Has LeBron James' tenure with the Lakers been a failure? Fans weigh in.

LOS ANGELES — Clara Massey stood behind her walker and methodically moved in front of Crypto.com Arena after trekking from her nearby apartment. She was wearing a purple Los Angeles Lakers jersey, a purple Lakers cap and sunglasses with yellow frames (or, as any self-respecting Lakers fans would point out, Lakers gold.)

“I just come down, walk around and get the good energy and give the good energy,’’ Massey told USA TODAY Sports.

That pregame energy was mostly pro-LeBron James with the Lakers on the verge of elimination from the playoffs on Monday, May 11 and Game 4 against the Oklahoma City Thunder potentially being James’ last with the Lakers, if not the NBA altogether.

As tipoff grew closer, the moment prompted the following question: Has James' time with the Lakers been a failure?

Despite the fact James led the Lakers to a championship – the 17th in franchise history in 2020 that culminated in the NBA bubble in Walt Disney World in Florida. Despite the fact he became the NBA's all-time leading scorer in front of Lakers fans when he overtook Lakers great Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Despite the dunks, the 3-pointers and, well, more than a few turnovers.

“I think he did a lot,’’ Massey said. “Won a championship. And he’s still contributing. He’s a pretty strong force.’’

Massey’s fondness for James goes beyond his on-court accomplishments in Los Angeles.

“I think he’s a great basketball player, a great figure in sports,’’ she said, reflecting on the time LeBron James and Bronny spent on the court together during the Lakers first-round series against the Houston Rockets.

“Did someone else do that for their child?’’ she said. “I bet if he could he would teach the world basketball.’’

Higher expectations

Four young men wearing Kobe Bryant jerseys and t-shirts surely would offer a tougher assessment.

“If LeBron can win another championship here, he deserves a statue,’’ Matthew Dominguez of Sylmar, California, said, of the statues outside Crypto.com Arena reserved for Laker greats like Kobe Bryant, Magic Johnson and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. “I think he knew what we expected. But we’re so grateful. He doesn’t deserve all the hate.’’

In fact, Dominguez said he hopes the Lakers keep James. That James could be key to the team winning another NBA title, something the fans like Dominguez are craving.

“And if he doesn’t do it for us, do it for Bronny,’’ Dominguez.

'No small feat'

Aiden Rivas, wearing a No. 6 jersey with James on the back, was standing in line outside Crypto.com Arena more than an hour before the doors opened. Speaking of which, Lakers fans might not have been so open to James’ coming to the Lakers, according to Rivas.

They feared Los Angeles might just be another stop as he jumped from one team to another. They assumed he was here to live in Los Angeles more than play for the Lakers.

Those concerns receded, Rivas, 20, told USA TODAY Sports.

“He brought us a ring, and that’s no small feat,’’ Rivas said. “Overall, I think he did a great job of getting us to the playoffs almost every year. That’s huge.

“I remember the times we couldn’t make it to the playoffs and we had Jordan Clarkson.’’

Sorry, Jordan.

Siblings perspective

Jesse and Lizbeth Medina, siblings who live in Los Angeles, sat outside Crypto.com Arena.

Jesse Medina, 25, said of James, “I think LeBron was good for PR, good for fan engagement but Luka (Doncic) will transform the team.’’

Lizabeth Medina, wearing a Kobe Bryant jersey, said of James' time here, “I was expecting another championship.’’

But she sounded optimistic it’ll happen.

With Doncic, not James, leading the Lakers.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: LeBron James' Lakers tenure may be coming to an end. Was it a failure?

Dillon Brooks keeps finding ways to make Lakers fans uncomfortable

Playoff basketball rolls on without the Phoenix Suns. That doesn’t mean they aren’t watching. In some cases, they’re getting quite the view.

The Los Angeles Lakers hosted the Oklahoma City Thunder for Game 4 of the Western Conference Semifinals on Monday night, and a familiar face was sitting in the crowd. Thunder guards Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and Luguentz Dort share something in common with Suns forward Dillon Brooks, as all three are members of Team Canada. So, in a game in which SGA and Dort could potentially clinch their second consecutive trip to the Western Conference Finals, it wasn’t surprising to see their national teammate Dillon Brooks sitting baseline at Crypto.com Arena taking in the game.

What made it even more entertaining is Brooks’ ongoing rivalry with LeBron James. The two have had plenty of run-ins over the years, some dating back to Brooks’ time with the Memphis Grizzlies, others happening this past season with Phoenix. When the Amazon Prime broadcast cut to Brooks sitting courtside, iced out in jewelry as LeBron stood at the free throw line, it felt very on brand.

And knowing Brooks, there were probably a few comments exchanged as he rooted for his friends to take down the Lakers.

Dillon Brooks is extension-eligible this upcoming offseason, and it’ll be interesting to see which direction the Phoenix Suns choose to go. Do they get ahead of it now and lock him up early? Or do they wait until next summer, when he becomes an unrestricted free agent and revisit it then?

