Broken bodies everywhere: are injuries about to be declared winners of the NBA playoffs?

Victor Wembanyama suffered a concussion during his team’s first round series. Photograph: Eric Gay/AP

Should we just cancel the rest of the NBA playoffs and declare injuries the winner? They’ve already dominated this postseason far more than one team possibly could. The Oklahoma City Thunder are playing without their second-best player, Jalen Williams, after what feels like his 10th hamstring injury. In the series against the Denver Nuggets, the Minnesota Timberwolves’ Donte DiVincenzo tore his achilles, and Anthony Edwards gruesomely hyperextended his knee. Wolves backup Ayo Dosunmu put up a heroic 43 points in Game 4, then returned to the bench two games later to nurse an injured calf. The Nuggets lost Aaron Gordon to calf tightness midway through the series and played entirely without Peyton Watson, who was sidelined by a hamstring strain.

Jayson Tatum’s record-quick comeback from an achilles tear was the feelgood story of the season, at least until he hurt his leg, which ruled him out of a vital Game 7 that his Boston Celtics lost to the Philadelphia 76ers. The Los Angeles Lakers’ starting rotation lacks Luka Dončić until further notice and played four of six games against the Houston Rockets without another of their stars, Austin Reaves. The Rockets’ Kevin Durant played 78 of 82 regular season games, then missed every game of the Lakers series but one thanks to a bad knee and a bone bruise in his ankle. We of course had to save the most ridiculous injury for last: Victor Wembanyama was knocked out by the court itself after tripping on a drive and whacking his jaw on the hardwood. (He missed all of one game and wishes he could have missed zero.) Perhaps it was an omen.

Related: Embiid urges 76ers fans not to sell playoff tickets to Knicks fans: ‘If you need money, I’ve got you’

This is how the NBA is now. Ten hyper-athletic men powered by modern training regimens share a 94-by-50-foot rectangle, sprinting back and forth and leaping into the air and often crashing into each other as they do. An unconscionably long 82-game regular season sands down the players’ durability. Mix in the extra dose of vigor and roughness that comes with the heightened stakes of the playoffs, and bodies break down. Injuries that affect the outcome of games and series, that make you want to turn off the TV, are a constant risk.

This isn’t to say that this postseason has lacked drama or dopamine. Among the relatively uninjured, somehow, is none other than 41-year-old LeBron James, who continues to find escape routes from the bounds of time. The Sixers pulled off a miraculous comeback from 3-1 down to eliminate the Celtics, the Pistons did the same against the Magic. The Toronto Raptors’ RJ Barrett hit a game-winning three-pointer that kicked high, high off the back of the rim and through the hoop. (I immediately thought of Tyrese Haliburton’s shot against the Knicks last year, the most indelible memory from one of the best runs of clutch plays in history – before Haliburton tore his achilles in the next series.) The shorthanded Wolves banded together to topple the Nuggets; I wanted their scrappy crew to win so badly that it hurt a little bit. But all this brilliance can’t be worth the trail of broken bodies left in the wake. These playoffs feel like a stay-healthy contest rather than a way to determine the best team in the league, which hurts the viewing experience. Far worse is the intensifying feeling that professional basketball itself is incompatible with health.

There are sports, like boxing, in which physical damage is inextricable from the appeal. Basketball is different, or should be. The attraction is in the manipulation of space required to splash a three-pointer, in the precision and explosiveness that goes into a chase-down block. One player bodying another via dunk or block is satisfying, but we don’t want the other player to be hurt. Moses Moody caving his knee in while jumping for a dunk is not supposed to be part of the experience, nor is the epidemic of achilles and calf injuries. Fans should not be wincing every time their favorite player clatters to the ground and is slow to get up, which seems to happen a dozen times per game. No superstar escaped this season unscathed: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had the luxury of not playing many fourth quarters thanks to his team usually putting the game away by then, but still missed time in February because of an abdominal strain. Nikola Jokić hyperextended his knee, after which his searing form from early in the season failed to fully return. Cade Cunningham suffered a collapsed lung in March. Dončić’s hamstring betrayed him in the middle of one of the hottest runs of form of his career. The latter two MVP candidates had to seek exemptions for the league’s 65-game rule to be considered for the honor.

That we’re only one round into the playoffs feels impossible. After his team finished off the Nuggets, Wolves coach Chris Finch looked tired rather than triumphant: the younger, healthier San Antonio Spurs were already waiting in the conference semi-finals.

“Before the series started, I figured the real winner of this series was going to be San Antonio, because both these teams were going to take a lot of pieces out of each other, and they did,” Finch said. “So I’m not sure what we have left standing before we go down there.” It’s easy to envision the Spurs essentially winning by TKO over what remains of the Wolves, or the Thunder forcing James into debilitating exhaustion midway through their series.

There’s a lot to be excited about for the rest of the playoffs, a likely Spurs-Thunder showdown in the Western Conference finals at the top of the list. Still, it’s hard to be too jazzed when more injuries are almost certain to join the pile. Last year’s NBA finals, brilliant through six games, will always be blemished by Haliburton’s achilles tear early in Game 7. In the 2024 finals, Dončić, the best player on the floor, was clearly carrying an injury. We can hope that injuries won’t insert themselves into this year’s finals, but recent history suggests mercy is unlikely.

Practically everybody agrees that the season needs to shorten, perhaps by a lot. Maybe the games do, too. Reverting first-round playoff series to best-of-five, as was the case before 2003, could keep players healthy a little bit longer. Maybe a seven-game series is too much punishment on a human body under any circumstances. For as long as the NBA resists change, its players will pay the price.

After the Lakers mercifully ended the Rockets’ bizarre, injury-marred season on Friday, the agony of defeat appeared tempered by exhaustion. The camaraderie between the players was also striking. Durant, who has had a tough season, hugged James tightly. He giggled with Dončić on the sidelines. Fred VanVleet, the Rockets’ vital point guard who sat out the whole season with a torn ACL, mingled with the players. It looked like everybody had finally been relieved of the burden of the game: the faces atop those beaten bodies, at last, smiling.

Evolution, not revolution: Inter’s gamble on Chivu pays off as club canter to Scudetto | Nicky Bandini

Inter’s manager was not first choice to replace Simeone Inzaghi but has created a juggernaut that could not be stopped

It all felt inevitable, by the end, Internazionale becoming champions of Italy for the 21st time with a win over Parma they did not even need. A draw would have sufficed: in this game, or the next one, or either of the two after that. Their rivals for the Scudetto yielded one-by-one through the spring and then, finally, all at once. None of Napoli, Milan or Juventus won this weekend, not that it would have mattered any more if they had.

Inter were 10 points clear at the start of this round and 12 by its conclusion, the best team in Serie A by a mile. They have scored 82 goals in a league where no other team has yet made it to 60. Defensively, only Como can equal their 17 clean sheets.

