San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama staying at Shaolin temple in China for a few days

Victor Wembanyama is in China, and it's not all about vacation.

The San Antonio Spurs star is in the midst of what's expected to be a 10-day stay at a Shaolin temple in Zhengzhou, China. The temple is a place that welcomes visitors who wish to study Chan meditation, Shaolin Kung Fu, traditional Chinese medicine and more.

The NBA China office confirmed that Wembanyama is at the temple, and some Chinese media also confirmed his presence there with the temple itself. “Concentrate on training!” read part of a social media post on the NBA's Weibo account, which also revealed the plans for a 10-day stay.

Then again, the secret was getting out through other social media means anyway.

Some photos of Wembanyama with a shaved head - it wasn't shaved when he arrived in China - and wearing a robe similar to the other monks began widely circulating this week. One of the photos showed the 7-foot-4 center sitting on a Chinese style chair in front of multiple Buddha sculptures.

There evidently was some sightseeing going on earlier in the trip as well.

“Victor Wembanyama, live from China, on the Great Wall itself, having an amazing time. It's crazy," he said on a video posted to Instagram by the Spurs' account and others.

Wembanyama is expected back in the U.S. in the coming weeks and likely will be with the Spurs' delegation that goes to the NBA Summer League in Las Vegas next month. The Spurs, like many teams, often have many players on their NBA roster with the summer league team for various events.

The 21-year-old Frenchman led the NBA in blocked shots during the regular season, despite his season ending in February - just after his first All-Star Game appearance - because of deep vein thrombosis in his right shoulder. The Spurs are hopeful that he will be able to play when next season begins, and the French national team also has expressed hope that Wembanyama will be able to play for his country at this summer's European championships.

Wembanyama was the league’s rookie of the year last season and was widely expected to be a front-runner in this season's defensive player of the year race. He attempted 403 3-pointers and blocked 176 shots this season - no player in NBA history has ever finished a season with those numbers - and he was averaging 24.3 points, 11 rebounds, 3.8 blocks and 3.7 assists when the DVT was detected.

The only other player in NBA history to finish a season averaging all those numbers was Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in 1975-76.

DeMarcus Cousins suspended for remainder of Puerto Rican league season after confrontation with fans

DeMarcus Cousins

Sacramento Kings center DeMarcus Cousins watches the final minutes of the game against the San Antonio Spurs from the bench after fouling out of during the second half of an NBA basketball game a in Sacramento, Calif., Wednesday, April 18, 2012. The Spurs won 127-102.(AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

AP

It's 2025, DeMarcus Cousins has been out of the NBA for three years, yet we're still talking about him beefing with fans.

Cousins was playing for Mets de Guaynabo in the Puerto Rican Professional Basketball League — "was" because he has been suspended from the league for the remainder of the season and fined $4,250 for a "disqualifying foul, a technical foul, and acts that incite violence or provocation," fines that could jump up to $10,000 if Cousins cannot "show cause" as to why he should not be fined more, reports, Baloncesto Superior Nacional.

Videos of the confrontations went viral. First, there was an incident with a fan courtside.

When Cousins was ejected, he went back to the locker room, and on the way, fans threw their drinks on him, which led him to try an go after those fans.

While the behavior of those fans was more aggressive than anything Cousins would have seen in his 11 NBA seasons, no league is going to let physically attacking fans go unpunished.

Cousins played in 11 NBA seasons, averaging 19.6 points and 10.2 rebounds per game, being a four-time All-Star and two-time All-NBA player.

Sienna Toohey, 16, surfaces as bright hope for Australian swimming

  • Schoolgirl wins 100m breaststroke to qualify for world championships

  • Toohey only started swimming as she wanted to play water polo

A 16-year-old schoolgirl is being hailed as the future of Australian swimming after earning world championship selection. Sienna Toohey left seasoned campaigners including Kaylee McKeown in awe with a stunning swim at Australia’s selection trials in Adelaide on Tuesday night.

The Albury teenager, who only started swimming because she wanted to play water polo, triumphed in the women’s 100m breaststroke. Toohey’s victory, in a personal best time of 1:06.55, secured her berth at the world titles in Singapore from 27 July to 3 August.

