Here are the lineups. For the Phillies:
For the Padres:
Let’s talk about it.
Worldwide Sports News
Here are the lineups. For the Phillies:
For the Padres:
Let’s talk about it.
As the NBA season finally barrels toward its conclusion, we’re down to the final stage of the journey. After an 82-game regular season and nearly two months of playoff basketball, there are, at most, seven games remaining. Standing at the finish line are two teams with very different stories but one fascinating connection to Minnesota basketball.
On one side sits the San Antonio Spurs, the team that ended the Timberwolves’ season in May and spent six games methodically demonstrating why so many people believe Victor Wembanyama is destined to dominate the NBA for the next decade. On the other side are the New York Knicks, led in part by the former face of the Timberwolves franchise, Karl-Anthony Towns, whose blockbuster departure from Minnesota in 2024 remains one of the defining moments of the franchise’s recent history.
If you’re wondering where Wolves fans are likely to stand during this series, I don’t think it’s particularly complicated.
They’re standing with KAT.
You don’t spend nearly a decade carrying a franchise through some of its darkest years and then suddenly lose the support of an entire fan base because you got traded. For all the frustrations that occasionally accompanied Towns’ tenure in Minnesota, for all the playoff disappointments, for all the debates about whether he could ever be the best player on a championship team, it’s easy to forget what he actually meant to this organization.
When Towns arrived, the Timberwolves were still wandering through the post-Kevin Garnett wilderness. The franchise was largely irrelevant nationally. Playoff appearances were a pipe dream.
Towns became the bridge. He wasn’t the player who ultimately turned Minnesota into a perennial contender, that distinction belongs to Anthony Edwards, but he was the player who kept the franchise afloat long enough to reach that point.
He endured coaching changes, front-office dysfunction, roster overhauls, the Jimmy Butler saga, the Tom Thibodeau era, the Rudy Gobert trade fallout. Through all of it, he remained remarkably loyal to a franchise that often gave him more headaches than help. So yes, Wolves fans are spending June cheering for a former player. It’s understandable, and frankly, it’s deserved.
What makes this Finals particularly fascinating is that it feels like two completely different basketball realities colliding.
The Knicks have spent the last several weeks looking like a team of destiny. Everything has worked. Everything.
They stormed through the Eastern Conference with an efficiency that bordered on absurd. The Hawks, 76ers, and Cavaliers put up minimal resistance. In the rare moments where New York was challenged, they displayed the kind of confidence and momentum that tends to accompany teams that believe they’re on a special run.
The city is alive. Madison Square Garden is operating like a basketball cathedral again. It’s been 53 years since New York last won an NBA championship. The drought has lasted so long that it has almost become part of the franchise’s identity. And now they’re four wins away from ending it.
The problem is that reality has a funny way of crashing through fairytale stories, and that reality currently wears a Spurs jersey.
As impressive as New York has been, we should probably acknowledge something that’s being glossed over a little bit. The Knicks road to the Finals was not exactly lined with basketball murderers. They had the privilege of facing the 6th, 7th, and 4th seeds on the way to the Finals. That’s not meant to diminish what New York accomplished. You can only beat the teams in front of you, and the Knicks did exactly that. In fact, they didn’t merely beat those teams. They dominated them.
But now they’re stepping into an entirely different weight class.
After eliminating our talented, but injured Timberwolves, the Spurs marched into the Western Conference Finals and knocked off Oklahoma City, a team many people believed was destined to win the championship. The Thunder entered the postseason looking like the league’s final boss. They had the MVP. They had elite depth. They had home-court advantage. They had youth. They had experience. They had seemingly everything.
And yet here we are, with the Spurs are representing the Western Conference.
While the Knicks have looked dominant, San Antonio has looked dangerous. The Spurs possess a player who can completely distort the geometry of basketball. Every generation gets a player who forces us to rethink what basketball is supposed to look like. Kareem did it. Jordan did it. LeBron did it. Steph did it. Wembanyama feels like the next entry on that list.
So what happens in this series? Honestly, I think there are only two outcomes. The first is the one every basketball fan is hoping for. Six or seven games full of momentum swings, last-second shots, Garden crowds losing their minds, and Wembanyama doing alien things. The type of Finals people still talk about five years later.
The second possibility is far less exciting. The Knicks’ magic carpet ride crashes into reality. The Spurs’ talent advantage becomes overwhelming. Wembanyama takes control of the series, and what looked like a dream run suddenly turns into a fairly quick conclusion.
I genuinely don’t know which outcome we’re getting. That’s what makes this matchup fascinating. One team arrives carrying the hopes of an entire city that hasn’t celebrated a title since 1973. The other arrives carrying what increasingly feels like the future of the NBA.