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Thoughts on a 7-1 Rangers loss

DETROIT, MI - MAY 03: Texas Rangers Jack Leiter (22) pitches in the first inning during the game between Texas Rangers and Detroit Tigers on May 3, 2026 at Comerica Park in Detroit, MI (Photo by Allan Dranberg/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Tigers 7, Rangers 1

  • Detroit. Dee-Troit. D Troit.
  • The Tigers.
  • They won.
  • Jack Leiter gave up 5 runs in 6.2 innings, which sounds bad.
  • Which is bad, really.
  • But he did pitch better than the line would indicate, to use that old cliche.
  • Leiter allowed a total of six baserunners in the game. The problem is that five of them scored.
  • Leiter walked just one batter — Riley Greene, to lead off the fifth. It was the first baserunner he allowed all game.
  • The next batter, Spencer Torkelson, put an 0-2 hanging slider into the bleachers, and that, for all intents and purposes, was that.
  • The Torkelson homer was the only ball in play over 100 mph that Leiter gave up in the game. Or any other Ranger pitcher, for that matter.
  • In the sixth, Jake Rogers led off the inning with a ball to the outfield that should have been a single. Evan Carter tried to make a diving catch on it, however, and it got past him for a triple. Kevin McGonigle then hit a flare that fell in for a single to drive in the third run off of Leiter.
  • Leiter had Kerry Carpenter on second with two outs in the seventh and got a ground ball from Hao-Yu Lee that snuck through the infield for an RBI hit. Leiter was then lifted for Tyler Alexander, who allowed a pair of singles and a double before the inning ended.
  • So that was the five runs off of Leiter.
  • He was still really good, though. 10 Ks on the game. 73 strikes on 100 pitches, including 16 swings and misses.
  • If Leiter pitches like that regularly the Rangers will be in good shape.
  • Gavin Collyer pitched the eighth and once again didn’t allow any runs. That’s nine games, and 7.1 innings, in Collyer’s major league career without a run being scored.
  • The bats, meanwhile, were not good, despite the Tigers rolling with a bullpen game.
  • The only run came off former Ranger Ricky Vanasco in the seventh, when an Ezequiel Duran double, a Josh Smith walk, a wild pitch, and a Kyle Higashioka ground out cut the lead to 3-1.
  • Duran’s double was the only extra base hit the Rangers were able to muster.
  • The team was 0 for 5 with runners in scoring position. Both the hitlessness and only having five at bats with runners in scoring position are problems.
  • Josh Smith was 2 for 3 with a walk, at least. That’s the offensive highlight for the Rangers.
  • Jack Leiter topped out at 99.4 mph with his fastball, averaging 97.5 mph. Tyler Alexander touched 91.3 mph with his sinker. Gavin Collyer’s fastball maxed out at 97.9 mph.
  • Jake Burger had a 108.7 mph ground out and a 101.9 mph fly out. Kyle Higashioka had a 105.9 mph ground out. Corey Seager had a 103.9 mph single. Andrew McCutchen had a 103.2 mph single. Ezequiel Duran had a 103.2 mph ground out. Brandon Nimmo had a 101.7 mph single. Josh Smith had a 101.6 mph single.
  • On to New York to play the Yankees. Things will maybe be better there.

Dodgers notes: Brusdar Graterol, Emmet Sheehan, Jackson Ferris

GLENDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 16: Brusdar Graterol #48 of the Los Angeles Dodgers stands on the field prior to a Spring Training game against the Milwaukee Brewers at Camelback Ranch on March 16, 2026 in Glendale, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Relief pitcher Brusdar Graterol started a minor league rehab assignment with Triple-A Oklahoma City on Saturday night, and pitched a scoreless inning in his first game action in over 18 months. Graterol, who missed all of 2025 after right shoulder surgery and was slow-played this spring, will have a long rehab assignment before he joins the Dodgers, manager Dave Roberts told reporters in St. Louis on Saturday.

From Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register:

“He hasn’t pitched a whole lot in the last two, three years. So his buildup needs to be methodical,” Roberts said. “I’m looking forward to him getting going.

“Yeah, it seems like the last few years it’s been a rehab situation. So for him to get out of that mode and get to being a regular player, get the health (issues) behind him – we’re all looking forward to that.”


Emmet Sheehan last week gave one of his gloves to Sarah Langs of MLB.com and ESPN for her birthday Saturday, as an appreciation for her advocacy of others with ALS.

Sheehan spoke with Sonja Chen of MLB.com about the origin of the “K ALS” on the side of his glove, which dates back to his days at Boston College. It’s to honor Pete Frates, the former Boston College player before Sheehan’s time there who co-founded the ice bucket challenge to raise money and awareness for ALS. Frates died in 2019.

From Chen:

“He would come around the team, and the Frates family is just a really special family,” Sheehan said. “They have the Frates Foundation, which supports ALS research. It was a really cool cause, and I didn’t know much about it before Boston College, but I was grateful that I got to learn about it and keep it going.”

Links

  • I’ve referenced this article in a few weekend minor league reports, but last week Kiley McDaniel at ESPN updated his top 10 prospects for all 30 MLB teams. On the Dodgers list, Zyhir Hope moved up to second place and shortstop Emil Morales is now fourth in the system. Also from McDaniel: “Jackson Ferris and Adam Serwinowski, lefties who just missed this list, are next to be added to the 40-man after the season; Serwinowski’s stuff fits better in shorter stints.”
  • Among the items in the FanGraphs mailbag over the weekend was wondering how good might Shohei Ohtani be at basketball.

NBA’s final 8 teams still standing in Playoffs, ranked by 2026 championship chances

SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS - APRIL 28: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs reacts after a made three-point basket against the Portland Trail Blazers during the second quarter in Game Five of the First Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Frost Bank Center on April 28, 2026 in San Antonio, Texas. 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. (Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The first-round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs already felt like a war of attrition. Star players were dropping left and right, and in some cases changing the outcome of series. It’s starting to feel like the healthiest team will ultimately be the last team standing as the second round begins.

The Boston Celtics were a popular pick to win the East heading into the playoffs. Now they’re out after the Philadelphia 76ers pulled off a shocking Game 7 victory with injured star Jayson Tatum on the bench. The Denver Nuggets were a trendy pick to win the championship a couple weeks ago. Instead, the team looked old, slow, and soft as they were boat-raced by the Timberwolves despite significant injuries to Anthony Edwards and Donte DiVincenzo.

Let’s rank the final eight teams still standing in the 2026 NBA Playoffs by their championship chances.

8. Los Angeles Lakers

Will Luka Doncic play in the second-round? It’s a question that hangs over the Lakers series with the Thunder. Los Angeles didn’t need him in round one against a pathetic Rockets’ offense, but the matchup with OKC will obviously be a much bigger challenge. Austin Reaves’ return to the lineup from his own soft tissue injury is an encouraging sign, but he’s about to face a stiff test against the Thunder’s legion of elite perimeter defenders. The Lakers know they have a sharp head coach in JJ Redick and a genius 41-year-old legend in LeBron James who should be able to find every vulnerability in the Thunder — but actually winning the series feels almost impossible with Luka still on the mend. The Lakers should feel great about getting this far, and this matchup with OKC will tell them where they need to improve this summer even if they ultimately fall short.

7. Philadelphia 76ers

The Sixers are a different team with Joel Embiid healthy and engaged, and they proved it in their shocking first-round victory over the Celtics. Embiid looked well-rested coming back from appendicitis, and he destroyed a weak Boston frontcourt when it mattered. He’ll have a much tougher matchup against the Knicks in round two, but his one-on-one scoring is still a huge advantage in the series for Philly. Tyrese Maxey also bolstered his reputation in the first-round, and his ability to play huge minutes at a superstar level is so impressive. VJ Edgecombe ripped five three-pointers in Game 7 to continue his fantastic rookie season, and his athleticism could give the taller Knicks’ wing defenders problems in round two. Anything feels possible in the East right now even if the Knicks are the favorites. Philly should like its chances around Embiid, Maxey, and Edgecombe.

