Game Preview: Pittsburgh Penguins @ Boston Bruins 3/3/2026

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - JANUARY 11: Kris Letang #58 of the Pittsburgh Penguins checks Marat Khusnutdinov #92 of the Boston Bruins in the first period at the TD Garden on January 11, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Richard T Gagnon/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Who: Pittsburgh Penguins (31-15-13, 75 points, 2nd place Metropolitan Division) @ Boston Bruins (33-21-5, 71 points, 5th place Atlantic Division)

When: 7:00 p.m. ET

How to Watch: Streaming on ESPN+, local broadcasts on SN-PT and NESN

Pens’ Path Ahead: The Penguins are back home later this week for a three-game homestand, which starts Thursday against the Buffalo Sabres, continues Saturday against the Philadelphia Flyers and wraps up with a Sunday rematch against the Bruins.

Opponent Track: After heading into the Olympic break with back-to-back shootout losses, the Bruins have split their schedule since between a 4-2 win over the Columbus Blue Jackets and a 3-1 loss in Philadelphia.

Season Series: Joonas Korpisalo earned a 27-save, 1-0 shutout win against the Penguins the last time these two teams met on Jan. 11 at TD Garden.

Hidden Stat: The Bruins have claimed 10 straight wins at TD Garden, marking the franchise’s longest home win streak since the 2022-23 season.

Getting to know the Bruins

Projected lines

FORWARDS

Marat Khusnutdinov – Elias Lindholm – David Pastrnak

Casey Mittelstadt – Pavel Zacha – Viktor Arvidsson

Michael Eyssimont – Fraser Minten – Morgan Geekie

Tanner Jeannot – Sean Kuraly – Mark Kastelic

DEFENSEMEN

Jonathan Aspirot / Charlie McAvoy

Hampus Lindholm / Mason Lohrei

Nikita Zadorov / Henri Jokirharju

Goalies: Jeremy Swayman, Joonas Korpisalo

Potential scratches: Alex Steeves, Andrew Peeke, Jordan Harris

Injured Reserve: Dans Locmelis

  • The Bruins were riding an eight-game point streak, dating back to before the Olympic break, before dropping a 3-1 decision to the Flyers on Saturday in Philadelphia.
  • Elias Lindholm and Pavel Zacha, both sidelined ahead of the Olympic break with upper-body injuries, are back to anchor the Bruins’ top two lines.

Season stats
via hockeydb

  • Morgan Geekie just tied a career high with 33 goals, and he’s done it in just 58 games this season.
  • The Bruins’ top defenseman, Charlie McAvoy, is riding a nine-game point streak dating all the way back to Jan. 22.
  • The penalty kill has been a weakness this season for the Bruins, who are heading into this matchup ranked 27th in the NHL with a 76.7 percent PK rate. The team reportedly made some significant changes to the unit after the Olympic break, per The Athletic’s Fluto Shinzawa. Since then— albeit in a small sample size— the Bruins PK has been perfect, going 1-for-1 against the Blue Jackets and 3-for-3 against the Flyers last week.
  • The Bruins are in the market for a “top-six forward and a right-shot defenseman” at the trade deadline, according to a recent report from The Fourth Period’s David Pagnotta. They’re reportedly dangling AHL forward Matthew Poitras as a potential trade piece, per Pagnotta.
  • Here’s a look at the Eastern Conference playoff race as of Monday night, per NHL.com. The Bruins are just two points up on the race for the final Wild Card spot in the East, although they have three games in hand on the Washington Capitals for the spot.

And now for the Pens

Projected lines 

FORWARDS

Egor Chinakhov – Tommy Novak – Evgeni Malkin

Avery Hayes – Rickard Rakell – Bryan Rust

Anthony Mantha – Ben Kindel – Justin Brazeau

Connor Dewar – Blake Lizotte – Noel Acciari

DEFENSEMEN

Parker Wotherspoon / Erik Karlsson

Sam Girard / Kris Letang

Ryan Shea / Connor Clifton

Goalies: Arturs Silovs, Stuart Skinner played yesterday

Potential Scratches: Kevin Hayes, Ryan Graves, Ilya Solovyov

IR: Sidney Crosby, Filip Hallander, Jack St. Ivany

  • Not much news from Monday. As of Monday, Evgeni Malkin was set to have a talk with Penguins management about a potential extension “in the next day or two,” per The Athletic’s Josh Yohe.
  • A few milestones potentially on the table tonight: Rickard Rakell is three assists short of 300, Sam Girard is two assists shy of 200 and Kris Letang is one point back from No. 800.
  • Per Pens PR: Only the Washington Capitals and Vegas Golden Knights have more 20-goal scorers than in Pittsburgh, where Sidney Crosby, Anthony Mantha and Bryan Rust have each reached the threshold this season.
  • Another fun fact from Pens PR: the Pens’ fourth line of Noel Acciari, Connor Dewar and Blake Lizotte has been on the ice for seven 5v5 goals against, the fewest of any forward line that has been together for at least 250 minutes at even strength this season.
  • The Pens’ Sunday win over the Vegas Golden Knights boosted their MoneyPuck playoff odds to 89.4 percent heading into Tuesday.

Suns Reacts Survey: Should Jalen Green come off the bench?

PHOENIX, AZ - FEBRUARY 24: Jalen Green #4 of the Phoenix Suns handles the ball during the game against the Boston Celtics on February 24, 2026 at PHX Arena in Phoenix, Arizona. 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 Kate Frese/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NBA. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Suns fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.


With Devin Booker returning tonight, expect a different starting lineup than the one the Phoenix Suns have been deploying the past few games amid all their injuries. Collin Gillespie will be running the point guard position as he has been the past three-plus months, Booker will be next to him in the backcourt, Mark Williams will be at center, and Royce O’Neale will be the team’s power forward.

The question is who will be playing the small forward position.

Grayson Allen has solidified his position as the team’s bench scorer, something he continued to do amid the team’s injuries, so it will come down to Ryan Dunn or Jalen Green.

Both have started the last few games, with Dunn having his first set of back-to-back double-digit scoring games since November, and Green has continued to struggle since coming back from his hamstring injury. The 24-year-old is averaging a career low 13 points per game on career low efficiency from the field, three, and free throw line. He’s especially struggled in his last four games, shooting 28% from the field and 15% from three.

While he did hit a buzzer-beating three against the Orlando Magic, it’s been a struggle lately for the fifth-year guard.

One of the key pieces the Suns acquired when they dealt Kevin Durant to the Houston Rockets back in the offseason, Green has one of the highest upsides out of any player on the Phoenix roster. Coming into the season, Green was the only player outside of Devin Booker on the Suns to average at least 20 points per game for an entire season, and he did it twice in his first four seasons, including last year, where he was the leading scorer on a Houston Rockets team that was the second seed in the Western Conference.

He had a 38-point playoff game in his second-career playoff game. Amid all his defensive struggles, inefficiency problems, and size, he has the potential to have a big offensive game like few can on the Phoenix Suns. With the team lacking draft capital for the foreseeable future and carrying few young players on the roster, Green’s progression remains a vital part of the Suns’ future. While Dunn is also one of the team’s few young players, Dunn does not have the offensive potential that Green does, and has been given ample opportunities throughout his two seasons to prove himself and not done so consistently. Green has not been given that opportunity yet with the Suns.

