance to reach 1,000 wins, Quenneville replied: “It’s something that I don’t think about. I think my motivation, my goals were always once you win a Cup one time, you can’t wait to do it again. It’s always been the reason why we’re doing what we’re doing.”

After playing 13 NHL seasons as a sturdy defenseman with the signature bristly mustache he has sported for his entire adult life, Quenneville has been an NHL head coach for parts of 26 seasons, and he has won at every stop.

He led the Blues to seven consecutive playoff appearances before his firing. Quenneville then lasted just three seasons in Colorado despite producing two playoff teams.

He replaced Denis Savard behind the Blackhawks’ bench in 2008 and led the Original Six franchise to eight straight playoff appearances and three championships — including the 2010 Stanley Cup, which ended the NHL’s longest active drought at 59 seasons.

Quenneville joined the Panthers in April 2019, but his third season in Florida ended abruptly when the NHL banned him along with Stan Bowman and Al MacIsaac “as a result of their inadequate response upon being informed in 2010 of allegations that Blackhawks player Kyle Beach had been assaulted by the club’s video coach,” the league said.

NHL Commissioner Gary Bettman determined Quenneville had showed remorse for his inaction on the allegations that surfaced during Chicago’s playoff run to a Stanley Cup title. Quenneville said he also worked with advocacy groups to study the proper ways to lead in such situations.

Quenneville remained intently focused on the NHL during his four years away from the bench, watching games every night on television from his home in Florida and staying in contact with his countless friends in the game. Those friends included Pat Verbeek, his former teammate with the Hartford Whalers and the Ducks’ general manager.

Verbeek fired Greg Cronin and persuaded owner Henry Samueli to take the potential risk and the definite public-relations hit of hiring Quenneville. The move has worked out splendidly on the ice so far, with the Ducks dramatically improving their record with a talented young core gaining another year of experience.

Bowman and Quenneville could be joined in the 1,000-win club by two more veteran coaches within the next few seasons.

Paul Maurice, who won the past two Stanley Cup titles with the Panthers, has 945 career victories with five teams. Lindy Ruff earned his 933rd career victory Wednesday night with the Buffalo Sabres’ 2-1 win over New Jersey.

Quite a dinger for Giants newcomer Harrison Bader, leaving an dent on a food truck

PHOENIX — That was quite a dinger for Harrison Bader, who left a mark with his first home run for the San Francisco Giants this spring training.

Bader’s 408-foot homer to left field in the Giants’ 13-12 loss against Milwaukee on Wednesday put a visible dent near the top on the side of a food truck. After exiting the game, the center fielder visited that concession area, met the truck’s owner and instead of partaking in an acai bowl added his autograph just below where the ball hit on the fly.

After climbing up, Bader signed his name along with his number and added: “Sorry.”

“It’s just a random, funny thing,” Bader told reporters.

Bader, who is set to play for Israel in the World Baseball Classic, joined the Giants last month after agreeing to a two-year, $20.5 million contract.

The 31-year-old, a Gold Glove winner with St. Louis in 2021, batted .277 with 17 home runs, 54 RBIs and a .796 OPS in 146 games with Minnesota and Philadelphia last season — setting career highs in all those categories.

Spring Training Game #5: A’s vs. Rangers Game Thread

With their being no A’s baseball yesterday, my afternoon was spent cranking out all four episodes of FX’s Love Story. Not sure if any of you are tuning in to the dramatized retelling of JFK Jr. and Carolyn Bessette’s relationship, but I must admit – – not terrible. Definitely not great by any means, but it’s got an aesthetic that I think a lot of people have been wanting to see more of in TV and film. I also wasn’t alive in the 1990s so I totally missed the moment it’s looking to capture. Which makes it more interesting to me. All I knew about JFK Jr. going in was that he dressed cool, had great hair, and died in a plane crash at the end of the decade. July 16th 1999 was the day that, according to my Nana and resident Shea Langeliers fan, the world stopped and cried at the news of JFK Jr. and Carolyn Bessette’s passing. Now I’m not saying she’s wrong or misinformed by any means, but July 16th 1999 was also a day worth celebrating. Why you ask? Well, a trip to baseball reference taught me that the A’s beat the Giants that day, 4-2, in Oakland, in front of a crowd of about 45,000 people. Jason Giambi went deep off of Russ Ortiz. So did Ben Grieve. Gil Heredia provided 7.1 innings of one run ball. The relief tandem of Buddy Groom and Billy Taylor held down the fort from there, securing the series win against the Giants.

