Weary Sixers crushed by Knicks in Game 1

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 4: Joel Embiid #21 of the Philadelphia 76ers drives to the basket during the game against the New York Knicks during Round Two Game One on May 4, 2026 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York. 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 Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

NEW YORK — No one should have to play so soon after a Game 7 anyway.

The Sixers were throttled 137-98 by the New York Knicks in Game 1 of their second round matchup, falling to another 1-0 series deficit.

Like Game 4 against Boston, Tyrese Maxey was just not aggressive enough. He finished with 13 points, shooting 3-of-9 from the floor with two assists to four turnovers. Joel Embiid again struggled with his jumper, he finished with 14 points on 3-of-11, shooting to go with four rebounds and one assist.

Paul George actually had an alright offensive night. He went for a team-high 17 points shooting 6-of-11 from the field along with three boards and three assists. VJ Edgecombe also looked slightly more ready for this series — he shot 5-of-11 for 12 points with one rebound and two assists.

Jalen Brunson led all scorers with 35.

Here are some thoughts from MSG.

First Quarter

  • The Sixers’ offense definitely looked stuck in the mud to start the game. Between the near turnover that was saved by an incorrect shot clock violation call, the layup Maxey thought he got fouled on, and Karl-Anthony Towns stripping Embiid, not much looked pretty early. Edgecombe started well though making his first two pull-up jumpers of the night.
  • With a lot of stops at the beginning of the game it was hard for either offense to get out of the gates. Brunson also made his first two shots of the night, drawing a foul on Edgecombe on his second. The Sixers had trouble chasing him around screens. Embiid missed his first three shots and got his first points at the line. He was able to again find Kelly Oubre Jr. for a baseline cut while George hit a couple of threes.
  • None of Edgecombe, George, Oubre or Quentin Grimes could slow Brunson down early as he put up 14 in the quarter. Whether that was a factor or not, the Sixers resorted to hack-a-Mitch, putting Justin Edwards in the game to use up those fouls. Robinson missed all four attempts before Mike Brown pulled Robinson off the floor for a couple possessions.
  • The Sixers ended the quarter doing a better job on Brunson — Oubre had forced him down the baseline nicely for a missed midrange jumper. The Knicks still shot it well as a team going 65% in the first quarter. The Sixers’ offense still looked sloppy with Embiid smoking a fairly open layup. A pair of Maxey free throws pulled the Sixers within eight after the first.

Second Quarter

  • The offensive process was a lot better to start the second, but it began with Oubre and Grimes missing wide open threes in the corner. Depending on which big the Knicks had out there Andre Drummond can make sense in this matchup, but asking him to chase KAT around the perimeter was a bit much. George did his best to keep them afloat with Maxey and Embiid both on the bench. He got stripped by Josh Hart, but he also hit a three and assisted to Oubre twice while the two of them were able to cause two turnovers as well.
  • Maxey didn’t make his first field goal of the game until nearly halfway through the second. The only thing he and Embiid had really done well to that point was draw fouls, and they were able to get three on both Robinson and Towns. On the other end, the Knicks, mainly through pick-and-rolls, continued to torch the Sixers’ deep drop coverage.
  • The Sixers may have been better off having Embiid roam off of Hart as opposed to guarding Towns on the perimeter, but Hart could have just as easily put him in space. It’s not like any Sixer could stay in front of anyone as they very much looked like a team that had just gone through a battle of a Game 7 48 hours prior. To make matters worse, Embiid really started to favor his midsection after Mikal Bridges hit him trying to fight through a screen.
  • As the Knicks continued to pour on baskets, all the Sixers could manage was trying to keep the lead under 20. Brunson got going again when he was able to take on Embiid in space. He then got a three to bounce in and got Grimes in the air to draw a foul attempting another three. The Knicks only grabbed three offensive rebounds in the half but they all managed to be big, the last getting kicked out to Brunson for another three to put the Knicks up by 23 at the half.

Third Quarter

  • Here were the first four possessions for the Sixers to start the second half: Oubre trying to fit a pocket pass to Embiid through three defenders that was easily stolen, an Oubre putback, a fast break Maxey could have found Edgecombe on but went for the layup himself and missed, and an Embiid pass to nowhere that was also easily stolen and taken back the other way. Five minutes into the quarter and the Knicks had pushed their lead to 30.
  • Edgecombe was able to pick on Brunson to get to the basket on a couple of possessions, something the Sixers’ backcourt probably should have started doing much earlier in the game. George was able to draw an and-1 on Towns but those were the lone positives.
  • Nick Nurse threw the white flag with five minutes left in the quarter. Dominick Barlow checked into the game for the first time and Edwards got his first minutes that weren’t just meant to foul Mitchell Robinson. Barlow might actually be a decent option to guard Towns in future games this series, but KAT was only in for one possession by the time Barlow got in the game, so there wasn’t a chance to see it here. The Sixers trailed by 31 heading into the fourth.

Fourth Quarter

  • Well, if Adem Bona’s shift in garbage time was anything to go off of, Drummond probably was the better option at backup five anyways. In his 3:47 minute shift he picked up five fouls, three of which were offensive fouls. The Sixers may need to get experimental with their bigs in this series and Bona will have to be playable to do so.
  • A night off early might be better for them in the long run — it may be the only thing that can recharge their legs at this point in the season. If the effort is similar in Game 2 that would be very alarming, to put it mildly.

Royals bring the fun in 6-2 win over Guardians

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - MAY 04: Jac Caglianone #14 of the Kansas City Royals is doused with water by Bobby Witt Jr. #7 and Carter Jensen #22 of the Kansas City Royals after a 6-2 win over the Cleveland Guardians at Kauffman Stadium on May 04, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images) | Getty Images

On Jac’s blazing bat bobblehead night, the Royals were jolted with a little bit of power. They hit two home runs and just barely missed a third in a game that was a joy to watch.

