Embiid ruled out for Sixers' matchup with Wizards

Embiid ruled out for Sixers' matchup with Wizards  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

WASHINGTON — While the Sixers’ health picture has improved considerably over the last week, it’s not quite spotless.

The Sixers ruled Joel Embiid out with an illness late Wednesday morning ahead of their matchup with the Wizards. Rookie Johni Broome (right knee surgery recovery) also remains sidelined.

Embiid had played in three straight games since returning from a 13-game absence with a right oblique strain. After posting 26 points on 10-for-25 shooting and seven rebounds Monday in the Sixers’ loss to the Heat, he told reporters in Miami he was sick, per Sixers Wire’s Ky Carlin.

Embiid’s averaged 30.0 points, 6.3 rebounds, 4.0 assists and 1.3 blocks over the last three games. He’s been aggressive offensively and shot especially well from three-point range, hitting 8 of 15 long-distance attempts. 

Backup big man Adem Bona had one of his best games this season when the Sixers visited the Wizards on Oct. 28, blocking five shots late in a comeback overtime win.

The Sixers entered Wednesday seventh in the Eastern Conference at 41-34, one game behind the sixth-seeded Raptors and one ahead of the eighth-seeded Magic. The Wizards are 17-58 and have lost 19 of their last 20 games. 

Embiid ruled out for Sixers' matchup with Wizards

Embiid ruled out for Sixers' matchup with Wizards  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

WASHINGTON — While the Sixers’ health picture has improved considerably over the last week, it’s not quite spotless.

The Sixers ruled Joel Embiid out with an illness late Wednesday morning ahead of their matchup with the Wizards. Rookie Johni Broome (right knee surgery recovery) also remains sidelined.

Embiid had played in three straight games since returning from a 13-game absence with a right oblique strain. After posting 26 points on 10-for-25 shooting and seven rebounds Monday in the Sixers’ loss to the Heat, he told reporters in Miami he was sick, per Sixers Wire’s Ky Carlin.

Embiid’s averaged 30.0 points, 6.3 rebounds, 4.0 assists and 1.3 blocks over the last three games. He’s been aggressive offensively and shot especially well from three-point range, hitting 8 of 15 long-distance attempts. 

Backup big man Adem Bona had one of his best games this season when the Sixers visited the Wizards on Oct. 28, blocking five shots late in a comeback overtime win.

The Sixers entered Wednesday seventh in the Eastern Conference at 41-34, one game behind the sixth-seeded Raptors and one ahead of the eighth-seeded Magic. The Wizards are 17-58 and have lost 19 of their last 20 games. 

Yankees vs. Mariners prediction: Odds, expert picks, best bets, and parlays for April 1

The New York Yankees (4-1) close out their three-game series in Seatle Wednesday afternoon against the Mariners (3-3). Cam Schlittler is scheduled to take the mound against George Kirby.

The series is tied at one game apiece following last night’s 5-0 win for New York. Max Fried was brilliant again throwing seven shutout innings. The veteran has now tossed 13.1 scoreless innings to open the campaign. Giancarlo Stanton continued his torrid start at the plate. Every game this season, Stanton has picked up a couple hits. He is now 10-20 (.500) for the season. The Yankees stayed tied with the Jays atop the AL East with the win while the loss dropped the Mariners to 1.5 games behind the Rangers in the American League West.

Lets dive into this afternoon’s matchup and find a sweat or two.

We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

Game Details and How to Watch: Yankees at Mariners

  • Date: Wednesday, March 31, 2026
  • Time: 4:10PM EST
  • Site: T-Mobile Park
  • City: Seattle, WA
  • Network/Streaming: MLB.TV, YES, Mariners.TV

Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

The Latest Odds: Yankees vs. Mariners

The latest odds as of Wednesday courtesy of FanDuel:

  • Moneyline: New York Yankees (-102), Seattle Mariners (-118)
  • Spread: Yankees -1.5 (+158) / Mariners +1.5 (-193)
  • Total: 7 runs

Probable Starting Pitchers: Yankees at Mariners

Pitching matchup for April 1:

  • Yankees: Cam Schlittler
    Season Totals: 5.1 IP, 1-0, 0.00 ERA, 0.19 WHIP, 8K, 0 BB
  • Mariners: George Kirby
    Season Totals: 6 IP, 1-0, 1.50 ERA, 0.67 WHIP, 6K, 2 BB

Who’s Hot? Who’s Not! Yankees at Mariners

  • Aaron Judge has struck out 10 times in 20 ABs
  • Jazz Chisholm Jr. has just 3 hits in 19 ABs this season (.158)
  • Giancarlo Stanton is 10-20 (.500) on the season with 2 hits in each of the Yankees 5 games
  • Brendan Donovan has hits in 4 straight and 5 of Mariners’ 6 games this season (.429)
  • Julio Rodriguez is 2-22 on the season (.091)
  • Cal Raleigh has struck out 13 times in 21 ABs this season

Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

Top Betting Trends & Insights: Yankees vs. Mariners

  • The Yankees are 4-1 on the Run Line this season
  • Seattle is 3-3 on the Run Line this season
  • The OVER has cashed 3 times in Seattle’s 6 games this season (3-3)
  • The OVER has yet to cash this season for the Yankees through 5 games (0-4-1)

If you’re looking for more key trends and stats around the spread, moneyline and total for every single game on the schedule today, check out our MLB Top Trends tool on NBC Sports!

Expert picks & predictions: Yankees at Mariners

Rotoworld Bet Best Bet

Please bet responsibly. If you or someone you know has a gambling problem, call the National Gambling Helpline at 1-800-522-4700.

Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

Here are the best bets our model is projecting for Wednesday’s game between the Yankees and the Mariners:

  • Moneyline: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Yankees on the Moneyline.
  • Spread: NBC Sports Bet is staying away from a play on either side on the Run Line.
  • Total: NBC Sports Bet is recommending a play on the Game Total UNDER 7.0.