Either way, Wolves fans will spend the remainder of this season cheering for Karl-Anthony Towns. Nearly two years removed from the trade, Towns remains one of us. And if he somehow ends up holding the Larry O’Brien Trophy a few weeks from now, there are going to be a lot of people in Minnesota smiling right alongside him.
Go get it, KAT.
The Baltimore Orioles, ranked third in the AL East with a 29-32 record, face the Boston Red Sox, who are fifth in the division at 25-3. Boston is favored with a -148 moneyline compared to Baltimore's +123. Starting pitchers are Chris Bassitt for Baltimore, with a 5.06 ERA, and Payton Tolle for Boston, with a 2.61 ERA.
Date: Wednesday, June 3
Time: 6:45 p.m. ET / 3:45 p.m. PT
Where: Fenway Park, Boston, MA
TV Channels: NESN, MASN
Live Stream:ESPN+, MLB.TV | Follow on Yahoo Sports
Baltimore Orioles: 29-32 (No. 3 in AL East)
Boston Red Sox: 25-34 (No. 5 in AL East)
Spread: Boston Red Sox -1.5
Moneyline: Boston Red Sox -148 (57.1%) / Baltimore Orioles +123 (42.9%)
Over/Under: 9.0
Baltimore Orioles: Chris Bassitt (4-3, ERA: 5.06, K: 36, WHIP: 1.58)
Boston Red Sox: Payton Tolle (2-2, ERA: 2.61, K: 46, WHIP: 0.90)
Weather: 77°F at first pitch
Ballpark: Capacity: 37,755 | Roof: Open | Surface: Grass
The San Francisco Giants are making yet another move, as it seems they have a daily quota to fulfill. This one, unfortunately, was mandated by injuries. Before their Wednesday game against the Milwaukee Brewers, the Giants announced that left-handed reliever Matt Gage had been placed on the 15-Day Injured List, while right-handed reliever Dylan Smith had been recalled from AAA Sacramento to take his place.
It’s a hit to a bullpen that is already struggling, as Gage has been one of their most reliable arms. The veteran southpaw, whose IL stint is for right knee inflammation, and is retroactive to June 2, has a 2.63 ERA on the season, third on the team (minimum: 10 innings pitched) behind only Joel Peguero (2.38) and Keaton Winn (2.45). That said, it hasn’t been the prettiest low ERA, as Gage has just 19 strikeouts in 24 innings, with 13 walks and three home runs allowed. That’s resulted in a fairly ugly FIP (4.76), which suggests the ERA could be primed for some regression.
Still, he’s been a trustworthy arm out of the ‘pen for Tony Vitello, and that’s more than most players have been able to say this year. Gage pitched during Monday’s blowout loss, and it seems the injury flared up then, and was likely partially responsible for the five baserunners that he allowed in an inning of work.
Replacing him is Smith, who returns to the roster after a very brief stint earlier in the year. A 3rd-round pick in 2021, Smith was sent to the Giants right before the start of the season in a DFA/cash trade with the Detroit Tigers. He’s pitched decently in Sacramento, with a 3.98 ERA, a 4.43 FIP, and 23 strikeouts to 10 walks in 20.1 innings. Smith, who turned 26 last week, has pitched once for the Giants this year, and faced three batters while getting two outs and walking a hitter during an extra-innings victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates on May 10.
Well that was certainly a gut punch. The Nats just got swept at home by a Marlins team that had lost five straight entering the series. For whatever reason, the Fish just seem to have our number. That is especially true of Marlins pitchers who have contained this offense better than any other team.
In this series, the Nats only scored 7 runs in the three games. Today, they only managed 1 run on 3 hits. The one run they did score was due to Otto Lopez booting what could have been an inning ending double play. That elite offense which has been so consistent all season long was nowhere to be found in this series.
Part of that is due to the Marlins pitching staff. The Marlins threw the ball well in all three games, and saved their best performance for last. Emerging ace Max Meyer just carved up this Nats lineup with elite breaking balls. The sweeper and slider were both working well for the 27 year old, who has pitched like an All-Star this year. He struck out 7 and also got 7 ground outs.
There were a couple missed opportunities for the Nats offense, but for most of the day, they were just being dominated. Keibert Ruiz, Jacob Young and Luis Garcia Jr. were the only ones who looked like they had a chance for most of this series. Young hit the only Nats home run of the series, while the contact oriented Marlins hit 8 homers.
While the depth pieces have been solid for this Nats offense, this group really goes as CJ Abrams and James Wood go. When the big guns are rolling, this offense is elite. However, when they go quiet, the house of cards begins to fold. In this series, the duo went 3/23 with 9 strikeouts. Today it felt like Wood and Abrams were both trying to do too much to spark the struggling offense.