It didn’t start like that though. Both offenses looked off in the first few innings. The game moved at a blistering pace; I thought for a little bit that the game might be over before my kids’ 8pm bedtime (yes yes that wouldn’t happen, I know). It seemed like every plate appearance was a first/second pitch popup for both teams. I blinked and it was the fourth inning already. Good thing I did not blink again, as the Royals bats woke up then. I could use some eyedrops now, maybe. Blinking is important.

In that fourth inning, Bobby Witt Jr opened the scoring with a home run. He got an 86mph cutter at or above the top of the zone. Honestly..might have been called a ball had he not swung. But, he made himself tall and put the ball into the Hall of Fame stands. Beautiful. The Royals weren’t done.

Right after, Vinnie Pasquantino took another upper-zone pitch off the right field fence. He missed a homer by a few feet. The next batter, Salvador Perez, hit a grounder dead up the middle, and the second baseman was in position to make the play. Maybe he blinked – the ball went right through his legs under his glove. Upon replay, we could see that the ball bounced off the base. The spin did not seem to change all that much; the guy’s glove was *right there*. The ball just snuck under the glove. Vinnie scored on the flub to make it 2-2.

Jensen followed with a single and Lane Thomas walked to load the bases with no outs. At that point, I got worried the RISP issues would show up again. Cags and Collins both struck out with no more runs scored. With two outs, Nick Loftin put a grounder perfectly between the third baseman and shortstop for a single. Perez scored easily, and then Carter Jensen rounded third. Steven Kwan made a great throw, and initially Jensen was called out. The Royals challenged, and it was quite clear Jensen was safe. A good slide, keeping his toes down to touch the plate right as he reached it. As in, he did not touch the plate in the middle; he touched right at the corner. That made the score 4-2.

Later on, Jac made his presence known on his blazing bat bobblehead night. He got an up-and-in fastball that he somehow managed to pull, and pull it he did. It was a moonshot past the right field bullpen. Then we got a little bit of manufactured scoring. Bobby reached first on a throwing error from Brayan Rocchio, advanced to second on a wild pitch, stole third, and scored on a Pasquantino single.

I’ve made it nearly 500 words without saying ANYTHING about Michael Wacha. It is time.

Wacha was a machine. He made basically one mistake to David Fry, a meaty cutter that caught too much of the plate. That led to a two-run homer. But then Wacha set down 16 of the next 17 guys. He allowed just one walk in that stretch before David Fry came up again in the 7th inning and hit a single. Angel Martínez followed by roping a double into the right field corner, but Fry was not able to score on it. After a mound visit from Brian Sweeney, Wacha got a lineout to prevent any runs from scoring.

Wacha’s changeup looked like it was working really well. There were several instances against left-handed hitters where he threw it against their shoulder and it ended up crossing the middle of the plate. Guys buckled up against it; he was pounding the edges. The camera view, in my opinion, didn’t quite do justice to the pitch.

As a result, Wacha was wildly efficient. He threw 60 pitches in only 6 innings! He had to throw 19 more to get through that little blip in the 7th inning. Overall, 79 pitches in 7 innings with only two runs allowed on the Fry homer. Four hits allowed. I’ll take that every day of the week and twice on Sundays. Matt Strahm and Alex Lange mowed down the hitters in the 8th and 9th innings.

It was fun to watch. That’s kind of it. That was a really fun game! I love fun baseball games!

Let’s do it again tomorrow!

Tuesday's Time Schedule

All Times EDT

Tuesday, May 5

MLB

Baltimore at Miami, 6:40 p.m.

Toronto at Tampa Bay, 6:40 p.m.

Athletics at Philadelphia, 6:40 p.m.

Boston at Detroit, 6:40 p.m.

Minnesota at Washington, 6:45 p.m.

Texas at N.Y. Yankees, 7:05 p.m.

Cleveland at Kansas City, 7:40 p.m.

Cincinnati at Chicago Cubs, 7:40 p.m.

Milwaukee at St. Louis, 7:45 p.m.

L.A. Dodgers at Houston, 8:10 p.m.

N.Y. Mets at Colorado, 8:40 p.m.

Chicago White Sox at L.A. Angels, 9:38 p.m.

Atlanta at Seattle, 9:40 p.m.

Pittsburgh at Arizona, 9:40 p.m.

San Diego at San Francisco, 9:45 p.m.

NBA - Playoffs

Eastern Conference Semifinal - Game 1

Cleveland at Detroit, 7 p.m.

Western Conference Semifinal - Game 1

L.A. Lakers at Oklahoma City, 8:30 p.m.

NHL - Playoffs

Western Conference Second Round - Game 2

Minnesota at Colorado, 8 p.m.

PWHL - Playoffs

Minnesota at Montreal, 7 p.m.

_____

Herrera Punishes Brewers for Walking Weatherholt-Cardinals Win 6-3

Apr 28, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; St. Louis Cardinals designated hitter Ivan Herrera (48) hits a double against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the eighth inning at PNC Park. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images | Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

The St. Louis Cardinals got a strong start from Kyle Leahy and the offense came through when it mattered as they beat their NL Central rival Brewers 6-3 Monday night at Busch Stadium.

The Cardinals offense executed excellent situational hitting early as Masyn Winn walked in the bottom of the 2nd inning. After Nathan Church flied out and Pedro Pagés struck out, Victor Scott II singled advancing Winn to third base and then JJ Wetherholt came up clutch by lancing a single into right-center driving in Winn and giving St. Louis a 1-0 lead.