Follow our experts on socials to keep up with all the latest content from the staff:

  • Jay Croucher (@croucherJD)
  • Drew Dinsick (@whale_capper)
  • Vaughn Dalzell (@VmoneySports)

Thoughts on an 8-5 Rangers win

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - MARCH 31: Catcher Danny Jansen #9 of the Texas Rangers hits a three RBI home run against the Baltimore Orioles during the seventh inning at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on March 31, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Bill Streicher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Rangers 8, Orioles 5

  • And the Rangers have now won two road series to start the season.
  • Jacob deGrom made his belated season debut, and for the first four innings and change, things went smoothly. Seven Ks, no walks, three hits, the one run being a solo homer by Pete Alonso to lead off the fourth.
  • I keep having to remind myself, oh yeah, Pete Alonso plays for Baltimore now.
  • A blame deGrom’s undoing with two outs in the fifth on Mike Bascik. Bascik said that deGrom’s pitch count and success was such that he should be able to go six innings in this, his maiden start of the season. DeGrom then gave up a single to Blaze Alexander, an infield single to Taylor Ward, and then a hard hit double to the gap by Gunnar Henderson, which tied the game at three and chased deGrom from the game.
  • So a bit of a letdown at the end, but still. 79 pitches, 14 whiffs, including 10 on the slider.
  • I will note that deGrom, who had a below average hard hit rate in 2025, continued that trend in his 2026 debut. When the O’s made contact, they hit it hard — the lowest exit velocity deGrom allowed was on the Ward infield single in the fifth, at 90.4 mph, and his average exit velocity allowed was 97.8 mph.
  • Cole Winn finished off the fifth with a strikeout, and ended up earning his first major league victory, going 1.1 shutout innings. Jakob Junis and Robert Garcia each threw a scoreless inning after Winn, before Chris Martin made the ninth inning a little scarier than it needed to be, allowing a pair of runs before retiring Henderson.
  • Fortunately, the bats were clicking. Orioles starter Zach Eflin left the game with two outs in the fourth due to elbow issues, and he had allowed just a single run, on an Ezequiel Duran home run — Duran’s first since September of 2024 — but the bats had still generated a couple of rallies against Eflin aside from the Duran prior to Eflin’s departure, even if they came to naught.
  • Once Eflin left the game, however, the bats went to town on the O’s relievers. Former Ranger farmhand Grant Wolfram, who inherited a two on, two out situation in the fifth but got out of it, got teed off on to start the fifth, with the Rangers putting up a pair on a Brandon Nimmo single, a Wyatt Langford triple, and a Corey Seager single.
  • Langford had not gotten off to a great start, coming into the game with 2 singles and 0 walks in 19 plate appearances. So its good to see him with a two hit game on Tuesday.
  • Langford also now is tied for the league lead in triples, with one.
  • Nimmo gave the Rangers the lead in the sixth with a two out single, and Danny Jansen broke it open with a two out, two run homer in the top of the seventh, a tremendously momentum shifting play, of course.
  • Corey Seager finished off the scoring with a homer off of Anthony Nunez to start the ninth, giving the Rangers a bit more of a cushion, and making Chris Martin’s sweaty ninth a little less stress-inducing than it might otherwise have been.
  • Everybody got a hit except for Joc Pederson, though Joc did draw a walk, though he is 0 for 8 to start the season. Who gets a hit first, Joc or Josh Jung (who got the day off and is currently rocking an 0 for 17 streak), will be an exciting subplot to follow.
  • The Rangers, as a team, have a .259/.319/.438 slash line on the year, good for a 121 OPS+ and 121 wRC+. The pitching staff has a 3.00 ERA, good for a 153 ERA+.
  • This may be a controversial take, but I like it when the hitting is good and the pitching is also good.
  • Jacob deGrom topped out at 99.2 mph with his fastball, averaging 97.6 mph. Cole Winn hit 94.0 mph with his fastball. Jakob Junis reached 93.6 mph with his fastball. Robert Garcia’s fastball topped out at 96.6 mph. Chris Martin’s fastball maxed out at 95.5 mph.
  • Wyatt Langford had a 107.5 mph fielder’s choice, a 106.8 mph single, and a 106.5 mph triple. Corey Seager had a 107.5 mph single and a 101.7 mph home run. Danny Jansen had a 107.3 mph single and a 104.1 mph home run. Josh Smith had a 105.3 mph single and a 102.8 mph fly out. Ezequiel Duran had a 104.7 mph home run, a 101.0 mph fielder’s choice, and a 100.0 mph ground out. Evan Carter had a 104.5 mph double. Brandon Nimmo had a 103.6 mph fly out.
  • Now let’s finish off the sweep.

NBA playoff bracket: Where teams stand if postseason started today

The 2026 NBA Playoffs are less than two weeks away, with the SoFi Play-In Tournament tipping off on April 14 and the first round officially underway on April 18. The playoff picture is rapidly taking shape, with 20 teams already locked in and the remaining seeds still up for grabs as the regular season winds down.

With just nine games remaining, every contest carries playoff implications as teams battle for position in the standings. The Atlanta Hawks face a pivotal matchup Wednesday, April 1, against the Orlando Magic, a must-win if they want to hold onto a top-six spot in the Eastern Conference and avoid the Play-In Tournament altogether.

The San Antonio Spurs travel to Golden State for their fourth meeting of the season, riding the momentum of Victor Wembanyama’s historic performance, a season-high 41 points and 16 rebounds in a win against the Chicago Bulls that marked the third-fastest double-double recorded since 1997-98. San Antonio is firmly in the hunt for the top seed in the Western Conference, and with the defending champion Oklahoma City Thunder sitting atop the standings, every win from here on out could prove decisive heading into the postseason.