6. Minnesota Timberwolves

The Wolves’ first-round series win against the Nuggets was the ultimate vindication for their core, but sadly it came at a cost with Donte DiVincenzo tearing his Achilles and Anthony Edwards suffering a hyperextension and bone bruise in his left knee. Edwards is somehow expected to play in Game 1 vs. the Spurs, and Minnesota will need him to regain top form in quick order. Rudy Gobert just humbled Nikola Jokic, and now he draws an arguably even tougher assignment against his younger and more athletic countryman in Victor Wembanyama. If Gobert can somehow out-play Wemby the way he just outplayed Jokic, the Wolves will have a chance. It feels like Minnesota may have found something with the former Illinois Fighting Illini duo of Ayo Dosunmu and Terrence Shannon Jr. in the last round, and both will need to provide consistent scoring given the team’s other injuries. It’s too bad we can’t see the Wolves fully healthy in this matchup against the Spurs, because that would have been electric. At this point, we should know better than to count out Minnesota even with the chips stacked against them. The Wolves have the length, athleticism, and experience to rattle anyone, but it feels like they have their work cut out for them against San Antonio.

5. Cleveland Cavaliers

The Cavs and Raptors were tied in aggregate score through 6.5 games before Cleveland dropped the hammer in the third quarter of Game 7 to avoid an embarrassing exit and advance to the second-round. The series never should have been that close. Cleveland has the pieces for a long playoff run after trading for James Harden at the deadline, but head coach Kenny Atkinson is still tinkering with his rotation and trying to maximize his lineups. Donovan Mitchell didn’t have a great series, and it’s hard to imagine the Cavs reaching their potential if he’s unable to find his All-NBA level from the regular season. Cleveland has a higher offensive ceiling than Detroit in their second-round matchup, but there’s no guaranteeing they’ll reach it, especially against an elite defense. At this point in the season, the Cavs should really know what they have, but it still doesn’t feel like it.

4. Detroit Pistons

The first-round was shaping up to be a disaster for the Pistons as they trailed the No. 8 seed Orlando Magic 3-1 before Franz Wagner injured his calf. That injury proved to be a turning point, and Detroit survived to set up their second-round matchup with the Cavs. Detroit was expected to have problems scoring in the halfcourt entering the postseason to some degree, and the struggle was real against an impressive Magic defense. Cleveland will pose different challenges, but the Pistons’ success still begins and ends with Cade Cunningham. The former No. 1 overall pick isn’t the most efficient scorer and he continues to have some turnover problems, but he’s a battering ram lead guard who can handle heavy usage while also contributing to an elite defense. Jalen Duren badly needs to roar back to form after a terrible first-round series, and it will be interesting to see if the Cavs can take away his rolls to the rim like Cleveland did. Detroit should feel very fortunate to still be playing, but Cleveland is a winnable matchup.

3. New York Knicks

It might have taken the Knicks six games to eliminate the Atlanta Hawks in round one, but they still won the series by an unfathomable 105 points in the aggregate. New York showed what this team can look like when its firing on all cylinders, with Jalen Brunson’s deadly 1-on-1 scoring, Karl-Anthony Towns’ versatile offensive skill set, and OG Anunoby’s lockdown wing defense and efficient scoring forming a strong foundation for a contender. Can the Knicks’ role players step up around them? This feels like it will be a key series for both Mitchell Robinson and Miles McBride, with Robinson needing to help limit Joel Embiid’s scoring and McBride balancing lineups with more shooting and likely drawing the assignment on Tyrese Maxey for stretches. The East is almost setting up a little too well for the Knicks. This season has been a Finals-or-bust from the start, and with the Celtics out of the way, New York is the clear favorite in the conference.

2. San Antonio Spurs

The Spurs saw their championship chances flash before their eyes when Victor Wembanyama banged his head on the floor during Game 2 of their first-round series against the Blazers. Somehow, he only missed one game with a concussion, and the Spurs looked dominant with him with a +13.3 on/off net-rating for the series. Wembanyama is a one-man wrecking crew, but the Spurs’ role players are also stepping up at the right time. Julian Champagnie ripped 62 percent of his threes against Portland, and will be a key shooter going forward. Rookie guard Dylan Harper took over Game 3, and showed why he’s a future All-Star in this league. Luke Kornet is rock solid as a backup center, and the Celtics have to be regretting letting him walk right now. De’Aaron Fox also looked more assertive when Wemby was in a more limited role in his return from the head injury, and that’s a great sign going forward for San Antonio. The reality is that the Spurs are a viable threat to win it all as long as Wembanyama is upright. The playoffs are setting up for an epic series in the Western Conference Finals vs. the Thunder.

1. Oklahoma City Thunder

The defending champs were the only team that made it look easy in the first-round, and their reward for a sweep against the Suns was an eight-day break before facing the Lakers. The Thunder still felt the carnage of the playoffs with Jalen Williams suffering a hamstring strain that puts his availability in question going forward, but OKC essentially played without him all year, and remains the favorites even if he can’t go. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was sensational in round one by scoring 33.8 points per game on 67.8 percent true shooting, and he’s set up for another huge series against a Lakers team without a natural defensive matchup for him. OKC’s defense is set up to thrive against the Lakers, too. It finished No. 1 in efficiency in both the regular season and playoffs on the way to a championship last season, and that might happen again this year after being a hair better during the 82-game marathon this season. The Thunder’s formula for success of SGA + an elite defense is so sustainable even without Williams. It shouldn’t matter if Luka Doncic returns for this series. The Thunder will roll either way.

Monday Rockpile: Josh Rosenthal reflects on pioneering the Rockies Cultural Education & Development program, and changing the cultural education landscape across MLB

Josh Rosenthal and Angel Amparo attend graduation at the Colorado Rockies training complex in Boca Chica, DR

Author’s note: When we started on this series, we envisioned three or four articles that described what the Rockies are doing to support their Latin American players as they transition to playing professional baseball. As we learned more about it, however, we discovered there was much more here — and that the Rockies were at the forefront of ensuring Latino baseball players received educations that prepared them for the next steps in their lives, whether that was playing baseball or doing something else. It doesn’t get enough attention — and we’ve only really come to understand it through telling this story — but five MLB teams radically re-envisioned what becoming an MLB player would look like for Latino prospects.

All photos are courtesy of Josh Rosenthal.


Two weeks ago, we discussed the Rockies Cultural Education & Development Program, which began in 2012. That article highlighted the program in its current form, but in a phone interview, Josh Rosenthal – the original architect of the program – shared how the program came to be and its impact on Major League Baseball. 

Origin story

Rosenthal served as a Peace Corps volunteer in Guatemala. Upon his return, he was introduced to now-Vice President of International Scouting and Development Rolando Fernández by his brother, Zack, who was an assistant general manager for the Colorado Rockies at the time.

“[Fernández] had this dream for building an education program for the Latino players, and my brother was talking to him about it,” Rosenthal said. “My brother had been working for the team since 2006, and he introduced me to Rolando, and we hit it off when we met for the first time, talking about the idea for this project and this program. And every time I went to visit my brother, I would connect with ‘Ro,’ and we would brainstorm about the possibility of this program, not ever knowing whether it would come true or whether funding would become available.”

They stayed in touch, discussing the framework for a program should it come into existence. 

And in 2012, it did. 