He was a major part of the identity and culture shift Phoenix experienced this past season, and that carries real value. The question is how much value the organization places on it financially. Until then, it’s nice to see Brooks enjoying the offseason and continuing the Suns tradition of rooting against the Los Angeles Lakers.


Winners and Losers: Cavs vs Pistons Game 4 – Donovan Mitchell drops 43 points

CLEVELAND, OHIO - MAY 11: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers shoots the ball over Cade Cunningham #2 of the Detroit Pistons during the fourth quarter in Game Four of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at Rocket Arena on May 11, 2026 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. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers ran the Pistons back to Detroit, tying the series at 2-2 behind a huge second half.

Let’s go over today’s winners and losers.

WINNER – Third Quarter CAVALANCHE

An aspect of this era of Cavalier basketball is that no matter how a game is trending, one four-minute stretch can change everything. While that’s true for both the good and bad — the Cavalanche has earned its name for a reason.

Detroit rolled into halftime feeling pretty good. They had weathered an early storm and controlled the rest of the half behind their defense. They ended the second quarter with a 56-52 lead.

Four minutes into the third quarter, the Pistons still had 56 points, while the Cavs had jumped to 75. That’s a 23-0 run led by Donovan Mitchell, who scored 15 points during that sequence. Rocket Arena turned into a madhouse, and a full-throated ‘Jarrett Allen’ chant capped off the run.

This type of heavyweight punch is what makes it hard to count the Cavs out.

WINNER – First Quarter Harden

You can’t ask for a much better start than that.

Cleveland lost both games in Detroit largely because of their slow starts. James Harden made sure that no matter what happened tonight, the Cavs wouldn’t leave with that same feeling.

Harden opened the game on fire. He scored 11 points in the first four minutes, banging three-pointers and even racking up two steals during that stretch. The Cavs defense was successful early on, and Harden surprisingly played a key role in setting that tone.

Sadly, that hot start didn’t spread to the rest of the team (or the rest of the quarter). Cleveland went cold once Harden went to the bench, somehow shooting just 30% from the floor and ending the quarter down by three points.

LOSER – The Caris LeVert Wheel

Cavs fans will be familiar with this. But in case you’re not, the ‘LeVert Wheel’ refers to the idea that on any given night, LeVert will play like any number of former players. For instance, sometimes he’s Michael Jordan, other times he’s closer to Alonzo Gee.

The wheel landed on Jordan tonight.

LeVert had confidence early. His first few jumpers hardly even touched the net. Shot after shot went through the basket as LeVert worked his way to 17 points on 7-12 shooting in the first half. All the while, he gave Donovan Mitchell fits defensively and forced several turnovers on various Cavs drives, including one where he stripped the ball out of bounds off Evan Mobley’s knee.

That type of support from a role player can be enough to steal a game on the road.

WINNER – Donovan Mitchell

We’ve already talked a bit about Mitchell. But he took so many lumps throughout the first round, I think it’s worth focusing on him one more time.

This whole thing was built around Mitchell.

Maybe not originally. The Cavs probably thought that Mobley would have been their best player by now when they first traded for Mitchell. But as Mitchell blossomed into a legit First-Team All-NBA player, and Mobley’s development crawled at a slower pace than expected, it became clear who was the centerpiece of this team.

The Harden trade cemented that. No more two-timelines. Only one. And that would be Mitchell’s.

With all this in mind, it was alarming to see Mitchell struggle to start this postseason. No version of the Cavs competes for a title without a superstar leader in Mitchell. His inefficient scoring and questionable decision-making were a significant concern.

That’s starting to change.

Mitchell found life in Game 2. He carried that over for a monstrous 35 points in Game 3. Then, after a slow start to Game 4, he broke free for 21 points in the third quarter, matching LeBron James and Kyrie Irving for the highest scoring quarter in franchise history. Reminding us of why this team has the expectations it does, in the first place.

“To turn it around the way he did, I’m not sure I’ve seen something like that in the playoffs,” said Kenny Atkinson after the game.

A whopping 39 points in the second half tied an NBA record and brought Mitchell’s total to 43 for the night. It’s his eighth playoff game of 40+ points and his fourth as a Cavalier. His best performances give Cleveland a punch it can’t get anywhere else on the roster.

Donovan Mitchell goes off for 39 points in second half as Cavaliers win Game 4 to even series with Pistons

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Donovan Mitchell of the Cleveland Cavaliers celebrates a play during a game against the Detroit Pistons, Image 2 shows Donovan Mitchell of the Cleveland Cavaliers shooting the ball against Caris LeVert of the Detroit Pistons, Image 3 shows Cade Cunningham of the Detroit Pistons dribbles the ball against the Cleveland Cavaliers
The Cavaliers defeated the Pistons on Monday.

