2025 NBA Playoffs Western Conference set: James Harden takes over OT, sends Warriors to play-in

James Harden can still shift into gear nobody in the NBA can defend.

With the risk of the Clippers falling into the Play-In Tournament on the line, Harden found that gear and scored 12 points in overtime, and that was enough to beat the Warriors 124-119 and send Golden State to the play-in instead.

It was a playoff intensity game in the Bay Area, and combined with Denver beating Houston and Minnesota handling Utah, it set up the Western Conference playoffs.That sets up these postseason matchups:

WEST PLAY-IN

Memphis (8) at Golden State (7) – winner is the No. 7 seed and will face Houston.
Dallas (10) at Sacramento (9) – winner to face loser of the 7/8 seed game to see who is the No. 8 seed and faces Oklahoma City.

EAST PLAYOFFS

Oklahoma City (1) vs. No. 8 seed
Houston (2) vs. No. 7 seed
Los Angeles Lakers (3) vs. Minnesota (6)
Los Angeles Clippers (4) vs. Denver (5)

There are going to be no easy rounds in the West. For anyone. The Clippers are red hot, finishing the season with eight straight wins, while Denver just fired its coach. Luka Doncic and LeBron James vs. Anthony Edwards and a Timberwolves team finding their stride of late. Houston is going to end up facing Stephen Curry or Ja Morant.

The West playoffs are going to be wild.

Mets' Kodai Senga calls start against Athletics 'a great stepping stone'

On Sunday afternoon, for the first time this season, a Mets starter pitched into the seventh inning.

Even more incredible? It was Kodai Senga who missed almost the entire 2024 season and who New York has been inching along this year.

But thanks to an aggressive Athletics squad, some quick outs and two fortuitous double plays, Senga outdueled former Met Luis Severino and pitched seven scoreless innings as the Mets beat the A’s, 8-0, in the series finale.

After the game, manager Carlos Mendoza was asked if he was tempted to send Senga back out there after an incredibly efficient 79 pitches.

“I thought about it,” Mendoza said with a smile. “But we’ve been keeping him at five innings the whole time and it’s already a big jump at seven innings. We were looking at 85 pitches and after that long inning because of the offense… I thought that was enough for him.”

In his previous two starts – both against the Miami Marlins – Senga went five innings each time, allowing two earned runs over 10 innings. With his seven scoreless against a team not from Miami (for now, at least), the Japanese right-hander now owns a miniscule 1.06 ERA.

While those numbers look great, what’s most important is how Senga feels following every start as he continues to work his way back to regular season form. By his own admission, he’s still only “80-90 percent” to where he wants to be, but Sunday’s start was a reminder of just how dominant he can be when he gets there.

“I think it’s a great stepping stone to get my body to adapt so I can throw further into the game and continuously throughout the season,” Senga said through an interpreter. “There are things throughout the game that I wish I could do better, but at the same time things are feeling a lot better so I’m getting close.”

If seven scoreless innings on 79 pitches is Senga “getting close”, the Mets can’t wait to see what’s in store for their starting pitcher when he’s 100 percent.

For now, Senga will continue his process and try to keep the momentum going. Part of that also means trying to get on the same page as Luis Torrens who has only caught Senga twice in his career, making Senga’s outing that much more impressive.

“I feel great throwing to him,” Senga said about Torrens. “Second game throwing to him and it’s definitely better and I think it’s gonna continue to get better. The conversations we’re having in the dugout between innings is great and I think the more I throw to him, the more he’s gonna understand how I throw and the more I’m gonna understand him. I think it’s a good chemistry.”

With Francisco Alvarezcurrently rehabbing from hand surgery but still out, Torrens will continue to be New York's starting catcher with Hayden Senger as the backup which means Sunday was a good sign.

As for Torrens, who went 3-for-4 with a double and two RBI on Sunday, the veteran catcher was "proud" of Senga's performance and wants all of his pitchers to succeed.

"I feel good when the pitching does well," he said.

Cubs pitcher Justin Steele to have season-ending elbow surgery

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Chicago Cubs ace Justin Steele will undergo season-ending surgery to repair the flexor tendon in his left elbow, dealing a significant blow to the team’s rotation.

It was unclear whether Steele, who underwent Tommy John surgery in 2017, will need another full ligament-replacement procedure or a Tommy John revision with an internal brace. The 29-year-old left-hander will be sidelined until 2026.

“On a day like this, you feel for Justin,” manager Craig Counsell said before Sunday’s series finale against the Los Angeles Dodgers. “It’s kind of the life of a major league pitcher, these injuries that make you miss most of seasons.

