What we learned as Jesús Luzardo's road mastery conquers old tipping site

What we learned as Jesús Luzardo's road mastery conquers old tipping site originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

370 days ago, Jesús Luzardo was in the toughest stretch of his professional career.

There seemed to be no rhyme or reason to Luzardo’s struggles last year until the Phils headed to Toronto.

The first-year Phillie was coming off a home start on the final day of May against the Brewers. He surrendered 12 runs in 3 1/3 innings to Milwaukee, the most runs allowed by a Phillies starter since 1947.

At Rogers Centre on June 5, Luzardo was not any better.

Eight runs on nine hits in 2 1/3 innings.

That capped off 20 earned runs in two starts.

He was tipping, they later found out. It was something Luzardo, pitching coach Caleb Cotham and the rest of the pitching coaches worked tirelessly to fix.

By the end of the season, his ERA was 3.92. Without those outings? 3.03. One of the best seasons by a left-hander in the sport in 2025, and he earned a contract extension in March to go with it.

On Wednesday, he returned to Toronto and looked like a completely different southpaw from the one who pitched there a year earlier.

The Phillies’ lefty delivered 5 2/3 innings of one-run ball with eight strikeouts, pairing well with the club’s offensive success against future Hall of Famer and Blue Jays starter Max Scherzer in a 7-4 win.

Luzardo’s start was symbolic in other ways, too. He outmatched Scherzer, a fellow Floridian whom he works out with in the offseason. It also further proved to Phillies fans what the top of the rotation, with Cristopher Sánchez and Zack Wheeler, is capable of producing against a tough lineup in a rowdy road environment.

To begin the week, the Phillies’ big three combined for a 1.93 ERA over 18 2/3 innings.

THE INSANE SPLIT

It also continued one of Luzardo’s stranger splits of the season.

He has been one of the best starters in baseball away from home. At Citizens Bank Park, it has looked completely different. A roller coaster.

Luzardo now has a 1.55 ERA in seven road starts. At home? The southpaw has a 7.34 ERA.

That 5.79-run gap between his home and road ERAs leads all pitchers in 2026, with Logan Gilbert next at 4.56. It would also be the third-largest gap by a left-hander since those splits began being tracked in 1976, minimum 10 total starts.

The biggest difference has been where he has lived in the zone.

At home, Luzardo has allowed seven home runs and 43 hits in 38 innings. On the road, he has allowed 37 hits in 40 2/3 innings and just one homer.

It will be important for Luzardo to right the ship at home. But nights like Wednesday show why his upside remains so intriguing.

PHILS GO BOOM — PLUS AN INJURY

The Phillies’ offense went berserk to back up its starter.

For the second time in the series, they knocked out a Blue Jays starter in the fourth inning. Patrick Corbin and Scherzer sandwiched a dominant Dylan Cease outing Tuesday night.

On Tuesday, the Phillies swung and missed 29 times against Cease. Scherzer, who notched his 3,500th career strikeout Wednesday, still generated 13 swings and misses.

But the Phillies worked his pitch count to 82 in 3 1/3 innings.

Scherzer likes to live in the zone, and that pushed the Phillies to be more aggressive. It worked in their favor.

In the first inning, Bryce Harper hit his fifth career homer off his former teammate. The Phillies’ first baseman let a fastball travel and drove it out to left field.

An opposite-field homer in a season where Harper entered Wednesday going the opposite way at the lowest rate of his career, 22.4 percent.

They stayed aggressive.

In the top of the third, more former Scherzer teammates got things started. Kyle Schwarber jumped on the first pitch for a single. Trea Turner followed with another single.

Scherzer responded with two outs.

Then Alec Bohm got ahead 1-0. Scherzer came back with a slider, but left it in the middle of the zone. Bohm did not miss the mistake, driving it deep into the left-field seats for a three-run homer.

A lot of Bohm’s recent power success has come to his pull side. For a hitter known for his swing to right-center, it is encouraging to see him find that kind of damage to left field, similar to the pull-side success he showed in spring training.

After knocking out the Cooperstown-bound right-hander, Schwarber tagged Blue Jays lefty Mason Fluharty for a long two-run homer that gave the Phils a 6-0 lead.