CLEVELAND — The Cleveland Cavaliers are back on even footing in their second-round series after Donovan Mitchell’s huge second half.

Mitchell tied an NBA playoff mark with 39 points in the final two quarters as he rallied the Cavaliers to a 112-103 victory Monday night.

“What a shift, right? Really struggled in the first half and then big-time, second-half performance by Don,” Cavaliers coach Kenny Atkinson said.

The home team has won all four games in the series, which shifts to Detroit for Game 5 Wednesday night.

Donovan Mitchell reacts during the Cavaliers’ May 11 game against the Pistons. NBAE via Getty Images

Mitchell matched the mark of Eric “Sleepy” Floyd on a free throw with 27.6 seconds remaining. He had a chance to break the record, set in 1987 when the Golden State Warriors faced the Los Angeles Lakers, but missed his second foul shot.

“Everybody let me know that I missed a free throw to break the record, though,” said Mitchell, who finished with 43 points. “I will say that, but we’re two and two headed to Detroit. That was what we came home to do and that’s all that matters.”

James Harden had his 40th playoff double-double with 24 points and 11 assists. Evan Mobley had 17 points as Cleveland remained unbeaten at home in six playoff games.

Caris LeVert had a season-high 24 points for Detroit. Cade Cunningham scored 19, the first time he has been held under 20 in 11 playoff games this season, and Tobias Harris added 16.

Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff, who takes pride in the physical style his team plays, was not pleased with the free throw disparity. Mitchell had more trips to the foul line (15) than Detroit (12).

Donovan Mitchell attempts a shot during the Cavaliers’ May 11 win. Getty Images

“There is no way one guy on their team should have more free throws than our team. We’re not a settling for jump shots team,” he said. “We didn’t do enough to help ourselves, but ever since we came to Cleveland, the whistle has changed.”

Even though Mitchell struggled in the first half and the Cavaliers shot 15 of 38, with most of their shots being 3-pointers, the Cavaliers felt pretty fortunate to be down 56-52 at halftime.

Atkinson’s message at halftime was to play with more pace and attack downhill, which opened things up.

Mitchell scored 15 during Cleveland’s 24-0 run that went from the last 12 seconds of the first half to the first six minutes of the third quarter. Cleveland trailed 56-52 at halftime before taking control.

Cade Cunningham looks to drive during the Pistons’ May 11 game. NBAE via Getty Images

The Cavs were 10 of 12 from the field and made three 3-pointers. They also converted five turnovers by the Pistons into nine points.

“When (Mitchell) sees a gap, he’s going to go. We’ve got to eliminate his touches and catches on the run,” Cunningham said. “That run, we just never caught our footing again. That was the first time they really got loose in the series.”

The 24-0 run was the longest in an NBA playoff game since since Minnesota also scored 24 straight in Game 6 of its Western Conference semifinal series against Denver in 2024. It was also the longest spurt by Cleveland in a postseason game since play-by-play stats were kept in 1997-98. The previous high was 19 in an Eastern semifinal series contest against Boston.

“We understood if we could just get some stops and get out in transition and get some easier looks, we’ll be in good shape. We were doing a solid job, we just weren’t scoring,” Mitchell said, “I think understanding that we were in a good spot and did a good job of weathering a storm.”

Mitchell and Harden accounted for 49 points apiece with their points scored and points off assists. Mobley was a force on both ends of the court with eight rebounds, five assists, three steals and five blocked shots.

“Don’s going to get all the flowers, but we should give a lot of flowers to Mobley for tonight’s performance,” Atkinson said.

Pistons vs Cavaliers final score: Series tied 2-2 after Detroit loses second straight

May 11, 2026; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers guard James Harden (1) knocks the ball away from Detroit Pistons center Jalen Duren (0) during the first half of game four in the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Rocket Arena. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-Imagn Images | Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

This one wasn’t all that close.

Everything looked bad at the start of the game as Cleveland got out to a 13-5 run. With two quick fouls on Ausar Thompson, Caris LeVert checked in and started playing his best ball of the season. He helped Detroit reclaim the lead and they took a 24-21 lead at the end of the first quarter. It was a good turnaround after Cleveland led by 11 and had zero fouls called on them.

The off-ball defense from Detroit was poor all game as they lost Cavs shooters multiple times for open catch-and-shoot looks. It was all tied up 38-38 halfway through the quarter until a Tobias Harris three put him in double-digits and gave them a four-point lead a few possessions later. Detroit would take a 56-52 halftime lead.

The Pistons had 10 first half turnovers that let Cleveland stay close while shooting 55% from the field and holding the Cavs to 40%. LeVert, Harris, and Cunningham combined for 43 of Detroit’s 56 points. James Harden had 15 points and Evan Mobley added 11 points.

This game was over as soon as both teams came out of the locker rooms.