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Pacers need more from Tyrese Haliburton in Game 3, but that’s more than simply scoring

INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana struggled to score in the first half of Game 2 against the swarming Oklahoma City defense, putting up just 41 points on 34.9% shooting, including shooting just 46.2% in the paint. The problems started with their all-everything point guard, Tyrese Haliburton, who shot just 2-of-7 through three quarters, with not one of those attempts coming in the paint.

That's happened to the Pacers a handful of times this season and in the playoffs — most notably Game 5 of the Eastern Conference Finals against the Knicks, when he had 8 points on 2-of-7 shooting for the game. In the face of intense defensive pressure, Haliburton defers to teammates — if the defense is loading up on him, someone else has to be open. His instinct is to find that open man.

As fans, we have been conditioned to expect our stars to attack in the face of that pressure — people want Haliburton to go Kobe and start shooting over triple-teams. People want him to be like Mike. Be selfish and pull his team up with him.

That's not how Haliburton is wired. That's not the Pacers' formula.

That's Indiana's dilemma for Game 3 and the rest of the series: The Pacers need more Haliburton, but it can't be just scoring. He's not going to go out and jack up 25 shots Wednesday night in Game 3 — he hasn't taken more than 23 in any game this season. Indiana thrives when Haliburton is setting the table and everyone is eating, but he's got to eat more, too.

Thunder pressure defense

Haliburton's challenge starts with the problem 28 other teams have faced this season: Oklahoma City's physical, high-pressure defense.

"They got more guys than most teams in the NBA that are high level at the point of attack," Haliburton said. "They're really connected on the defensive end. I feel like they mix up coverages. I think coach [Mark] Daigneault isn't afraid to do things on the fly. He doesn't do everything that's like very traditional…

"I think the biggest thing is just personnel. Their personnel is different than everywhere else."

"We've got guys that are hard to screen either because of strength or quickness or both," Daigneault said. "[Lu] Dort comes to mind. [Alex] Caruso comes to mind. [Jalen Williams] comes to mind. Cason Wallace, for sure. They're good pursue guys. Having guys at the rim is helpful [Chet Holmgren, Isaiah Hartenstein]. You can't spring downhill and assume there's something good there for you. Hopefully, the help is deterring that to a degree."

Haliburton and other Pacers mentioned leaning into watching the film of Game 2 (and the first half of Game 1), seeing what didn't work, and what worked better in the fourth quarter of Game 2 (when Haliburton scored 12 points and looked more like himself, but it was too little to late). "The answers always lie in the film," Haliburton said.

Pacers mixing it up

When discussing the Thunder defense, Haliburton employed phrasing typically reserved for describing how to slow down an elite offensive player.

"You can't give these guys the same dosage, the same look of anything," Haliburton said. "If you try to run high pick-and-roll all game, they just crawl into you, really pack the paint, nothing is open. There's got to be a mix of things. Got to be off the ball, playing off the pitch, coming off ball screens. You can't run the same thing consistently against these guys. You got to mix it up.

"We got to do a much better job of that. I feel like I probably got caught in too many high pick-and-rolls where they can really pack it in and end up getting shots late against the clock, especially the first half of both games."

To a man, the Pacers talked about getting the ball into the paint more and working inside-out to get their attempts, as they have done all season. It also could mean a little more Pascal Siakam with the ball in his hands for the Pacers.

"[Siakam is] one of the few guys on their team that really looks for isolation to score. A lot of other guys, it's through the flow of their offense and pace," Caruso said.

Whatever the Pacers do to adjust, it won't change how the Thunder want to play.

"My approach will be the same. Our approach will be the same," Dort said.

Indiana is going to come out at home Wednesday night in a critical Game 3 (with the series tied 1-1) and throw its best punch — and that punch has to have Haliburton shooting more.

Just not too much.

Mets' Sean Manaea strikes out four in second rehab start with High-A Brooklyn

Mets left-hander Sean Manaea had a solid second rehab start Tuesday night in Coney Island as he works his way back from an oblique injury.