Rosenthal interviewed for a position to build the program, but his inspiration always came from his time serving in the Peace Corps because of the culture shock he experienced serving in El Campo, Guatemala. 

“I needed to really adapt to a very different culture, and I also needed to learn a new language all at the same time,” Rosenthal said. 

He sees the experience of the Rockies Latin-American prospects reflected in his own.

“That’s what these boys are having to do, as well,” he said. 

“They’re learning a new culture, moving from the Dominican Republic or Venezuela or wherever to the United States. It’s a different culture and a different language. So I’d been through what they’ve been through. I also have a passion for helping people. Being in the Peace Corps, you’re given a unique gift to help people every day. That’s your job. And so I was looking for something that was fulfilling. Obviously, I was a baseball coach, baseball fan and (came from) a baseball family. My brother was the assistant GM for the Rockies for a long time, so this was a marriage of all my passions – teaching, language, travel and helping people in baseball.”

Setting the standard

When the Rockies started their program in 2012, only four other teams had dedicated education programs and full-time education coordinators: the Houston Astros, the Kansas City Royals, the Detroit Tigers, and the Pittsburgh Pirates. Other MLB teams had English programs, but nothing really comparable. 

“We’re really setting these players up for success, both on and off the field, during and after their careers,” Rosenthal said.

During that time, Neskys Liriano, the education director for MLB, and Rafael Pérez, the director of Dominican operations for MLB, pushed education programs and challenged teams to build better infrastructure to support them. MLB also dedicated space at the Winter Meetings for these five teams to share resources, so other teams could build their own programs.

Eventually, Rosenthal and Angel Amparo partnered with the New York Yankees to create one of the first high school education programs that allowed students to earn their high school diplomas while playing baseball.

“If I die tomorrow, that’s my legacy more than anything,” Rosenthal said.

“These boys develop all these amazing skills – they develop leadership, hard work, discipline, teamwork… They’re international. They know how cultures work in the United States. They’re bilingual. They have all these amazing experiences, but then they go home, and they have no high school diploma, so they can’t get a good job.”

Not everyone was on board, however. 

“When we developed the high school diploma program, at times there was a little bit of pushback” Rosenthal said, “because we’re in the business of winning championships, not educating young men.” 

But Rosenthal knew that was the wrong approach.

“We did the research, and we backed it up, and we said, ‘No, an educated player is a better player. And somebody who has the self-confidence and understands that they have a fallback when their career is over – whether it’s after a 10-year career in the big leagues or whether it’s when their career fizzles out in the Dominican Summer League or rookie ball – they’re going to be more confident knowing that they have a fallback,” he said. 

“They’re going to be better learners because they’ve had formal education, and they’re going to be able to more quickly learn English. They’re going to be able to more quickly communicate with their teammates and their coaches. They’re going to be able to understand more quickly what the coaches are teaching them about pitching or hitting.’ So we were able to justify this education for them beyond just being on a moral ground.”

They also had support from others in the front office, including former general manager Jeff Bridich.

“His wife has a doctorate in education, as well, and the Monforts are kind and loving people who supported us, and they told us that they’d pay for the program,” Rosenthal said. 

“And now all 30 clubs have programs.”

Creating a new culture

Since this was a new program, there was a big learning curve in the first year for Rosenthal and his team as well as the Rockies organization. 

Rosenthal was hired in mid-February 2012 and reported to spring training in Scottsdale just two weeks later. During that spring, he spent most of his time observing baseball operations and interviewing players and coaches to learn as much as possible about Major League Baseball. 

Then he got to work on a guiding handbook, which wasn’t without challenges.

“I worked and I grinded and I made copies of English books and picture dictionaries and all this stuff,” he said. “I was in my office just grinding away and I didn’t really feel like I was part of the team.”

He approached then-GM Dan O’Dowd, who told him to be more present with the team.

“So instead of being locked in my office, I started being at practice,” he said. “I started being on the field. I started sitting in the dugout during games or sitting in the stands with the players and working with them and talking about baseball in English, but I was also able to show off my knowledge of baseball in the game and I was able to have conversations with the coaches and they understood and the players understood and respected (me).”

That helped build rapport within the organization as well and set the standard that English classes were just as important as baseball instruction.

“There were some times where players would get called out of my class for a meeting with a hitting coach and I had to step up and be like, ‘No, you can’t leave. You’re in my class right now,’” Rosenthal said. “And I would have to make a statement. There was a time when a coach came in because Rolando wanted to see a player, and Rolando is all powerful, but I would say, ‘Nope, you can see him in 30 minutes when class is over.’

“I have all the respect in the world for Rolando – he’s one of my mentors,” he continued. “But English class is just as important as looking at a video for hitting or pitching or mental skills. That was the culture that we built, and it was appreciated because of that. If a player missed English class, it was like he missed BP, and he wouldn’t play in the game. And we had that culture and guys never missed. It was mandatory, and that was really important.”

In addition to creating new norms in the classroom, Rosenthal and his team also had to break some old norms outside it. Most important was better integrating the dugout and the clubhouse — literally.

“When I first got here in 2012, the dugouts in spring training were separated,” Rosenthal said. 

“The Latino players were on one side, and the American players were on the other side. And I went in and said, ‘Hey, we need to change this. You need to mix up these lockers.’ And they said, ‘No, it’s the way we’ve always done it.’ And there was some pushback, and I basically was like, ‘Guys, we’re literally segregating these players. It’s a big word, but this is literally what this is.’ 

“And they acknowledged it, and they were like ‘We never even thought about it. This is just the way we’ve always done things.’ And sure enough, I had Bridich go in and talk to the clubhouse staff and say, ‘You’re going to go in and mix up all these lockers.’ Now, it was a lot of work to move everyone’s locker, but they did it, and we really had unification of our American and Latino players.”

Another way they unified the players was with a language lesson at the beginning of every meeting in spring training.

“We would do a word of the day or the phrase of the day at the beginning of our morning meetings,” Rosenthal said. “I would call on an American player and I’d call on a Latino player, and the American player would have to say the word of the day in Spanish, and the Latino player would have to say it in English. And everybody was learning, and they were working together, and it was impactful.”

Proudest moments

While there have been a number of players who have reached the Major Leagues, Rosenthal said he’s most proud of “the guys who have become coaches and scouts and that sort of thing because those guys have careers for the rest of their lives.

“I know their kids are going to go to great schools. I know that their children are going to be educated, really breaking the cycle of poverty,” he continued. 

“A guy that makes it to the big leagues could lose all his money. It’s wonderful that they made it to the big leagues, but we have Michael Ramirez who’s the Latin American Hitting Coordinator. Cesar Galvez is the manager in (Single-A). Alving Mejias is a crosschecker, and that’s one of the highest roles in scouting. Helmis Rodriguez is a pitching coach. These are all guys that came up through our program, and at times, we would be talking to the front office guys and I’d say, ‘Hey, when this guy’s career is over, this is the type of guy that we want to become a coach or have a role in our program.’ And these are guys that have been hired by the team and have careers that are going to be able to support them forever. So those are the guys I’m most proud of.”

As far as players go, Rosenthal cited six players who played for their countries in the WBC: Germán Márquez, Antonio Senzatela, Huascar Brazobán (who is now with the Mets), Ezequiel Tovar, Juan Mejia, and Carlos Estévez.