Despite shooting 1-for-8 in the first half, Donovan Mitchell came out on fire and never cooled off. Cleveland started the second half with an 8-0 run, all from Mitchell. After JB Bickerstaff called a timeout, the Cavs went on another 8-0 run into another JBB timeout. By the time unsung hero Paul Reed finally put an end to the bleeding, Cleveland went on a 22-0 run.

Bball Paul was the lone bright spot for Detroit in the third quarter. He made all six of his shots for 13 points in the quarter. Mitchell ended up with 21 points in the third, equivalent to the number of points the Pistons scored in the quarter as well.

The final score makes the game look closer than it was. Cleveland was up by 17 with less than three minutes left and a late push by Reed and the third stringers forced the Cavs starters back in late. Detroit would lose 112-103.

This will be a game to forget, and one where the film won’t be pretty. LeVert finished with 24 points, Cade added 19 points, Harris had 16 points, and Reed had 15. Duncan Robinson played 29 minutes to score four points on only two field goal attempts. Ausar Thompson played 12 minutes in the first half and seven minutes in the second while Donovan Mitchell tied an NBA record with 39 second half points.

Jalen Duren was not good. He looked bad from the start of the game and finished with eight points on eight shots while only grabbing two rebounds in 27 minutes. Isaiah Stewart only played seven minutes but grabbed one more rebound. Both bigs were outplayed by third stringer Reed who had 15 points, four rebounds, two assists, and a steal in only 14 minutes.

I dunno, man. We played 11 guys if you don’t include Sasser’s garbage time minutes while Ausar played 19 and Stew played seven. Daniss played 21 minutes and missed all four of his field goal attempts. Leaving Ausar on the bench for six combined points out of Duncan and Daniss is an issue when Mitchell is having an NBA record-tying performance.

It is what it is – it didn’t go well tonight, but the Pistons have homecourt advantage and will look to use that on Wednesday night in Little Caesars Arena. They’ll need to come out with a better performance that tonight if they want to win this series.

Go Stones.

All the small things: Rays 8, Andrés Giménez 5

TORONTO, CANADA - MAY 11: Chandler Simpson #14 of the Tampa Bay Rays steals second base against the Toronto Blue Jays during the second inning in their MLB game at the Rogers Centre on May 11, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Mark Blinch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Baseball, especially the Rays brand of baseball, relies on doing all the little things well. Baseball is also a very luck dependent sport. But, doing the little things can help manufacture some luck.

Perhaps no player exemplifies that more than Chandler Simpson. Simpson got things started right away, with a comebacker to Gausman, who was rushed to try and field it and took his attention and eyes off the ball litterally and figuratively trying to get the speedy Simpson. Once on first, Simpson drew even more attention even without running. A few pitches later Chandler was in motion allowing Junior Caminero to punch one the other way into a gaping wide hole drawn by the runner in motion. Of course once that ball found grass, Simpson was cruising into 3rd, allowing Jonathan Aranda to lift a fly ball to get the Rays on the board in the 1st.

The Rays weren’t done with Gausman in the 1st, and with some 2 out magic, Jake Fraley double and a Richie Palacios two RBI base hit gave the Rays an early 3-0 lead. They would expand that in the 2nd, with some more clutch and agressive base running. Hunter Feduccia got a single, followed by a Taylor Walls triple (it was a game for inexplicable contributions, more on that later) with Feduccia getting a good read and sprinting around to score 1st to home.

After a sharp Chandler Simpson grounder to a drawn in Vlad Jr, Vladdy was able to make an excellent throw home to get Walls just in time to save a run. However, that trade off meant Chandler was now on 1st. He would be on 2nd a few pitches later, swiping his 13th bag of the season. Aranda (again) got a broken bat liner to fall in to give the Rays a 5-0 lead.

With the Rays pitching lately that should have been all she wrote. And with Drew Rasmussen on the mound, things were looking good. In fact, Drew was fairly sharp today. 13 total whiffs, only 3 hard hit balls over the course of 6 innings with 4 scattered hits, 1 walk, and 6 strikeouts. However, there was one little thing that proved to be a thorn in the Rays side.

You probably guessed by the title of this recap who that is: light hitting defensive wiz Andrés Giménez. In the 2nd inning Rasmussen ran into a bit of trouble. After nearly working his way off the hook, Giménez stepped up to the plate with runners at 3rd and 1st, 2 out. Rasmussen fell behind and landed a sharp 97 MPH fastball busting him inside.

Absolutely no way that’s a dangerous or risky pitch. Especially not to Giménez. And yet, Andrés guessed correctly and was able to turn on it with just enough speed and just enough distance to just get out. About as many runs as the Rays have given up in any game in weeks and it came on one swing by a guy who had 3 HRs on the year. That’s luck and that’s baseball.

But again, you gotta generate your own luck and back to Chandler to provide some insurance. In the 4th, 2 outs and Guasman back to cruising along after a rough first two innings, Chandler Simpson worked the count full and hit a grounder to 1st that drew Vlad off the bag to field it. Chandler won the footrace with ease beating Gausman by a full length. Once on 1st, Gausman was cruising no more, clearly preoccupied with Simpson.