St. Louis would threaten (and follow thru on that threat) in the bottom of the 4th inning when Nathan Church ripped a double. Pedro Pagés walked and Victor Scott II sacrificed advancing both runners to second and third. Victor, by the way, had 2 hits in addition to his sacrifice bunt. A good night for VSII. The Milwaukee Brewers then made the fateful decision to intentionally walk JJ Wetherholt loading the bases for Ivan Herrera. He promptly unloaded them giving the Cardinals a 4-0 lead.

Kyle Leahy had nasty stuff Monday night (in a good way for the Cardinals) throwing 5 1/3 innings of shutout ball. Unfortunately, he would get into trouble in the top of the 6th inning walking Bauer then surrendering a one-out single to Frelick putting runners and first and third. Oli Marmol brought in George Soriano who gave up a single to Rengifo driving in a run attributed to Leahy making it 4-1 St. Louis. Fortunately, Soriano would get out of the inning with no further damage striking out Hamilton and getting Mitchell to fly out to left. Kyle Leahy’s final stat line was solid allowing only 6 hits, 1 earned run and 5 strikeouts with 2 walks over his 5 1/3 innings. George Soriano and JoJo Romero did a respectable job in relief navigating through singles and walks, but not allowing any further Brewers runs.

The Cardinals would fortunately not be content with their 3-run lead by adding to it in the bottom of the 7th inning. Jordan Walker walked, Nolan Gorman singled and then Masyn Winn came through with a sharp single into right-center scoring Walker, but Gorman was caught adventuring too far past second base which helped contribute to extinguishing the rally as Nathan Church popped out to short to end the inning, but the St. Louis 4-run lead was restored as it was 5-1 Cardinals.

Get this. Ryne Stanek through a 7-pitch top of the 8th inning shutting the Brewers down 1-2-3. That normally wouldn’t be news, but lately that’s a non-typical result. Ryne sure does have nasty stuff that makes him difficult to deal with when he’s on. This is the version of Stanek we’d like to see more often if the Cardinals are willing to accept requests.

The relentless 2026 St. Louis Cardinals showed up again Monday night as Victor Scott II ripped a double into left-center. He was then driven in by super-rookie JJ Wetherholt who had another multi-hit game giving St. Louis a comfortable 6-1 lead. I love watching this team. This is seriously fun.

Gordon Graceffo, who was kind enough to hang out on our podcast this week, was brought in to close out Milwaukee and unfortunately gave up a double to Jackson Churrio and then a 414 foot 2-run homer to Turang cutting into the Cardinals lead 6-3. After Contreras followed that with a screaming single to center, Oli Marmol reluctantly brought in Riley O’Brien to shut down the Brewers which he fortunately did. On his first pitch to Tyler Black, he got him to ground out in a force out to second base, but he got a slight knee in the back covering first barely missing a double play. Riley got Vaughn to fly out to Jordan Walker to close out the game and give the Cardinals the victory.

Congrats to Oli Marmol who tied Miller Huggins for 11th on the all-time St. Louis Cardinals manager win list with Monday night’s victory.

The Cardinals will try to pile on the Brewers Tuesday night as Andre Pallante will start game 2 against Milwaukee as Brandon Sproat will take the mound for the Brewers. First pitch scheduled for 6:45pm central time at Busch Stadium.

Red Sox 5, Tigers 4: Big road win, followed by meditations on John Sterling, Jason Benetti and McGarnagle

May 4, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Boston Red Sox pitcher Payton Tolle (70) pitches in the second inning against the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images | Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images

The Red Sox won 5-4 on Monday night after two-time reigning Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal was scratched for surgery (boo), the game time was moved up to 6:10 (yay?) and the Justin Bieber to all of my Detroit friend fans (a sizeable faction, randomly), Kevin McGonigle did not play. So things were going well and all but I still cannot not think of the Simpsons at every turn when I hear that dude’s name. And so:

I’m working through it.

Anyhow, back to our sense of hope. This goes a coupla directions for me tonight. One, Peyton Tolle was so good that the opposing team’s announcers were in awe. He’s a dude. Relatedly, two, I listened to the home team’s announcers. That’s Jason Benetti’s crew. This is like winning the lottery on a night like tonight, for reasons explained below. It was like a revival, or like living in an alternate universe. The joy for the game exploded off the screen, and the fact that the game lived to the environment to them is a testament to how good baseball can be. Which is much easier to say because the Sox won. But they did. Which means overthinking things feels good.

I’m not gonna tick-tock what happened in this space any more because you can get that anywhere else. Here is what it felt like: Very fucking cool! A potentially dangerous thunderstorm was bearing down so they started early to avoid it and neither avoided it nor were in danger. It’s weather, so them’s the breaks. And while Skubes was out, Tolle wasn’t, and he was so good that Benetti and co — the opposing announcers — were or just sounded believably in awe. Maybe they’re just good at it, or maybe you just realize how effective the “maybe it’s Maybelline” ads were, or maybe they were telling the truth.

The game was scoreless until the Tigers got 2 runs in the bottom of the 6th, which visibly bothered Tolle, who was neither at fault nor ultimately had anything to for which to apologize anyway. In the top of the 7th the Sox plated 5 runs, 3 of them on a home run by Jarren Duran, apparently unshaken by being traded twice in my dynasty league in 2 hours, the first time from me. He really can hit it when he’s right tho. Masa and Wilmer also came up big. The Tigers cut it to 5-4 but that was as close as they got.

To me, that wasn’t the story. The game was delayed 28 minutes by rain, and I got to watch the Benetti feed. They fielded questions like favorite board game, food, etc, so I just happened to be watching as all this happened, below. It’s lovely. You can enjoy it as well:

Maybe I wouldn’t care if this wasn’t on the night John Sterling, the Yankees’ singularly bombastic passed away, probably the last true performer in the booth, literally by decades. But as everything got corporatized (derogatory) he became corporatized (complimentary.) When I told Yankees fans, like the most dyed-in-the-w0ol types, that I said he seemed happiest reading ads they all agreed. A friend who loved him more than about anyone texted today that “His hearse will be driven…by jeep,” and I think he’d have loved that.