“But I talked to him this morning, and he has a great attitude about it, as he always does. He knows that it’s part of the career he’s chosen, and he’s going to take it a step at a time and do the best he can to come back even better.”

Steele, 3-1 with a 4.76 ERA in four starts, felt tightness in his elbow after throwing seven scoreless innings at home against the Texas Rangers last Monday, discomfort he attributed to the chilly weather at Wrigley Field.

Two days later, the Cubs placed Steele on the 15-day injured list. An MRI revealed that Steele was “dealing with the same injury” as last September, when he missed two starts because of tendinitis, Counsell said Friday. A visit to a doctor for a second opinion revealed a more serious injury.

Steele had a 3.10 ERA in 78 starts from 2022-24 and finished fifth in National League Cy Young Award voting in 2023, when he went 16-5 with a 3.06 ERA in 30 starts, striking out 176 and walking 36 in 173 1/3 innings.

Counsell said right-hander Colin Rea, who started against the Dodgers on Sunday, will fill Steele’s rotation spot for now and that right-hander Javier Assad, who will begin a minor league rehabilitation assignment with Triple-A Iowa on Tuesday, will be a candidate to fill Steele’s spot when he returns from a left oblique strain.

‘In a league of his own’: Oscar Piastri star continues to rise with Bahrain GP win

  • Australian leads from pole to flag to pick up second win of season
  • ‘It was relatively straightforward,’ says McLaren driver

Australian Oscar Piastri hailed an “incredible weekend” after earning another pole-to-flag Formula One triumph at the Bahrain Grand Prix. The McLaren driver made his 50th grand prix start on Sunday and moved into second place in the drivers’ standings with the victory, which left him breathing down the neck of his low-on-confidence teammate Lando Norris.

After he held off a challenge on the first corner from Mercedes’ George Russell at the floodlit Sakhir circuit, Piastri then utterly dominated, even after a mid-race restart under the safety car. The man from Melbourne, the first driver to win two grand prix this season after his Chinese GP victory, ended up outpacing Russell by 15-and-a-half seconds – the biggest margin of victory by any winner this year – with championship leader Norris third.

Continue reading...

Mets' Jeff McNeil, Francisco Alvarez reach base in another Single-A rehab game

Before the Mets won their rubber game over the Athletics on Sunday afternoon in Sacramento, a pair of their injured starters contributed to the top of a minor league lineup back east in Florida.

Jeff McNeil (oblique) and Francisco Alvarez (fractured hand) continued their rehab assignments with Single-A St. Lucie, and the tandem combined to go 1-for-7 with a walk and three strikeouts in the team's 2-1 loss to Single-A Lakeland (Tigers' affiliate). The veteran infielder collected a single in three trips to the plate, while the fourth-year catcher went hitless in four at-bats but reached base on balls once.

McNeil's rehab stint began on Friday, and as the leadoff hitter manning second base, he went 1-for-2 with a walk and run across five innings. The former NL batting champion played seven innings on Sunday, and he's expected to play again on Tuesday -- this time with Triple-A Syracuse -- according to Mets manager Carlos Mendoza.

As for Alvarez, he played his second rehab game alongside McNeil (third total) and threw out a runner trying to steal second in the sixth inning. Mendoza recently said the plan is for the 23-year-old backstop to travel back to Citi Field on Monday for doctor evaluation and then join McNeil for Tuesday action with Triple-A Syracuse.

'It’s F***ed': Calvin de Haan Rips Rangers As Disasterous Season Nears End

Calvin de Haan (Brad Penner-Imagn Images)

The New York Rangers were eliminated from Stanley Cup playoff contention Saturday, and nobody in the organization can be happy with the way things have unfolded for them this season. But one Ranger in particular – veteran defenseman Calvin de Haan – has just made it publicly known how angry he is at the moment. And de Haan lashing out could be the precursor to major changes for the Blueshirts.

Speaking to the New York Post Sunday at practice, de Haan said, “How about the way I’ve been treated here? It’s f***ed." de Haan bit his tongue after that statement, but he told media he’d be “very transparent” at the end of the season. 

And to be sure, you can understand why de Haan’s frustrations boiled over with Rangers management: He’s been a healthy scratch since March 3 – missing 18 straight games – and he had been playing third-pair minutes for the Colorado Avalanche before being dealt to the Rangers in the March 1 deal that sent blueliner Ryan Lindgren to the Avs. 