Daylen Lile had a good game yesterday, but he has been in an extended slump since his massive series against the Reds with his family in the house. Lile’s increased chase rate is alarming. Last season, he chased 26.7% of the time, which is slightly less than the average hitter. Impressively, he was able to do this while being very aggressive in the zone. This season, Lile’s chase rate is up 10% to 36.7% which is in the 14th percentile.
We are going to do a deeper dive on Lile, but the Nats need him to step up. He was a big part of this offense at the end of last season, and has gone on some very impressive runs this season as well. However, his season has been slightly underwhelming so far, especially offensively.
On the mound, the Nats were lucky to only allow 4 runs. The Marlins were putting constant pressure on Nats pitchers. Nationals pitchers were constantly falling behind hitters and nibbling as well. They walked 8 and gave up 10 hits. Usually when that happens, you are allowing at least 6 runs. However, the Marlins were not great with runners in scoring position. Fortunately for them, the Nats offense was in no mood to make them pay.
Sweeps happen in baseball, but this stings. However, what happens next is what will truly define this season. The Nats are at a crossroads right now. They can either bounce back and keep their exciting season rolling on this west coast trip, or this could be where everything goes off the rails.
Last season, the Nats entered June only two games under .500 before everything unraveled. Another June swoon would be so discouraging for a Nats fanbase that was beginning to see light at the end of the tunnel. It could also have major implications on CJ Abrams’ future. If the Nats fold again in June, it makes it much easier for Paul Toboni to stick to his original timeline and trade CJ Abrams.
However, if the Nats prove that this was just a blip, we could push forward with Abrams and try to maximize his window. It may sound melodramatic, but how the Nats respond to this sweep could legitimately decide the future direction of this franchise for years to come.
The Cleveland Guardians, ranked first in the AL Central with a 35-27 record, face the New York Yankees, who are second in the AL East with a 36-24 record. The New York Yankees are favored with a -160 moneyline compared to the Cleveland Guardians' +134. Starting pitchers are Gavin Williams for Cleveland, with a 3.07 ERA, and Gerrit Cole for New York, with a 0.00 ERA.
Date: Wednesday, June 3
Time: 7:05 p.m. ET / 4:05 p.m. PT
Where: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY
TV Channels: Amazon Prime Video, Guardians.TV Presented by Progressive
Live Stream:ESPN+, MLB.TV | Follow on Yahoo Sports
Cleveland Guardians: 35-27 (No. 1 in AL Central)
New York Yankees: 36-24 (No. 2 in AL East)
Spread: New York Yankees -1.5
Moneyline: New York Yankees -160 (59.0%) / Cleveland Guardians +134 (41.0%)
Over/Under: 7.5
Cleveland Guardians: Gavin Williams (8-3, ERA: 3.07, K: 88, WHIP: 1.09)
New York Yankees: Gerrit Cole (1-0, ERA: 0.00, K: 12, WHIP: 0.71)
Weather: 78°F at first pitch
Ballpark: Capacity: 47,309 | Roof: Open | Surface: Grass
The Atlanta Braves have a similar look to yesterday’s lineup against the Toronto Blue Jays, with a few additions to spice it up a bit with a new game plan to secure tonight’s win.
Ha-Seong Kim will be taking Jorge Mateo’s spot at shortstop in hopes of turning his slump around after a mediocre showing since his mid-May return.
On both offense and defense, his performance has taken a decline, currently averaging a .089 at the plate and a .269 OPS. It is necessary to put Kim in every other rotation, not only to give him extra opportunity to improve, but also rest Mateo and focus on fixing what mechanics aren’t working.
You’ll also notice Mauricio Dubón, Eli White and Chadwick Tromp are set to join Atlanta to help secure a series win early-on. Ronald Acuña Jr. will continue to lead off and take over DH.
Now, we hinted at this in the pitching preview, but the majority of the Braves’ lineup finds success in reaching base and knocking in RBIs against Toronto’s Patrick Corbin.
Even Kim has nine RBIs and a homer with a .977 OPS against him in his 17 total at-bats.
Austin Riley and Ozzie Albies are two major concerns for Corbin, as both have three solo shots apiece against him and over 10 RBIs.
If the rest of the Braves offense takes advantage of finding their perfect pitch against Corbin’s six-pitch arsenal early on, this matchup is a winnable one, though they’ll need to set the tone early with Grant Holmes on the mound.
Since the Blue Jays are missing some key pieces, they’ll fight to the finish and try to make it as close as they did in game one to rattle the team and shift the momentum.