“One of my proudest moments was the Dominican Republic versus Venezuela WBC game, which was the biggest game in Latin America,” Rosenthal said. “We had six players in those games – Márquez and Estévez didn’t play – making significant impacts in these huge games that were the biggest in their country’s history. It was just really special to see them on that world stage, and that was one of my proudest moments for sure.”

Looking to the future

Rosenthal left the team in December 2019 to spend more time with his family, but he still keeps in touch with the Rockies.

“I keep in contact with them,” he said. “I stop by the complex usually once a year. Angel and I are best friends. We still talk on the phone. The Rockies staff is pretty much the same as when I was hired in 2012 – the core group is still there, and those guys treated me like family and took care of me.”

Additionally, he has turned his focus to his nonprofit, the BASE Foundation, which “provides educational opportunities for boys who are active and dedicated baseball players, but come from low-income communities and have limited resources.”

But most importantly, Rosenthal highlighted the impact these education programs have had on the Latin American communities.

“I think Latin American baseball and its affiliation with Major League Baseball, in some ways, has a bad reputation,” he said. “They sign these players at 16, and that means a lot of these kids drop out of school and go and work and train full-time in an academy and put their education on the back burner. But the education programs that the teams are building and providing to the players make baseball part of the solution, not part of the problem. 

“It’s really amazing,” he continued. “It’s gone beyond our wildest dreams that all 30 clubs have active education programs now, and all 30 clubs have high school diploma programs. That’s thousands of kids that have received a high school education in addition to becoming bilingual, learning financial planning, learning emotional intelligence, and those types of skills will help them be successful both on and off the field, during and after their careers. It’s really wonderful.”

Up next

In the coming weeks, we will have interviews with some of the teachers, as well as player experiences and community involvement.

Stay tuned!


On the Farm

Triple-A:Albuquerque Isotopes 4, El Paso Chihuahuas 3

The Isotopes fell back to earth, only scoring four runs after scoring 45 in their last two games combined. They managed to still beat the Chihuahuas (Padres), though, so that’s positive. Zac Veen (No. 9 PuRP), Cole Carrigg (No. 4 PuRP) and Jose Cordova each recorded two hits, but it was Chad Stevens who singled in the eighth to secure the win.

Caron Palmquist (No. 19 PuRP) pitched three innings, allowing just one unearned run on two hits with a walk and four strikeouts. Patrick Weigel pitched three more scoreless innings, but Seth Halvorsen gave up two runs in the seventh to blow the save. Blas Castaño and TJ Shook put up two innings of zeroes, though, to close things out and earn the win and the save.

Double-A:Hartford Yard Goats 12, Reading Fightin’ Phils 6

It was a home run parade in Hartford, as the Yard Goats defeated the Fightin’ Phils (Phillies). The Goats hit eight extra base hits — four doubles, one triple, and three home runs.

Each of the Goats’ starters had at least one hit, and they racked up 17 in total. Aidan Longwell did the most damage, doing 3-for-5 with a triple, a home run, three runs scored and three RBI. Bryant Betancourt also had a three-hit day, recording a double but also scoring two runs, recording an RBI and taking a walk. Dyan Jorge, Andy Perez, Benny Montgomery and Cole Messina (No. 26 PuRP) also had two hits apiece.

Starting pitcher Connor Staine threw five innings, allowing three runs on four hits with two walks and four strikeouts. Carlos Torres pitched two scoreless innings, but then Sam Weatherly got lit up for three runs on three hits in his inning of work. Luckily, Fidel Ulloa was able to finish the game with just a walk and two strikeouts.

High-A:Eugene Emeralds 8, Spokane Indians 1

The Indians struggled to find any offense in their series finale against the Emeralds (Giants). They mustered four hits, which came at the hands of Tevin Tucker, Jacob Humphrey, Robert Calaz (No. 6 PuRP), and Roynier Hernandez. Hernandez hit a double, while Calaz hit a solo homer — which was the only score of the game.

Jeff Criswell — making his second start of his rehab assignment after having Tommy John surgery in March 2025 — started the game, pitching a scoreless inning with two strikeouts. But the damage was done against the other three pitchers. Yujanyer Herrera (No. 22 PuRP) pitched 2.2 innings and was tagged for two runs on five hits with two walks and a strikeout. Fisher Jameson pitched 3.1 innings and was tagged for three runs (two earned) on four hits with three strikeouts. And Hunter Mann gave up three more runs in his one inning of work, including one walk and three strikeouts.

Low-A:Stockton Ports 5, Fresno Grizzlies 4 (F/10)

The Fresno Grizzlies fell in extra innings against the Stockton Ports (Athletics). The Grizzlies jumped out to an early 2-0 lead in the first, but then the Ports answered back in the bottom of the inning. The Grizzlies tacked on another run in the fourth, but the Ports answered back again in the sixth to make things 3-3. Entering extras, Roldy Brito (No. 11 PuRP) singled to score Carlos Renzullo, but Michael Brooks singled to score Gavin Turley and then Myles Naylor singled to score Clayton Gray and officially walk off the Grizzlies 5-4.


Goodman’s watchful eye from behind plate paying off with ABS challenges | MLB.com

Watching the ABS challenge system has been one of the more entertaining things about baseball this year, as it’s given fans a glimpse into how hard it is to judge the strike zone from all sides. However, Hunter Goodman has proven to have a keen eye behind the plate (not as much in the batter’s box, though). Thomas Harding talked with Goodman about his strategy, and what’s been behind his early-season success.

Don’t mess with Walt Weiss: Beloved former Rockies player, manager has Braves playing inspired baseball | Denver Post ($)

Walt Weiss played shortstop for the Rockies from 1994-97 and managed the team from 2013-16. Now, he’s the manager of the red-hot Atlanta Braves after serving as the bench coach for the last eight years. Earlier this year, Weiss went viral for tackling Jorge Soler during a brawl that broke out between the Braves and the Los Angeles Angels. Patrick Saunders caught up with Weiss in his return to Coors Field to discuss what went down in the brawl, as well as finding himself back in the manager’s office.


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SF Giants Video: Let’s re-visit Matt Cain’s perfect game

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - JUNE 13: Matt Cain #18 of the San Francisco Giants is congratulated by teammates after pitching a perfect game against the Houston Astros at AT&T Park on June 13, 2012 in San Francisco, California. The Giants defeated the Astros 10-0. (Photo by Jason O. Watson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning, baseball fans!

We are in the middle of a new feature for May that I’m calling the “12 Days of Mays-mas” because I won’t be around for this week, and I want to leave you guys with some fun things to watch while I’m gone.

For the fourth day of Mays-mas, I thought we could take another look at Matt Cain’s perfect game!

I vividly remember this game, but not because I was watching it. I was still living in the bay at the time, and I remember getting about a half dozen text messages telling me to get to a television.

It was my brother’s birthday, and I remember very clearly him telling me that he refused to turn the game on because he felt he had the worst luck in the world and would jinx it. For his sacrifice, Matt Cain gave him the best birthday present a baseball player could give someone that would be forever associated with his day.

So grab your coffee, settle in, and enjoy!

What time do the Giants play today?

The San Francisco Giants return to Oracle Park tonight to begin a three-game series against the San Diego Padres at 6:45 p.m. PT.

MLB News Outside The Confines: Walks will haunt

Good morning to fans of a first-place team.