Green has only played 12 games this season. When he returned from his hamstring injury, he re-injured it. Then, when he returned, he quickly had a few more absences due to injury. It’s fair to wonder how his conditioning has impacted his play, given how inconsistently he’s been in the lineup, as Jordan Ott spoke about recently. The question is, should he be playing more with the starters or the reserves? You decide.

Kuminga, Hawks both needed this kind of joy

ATLANTA, GA - MARCH 1: Jonathan Kuminga #0 of the Atlanta Hawks smiles during the game against the Portland Trail Blazers on March 1, 2026 at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia. 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 Adam Hagy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

I’ll admit it: I was skeptical when the Hawks acquired a guy who didn’t exactly endear himself to four-time championship head coach Steve Kerr. But clearly, sometimes a change in scenery is all you really need.

Or maybe the Warriors just didn’t know what they had.

Jonathan Kuminga was drafted seventh overall in the 2021 NBA Draft, and the original plan was for him to help guide the Golden State Warriors into a new era once the core dynasty players aged out.

Well, that didn’t quite happen — and to the great benefit of these Atlanta Hawks.

Since arriving here at the trade deadline, in just three games (albeit against the tanking Wizards and the Blazers minus Deni Avdija), Jonathan Kuminga has given fans something to believe in with this team. In 26.7 minutes per game, he’s averaging 21.3 points, 7.7 rebounds, and 3.3 assists per contest while shooting 68/56/77 in the traditional shooting triple slash (a blistering 79% true shooting percentage).

And it hasn’t been one-way impact. He’s been a big contributor on defense as well with the team a +43 in his 80 court minutes so far.

There were concerns with his unwillingness to move the ball in a system that encourages quick decision making. Well, that concern has been assuaged with his sharp passing and good decision making so far. His 10-assist to eight-turnover ratio far undersells how easy he’s moved the ball so far and how well he’s seeing the floor.

After the missed corner three last time out against Portland, Kuminga hustles for the rebound in the video below. With the Blazers trying to reset their defense, he finds Landale for an easy dunk:

There were also concerns with his style of play on offense for a guy whose best attribute is getting into the restricted area. But so far, Kuminga has attacked the rim and been rewarded for his efforts.

Out of his 64 points scored, 32 of them are from the painted area and another 17 are off free throws after getting fouled. That means that 49-of-64 points or 77% of his scoring is coming from his downhill pressure.

From the beginning of the season until February 23, the day before Kuminga’s debut for the Hawks, the team was 27th in free throw rate (a ratio of free throw attempts to field goal attempts) at 0.232. Kuminga has a career free throw rate of 0.364 — and through three games, it’s a sky-high 0.710 here. That’s been a huge shot in the arm for a Quin Snyder team that wants to drive and kick more and more.

Additionally, the other 15 points are from his 5-for-9 (56%) performance from three-point land. He’s a career 33% three-point shooter, so I don’t expect this accuracy to continue, but his willingness to let it fly will certainly endear himself to the current coaching staff.

There were even concerns with his ability to fit in a team defense that needs forwards and centers alike to contribute to keeping opponents out of the restricted area. Well, he’s looked very engaged on that end, with five steals and a block so far.

Look at him slide his puppies in the clip below. And he finishes the possession with a tough close out on Jerami Grant:

In this next one, Kuminga sinks into the paint as the low man on defense. He gets off a clean weakside block on Tristan Vukcevic that starts a break the other way:

And here, he stays attached with his man, Grant again, while keeping eyes on the driving Jrue Holiday. But when he notices Holiday get too deep under the rim without a good outlet, Kuminga peels over to the relocating Blake Wesley and intercepts the pass:

The Hawks have struggled against physical teams like the Detroit Pistons and Toronto Raptors this year. They’ve gotten pushed around on the boards and outmuscled on drives more times than I can count.

The front office responded by beefing up at the deadline. First, was picking up the 6-foot-11, 255-pound Jock Landale for free (minus a bit of cash money). Now comes in a 6-foot-7, 225-point forward who has no problem mixing it up when need be. And the team has responded with a fun brand of basketball in the past month.

Finally.

Sometimes, it’s best to not overthink things. Jonathan Kuminga possesses a level of athleticism, power, and open court pace that you can’t teach. There was always lottery talent there, even if it didn’t shine as much in the Bay Area as many had hoped.

Now he’s playing his game — and that joy has been infectious.

The Hawks have blown out three straight opponents, with the latest a highlight dunkfest for Kuminga. It doesn’t take long to notice that he’s displaying a level of excitement to be playing the game of basketball and getting a new start in Atlanta:

And the greater NBA world is even taking notice. This from NBA insider Brian Windhorst on ESPN’s NBA Today:

In retrospect, there was really only upside when the Hawks made this move in the dead of night the evening before the trade deadline. When the cost is just an illness-stricken 30-year-old center who has only managed to play one game (in a blowout loss) for his new team, the Golden State Warriors, it’s already clear that the trade is a big win for Atlanta — even if ‘JK’ comes back to Earth a bit.

The Hawks experimented for a few minutes with both he and Jalen Johnson sharing the floor, and I suspect we’ll see more of that given the collective talent level. But there also may be a possible skillset overlap to look into in these lineups.

These next 20-plus games will be an interesting showcase to evaluate his fit, and that means it’s entirely possible he plays his way into a long-term future here.

At the end of this season, the Hawks own a $24.3 million team option on his contract. That ultimately means there’s no reason for him to walk in free agency unless the team chooses to part ways. Either you work out a trade, an extension, or merely pick up the option and figure things out during the 2026-27 season.

These past few games have been fun, but we truly need a bigger sample size against better teams to declare the trade an absolute heist. Still, the early returns have been everything we would have wanted and more.

It’s a little too early to say I was way off base, but I promise I will happily eat my words if Kuminga continues to play well enough to force the Hawks to keep him in their plans.

YouTube Gold: Dave DeBusschere Was A Special Player

(Original Caption) 4/20/1973- Boston, MA: Overhead view under basket during game 3 of NBA playoffs at Boston Garden. Dave Debusschere (R) of Knicks and Paul Silas (C) of Celtics wait for possible rebound during 1st quarter action. Walt Frazier of the Knicks looks on.

Dave DeBusscherre is an underappreciated great of the game.

Born in 1940 in Detroit, DeBusscherre was a talented basketball and baseball player. He attended the University of Detroit (now Detroit Mercy). Like Danny Ainge and Duke legend Dick Groat, DeBusscherre played professionally in both sports.

Amazingly, in 1964-65, at the tender age of 24, he was named player-coach of the Detroit Pistons. His greatest fame came after he was traded to the New York Knicks and became a key part of two championship teams there.

DeBusscherre was famous for intensity, defense, and hustle. When you watch this video, you’ll see just how much his teammates thought of him. He was really the final piece of a great team.

He retired in 1974, and after working for the ABA’s New York Nets for a year, became the final commissioner of the ABA, helping to organize the 1976 merger.

After that, he went back to the Knicks and ultimately got to draft Patrick Ewing in 1985.

Sadly, DeBusscherre died of a heart attack on a Manhattan street in 2003.

He was a tremendous player though and his ability to accept and perfect his role with the Knicks was a key to their brilliant post-Celtics dynasty run.