After allowing four runs (three earned) in 1.2 innings on Friday, Manaea bounced back to deal 2.2 scoreless innings.

Of course, his outing got off to an auspicious start, as he plunked left-handed batting Joseph Sullivan on the second pitch he threw. Manaea allowed a steal of second on his third pitch before getting a flyout to right, but an infield single to first put runners on the corners with one out. A ball in the dirt put two in scoring position, but the Mets' lefty got a strikeout swinging and a pop-up to right to end the threat.

Manaea got to pitch with a lead after the Cyclones plated two runs in the home half of the first inning, and after retiring the first two of the frame, adding a second strikeout swinging, he issued his first walk of his rehab before recording another strikeout swinging on a nasty breaking pitch.

In his final inning of the night, the lefty sandwiched an infield single to short around another swinging strikeout on a breaking pitch and a pop out to third base.

Manaea threw 46 pitches (31 strikes) to get 10 outs, allowing one hit, one walk, a hit-by-pitch, and striking out four.

Paul Maurice Makes History In Panthers' Game 3 Win

The Florida Panthers picked up a massive 6-1 win over the Edmonton Oilers in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final. With this blowout win, the Panthers now have a 2-1 series lead over the Oilers in the series. 

With Florida's Game 3 win, Panthers head coach Paul Maurice has hit an incredibly rare milestone behind the bench. 

According to NHL Public Relations, Maurice is now just the third coach in the history of the NHL to reach 1,000 career wins (regular season and playoffs combined). The only other coaches who have reached this incredible feat are Scotty Bowman (1,467 wins) and Joel Quenneville (1,090 wins).

This latest accomplishment for Maurice only shows just how fantastic of a career he has put together as an NHL coach, and the Panthers are certainly lucky to have him as their bench boss. 

Maurice and the Panthers will now look to stay hot and pick up another victory in Game 4 from here. It would be huge if they did, as the Panthers would take a commanding 3-1 series lead over the Oilers. 

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Photo Credit: © Jim Rassol-Imagn Images

Adames uses ‘reset' to spur resurgence in Giants' improbable comeback

Adames uses ‘reset' to spur resurgence in Giants' improbable comeback originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Entering the ninth inning Tuesday, even as the Giants trailed the lowly Colorado Rockies 5-2, Willy Adames already had to feel better about himself.

Adames came into the game without a hit in 18 at-bats since June 1 and without a home run since May 13, but he ended both streaks with a blast to center after driving in another run earlier.

Then the star shortstop grinded out an important walk to continue San Francisco’s game-winning rally in the final frame for a 6-5 comeback win at Coors Field. That took his night up another notch, which could mark the start of an impending turnaround.

“Obviously, it’s a good day for me personally, but it’s even better when you get a win like that,” Adames told NBC Sports Bay Area’s Bonta Hill and Ron Wotus on “Giants Postgame Live.” “I think that’s going to get us going.”

After signing with San Francisco as a free agent last December, Adames has underwhelmed so far in the first season of his seven-year, $182 million contract. Before Tuesday, he was hitting just .193 with a .584 OPS.

But on a night when Adames recorded both his 500th career run and 500th RBI, he displayed why the Giants gave him the largest contract in franchise history.

It all started Sunday, when manager Bob Melvin gave the shortstop a rare rest day ahead of Monday’s off day, allowing Adames a full 48 hours to get his mind right.

“It’s always great when you’re not having your best time out there, just to have a day or two days just to reset and go back to who you are,” Adames told Hill and Wotus. “I think those two days were really good for me just to relax mentally and let it go and try to be here for the team and just do whatever I can to help the guys to win.”

He delivered immediately upon his return. After Jung Hoo Lee‘s leadoff triple to open the game, Adames got to a 3-2 count before hitting a sacrifice fly to put San Francisco ahead early.

He remained patient again in the fifth, earning a 3-1 count advantage before smashing a 439-foot, game-tying homer.

“Today, it was just for me to try to be calm on the play and just try to swing at my pitch, to battle the at-bats and put a good swing on it,” Adames explained. “I feel like I got away from that the last week or so. … That homer obviously felt really good.”