At 33 years old, de Haan – who will be a UFA at season’s end – is nearing the conclusion of his 12-year NHL career, and no player wants to be treated as a spare part. But de Haan’s criticism of the Blueshirts is going to be a stain on the team moving into the off-season, and it could give pause to free-agent NHLers who take in de Haan’s comments and decide to join a team that doesn’t have its players openly ripping team brass.

There’s no doubt de Haan was happy to play on an Avalanche team that, unlike the Rangers, was going places this season. And being forced to sit on the sidelines and watch helplessly as the Rangers nosedived out of playoff contention is obviously the straw that broke the camel’s back for de Haan.

If he had even the slightest inkling the Blueshirts would re-sign him for the 2025-26 campaign, de Haan would’ve kept his anger to himself, the way many players on losing teams choose to do. But clearly, he’s not concerned about burning bridges, and consequently, the Rangers look bad for not addressing the situation to de Haan’s satisfaction.

He’s going to be a free agent who will be, at best, a depth addition next year, so de Haan almost assuredly understands his place in the pecking order. But we don’t know the whole story behind him lashing out – and to be fair, we don’t know the Rangers’ side of the story – so Rangers GM Chris Drury will want to snuff out this human resources fire before it affects more people in the organization.

Indeed, de Haan has created a negative spectacle with his choice of words, and the public relations impact could affect Rangers fans and potential veteran additions this summer.

No player is bigger than a team, of course. But the way you handle your roster assets does reflect on you as a franchise. And that’s why de Haan’s outburst needs to be dealt with as soon as possible. It sure sounds like de Haan is going to be in a position to lash out to an even bigger degree when the season ends, so Drury has to do major damage control immediately to prevent that from happening. 

Because if he doesn’t, the odor of a player who feels betrayed or misled is going to linger – and the Rangers are going to take an even bigger PR hit than the one they’re dealing with now.

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3 Takeaways From Penguins Lackluster 4-1 Loss To Bruins

Sidney Crosby - Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

The Pittsburgh Penguins had six periods left in their 2024-25 season. On Sunday at PPG Paints Arena, they played an equally disappointing Boston Bruins team and walked away with a lackluster 4-1 loss

Ultimately, the Penguins didn't generate much through 40 minutes, only playing with passion and grit in the final period. The game was out of reach at 3-1 before an empty net tally sealed a victory for the visitors.

Now, at 33-36-12, Pittsburgh will finish below .500 for the first time since 2005-06. 

Rakell Continues Career Season

Rickard Rakell had the Penguins' only goal on Sunday, a power play tally late in the second period. His 35th of the year is a new career high. Meanwhile, with his 69th point, he's just one shy of reaching 70 for the first time. 

As Pittsburgh's leading goal-scorer, Rakell extends a franchise streak of at least one player scoring 35 goals to four seasons, following Jake Guentel (2022, 2023) and Sidney Crosby (2024). 

A Lot of Passengers on Sunday's Train

The Penguins have had their fair share of good and bad moments over the last month, which resulted in their early playoff elimination. However, with a struggling Bruins team in town, it seemed like the Penguins were no match for a team below them in the standings.

In the first, the home team had six shots and didn't significantly increase their total in the middle period until the second half of the frame. At the end of 40 minutes, the Bruins were up 3-1 and outshooting Pittsburgh 26-15. 

Unfortunately, by the time the Penguins showed up to play, banging bodies and making plays along the goalline, time was running out. Veteran Evgeni Malkin registered no shots on goal, one of only two forwards not to pepper Joonas Korpisalo. 

Meanwhile, no skater registered a positive plus/minus rating, and the Bruins outscored the Penguins in the face-off circle. 

What's Next: Season Finale

The 2024-25 Penguins have one more game together next Thursday when they host Alex Ovechkin for the season finale. Since breaking the all-time goals record, the Capitals are 1-1-0 with their playoff spot locked up. 

After Sunday's performance, these Penguins have one final opportunity to give fans something to cheer about this season. Ultimately, it's the one chance players like Crosby, Rakell, and Bryan Rust have a chance to reach a personal milestone. 

Moreover, it could be the final time fans see Tristan Jarry or Matt Grzelyck in a Penguins sweater. Considering the franchise's draft capitals at the upcoming draft, plus plenty of cap space, change is on the horizon, and Thursday night will be the last time we see this group together. 

Rakell Sets New Career-High In 'Slow' 4-1 Loss To Bruins

Apr 13, 2025; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins right wing Rickard Rakell (67) skates up ice with the puck as Boston Bruins center Fraser Minten (93) chases during the first period at PPG Paints Arena. (Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images)

Heading into a Sunday matinee matchup with the Boston Bruins, the Pittsburgh Penguins hoped to take advantage of a team in free fall and sitting at the bottom of the Eastern Conference standings.