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Bucs are scoring runs in the Grapefruit League

Mar 1, 2026; Jupiter, Florida, USA; Pittsburgh Pirates shortstop Konnor Griffin (75) hits a two-run home run against the St. Louis Cardinals during the first inning at Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images | Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

The Pittsburgh Pirates are a surprising 9-2 in this year’s Spring Training Grapefruit League following yesterday’s 4-1 win over the Tampa Bay Rays. They are currently on a five-game win streak and have the best record in all of Spring Training. And while it’s ceratinly way early, and the real games haven’t even started yet, the Bucs looks like they’ve made a dent in one of their longstanding problems — scoring runs.

The Pirates have 65 runs scored over their 11 games, or almost 6 per contest, which is good enough for third-best in the Grapefruit League. Their +31 run differential is good enough for the second best in the Grapefruit and in all of Spring Training.

The lack of power in last season’s Bucs lineup was stark, but at the moment in Spring Training, they have 13 team dingers, which is tied for ninth across the Majors, including 3 homers from top prospect Konnor Griffin, 2 from Yordany De Los Santos, and single dingers from Oneil Cruz, Ryan O’Hearn, Endy Rodriguez, and Jhostynxon Garcia, as well as a few from a couple guys unlikely to be playing in the Majors this year.

In addition, the Bucs are hitting .274 across all Spring Training games, a number I’m pretty sure we’re all happy with after a 2025 in which they hit a dreadful .231, which was third-worst in the Majors. Nick Gonzales, along with Cruz and Garcia, are all hitting .538 across 5 and 6 games respectively this Spring to help lead the Bucs in the average department.

When you combine some above-average hitting with one of the league’s best pitching staffs, this is the result. The Bucs are second in all of Spring Training in ERA, third in team WHIP, fifth in strikeouts and second in opposing team batting average. I don’t think any of us are surprised there. But we’ve all been wondering how good the Bucs could be with even some decent hitting, and we’re getting a glimpse of that this Spring.

Yes, it’s super early, and the real games haven’t even started yet, but if the Buccos can translate their Spring Training hitting into similar success in the regular season, they have every chance to be back in the MLB headlines for all of the right reasons.

March Madness bracket predictions: No. 1 seeds to First Four of NCAA tournament

March has arrived in men's college basketball, and the Madness has already begun.

Over the weekend, several teams that were in the mix with Connecticut for the final 1-seed saw some crushing losses that have them out of contention, while other teams made some positive headway with their projected NCAA tournament seedings, such as Florida annihilating No. 19 Arkansas by 34 points to jump in the mix for that 1-seed.

That is just the tip of the iceberg, though.

The bubble remains congested and work in progress heading into the final week of the regular season for the sports' power five conferences and some mid-major conferences. Auburn finds itself sitting on the outside after a Quad 3 loss to Mississippi dropped them to 1-7 in their last eight games.

Several other Power 5 conference teams — ACC, Big Ten, Big 12, SEC and Big East — that look to be "locks" for March Madness have hit a few roadblocks that can knock them down a seed line if they aren't able to rebound in the final week of the regular season or if they can't get can't a win (or two) at their respective conference tournaments.

Here’s a look at the latest NCAA tournament bracket projection, which takes into account games played through Monday, March 2:

March Madness bracket predictions

Last Four In

  • Santa Clara **
  • New Mexico **
  • TCU **
  • Indiana **

First Four Out

  • Auburn
  • Virginia Commonwealth
  • San Diego State
  • Seton Hall

No. 1 Seeds

  • Duke (AQ — ACC)
  • Arizona (AQ — Big 12)
  • Michigan (AQ — Big Ten)
  • UConn (AQ — Big East)

There is no change at the 1-seed line since the last projection. It's UConn vs. the likes of Florida/Illinois/Houston for that final 1-seed spot. The Huskies handled business last week to separate themselves from the 2-seed line a bit with their eighth Quad 1 win of the season against St. John's and a gutsy win over Seton Hall.

No. 2 Seeds

  • Florida (AQ — SEC)
  • Illinois
  • Houston
  • Michigan State

Florida is beginning to come into the mix and knock on the door of a 1-seed following its 34-point win over No. 19 Arkansas over the weekend, where it got 23 points from Thomas Haugh. The Gators are 18-2 since their less-than-ideal 5-4 start to the season, where they were unable to lock up a signature Quad 1 win in non-conference play.

Michigan State bumps up to the 2-seed line after a 2-0 week on the road with wins at No. 14 Purdue and Indiana. The Spartans have a big one coming up against Michigan to end the regular season before heading to the Big Ten tournament in Chicago.

No. 3 Seeds

  • Iowa State
  • Purdue
  • Kansas
  • Gonzaga (AQ — West Coast Conference)

Iowa State and Purdue are both losing some steam heading into the final week of the regular season. The Cyclones lost out on an opportunity to keep themselves in the mix for the 1-seed vs. Texas Tech going into Monday's loss at Arizona, as the path to the No. 2 seed had opened up for them a bit before their game vs. the Red Raiders with Houston's three-game losing skid and the Boilermakers' loss to Michigan State.

For the Boilermakers, Matt Painter's squad is 5-6 in their last 11 games, and has lost three of their last four. In addition to its loss to Michigan State last Thursday at Mackey Arena, Purdue followed that up with a loss at Ohio State, a then-bubble team. Gonzaga hangs onto the 3-seed heading into the West Coast Conference tournament. It's a big March coming up for Mark Few's squad before they head to the reorganized Pac-12 next year.

No. 4 Seeds

Alabama stole one on the road at Tennessee to continue its quiet rise up to the 4-seed line. The Crimson Tide has now won eight straight and has eight Quad 1 wins going into Tuesday's road game at Georgia, the latter of which is tied for the fifth most in the country.

No. 5 Seeds

  • Tennessee
  • Arkansas
  • St. John's
  • Vanderbilt

St. John's bounced back from a 32-point loss at UConn with its own 32-point win over Villanova. Arkansas ended a rather strong month of February, during which it went 5-2, but ending in ugly fashion with its loss to Florida.

No. 6 Seeds

  • North Carolina
  • Louisville
  • Kentucky
  • Brigham Young

BYU might be "safe" to make the NCAA tournament, but the Cougars' chances of having a six-seed or higher are now in question. Since starting 16-1 on the season, BYU has lost eight of its last 12 games, which includes two bad back-to-back losses to Oklahoma State and West Virginia.

Kentucky has been a tough team to get a read on for most of the season, and it's why the Wildcats have moved around a ton in bracket projections and top 25 rankings. Mark Pope's squad takes a two-game winning streak, which features a top-25 win over Vanderbilt, into its road game at Texas A&M on Tuesday.

Louisville fell out of the latest USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll following back-to-back losses to North Carolina and Clemson. The Cardinals are 1-3 in their last four games.

No. 7 Seeds

  • Wisconsin
  • Villanova
  • Saint Mary's
  • North Carolina State

Villanova drops down a seed line following a no-show performance at Madison Square Garden against St. John's over the weekend. The Wildcats will have to find a way to fill the loss of Matt Hodge with their 3-point shooting in their final two games (at DePaul, vs. Xavier) before heading back up to The Garden next week for the Big East tournament.

No. 8 Seeds

  • Saint Louis (AQ — Atlantic 10)
  • Utah State (AQ — Mountain West)
  • Miami
  • Iowa

The Atlantic 10 continues to look like a one-bid conference with Saint Louis, but the Billikens' loss to Dayton has opened the possibility that there could be a different representative from the conference after next week's tournament in Washington D.C. ... perhaps Virginia Commonwealth under first-year head coach Phil Martelli Jr.?