The winning streak that helped my dad

Apr 29, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; St. Louis Cardinals relief pitcher Riley O'Brien (61) reacts after securing the final out against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the ninth inning at PNC Park. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images | Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

With one out in the top of the 7th, Rich Simonds woke up in his hospital bed to the Cardinals getting shut down by a series of Pirates relievers. He had missed the previous 6 innings, being too tired to stay awake, but the sounds of Cardinals baseball gradually seeped into his consciousness and his eyes opened with Ivan Herrera at the plate. Somewhat groggy, he was still half asleep when Herrera grounded out. But when Alec Burleson broke up the perfect game with an infield single, he was at least awake enough to start paying attention to the game. And he stayed awake to watch the Cardinals come back in the 9th inning and win the game.

Earlier that day, the doctors had deemed my dad able to breathe on his own for the first time since the previous Wednesday. And while that Monday was a good day, he was mostly still pretty miserable, because he couldn’t do a lot on his own, his voice was very raspy and sore from having a tube down his throat for five days, and he still had double pneumonia, the disease that caused him to need help breathing in the first place. Barely able to stay awake for most of that first day, he was improbably awake for the improbable comeback.

While he was unconscious, I had a running joke that I would tell my dad whenever I saw him, which is that the Cardinals were waiting for him to wake up. And then it became not a joke. I rushed to the hospital in the middle of my work day before he was intubated, and shortly after that, the Cardinals lost to the Marlins. Wednesday was a tough day, because he needed 100% oxygen and the doctor was not comforting when explaining the situation. It wasn’t her job to make me or my family feel comfortable, I was just hoping for more “This is nothing, he will be back.” And we didn’t get that. The seriousness of the situation settled in.

But Thursday morning, we got the update that he had an uneventful night and his oxygen percentage needed from the machine went down. And then every new day came with slightly better news. I got excited at things I did not understand, but was told was good news, like the pressure from the machine dropping from 10 to 8. It quickly became clear that he had a good chance to get off the tube by next week. Meanwhile, the Cardinals lost on Friday to the Mariners. And then Saturday. And I was in the ICU with him unconscious with my mom watching the Cardinals get swept by the Mariners. I again told him that he needed to wake up because the Cardinals were waiting for him.

Leaving the hospital that night, I was hopeful they would take out his breathing tube the next day or Tuesday, but I was surprised to wake up to a text message that they had already removed the tube. He was woken up before the tube was removed, and I was told he motioned for his tube to be taken out, but they were waiting for a reason I can’t remember, and he threw up a couple of middle fingers. He has no memory of this, but I knew my dad was back when I heard that.

He still didn’t feel very good on Tuesday. He was still making progress, but you don’t see it as progress when you’re living through it. I was unable to see him on Monday due to the tornado warning, but I went straight after work on Tuesday. I left before the Cardinal game started, but made plans to see the game with him the next day. He said it was probably good I was leaving, because he didn’t think he could stay awake for the game. Well, he did. He watched the Cardinals’ offense explode for 11 runs and beat the Pirates despite the best efforts of the Cardinals’ bullpen to blow it.

You see my dad, in case it wasn’t obvious, is an enormous Cardinals fan. It’s something I picked up from him and my mom, who both shared season tickets with my grandparents for years. When I went to college (and the prospect of two siblings not far behind), they were forced to drop it. Also, I believe it was because neither my brother nor sister are as big of Cardinals fans as I am and I think that was just too many games where if I’m not an option, it might be a struggle to find people to go to the game.

But we did start a tradition during that period of time, which continues to this day, which is that I go to Opening Day with my mom. My dad was a construction worker and couldn’t ever go because of work. My mom would take me out of school and we would go to Opening Day together. It stopped briefly when I went to college, but it continued as if he had never stopped after I graduated. My dad retired a few years after that, but graciously let the tradition continue between me and my mom. He even drives us to the game and then picks us up after.

Another reason developed why he couldn’t go to Opening Day, which is that he got an infection on his foot maybe five years ago that has never quite healed. It has constantly been on the verge of healing, and then something comes up, and it’s like he has to start from scratch. He is very rarely not been under orders from doctors to stay off his foot as much as possible. It has prevented us from taking baseball trips and from him going to a lot of games. He has attended Cardinals games – not as many as he’d like and none so far this year – but we would park as close as possible, walk directly to our seat, and then stay in our seat until we were ready to leave. You can see how this would be a problem on Opening Day.

Because of his foot, he was prescribed antibiotics. He’s used to those, and when he felt the side effects, it didn’t raise any alarm bells. He’s used to side effects. If there’s a bad side effect he can get, he’ll get it. His new nickname is “Worst Case Rich” which he has more than earned even before this recent development. It turns out this side effect was actually double pneumonia, which is an extremely rare side effect. He was lethargic, sick and had no appetite for a couple weeks before it became all but impossible not to go to the doctor’s. He went to the hospital on Monday, they exhausted other options, but he couldn’t keep his breathing rate above 90, and he was absolutely miserable. Intubation became the only option.

On Wednesday with my mom and sister, we all watched the Cardinals run up the score to 5-1 in in his tiny hospital room, and then once again, the bullpen tried their hardest to blow the game, culminating in the game-saving catch by Nathan Church that we all thought was going to be a homer. The next day, I get a call asking me if I’m watching the game. Unfortunately, I was at work. He told me JJ Wetherholt homered to lead off the game against Paul Skenes. After I hung up, he called me almost immediately to share that Jordan Walker just homered. He also shared excitedly that he was sitting down watching the game, and that he could sit for as long as he wanted. Trust me, this was big news.

By the time I saw him next, on Saturday night, we watched the game again and he was in a chair the entire game. He was animated and talkative – two things he was very much not on Wednesday. We talked baseball the entire time, interrupted at points by the helpful nurses at Mercy. Eventually my uncle joined us and we watched a relatively stress free game – until the end when the Cardinals almost made a bunch of plays before Riley O’Brien decided he better just strike the guy out to avoid another almost catch.

The magical streak came to an end on Sunday, but the streak did its job. We had a great day on Sunday with my entire family which included my nephew and his grandson. He was pretty down at the beginning of his recovery, looking at the long road ahead, but he had the Cardinals. The unknown, incomprehensible spirit that lives within us sometimes needs a little bit of a boost. The Cardinals’ winning streak provided that.

I will never have any way of proving it, but I do believe the Cardinals winning streak did a lot for my dad. At the beginning, I kind of suspect he needed the Cardinals to win in a way, and winning has a way of instantly improving any fan’s mood. Mood can be very important for recovery and I don’t think it’s a coincidence that my dad seemed to improve by leaps and bounds each day and seems to be himself, now to ready to face the rehab process. There’s even hope for his foot which as it turns out, the one positive of being stuck in a hospital bed for a week, is that you are off your foot. Very strange bright side, but a bright side nonetheless.

The winning streak did its job. Now he’s like the rest of us, desperately wanting the Cardinals to win and being invested in every pitch, but if they lose, oh well there’s another day tomorrow.

Kansas City Royals news: No longer in last place!

May 3, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Kansas City Royals right fielder Jac Caglianone (14) high-fives teammates in the dugout after scoring a run against the Seattle Mariners during the sixth inning at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images | Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images

The Royals struck out 17 times on Saturday, yet managed to win the game, writes Josh Kirshenbaum, filling in for Anne Rogers.

“Runs were going to be tough to come by,” Massey said. “You might have to find some unorthodox ways to figure it out.”

Jaylon Thompson writes that Jac Caglianone’s big hit on Saturday is a sign he is heating up.