In games where the Phillies have gotten homers from Schwarber and Harper, they are now 25-8 all-time.

Adolis García, in the Blue Jays’ three-run seventh inning, left the game with a pulled muscle in the area of his right shoulder, attempting to throw out a runner trying to score on a sac-fly. They would take him out of the game immediately. 

Philadelphia does not have a great deal of right-field options. Still, it has the flexibility to move Brandon Marsh to right field — which could open the opportunity for Otto Kemp, Felix Reyes, or even Bryan De La Cruz, all at Triple-A Lehigh Valley.

TIP THE CAP, DON

Philadelphia picked up its 10th series win under interim manager Don Mattingly out of the 13 series it has played. He became the first Phillies manager to win that many series in that span to begin his tenure in franchise history.

His 28-12 record also ties Steve O’Neill in 1952 for the best first 40-game stretch by a Phillies skipper.

The club has played like a different group since the managerial change.

They will face another tough road test this weekend in Milwaukee. The Brewers have continued their success from the last two seasons and lead the NL Central with 41 wins.

The Phils will face NL Cy Young hopeful and flamethrower Jacob Misiorowski (7-2, 1.50) on Friday at American Family Field. They can improve Sánchez’s case (8-2, 1.54) and even Wheeler’s (5-1, 2.22) with a big day against the other pitcher in the race.

Spurs-Knicks Game 3 TV ratings most since Michael Jordan's last Finals with Bulls

Monday night's Game 3 NBA Finals between the San Antonio Spurs and the New York Knicks was watched by almost 24 million people, the highest-rated NBA Finals Game 3 this century.

ABC and ESPN, which broadcast the game, say the 23.8 million people who tuned in to watch the game is the most for an NBA Finals Game 3 in 28 years. The last time the third game of the Finals had more viewers came in 1998 when Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls were closing in on their second three-peat.

Game 3 of this year's NBA Finals is also the most-watched program on broadcast television since Super Bowl 60, when 125.6 million viewers watched the Seattle Seahawks defeat the New England Patriots.

San Antonio's 115-111 win, which cut New York's series lead to two games to one, peaked at 26.3 million viewers at 11:15 p.m. ET.

The highest-rated NBA Finals game of all-time remains Game 6 of the 1998 NBA Finals, when Michael Jordan sank a game-winning jumper with 5.2 seconds left, giving the Bulls an 87–86 victory over the Utah Jazz for the franchise's sixth championship. That game on NBC was seen by 35.89 million viewers.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Spurs-Knicks NBA Finals Game 3 deliver huge TV ratings for ABC

Steph Curry goes viral rapping Jay-Z in Cannes ahead of Warriors season

Stephen Curry
Stephen Curry

While the Warriors spend the summer searching for one more championship-caliber roster, Steph Curry appears perfectly content spending his offseason rapping Jay-Z on the French Riviera.

Fresh off being named to TIME’s inaugural list of the 100 Most Influential People in Sports, Curry was spotted this week at the famously exclusive La Guérite beach club in Cannes, enthusiastically singing along to “Empire State of Mind” as fellow diners cheered him on.

The brief viral clip showed Curry standing among packed tables overlooking the Mediterranean, phone in hand, gesturing through Jay-Z’s lyrics while guests recorded the moment and joined the fun.

Steph Curry went viral rapping Jay-Z in Cannes as the Warriors star enjoys a French Riviera offseason getaway. X/@TheDunkCentral

For anyone familiar with Curry’s music tastes, the soundtrack wasn’t exactly surprising.

The Warriors star has long spoken about his admiration for Jay-Z, previously naming the rap icon among his top-five favorite emcees.

So while some NBA superstars spend the offseason in the gym posting workout videos, Curry spent part of his summer vacation turning a luxury lunch into an impromptu “Blueprint 3” singalong.

The Cannes appearance is simply the latest stop on an increasingly enviable European getaway.

The Warriors’ Steph Curry, a four-time NBA champion, has been enjoying time in France. Robert Sabo for NY Post

Just weeks earlier, Curry was photographed enjoying time in Saint-Tropez alongside wife Ayesha, family members and friends. The four-time NBA champion was seen going shirtless while hopping between luxury boats and a private yacht anchored off the French coast.