Here is the current brackets for the playoffs and the Play-In Tournament, and the NBA standings as of April 1:

NBA playoffs bracket

(After games played on March 31)

Western Conference

  • (1) Oklahoma City Thunder vs. (8) Play-In Winner
  • (2) San Antonio Spurs vs. (7) Play-In Winner
  • (3) Los Angeles Lakers vs. (6) Houston Rockets
  • (4) Denver Nuggets vs. (5) Minnesota Timberwolves

Eastern Conference

  • (1) Detroit Pistons vs. (8) Play-In Winner
  • (2) Boston Celtics vs. (7) Play-In Winner
  • (3) New York Knicks vs. (6) Toronto Raptors
  • (4) Cleveland Cavaliers vs. (5) Atlanta Hawks

NBA Play-In Tournament

(After games played on March 31)

Western Conference

  • (7) Phoenix Suns vs. (8) LA Clippers
  • (9) Portland Trail Blazers vs. (10) Golden State Warriors

Eastern Conference

  • (7) Philadelphia 76ers vs. (8) Orlando Magic
  • (9) Miami Heat vs. (10) Charlotte Hornets

NBA standings

All 20 teams – 10 in each conference – that will participate in the postseason have been determined. Here are their records as of Wednesday, April 1, and what each of those teams have clinched so far:

Western Conference

  • (1) Oklahoma City Thunder: 60-16
  • (2) San Antonio Spurs: 57-18
  • (3) Los Angeles Lakers: 50-26
  • (4) Denver Nuggets: 48-28
  • (5) Minnesota Timberwolves: 46-29
  • (6) Houston Rockets: 46-29
  • (7) Play-In Winner
  • (8) Play-In Winner

Eastern Conference

  • (1) Detroit Pistons: 55-21
  • (2) Boston Celtics: 50-25
  • (3) New York Knicks: 48-28
  • (4) Cleveland Cavaliers: 47-29
  • (5) Atlanta Hawks: 43-33
  • (6) Toronto Raptors: 42-33
  • (7) Play-In Winner
  • (8) Play-In Winner

When do the NBA playoffs begin?

  • The NBA Play-In Tournament begins on Tuesday, April 14 and runs through Friday, April 17.
  • The NBA playoffs start Saturday, April 18 and feature eight teams in each conference after teams are eliminated in the Play-In Tournament.
  • Game 1 of the NBA Finals scheduled for Wednesday, June 3.

Which NBA teams have been eliminated from the playoffs?

Eastern Conference

  • Brooklyn Nets
  • Chicago Bulls
  • Indiana Pacers
  • Milwaukee Bucks
  • Washington Wizards

Western Conference

  • Dallas Mavericks
  • Memphis Grizzlies
  • New Orleans Pelicans
  • Sacramento Kings
  • Utah Jazz

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NBA playoff bracket: Where teams stand in final stretch of season

Cavs vs Lakers draws star-studded crowd of athletes, musicians, and actors

An image collage containing 5 images, Image 1 shows Halsey sitting courtside with two men at a Lakers game, Image 2 shows Justin Herbert and Madison Beer watching a basketball game, Image 3 shows Anthony Kiedis sticking his tongue out with a woman at a Lakers game, Image 4 shows Scott Shriner and Brian Bell attending a basketball game, Image 5 shows Vivica A. Fox and Ciarra Carter at a Los Angeles Lakers game

Tuesday night didn’t just belong to the Los Angeles Lakers. It belonged to the star-studded celebrities sitting underneath the bright lights of Crypto.com Arena, where basketball and Hollywood collided like two speeding convertibles driving down Mulholland Drive.

When you attend a Lakers game, you don’t just scan the floor, you scan the crowd for a who’s who of A-list athletes, actors and musicians. It’s a cornucopia of trend-setters and influencers.

Let’s start with the quarterbacks because a lot of them showed up to watch the Lake Show host the Cleveland Cavaliers. LA Chargers quarterback Justin Herbert sat alongside his girlfriend Madison Beer. 

Justin Herbert and Madison Beer attend a game between the Cleveland Cavaliers and the Los Angeles Lakers (Credit: Getty Images) Getty Images

Nearby sat Carolina Panthers quarterback Bryce Young, and next to him was former Alabama quarterback Ty Simpson who’s expected to be taken in the first round of the NFL Draft this month. 

Also expected to go in the first round of the draft is former USC wide receiver Makai Lemon, he soaked in all the action as well. 

And when you’re playing the Cavaliers, the city of Cleveland has to be represented as well. Thankfully, former Guardians baseball player Kenny Lofton was also sitting courtside. 

The world of music was well represented as well. In addition to Beer, the soundtrack of the game could have been performed by Halsey who stunned in a black top.

Halsey attends a basketball game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Cleveland Cavaliers at Crypto.com Arena on March 31, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Credit: Getty Images) Getty Images

Donovan Mitchell’s fiancee Coco Jones was there too. 

Coco Jones attends a basketball game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Cleveland Cavaliers at Crypto.com Arena on March 31, 2026 in Los Angeles, California ((hoto by Allen Berezovsky/Getty Images) Getty Images

Rock bands also wanted to bask in the energy of the game. Red Hot Chili Peppers trio—Anthony Kiedis, Flea, and Chad Smith—buzzed like a live amp. Weezer’s Scott Shriner and Brian Bell added their own alt-rock vibes. 

Credit: Getty Images
Getty Images
Getty Images
Getty Images
NBAE via Getty Images
NBAE via Getty Images

And right across the court was record executive Jimmy Iovine. 