With an absent George Springer from Toronto’s lineup, Nathan Lukes is taking the lead off spot, with Jesús Sánchez taking over as DH and batting fourth in the lineup. In his seven plate appearances against Holmes, Sánchez averages a .286 but also gets comfortable taking his base when facing him with a .946 OPS.
The Blue Jays might not have been looking like the team that faced the Dodgers in last year’s finals matchup, but that doesn’t mean they won’t play like they have something to prove. And the Braves, well, they just need to beat them to it and start off hot.
Starting at 7:15 p.m EDT. Tune in to watch how tonight pans out.
It’s gameday, everyone.
The New York Knicks are in the NBA Finals. June basketball is here. I never thought this day would come.
I’ve spent the last few days reliving the recent playoff runs via YouTube highlights to truly encompass the path we’ve endured to get here, and while we can maybe save the whole story of the Knicks for another day, it’s important that we reflect on the 14 games that bridged a topsy-turvy regular season and the pinnacle of basketball.
The Knicks are 4.5-point underdogs tonight and +160 underdogs to raise the Larry O’Brien Trophy, both according to FanDuel, but with the way this team has been playing and the lessons they’ve learned about themselves over the course of the postseason, I don’t know how you can be anything but confident in their chances.
Let’s look back at the five plays that have defined this playoff run thus far:
This might seem like an odd choice, given that this sequence resulted in a Knicks defeat, but we likely don’t see the absolute dominance we’ve gotten for the last 11 games without this game.
It was easy to chalk up Game 2 as a game of playoff shenanigans. A young team scrapped their way back from a 14-point deficit and rode the coattails of a generational heater by their vet, CJ McCollum, and caught the favorite napping in their own gym. It happens.
But when Atlanta burst out to an 18-point lead in Game 3, you started to get concerned, but the veteran team was able to weather the storm of being punched in the mouth on the road and came all the way back to take the lead late. This was the moment that the Knicks’ experience would prevail.
Well, not quite. After a very bad offensive possession resulted in a shot clock violation, Atlanta inbounded with 16 seconds left, trailing by one. The Knicks decided to play straight up, allowing McCollum to get the ball and face Deuce McBride 1-on-1. That strategy failed, and the Hawks took the lead.
Still, they had a chance to take the lead back or even win the game if they held the ball long enough. Yet, despite having one of the most clutch players on the planet, his resolve vanished in a similar fashion to the way it did in Game 6 against Miami three years ago, a mistake that ended their season.
This play personified the Knicks’ offense at this point. Mikal Bridges didn’t want the ball. Karl-Anthony Towns was willing to sit in the background. The team was utterly dependent on Jalen Brunson bailing them out late in games. If he struggled, the team was dead in the water.
Tears were shed in that locker room after falling behind 1-2. Knowing that this was unacceptable and sensing that a premature exit would mark the end of this era of Knicks basketball, everything changed after this.
They stopped letting McCollum work in isolation, blitzing him to force it out of his hands. They shifted to a KAT-centric offense, lightening the load on Brunson. Bridges found his confidence. Losing this game was necessary to be the wake-up call this team needed to get to the NBA Finals.
Fast forward to Game 6. The Knicks rolled to a Game 4 win to even up the series heading back to MSG and eviscerated the Hawks at home to put them on the brink of elimination in Game 6.
Despite falling behind 9-5 early, the Knicks looked the part of a Great White Shark. Their opponent was wounded and on their back feet.
They. Smelled. Blood.
The next 17-ish minutes saw the team go on a jaw-dropping 67-13 run, repeatedly turning over the Hawks, running out in transition, and scoring at will. The margin was incomprehensible. This sequence personified the degree of ass-kicking this game was.
Jalen Johnson, whose terrific All-NBA season went up in smoke over the course of this series, gets put into a box by Mitchell Robinson in the paint. Josh Hart races into the frontcourt before Atlanta could set their defense, allowing OG Anunoby to get downhill and score. The only reason it didn’t sound like a funeral after this was because of the Knicks fans.
There was no adversity to overcome in the four-game sweep of the Philadelphia 76ers in the second round. The only game that was competitive in the fourth quarter was Game 2, when Joel Embiid sat. The only game that Philly took a double digit lead was Game 2, but they didn’t lead for the last 34 minutes of the game.
By Game 4, the Sixers were dead. The Knicks were making triple after triple, much to the chagrin of the jarringly small number of Philly fans at Xfinity Mobile Arena. It was a Mother’s Day Massacre.
But no sequence displayed the true disparity between the heart and desire of these two teams more than when the Knicks extended their lead from 24 to 29 in less than 10 seconds early in the second half.