He’d been a welcome anachronism and eventually wiped away all traces of cynicism for anyone without hate in their hearts and finished the indoctrination. Yes, it took time: I’ve had him for more than 25 years on local radio and all I can tell you sisters and brothers he is ultimately more fun to laugh both at and with than hate. He loved something about baseball, and pomp, and the use of time. Benetti understands it better than anyone right now, and that he does it in a way that’s 180 degrees away from Sterling is why we love this sport. It takes all kinds. The only common thread is how much we know they love it. We know when it’s real.

Jarvis’ score forces OT in Game 2 of Flyers-Hurricanes 2nd-round series in NHL playoffs

NHL: Stanley Cup Playoffs-Philadelphia Flyers at Carolina Hurricanes

May 4, 2026; Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; Carolina Hurricanes center Seth Jarvis (24) scores a goal against the Philadelphia Flyers during the third period in game two of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Lenovo Center. Mandatory Credit: James Guillory-Imagn Images

James Guillory-Imagn Images

RALEIGH, N.C. — Seth Jarvis scored midway through the third period to complete the Carolina Hurricanes’ rally from an early two-goal deficit and force overtime against the Philadelphia Flyers in Monday night’s second-round playoff game.

Carolina is chasing a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven series.

Jarvis took a feed from Nikolaj Ehlers as the trailer and beat Dan Vladar from the right side at the 11:21 mark to knot the score at 2-2. Ehlers had Carolina’s first goal with a first-period one-timer and the Hurricanes on the power play.

Jamie Drysdale and Sean Couturier scored in a 39-second span of the first period for the Flyers, whose flurry in the opening 5 minutes put Carolina in its first deficit of the postseason.

Then Vladar spent the rest of regulation flirting with making that 2-0 margin hold up, including twice stopping breakaways by Eric Robinson. And Travis Sanheim came through to back up his goalie with a big second-period play, clearing a puck that had gotten loose behind the netminder in the crease to deny a potential tying goal.

Aaron Judge immediately sets the tone as Yankees dominate Orioles to complete sweep

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Jasson Domínguez (24) advances to second base during the sixth inning when the New York Yankees played the Baltimore Orioles Monday, May 4, 2026 at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, NY, Image 2 shows Aaron Judge (99) 2-run home run during the first inning when the New York Yankees played the Baltimore Orioles Monday, May 4, 2026 at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, NY.
Jasoon Dominguez; Aaron Judge

Not long after a pregame ceremony to honor the late John Sterling, Aaron Judge delivered another tribute: a Judgian blast.

By the end of the night, with some late piling on — including a six-run eighth inning — and an effective enough Cam Schlittler, the Yankees were able to reprise Sterling’s most iconic line over the stadium’s speakers:

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Ballgame over! Yankees win! Thuuuuuuh Yankees win!

Judge’s two-run shot in the bottom of the first inning set the tone for the night as the Yankees went on to finish off a four-game sweep of the Orioles with a 12-1 win Monday night in front of 36,802 in The Bronx.

On a day that began with news of Sterling’s death at the age of 87, the Yankees (24-11) paid homage to their longtime legendary radio voice — who was well known for his home run calls — as Judge immediately crushed his 14th homer of the season off right-hander Shane Baz.

And it was high, it was far, it was gone.

“[I was] just thinking of his call,” Judge said of his trip around the bases. “Definitely seeing that tribute hit home, because he loved the Yankees. He loved this team, he loved this franchise, he loved the fans, he loved everybody he talked to on a nightly basis. So to do that there in the first, I was chuckling around the bases thinking about what he was probably saying.”

Aaron Judge (99) 2-run home run during the first inning when the New York Yankees played the Baltimore Orioles Monday, May 4, 2026 at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, NY. Robert Sabo for NY Post

Both Judge and manager Aaron Boone said they would be in favor of Sterling’s “Yankees win” call continuing after wins at home.

“I would love it, right on into Frank [Sinatra],” Boone said. “I loved when they first started doing that [after Sterling retired in 2024], so it was really good to hear.”

Trent Grisham also drilled a pair of doubles and came around to score both times while Schlittler limited the Orioles (15-20) to just one run across 5 ²/₃ innings as the Yankees won for the 14th time in their last 16 games.

Across the four-game sweep, the Yankees boat-raced the Orioles by a combined score of 39-10.

The Yankees blew the doors off the game in the eighth inning off Lou Trivino, including a two-run single from Judge and a two-run triple from Cody Bellinger to turn it into a laugher.

Judge finished the night 2-for-4 with an intentional walk and four RBIs.

While the captain had not exactly gotten red-hot through the first month of the season, he continued to supply the power, and now may be doing both.

Jasson Domínguez (24) advances to second base during the sixth inning when the New York Yankees played the Baltimore Orioles Monday, May 4, 2026 at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx, NY. Robert Sabo for NY Post

Judge has homered in back-to-back games, five of his last eight and 11 of his last 21 — now on pace for 65 home runs through 35 games — while batting 11-for-25 (.440) with a 1.563 OPS over his last seven games.

Schlittler, whose four-seam fastball averaged 99.6 mph, up 2 mph from his season average after discovering a mechanical tweak in between starts, had some trouble harnessing that velocity as he issued a season-high three walks.



That included to the final two batters he faced, the last one forcing in a run with the bases loaded and two outs in the sixth inning, making it a 3-1 game.

But Jake Bird came in from the bullpen and — after being hit for a pitch clock violation before he threw a pitch — struck out Jeremiah Jackson to leave the bases loaded.