It’s a well-earned break after a challenging season.

Warriors star Steph Curry has been relaxing in Saint-Tropez. BACKGRID

Curry missed 27 games with a lingering knee injury before returning late in the season to help lift Golden State back into playoff contention. He delivered several vintage performances down the stretch, including a 35-point explosion in the Play-In Tournament, but the Warriors ultimately fell short of making a deep postseason run.

Curry enters the summer with another major honor attached to his legacy.

TIME recognized him not only for revolutionizing basketball through the 3-point revolution but also for his broader cultural impact through entertainment ventures, philanthropy and influence that extends far beyond the court.

Warriors veteran Steph Curry is seeking his fifth career NBA title. Robert Sabo for NY Post

The timing is notable as Golden State quietly enters what increasingly feels like its final chapter.

Coach Steve Kerr’s contract now aligns with the remaining years of Curry’s current deal, creating a clear runway for one last title push. The Warriors have made it clear they are focused on maximizing what’s left of Curry’s championship window rather than launching a rebuild.

At 38, Curry remains the face of the franchise, the architect of an NBA revolution and one of the sport’s most influential figures.

For now, however, the only “last dance” Curry appears interested in is one between yacht stops and beach clubs along the Mediterranean.

Dodgers bullpen can't help out Shohei Ohtani in loss to Pirates

Shohei Ohtani waits to hand the ball to manager Dave Roberts after giving up a two-run double in the seventh inning.
Shohei Ohtani waits to hand the ball to manager Dave Roberts after giving up a two-run double in the seventh inning. (Gene J. Puskar / Associated Press)

For the first time this season, Shohei Ohtani watched his manager walk out of the dugout to pull him mid-inning.

On a humid night at PNC Park, in a 9-8 loss, Ohtani pitched into the seventh inning against the Pirates. But Brandon Lowe’s two-out, two-run double cut the Dodgers’ lead to three.

And as manager Dave Roberts gathered the Dodgers infield around him, Ohtani made the long walk to the dugout, pushing up his cap to wipe the sweat from his brow on the way.

Ohtani’s performance was enough to leave the mound with the lead, which the Dodgers bullpen surrendered. But in a near-flawless season on the mound, it was his worst start of the year.

Ohtani gave up three earned runs for the first time all season, along with a season-high six hits. That took his ERA from 0.74 to 1.06 And his ninth-inning home run came too late to save the day. It was his third time homering in a game he pitched this season.

Ohtani also came inches away from homering in the third inning. The opposite-field drive sent Pirates left-fielder Bryan Reynolds leaping into the padded wall. As the fans beyond it jumped to their feet with their hands raised, Reynolds reached over and squeezed his glove shut around what would have been the go-ahead home run.

That’s how much of Ohtani’s day went — solid by most standards, but not his.

Tyler Callihan is greeted by Pirates teammates after his three-run home in the eighth inning.
Tyler Callihan is greeted by Pirates teammates after his three-run home in the eighth inning. (Gene J. Puskar / AP)

Ohtani infamously has another level he can reach in leverage situations. And he demonstrated that ability in the first three innings, though he allowed baserunners in each.

After giving up a single and walking a batter to begin his start, Ohtani struck out Reynolds on a 100.2-mph fastball. And after hitting Reynolds with a sweeper in the third inning, he induced Ryan O’Hearn to line out on a 100.3-mph fastball.

Ohtani successfully navigated traffic, despite a wide throw to second on a comebacker in the second inning, without allowing a run until the fourth.

With two out, Ohtani challenged 25-year-old Tyler Callihan with a first-pitch fastball. Callihan sent it not only over the Clemente wall, but soaring all the way over the right-field stands for his first major-league home run.

It was only the third home run Ohtani has surrendered this season. The other two came in his start in Houston a little over a month ago.

The Dodgers (43-25) responded with a first for rookie Ryan Ward.