Brunson shakes Dominick Barlow out of his shoes and goes up-and-under Embiid for a reverse layup. A misguided outlet pass from Embiid was picked off by Deuce McBride, who got a hockey assist after Bridges hit Brunson in the corner for a three that gave the Knicks 99 points with over 19 minutes of game time remaining.
The only time the Knicks have felt adversity in the last 40 days was Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals. A rusty Knicks team couldn’t buy a make and were repeatedly exploited defensively as the Cavs abused the same game plan that stunted Tyrese Maxey and the 76ers.
It was 93-71 with under eight minutes to go, but we all know what happened from there. Brunson showed Tyler Kolek the true meaning of BBQ chicken with what he did to James Harden, dragging this team back into the game.
If I could pick a few more clips, I’d give credit to two gigantic shots by Bridges that countered the lone buckets from Cleveland down the stretch and gave the team life. Most of us thought it was over when Towns committed a dumb offensive foul, but his clutch shotmaking set up what happened next.
Towns got a piece of a Spida floater with a minute to go that gave the Knicks the ball, down by three. Brunson brought the ball up, was double-teamed, and made the right read to kick it to Anunoby, who then swung it to a wide open Landry Shamet.
If he misses this shot, the Cavs will have a three-point lead and the ball with under 45 seconds to go. The margin for error would be nonexistent. When the ball first hit the rim, it seemed like that was reality, but the basketball gods repaid the Knicks for Tyrese Haliburton’s improbable game-tying shot in a similar spot last year, giving Shamet a friendly role.
The Knicks aren’t here without Shamet’s blisteringly hot shooting. Every contender needs someone who can turn into a flamethrower on cue.
In case you haven’t noticed, a trend of this article is the Knicks breaking their opponents. It’s like Mike Brown’s been showing them clips from Rocky IV:
At this point, it’s all but academic in Game 3. The Knicks had come to Rocket Arena and had all but killed the Cavaliers. A 3-0 deficit is logistically impossible to come back from in basketball.
But you kinda had a feeling that the Memorial Day massacre was coming when Cleveland basically gave up at the end of the game. It looked like a team that was mentally checked out, something that was validated by Kenny Atkinson’s foolish remarks the next day at shootaround.
Aside from Max Strus, everyone stopped playing. This was a team dead in the water, mortally wounded by Game 1’s impossible comeback and firmly on life support after two more devastating blows to the heart. The Knicks are breaking their opponents, and that’s how they’ve made it to the NBA Finals.
This has nothing to do with basketball, but the results speak for themselves, don’t they?
Maybe I’m just a tad superstitious.
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The New York Knicks are back in the NBA Finals for the first time since 1999 — and they’ll face the same opponent this year, too.
A direct rematch of the 1999 NBA Finals between the Knicks and the San Antonio Spurs begins tonight, June 3. As you may recall, these two teams faced off just six months ago in the 2025 NBA Cup championship game, which the Knicks won, 124-113.
The Spurs enter the series as the oddsmakers’ favorite largely due to the sheer defensive gravity of Victor Wembanyama, who completely altered the Western Conference Finals by playing heavy minutes, raining threes and anchoring a dominant net rating when on the floor.
Led by Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns, the Knicks can’t be counted out easily. They rely heavily on outside shooting and floor spacing rather than just driving relentlessly into the paint where Wemby dominates.
The series will continue on Friday night for Game 2.
Game 1 of the NBA Finals is scheduled to tip off at 8 p.m. ET tonight, June 3.
If you don’t have cable, you’ll need a live TV streaming service to stream the game for free.
DIRECTV is our top pick for watching basketball live for free — its five-day free trial includes ABC, where every game of the NBA Finals will air. When the trial is over, you’ll pay as low as $44.99/month and gain access to over 90 live channels.
Sling TV is another affordable way to watch TV live and stream NBA games; its Select plan includes ABC and starts at $19.99/month.
All games will air on ABC at 8:30 p.m. ET.
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TV: NESN
First Pitch: 6:45 p.m. ET
The Red Sox still cannot figure out ways to win at Fenway Park. Boston dropped the series opener against the Baltimore Orioles and remains the only club in baseball to not win 10 games at home so far.
Payton Tolle looks to get the Red Sox there after a short but solid outing last time out against the Atlanta Braves.
Here’s who the Red Sox will send to the plate Wednesday night.
The Orioles counter with Chris Bassitt. The right-hander has given the Red Sox problems for years to the tune of a 3.59 ERA in his career against them. With that said, Boston chased him after allowing eight runs in two innings last June for the Toronto Blue Jays.