Sounds like a pretty good day to me. For the Kennedy family? Not so much. Unless they were A’s heads like the rest of us.

I tried to locate the broadcast of that game, to see if there was any mention of the plane crash, but had no success. If any of you taped it, and still have that tape in your possession, do not hesitate to reach out. In the meantime, I’ll have A’s vs Rangers fired up, anxiously anticipating not only tonight’s episode of Love Story, but the A’s first win of the spring!

Going into today’s game, the A’s have been outscored 33-4! Yikes! Not want you want to see, especially when the biggest narrative around the A’s going into the Cactus League was how the offense was going to be potent, but the pitching staff lackluster. One of those things has been true. Not the one you want unfortunately. Thankfully today’s a new day, the team is well rested, and my boy Jack Perkins is on the bump. I’m curious to see how they handle Perkins this spring. Chances are he’ll spend the bulk of the regular season coming out of the bullpen, possibly even closing. Today, however, will be a chance for him to run through his starting pitching rituals. That being said, I can’t imagine he’ll go more than a couple of innings.

Let’s check out the lineup behind him!

As you can see, the Stickman Nick Kurtz lead-off experiment is in full effect today. Everyone that follows is expected to make the big league club, so let’s see how they fare against Cal Quantrill and the Texas Rangers.

It’s a split squad day for the Rangers. Some of their heavy hitters such as Wyatt Langford, Corey Seager, and Josh Smith will be off facing the Milwaukee Brewers. Look closely at their lineup against the A’s and you’ll catch a trio of familiar faces. Leading off is Tyler Wade, who was with the club in 2023. Jonah Bride, who the A’s drafted in the 23rd round back in 2018, is occupying the DH spot. Former A’s first rounder Richie Martin Jr. mans the hot corner. It’s been a rough decade for Martin Jr. A cup of coffee with the Baltimore Orioles has been his only real taste of the show. Even then, he hasn’t donned a big league uni since 2022. The Texas Rangers are club number six for the infielder. He’ll be looking to get a little revenge against the A’s today, on this beautiful Thursday afternoon in Mesa, Arizona.

Live from Hohokam Stadium – – it’s the (0-4) A’s against the (4-2) Rangers!

Make yourself a sandwich and enjoy the game. I’ll be putting a Philly cheesesteak to work, hanging onto every Jack Perkins sinker like it’s Game 162.

Olympics 3-on-3 overtime 'not hockey anymore': Could it change?

The NHL season has resumed after the Olympic break and if a game is tied after 60 minutes, there will be a 3-on-3 overtime, followed by a shootout.

Just like the Olympics.

But when the NHL rolls around to the playoffs, it will switch to a 5-on-5 overtime.

The Olympics doesn't do that, though. It goes from a five-minute 3-on-3 overtime in the preliminary round, plus a shootout if necessary, to 10 minutes and a potential shootout in the knockout rounds up to the bronze medal. Even though the gold medal game's overtime lasts for however long it takes for the first goal to be scored it's still 3-on-3.

"It’s not a format we would have chosen, but we respect the rules of the tournaments we participate in," NHL deputy commissioner Bill Daly told USA TODAY Sports.

When Jack Hughes scored in the Feb. 22 gold-medal game to give the USA its first gold since 1980, it was done at 3-on-3.

"You take four players off the ice, hockey's not hockey anymore," Canada coach Jon Cooper said after that game. "There's a reason overtime and shootouts are in play. It's all TV driven to end games. So there's not a long time. There's a reason it's not in the Stanley Cup Finals or playoffs because it gets ended in five."

He backtracked later in the news conference.

"All the teams know the rules going into these beforehand. So you can't come up here and say we're the losing team because we lost in a 3-on-3 and that's not fair," he said. "We knew the rules coming in. We won a game in this tournament 3-on-3 (against Czechia), so that's not the way it is."

Here's a look at the impact of 3-on-3 overtime at the Olympics:

Why was 3-on-3 overtime adopted?

The NHL has been using 3-on-3 (changed from 4-on-4) in the regular season since 2015-16 in an attempt to cut down on the number of games that go to a shootout.

It's incumbent early in the Olympics to have games not last forever because up to three games a day are played at the same arena.