But his ninth-inning at-bat arguably was the most impressive. As the go-ahead run at the plate with one out, Adames quickly fell behind 0-2. He then battled back to a full count and fouled off a pair of tough cutters in the zone. On the eighth pitch of the at-bat, Adames didn’t swing at a high cutter to draw a walk that loaded the bases.

Three batters later, Adames scored the game-winning run on a Mike Yastrzemski single to cap off yet another wild Giants comeback — their franchise-record sixth one-run win in a row.

“It feels like we never give up. It feels like we always have an opportunity to come back,” Adames told Hill and Wotus. “That’s how the guys feel in the dugout. It’s like, OK, we can be down by three, four, it doesn’t matter. We’re going to go out there until the last out and grind every at-bat, and I think today was a very good example of how good this team is. Everybody went out there in the top of the ninth and battled, took great at-bats, took great swings, just did the fundamental stuff, and it paid off. We got the win.”

Tuesday was the Giants’ eighth comeback of at least three runs in just 67 games this season, which leads MLB. Even Adames isn’t sure how San Francisco keeps pulling out these bizarre wins.

“It’s been so fun. I don’t even know how to explain it,” Adames told Hill and Wotus. “We’re just having fun, and just knowing that we can come back, it doesn’t matter [what] the score is.”

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Giolito gives Red Sox much-needed quality start in win vs. Rays

Giolito gives Red Sox much-needed quality start in win vs. Rays originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

BOSTON – The Boston Red Sox needed a bounce-back outing from Lucas Giolito on Tuesday, and the veteran right-hander delivered.

Giolito, who entered his Tuesday start with a lackluster 6.42 ERA, limited the Tampa Bay Rays to only one run (none earned) on three hits and three walks through six innings. He struck out four Rays hitters en route to a 3-1 Red Sox victory at Fenway Park.

The performance was a breath of fresh air for a Red Sox rotation that has been abysmal with the exception of ace Garrett Crochet. All season, Boston’s starters have struggled and strained the bullpen with their inability to pitch deep into games.

“We needed that,” Red Sox manager Alex Cora said after the win. “We were very thin in the bullpen. It was good to see him. Velo’s up, location was better, the mix of pitches, really good. And one run over six, that’s more than enough.”

Giolito’s dip in fastball velocity was a concern over his last few starts, but it was back in the mid-to-upper 90s on Tuesday. After allowing seven earned runs in only 1.2 innings during his previous start against the Los Angeles Angels, he went back to the drawing board with pitching coach Andrew Bailey.

“After the last outing, we really broke down a lot of my mechanics and made some big-time adjustments,” Giolito said. “Which is still a work in progress, but we found something to get that life back on my heater. … and then let everything play off of that.”

Tuesday’s win marked the Red Sox’ second straight game with a starter making it at least six innings. Right-hander Brayan Bello pitched 6.1 innings in a losing effort on Monday, his second consecutive six-inning start after failing to make it through five innings in his previous five outings.

“We’re two for two in this series, and hopefully we can do it again tomorrow,” Cora said. “To get the lead is important at this level. You can use the bullpen after that however you want. And it’s tough to comeback. Like, 65 percent of the games we’ve been behind.”

Walker Buehler will look to complete the trifecta when he takes the mound for Wednesday’s rubber match. Like Giolito, the veteran righty is looking for a bounce-back performance after lasting only two innings in Friday’s loss to the New York Yankees.

First pitch for Wednesday’s series finale against the Rays at Fenway Park is scheduled for 7:10 p.m. ET.

Yankees Injury Notes: Jake Cousins undergoing elbow testing, Marcus Stroman's first rehab start set

Prior to Tuesday's series opener against the Royals in Kansas City, Yankees manager Aaron Boone gave updates on a few players...


Jake Cousins pulled from rehab assignment

Cousins was on rehab assignment, recovering from a forearm/pectoral injury, when he was suddenly removed by the Yankees due to an elbow issue.

Boone said the assignment was paused because Cousins spoke up after the reliever said he "felt some stuff in his elbow." The right-hander has undergone an MRI and has met with doctors on Tuesday to get to the bottom of the issue.