Unfortunately, the Penguins were dead on arrival.

Pittsburgh dropped the penultimate game of their season, 4-1, to a Bruins team that was simply more ready from the jump. They outshot the Penguins 26-16 through the first 40 minutes, and that reflected in the score.

Boston got the scoring started at the last moments of the first period. With three seconds remaining on the clock, Elias Lindholm put home his own rebound at the net-front to give Boston a 1-0 lead. They added on in the second period, as Fabian Lysell scored his first NHL goal on the power play a little past the midway point and Morgan Geekie added a third goal a few minutes later.

The Penguins got a late-period goal of their own in the second, however, and it was a milestone one. With 16 seconds remaining in the middle frame, Philip Tomasino took a pass from Ville Koivunen and then fired a shot-pass of his own toward the net. Rickard Rakell was waiting on the backdoor, and it hit the shaft of Rakell’s stick and went in.

That goal was Rakell’s 35th of season, which set a new career-high for the scoring forward. He also registered his 69th point on the goal, which ties his career-high set in 2017-18 with the Anaheim Ducks. And he said a better start this season was a huge part of his resurgence.

“I think I just got off to a good start, and then, you obviously start feeling better after that and just [start] trusting your game,” Rakell said.

After the Rakell goal, unfortunately, any momentum the Penguins had at the end of the second period died off in the third. The Bruins played a pretty stingy brand of hockey - as they’re known to do - and Jakub Lauko added an empty-net goal within the final three minutes of regulation to shut the door.

Head coach Mike Sullivan was not particularly pleased with his group’s energy level and felt that the Penguins played a slow game throughout. 

“It was a slow game, period,” Sullivan said. “I thought our goaltender was terrific. The rest of it, it’s hard to find a positive.”

Even In Passing, Shero Leaves Legacy On Penguins OrganizationEven In Passing, Shero Leaves Legacy On Penguins OrganizationIt's hard to talk about the Sidney Crosby-era Pittsburgh Penguins without talking about former general manager Ray Shero.

Here are some thoughts and observations from this one:

- First and foremost, there was a really nice video tribute to former Penguins general manager Ray Shero, who died Wednesday at the age of 62. before the game. Both the Penguins’ and Bruins’ starters on the ice - typically lined up on the blue lines in preparation for the game - actually backed up toward the benches in order to be able to view the tribute on the jumbotron.

If that doesn’t tell you how much love the Penguins - and the league at large - have for Shero, I’m not sure what does. He will be sorely missed by everyone in hockey and by the Penguins. 

- Ponomarev looks okay. I do like his tenacity and his ability to extend shifts. Sullivan and Dubas have both talked about his “motor,” which is definitely on display.

But I do think there are some details in terms of the speed of the game that he needs to get more accustomed to with more NHL experience. His reads are a bit slow, the timing of his passes is off, and he sometimes still gets caught playing the man-to-man defensive style that the Carolina Hurricanes deployed before he was brought to Pittsburgh in the Jake Guentzel trade.

That being said, development for a player like Ponomarev is going to be much different than for players like Rutger McGroarty and Ville Koivunen. He is a bottom-six player, and his ceiling is likely third-line center. A lot of his development will be focused on defensive details, reads, forechecking, and versatility. 

Apr 13, 2025; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins center Vasily Ponomarev (11) and Boston Bruins center Fraser Minten (93) take a third period face-off at PPG Paints Arena. (Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images)

Don’t expect Ponomarev to look like an impact player right away. Eight NHL games - and only six with the Penguins spread across three stints - is not anywhere close to enough time to make any sort of judgment on whether or not he’ll be an effective NHL player within his role. 

Remember, development doesn’t stop when players reach the NHL level. There is still a learning and adjustment curve. You might see that with Ponomarev.

- Speaking of Koivunen, I’m not sure what else I can say at this point. This guy has not missed a beat playing in Pittsburgh’s top-six, as he has five points in seven games - including a four-game point streak.

But it’s not even the production that impresses me most. It’s his hockey sense and his reads. He’s always right where he needs to be in order to make and execute plays. His vision is legitimate, and it marries well with both Crosby and Malkin.

The transition has been seamless for Koivunen, as it was for McGroarty before his season-ending injury. If they can keep this up, this is very, very good news for the Penguins and their chances at a quicker turnaround.

- Jarry was absolutely phenomenal in the first period for the Penguins. He did surrender the late goal - not really his fault on that one - but the Bruins were peppering him with shots in the latter half of the opening frame.