A loss to last-place Penn State could not have come at a worse time for Iowa. The Hawkeyes hang on to an 8-seed for now, though they've now lost four of their last six.

No. 9 seeds

  • Texas
  • Georgia
  • Texas A&M
  • Clemson

Clemson picked up a much-needed win over Louisville over the weekend to snap a four-game losing skid. The Tigers have a Quad 1 opportunity on Tuesday at North Carolina awaiting them, where a win could really boost their "okay" 6-5 Quad 1 record before the ACC tournament. Texas A&M is slowly moving its way down to the 10-seed line, as the Aggies have dropped six of their past eight games.

No. 10 seeds

  • Central Florida
  • UCLA
  • Ohio State
  • Missouri

Ohio State, you can exhale for a second. The Buckeyes' win over Purdue on Sunday bumps Jake Diebler's squad up to the 10-seed line heading. Ohio State still needs a win or two to feel "safe," but the Buckeyes hopes of making the cutline and snapping their three-year drought of not making the tournament look a lot better now than before the ball tipped against Purdue.

No. 11 Seeds

  • Miami (Ohio) (AQ — Mid-American)
  • Southern Methodist
  • Santa Clara **
  • New Mexico **
  • TCU **
  • Indiana **

From the eye-test, Indiana shouldn't be making the field — even as a First Four team — given the fact that the Hoosiers have lost five of their last seven games and are nine games back of first place in the Big Ten standings. It's their top-50 NET ranking (No. 41) that keeps them in Dayton for now.

TCU is an interesting team on the bubble. The Horned Frogs' metrics are the "best," as they are No. 45 in the NET and No. 49 on KenPom with a 4-6 Quad 1 record, but they've been able to turn around their season in the Big 12 rather nicely in the last month to give them a shot at their fourth March Madness appearance in the last five years. Since starting 3-6 in Big 12 play, TCU is 6-1 with two games against Texas Tech and Cincinnati to go in the regular season.

New Mexico went 1-1 last week and has two games this week against Colorado State and Utah State before heading to the Mountain West tournament, where the Lobos are currently projected to be the 2-seed in the field. Santa Clara earned the No. 3 seed and a bye to the quarterfinals in the WCC tournament.

No. 12 Seeds

  • South Florida (AQ — American)
  • Belmont (AQ — Missouri Valley)
  • Yale (AQ — Ivy League)
  • Stephen F. Austin (AQ — Southland)

No. 13 Seeds

  • High Point (AQ — Big South)
  • Hawaii (AQ — Big West)
  • UNC Wilmington (AQ — Colonial Athletic Association)
  • Liberty (AQ — Conference USA)

No. 14 Seeds

  • East Tennessee State (AQ — Southern)
  • North Dakota State (AQ — Summit League)
  • Central Arkansas (AQ — Atlantic Sun)
  • Utah Valley (AQ — Western Athletic)

No. 15 Seeds

  • Portland State (AQ — Big Sky)
  • Navy (AQ — Patriot League)
  • Merrimack (AQ — Metro Atlantic Athletic)
  • Wright State (AQ — Horizon)

No. 16 Seeds

  • Troy (AQ — Sun Belt)
  • LIU (AQ — Northeast)
  • Bethune-Cookman (AQ — Southwestern Atlantic) **
  • Morehead State (AQ — Ohio Valley) **
  • Howard (AQ — Mid-Eastern Athletic) **
  • UMBC (AQ — America East) **

** Denotes playing in First Four game

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness bracket predictions: Who's in, out of NCAA tournament?

March Madness bracketology: NCAA Tournament projection has changes on bubble

With Selection Sunday now less than two weeks away, the likely top seeds in the NCAA men's tournament field appear to be separating themselves from the pack.

Three of our projected No. 1 seeds were involved in highly-anticipated contests against highly-ranked opponents over the weekend. Duke, Arizona and Michigan all won those matchups in impressive fashion, solidifying their place on the first line of the bracket. The fourth No. 1 is also unchanged, though Connecticut might be challenged in the next couple of weeks by a hard-charging Florida squad. For now, the Gators hold steady as the leaders on the No. 2 line along with Houston, Iowa State and Nebraska.

But while there is clarity near the top of the bracket, there’s a lot of chaos around the bubble. The team that did the most to help its case this weekend was Ohio State, now in much safer territory thanks to a win against Purdue.

Auburn remains in freefall, barely clinging to a spot in the First Four after going just 1-7 since Jan. 31. New Mexico nudges back into the field with a key Mountain West win, while Indiana, California and San Diego State find themselves on the outside.

March Madness bracketology: NCAA Tournament projection

March Madness last four in

UCLA, Santa Clara, New Mexico, Auburn.

March Madness first four out

Indiana, Virginia Commonwealth, California, San Diego State.

NCAA tournament bids conference breakdown

Multi-bid leagues: SEC (11), Big Ten (9), ACC (8), Big 12 (8), Big East (3), West Coast (3), Mountain West (2).

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness predictions: Bracketology forecast for NCAA Tournament

Who's in WBC? Team by team look at MLB stars playing on global stage

The World Baseball Classic is back, and with it comes major-league star power battling for national pride.

Nearly 200 Major League Baseball players will take part in this year's WBC, the worldwide tournament that started in 2006. Japan has won three of the five tournaments, including 2023 when Shohei Ohtani struck out then-Angels-teammate Mike Trout to secure victory over the United States.

The WBC begins Wednesday, March 4 with Taiwan taking on Australia in the first pool play matchup. The United States kicks off its tournament in Houston on Friday, March 6 against Brazil.

Rosters at this year's WBC are littered with some of baseball's biggest stars. Czechia is the only team of the 20 that are competing to not have an MLB-rostered player on its squad.

Here is a team-by-team look at the MLB players competing:

Australia

  • Max Durrington (Athletics)
  • Travis Bazzana (Guardians)
  • Kailen Hamson (Orioles)
  • Mitch Neunborn (Phillies)
  • Blake Townsend (Rangers)
  • Kai Wynyard (Rangers)
  • Curtis Mead (White Sox)

Brazil

  • Lucas Ramirez (Angels)
  • Pedro Da Costa Lemos (Mariners)
  • Gabriel Barbosa (Phillies)
  • Pietro Albanez (Pirates)
  • Daniel Missaki (Rangers)

Canada

  • Denzel Clarke (Athletics)
  • Adam Macko (Blue Jays)
  • Jameson Taillon (Cubs)
  • Indigo Diaz (D‑backs)
  • Michael Soroka (D‑backs)
  • Bo Naylor (Guardians)
  • Matt Wilkinson (Guardians)
  • Josh Naylor (Mariners)
  • Owen Caissie (Marlins)
  • Liam Hicks (Marlins)
  • Otto Lopez (Marlins)
  • Jared Young (Mets)
  • Micah Ashman (Orioles)
  • Tyler O’Neill (Orioles)
  • Carter Loewen (Padres)
  • Cal Quantrill (Rangers)
  • Antoine Jean (Rockies)
  • Edouard Julien (Rockies)
  • Eric Cerantola (Royals)
  • Abraham Toro (Royals)