Cousins, 30, has yet to pitch for the Yankees this season but was a good bullpen piece a season ago. In 37 appearances in 2024, he pitched to a 2.37 ERA and a 1.05 WHIP. He also had eight holds and one save in one opportunity.

Marcus Stroman's first rehab start set

On a positive note, the Yankees have set the date for Stroman's first rehab start. The veteran right-hander will take the mound for Double-A Somerset on Wednesday.

Stroman (knee) has been trying to work his way back to the Yankees rotation after making three starts earlier this season. He's allowed 12 earned runs in 9.1 innings across those three starts.

Stroman will join teammate Giancarlo Stanton in Somerset. The slugger started his rehab assignment on Tuesday and will likely be in the lineup for Stroman when he takes the mound on Wednesday.

With a crowded rotation, the Yankees will have to make a decision on what to do with Stroman. The logical move would be to move Ryan Yarbrough back into the bullpen and slide Stroman in the rotation with Max Fried, Carlos Rodon, Clarke Schmidt and Will Warren.

How Giants made franchise history in gritty comeback win vs. Rockies

How Giants made franchise history in gritty comeback win vs. Rockies originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Giants are back to their tortuous ways after another nail-biting victory on Tuesday night at Coors Field.

In fact, San Francisco’s 6-5 win over the Colorado Rockies — which came after a wild four-run ninth inning — put the 2025 Giants in the franchise history books with six consecutive one-run victories. It’s the longest such streak in Giants history.

Additionally, the Giants are the first MLB team in 36 years to win six games in a row by one run, per Josh Dubow of the Associated Press. It hadn’t been done since the then-California Angels accomplished the feat in 1989.

The Giants entered the final inning of Tuesday’s game trailing 5-2, but a Casey Schmitt homer closed the gap and a trio of walks set Heliot Ramos up for a sacrifice fly with the bases loaded. Then, Wilmer Flores beat out an infield single to tie the game before Mike Yastrzemski delivered the go-ahead run with an RBI single to right field.

The Giants’ one-run marathon also coincides with their six-game winning streak, which began after president of baseball operations Buster Posey put his first big roster shakeup into place — a series of moves headlined by designating first baseman LaMonte Wade Jr. for assignment.

Fans in San Francisco know their way around torture very well, but even the dynastic Giants teams of the 2010s never did it like this.

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Oilers' Walman fined $10K as Panthers stayed cool amid fight-filled Game 3

The Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers played Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final on Monday night in Sunrise.

It did not feel like a normal Stanley Cup Final game.

There were multiple fights, a line brawl and cheap shots left and right.

When the dust settled, officials had called 140 minutes of penalties, which is the fourth-most ever in a Stanley Cup Final game.

Many of the physical interactions were either instigated or exacerbated by the Oilers as Florida's lead ballooned from three to four to five.

While there were plenty of questionable decisions, a couple by Oilers defenseman Jake Walman caught the attention of the NHL Department of Player Safety.

Walman was fined a total of $10,000 by the NHL DOPS for two separate incidents that occurred during Game 3.

One came after he and Florida's A.J. Greer had a little run-in, which ended up with Greer skating away and to his bench with Walman's glove.

Walman responded by taking a water bottle from the Oilers bench and spraying it several times at Florida's bench.

That "incident involving Florida's bench" cost Walman $5,000, the maximum allowable fine under the collective bargaining agreement between the NHL and NHLPA.

"I obviously did that for a reason," Walman said after the game. "I won't go into the details. It's just gamesmanship, I guess. I've just got to realize there's cameras everywhere and they see that stuff."

The second $5,000 fine stemmed from an altercation with Matthew Tkachuk in front of Edmonton's net.

While Tkachuk's arms were being held by Oilers blueliner John Klingberg, Walman laid several punches to Tkachuk's face and head.

Officials gave Wallman a double minor for roughing and a minor penalty for unsportsmanlike conduct.