The Dodgers had a narrow lead after a two-run rally in the fourth, powered by the heart of the order. But Ward made it more far more comfortable when he stepped up to the plate with two out and the bases loaded in the sixth inning, jumped on a first-pitch sweeper, and recorded the first grand slam of his major league career.

The Dodgers, it turned out, would need more than that wiggle room.

Ohtani’s seventh inning got off to an inauspicious start. He battled Callihan for eight pitches and walked him to lead off the frame.

Then a looping curveball got Jake Mangum to bounce a swinging bunt up the third-base line. But by the time Ohtani got to it, Mangum was almost to first. Ohtani held the throw.

Read more:Dodgers Dugout: Random thoughts and stats for the season so far

Ohtani buckled down, throwing mostly breaking stuff to Jared Triolo and Spencer Horwitz to strike out both looking. But Ohtani didn’t quite make it out of the inning. Lowe stayed aggressive in a 3-0 count, and it paid off, trimming the Dodgers’ lead to 6-3.

Reliever Alex Vesia finished the inning for Ohtani, but not before a fielding error by third baseman Max Muncy gave the Pirates another run.

The game unraveled in the eighth, as Callihan homered again — this time off reliever Kyle Hurt for three runs and the lead — and Horwitz added a two-run blast off lefty Jack Dreyer.

Ohtani’s two-run homer the next inning cut the lead to one.

Will Smith update

The Dodgers are likely to put catcher Will Smith on the injured list Thursday, as the stiffness in his neck continues to linger.

“There’s been some improvement,” Roberts said. “We’ll have to make that decision at some point in time [Wednesday] after the game.”

The Dodgers’ game against the Pirates on Wednesday was the fourth Smith had missed since being scratched from the lineup Saturday with a stiff neck. Teams can backdate IL moves a maximum of three days.

Dalton Rushing is scheduled to catch all three games in Pittsburgh, Roberts said, but the Dodgers will likely add a backup to the roster on Thursday. In the meantime, Smith could catch in an emergency situation.

Read more:Freddie Freeman reaches career milestone in Dodgers' rout of Pirates

The Dodgers have already cleared a spot on the 40-man roster, releasing utility man Tyler Fitzgerald on Wednesday. He had a .998 OPS in 24 games with triple-A Oklahoma City.

Unless the Dodgers bring in additional catching depth from the outside, their options in triple-A are Eliezer Alfonzo and Chuckie Robinson. Roberts downplayed the challenge of integrating a catcher midseason.

“We had Chuckie last year, and we had Eliezer all spring,” Roberts said. “So both those guys are confident. They’re kind of a little older, so they’ve been around, and we’re very familiar with both those guys, so it should be pretty seamless.”

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Mets vs. Cardinals: Lineups, broadcast info, and open thread, 6/10/26

Austin Warren #44 of the New York Mets pitches against the San Diego Padres during the seventh inning at Petco Park on June 06, 2026 in San Diego, California.

Mets lineup

Carson Benge – RF
Bo Bichette – SS
Juan Soto – LF
Jared Young – 1B
Marcus Semien – 2B
A.J. Ewing – CF
Francisco Alvarez – DH
Brett Baty – 3B
Luis Torrens – C

SP: Austin Warren – RHP

Cardinals lineup

JJ Wetherholt – 2B
Ivan Herrera – C
Alec Burleson – 1B
Jordan Walker – DH
Lars Nootbaar – RF
Masyn Winn – SS
Nelson Velazquez – LF
Nathan Church – CF
Jose Fermin – 3B

SP: Andre Pallante – RHP

Broadcast info

First pitch: 7:10 PM EDT
TV: SNY
Radio: Audacy Mets Radio WHSQ 880AM, Audacy App, 92.3 HD2

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Pirates place CF Oneil Cruz on 10-day injured list with broken left hand

PITTSBURGH — The Pittsburgh Pirates placed center fielder Oneil Cruz on the 10-day injured list on Wednesday with a broken left hand.

Cruz was injured while sliding into the plate during the fourth inning of a loss to Atlanta on Saturday. Cruz was available as a pinch-runner on Sunday and the club had been hopeful he would avoid a stint on the IL. But additional tests revealed non-displaced fractures between his ring finger and his pinkie.