Jimmy Iovine and Liberty Ross attend a basketball game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Cleveland Cavaliers at Crypto.com Arena on March 31, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Allen Berezovsky/Getty Images) Getty Images

Hollywood, naturally, didn’t miss curtain call. Vivica A. Fox and Ciarra Carter sat together. 

Ciarra Carter (L) and Vivica A. Fox attend a basketball game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Cleveland Cavaliers at Crypto.com Arena on March 31, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. Getty Images

Nicholas Hoult and Damson Idris added the modern star power. Noah Centineo showed off his t-shirt, and Emmy-award winning director Ben Winston might have been looking at all of them thinking which actor he wanted to cast in his next show. 

They all watched the Lakers finish off the month of March with a 127-113 win over the Cavaliers. They finished the month 15-2 and Luka Doncic scored a franchise-record 600 points over that span. 


Download The California Post App, follow us on social, and subscribe to our newsletters

California Post News: Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, X, YouTube, WhatsApp, LinkedIn
California Post SportsFacebook, Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, X
California Post Opinion
California Post Newsletters: Sign up here!
California Post App: Download here!
Home delivery: Sign up here!Page Six Hollywood: Sign up here!


Dodgers notes: Shohei Ohtani, Will Smith, Yoshinobu Yamamoto

Los Angeles, CA - March 31: Starting pitcher Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers throws to the plate against the Cleveland Guardians in the fourth 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

It took two whole seasons for Shohei Ohtani to open the season in the starting rotation, and he showed on Tuesday that he is up for the challenge to post a fully healthy two-way season.

Ohtani only went 1-3 with a pair of walks at the plate against the Cleveland Guardians in the Dodgers 4-1 win, but he had the most efficient outing from a starting pitcher on the young season. Fighting the rain and a muddy mound, Ohtani tossed 87 pitches over six shutout innings while allowing just one hit and three walks and striking out six.

After securing his first win as a pitcher since his otherworldly performance in last year’s NLCS Game 4 against the Milwaukee Brewers, Ohtani spoke with Kirsten Watson of SportsNet LA about being back on the mound and battling against both Cleveland hitters and Mother Nature herself.

“I felt really good going into the game. The condition— today’s weather— wasn’t great, but it was a good thing to experience this early in the season, so I’m going to charge it to experience.”

Links

Now that the 2026 season is almost a week underway, we now have a better understanding as to not only how the ABS system works, but also how the Dodgers plan to navigate and implement it.

Will Smith, who has so far made the majority of challenges for the Dodgers, spoke with David Vassegh of AM 570 about the system and about how umpires have been more “locked in” after a full test trial in spring training.

“I think it’s good for the game. I think honestly, the best part about it is I think the umpires are more locked in just from the get-go. There were a lot less overturned calls because they were locked in. The most important thing is getting the call right, and they’re trying to do their best too.”

Tuesday was Yoshi bobblehead night, and the Dodgers had the perfect opportunity to create their own “Spiderman meme” of Yoshinobu Yamamoto, the character Yoshi, and actor Donald Glover, who is set to play Yoshi in the upcoming film “The Super Mario Galaxy Movie.”

Dodgers players also were vying to get Yamamoto’s signature on their Yoshi bobblehead, as Sonja Chen of MLB.com writes about the high demand from players and fans alike for the bobblehead.

Calm down — the Red Sox have plenty of time to turn things around

CINCINNATI, OHIO - MARCH 29: First baseman Willson Contreras #40 of the Boston Red Sox looks on during a baseball game against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park on March 29, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Jeff Dean/Getty Images) | Getty Images

A number of Red Sox players were hot in the World Baseball Classic. A number did well in Spring Training. But it hasn’t really carried over into the first week of the season. The Boston Red Sox are 1-4 after a full turn of the rotation and are once again looking for Garrett Crochet to play the part of the stopper.

This is the same team that made upgrades over the winter — even if those upgrades didn’t come off the wish list of players we would have come up with. This is the rotation projected by analysts around the industry to be the best in baseball. But Garrett Crochet was good. Connelly Early looked really good for his sophomore season debut and only a handful of starts last season. Sonny Gray wasn’t impressive. Ranger Suárez looked like he was still trying to catch up after missing time pitching this spring due to WBC rotation issues. And Brayan Bello had good and bad innings.

Mathematically, the first five games count as much as the last five but the impact seems even larger because there are no other games on the season record to hide a run of four poor performances. Everything at the start of the season is magnified.

But let’s step back.

Willson Contreras is a veteran. He’s a career .257/.352/.458 hitter over his 11 years in MLB. How many times over a five-game span has he gone gotten two hits or fewer? 172. That’s obviously distributing them across the season but that’s the point. And there have been variations in his playing time over the samples. As many as 22 at bats and as few as 10. At the start of 2025 he was 0-19 over the first five games. In 2018 and 2022 he had 7 hits in 25 and 18 at bats, respectively.

He’s a year older, granted, but still likely to have his typical Willson Contreras season.

Trevor Story? He’s not piling up big starts in five games all the time either. In 2016 he had six home runs in the first five games of the season. But he also had totals of 2, 1, 1, and 1 with the other six seasons being zero home runs.

Roman Anthony doesn’t have a long career to draw on and he is putting up some bad numbers for his short career. On Tuesday he struck out three times on a total of nine pitches. That’s not great. He struck out four times in a game for the first time this season and first time since July 2025. As you may recall, he turned things on quite a bit for a while as July turned into August.

And while the hitters have looked bad there’s also some amount of the struggle that isn’t in their control. Maybe they’re facing really tough pitchers?

This is likely not the only reason. The bats have been slow to warm up even as spring is in the air in Boston, a month removed from seven-foot piles of snow occupying the city.

And while the Red Sox also have, at least on paper, a good pitching staff that could be dominating opposing lineups, sometimes these things happen. Remember Bello and Lucas Giolito heading into last June? Disaster. And then both of those guys started throwing well.