The Yankees’ bullpen, contrary to popular belief, hasn’t been a weakness so far. Well, statistically at least. The unit ranks tenth in MLB with a 3.59 ERA before Tuesday’s game, which is not bad. Of course, true contenders want to be much closer to the top of the league, and that hasn’t been the case with this group.
However you split it, though, the Yanks want another true shutdown reliever or two, and if they go out to the trade market to bring them in, the cost in prospects would be high. That’s probably why they have decided to speed up Carlos Lagrange’s potential call-up by moving him to the bullpen.
Lagrange, to this point, had been OK as a starter in Triple-A Scranton. Not particularly good, and certainly not bad. Just OK, which is fine for a 23-year-old pitcher with big velocity but control issues pitching at that level for the first time in his career.
The right-hander has a 4.41 ERA in 49 innings of work, with an impressive 29 percent strikeout rate but also an 11.5 percent walk rate. While that last number might look a tad high, it’s actually solid considering Lagrange’s reputation as a thrower as opposed to a pitcher.
The main issue so far with Lagrange, at least this season in Triple-A, hasn’t even been walks: it’s been a lack of better command. In his most recent start in Scranton, he threw 30 fastballs, and 21 were strikes, for example. That’s not bad if we speak strictly about control:
He can overwhelm hitters in the low minors just by pumping 103-mph heaters and that filthy slider of his, but he needs more to consistently get Triple-A batters out, and he’ll certainly need even more to be a solid major leaguer. That ‘more’ is, quite simply, command. He has the raw stuff to be a difference-maker on any staff, but MLB hitters will test him in ways he didn’t think were possible.
The lack of good command, which is basically hitting his spots and not just throwing the ball in the zone, has resulted in more hard contact against Lagrange. Last year, the flamethrower allowed 0.46 home runs per nine innings in Double-A Somerset, but that number has soared to 1.47 in 2026 in Scranton. It’s the first time in his career he has been over 1.00 in a relevant sample.
Perhaps the fact that Lagrange is prone to leaving some meatballs over the plate from time to time played a big role in the Yankees’ decision to move him to the bullpen, at least for 2026. Yes, their lack of elite relief pitching talent on the roster aside from one or two exceptions might have contributed, too, but they also believe that the righty could be less vulnerable in short spurts as a reliever. They probably think his top-notch velocity can be an asset even if command is not ideal, and they are probably right… as long as he doesn’t hurt himself with walks at the highest level.
If Triple-A hitters can make him pay if he gets wild, you can be sure the same is true, even to a greater extent, for MLB batters. When it’s time for him to test his skills against top competition, he will need to show that he has, indeed, made strides.
The 2026 campaign has been positive for the pitcher even though the results have been far from elite. His development, however, is not done. Lagrange still needs to do a better job preventing the long ball, and that will come with reps, time, and innings. Circumstances might force the Yankees to call him up in the summer, once he has become familiar with his new role, and to be completely honest, it suits his current skill set better than starting.
The Spurs depth in the regular season was one of their strengths, with up to 11 current players having rotation spots at some point or another. That includes veteran Harrison Barnes and rookie Carter Bryant swapping places midseason, but even as the rotation has shortened, they have both still been situationally used in the playoffs (albeit in short leashes).
Despite all that depth, how the game has gone for the Spurs has depended more and more on how Victor Wembanyama has performed as the playoffs progress. When he’s great, the Spurs usually win, but when he’s merely “good” but doesn’t get a lot of help (or, you know, has to leave the game for reasons he either did or didn’t cause), the Spurs have struggled. Now that we have reached the NBA Finals against a similarly deep and stronger Knicks team, everyone will have to step up.
The Spurs have seen almost everyone step up at some point or another in these playoffs, but there’s one player they seem to benefit the most from when he has a big game, and that’s rookie guard Dylan Harper. In our In the Bonus article from after Game 7 against the Thunder, this was part of my answer to the question, “Who was the second most important Spur” after Victor Wembanyama:
I’m going to go out on a limb (and probably differ from everyone else) and say Harper because he is the biggest wildcard of the group. Outside of Wemby, perhaps the biggest deciding factor in each game was if the Spurs’ bench would hold on when he sat, and when Harper was out for most of Game 2 or ineffective from games 3-5 with the sore adductor, it was a much bigger hurdle for them to overcome. When he was on point in games 1 (which he admittedly started), 6 and 7, the Spurs had the upper hand almost the entire time.
This got me to thinking, as many X factors as the Spurs have in this series, Harper could be the most important one, just like he was against OKC. An X factor is defined as “a circumstance, quality, or person that has a strong but unpredictable influence,” and that certainly applies to Harper. He’s a rookie, and despite having a poise and maturity level beyond his years, he‘s still going to have his ups and downs, but perhaps nothing showed his value more than when he was at his best against the Thunder, and that is bound to be the case against the Knicks as well.