“It’s frustrating,” Schlittler said. “I get on myself for the walks, it’s something you can control. Obviously Birdie’s able to come in there and bail me out. That’s a huge momentum shift for us. Just got to work on that and try not to collapse there in the sixth inning.”

Grisham, whose underlying metrics have suggested he has been better than his surface numbers would indicate, was rewarded Monday and sparked a pair of early rallies.

He doubled into the gap before Judge homered in the bottom of the first, then doubled into the gap again with one out in the third, took third base on a bad throw in and scored on Bellinger’s sacrifice fly to make it 3-0.

The center fielder also added a strong catch to start the sixth inning — just before Schlittler got into trouble — tracking down a fly ball on the warning track before banging into the wall.

Yankees put up a dozen runs on Orioles, sweep series for John Sterling

Michael Kay and Suzyn Waldman are shown just after laying flowers at home plate in memory of John Sterling, Monday, May 4, 2026, at Yankee Stadium. | Kevin R. Wexler-NorthJersey.com / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

I don’t know how much the loss of John Sterling affected the Yankees’ players on the field, but his spirit was certainly palpable in all other forms of the game. Tributes were paid to the iconic broadcaster multiple times, with a touching pregame ceremony and other moments highlighting Sterling’s career and humanity. Perhaps most fitting of all, the Yankees did what Sterling would have wanted most: winning big and sweeping a series. New York completed the four-game rout of the Baltimore Orioles, 12-1.

True to form, Aaron Judge clubbed his 91st first-inning home run, and Sterling’s old radio partner Michael Kay, who seemed to be on the verge of tears just about all night, called it perfectly:

Judge’s blast broke a tie with Albert Belle and moved into another one at 71st on the all-time home run list at 382, even with three outstanding sluggers in their own right: Ryan Howard, Frank Howard, and Hall of Famer Jim Rice.

I actually didn’t think that Yankees starter Cam Schlittler pitched all that well, showing some of the weaker control in his young MLB career. In particular he was falling off hard to the first base side, harder than he normally does. This is often a byproduct of inconsistent mechanics — in essence, your body is out of whack with its normal rhythm. The first inning saw Schlittler slinging 101 with ease the way we have gotten used to, but beyond that it seemed much more work than normal. More inconsistent mechanics don’t necessarily mean you lose velocity, but the three walks to four strikeouts underlines how much more effort Cam needed tonight.

Schlittler got into three jams in 5.2 innings, twice engineering timely double plays to avoid damage, then finally walking in Baltimore’s lone run facing his final batter. Jake Bird made what I think might be the single best pitch of his career to keep the damage at just one, and save Schlittler from what could have been a very ugly line:

With regards to Cam, these things happen to everyone, and certainly to pitchers with 21 MLB starts under their belt. What’s encouraging to me is two things — one, if I can see the mechanical inconsistency, the development team that’s helped get Cam as good as he is now should be able to, and two, he’s been able to adjust between starts a lot in his young career. I expect he’ll be much better next time through the rotation.

After the O’s made it 3-1, the Yankees were able to respond in kind. With two men in scoring position, Shane Baz spiked a ball and Jasson Domínguez was able to scamper home, with the run confirmed on review:

Ryan McMahon tacked on another run with a single, and José Caballero justified the Yankees’ decision to option Anthony Volpe to Triple-A:

All of the sudden the Yankees had a five run lead, and we were all breathing just a little bit easier.

As an aside every Yankee pitcher had some kind of problem with their PitchCom today and I must bring back what I think a very important rule change should be: You get one PitchCom an inning. If it works, great. If it breaks, you have to use old-school signs until you get back into the dugout. There are few things more ludicrous than a trio of grown men staring into an MLB dugout with sad puppydog eyes because their talking PS5 controller’s battery died.

Old friend Lou Trivino was smacked around in the eighth inning in what was his Oriole debut. The Yankees put up a six spot on the right-hander, with all four guys atop the order having run-scoring hits, the biggest one a Cody Bellinger triple that brought in a pair. With a 12-1 lead, it was a pretty easy assignment for Paul Blackburn to close out the game, and the series, and the sweep.

The Yankees are now 24-11 with a +76 run differential; both are still the best marks in the AL. They welcome in the Texas Rangers to the Bronx tomorrow for a three-game set, a rematch of last week’s series in Arlington that saw New York take two of three. One of those wins came against the man tapped to start for the Rangers, Jacob deGrom, while the loss was in the MLB debut of Elmer Rodríguez, who will go for the Yankees. Something’s gotta give this time around, and first pitch from the Bronx will come at 7:05pm Eastern.

Box Score

Aaron Judge's first-inning home run, Cam Schlittler's strong outing lead Yankees to 12-1 win over Orioles

The Yankees got on the board early and didn't look back, beating the Baltimore Orioles 12-1 on Monday night to complete the four-game sweep.

Here are the key takeaways...

-- New York's bats came to play in the first inning as Trent Grisham doubled and Aaron Judge hit one "high, far, and gone" for his 14th home run of the season, giving the Yanks an early 2-0 lead. In honor of legendary broadcaster John Sterling, who passed away on Monday, Michael Kay called the slugger's sixth first-inning HR of the season a "Judgian blast."

-- Grisham stayed hot in the third innin with another double to the wall and advanced to third on a throwing error. Shane Baz wanted no part of Judge for a second time, intentionally walking the slugger, but let up a sac fly to Cody Bellinger as the Yanks took a 3-0 lead.

-- Cam Schlittler came out firing, throwing the three fastest pitches of his career (101.3 mph, 101.1 mph, and 101 mph) for a scoreless first inning, including a strikeout of Dylan Beavers. The right-hander kept it going in the second, hitting 101.1 mph on the gun again during the four-batter frame with one walk.