First two throw overs and then Gausman was up there balking around, which Chandler and the umps caught. Once on 2nd, even with Junior at the plate, the Rays and Chandler decided to keep the pressure ball on the very next pitch.

The steal 3rd force a throw and maybe you can generate a run play is a thing of beauty when it works, and with Chandler running it causes all sorts of chaos. Small ball, big rewards.

The game was all but decided there, but the drama still had some turns. Aranda who took the lead in the RBI race after his 2nd RBI of the night decided to celebrate that with a towering HR to center field.

Of course, when I talk about little things, and the Jays are involved, I have to talk about John Schneider, manager of the Jays and a small, petty man. After Aranda’s HR the next time up, Braydon Fisher who has normally excellent command, very few walks or HBP, threw his first pitch nearly behind Aranda drilling him in the back.

Rays were able to expand their lead after a couple of grounders to advance Aranda, and a 2 out base knock by Palacios. Small ball revenge, after Schneider’s feelings were hurt and he showed off his own small beanball.

Andrés Giménez would add another HR, this time of the 2-run variety, but that would just bring the score closer to eventually allow Bryan Baker to get his 11th save of the season (fittingly with a punchout to Andrés Giménez).

4o games into the season (around 25% of the season) is roughly around the time you start to know what a team is in baseball. With this win in game number 40 today, the Rays maintain their AL best 27-13 record.

This team does a lot of little things really well. This team confounds several bits of traditional wisdom. This team is an outlier.

Mostly, to paraphrase an expression of one of the Rays new employees: this team is fun!

Andrej Stojakovic put on a show to start NBA Draft Combine

CHICAGO, IL - MAY 11: Andrej Stojakovic participates in the shuttle run drill during the 2026 NBA Draft Combine on May 11, 2026 at Wintrust Arena in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jeff Haynes/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Uhhhhhh.

Andrej might not be coming back.

The Illini wing put on a show Monday night at the NBA Draft Combine in Chicago. A good week for Stojakovic in the Windy City could push him to stay in the NBA Draft rather than return for his second year at Illinois (and his fourth overall in college).

In the maximum vertical jump, Stojakovic finished atop the leaderboard at 41.5 inches.

While he won’t participate in the 5-on-5 scrimmages at the combine, Stojakovic is making a name for himself with his athleticism, which he flashed at times last year off the bench during Illinois’ Final Four run.

It’d be great to have him back in orange and blue next year, but you can’t blame him if he’s able to assure that he’s a high second-round pick and has a real chance at the NBA.

20-22: Chart

HOUSTON, TEXAS - MAY 11: George Kirby #68 of the Seattle Mariners pitches in the first inning against the Houston Astros at Daikin Park on May 11, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Mariners 3, Astros 1

When Andrés Muñoz is happy: George Kirby, .17 WPA

When Andrés Muñoz is sad: J.P. Crawford and Brendan Donovan, -.08 WPA

Game thread comment of the day:

I gotta go with BirdNerd’s time to shine. Thanks for making us all smarter!

And BONUS CONTENT because it was too good to pass up:

Ryan Weathers lost nine pounds – and then a no-hitter and game he deserved to win

BALTIMORE — Ryan Weathers got violently ill, had to quarantine from his newborn, lost nine pounds, returned to the New York Yankees rotation with his rotation spot in jeopardy and promptly took a no-hitter into the seventh inning.

Yet all the toil of a turbulent two weeks went for naught.

Weathers, the Yankees left-hander turned over a one-hit shutout with one out in the seventh to his bullpen on Monday, May 11, only to see lefty Brent Headrick give up a towering three-run home run to Baltimore Orioles DH Coby Mayo.

Gone was the two-run advantage Weathers handed him. Moments later, the Yankees were stewing in their fourth consecutive loss, a 3-2 setback to the offensively impotent Orioles, a team they steamrolled in four games in the Bronx just a week ago.

It was not the outcome the Yankees expected. Nor was it anything Weathers deserved, not at this odd point in his career.

Weathers was working on eight days of rest, because he fell ill the day of his most recent start on May 2. He spent the next couple of days with his insides turned out, leading to the nine-pound weight loss.

A further indignity: Weathers and his wife Thayer welcomed their first child, Paul David Weathers, on April 22. Weathers’ virus meant he had to sleep on a different floor at home than wife and newborn.

“It’s definitely been a couple weeks, for sure,” says Weathers. “But that doesn’t stop me from doing my job.

“My job is to go out and compete and throw up as many zeroes and get as many outs as I can get.”

Adding to the drama: His time in the Yankees rotation was ticking down as he recovered. Left-hander Carlos Rodón returned from off-season elbow surgery on May 10; Rodón’s procedure largely spurred the Yankees to acquire Weathers from Miami in the off-season.