“I hadn’t faced Munoz before, but you know, watching videos and everything, I knew he had an electric heater,” Caglianone said. “So I told myself, just be on time for the heater. And if it’s there, just go.

“And luckily, first pitch, saw it pretty good and put a good swing on it. Props to Lane for busting it and getting around the bases and scoring that run. That was huge. So it was just a really cool moment to do that on the road.”

Maikel Garcia talks about battling back against the Mariners.

“You know, the game was close,” Garcia said. “(Hancock) did a great job. Game was on the line, like 2-1, so we can’t give up. We know we have the talent to come back and we did.”

They also showed resiliency in Friday’s win, doing the little things to advance runners.

“I think the bigger thing to talk about is Carter moving (Perez) over,” Royals first baseman Vinnie Pasquantino said. “That’s a professional at-bat. It’s not going to show up in the box score and it’s not going to help his (Baseball) Savant page. It’s not going to help any of those things people love to talk about. It’s a good baseball play.”

Randy Johnson had his number retired with the Mariners with the Royals in town, so Kirshenbaum talked to Royals hitting coach Marcus Thames about facing the Big Unit.

Carter Jensen and Seth Lugo were named Royals April Player and Pitcher of the Month, respectively.

Preston Farr reviews 2026 first-round pick Sean Gamble so far.

The swing isn’t there yet. Gamble gets his hips open early but ends up out of sync as he adjusts to the pitch, resulting in a weakly hit ground ball. His upper half drifts towards first base as he begins his swing. The margin of error becomes so slim here that Gamble isn’t going to get a hit unless he grounds it weakly through the hole or finds the barrel perfectly. He appears to be selling out early to get to some of that power.

Nolan Schanuel throws his glove to first to record an out.

Reds pitchers tie a MLB record by issuing seven consecutive walks.

The Braves lose outfielder Ronald Acuña Jr. to a hamstring injury.

Angels pitcher Yusei Kikuchi is out with shoulder inflammation.

The Marlins will promote top catching prospect Joe Mack.

The Mets extend catcher Luis Torrens with a two-year, $11.5 million contract.

David Schoenfield at ESPN ranks his April All-Stars and disappointments.

There has been a resurgence in fans keeping score at the ballpark.

The Padres announce an agreement to sell the team to a group led by Kwanza Jones and José E. Feliciano.

A Japanese umpire accidentally hit by a bat has emergency surgery and has been in a coma for weeks.

Golden Tempo’s win makes Cherie DeVaux the first female trainer to win the Kentucky Derby.

Has the window closed for the Denver Nuggets?

Sugar doesn’t actually cause cavities.

Inside the final hours of Spirit Airlines operations.

A $150 million Saudi-backed movie starring Anthony Mackie may be one of the biggest flops ever.

Your song of the day is Foster the People with Call it What You Want.

Weekly Cupcakes: Newhook sends Habs to second round

MONTREAL, CANADA- APRIL 26: Alex Newhook #15 of the Montreal Canadiens screams during the warm-up of Game Four of the First Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs. (Photo by Arianne Bergeron/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Colorado Avalanche News

  • 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs: Wild vs. Avalanche Western 2nd Round preview. [NHL]
  • Who has the edge in Wild vs. Avalanche? Breaking down a titanic, conference-final worthy showdown. [The Athletic]
  • Notebook: Avalanche prepare for heavyweight Round 2 series vs. Wild. [Sportsnet]

News Around the League

  • Habs hang on in Game 7, eliminate Lightning on a goal from Alex Newhook, move on to face Buffalo Sabres. [CBC]
  • NHL Draft Lottery: Canucks are no strangers to sliding, even with a lucky charm. [The Province]
  • Malkin wants to keep playing in NHL, even if Penguins don’t re-sign him. [NHL]
  • Maple Leafs elect for high-risk, high-reward option in hiring franchise legend Mats Sundin. [The Leafs Nation]
  • Leon Draisaitl unloads: Edmonton Oilers have ‘taken big steps backward’. [Edmonton Journal]
  • Top 50 NHL UFAs of 2026: Bobrovsky isn’t in the playoffs, yet his value is rising. [Daily Faceoff]
  • Rantanen fined $5K for cross-checking Kaprizov. [The Score]

Kent v Derbyshire, Somerset v Yorkshire, and more: county cricket, day four – live

Updates from the final day of the latest matches
Sign up for the Spin | Mail Tanya or comment BTL

Derbyshire’s unlikely run-chase against Kent is already in tatters at 34 for four. Three wickets for Matt Milnes: Came, Jewell, Montgomery and Madsen all done and dusted.

Kevin Hand says that Glamorgan are on track for their biggest ever thrashing of Hampshire. And just to hurry things along, Felix Organ is obligingly lbw to Jamie McIlroy. Hampshire are six down, and still trail by 190.

Continue reading...

Monday’s Brotherhood Playoff News & Links

May 3, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Orlando Magic forward Paolo Banchero (5) hugs guard Anthony Black (0) after the game against the Detroit Pistons during game seven of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images | Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images

Paolo Banchero, Wendell Carter, and the Orlando Magic are out of the playoffs with a 116-94 loss to Trajan Langdon’s Detroit Pistons.

Banchero didn’t go down easy though: he put up 38 points, pulled down 9 rebounds, and passed out 6 assists. For his part, Carter had 13 points, 5 rebounds, and 2 assists.

RJ Barrett, Brandon Ingram, and the Toronto Raptors lost Game 7 to Tyrese Proctor and the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Barrett finished with 23 points, 4 rebounds, and 6 assists. Ingram was out with a heel injury, while Proctor got a DNP.

On Monday, Mason Plumlee and the San Antonio Spurs will open the series with the Minnesota Timberwolves.

Go to the DBR Boards to find Blue Healer Auctions || Drop us a line

David Peterson to pitch following an opener this afternoon against Rockies

David Peterson throws a pitch in a road grey Mets uniform

David Peterson will be pitching following an opener this afternoon against the Colorado Rockies in Denver. The Rockies recently swept the Mets at home in late April, and Peterson’s return to pitching after an opener comes after his difficulties in his last appearance, a start against the Nationals. 

Peterson has floundered in all five of his starts this year and was sent to the bullpen for two games until the Mets’ need for healthy starting pitchers was too great. He returned to a traditional starting role for an April 29 start at home against the Nationals, But he allowed five hits and walked three as he gave up seven runs in three-and-two-thirds innings. His ERA now sits at 6.53.

Nevertheless, Peterson has done well against the Rockies historically, with a 3-1 record and a 1.99 ERA. In his one start at Coors Field in 2024, he only gave up one run and five hits in five innings. 

With the Celtics and Bruins done, the Red Sox take center stage… for better or worse

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - MAY 02: Roman Anthony #19 of the Boston Red Sox slides back to first during a pick-off attempt in the fifth inning against the Houston Astros at Fenway Park on May 02, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Jaiden Tripi/Getty Images) | Getty Images

That week sucked, man.

Even with a couple of wins for the Red Sox here and there, I think we can go ahead and generally chalk up the recent play we’ve seen one week into the post-Cora era as “uninspiring” as this dreadful start to the season slugs along. Another series L against Houston only reinforces how bored I am with this team. It’s a shitty feeling. I need the spark to be back within my baseball-related life.