No one wants to wait until June — the Sox squandered a lot of April and May wins in 2025 that might have been nice to have come September — the calendar is only just turning to April. We’re not at the Marathon game yet. Opening Day at Fenway Park hasn’t even happened. For a moment, perhaps, let’s give these guys a chance to turn things around.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to host baseball camps for FlexWork Sports baseball camps

Toronto Blue Jays All-Star first baseman Vladimir Guerrero, one of baseball’s most popular stars, is hoping to make an impact off the field too, becoming the first brand ambassador for a premier youth sports experiential company.

Guerrero, 27, who signed a two-year contract, will be the face of FlexWork Sports’ baseball programming across Canada, USA and other global markets. He will host 11 youth events the next two years for youth and family, with the first two being held in Hamilton, Ontario on July 30 and Aug. 24 in Toronto.

“I was born in Canada, play in Canada, and want to give back to the kids who grew up watching me across the country and around the world,” Guerrero Jr. said in a statement. “This partnership gives me the platform to show them what’s possible.

“After hosting an incredible event with FlexWork Sports in Toronto last year, I knew I wanted to build something bigger with lasting impact.”

FlexWork Sports works with hundreds of athletes, but wanted Guerrero after seeing him work at their baseball camp a year ago and watching how the kids gravitated towards him. There were 1,200 kids who flocked to Guerrero’s double session camp a year ago in Toronto.

“Just the way all the kids lit up when he walked in," Adam Van Rees, FlexWork’s chief business offer told USA TODAY Sports in a Zoom call. “I mean, you're going to have that with most professional athletes. But it's just a different level when you bring that superstar level in, and layer that in with that personality."

Said Forrest West, founder and CEO of FlexWork Sports: “One of the reasons we choose Vladdy is that he’s kind of  a big kid himself. I mean, he’s running around the kids. He’s probably more excited than a number of them. He didn’t really know what to expect, but once he got out there, he just shined. He loved it."

Really, Guerrero, 27, was the prototype athlete and personality FlexWork has been seeking all along, and they’re now hoping their relationship lasts much longer than the two-year contract. They’re hoping to have camps featuring Guerrero in Canada, the United States and in the Dominican Republic, where he lives in the offseason.

FlexWork Sports has conducted more than 2,000 youth-sports experiential events in 44 states and 18 countries, featuring about 700 athletes, including Mike Trout, Mookie Betts, Kyle Schwarber and Fernando Tatis in baseball, as well as Saquon Barkley, Karl-Anthony Towns and Cameron Brink.

“I think the biggest thing is the investment we put into the quality of our events," West said. “There are other companies out there that have athletes that come out, wave to the kids, say a few things and leave. Our athletes come to the camps. They're there for the full length of the camp. They interact with all the families. We have them go through the stands to do high fives, do Q&A. We really focus on the experiential side, making sure that each kid gets to interact with that athlete.

“It's like we want our camps to be full of instruction, of sport and play, but we also wanted to have that feel of Disney where you show up and it's truly like a performance, kind of a major activation with the athlete. We want that to be reflected with the quality of athletes we work with."

FlexWork began with eight events in 2019, expanded to 24 events in 2021, which included four of the top five NFL draft picks. The company now is projected to have about 385 events this year.

“I think the right kind of momentum is the partner with the right one or two athletes across each major sport and create these ambassadors, multi-year partnerships" Van Rees said, “so we can build out some programming with them that can last well beyond even their playing days. Candidly, Vladdy's got a long time to go, but we're really excited about working with him for years to come, even extending into retirement.

“He's generational talent and personality, and we think there's one or two of those guys, maybe three, in each major sport. There's only a handful of guys that can really connect from a personality standpoint, as well as what their on-field ability is, and obviously, Vlad is at the top."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Vladimir Guerrero Jr. to host baseball camps for FlexWork Sports

The NBA’s anti-tanking plans and how they could affect the Mavs – Part I

NEW YORK - APRIL 10: NBA Commissioner Adam Silver addresses the media during a press conference after the Board of Governors Meeting on April 10, 2024 at the St. Regis Hotel in New York City. 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 2024 NBAE (Photo by David Dow/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The art of tanking is nothing new for the NBA. Teams have been finding ways to lose games in an effort to improve their Draft position at least as far back as the early 1990s when the league implemented weighted odds favoring the worst teams. Prior to that, there was an outright coin flip between the worst Eastern and Western Conference teams, then an unweighted lottery where all non-Playoff teams had an equal chance at the first pick. More recently, the worst team had by far the best odds to win the lottery until the NBA attempted to course-correct. They flattened the odds for the three worst teams and expanded the lottery to determine the top four picks instead of only the top three.

Despite it all, teams find ways to lose games in hopes of getting a coveted pick high in the Draft. On February 12th, the NBA fined the Utah Jazz $500,000 and the Indiana Pacers $100,000 for conduct detrimental to the league. Both teams made questionable roster decisions in otherwise winnable games. With the incidents taking place relatively early in the season and social media jumping all over it, it was only a matter of time before the NBA took further action.

Shams Charania recently reported that the NBA has proposed three options to the Board of Governors to combat tanking.

We will take a look at each of the three proposals in turn over the coming days, but first, a commentary on the overall notion: There is no outright “fix” to the concept of tanking. So long as there is an incentive for a bad team to get something good as a result of being worse, the NBA is going to have teams racing to the bottom.

As of March 27th, 2026 when Charania broke the aforementioned news, there were ten teams in the NBA with fewer than 30 wins. That is one-third of the league. The Indiana Pacers were officially eliminated from Playoff contention on March 10 when they fell to 15-50 on the season in a loss to the Sacramento Kings, who themselves were eliminated the following night when they fell to 16-51 after a loss to the Charlotte Hornets. For perspective, that is two teams completely out of the mix with only about 80% of the season in the books to that point. By March 27, eight teams were eliminated from Playoff contention, with two others having virtually zero statistical probability of making the Play-In Tournament.