Colombia

  • Gustavo Campero (Angels)
  • Brayan Buelvas (Athletics)
  • Reiver Sanmartin (Giants)
  • Dayan Frias (Guardians)
  • Michael Arroyo (Mariners)
  • Guillo Zuñiga (Mariners)
  • Sean Linan (Nationals)
  • Austin Bergner (Rangers)
  • Nabil Crismatt (Rangers)
  • Tayron Guerrero (Red Sox)
  • David Lorduy (Reds)
  • Jorge Alfaro (Royals)
  • Gio Urshela (Twins)

Cuba

  • Yoán Moncada (Angels)
  • Francis Texido (Angels)
  • Yariel Rodríguez (Blue Jays)
  • Yiddi Cappe (Marlins)
  • Daviel Hurtado (Mets)
  • Naykel Cruz (Orioles)
  • Emmanuel Chapman (Pirates)
  • Alexander Vargas (Reds)
  • Omar Hernández (Royals)

Dominican Republic

  • Jeremy Peña (Astros)
  • Elvis Alvarado (Athletics)
  • Luis Severino (Athletics)
  • Vladimir Guerrero Jr. (Blue Jays)
  • Abner Uribe (Brewers)
  • Ketel Marte (D‑backs)
  • Geraldo Perdomo (D‑backs)
  • Carlos Santana (D‑backs)
  • Joel Peguero (Giants)
  • Jose Ramirez (Guardians — expected to miss first round)
  • Luis Castillo (Mariners)
  • Julio Rodríguez (Mariners)
  • Sandy Alcantara (Marlins)
  • Agustín Ramírez (Marlins)
  • Huascar Brazobán (Mets)
  • Juan Soto (Mets)
  • Yaramil Hiraldo (Orioles)
  • Manny Machado (Padres)
  • Wandy Peralta (Padres)
  • Fernando Tatis Jr. (Padres)
  • Johan Rojas (Phillies)
  • Cristopher Sánchez (Phillies)
  • Oneil Cruz (Pirates)
  • Yohan Ramirez (Pirates)
  • Dennis Santana (Pirates)
  • Gregory Soto (Pirates)
  • Junior Caminero (Rays)
  • Edwin Uceta (Rays)
  • Brayan Bello (Red Sox)
  • Juan Mejia (Rockies)
  • Carlos Estévez (Royals)
  • Seranthony Domínguez (White Sox)
  • Yerry De Los Santos (Yankees)
  • Camilo Doval (Yankees)
  • Amed Rosario (Yankees)
  • Austin Wells (Yankees)

Great Britain

  • Najer Victor (Angels)
  • Willis Cresswell (Blue Jays)
  • Miles Langhorne (Brewers)
  • Jack Seppings (Brewers)
  • Matt Koperniak (Cardinals)
  • BJ Murray (Cubs)
  • Kristian Robinson (D‑backs)
  • Antonio Knowles (Dodgers)
  • Tristan Beck (Giants)
  • Ian Lewis (Marlins)
  • Michael Petersen (Marlins)
  • Harry Ford (Nationals)
  • Ryan Long (Orioles)
  • Gary Gill Hill (Rays)
  • Owen Wild (Rays)
  • Jack Anderson (Red Sox)
  • Nate Eaton (Red Sox)
  • Ivan Johnson (Reds)
  • Brendan Beck (Yankees)
  • Jazz Chisholm Jr. (Yankees)

Israel

  • RJ Schreck (Blue Jays)
  • C.J. Stubbs (Blue Jays)
  • Zach Levenson (Cardinals)
  • Noah Mendlinger (Cardinals)
  • Jake Gelof (Dodgers)
  • Harrison Bader (Giants)
  • Ryan Prager (Guardians)
  • Charlie Beilenson (Mariners)
  • Josh Blum (Mets)
  • Jordan Geber (Mets)
  • Benjamin Simon (Mets)
  • Robert Stock (Mets)
  • Matt Mervis (Nationals)
  • Dean Kremer (Orioles)
  • Josh Mallitz (Padres)
  • Max Lazar (Phillies)
  • Garrett Stubbs (Phillies)
  • Spencer Horwitz (Pirates)
  • Cole Carrigg (Rockies)
  • Troy Johnston (Rockies)
  • Eli Morgan (Royals)
  • Matt Bowman (Twins)
  • Carlos Lequerica (Tigers)
  • Harrison Cohen (Yankees)

Italy

  • Sam Aldegheri (Angels)
  • Camden Minacci (Angels)
  • Zach Dezenzo (Astros)
  • Andrew Fischer (Brewers)
  • Gordon Graceffo (Cardinals)
  • Thomas Saggese (Cardinals)
  • Dylan DeLucia (Guardians)
  • Matt Festa (Guardians)
  • Dominic Canzone (Mariners)
  • Miles Mastrobuoni (Mariners)
  • Jakob Marsee (Marlins)
  • Joe Jacques (Mets)
  • Nick Morabito (Mets)
  • Alek Jacob (Padres)
  • Ron Marinaccio (Padres)
  • Aaron Nola (Phillies)
  • Dante Nori (Phillies)
  • Alessandro Ercolani (Pirates)
  • Joe La Sorsa (Pirates)
  • Kyle Nicolas (Pirates)
  • Michael Lorenzen (Rockies)
  • Jac Caglianone (Royals)
  • Vinnie Pasquantino (Royals)
  • Dan Altavilla (Twins)
  • Sam Antonacci (White Sox)
  • Kyle Teel (White Sox)
  • Greg Weissert (Red Sox)

Japan

Japan's Shohei Ohtani (16) celebrates after Japan's victory against the United States in the World Baseball Classic at LoanDepot Park in Miami on March 21, 2023.

  • Yusei Kikuchi (Angels)
  • Tatsuya Imai (Astros)
  • Kazuma Okamoto (Blue Jays)
  • Seiya Suzuki (Cubs)
  • Shohei Ohtani (Dodgers)
  • Yoshinobu Yamamoto (Dodgers)
  • Shinnosuke Ogasawara (Nationals)
  • Yuki Matsui (Padres)
  • Masataka Yoshida (Red Sox)
  • Munetaka Murakami (White Sox)

Korea

  • Shay Whitcomb (Astros)
  • Riley O’Brien (Cardinals)
  • Hyeseong Kim (Dodgers)
  • Jung Hoo Lee (Giants)
  • Dane Dunning (Mariners)
  • Woo‑Suk Go (Tigers)
  • Jahmai Jones (Tigers)

Mexico

  • Samy Natera Jr. (Angels)
  • Joey Meneses (Athletics)
  • Alejandro Kirk (Blue Jays)
  • Javier Assad (Cubs)
  • Alek Thomas (D‑backs)
  • Randy Arozarena (Mariners)
  • Andrés Muñoz (Mariners)
  • Jared Serna (Marlins)
  • Alex Carrillo (Mets)
  • Daniel Duarte (Mets)
  • Omar Cruz (Padres)
  • Victor Lizarraga (Padres)
  • Alan Rangel (Phillies)
  • Taijuan Walker (Phillies)
  • Nick Gonzales (Pirates)
  • Robert Garcia (Rangers)
  • Alejandro Osuna (Rangers)
  • Jonathan Aranda (Rays)
  • Jarren Duran (Red Sox)
  • Irvin Machuca (Reds)
  • Brennan Bernardino (Rockies)
  • Victor Vodnik (Rockies)
  • Nestor German (Orioles)