Schlittler got hit in the back of the knee on a comebacker in the third inning, as Blaze Alexander reached first safely. Aaron Boone and a team trainer came out to check on him, but he remained in the game. After Gunnar Henderson singled, New York's defense stepped up to help Schlittler with a 4-6-3 double play. He then won a nine-pitch battle against Beavers with a 101.2 mph heater, his fifth 101-plus mph pitch of the night.

The fifth inning was nearly a duplicate of the fourth, as Schlittler let up back-to-back singles and got a double play. This time, he closed it out on a flyout. Schlittler loaded the bases in the sixth inning with two outs, and after a mound visit with pitching coach Matt Blake, walked in a run to end his night, up 3-1. Jake Bird came through with a big strike out against Jeremiah Jackson for the third out.

-- After reaching base for a third time in the fifth inning, Grisham showed his defensive skills in the top of the sixth inning with a nice running catch on Adley Rutschman's fly ball. It was McMahon's turn to pull off a web gem in the seventh inning, snagging a Beavers' line drive for the third out.

-- Jasson Dominguez was ruled out trying to score from third base on a passed ball in the sixth inning, but the replay showed otherwise, and New York won the challenge to make it a 4-1 game. Ryan McMahon pushed the lead to 5-1 with an RBI single to left field, scoring Jazz Chisholm Jr. from third base and knocking Baz out of the game. José Caballero kept the foot on the gas, ripping a double off the left field wall to put NY up 6-1.

-- New York blew it open in the bottom of the eighth inning against former Yankee Lou Trivino, scoring six runs to go up 12-1. Grisham picked up an RBI on a bases loaded walk, Judge drove in another on a single, Bellinger cleared the bases with a three-run triple, and Dominguez added another on a single.

Game MVP: Cam Schlittler

Schlittler dominated for most of the night, tossing 95 pitches (59 strikes) over 5.2 IP, allowing seven hits, and striking out four with three walks. He threw 21 pitches that clocked in at 100 mph or more, per Statcast.

Highlights

Upcoming Schedule

The Yankees stay home and will begin a three-game series against the Texas Rangers on Tuesday at 7:05 p.m.

Elmer Rodríguez (0-1, 4.50 ERA) will make his second big league start and face two-time NL Cy Young Award winner Jacob deGrom (2-1, 2.01 ERA).

Utter humiliation: Orioles lose 12-1, get swept out of Yankee Stadium

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 04: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees is congratulated by Trent Grisham #12 after his first inning two-run home run against the Baltimore Orioles at Yankee Stadium on May 04, 2026, in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) | Getty Images

They say it’s very hard to sweep a four-game series in baseball. But they must not have watched the 2026 Orioles.

In an inevitable result, the Yanks completed the sweep of the Orioles with a 12-1 win in the finale. Aaron Judge’s first-inning homer dug the O’s a hole from which they never escaped, with yet more defensive blundering and overwhelming offensive futility in RBI situations compounding the Orioles’ woes.

The Birds’ four-game jaunt to Yankee Stadium was, simply put, an embarrassment. The O’s were outscored by at least five runs in every game. They never held a lead at any point. Their defense was terrible, their pitching was worse, and their offense failed to show up time and time again. They were utterly outclassed at every turn, to the point that they looked like they weren’t even playing the same sport as the Yankees.

Other than that, though, everything is fine.

What’s there to say about a game that was essentially over in the first inning? Shane Baz was the latest O’s starting pitcher to simply not get the job done, and it started immediately when Trent Grisham led off the Yankees’ first with a double before Aaron Judge crushed a booming, two-run homer to right-center. Sigh. That happened, by the way, after Judge took a 2-2 pitch that was practically right down the middle, only to be called ball three, and Adley Rutschman failed to challenge it. I know you don’t generally want to risk losing a challenge in the first inning, but on a pitch that’s so obviously in the zone with Aaron Judge at the plate, I feel like it’s worth the gamble. Instead, it was 2-0 Yankees after just two batters.

There’s no shame in a pitcher being victimized by Aaron Judge, but it’s not as if Baz was good otherwise. He labored through his 5.2 innings and was tagged for six runs (five earned) while issuing a season-worst five walks. Seven starts into his O’s career, his ERA is just a hair shy of five (4.99). When exactly do we get to see the ace-caliber starter the Orioles thought they were trading for?

As usual, lousy defense cost the Orioles a run. On a Grisham double in the third, Leody Taveras lollipopped a bad throw from center field that Gunnar Henderson failed to corral, an equally sloppy play by both fielders. That allowed Grisham to advance to third, where he later scored on a sac fly. I dream that someday the O’s will play a clean defensive game. It probably won’t happen this season, but maybe someday.

You wouldn’t think a 3-0 deficit would be insurmountable, especially since the O’s collected their fair share of hits against Yankees pitching, but with the Orioles, no amount of failure is unachievable. The flamethrowing Cam Schlittler was pumping 100-mph fastballs into the zone with frequency but the O’s managed a baserunner against him in almost every inning. They just couldn’t capitalize once those runners were on base. The third and fifth innings were particularly painful, with the O’s putting the first two runners on base in both instance, only to ground into a rally-killing double play each time (Adley Rutschman first, then Blaze Alexander).

Even when the Orioles finally scratched across their first run, on a Colton Cowser bases-loaded walk in the sixth, they blew a chance at a big inning when Jeremiah Jackson struck out to strand three. At that point the O’s were 0-for-6 with runners in scoring position.

If there were any doubt, the Yankees put the game away in the sixth with three more runs, set up by two Baz walks followed by a run-scoring wild pitch, a Ryan McMahon RBI single, and a José Caballero double off Yennier Cano.