'I Would Love To Come Back': After Career Year, Grzelcyk Hopes To Stay In Pittsburgh'I Would Love To Come Back': After Career Year, Grzelcyk Hopes To Stay In PittsburghWhen defenseman Matt Grzelcyk made the decision to sign with the Pittsburgh Penguins last summer, he did so with the mindset that he'd come in and be granted some opportunity to rediscover his game.

- In the seven games since being moved off of Sidney Crosby’s line, Rickard Rakell does have three goals and six points. However, all three goals - and five of those points - have come on the man advantage.

It seems abundantly clear that Rakell has an immense amount of chemistry with Sidney Crosby. But if the Penguins are going to give younger guys like McGroarty and Koivunen legitimate runway at the NHL level in 2025-26 - and Rakell is still around - this may pose a bit of an issue.

I think the simple solution is to swap Rakell and Bryan Rust, as Rust has historically meshed well with Evgeni Malkin. But it will also be interesting to see whether or not the Penguins target a second-line center this offseason.

In any case, if Rakell is on this team, he should be playing with Crosby. This was the first season in which he spent the vast majority of his minutes alongside 87 - and it’s hard to argue with the results.

_ I want to focus on Rakell a bit more.

What a season he has had. Just one year ago, social media keyboard warriors were writing him off during a down season that was set back by a slow start and a few injuries.

I’ve said it time and time again, but this is the kind of player Rakell is when he has the opportunity to play with an elite playmaking center. As long as he and Crosby play together - and he remains healthy - he is going to put the puck in the net. 

Crosby, Rakell Continue Dominance As Top DuoCrosby, Rakell Continue Dominance As Top DuoAfter the 2024 NHL trade deadline, Pittsburgh Penguins POHO and GM Kyle Dubas traded captain Sidney Crosby's best winger in Jake Guentzel. It seemed to be the first domino to fall in an effort to sell off the team's marketable, talented assets to begin pushing toward the future.

I don’t know what is going to happen this summer with Rakell. My gut feeling is that he will be a Pittsburgh Penguin when the puck drops for the 2025-26 season. Regardless, he’s a heck of a player on both sides of the puck, and he’s a valuable piece to any team interested in contending.

_ Well, there’s just one more. And that’s when the Washington Capitals come to town on Thursday for fan appreciation night.

Pens fans, do Alex Ovechkin a favor and show him some appreciation on Thursday. He deserves it. And take it all in, because - by all accounts - we don’t have much time left to watch Crosby and Ovechkin square off. Ovechkin has indicated that he plans to retire following the expiration of his contract in 2026.

So just enjoy this rivalry for what it is, and has been, for two decades.


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Mets' offense turns on late in 8-0 win against Athletics

The Mets' bats woke up late en route to an 8-0 win over the Athletics on Sunday afternoon to take the rubber game of the three-game series.

Here are the takeaways...

-Not having hit to their fullest potential in the early going this season, the Mets had a golden opportunity to get off to a fast start against former Met Luis Severino in the first inning, after the right-hander walked Francisco Lindor to lead things off and Juan Soto reached on an error. However, New York wasted the prime scoring chance following a double play by Pete Alonso and a groundout by Brandon Nimmo.

-Meanwhile, Kodai Senga toed the rubber for his third start of the season and fell into immediate trouble after a leadoff double by Lawrence Butler to left field. Nimmo made a diving effort on the sinking line drive but came up empty, although the outfielder's hustle back to the ball kept Butler from going to third base. Senga rebounded nicely and got a strikeout, flyout and groundout to strand Butler at second.

-Senga was living dangerously in the first few innings and had to deal with traffic on the basepaths. But the right-hander was bailed out with a nifty double play in the second inning, started by third baseman Brett Baty -- who was playing in on the grass -- and turned by Luisangel Acuña at second. The duo turned another double play in the third after Senga allowed back-to-back singles to start the frame.

-As for Severino, he and Senga were matching zeros and engaged in a pitchers' duel. After escaping the first inning, the former Met struck out three in the second (all looking), one in the third and two in the fourth, which came after a double by Nimmo and a walk to Luis Torrens. Severino got through five scoreless innings, and despite a high pitch count -- thanks to some tough at-bats by the Mets throughout the contest -- he went out there for the sixth.

-Alonso began the inning with a walk and ended up on third base after two groundouts. But before throwing another pitch, A's manager Mark Kotsay went out to talk to his starter and instead of pulling him, Kotsay let Severino try to finish the inning.