Netherlands

  • Ozzie Albies (Braves)
  • Jurickson Profar (Braves)
  • Chadwick Tromp (Braves)
  • Druw Jones (D‑backs)
  • Jaitoine Kelly (D‑backs)
  • Shawndrick Oduber (Dodgers)
  • Dayson Croes (Giants)
  • Dylan Wilson (Mariners)
  • Jamdrick Cornelia (Mets)
  • Xander Bogaerts (Padres)
  • Jaydenn Estanista (Phillies)
  • Antwone Kelly (Pirates)
  • Ryjeteri Merite (Reds)
  • Ceddanne Rafaela (Red Sox)
  • Brandon Herbold (Royals)
  • Kenley Jansen (Tigers)

Nicaragua

  • Ismael Munguia (Blue Jays)
  • Stiven Cruz (Brewers)
  • Carlos Rodriguez (Brewers)
  • Freddy Zamora (Brewers)
  • Mark Vientos (Mets)
  • Oscar Rayo (Royals)
  • Duque Hebbert (Tigers)

Panama

  • James Gonzalez (Athletics)
  • Leo Jiménez (Blue Jays)
  • Javy Guerra (Braves)
  • Leo Bernal (Cardinals)
  • Iván Herrera (Cardinals)
  • Miguel Amaya (Cubs)
  • Christian Bethancourt (Cubs)
  • Erian Rodriguez (Cubs)
  • Logan Allen (Guardians)
  • Abdiel Mendoza (Mariners)
  • Jose Ramos (Mets)
  • Enrique Bradfield Jr. (Orioles)
  • Edmundo Sosa (Phillies)
  • Miguel Cienfuegos (Padres)
  • José Caballero (Yankees)

Puerto Rico

  • Matthew Lugo (Angels)
  • Carlos Cortes (Athletics)
  • Darell Hernaiz (Athletics)
  • José Berríos (Blue Jays)
  • Bryan Torres (Cardinals)
  • Yacksel Ríos (Cubs)
  • Nolan Arenado (D‑backs)
  • Edwin Díaz (Dodgers)
  • Heliot Ramos (Giants)
  • Jose Espada (Orioles)
  • Rico Garcia (Orioles)
  • Luis Vázquez (Orioles)
  • Alexis Díaz (Rangers)
  • Ricardo Velez (Rangers)
  • Jovani Morán (Red Sox)
  • Eduardo Rivera (Red Sox)
  • Edwin Arroyo (Reds)
  • Willi Castro (Rockies)
  • Seth Lugo (Royals)
  • Luis Quinones (Twins)
  • Fernando Cruz (Yankees)
  • Elmer Rodríguez (Yankees)

Taiwan

  • Wei‑En Lin (Athletics)
  • Tzu‑Chen Sha (Athletics)
  • Chen Zhong‑Ao Zhuang (Athletics)
  • Jonathon Long (Cubs)
  • Yu‑Min Lin (D‑backs)
  • Stuart Fairchild (Guardians)
  • Po‑Yu Chen (Pirates)
  • Hao Yu Lee (Tigers)

United States

Team USA's Kyle Schwarber reacts after hitting a home run against Japan at the World Baseball Classic in the eighth inning at LoanDepot Park in Miami on March 21, 2023.

  • Ernie Clement (Blue Jays)
  • Jeff Hoffman (Blue Jays)
  • Tyler Rogers (Blue Jays)
  • Brice Turang (Brewers)
  • Matthew Boyd (Cubs)
  • Alex Bregman (Cubs)
  • Pete Crow‑Armstrong (Cubs)
  • Corbin Carroll (D‑backs — injured)
  • Will Smith (Dodgers)
  • Logan Webb (Giants)
  • Cal Raleigh (Mariners)
  • Gabe Speier (Mariners)
  • Clay Holmes (Mets)
  • Nolan McLean (Mets)
  • Gunnar Henderson (Orioles)
  • Bryce Harper (Phillies)
  • Brad Keller (Phillies)
  • Kyle Schwarber (Phillies)
  • Paul Skenes (Pirates)
  • Garrett Cleavinger (Rays)
  • Griffin Jax (Rays)
  • Roman Anthony (Red Sox)
  • Garrett Whitlock (Red Sox)
  • Michael Wacha (Royals)
  • Bobby Witt Jr. (Royals)
  • Matt Strahm (Royals)
  • Tarik Skubal (Tigers)
  • Will Vest (Tigers)
  • Byron Buxton (Twins)
  • Joe Ryan (Twins — injured)
  • David Bednar (Yankees)
  • Tim Hill (Yankees)
  • Aaron Judge (Yankees)
  • Mason Miller (Padres)
  • Ryan Yarbrough (Yankees)

Venezuela

  • Ronald Acuña Jr. (Braves)
  • Andrés Giménez (Blue Jays)
  • Jackson Chourio (Brewers)
  • William Contreras (Brewers)
  • Angel Zerpa (Brewers)
  • Daniel Palencia (Cubs)
  • Eduardo Rodríguez (D‑backs)
  • Luis Arraez (Giants)
  • José Buttó (Giants)
  • Eduard Bazardo (Mariners)
  • Jhonathan Díaz (Mariners)
  • Javier Sanoja (Marlins)
  • Carlos Guzman (Mets)
  • Christian Suarez (Dodgers)
  • José Alvarado (Phillies)
  • Jesús Luzardo (Phillies)
  • Oddanier Mosqueda (Pirates)
  • Yoendrys Gómez (Rays)
  • Wilyer Abreu (Red Sox)
  • Willson Contreras (Red Sox)
  • Ranger Suárez (Red Sox)
  • Eugenio Suárez (Reds)
  • Antonio Senzatela (Rockies)
  • Ezequiel Tovar (Rockies)
  • Luinder Avila (Royals)
  • Maikel Garcia (Royals)
  • Salvador Perez (Royals)
  • Enmanuel De Jesus (Tigers)
  • Keider Montero (Tigers)
  • Gleyber Torres (Tigers)
  • Pablo López (Twins — injured)
  • Eduardo Salazar (Twins)

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB players in WBC 2026: Team by team roster breakdown

Pens Points: Rust celebrates 20-goal milestone

ELMONT, NEW YORK - FEBRUARY 3: Bryan Rust #17 of the Pittsburgh Penguins celebrates a goal with teammates during the second period of the game at UBS Arena on February 3, 2026 in Elmont, New York. (Photo by Dennis DaSilva/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Here are your Pens Points for this Tuesday morning….

The NHL trade deadline is this Friday, March 6. While general manager Kyle Dubas and the Penguins could hedge their bets on the current roster to withstand Sidney Crosby’s absence or answer any lingering defensive questions, Dubas may yet have a trick or two up his sleeve, given the bevy of draft capital and cap space at his disposal. [PensBurgh]

Veteran forward Bryan Rust remains a proud player, growing his game from a “non-offensive threat” to his seventh straight 20-goal season, and says he’s fully committed to the Penguins, calling Pittsburgh “home” as the trade deadline approaches. [Trib Live]

Silovs shines again: Goaltender Arturs Silovs has been named the NHL’s second star for the week ending March 1, the team announced on Monday. [Penguins]

News and updates from around the NHL…

If Dubas and Co. go bargain hunting to look for a new center or defenseman, here are some potential options he could entertain. [Sportsnet]

One potential defensive trade target is off the board for the Penguins. Connor Murphy was traded to the Edmonton Oilers by the Chicago Blackhawks on Monday for a second-round pick in the 2028 NHL Draft. [NHL]

If New York Rangers forward and Pittsburgh native Vincent Trocheck is traded before Friday’s deadline, he has made it abundantly clear that he will not accept a deal that sends him to the West Coast. [NHL]

The Ottawa Senators made a bid to be a host for the 2028 World Cup of Hockey, but according to a new report, Canada’s capital city did not make the shortlist of options. [TSN]

Which Yankee will perform best in the WBC?