Tkachuk, who finished the game with an assist and, surprisingly, no penalty minutes,

"We just went out there and played hockey," he said. "We talked about it in the third (period), if you have to take a punch, you take a punch. If you have to take a cross-check, take a cross-check. A spear or a slash in the face, whatever the case is."

It will be interesting to see how the Oilers respond after such an undisciplined performance.

Game 4 between Florida and Edmonton is set for Thursday at 8 p.m. from Amerant Bank Arena.

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Photo caption: Jun 9, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers forward Evan Rodrigues (17) fights Edmonton Oilers right wing Corey Perry (90) during the third period in game three of the 2025 Stanley Cup Final at Amerant Bank Arena. (Jim Rassol-Imagn Images)

Erin Phillips and Daisy Pearce become first AFLW players inducted to hall of fame

  • Pair join trailblazer Debbie Lee in Australian Football Hall Of Fame

  • Nick Riewoldt, Luke Hodge and Garry Lyon also inducted

Erin Phillips paid an emotional tribute to her father Greg as she joined him in the Australian Football Hall Of Fame. Phillips and Daisy Pearce are the first AFLW players to be inducted, joining trailblazer Debbie Lee as female inductees.

South Australian goalkicking machine Ken Farmer was elevated to legend status at Tuesday night’s annual dinner in Melbourne.

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Cubs' enviable offense beats up on Abel and Phillies' bullpen in loss

Cubs' enviable offense beats up on Abel and Phillies' bullpen in loss originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Mick Abel has faced a tougher lineup each time out as a big-leaguer and his third start on Tuesday wasn’t nearly as effective as the first two.

He left three balls up against the Cubs and paid for all three mistakes with homers by Dansby Swanson in the second inning, Ian Happ in the third and Michael Busch in the fourth of an 8-4 Phillies loss.

Abel was able to strike out the dangerous Kyle Tucker on his 30th pitch of the fourth inning to end a bases-loaded jam but it also ended his night. He walked three after pitching 11⅓ innings without one in his first two starts against the Pirates and Blue Jays.

”The Busch one was kind of a flat fastball left over the plate,” Abel said. “The one to Dansby, I’ll give him all the credit in the world, he just smashed it, top-rope.”

The Phillies came back to take the lead in the middle innings on a two-run single to left-center by Alec Bohm, one of their only hot hitters. Earlier, Max Kepler hit a Citizens Bank Park cheapie to the first row in right-center for the Phils’ first two runs.

But Happ, who has hurt the Phillies badly in the two games of this series, answered with a two-out, two-run homer off a middle-in Taijuan Walker cutter in the sixth to put the Cubs ahead. They broke it open with three more in the top of the eighth off Joe Ross and Carlos Hernandez.

The Cubs are second in MLB to the Dodgers in runs per game and rank in the top five in homers, batting average, on-base percentage, slugging and steals. They’ve been a complete offense in 2025, much more dynamic than the Phillies, and leads haven’t felt safe this week.

The Phils are 38-29 heading into the final meeting of the season between the two teams Wednesday at 1:05 p.m. A win would clinch them the series and the season series, with all of these games potentially mattering for seeding come playoff time.

Before any of that matters, though, the Phillies need to find some semblance of offensive consistency. They’ve scored more than four runs twice in their last 12 games, going 2-10. They don’t have much of an offensive identity, especially without Bryce Harper. At many times during the four years with this core, the Phillies have been a powerful offense, a selective offense, one capable of taxing and beating even elite setup men and closers. But they’re none of those things right now, at least not consistently. They’re more of a station-to-station, singles-based offense that doesn’t have great speed and isn’t picking enough big blows with runners in scoring position.

“The last couple weeks, wins, losses, guys getting hurt, it feels like anything that can go wrong has gone wrong,” catcher J.T. Realmuto said. 

“I know we say it all the time but that’s part of the game, it happens every season. We went through a stretch just like this last year. We’ve just got to do our best to press forward. We know we’re a good team, there’s a lot of talent in this clubhouse. We’ve got to get through this stretch as fast as we can and move on.”