Against his former battery mate, Torrens made Severino pay with an RBI single, his second hit of the game, to drive in Alonso for the game's first run and end Severino's outing. Torrens finished 3-for-4 with a double, two RBI, a walk and a run scored. He's now hitting .333 with a .942 OPS to begin the year.

-Staked to a lead, Senga, who got better as the game went on, kept on rolling. The 32-year-old pitched a shutdown sixth and ended his day with a 1-2-3 seventh, including two strikeouts. In seven frames, Senga allowed just four hits and two walks while striking out four across just 79 pitches. He likely could've went longer, but the Mets are still taking things slow with the righty after his injury-plagued 2024 campaign.

-New York's offense tacked on two in the seventh with an RBI double by Lindor and a bases loaded walk by Mark Vientos -- just his second RBI this season. The Mets added another run in the eighth before the floodgates opened in the ninth, when New York scored four more to make it 8-0. The big hits belonged to Vientos (RBI double), Torrens (RBI ground-rule double) and Baty (RBI triple).

Baty's triple was his first hit of the game, and it drove in his first run of the season as he looks to get his year on track. It was also the Mets' second triple of the afternoon, after Tyrone Taylor reached third in the eighth.

-Every starter besides Soto (0-for-3, two walks) had at least one hit. Lindor, Nimmo and Torrens produced multi-hit games.

-A.J. Minter and Max Kranick followed Senga in relief and kept the shutout intact with a scoreless inning each.

Game MVP: Luis Torrens

Torrens got the Mets on the board and finished 3-for-4.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets continue their road trip with three against the Minnesota Twins, starting on Monday night. First pitch is scheduled for 7:40 p.m.

RHP Clay Holmes (1-1, 4.30 ERA) will go up against RHP Joe Ryan (1-1, 2.65 ERA).

Clippers beat Warriors and get fifth seed in NBA playoffs

Clippers center Ivica Zubac screams after scoring against the Golden State Warriors Sunday in San Francisco.
Clippers center Ivica Zubac reacts after scoring against the Golden State Warriors on Sunday in San Francisco. (Godofredo A. Vásquez / Associated Press)

Step by step, the Clippers have inched toward their goal of making the NBA playoffs.

The final step came Sunday and it was against the Golden State Warriors, who were also seeking an automatic postseason spot in the final regular-season game for both.

The teams went toe-to-toe all game, so much so they battled into an extra five minutes of overtime to determine their fates, the outcome finally decided by James Harden’s clutch play and two blown opportunities by the Warriors that allowed the Clippers to escape with a 124-119 win at Chase Center.

The Clippers advanced to the playoffs as the fifth seed in the Western Conference, where they will face the fourth-seeded Nuggets in Denver either Saturday or Sunday in the first round of the postseason.

“On nights like this, this is really when it means something,” Clippers coach Tyronn Lue said. “Like I said, you make it to the playoffs, all the hard work you put in throughout the course of the season, it’s huge when it comes down to this point. I’m just proud of our guys, being counted out and staying the course and playing with that chip on your shoulder all year long.”

It took Harden scoring 12 of the Clippers’ 13 points in the overtime for them to reach the playoffs for the 12th time in the last 14 seasons. It took Harden scoring 39 points, handing out 10 assists and grabbing seven rebounds for the Clippers to win 50 games this season for the seventh time in franchise history.

It took Harden playing all 29 minutes in the second half, including overtime, and a total of 48:24 for the Clippers to win for the eighth straight time. It took Harden making back-to-back three-pointers to open the overtime and making two free throws to seal the game with three seconds left for the Clippers to win for the 17th time in their final 20 games and avoid the play-in.

"I’m happy that we’re in it,” said Kawhi Leonard, who had 33 points, seven assists and six rebounds in 47:25. “The last three weeks I felt like we’ve been in a playoff mindset or environment and we had to win really every game to get to this point. I don’t know what our record was, but I think we lost two games in the last three weeks or something like that. I’m happy and proud that we were able to fight and get in for the playoffs without the play-in.”

But it wasn’t until Buddy Hield missed a three-pointer with the Clippers ahead by three with 5.1 seconds left in overtime did the Clippers clinch a playoff spot.

Read more:Clippers survive last-second scare to edge Kings, move to brink of playoff berth

Kawhi Leonard made one of two free throws with 6.1 seconds left that let the Clippers ahead by just three, but he still had 33 points, seven assists and six rebounds.

Stephen Curry turned up the heat on the Clippers late in the fourth quarter, scoring 18 of his 36 points in that span. But he had eight of the Warriors’ 16 turnovers, two of them in the important overtime.