In the bottom of the eighth, the Orioles debuted newly signed reliever Lou Trivino, a 34-year-old with six years of MLB experience. Let’s just say that Lou fits right into this Orioles team. He was bludgeoned for six runs, four hits, and three walks in two-thirds of an inning, an outing so unspeakably atrocious that he had to be replaced by a position player, Weston Wilson. That Mike Elias sure can pick ’em! I can think of no more fitting way for this series to have ended.

The Yankees put the Orioles out of their misery with a quick top of the ninth. That ended the short-term humiliation of these four days at Yankee Stadium. But the long-term humiliation of these 2026 Orioles, sadly, has only just begun.

Thunder star Jalen Williams out Game 1 vs. Lakers

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Oklahoma City Thunder player Shai Gilgeous-Alexander yelling and pumping his fists during a game against the Phoenix Suns, Image 2 shows Jalen Williams laughing on the court with his teammates

As expected, the reigning champs will be shorthanded Tuesday night.

Star wing Jalen Williams has been ruled out in Game 1 against the Lakers due to a Grade 1 hamstring strain.

“He’s progressing according to plan, I would say,” Thunder head coach Mark Daigneault said Monday when speaking with media. “In terms of a timeline, we’re not going to release that. We’ll continue to let you guys know on a week-to-week basis.”

Thunder star wing Jalen Williams has been ruled OUT for Tuesday’s Game 1 vs. the Lakers. NBAE via Getty Images

It was an injury-ravaged season for Williams in which he only played 33 games, less than half the regular season.

He was sidelined for the Thunder’s first 19 games, during which they went 18-1, because of offseason surgery on his right wrist. 

He then missed 10 games between January and February because of a right hamstring strain, playing in two games, before aggravating the hamstring and missing another five weeks.


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Williams played in the first two games of Oklahoma City’s first-round series vs. the Suns. He averaged 20.5 points, 5.0 assists and 4.0 rebounds per game, a good sign after he averaged 17.1 points per game during the regular season.

However, he suffered a Grade 1 left hamstring strain during Game 2 of the series against Phoenix on April 22.

Because Grade 1 hamstring strains typically heal in one to two weeks, there was a good chance Williams would return by the beginning of this next round. But Williams’ injury appears to be worse than originally expected after Daigneault’s comments.

The Lakers will also be shorthanded as Luka Doncic has been ruled out for Game 1 as well.

‘One of one’ John Sterling touched the lives of everyone around Yankees during memorable life

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Close-up of the back of a baseball player's dark blue cap, embroidered with
The Yankees paid tribute to John Sterling ahead of their game against the Orioles on Monday.

The announcers who shared a booth with the great John Sterling, and the players and manager who became the main actors in his theatrical telling of the game, arrived at Yankee Stadium on Monday to celebrate a life well lived, and lived only the way one man could.

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Sterling, the legendary and longtime radio voice of the Yankees, died Monday morning at the age of 87, giving way to a day of tributes and remembrances around the Yankees for the play-by-play man who became a fabric of the franchise.

“There is no one like him, and there never will be,” Suzyn Waldman said Monday morning. “He was totally unique and was an original.”

“The thing that comes to mind is one of one,” Michael Kay said.

“A giant in the sport, did it his own way,” manager Aaron Boone said. 

John Sterling and Suzyn Waldman are pictured in January 2025. Getty Images

“He brought that New York theater to the ballpark,” said Aaron Judge, he of the many “Judgian blasts” that Sterling called. “He brought this game to life on the radio.”

The Yankees honored Sterling with a ceremony before their game against the Orioles, which included a video, and Waldman and Kay — his most notable partners in the broadcast booth — laying flowers on home plate ahead of a moment of silence.

Every Yankee had the initials “JS” on the back of their caps, above the MLB logo, honoring the man who called 5,426 regular-season Yankee games and 225 more in the playoffs from 1989-2024.

And the Bleacher Creatures finished their roll call with chants of “John Sterling!”

With his iconic calls — from “Thuuuuuuh Yankees win!” to unique home run calls for each player — Sterling’s voice will remain part of Yankees lore.

So, too, will the character that he was.

Suzyn Waldman and Michael Kay are pictured before the Yankees’ May 4 game against the Orioles. Robert Sabo for the NY Post

“The best way to describe John, to me, is he looked at life like this one big cocktail party,” said Kay, who was Sterling’s radio partner from 1992-2001. “He wanted everybody around him and everybody he was around to be having fun.”

Sterling in the booth was the same as Sterling in everyday life, said Waldman, who described him as an “older brother.”

The two sat next to each other on the Yankees team bus since he arrived in 1989 and then shared the WFAN booth from 2005-2024, giving Waldman an appreciation for what Sterling meant to the generations of fans for whom he called the game.

The Yankees paid tribute to John Sterling before their game against the Orioles. Robert Sabo for the NY Post

“He was doing Yankee games for Yankee fans,” Waldman said. “He knew who was out there. They loved the references to Broadway shows and things in New York. This was a broadcast for New Yorkers, and people loved him for that. He described things in a way nobody else did.” 

“He was their childhood, he was their summers. I hear it from ballplayers that grew up in New York.”

Sterling was also a family man, so proud of his four children who were his “biggest accomplishment,” Waldman said.

Sterling, who suffered a heart attack in January, was looking forward to walking his oldest daughter, Abigail, down the aisle for her wedding in June.

Aaron Judge is pictured during the Yankees’ May 4 game. Corey Sipkin for the NY Post

“They were the love of his life, were his children and the New York Yankees,” Waldman said.

“He was very emotional about a lot of things,” Kay added, “but when it came to his kids, that was his whole world.”

Waldman’s favorite memory in the booth with Sterling came in 2011, when Derek Jeter recorded his 3,000th career hit and Sterling nailed the call with tears streaming down his face.

They had known Jeter since he was 18 years old and Sterling called every single one of his hits on the way to 3,000, as part of the 5,060 consecutive games he called from 1989-2019.