The move, retroactive to Monday, means the Pirates will have to try to stay in the mix in the NL Central without one of their most productive hitters. Cruz is hitting .264 with 14 home runs and 44 RBIs. His 98 strikeouts also lead the majors.

Pittsburgh recalled utility player Billy Cooke from Triple-A Indianapolis to take Cruz’s roster spot. Cooke is hitting .190 in 32 games this year for Pittsburgh.

The Pirates also placed catcher Henry Davis on the paternity list and recalled catcher Rafael Flores Jr. from Triple-A.

Wednesday night game thread: vs Mariners, 6:35 pm

Taylor Ward and Blaze Alexander of the Orioles look lovingly at each other
TORONTO, CANADA - JUNE 7: Taylor Ward #3 of the Baltimore Orioles and teammate Blaze Alexander #23 celebrate after scoring against the Toronto Blue Jays during the fifth inning at Rogers Centre on June 7, 2026 in Toronto, Canada. (Photo by Kevin Sousa/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Things have not been going so well for the Orioles over the last week. They have lost four games in a row to fall six games below .500. At this rate, they’ll never reach that mark. Maybe tonight will be the start of a six-game winning streak? Probably not. But maybe!

One thing I know for sure is that you cannot start a winning streak without winning the first one, so that is the task at hand for today. The Orioles will face off against righty George Kirby is in a bit of a tough stretch, with a 7.29 ERA over his last four starts, a total of 20.1 innings. If the Orioles want to take advantage of his tailspin, I am ok with that.

Brandon Young is pitching for the Orioles. Young has pitched into the seventh inning in each of his last three starts, but hasn’t completed the seventh in any. Maybe tonight is the night. He continues to impress.

With Samuel Basallo and Adley Rutschman both dealing with injuries, Sam Huff gets another shot behind the plate tonight. The lineup looks a lot less impressive without them in it, especially with Gunnar Henderson and Pete Alonso having such a hard time.

Orioles lineup

Taylor Ward (R) LF
Gunnar Henderson (L) SS
Pete Alonso (R) 1B
Colton Cowser (L) CF
Leody Taveras (S) RF
Jackson Holliday (L) 2B
Tyler O’Neill (R) DH
Blaze Alexander (R) 3B
Sam Huff (R) C

Mariners lineup

Cole Young (L) SS
Julio Rodríguez (R) CF
Josh Naylor (L) 1B
Randy Arozarena (R) LF
Luke Raley (L) RF
Dominic Canzone (L) DH
Mitch Garver (R) C
Miles Mastrobuoni (L) 2B
Patrick Wisdom (R) 3B

Let’s go O’s!

Phillies @ Jays Game Thread

Mar 27, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; A general view of the MLB Debut patch of Toronto Blue Jays third baseman Kazuma Okamoto (7) against the Athletics during the fourth inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images | Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images

The last game of the series with the Phillies. A series win would be a good thing.

Yesterday’s game was great, but I’d be ok with the Jays winning a blowout today.

There was a roster move today. Max Scherzer, of course, is added to the active roster. Connor Seabold has been DFAed. He’s out of option years. But he’s making near the major league minimum, so it is possible someone will take him off waivers. He didn’t show us much on the mound.

Hopefully Max can give us a decent start.

Today’s lineup. Vlad bats second. Clement third, against the lefty. And Charles McAdoo plays second.

Today’s Lineups

PHILLIESBLUE JAYS
Kyle Schwarber – DHGeorge Springer – DH
Trea Turner – SSVladimir Guerrero – 1B
Bryce Harper – 1BErnie Clement – SS
Brandon Marsh – LFKazuma Okamoto – 3B
Alec Bohm – 3BYohendrick Pinango – LF
Bryson Stott – 2BBrandon Valenzuela – C
J.T. Realmuto – CCharles McAdoo – 2B
Adolis Garcia – RFMyles Straw – CF
Justin Crawford – CFNathan Lukes – RF
Jesus Luzardo – LHPMax Scherzer – RHP

Go Jays Go.