The Clippers leaned on their starters to get this win, and big Ivica Zubac did his part in 42:16.

He had 22 points and 17 rebounds and he kept making history as a Clipper, his 1,010 rebounds on the season making him the fifth player in franchise history to reach that milestone.

He secured his 59th double-double of the season, tied for the second-most in the NBA and tied for the fifth-most in a season in franchise history.

"We want to go a little further,” Zubac said. “So, our goal was obviously to make the playoffs, but we’re not happy or whatever. We’re happy that we got in and not to be in the play-in. But since everyone doubted us, it feels good to prove everyone wrong. There was people saying we’re going to win 30 games, 35 or whatever. To win 50 games and not to be in the play-in, it feels good. But we got some more work to do.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Yankees' Carlos Rodón remains plagued by homers curse: 'It's not good enough'

The Yankees insisted on a sixth-inning mound visit between starter Carlos Rodónand pitching coach Matt Blake before the Giants sent Jung Hoo Lee to the plate as the go-ahead run on Sunday. A proper time to talk strategy, considering that the southpaw allowed a solo home run to the lefty-batting outfielder just two innings earlier.

But the brief conversation didn't help solve the problem at hand. While ahead 1-2 in the count, Rodón hung a curveball that Lee launched into the right-field seats for a three-run blast. It was a go-ahead shot that ultimately spoiled Rodón's afternoon and lifted San Francisco to a 5-4 rubber-game win in the Bronx.

Of the 100 pitches that Rodón threw across 5.2 innings of work, only seven of them were curves. He relied heavily on a slider-fastball combo that yielded eight strikeouts and appeared to be the correct gameplan.

So, when he deviated from that approach to throw an infrequently-used breaking ball, he was at risk of further damage from Lee.

"[Lee is a] good hitter, hit my mistakes... Just terrible execution on a curveball that he punished," Rodón said following Sunday's loss. "Really frustrating. Up 3-1 in the sixth, obviously you want to hang up a zero. Just missed execution on a curveball and I got punished. It's not good enough... We have the momentum and I've just got to be better."

Rodón was cruising through five innings. He retired 10 of the first 11 batters he faced and looked well on his way to logging a quality start for the first time this season.

But the energy quickly shifted in the sixth. He gave up a leadoff infield single to Christian Koss, and after fanning Heliot Ramos for the first out, he put the tying run on base with a walk to Willy Adames.

The Yankees sent Blake to the mound to settle Rodón's nerves with Lee awaiting his third at-bat. Composed or not, Rodón found his way into control of the count before that fatal seventh and final curve.

"I thought he was excellent and a critical mistake with runners on. It's really one pitch that hurt his outing with two strikes, a hanging curveball," manager Aaron Boone said of Rodón. "It's that small of a separator between him being in a dominant position right now. The reality is, we've got to look at it as, he's throwing the ball incredibly well. It's that next level of avoiding that ball today. I thought the stuff was excellent..."

Rodón's ERA now sits a 5.48 through four starts this season (23 innings). He's already given up five homers, tied for most in the majors, and 10 of his 14 earned runs allowed have come on the long ball. Since the start of last season, the 32-year-old lefty has surrendered a league-high 36 blasts.

When looking at Rodón's full body of work in pinstripes, there's a clear history repeating itself. He's been plagued by walks, haunted by home runs, and tormented by winning efforts that evaporate.

The Yankees have no choice but to trust Rodón to work through the well-established issues and provide ace-type performances each week. He's getting paid to pitch like a No. 1 starter, after all.

"He's made a lot of big pitches. His stuff is prone to the long ball," Boone said. "Especially in certain situations, preventing that the best we can is a challenge."

Former NHLer Rob Pearson Looks Back On His Career From Leafs Winger To Jr. A Coach

Toronto Maple Leafs logo on a jersey (David Kirouac-Imagn Images)

By Ella Tsotsos, The Hockey News Intern

Rob Pearson, a former OHL and NHL player, recently announced his departure as the head coach of the Pickering Panthers in the Ontario Jr. A League. Pearson played for several teams during his junior and professional career, including the OHL’s Belleville Bulls, which was the team he played for when he was drafted by the Toronto Maple Leafs in 1989.

Growing up, Pearson‘s parents had season tickets for Toronto and being able to watch the Leafs from a young age kept the franchise close to his heart. The 1989 NHL draft was held in Minnesota, and Pearson’s experience was unforgettable. After being selected 12th overall, Pearson recalls going out for dinner with Leafs legend George Armstrong. Pearson was informed by Armstrong that it was the first time that a draft pick had ordered two steaks at dinner.