The National League is tougher this year. A playoff berth can’t be assumed. The Phillies began the night four games behind the Mets in the NL East and tied with the Giants for the top wild-card spot but only 1½ games ahead of the Cardinals, the first team out. The Brewers, Reds and D-backs aren’t too far behind. There’s a ton of baseball left, 95 games, but there will be no cruising to October this year.

There was no update Tuesday on Harper’s inflamed right wrist. He continues to receive treatment and won’t swing for a little while. It is unclear when he will return but it doesn’t seem like it will be next Monday when Harper is first eligible.

The update on Aaron Nola was worse. Nola has a stress reaction in his right rib on top of the sprained right ankle that initially landed him on the injured list on May 15. It is highly unlikely Nola will return before the All-Star break in mid-July. When he does rejoin the Phillies’ rotation, he’ll have missed more than two months.

It will mean a substantially longer runway for Abel, who is currently occupying Nola’s rotation spot. He wasn’t at his best Tuesday and we’ll now see how Abel responds to his first bit of big-league adversity.

To add insult to injury, Brandon Marsh exited after the fifth inning Tuesday with left elbow soreness after finally heating up for the first time in 2025. He appeared to jam the arm on a slide when stealing second base. Marsh had been 5-for-7 during a season-best three-game hitting streak.

”He kind’ve hyperextended it so there’s some soreness,” manager Rob Thomson said. “He’ll be day-to-day.”

The Provoked Oilers Gave The Panthers Exactly What They Wanted

The Edmonton Oilers were nearly impossible to shake in the first three rounds of the playoffs. 

As they beat the Los Angeles Kings, Vegas Golden Knights and Dallas Stars, the Oilers had brief moments here or there where they looked unnerved, but that was only temporary. For the most part, the Oilers imposed their will on their opponent and made relatively short work of them.

But now, after three Stanley Cup final games against the defending champions, the Florida Panthers, the Oilers have been reactionary, knee-jerk-ish and ultimately, very beatable. 

In Game 1 against the Panthers, Edmonton pulled out a win, but in the last two games, the Oilers have been increasingly overwhelmed by Florida’s waves of provocation. 

The frustrating part for the Oilers is that they had to know the provocation was always coming, yet they still look very much like a team that doesn’t have the capacity to turn the other cheek. They’re down 2-1 as a result.

The Panthers made their bones by pushing the envelope, playing an extremely physical game and basically daring their opponent to maintain their composure. 

Everybody knew what they were doing. And thus far, only the Toronto Maple Leafs – which took the Panthers to seven games in the second round – absorbed Florida’s punches, literally and competitively, and gave the Panthers a run for their money. But even then, the Leafs eventually wilted under Florida’s unending pressure with blowout losses at home.

You would think Oilers coach Kris Knoblauch would’ve made it clear to his players that they couldn’t give in to the temptation to pound the Panthers into a new zip code. Trent Frederic even discussed that before the Cup final.

"You have to stay away from the stuff after whistles," Frederic told Ryan Kennedy. "I like our power play a lot, but we can't fall into their trap."

Sam Bennett and Trent Frederic (Jim Rassol-Imagn Images)

Florida had 11 power plays on Monday. They scored three times with the man advantage in the 6-1 win. Edmonton went 1-for-6 on the power play.

After the game was essentially out of hand for Edmonton, the Oilers completely melted down, getting into something close to a line brawl. Some might’ve viewed the late-game breakdown as a sign of life for Edmonton, but this writer saw it as a sign that the Panthers were utterly and completely under the Oilers’ skin.

If the Oilers are going to get back in this series, their discipline will have to drastically improve. Florida’s professional troublemakers, such as Sam Bennett, must be ignored as much as possible. Otherwise, the Panthers will just push forward with the Oilers under control.

In Game 1, Florida only had two power plays, compared to Edmonton's four. The Oilers looked like they were playing their game instead of letting Florida dictate the tone. And although the Oilers had six power plays in Game 2, they gave Florida four as well, leading up to Game 3's chaos.

If Games 4 and 5 look anything like Game 3, the Oilers will be on the losing end of the Cup final for the second straight season. They must stick to their game if they intend on winning.

Promo image credit: Jim Rassol-Imagn Images

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