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MARCH 02: Aaron Judge #99 of Team USA talks with Ken Griffey Jr. (L) during a workout at Papago Park Sports Complex on March 02, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The leadup to the World Baseball Classic is nearly at its apex, with group play beginning later this week. The Yankees, for their part as a team, will play an exhibition game later today against the Panama team that will be participating in Pool A. But more notably for some of their individual players, they’ll have a total of ten participants from their 40-man roster in the tournament headlined by their captain, Aaron Judge, captaining the US team.

The Yankees’ overall representation in the games is spread across several countries: The US leads with four Yanks starring Judge and featuring closer David Bednar, first baseman Paul Goldschmidt, and left-hander Ryan Yarbrough; the Dominican Republic has three players shedding their pinstripes for a bit including catcher Austin Wells, infielder Amed Rosario, and reliever Camilo Doval; Great Britain got Jazz Chisholm Jr. aboard (with prospect Brendan Beck on their pitching staff); Panama carries shortstop José Caballero; and Puerto Rico has reliever Fernando Cruz on their team.

There’s only so many games to be played in a tournament like the World Baseball Classic, so even though some of those names are heavyweights on the Yankees’ roster there may be others who steal the spotlight for their country over the next couple of weeks. Judge is obviously the superstar among the listed candidates and the US team is expected to go far and compete for the title, but will teams give him anything to crush? Perhaps they’ll pitch around him and deal with some of the other bats protecting him in the lineup. Chisholm is another strong candidate on paper, but will Great Britain go far enough to give him a chance to stand out? Perhaps Fernando Cruz ends up tossing some of the most crucial innings late in games to close out wins for Puerto Rico that push them towards the championship game. Who would you pick to end up being the most impactful Yankee in the WBC?


We’ll lead off today with more WBC coverage, as Jake previews the Pool B rosters that the US team will compete with. Josh is up next with a look at Cam Schlittler’s upcoming season now that all eyes will be on him following his magnificent postseason run, and one of our new writers Jonathan debuts with a birthday post to one of the oldest Yankees there is in Willie Keeler. Finally, Jeff continues our MLB team previews with a look at the Athletics as they try to build back up to average.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees vs. Panama

Time: 1:05 p.m. EST

Venue: George M. Steinbrenner Field

The Breakdown | Again we dare to wonder if this is Italy’s time – because England’s confidence looks shot

Italy matched France physically and, while England have never lost to the Azzurri, Saturday is a Six Nations chance as good as any for the hosts

Italy and England. On level points in the Six Nations table. Two rounds to go. And England have already played their Wales joker.

All in all, there is quite a lot riding on the fixture in Rome on Saturday, especially if you are interested in the lower reaches of the Six Nations table, a purgatory with which even England are quite familiar. They started this championship ranked third in the world, a whisker behind the All Blacks in second, and feeling (not unreasonably) rather good about themselves after 11 Test wins in succession. Then it was 12 (Wales), and then … oh dear.

Continue reading...

10 Takeaways from Hugo Gonzalez big night in Celtics’ win in Milwaukee

MILWAUKEE, WI - MARCH 2: Hugo Gonzalez #28 of the Boston Celtics free throw during the game against the Milwaukee Bucks on MARCH 2, 2026 at Fiserv Forum Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 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 Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images). | NBAE via Getty Images

1. Hugo Gonzalez Career Night

After Neemias Queta had a career night against the 76ers the night before, Hugo Gonzalez decided it was his turn to have the best game of his young career on the second night of a back-to-back in a commanding 108-81 win over the Milwaukee Bucks. In his third career start, Gonzalez finished with career highs of 18 points, 16 rebounds, and 3 steals while tying his career high with 2 blocks on 7-15 shooting from the field and 3-8 from three. He is the first Celtics rookie to have a stat line like this since Larry Bird on November 14th, 1979 against the Detroit Pistons.

After making the first basket of the game for the Celtics, there was a chance Gonzalez could have a good offensive night but I don’t think anyone expected him to put up this type of performance. He drove to the basket with force, made some great hustle plays on put-backs, and was able to shoot the three ball comfortably.

Hugo made the Bucks work on every possession, flying around the court on defense for his rebounds, blocks and steals. He did an incredible job when it came to locking down his offensive matchup and did solid when it came to guarding Giannis Antetokounmpo on a few possessions. His hustle and ability to be in the right place at the right time was absolutely huge for the Celtics and without Gonzalez, there is a chance Boston loses this game.

2. Great Defensive Stand

In a game where Jaylen Brown (illness) and Neemias Queta (rest) were ruled OUT, Boston was still able to hold the Bucks to only 81 points, their second lowest scoring output of the season only behind the 79 point performance that the Celtics held them to on February 1st in TD Garden.

Boston held Milwaukee to 27-74 (37%) shooting from the field and 13-36 (36%) from three point range. They forced 16 turnovers on the Bucks while also getting 7 steals and 6 blocks. Without two key defensive stoppers in the front court, the Celtics were able to once again dominate the Bucks.

Bucks Shooting Zone Chart (via NBA.com)

3. Dominance in the Paint

Boston absolutely owned the paint against Milwaukee in this matchup. In the rebounding department, the Celtics crushed the Bucks on the boards 54-32. Out of the 54 rebounds, 19 of them resulted in offensive rebounds and usually ended in a basket on the second-chance opportunity.

When it came to the points in the paint battle I assumed that Milwaukee would have the edge given they got Giannis back but that wasn’t the case. The Celtics outscored them 34-22 when it came to points in the paint. This was a result of Boston’s elite rebounding and Milwaukee’s overall lack of interest when it came to wanting to play defense.

4. Payton Pritchard Bounce Back

Coming off a game against the 76ers where Payton Pritchard scored 0 Points, he was able to bounce back in a big way against the Bucks, finishing with 25 points and 9 assists on 10-23 shooting from the field and 5-10 from three. This was a much needed game for Pritchard who had scored in the single-digits in 3 of his last 4 games.

He started the game out kind of slow, but once he hit a midrange almost buzzer beater at the end of the third quarter, Pritchard turned it on in the fourth quarter. Payton scored 12 of his 25 points in the fourth quarter and turned into the Celtics closer, icing the game.

5. Derrick White Steadied the Ship

Derrick White didn’t have the best shooting night in this game, going 5-18 from the field and 4-12 from three, but watching the game it felt like he was the stabilizer for the Celtics offense. He finished with 18 points and 9 assists, continuing his great stretch of facilitating. Dating back to February 3rd, White is averaging 7.1 assists since Pritchard starting coming off the bench.

Against the Bucks this season, the on/off numbers show that the Celtics are a +65 when White is on the court in 95 minutes versus a -25 when he has been off the court in 49 minutes. He has been the perfect connector for this team and with a lot of young guys playing for the Celtics, he is the veteran that can keep them afloat.

6. Sam Hauser Homecoming

Growing up in Green Bay, Wisconsin, Sam Hauser grew up a Milwaukee Bucks fan as a kid and has had some special performances against them in the past. The game on December 11th of this season was not one of those good games, finishing with 0 points on 0-10 shooting in a 116-101 Celtics loss.