John Sterling is pictured in July 2019. Charles Wenzelberg

One iconic moment that Sterling did not call was Boone’s walk-off home run against the Red Sox in Game 7 of the 2003 ALCS, which Charley Steiner was on the microphone for in extra innings. 

But when Boone was later working for ESPN, he revealed Monday, Waldman handed him a tape from Sterling in which he made his own call of the historic moment.

“Which is so John,” Boone said, smiling at the thought. 

Boone has also taken on the tradition of channeling his inner Sterling after every Yankees win.

As soon as the final out is made, the manager lets out to no one in particular, “Ballgame over! Yankees win! Thuuuuuuugh Yankees win!”

“I loved his calls, I love it,” Boone said. “It’s a sad day, but what a life and what an amazing character John was.”

Judge, meanwhile, said he listened again Monday to Sterling’s call of his record-breaking 62nd home run in 2022.

The captain’s parents, especially his mom, Patty, would often listen to Sterling and Waldman — more affectionately known as John and Suzyn — while working in the yard, he said.

“John meant so much to us as Yankee fans,” Judge said, “but also baseball fans, just the way he described the game, the beauty he brought to it.”

Royals Hot, Guardians Not in Cleveland Loss

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - MAY 04: David Fry #6 of the Cleveland Guardians celebrates his two-run home run against the Kansas City Royals in the second inning at Kauffman Stadium on May 04, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Guardians lost a baseball game today.

David Fry hit a two-run homer. Travis Bazzana had another hit and scored on that homer. Angel Martinez had a double and a walk and Fry added another hit. Other than that… bupkis. I can go the rest of my life and not see the Guardians look pathetic against Michael Wacha again and I’ll be a happy man.

Tanner Bibee was good… except for one absolutely dreadful inning. In the fourth, he gave up a leadoff home run to Bobby Witt Jr, then a double to Vinnie Pasquantino, then a single to Salvador Perez that will likely later be changed to an error on Travis Bazzana. Bazzana just plain missed it. Through the wickets. Yikes. Then a single to Carter Jensen and a walk to Lane Thomas. And, after all that, Bibee almost escaped with the game tied but an 86 mph groundball snuck through the infield and he had surrendered four runs.

After I staked my claim that I think Matt Festa and Connor Brogdon are better pitchers than Peyton Pallette, Pallette looked electric today and Festa gave up a bomb to Jac Caglianone and Brogdon gave up a run after a Rocchio error.

Bleach. Got a find a way to win these next two because I do not want to be trying to win that last game on Thursday against Seth Lugo who is even worse to face for the Guardians than Wacha. The Royals have won 8 out of 10. The Guardians… have not. And are back at .500. Tomorrow is another day.

Braves trade catcher Jonah Heim to Athletics

May 3, 2026; Denver, Colorado, USA; Atlanta Braves catcher Jonah Heim (20) during the first inning against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images | Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

Just a few hours after designating backup catcher Jonah Heim for assignment, the Atlanta Braves announced a trade to the Athletics in exchange for cash considerations.

With catcher Sean Murphy ready to be activated from the IL, it was Heim who found himself as the man left out from the 26-man roster.

There was discussion the club could opt to keep Heim around and carry three catchers, especially with Drake Baldwin and Murphy expected to play nearly every day, but given the injured state of the outfield, the Braves had no choice but to part with the veteran catcher.

Heim did a fine job in backup duty of Baldwin over the past month, hitting .231/.311/.410 (99 wRC+) across 45 plate appearances. In case of an injury to Baldwin or Murphy in the weeks to come, the club would likely call upon Chadwick Tromp, who is currently in Triple-A Gwinnett, to serve as the backup catcher.

Timothee Chalamet hits Knicks playoff game as Kylie Jenner goes nude at Met Gala

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Kylie Jenner attends the 2026 Met Gala celebrating
Kylie Jenner; Timothee Chalamet

Timothée Chalamet’s Knicks loyalty can’t be questioned.

The “Marty Supreme” actor was in his usual spot on Celebrity Row for Game 1 of the Knicks-76ers series, while his girlfriend Kylie Jenner was across town at the Met Gala.

Chalamet was dressed in a cozy-looking sweater and jeans as he arrived at Madison Square Garden. Meanwhile, the 28-year-old Jenner — who was at Game 5 of the Knicks’ opening-round series win over the Hawks — was leaving jaws dropping with her faux nude look in a Schiaparelli gown at the Met Gala red carpet.

Timothee Chalamet arrives for Game 1 of the
Knicks-76ers series at MSG. X

Chalamet, 30, was seen chatting with Tracy Morgan and other Celebrity Row staples before the 8 pm tipoff.

However, Ben Stiller went the other direction — attending the Met Gala with wife Christene Taylor and predicting a Knicks in six win over Philadelphia.

The Knicks were off to an impressive start against their rival, leading 74-51 at the half after the 76ers clawed past the Celtics to get out of the first round in seven games.

It is the second straight year that Chalamet has chosen the Knicks over the fashion bonanza, last season opting to watch the Knicks’ Game 1 win in Boston at home with friends.

Kylie Jenner attends the 2026 Met Gala celebrating “Costume Art” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art on May 04, 2026 in New York City. WireImage
Timothee Chalamet and Kylie Jenner at Game 5 of the Knicks-Hawks series. Brad Penner-Imagn Images

The power couple has been going strong for over three years, though they are fairly quiet about the details of the romance.

Chalamet made a rare public comment about Jenner at the 2026 Critics Choice Awards after winning best actor for “Marty Supreme.”

“And lastly, I’ll just say, thank you to my partner of three years,” Chalamet said. “Thank you for our foundation. I love you. I couldn’t do this without you. Thank you from the bottom of my heart,”