And ace Gerrit Cole has now made five rehab starts and should line up to rejoin the rotation by month’s end.

With his future in flux, Weathers went out and pitched the game of his life – even as he was unaware he was tossing a no-hitter.

He’d never thrown a complete game in 62 career starts and hadn’t thrown more than 101 pitches in a start this season. So at 85 pitches through six no-hit innings, it figured he wouldn’t finish a solo no-hitter.

Yet Weathers bedeviled the Orioles, striking out nine and using an almost equal four-pitch mix of changeup, his sinking and four-seam fastballs and sweeper. The no-hitter was intact until Adley Rutschman – the only Oriole who hit the ball hard off Weathers this night – poked a single to the right of second base.

When Weathers issued just his second walk of the game to Tyler O’Neill, manager Aaron Boone went and got him. With the Yankees suffering three narrow losses at Milwaukee before arriving here, relievers Tim Hill and Fernando Cruz were down.

Headrick was summoned to face the righty-swinging, but .158-hitting Mayo. Boone liked Headrick’s slider against Mayo. Mayo liked the slider Headrick threw him, clubbing it 389 feet out to left field.

A 2-0 lead became a 3-2 deficit. And with the Yankees struggling offensively, that was that.

And Weathers, through little fault of his own, was the losing pitcher.

New York Yankees pitcher Ryan Weathers delivers during the second inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on May 11, 2026.

“We’ve scored zero, three, three, two,” says Boone of the skid that started in Milwaukee. “Pitching’s been there. Continues to be there.

“We gotta get some guys unlocked. We got a handful of guys scuffling.”

None more than Jazz Chisholm, who went 0-for-4 with three strikeouts and is in an 8-for-48 slide, with one extra-base hit in that span. He refused comment after the game.

Despite the skid, the Yankees are still 26-16, though they now trail Tampa Bay by two games.

Weathers, too, has a deficit to make up: He has not gained back all of his nine pounds, noting he needed to re-hydrate initially and then coax some food down after a couple days.

“I’m sneaking,” he said of gaining back all the weight he lost off his 6-foot-1, 230-pound frame. “I’m sneaking.”

Just not quite enough to add a historic night to his career.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Ryan Weathers carries no-hitter into seventh, only for Yankees to lose

Donovan Mitchell goes scorched Earth, Cavs beat Pistons 112-103 in Game 4

CLEVELAND, OH - MAY 11: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers drives to the basket during the game against the Detroit Pistons during Round Two Game Four of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 11, 2026 at Rocket Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers beat the Detroit Pistons 112-103 in Game 4, riding Donovan Mitchell’s 43 points to a tied series back to Motown.

Cleveland started this game hot. They jumped out to a 14-5 lead in the opening minutes as James Harden poured in 11 of those points all on his own. He nabbed two steals and banged home a pair of triples as the Cavs had their best start to a game this series.

That didn’t last long.

The lead was quickly reversed once Harden went to the bench and the Cavs offense went frigid. Some timely shot-making from Tobias Harris and Caris LeVert allowed the Pistons to change momentum and end the first quarter with an advantage. LeVert started the game with 17 points on 7-12 shooting.

LeVert changed the dynamic of this game. Before his run, the Pistons’ offense was having a difficult time finding support for Cade Cunningham. LeVert not only provided aid but practically took the wheel and started driving this thing himself.

Then the third quarter came, and the Cavaliers gave us another example of how quickly playoff basketball can change.

A dominant 23-o run put the Cavs back in front. Donovan Mitchell erupted for 15 points during that sequence, breaking free from a hellish first half where he only scored 4 points. Mitchell’s scoring was complemented by an elite stretch of defense, with Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley shutting down the paint.

Detroit made a run to keep it within range through the third quarter. But Mitchell continued to apply pressure until the dam finally broke. He ended the night with 43 points to complement Harden’s double-double.

We have to take a moment to shout out both Allen and Mobley, who seem totally unbothered by Jalen Duren. The Cavs bigs have flipped the script by dominating Duren in the paint, combining for 26 points and 13 rebounds while holding Duren to just 8 points and 2 rebounds.

Still, the story of the night is Mitchell erupting for 39 points in the second half. This team is built around the idea of him being an All-NBA superstar. That looked pretty good tonight.

Game 5 is Wednesday in Detroit.

19-22 – Rangers silenced by Diamondbacks 1-0

May 11, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers center fielder Evan Carter (32) miss plays a ball during the first inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images | Raymond Carlin III-Imagn Images

The Texas Rangers didn’t score a run but the Arizona Diamondbacks scored one run.

Everything you come to expect from a first inning at The Shed came to pass as the Rangers immediately allowed a first inning run and then wasted a chance for a first inning rally of their own with three consecutive outs with runners in scoring position.

And that was essentially the entire game. No joke. Nothing else happened.