Dodgers on Deck: Thursday, June 11 at Pirates

PITTSBURGH, PA - JUNE 09: Andy Pages #44 of the Los Angeles Dodgers rounds the bases after hitting a home run in the seventh inning during the game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park on Tuesday, June 9, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Christopher Denver/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Dodgers and Pirates finish off their three-game series on Thursday night at PNC Park.

Left-hander Justin Wrobleski starts for Los Angeles, with right-hander Mitch Keller on the mound for Pittsburgh.

Thursday game info

  • Teams: Dodgers at Pirates
  • Ballpark: PNC Park, Pittsburgh
  • Time: 3:40 p.m. PT
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

Diamondbacks @ Marlins discussion

Little Havana, Miami, Florida, Young woman posing in front of little Havana mural. (Photo by: Jeffrey Greenberg/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

Today’s Lineups

DIAMONDBACKSMARLINS
Ketel Marte – 2BLiam Hicks – C
Corbin Carroll – RFOtto Lopez – SS
Gabriel Moreno – CKyle Stowers – DH
Nolan Arenado – 3BXavier Edwards – 2B
Pavin Smith – DHHeriberto Hernandez – LF
Geraldo Perdomo – SSJakob Marsee – CF
Ildemaro Vargas – 1BChristopher Morel – 1B
Ryan Waldschmidt – CFOwen Caissie – RF
Tommy Troy – LFJavier Sanoja – 3B
Ryne Nelson – RHPRyan Gusto – RHP

Quick: what’s the strongest position on the D-backs this year? It’s really not too difficult a question to get right, because your instincts are probably right. Powered largely by Corbin Carroll (all but 28 PA there, in fact) it’s right field. By bWAA – that’s bWAR above average, not replacement – the D-backs are at +1.7. That trails only the Cardinals, for whom Jordan Walker has been a revelation, batting .301 with 16 home-runs. But which position is the next highest-ranked for Arizona? Probably less obvious: it’s third-base (7th, +0.7 bWAA), courtesy mainly of Nolan Arenado’s unexpected resurrection which has seen some predict he’ll make his 9th All-Star game.

After that, despite Geraldo Perdomo’s struggles, it’s shortstop, which is the only other place at which the D-backs rank in the top ten (10th, +0.7). Ketel Marte, who hasn’t reproduced his previous form either, anchors second-base to 12th place (+0.3). At the other end, no real surprises there either. First-base is easily the worst performing spot for the Diamondbacks, ahead of just the Mets and Tigers (28th, -1.0). Left-field (-0.6) and the designated hitter spot (-0.8) are tied for next worst, Arizona ranking 25th at both places. It’s nice to see our bullpen (-0.4, 14th) is at least non-terrible, and for once our rotation (-0.9, 23rd) is worse.

What’s interesting is, the D-backs overall at at -1.1 bWAA, which is only good enough for 18th – despite being in a tie for the third NL wild-card spot, with the 11th-best record. My instinct is it’s a result of the team being “clutch” on both sides of the ball, so scoring more and conceding fewer runs than would be expected. Despite recent struggles, their OPS with RISP is still 5th-highest in the majors. Conversely, in “Late & Close” situations, the D-backs have the fifth-lowest OPS. Taylor Clarke, for example, is 5-for-42 with no extra-base hits allowed. That has likely helped them punch above their weight. But is it sustainable? That seems more doubtful.

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NBA Finals Game 4 Thread

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 08: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs and Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks battle for position during the fourth quarter in Game Three of the 2026 NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden on June 08, 2026 in New York City. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images) | Getty Images

They say it’s not a series until the home team loses.

Well, if that’s the case, the 2026 NBA Finals might be trying to become the greatest series of all time.

Through three games, home court has meant absolutely nothing. The New York Knicks walked into San Antonio, stole Games 1 and 2 from Victor Wembanyama and the Spurs. The entire New York metropolitan area found itself in a collective basketball fever dream that only happens when a 53-year championship drought starts to look less like a curse and more like an inevitability. Karl-Anthony Towns was making a real Finals MVP case, the Garden was preparing for a coronation, and every Knicks fan from Manhattan to Montauk was envisioning the ticker tape parade in the Canyon of Heroes.

Then Game 3 happened.