Say what you want about the dismissal of the manager and members of his coaching staff (which, believe me, we have here at OTM) but all of the warts of the 2026 team were not gonna magically disappear with them. The lineup, by and large, is still not doing enough to succeed. Most of the starting pitching staff—something that was supposed to be a strong foundation of this team—is either hurt or hasn’t met the standard. We’re staring down a pair of games in Detroit this week against two of the best left-handed pitchers in the sport—a pair of guys who already shoved against us recently—along with a series at the end of the week against a good Rays team. It could get real spooky by the time I sit down to write the next MMBB. We got outfielders throwin’ their hands up at infielders, we got hit pieces comin’ in, our pets’ heads are fallin’ off—the vibes are just putrid right now, even if I did find a pair of positive things to talk about in this edition of the Brushback. Little victories, people.

And here’s the kicker: we’re now the main show in town. The C’s and B’s biting the dust means the stage is ours. The ire in Boston will be squared directly on the Sox. Sometimes I feel that talking points like that are a bit corny, but the bad vibes could be even worse if the boys don’t turn this around fast. The old adage is that you can really start panicking by Memorial Day, right? Well, the calendar just turned to May. I don’t want this 2026 campaign to get out of hand, though it just might.

It’s Monday Morning Brushback time, y’all.

Bell-oh, No

I feel like I’ve stuck my neck out for Brayan Bello over the last few years. Whether it’s here on OTM or on Pod On Lansdowne, in person or online, I’ve given him grace. Just a few weeks ago on this very site, I wrote in a Brushback article that I still believe there’s a good pitcher in there somewhere in spite of what was (and still is) a real rough start to 2026.

Since that shout out, things have only gotten worse for Bello. In seven innings over his last two starts, he’s surrendered 19 hits (and three walks, so not as bad I guess?) and 12 runs—all of ‘em earned. His ERA has now ballooned beyond 9 and his WHIP is a ghastly 2.26. He’s gotten some more swing-and-miss in his game, sure, but that isn’t resulting in K’s. I’ll concede that hasn’t been his game in the past, but the qualities he’s shown in the past have also been mid. He’s technically keeping the ball on the ground a lot, I suppose, but is that because everyone right now knows they can tee off of him? I suppose not every ball can be barreled up (although Bello’s body of work seems to be trying to disprove that notion considering his barrel rate sits in the 7th percentile as I’m writing this), right?

I’m baffled at how bad this has been for Bello. I can’t really tell you exactly what’s causing this, because so much of the stuff under the hood looks bad. My patience is wearing thin, if it’s not completely gone already. I’ll leave it to others to dive deep on his body language when he’s being taken off of the hill and whatnot, but the fact of the matter is that he’s only made it through five full innings in one of his six starts. Hell, he’s only made it into the fifth twice! It is, simply put, unacceptable stuff from number 66. If he doesn’t want to get all pissed off, I’d suggest he stop throwing absolute cookies that are practically tailor-made for clobbering en route to another outing where he fails to qualify for a winning decision.

Interim manager Chad Tracy said they might utilize an opening pitcher for Bello’s next start. Maybe that does something; it worked for Nick Pivetta a few years ago if you recall. Or maybe it does nothing at all and it’s just window dressing. Either way, I don’t think a trip down to Worcester is out of the question for him in the near future, especially when you remember that he’s still got minor league options remaining. The issue is that the amount of MLB-caliber arms available for Boston at this point in time is thin (although it sounds like Sonny Gray could return soon), so the team might feel like they need to have Bello out there to eat more innings.

(Note: Of course, now it looks like Ranger Suarez is hurt. I’m writing this just as we’re all finding out that he got pulled after just four innings. Yikes.)

While that might be true, I think the clock’s ticking here folks. Something’s gotta change or something’s gotta give. Not to repeat myself, but Bello’s pitching has been unacceptable for a team claiming to contend for something this season. Figure it out, man.

HEY MAYERRRRRRR!!!!!!!

I know the production at the plate fell off towards the end of his cup of coffee in 2025 and it was a slow start for him to begin 2026, but infielder Marcelo Mayer has impressed me with the lumber recently. His nine-game hit streak came to a close in Saturday’s loss, sure, but his OPS climbed over .100 over that stretch (.549 to .685; gotta start somewhere, right?) while he struck out just once in that same time frame.

The strikeouts—or lack thereof—for Mayer have certainly been the most positive development in my book. His swing was always beautiful and we’ve seen flashes of the type of hard contact he can make when he’s on, but he struck out about 30% of the time across his 136 plate appearances last year. Entering play on Sunday, he’s almost slashed that K-rate in half; he had only struck out 16.3% of the time, good for the 79th percentile in the league prior to Sunday’s action.

The reasoning behind that, simply put, is that he’s not chasing at junk. For a team that has so many noncompetitive ABs over the first month-and-change of the season, Mayer’s plate approach recently has been a breath of fresh air.

Now, of course, the point about limiting strikeouts is all well and good, but it isn’t everything. Mayer’s offensive production is still subpar at the end of the day. The OPS still starts with a 6 since he’s not excelling at either component of that formula. It remains to be seen if he can continue to deliver against left-handed pitchers, though Tracy has said he wants to give him more looks against those guys (thankfully).

But the building blocks to Marcelo’s continued offensive development are showing themselves now. It’s gonna be hard for a 23-year-old to make any sort of progress with the bat if the ingredients aren’t in place. If he’s staying competitive in the box and not bailing pitchers out by chasing at stuff out of the zone, that sets the table for everything else. His swing is beautiful, he controls the bat on a good plane, and his bat speed is very good. If he’s pairing good swing decisions with his physical tools, then I believe that positive regression is in the cards for Mayer.

Maybe that Car Shield heckler motivated him to be better.

Bennett’s Beginnings

A hearty congratulations to lefty Jake Bennett on making his MLB debut Friday night and logging his first victory! He threw five innings en route to the W, as he struck out a trio of ’Stros while surrendering just one earned run. It was a perfectly cromulent debut for the 25-year-old.

Three words on what you can perhaps expect from Mr. Bennett, courtesy of the wonderful Prospect Savant resource: extension, extension, extension. CBO Craig Breslow loves pitchers who are literally letting go of the ball closer to the plate than the average bear, and Bennett’s got that in spades as evidence by his 93rd percentile extension within the Arizona Fall League. He doesn’t throw insanely hard (easy for me to say that a fastball sitting at around 95 MPH isn’t that fast, I suppose) but the location and command he’s shown has been impressive; MLB Pipeline rated him a 60-grade command guy on the 20-80 scale. The 4SFB-change-sinker triumvirate looks to be his main offerings, as he threw those three offerings 74 out of 85 times on Friday.

Pipeline writes: “He has a high floor as a No. 4 starter and Boston believes it can help him add some more strength and velocity, which could make him more than that.” I’ll take that, especially right now given the pitching injuries. Crochet and Gray, like I said earlier, won’t be on the mend terribly long (although I have no idea what the deal with Suarez is right now, TBD), but those IL stints along with the performance of the guy who I just wrote about could open the door for some more Bennett appearances.

One thing to watch the next time Bennett’s out on the bump, perhaps, is the walks. He issued two free passes on Friday, but historically that’s not been an issue for him. He walked just 6% of batters in the AFL a few months back, and again: that control is damn good.

Bennett could be a quite useful pitcher to have, and his emergence could be coming at the right time for Boston. I’m interested to see him continue to develop.

Song of the Week: “Nothin’ But The Taillights” by Clint Black

A lil’ honky-tonk action for ya to begin the week.

Same time and same place next week, friends! Go Sox.