Sure, Texas was put in an unfavorable position with a pregame Nathan Eovaldi ailment forcing them into a bullpen game but that bullpen allowed one run. The pitch totals and inning load is tomorrow’s problem.

Five members of that bullpen combined to produce a game that Eovaldi himself would have been happy with while the lineup collected four hits on the night, only two of which came after the second batter of the evening.

Everyone pinpointed the post-40 game mark for when the Rangers needed to step on the gas and instead, for game No. 41, the engine stalled, exploded, and the car tumbled off a cliff.

Player of the Game: Heaven knows it ain’t anyone from a lineup that let Michael Soroka shut them down for more than six innings.

We’ll go with Peyton Gray who tied Jakob Junis for a Ranger-high 2.2 innings. Unlike Junis, who allowed the first inning run that won the game for Arizona, Gray held Arizona scoreless with a team-high two strikeouts.

Up Next: The Rangers and Diamondbacks are back at it tomorrow night with LHP MacKenzie Gore looking to get right for Texas opposite RHP Zac Gallen for Arizona.

The Tuesday night first pitch from The Shed is scheduled for 7:05 pm CDT and you can catch it on the Rangers Sports Network.

Dodgers series kicks off make-or-break road trip for flailing Giants

You wouldn’t think there would be any competition in terms of hostile crowds for the Giants than the one they will face for four games this week at Dodger Stadium.

That is, until they heard it from their own fans over the weekend at Oracle Park.

“I had never heard that, ever,” outfielder Heliot Ramos said.

Things have gotten so dire in San Francisco that a historically cordial home crowd voiced its frustrations at multiple points in the team’s ugliest loss in an eyesore of a season.

“What would you do?” manager Tony Vitello said in reaction to the rarely heard boobirds. “I think it got to the point where it wasn’t an acceptable effort.”

Heliot Ramos celebrates a solo home run. AP

At the quarter mark of the season, there haven’t been enough acceptable efforts from a team that expected to compete for a playoff spot. Only thanks to a walkoff win in extra innings the following day did they begin Monday outside of the cellar in the NL West.

Time is running out fast to turn things around.

By the time the Giants return home from their first of two 10-game road trips this month, it will be Memorial Day weekend — traditionally an important inflection point in the MLB season.

By then, with about a third of the season behind them, teams have typically separated themselves into contenders and pretenders. The Giants, at this point, are squarely in the latter camp.

Consider this a make-or-break road trip.

“What would you do?” manager Tony Vitello said in reaction to the rarely heard boobirds. Getty Images

“I think this is going to be a good road trip,” Ramos said.

They’d better hope so.

Facing four games against the Dodgers, three more against the AL West-leading Athletics and a third series against another divisional foe ahead of them in the Diamondbacks, the Giants have already dug themselves a deep enough hole — they can’t allow it to get any bigger.

Sunday’s win staved off the distinction of holding the worst record in the majors — the Mets, Rockies, Angels and Astros were all either a half or full game worse — but their amount of stinkers like Saturday’s left them with the game’s worst run differential (minus-48).

In MLB’s wild-card era (since 1995), only a handful of teams have been able to recover from a start as poor as the Giants. Just six have won 16 or fewer of their first 40 games and went on to make the postseason, most notably the 2019 World Series-champion Nationals.

Extend that out to 50 games, where the Giants will be at the end of this road trip, and the list narrows to just three teams with 20 or fewer wins — the position the Giants will be in if they don’t win at least half their games during this stretch.

“This thing is about winning series,” Vitello said. “If you just break our season down into series, you win the first and you win the third, the second one was an embarrassing loss. But it’s not a slam dunk contest. You don’t get extra value or not based on how the win or loss went.”

Not only had the gap between them and the Dodgers grown to eight games entering Monday, they have to make up seven games and overtake as many teams just to get themselves into the picture for one of the NL’s three wild card spots.

A successful series in Los Angeles would go a long way to making up their deficit in the NL West. That could prove difficult for an offense that has scored the fewest runs in the majors, with Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Shohei Ohtani and Blake Snell expected to oppose them.

Heliot Ramos hitting an RBI double. AP

“As a team, we’ve just been trying to find momentum,” said Ramos, who scored the winning run Sunday when Jesus Rodriguez snuck a soft line drive into right field in the 12th inning. “I think we haven’t played our best baseball yet. I think that’s it. (Bad) stretches are going to happen.”

The walkoff win against the Pirates offered some signs for optimism. They got strong efforts from members of their struggling bullpen, including two scoreless innings from lefty specialist Ryan Borucki against a pocket of righties. Rafael Devers and Willy Adames both collected hits and the rest of their lineup provided enough timely knocks.

Could that be the kind of win that finally kickstarts some of that long-lost momentum?

“The last game was really reassuring of what we can do,” Ramos said. “It’s comforting for us to just know that we can carry that from one series to the next.”