When you have that many teams made irrelevant a full month before the end of the regular season, most of whom knew where they were headed months earlier, you’re going to have a lot of franchises looking to lose. Most teams are not going to want to destroy their chances at a franchise-altering pick, simply to stumble through the Play In Tournament for the honor of getting annihilated by the top seed in the conference.

Ironically, as the league talks about curbing tanking for the sake of the game’s integrity, they are on the cusp of expansion with the likely addition of two new franchises. Surely this will only add to the number of teams with more incentive to lose than to win. It’s difficult to take the league’s tanking-related pearl-clutching seriously, as their desire for more teams and more revenue run contrary to competitiveness. Adding two new franchises means you’re adding 30-plus players to the NBA that wouldn’t otherwise be “good enough” to be there prior.

Regardless, the wheels of change are turning, so we’ll take a look at each of the three options and what they could mean for the Mavericks throughout the next few days.

I invite you to follow me @_80MPH on X, and check back often at Mavs Moneyball for all the latest on the Dallas Mavericks.

The Suns went small at the wrong time and paid for it

ORLANDO, FL - MARCH 31: Collin Gillespie #12 of the Phoenix Suns looks on during the game against the Orlando Magic on March 31, 2026 at Kia Center in Orlando, Florida. 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 Fernando Medina/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Tuesday night in Orlando was supposed to feel like something. The Phoenix Suns were getting their soul back with Dillon Brooks returning after an 18-game absence. Instead, it left you with more questions than answers, especially for a team now flirting with the idea that hosting a Play-In game is no longer a guarantee.

It started from the jump. Phoenix came out too amped, too keyed up, playing with emotion but not control. The Orlando Magic lean into physicality. They like to get under your skin, and that is a lane the Suns are comfortable in as well. But a minute and a half in, the tone was already off. Technical fouls, jawing back and forth, energy spilling over in the wrong direction.

And here was the problem. Only one team backed it up.

Phoenix put themselves in foul trouble almost immediately, handing Orlando free points and easy rhythm. From there, the night became about chasing. Possession after possession, they were trying to climb out of a hole they had dug themselves.

Then came the fourth, and that is where things really went sideways. The Orlando Magic are big, long, and physical. That is their identity, and with Oso Ighodaro sitting on five fouls, the expectation was simple. Match size with size. Give yourself a presence inside. Instead, Jordan Ott went the other direction. No added length. No adjustment to what Orlando was throwing at them. No Khaman Maluach. No Ryan Dunn.

The Suns leaned all the way into small ball, and it backfired.

The offense stalled out completely. 17 points in the fourth, 29.2% shooting from the field, 20% from deep. Possessions got tight, spacing shrank, and nothing came easy. It turned into one of those stretches where every trip down the floor felt like a grind, and nothing broke loose.

And then there was Jalen Green. It was not his night through three quarters. He was 3-of-10 from the field, 0-of-5 from three, but when the offense needed something…anything…he stayed on the bench. The reasoning was sticking with the small lineup, riding what was out there.

But that is where it gets confusing. Green fits that mold. He is one of your primary shot creators, one of the few players who can generate offense when things bog down. And at $33 million, he is not someone you hide from those moments. You give him the opportunity to play through it, to find a rhythm, to create when nothing else is working.

That never came. And as the offense sputtered possession after possession, it left you wondering what could have been different if that choice had gone the other way.

There was no size inserted, so the advantage stayed exactly where Orlando wanted it: in the paint. It has been a recurring issue for the Phoenix Suns. The inability to consistently deter penetration and protect the rim. The frustrating part is the tools are there. They are young, they are developing, but they exist. And yet, night after night, teams are getting downhill, living in the paint, and dictating terms.

And then there is the irony of the final five minutes. Devin Booker was not the focal point in the way you would expect. The ball moved, the gravity was there, he drew attention, and he created opportunities for others. It looked like the version some have been asking for: less isolation, more distribution, more trust in the group.

And the result was empty.

Shots did not fall. Looks that were clean never dropped. And when the biggest possession arrived, it was Dillon Brooks with the ball in his hands. The result? A shot that sailed over the backboard.

I’m just gonna go ahead and put my face in my hands.

That is the tradeoff. You move away from your primary option, you trust the collective, and sometimes the collective does not deliver. It does not mean the idea is wrong, but it shows how thin the margin is when your best player is not the one taking the shot when it matters most.

As the season winds down, it feels like the questions are piling up instead of clearing out. Why was that the approach? Why match small against a team built on size? Why not give Jalen Green a chance late when the offense was starving for creation? Why does Khaman Maluach never see those closing minutes, especially in games that are screaming for rim protection? And why, when things tighten, does the offense feel like it narrows into a three-point dependency instead of something more layered?

The calendar is not waiting. These are games sitting right in front of you, games you have to take. The Orlando Magic handed over 25 turnovers, 25 extra opportunities, and Phoenix still could not capitalize. 20 turnovers of their own, 26 points allowed off of them, possessions slipping through their fingers over and over again. Then come the fouls. Some you can argue, some you cannot, but the reality is they put themselves in that position and paid for it.

And this is where it starts to matter. Because if you keep playing like this at the back end of the season, if you keep letting games like this get away, the Los Angeles Clippers are going to close that gap. And suddenly, you are not hosting a Play-In game, you are flying to Los Angeles, putting yourself in a tougher environment with everything on the line.

So the Suns leave Orlando, and it is far from the happiest place on earth. And for the fan base, it does not feel much better. It feels like a team still searching for answers at a time when they should be locking them in.