San Antonio walked into Madison Square Garden and returned the favor, dominating the second half, taking the air out of the building, and handing the Knicks their first loss since April 23. New York had been rolling for so long that it almost started to feel automatic, which is always when sports becomes most dangerous. The second MSG started treating destiny like a direct deposit, Victor Wembanyama showed up and reminded everyone that this series is still very much alive.

Which brings us to Game 4, the pressure cooker game.

If the Knicks win, they take a commanding 3-1 series lead and move within a single victory of their first NBA title in 53 years. One win from the Larry O’Brien Trophy. One win from Karl-Anthony Towns joining Kevin Garnett and Kevin Love as former Timberwolves greats who found championship glory after leaving Minnesota.

But if the Spurs win? If San Antonio pulls the road reverse sweep and snatches both games at MSG after dropping the first two at home? Then this series becomes something completely different. It becomes 2-2. It becomes San Antonio regaining home court, if home court advantage even exists in this series. It becomes New York watching a 2-0 Finals lead evaporate in real time, with 53 years of anxiety crawling up the walls like something out of a horror movie.

That’s the thing about ghosts. They don’t stay quiet just because you win the first two games. The Knicks are trying to exorcise a 53-year-old demon. That’s not normal pressure. That’s not “close out a second-round series” pressure. That’s not “win a big Christmas Day game” pressure. That’s the entire weight of Knicks history pressing down on one team in one building in one city that has been waiting more than half a century for this. You could almost feel the mood shift after Game 3. The same fan base that was planning parade routes now had to spend 48 hours trying not to think about what happens if the Spurs win again.

That is why Game 4 is enormous. This is the kind of game that can define a series. Win it, and the Knicks walk into Game 5 with three chances to finish the job and the entire basketball world preparing for a New York coronation. Lose it, and suddenly San Antonio has ripped away the momentum, Wembanyama has reasserted himself, and the Knicks are staring at a best-of-three series against the one player in basketball who seems genetically engineered to ruin everyone’s plans.

For Wolves fans, of course, the focus remains on Karl-Anthony Towns. Our guy.

KAT did not have his best Game 3. After making a strong Finals MVP case through the first two games, he came back to earth in New York’s first loss of the series. Nobody said matching up with Wembanyama was going to be easy. Actually, let’s go one step further: it might not be possible in any normal sense. You don’t really solve Victor Wembanyama. You bother him, drag him into different actions, force him to work, and hope that over 48 minutes you create just enough pockets of normal basketball to win. Towns did that beautifully in Games 1 and 2. He played with the poise and maturity Wolves fans spent years hoping he would consistently find in Minnesota. He was physical without being reckless. He looked like a player who understood exactly what this stage required from him.

Game 3 was a reminder that nothing about this matchup will be easy. Now Game 4 becomes his response.

That’s why this is so compelling for those of us watching from the Wolves side of the fence. We spent years living through every version of KAT. The brilliant version. The frustrating version. The misunderstood version. The version that could dominate quarters and then pick up a foul 35 feet from the basket. The version that carried a terrible franchise with grace. The version that never quite got the chance to finish the job here.

Now he gets that chance in New York, under the brightest lights in the sport, in the most famous arena in the world, with an entire city begging him to help end a drought that has lasted longer than most of its fans have been alive.

No pressure.

The Knicks need him to be better in Game 4, point blank. If New York is going to put San Antonio one nail away from the coffin, Towns has to regain the form he showed in Texas, because San Antonio is not going away. The Spurs did not win the West by accident. They did not survive the Thunder by accident. They did not march through a loaded conference just to roll over because Madison Square Garden got loud. This is a young, prideful, absurdly talented team led by a generational player.

The Knicks still have the advantage. They still lead the series. They still have the Garden behind them. They still have Towns, Jalen Brunson, and the momentum that comes with knowing they already proved they can win in San Antonio. But Game 4 is where the series either bends toward New York’s dream ending or snaps back into something much more terrifying.

The Knicks are either one win away from glory or two wins away from disaster.

So yes, tonight matters for New York, for San Antonio, for Towns, and for every Wolves fan who still feels connected to the player who gave so much of his career to Minnesota and now stands within reach of the one thing every player spends his life chasing.