San Francisco Giants Heliot Ramos and Willy Adames celebrate a home run. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

That hasn’t been the case so far this season.

San Francisco has ended its previous two home stands on positive notes, too. In April, they shut out the Phillies in back-to-back games, extended their winning streak to three games in their first game on the road against the Orioles and proceeded to lose their next four contests.

They took two of three from the Dodgers earlier this month and won their final two games against the Marlins. They hit the road and lost all six games they played — without homering.

Entering Monday, they had lost their last seven games away from Oracle Park.

This time around, at least, the road atmosphere could provide a respite of sorts from the pressures of playing in front of a fanbase whose patience has run thin.

That doesn’t mean they won’t hear their fair share of boos inside their archrivals’ ballpark.

“Hopefully it’s the good ones,” Ramos said. “When we’re winning.”

Dodgers vs. Giants game IV chat

Los Angeles, CA - March 31: Shortstop Mookie Betts #50 of the Los Angeles Dodgers throws out Gabriel Arias (not pictured) of the Cleveland Guardians at first base in the fifth inning of a baseball game at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Tuesday, March 31, 2026. (Photo by Keith Birmingham/MediaNews Group/Pasadena Star-News via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

The San Francisco Giants come to Dodger Stadium for the first time in 2026—Mookie Betts returns from the injured list.

Monday’s game info

  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Giants
  • Ballpark: Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles
  • Start time: 7:10 p.m. PT
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

Purple Row After Dark: It’s been a year. Grade Rockies manager Warren Schaeffer

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 11: (L-R) Manager Warren Schaeffer #4 and bench coach Jeff Pickler #61 of the Colorado Rockies look on from the dugout during the eighth inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on April 11, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It seems impossible, but one year ago today, the Colorado Rockies fired then-manager Bud Black and named third-base coach Warren Schaeffer their interim manager.

On November 24, 2025, he was given the permanent position.

As Rockies president of baseball operations Paul DePodesta said at the press conference introducing Schaeffer as permanent manager,

“I certainly explored the idea [of exploring other managerial candidates],” he told the media. “I thought it was important to do that and talk to a lot of people about different potential candidates, but ultimately, this is where I landed. And it was pretty quick. I mean, I would say even a week in with the number of people that I had spoken to, both in the organization and outside the organization, about ‘Schaeff’ it became pretty clear to me that this was a good direction to go.”

Whether or not this was the right decision was a subject we’ve written about a lot (see here, here, here, here, and here, for example).

Despite the change, the Rockies still finished 2025 with a historically bad 43-119, and while they are better in 2026, many of the problems remain.

So, Purple Row Night Owls, here’s the question: How would you grade Warren Schaeffer’s first year as the Rockies manager?

Vote in the poll, and explain your evaluation in the comments!


Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

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

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

How to watch San Francisco Giants vs. Los Angeles Dodgers

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - MAY 04: Trevor McDonald #72 of the San Francisco Giants pitches against the San Diego Padres in the top of the first inning at Oracle Park on May 04, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Francisco Giants head south today to begin a four-game series against the Los Angeles Dodgers this afternoon.

Taking the mound for the Giants will be right-hander Trevor McDonald, who will be making his second start for the Giants this season. His first start was in the team’s 3-2 win over the San Diego Padres last Monday, in which he allowed just one run on two hits with eight strikeouts in seven innings.

He’ll be facing off against Dodgers right-hander Rōki Sasaki, who enters tonight’s game with a 5.97 ERA, 6.81 FIP, with 26 strikeouts to 15 walks in 28.2 innings pitched. His last start was in the Dodgers’ 3-2 loss to the St. Louis Cardinals on May 2nd, in which he allowed three runs on five hits with four strikeouts and two walks in six innings.

Join the conversation!

Sign up for a user account and get:

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

Lineups

Giants

  1. Jung Hoo Lee — RF
  2. Luis Arráez — 2B
  3. Casey Schmitt — 1B
  4. Rafael Devers — DH
  5. Heliot Ramos — LF
  6. Willy Adames — SS
  7. Matt Chapman — 3B
  8. Harrison Bader — CF
  9. Jesús Rodríguez — C

RHP. Trevor McDonald

Dodgers

  1. Shohei Ohtani — DH
  2. Mookie Betts — SS
  3. Freddie Freeman — 1B
  4. Kyle Tucker — RF
  5. Will Smith — C
  6. Max Muncy — 3B
  7. Andy Pages — CF
  8. Teoscar Hernández — LF
  9. Hyeseong Kim — 2B

RHP. Rōki Sasaki

Game #41

Who: San Francisco Giants (16-24) vs. Los Angeles Dodgers (24-16)

Where: UNIQLO Field at Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles, California

When: 7:10 p.m. PT

Regional broadcast: NBC Sports Bay Area

National broadcast: n/a

Radio: KNBR 680 AM/104.5 FM, KSFN 1510 AM