Bright Side Baller Season Standings

That “36 points without a free throw” thing certainly didn’t hurt Booker’s case for earning his 18th Bright Side Baller of the season. He now has earned the Baller in 31% of his games played this season.

Bright Side Baller Nominees

Game 76 against the Magic. Here are your nominees:

Devin Booker
34 points (8-of-16, 2-of-6 3PT), 3 rebounds, 7 assists, 16-of-19 FT, 1 steal, 4 turnovers, -14 +/-

Royce O’Neale
14 points (4-of-8, 4-of-7 3PT), 9 rebounds, 4 assists, 1 steal, 1 turnover, 1 block, -3 +/-

Collin Gillespie
11 points (4-of-8, 2-of-6 3PT), 2 rebounds, 3 assists, 2 steals, 2 turnovers, +5 +/-

Rasheer Fleming
11 points (4-of-9, 1-of-5 3PT), 4 rebounds, 2 turnovers, +7 +/-

Grayson Allen
10 points (4-of-14, 2-of-10 3PT), 2 rebounds, 1 assist, 2 turnovers, -5 +/-

Oso Ighodaro
5 points (2-of-2), 10 rebounds, 5 assists, 2 turnovers, 1 block, -6 +/-


Who gets it?

MLB News Outside The Confines: Extensions for everyone!

Good morning.

Toledo takes down Syracuse in series opener

Hens 5, Mets 1 (F/7)

The Mud Hens came out on top in the first of six against the Syracuse Mets on Tuesday afternoon. The Hens pounced on the Mets in the top of the first and cruised to victory as the game was called in the seventh due to rain.

Veteran Cubs’ closer Carl Edwards Jr. got the start in this one, and the Hens took advantage of some walks and poor defense. Wenceel Pérez led off with a walk, and second baseman Ji Hwan Bae botched a grounder off the bat of Max Clark, leaving both runners safe. A walk to Jace Jung loaded the bases with no outs.

Edwards Jr. froze Eduardo Valencia on a called strike three after winning a challenge, but a seeing eye ground ball from Trei Cruz found the outfield grass, plating two runs. A soft tapper from Max Anderson scored Jung as Edwards Jr. couldn’t make the play in time to get Anderson at first. Corey Julks pulled a grounder to third and the Mets got Anderson at second, but Bae threw wide of first, botching the possible double play and allowing Cruz to score. A double from Gage Workman brought Julks all the way around from first, and it was 5-0 when Ben Malgeri grounded out to end the inning.

Reliever Ricky Vanasco took the mound for the Hens and gave up a leadoff single to MJ Melendez, but set the Mets down 1-2-3 after that. He punched out Ryan Clifford on a changeup foul tipped into Valencia’s glove to send this to the second inning.

Pérez led off again in the top of the second, lacing a single, but he was erased trying to steal second. Max Clark lined out and Jung grounded out to end the inning. Vanasco spun a 1-2-3 frame, punching out Cristian Pache swinging over a changeup along the way.

An Anderson double play ball erased Trei Cruz after a walk in the third. Lefty Drew Sommers took over from Vanasco and promptly walked the leadoff hitter, but cleaned things up from there with a pair of swinging strikeouts, one on a high fastball and the other on a good, biting slider.

Sommers gave up a homer to Ronny Mauricio in the fourth, along with a second walk, but right-hander Burch Smith came on to clean up the inning without issue.

Having survived the first inning, Edwards Jr. had delivered three scoreless, and right-hander Jordan Geber took over in the top of the fifth. Max Clark singled with one out, but was picked off, and Geber punched out Jung with a high splitter fading away out of the zone to send this to the bottom half. Smith tossed a 1-2-3 frame, striking out Mets’ catcher Hayden Singer on a high fastball to send this to the sixth.

Geber set down the Hens in order, and the rains let loose, delaying the game for a half hour. When things calmed down, lefty Konnor Pilkington took over for the Hens in the bottom half. He gave up a bunt single to start the inning, but bounced back to strike out Mauricio and Clifford and got out of the inning without issue.

Geber got Julks on a flyout to open the seventh, but walked Gage Workman. Ben Malgeri smoked a ball to center that was caught, but Geber followed by walking Pérez after Workman stole second base. The Mets went back to their pen, but reliever Alex Carrillo walked Max Clark after Clark challenged a 2-0 fastball away correctly. However, Jung went down 0-2 in the count, and Carrillo dropped a slider on the bottom rail of the strike zone. Called a ball, catcher Senger challenged it and Jung was called out.

That was all she wrote for this one, as the rains really cut loose, and the game was officially called official.

Pérez: 1-2, R, 2 BB, CS

Cruz: 1-2, R, 2 RBI, BB, K

Clark: 1-3, R, BB

Vanasco: 2.0 IP, 0 R, H, 0 BB, 2 K

Sommers (W, 1-0): 1.1 IP, ER, H, 2 BB, 3 K

Smith: 1.2 IP, 0 R, 0 H, 0 BB, 2 K

Pilkington: 1.0 IP, 0 R, H, 0 BB, 2 K

Coming Up Next: The 1-3 Hens and the Mets will get going again on Wednesday at 1:05 p.m. ET.

Wednesday Rockpile: The “Running Rockies” may be here to stay

TORONTO, CANADA - MARCH 30: Jake McCarthy #31 of the Colorado Rockies steals second base against Ernie Clement #22 of the Toronto Blue Jays during the third inningin their MLB game at the Rogers Centre on March 30, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Mark Blinch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

They’ve talked about it for years now.

The Colorado Rockies would enter spring training with the prerogative of stealing more bases in the regular season, especially after the implementation of bigger bases in 2023. Players would run free during Cactus League action, particularly the speedsters, in the hopes that it would carry over into the regular season. Things appeared to be working as the Rockies placed in the top 10 in spring training stolen bases each of the last three seasons.