The 1989 draft was the first time – and only time – in which three players from the same OHL team were selected by the same NHL team in the first round. The Leafs drafted Scott Thornton at No. 3 overall, followed by Pearson at 12th overall and Steve Bancroft at 21st overall, the final pick in the first round. All three players had suited up for Belleville during the 1988-89 OHL season.

“We were fortunate,” Pearson said. “It was Scottie, then I went 12th, and Steve Bancroft went 21st. So, as friends and guys on the same team, it was awesome. We really enjoyed it.”

 Rob Pearson, Scott Thornton and Steve Bancroft (Rob Pearson)

Pearson played parts of six NHL seasons from 1991-92 to 1996-97, getting into 269 NHL games. After that, he spent a few years in the AHL and IHL before a final season in Germany with the Frankfurt Lions in 2001-02.

Pearson shared that it was a difficult transition adjusting to life after hockey. He said he took a break from everything and learned how to take care of a home until he began making calls to figure out what he wanted to do next.

Michael Boyer, a Chevrolet dealer located in Pickering, Ont., represented a new chapter for Pearson. He joined the car dealership, and Pearson now holds the title of Business Elite Manager. And once he had his post-playing career in order, with hockey still in the back of his mind, Pearson began coaching and becoming a mentor.

Pearson coached various teams, and one in particular was the Pickering Panthers in the OJHL. Pearson coached the team from 2019 through this season before announcing his departure at the end of the campaign. From playing professionally to coaching, this transition is common with many players. His son, Luke, is a goalie for Yale University. To have the privilege to learn from a professional player goes a long way.

"You just felt it was a good opportunity to be able to give back and help these kids out, that maybe a path that you took was wrong or a path that you took was right, that I could go and help them individually,” Pearson said.

Pearson’s hockey career was well travelled, as he played for Belleville and Oshawa in the OHL, Toronto, Washington and St. Louis in the NHL, Portland and Worcester in the AHL, Cleveland, Orlando and Long Beach in the IHL, and, finally, Frankfurt in Germany’s DEL.

His highest-scoring seasons came in the OHL when he scored 48 goals and 88 points with Belleville in 1989-90 and then 63 goals and 118 points with Belleville and Oshawa in 1990-91.

In his NHL draft season of 1988-89, Pearson missed much of the Bulls’ campaign due to an injury – he scored eight goals and 20 points in 26 games as an OHL rookie that season – so there were some questions as to where he would go in the draft.

He ended up being selected 12th overall in the first round, and Pearson lived up to the role that everyone hoped for during his first season with the Leafs, with 14 goals and 24 points in 47 games during the 1991-92 campaign. In 1992-93, he enjoyed his best NHL season, placing fourth on the Leafs with 23 goals and leading Toronto with 211 penalty minutes.

"We were thrilled to get 'our man,’ ” said former Leafs GM Gord Stellick, who drafted Pearson.

The Leafs had been pining for Pearson, as they wanted a player with outstanding stats and grit. Pearson was a player that stood out because he played a physical game but also had offensive talent. The 1980s and '90s were an era in the NHL when the physicality of the game was very prominent.

“Guys that could score, guys that could skate, like a guy like Brendan Shanahan,” Pearson said. “He was somebody that held you accountable on the ice, but he could play the game.”

Pearson played most of his professional games in the AHL, where he did very well for himself. After his playing career and to the present day, he became a mentor in the hockey world, providing invaluable insight to shaping hockey players.

“I believe that if you can teach these young men that it's not a race, if you can teach them to learn how to find their game and play their game, if you can teach them to find their path and not to be in such a rush to climb the ladder and get to that next level, to be patient and understand that the level will come to you and you'll get there eventually,” Pearson said.

Pearson announced his departure from the Panthers at the end of the 2024-25 season. He led the Panthers to victory as the Buckland Cup champions after defeating the Toronto Junior Canadiens in 2022. Pearson was also named coach of the year in 2021-22 after guiding the Panthers to a 39-10-1-3 record, which was the second-best record in the 21-team Jr. A league.

While he steps away from the game for now, Pearson cherishes the many memories he made in hockey – even the ones that came with a few bruises. “I remember leaving the arena black and blue and looking right away who's your opponent for the next game, because sometimes you had those tough sleeps at night knowing Detroit is coming in or Chicago is coming in or whoever's coming in, and you knew what you had to deal with the next night,” Pearson said.

The journey has been long for Pearson, but hockey has always found a way to stick with him.

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