The International Ice Hockey Federation kept a shootout for all games until recently, and a few gold medal games went to a shootout. The 1994 Swedish men's team won on the famed Peter Forsberg move. The 2018 USA women's team beat Canada in a shootout. Overtime was played at 4-on-4 in that year and the 2010 gold medal overtime won by Canada.

"The IIHF has tried various formats over the years – some years ago it was decided to align all overtime formats into (3-on-3) and as such it was also used for the Olympics," said IIHF spokesperson Noémi Villamarin.

When did 3-on-3 overtime start at the Olympics?

The 2022 Olympics were the first to use 3-on-3 overtimes and to drop the shootout for the gold medal game.

The NHL originally was scheduled to send players to the Beijing Games but backed out to make up league games postponed by COVID.

Despite the 3-on-3, three men's games went through a full overtime to a shootout, including the USA's loss to Slovakia in the quarterfinals and Russia's semifinal win against Sweden. Two preliminary round games were settled in overtime, one after two minutes and the other after four minutes.

Overtime at the 2026 Olympics

The 3-on-3 overtime in 2026 drew notice because NHL players – and therefore elite skill – were on the ice for the first time since 2014.

There were five overtime games in the men's tournament and no shootouts. One was in the preliminary round, three in the quarterfinals and the one in the final. The women's gold- and bronze-medal games also went to overtime.

The longest men's overtime lasted 3 minutes, 27 seconds when the USA's Quinn Hughes, Jack's brother, scored to defeat Sweden in the quarterfinals.

"That's as nervous as I've been ever in a hockey game," said Dylan Larkin, who had scored in regulation. "Just the way 3-on-3 goes, it's really just being opportunistic. Someone could fall, some puck could bounce, anything could happen, especially with the ice out there."

The USA took advantage the wider-open ice of 3-on-3 in the gold medal game. Jack Hughes pushed the puck past Canada's Cale Makar, Zach Werenski fought off a defensive play and fed Hughes for the winning goal at 1:41.

"It's still skilled players out there making skilled plays," Cooper said. "And the U.S. team has some skilled players – as do we. They made one more play than we did in overtime."

What's next for best-of-best hockey overtime?

The 2025 4 Nations Face-Off was the start of a commitment of the NHL to best-on-best international tournaments.

Canada beat the USA in overtime in the final, which was played at 5-on-5.

"The 4 Nations Face-Off was our tournament with our rules," Daly said.

A 2028 World Cup of Hockey is in the works. The NHL also has committed to send its players to the 2030 Winter Olympics in France.

Could there be a change in the overtime format before then?

"The IIHF is continuously evaluating all aspects of the game, also the OT format and will make decisions accordingly," Villamarin said.

Contributing: Helene St. James, Detroit Free Press; Michael Traikos, Hockey News

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Will Olympics 3-on-3 overtime change after rising criticism?

Speculation That Sabres Are A Fit With Blackhawk Blueliner

The Buffalo Sabres were expected to be a team in the seller category after starting the season at the bottom of the Eastern Conference standings, but the Sabres surge since December has them in position to end their 14-year playoff drought, which has made GM Jarmo Kekalainen re-evaluate the club’s options. 

Based on the Sabres position in the top three of the Atlantic Division, it seems highly unlikely that they will deal pending unrestricted free agent winger Alex Tuch, but in the days leading up to the NHL trade deadline on March 6, there are a number of potential trade options on the table for Kekalainen that make sense.

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Six Former Sabres Who Signed Elsewhere

Rasmus Dahlin - Norris contender?

One potential option floated in a piece in The Athletic earlier this week is a trade for Chicago defenseman Connor Murphy. The 32-year-old is a 13-year NHL veteran who started his career in Arizona and has spent the last nine seasons with the Hawks, but Murphy is a pending UFA making $4.4 million. With the inconsistent availability of Michael Kesselring and the injury to Conor Timmins, it would make sense for the Sabres to be seeking reinforcements on the right side of their blueline. 

The piece speculates that Murphy, who has 12 points (4 goals, 8 assists) in 57 games, would cost the Sabres a 2027 second-round pick, but the cost for right-shot blueliners tends to increase as the deadline approaches. The Sabres interest in someone like Murphy would only make sense if they are not confident that Kesselring can stay healthy, or that Timmins will not return before the end of the season.    

 

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