None of this is to say he needs to be their second best player or leading scorer after Wemby or completely take over games, but he needs to help keep the offense flowing for the second unit when De’Aaron Fox and/or Stephon Castle sits and keep hitting big, timely shots like he did in Game 7. As previously stated, when he’s been on, the Spurs have had the advantage; when he isn’t, they suffer when the starters sit. The Finals is all hands on deck, and even though Keldon Johnson was Sixth Man of the Year, the second unit’s performance and perhaps the Spurs’ fate begins and ends with Harper.
(For added proof, FanDuel Sportsbook has Harper as 4th most likely Spur to win Finals MVP behind Wemby, Fox and Castle. How far has he come that a rookie bench player is looked so highly upon?)
Julian Champagnie — After a hot first round, Champagnie’s three-point shooting has been up and down in the last two rounds, and his impact is pretty clear. In their 12 wins, he has shot 40% from three; in their six loss, just 29.8%. Almost every rotation player on the Knicks is an above average three-point shooter, which could be their biggest advantage. The Spurs will need everyone to step up in that regard, especially their best shooter, who needs to either help prevent double-teams on Wemby by making shots or capitalize off them — by making shots.
De’Aaron Fox’s ankle — As an All-Star, Fox himself is not a X Factor, but his gimpy ankle turns him into one. After suffering a high ankle sprain in the second round against Minnesota, he missed Games 1 and 2 against the Thunder, which the Spurs split thanks to a fantastic performance from Harper in Game 1. However, it took him until about Game 6 or 7 to look right again, but while the Spurs certainly missed his slashing ability and automatic offense in that time frame, his mere presence was able keep the turnovers down. They’ll need that at a minimum from him again, but the closer he can get to the healthiest version of himself, the better.
Keldon Johnson — It goes without saying that KJ has suffered the Curse of the Award in these playoffs (a.k.a. when a player wins something, then their production in the postseason suffers — it’s especially known to attack MVP’s). Similar to Harper and another player to be listed below, the Spurs need the bench to perform in those crucial non-Wemby (and Fox, Castle, etc.) minutes. KJ got some redemption with an offensive explosion in the fourth quarter of Game 7, and they’ll need of his Sixth Man of the Year form throughout the Finals.
Luke Kornet — Kornet has and will continue to be the target of driving lanes the instant Wemby sits because opponents know how valuable those minutes are. He’s not the only reason the non-Wemby minutes have been largely negative, but he’s the one carrying the burden, fairly or not. Like KJ, hopefully his redemption from Game 7 carries over. We may also get some French Vanilla minutes since the Knicks are equally as capable of playing two bigs, so that’s another scenario he needs to be ready for and could be a huge factor.
The Nick Castellanos experiment in San Diego is over after just 39 games.
The Padres designated the veteran outfielder for assignment on Wednesday after an abysmal first two months of the season in which he slashed .191/.221/.339 for an OPS of .560 in 122 plate appearances, career lows across the board in his 14-year big league career.
INF/OF Samad Taylor has been called up from Triple-A El Paso in the corresponding roster move.
The timing of the move comes as the Padres are currently in Philadelphia for a three-game series, where Castellanos played four seasons before he was released in February ahead of the final year of a five-year, $100 million contract that began in 2022. During his time in Philadelphia, Castellanos averaged .260 with a .732 OPS and hit 82 home runs.
He emerged as a key player during the Phillies' 2022 NLCS run and was an All-Star for the second time in his career the following season, but his relationship with the organization and then-manager Rob Thomson became strained in 2025 after his antics — such as drinking an El Presidente beer in the dugout after being removed from a game — made more headlines than his declining production.
"Apparently, they thought it was just best for the organization that my personality wasn’t in the clubhouse," Castellanos told reporters recently of his unceremonious end in Philadelphia.
Castellanos last appeared in a game for the Padres on May 31 against the Washington Nationals, where he went 1-for-2 with an RBI and a stolen base.
This could spell the end of Castellanos' career. The 34-year-old currently ranks in the bottom third of the Majors in fielding run value, bat speed, squared-up percentage, arm value and arm strength. His liability on defense was a factor in his fallout with the Phillies a year ago and the Padres tried to mitigate that by getting him some reps at first base and DH this season, but he still posted an OAA (outs above average) value of -4. Though he has never been a strong fielder, Castellanos' bat has always been able to make up for his defensive shortcomings; but that simply hasn't been the case the last two seasons.
That said, it wouldn't be the biggest surprise if some team in need of pop at the plate takes a chance on Castellanos in hopes he can return to form.