However, once the games actually started, the running game ceased to matter as much.

Over the last three seasons, the Rockies have ranked 28th in baseball with 248 total stolen bases. That’s 284 fewer than the Tampa Bay Rays, who swiped 532 bags. As for the Rockies themselves, only eight players had more than 10 stolen bases from 2023 to 2025, with Brenton Doyle as the only player with more than 30 bags, coming in with a hefty 70.

Cory Cohen explored some of the follies of the Rockies’ running in 2025. Despite having a fairly quick team, the Rockies ranked 23rd in stolen bases but were caught 39 times, resulting in a league-worst 68.5% success rate. Jumps were slow, and there was a hint of trepidation in the running of the bases.

It’s understandable why the running game would cease during the regular season. Being down big more often than not, the Rockies were hesitant to give away outs on the bases.

“The game has to sort of dictate what you do,” former manager Bud Black said in 2025. “You’ve got to be close in the score or have a lead. If you’re behind a few runs, running yourself into an out or running yourself out of an inning can be detrimental.”

It’s a sentiment that current manager Warren Schaeffer echoed this season.

“There were times last year where we were down early, so you shut the running game down — you can’t run them, and you have to take the risk down a notch,” Schaeffer said.

However, both managers alluded to the fact that keeping games close and staying ahead are the ideals to make sure the running game remains a factor. While that has much to do with how the pitching is doing, the offense has its role to play to keep things rolling.

The running game remained a factor this year in spring training more than in previous years. The Rockies finished third in all of baseball with 45 stolen bases, but they had more attempts than anyone with 68 total attempts. Twenty-three different players had at least one stolen base in camp.

Only five games into the 2026 season, and the Rockies are showing that running and being aggressive will play a factor. In 2025, the Rockies swiped eight bases through their first 12 games. This season, the team swiped eight bases through their first four games, a franchise first. The expected culprits of speedy players such as Jake McCarthy — who had three seasons of 20 or more bases in Arizona — Jordan Beck, and Brenton Doyle will get their bases. Still, there is also a noticeable difference in how the Rockies will approach base stealing.

No one is exempt from the steal signal.

Kyle Karros isn’t exactly a speedster. In his recorded baseball history on Baseball Reference, Karros’s career high in stolen bases is the 12 he swiped in 2024 in 17 attempts with the High-A Spokane Indians. In fact, you would probably have to go back to his high school days to see if he stole more than 10 bases in a season before that. And still, Karros has already swiped two bases this year, with more likely on the way.

Hunter Goodman is also a candidate to run in the right situation despite not being a speedster. On Monday night against Toronto, Goodman attempted a steal of a second, and while he got thrown out, he had a good jump and was just beaten by a good throw. But if the Rockies’ All-Star catcher is going to try swiping bags, nothing is off the table for the running game.

Being aggressive base runners, particularly in the steals department, is something the Rockies can finally make good on in 2026. As they try to develop their new brand of baseball, using speed and aggression to create havoc on the bases is going to go a long way in helping this team score more runs.

Willi Castro said it best in spring training: “The mentality is to score because that’s how you win ballgames.”

The archetype of how base stealing can make a difference was on full display in Miami by the Marlins as they swept the Rockies. The Milwaukee Brewers lead the league with double-digit steals already, and they had the best record in baseball last season. When trying to win in the margins, the “Running Rockies” have to keep the foot on the gas pedal and run without fear. Only then can the strategy manage to stick around as they hope.


On the Farm

Triple-A: Reno Aces 8, Albuquerque Isotopes 1

What began as a pitcher’s duel ended up being a blowout in the home opener for the Albuquerque Isotopes. Gabriel Hughes (No. 12 PuRP) made the start for the Isotopes and was excellent through five innings as he allowed two runs on three hits with two walks and eight strikeouts. He actually came out to start the sixth inning, but surrendered a leadoff triple to end his evening. Things got out of hand in the eighth inning for the Isotopes bullpen after Ryan Miller and Patrick Weigel surrendered a combined six runs on four hits. Zac Veen (No. 9 PuRP), making a rehab appearance, went 0-for-4 with three strikeouts, while Blaine Crim went 1-for-3 in his rehab. Cole Carrigg (No. 4 PuRP) had a good night, going 2-for-4 with a double, while veteran Vimael Machín had three hits, including a triple. The offense managed just one run on eight hits with 11 strikeouts and just two walks.


Affected by Altitude Episode 204: FacePalm Sunday | Rocky Mountain Rooftop

On this week’s episode, Evan Lang and I talked about the first series of 2026 against the Marlins and broke down the first weekend of play for minor league baseball.

Topes Notes: Prospect Cole Carrigg embracing versatility as Isotopes home opener arrives | Albuquerque Journal

There are plenty of interesting things to watch for with the Rockies’ Triple-A affiliate, one of which is the versatility of Cole Carrigg. The Rockies are stretching Carrigg out to play multiple positions after he spent 2025 as a primary center fielder, and he is continuing that journey with the Albuquerque Isotopes.


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!

SF Giants Videos: Watch “Mic’d Up” with Luis Arráez

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 30: Luis Arraez #1 of the San Francisco Giants bats during the second inning against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on March 30, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning, baseball fans!

As we discussed yesterday, I am living in the past on these so I am going to take a second to give the San Francisco Giants a polite golf clap for getting their first win of the 2026 season on Monday night!

But today, I wanted to take a look at the latest in the Giants’ social media team’s YouTube series “Mic’d Up” this time featuring one of the newer members of the team and WBC Champion, Luis Arráez! The video follows along with Arráez as he goes through his day during the team’s Spring Training in Scottsdale, AZ!

What time do the Giants play today?

The Giants wrap up their series against the San Diego Padres this afternoon at 1:10 p.m. PT.