This game was a different story for Sam, finishing with 14 points on 5-9 shooting from the field and 4-8 from three. He torched the Bucks from beyond the arc and his shoot looked smooth all night long. This was some fitting redemption for Hauser, being able to take the win against his hometown team.

7. Luka Garza Steps Up

Ever since the Celtics traded for Nikola Vucevic, Luka Garza has found himself slowly falling out of the rotation. Before this game against the Bucks, the last time Garza got real meaningful minutes in a game was on February 8th against the New York Knicks when he played 15 minutes.

However, with Queta out and Vucevic in the starting lineup, Garza was able to be the backup center in this game and he stayed ready. He finished with 7 points and 10 rebounds on 3-6 shooting in 20 minutes of play. He was a big reason as to why the Celtics were able to dominate Milwaukee on the glass and in the paint, using his physicality to get underneath the basket with ease. My favorite play of the night was his turnaround hook shot after bodying Myles Turner.

8. Nikola Vucevic First Celtics Start

For the first time in his Celtics career, Nikola Vucevic was named as a starter with Brown and Queta out. This is a role he was familiar with over the course of his NBA career, and he played a pretty solid game, finishing with 10 points, 7 assists, and 5 rebounds on 5-12 shooting. He was the primary defender on Giannis for most of the night and did a great job of controlling Antetokounmpo in the paint, even getting a block on him.

His passing was the biggest story for me in this game. Vucevic did a great job with handoffs when he set a screen and also made a few nice cross-court passes. I have been incredibly surprised with his passing ability since he’s come to Boston and he continues to show it off in games like tonight.

9. C’s Spoil Giannis Return

After weeks of trade rumors, flip-flopping emotions, and prediction market partnerships, Giannis Antetokounmpo suited up for the Milwaukee Bucks for the first time since January 23rd. In a game where Boston was missing two key players, you would think Giannis would be able to wild against the Celtics but that wasn’t necessarily the case.

He finished with 19 points and 11 rebounds on 7-18 shooting from the field and 0-2 shooting from three while missing his final 7 shots in a row. He was able to get his typical baskets from time to time by ramming his way to the basket but the Celtics did an incredible job building the wall and making every shot a difficult look. Out of any team in the NBA, I would say the Celtics have historically done the best job when defending Giannis and even with different and depleted personnel, they still found a way to get the job done.

10. Coaching Masterclass

What more can you say about the brilliance of Joe Mazzulla. This game was a perfect representation of why he needs to win Coach of the Year. He ran a starting lineup of White-Gonzalez-Scheierman-Hauser-Vucevic, a lineup that had never seen the floor together and dominated Milwaukee on the road. This was the 7th time the Celtics have won a game on the road by 20+ points and the 13th time this season.

This game is a testament to Joe Mazzulla and the entire coaching staff spending tons of hours in Celtics University drilling the players heads with information, it is a testament to Brad Stevens and the front office for identifying these players for the system, and it is a testament to the Celtics players as a whole for always being ready to play their roles when called upon. This game was another great team win a season full of incredible team wins.

Rockets hold on to beat Wizards 123-118

WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 2: Kevin Durant #7 and Alperen Sengun #28 of the Houston Rockets high five during the game against the Washington Wizards on March 2, 2026 at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC. 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 Kenny Giarla/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Houston Rockets built up a big lead against the Washington Wizards, and then they had hold on towards the end and a fourth-quarter rally by the Wiz, finishing the game with a 123-118 victory.

The Rockets were led by Alperen Sengun, who finished witgh 32 points, 13 rebounds, 2 assists, 1 steal and a block, but he did turn the ball over 8 times. Sengun shot 12-for-20 from the field. Houston also got 30 from Kevin Durant, who also had 7 rebounds, but he also racked up 6 turnover, making 14 between KD and Alpie out of the Rockets 20 total turnovers. .

And this was with good play by a point guard. Reed Sheppard had his first career double-double. He played 42 minutes, finishing with 19 points on 7-for-18 from the floor, 4-for-11 from deep, to go with 7 rebounds, 10 assists, 6 steals and 2 blocks for a monster stat line for Reed. Of course, in the post game, coach Ime Udoka mentioned that he expects Jabari Smith Jr. to be back soon and Reed to head back to the bench, but that’s a convo for another day.

Amne Thompson also pitched in 22 points, 12 rebounds and 4 assists on 10-for-15 shooting, to round things out for the Rockets.

The Wizards were led by Bilal Coulibali, who finished with 23 points, and Sharife Cooper who had 21. Trae Young was also ejected from the Wizards bench, while Tari Eason was ejected for the Rockets. That gave Dorian Finney-Smith for Houston 27 minutes of playing time.

The Rockets move to 38-22 on the season and still sit in third place in the Western Conference, while the Wizards fall to 16-44 on the year. The Rockets are now off until Thursday, when they will return to action against their arch nemesis the Golden State Warriors.

Warriors' Al Horford co-signs Luke Kornet's Atlanta Hawks ‘Magic City' plea

Warriors' Al Horford co-signs Luke Kornet's Atlanta Hawks ‘Magic City' plea originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Warriors center Al Horford showed support for former Boston Celtics teammate Luke Kornet.

Kornet, now with the San Antonio Spurs, posted an article on his personal Medium blog on Monday titled ‘Concerning the Atlanta Hawks,’ where he criticized Atlanta’s “Magic City Monday” promotional night on March 16, which is a “special one-night collaboration to celebrate the city’s iconic cultural institution Magic City,” which is an Atlanta-based adult entertainment venue.

“The NBA should desire to protect and esteem women, many of whom work diligently every day to make this the best basketball league in the world,” Kornet wrote. “We should promote an atmosphere that is protective and respectful of the daughters, wives, sisters, mothers, and partners that we know and love.

“Allowing this night to go forward without protest would reflect poorly on us as an NBA community, specifically in being complicit in the potential objectification and mistreatment of women in our society.”

“Regardless of how a woman finds her way into the adult entertainment industry, many in this space experience abuse, harassment, and violence to which they should never be subjected.

“I’d like to encourage the league, its owners, employees and fans to hold the Atlanta Hawks to a higher standard of what they find worthy of promoting.”

Magic City widely is regarded by locals as a significant cultural institution in Atlanta and is deeply connected to the city’s music and nightlife scene, with many locals believing it serves as much more than just an adult entertainment venue.

Horford, who was teammates with Korent for three-plus seasons in Boston, co-signed the fellow big man’s message.

The Hawks, at the time of this writing, have not responded publicly to Kornet’s plea.

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Racing’s crisis intensifies with tracks on verge of civil war after Allen quits BHA

  • Labour peer leaves sport facing governance troubles

  • Major tracks call for urgent review of their association

A grouping that includes most of Britain’s major racecourses on Tuesday fired the opening shot in what could prove to be a civil war involving the country’s tracks, following confirmation by the British ­Horseracing Authority earlier in the day that Charles Allen had resigned from his position as chair of the sport’s ruling body after just six months in the role.

Jockey Club Racecourses, which controls a significant number of high‑profile tracks ­including ­Cheltenham, Aintree, Epsom and Newmarket, issued a joint ­statement with four of the biggest “independent” courses: Ascot, ­Newbury, York and Goodwood shortly after Lord Allen had issued a statement of his own, confirming his departure.

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