The Padres were able put together a solid start to the season despite struggles at the plate from Castellanos as well as their core of Fernando Tatis Jr. and Manny Machado thanks to stellar performances from their starters and league-best bullpen, but they've struggled down the stretch. Since losing two of three against the Los Angeles Dodgers from May 18-20 to fall back into second place in the division, they've lost seven of their last 10 and enter Wednesday on a three-game losing streak and find themselves trailing LA by six games.
San Diego is currently tied with the Pittsburgh Pirates for the top NL Wild Card spot.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Nick Castellanos era with Padres over: San Diego stats tell the story
I always say it is hardest to blog about a middling team. A bad team, lots to talk about. A good team, lots to talk about. One in the middle?
I think the Jays will get better. I think getting Alejandro Kirk back will help a lot. I think getting, you know, five actual starting pitchers will help. Teams tend to do well on bullpen days, but I think using everyone in the pen in one game out of five (or in the Jays’ case, two games out of five) puts a lot of stress on the relievers. As much as I like the old days when Mark Eichhorn could throw 160 innings in a season, Tom Henke could throw 90 innings, and Duane Ward could throw 110, it was a different game back then. Having Louis Varland pitch in every other game isn’t a recipe for long-term success.
It would also help if we could get 4-5-6 runs a game. Yesterday, we had nine hits, including a home run, and we still only scored three runs. Until we start scoring consistently, we really can’t blame the pitching for a mediocre record. There is hardly anyone on the offense who is heading better than we would have expected, except for Yohendrick Piñango (and I don’t know of anyone who expected he would get playing time in the majors this year.
Even defensively, we haven’t been the team I expected. Gimenez has been terrific at short. And Daulton Varsho seems to be coming back to what we expected. But Ernie Clement has been a -5 runs above average at second base, and I didn’t see that coming. Jesus Sanchez and Piñango look like two guys who are new to playing the outfield.
Anyway, I do think things will get better with some of the guys coming off the IL. I don’t know if it will be better enough, but the AL has been pretty crappy, and we aren’t far out of a playoff spot, just one game back at the moment. Some or one of those teams hovering around the .500 mark are going to have to get better; maybe it will be the Jays. They had a great second half last year. Who is to say it can’t happen again?
Baseball America has made some changes to its top 100 prospect list, and Jays prospect Nolan Perry has jumped on the list at #85. BA says:
Perry is one of this season’s biggest risers. He’s used a dynamic combination of speed and spin to flummox hitters at both Class A stops, and his ERA entering June 2 sat at a sparkling 1.37. He’s punched out 72 hitters in 46 innings and has the makings of a future rotation piece if he can bring his changeup forward.
Of course, Trey Yesavage is one of ten players from their list to have graduated off their list.
Beyond that, Arjun Nimmala has moved up from #65 to #48 (Jo Jo Parker has moved down, 41s
Another Wednesday, that means it must be Ohtani on the bump day.
Just a few weeks ago people were wringing their hands about Shohei Ohtani being stellar on the mound, but putrid at the plate. Well, the two-way superstar has definitely turned things around with his bat.
In Tuesday night’s game, his first two at bats were a double and a triple. His reappearance of his old self at the plate came into play later, when he was intentionally walked in the seventh inning – which is the first time in 26 games that he had been walked intentionally. He later came around to score what would be the winning run. In his last five games, Ohtani is 11-for-22 with a homer, a triple, and two doubles.
On the pitching side, Ohtani sits at 5-2 with a 0.82 ERA. Despite tossing six no-hit innings last week against the Colorado Rockies, Shohei didn’t actually have one of his best outings. He had a season low 56% strike rate and walked a season high four batters. He stated after the game he “just really couldn’t find it”.
Only seven current Diamondback players have faced Ohtani before, and all combined have 21 at bats against, with no homers and no RBI amongst them.
The Dodgers will face Zac Gallen, whom they have seen plenty of times. Gallen has been much better at home so far this season, going 3-1 with a 3.09 ERA as opposed to a 7.57 ERA on the road. The Dodgers did see him to start the season where they tagged him for four runs, but not until the fifth inning, which included a three-run homer off the bat of Andy Pages.
The Diamondback have been tough so far this series, with Arizona taking the first game 4-1, and almost completing a comeback, losing 6-5 in Tuesday’s game.
In that game, five relievers were needed to hold on to that win. Ohtani would do well to go deep into the game, at least the six he usually goes. Gallen is one of the weaker pitchers in the Diamondbacks arsenal, and Dodgers have done really well against right handers this season. Ohtani last pitched at Chase Field last September, where he went six scoreless innings with eight strikeouts.