The Canis Hoopus faithful will be here backing KAT, cheering him on, and hoping Game 4 becomes the night New York steadies itself, answers the punch, and moves one step closer to the promised land.

Go get it, KAT.

Spurs' win over Knicks was most-watched NBA Finals Game 3 since 1998 with 23.8 million viewers

NEW YORK (AP) — Victor Wembanyama's 32-point performance in San Antonio's 115-111 win over the New York Knicks on Monday night was the most-watched NBA Finals Game 3 since 1998.

The game averaged 23.8 million viewers and peaked at 26.3 million late in the fourth quarter, according to data released by Nielsen on Wednesday. That's the largest television audience since Super Bowl 60 on Feb. 8.

The finals are averaging 19.1 million, the second most-watched since ABC and ESPN took over the broadcast in 2003. That represents a 114% increase over last year's series between the Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers.

“NBA Finals All‑Access with The Pat McAfee Show” averaged 1.1 million on ESPN, making it the most-watched NBA alternate telecast on the network.

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AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Los Angeles Dodgers vs. Pittsburgh Pirates: Shohei Ohtani vs. Jared Jones

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - JUNE 03: Starting pitcher Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers reacts after pitching out of the sixth inning of the MLB game against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field on June 03, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Los Angeles Dodgers vs. Pittsburgh Pirates, Wednesday, June 10, 6:40 p.m. ET

The Pirates have their work cut out for them on the second matchup of a three-game series against the Dodgers at PNC Park. They will face off against one of the best pitchers in the game in Shohei Ohtani, who is 6-2 with a 0.74 ERA so far this season.

Ohtani has not allowed more than two earned runs in a single game. That came on May 5 against the Houston Astros, which is also the last game he lost. Since then, he has beaten the San Francisco Giants, San Diego Padres, Colorado Rockies, and Arizona Diamondbacks in consecutive starts.

The Dodgers are 6-4 when Ohtani pitches, but have won their last four games and have only given up one whole run in all of those starts.

On the flip side, Jared Jones is making his third start of the season for the Bucks. In his 2026 debut on May 29, Jones pitched 4.1 innings and gave up five runs, but the Pirates were able to score six in a 6-5 victory at home. In his last start on June 4 against the Astros, Jones pitched five scoreless innings, giving up four hits, in a 5-1 victory. Now, he will look to remain perfect with the defending champs in town.


Location: PNC Park, Pittsburgh, PA

Broadcast: KDKA AM/FM, Sportsnet

Pitching Matchup: Shohei Ohtani (6-2, 0.74 ERA) vs. Jared Jones (1-0, 4.82 ERA)

BD community, this is your thread for today’s game. Enjoy!

Giants’ Willy Adames misses series finale: ‘Fighting through some pain’

SAN FRANCISCO — Willy Adames’ cold snap progressed into a minor slump with another hitless effort Tuesday night, but that wasn’t the reason he was out of the lineup the following afternoon.

Adames was “kind of fighting through some pain,” in the Giants’ 6-3 loss to the Nationals, manager Tony Vitello revealed before Wednesday’s series finale.

The Giants held shortstop Willy Adames out of the series finale Wednesday against the Nationals. Stan Szeto-Imagn Images

The issue is in the shortstop’s upper leg — “knee to hip,” per Vitello — and only cropped up sometime during the loss Tuesday. He went 0-for-4 with a walk and two strikeouts, extending his hitless streak to his past 17 at-bats over the previous four games.

“I think it affected the way he was moving a little bit,” Vitello said. “Yesterday, the read from everybody was he’s fighting through that thing.”

Adames pleaded his case to play Wednesday, Vitello said. But after consulting the training staff, the manager opted to pencil in a different name at shortstop — utilityman Casey Schmitt — for only the second time in 69 games this season.

Giants manager Tony Vitello (right) penciled in utilityman Casey Schmitt at shortstop Wednesday against the Nationals. AP Photo/David Zalubowski

Schmitt has spent most of his time lately in left field but reacquainted himself with the infield dirt by going through drills at shortstop with infield coach Ron Washington.