Projecting Rangers' new-look lineup for 2026-27 season

The past week has been a whirlwind for the NHL, beginning with the 2026 Draft on June 26-27 and continuing with a frenzy of free agent signings and trades made across the league.

As the dust begins to settle, it's time to take a first glance at how the Rangers roster could look next season under head coach Mike Sullivan.

Forwards

Rangers president and general manager Chris Drury spent much of the past seven months expressing his desire to build a younger, faster, and more dynamic Rangers offense. Drury stuck to his word, and the blockbuster addition of Pavel Dorofeyev from the Vegas Golden Knights via trade means that the Rangers top forward line should look and play very differently next season.

Dorofeyev is physical, aggressive, and intelligent as a forechecker, gets into dangerous areas off the puck, and puts away goals by the bucketload. The 25-year-old Russian winger is a two-way star who draws plenty of attention from opposing defenses, meaning he should make life a lot easier for his projected linemates, center Mika Zibanejad and winger Alexis Lafrenière.

Elsewhere in the lineup, Will Cuylle, Noah Laba, and Gabriel Perrault are talented young players each entering the final year of their current contracts, meaning they will all be restricted free agents (RFAs) in the summer of 2027. Cuylle is out to prove that he can be more than a decent middle-six forward following two straight 20-goal seasons. Meanwhile, Laba and Perrault should see increased playing time, and with it, the opportunity to break out into reliable pieces of the forward core.

The Rangers also brought in free agents Oliver Bjorkstrand and Joe Veleno, both on one-year contracts. Bjorkstrand is a crafty winger who lost a bit of his scoring touch last season with the Tampa Bay Lightning, but remains a useful playmaker who can hold his own defensively. Veleno is a fourth-line center who saw his faceoff percentage and penalty kill usage reach career highs last season with the Montreal Canadiens.

The Rangers still have a good chunk of cap space to work with, close to $8 million according to Puckepedia, so don't be surprised if they're not done adding to this new-look group, as the team's depth chart looks a bit thin when it comes to bottom-six forwards.

Defensemen

The duo of Adam Fox and Vladislav Gavrikov is one of the most dynamic and dangerous top-line defensive pairings in the NHL. The issue is that Fox played just 55 games last season due to injuries, and with Fox out of the lineup, the Rangers were a putrid 8-16-3 in 2025-26. As a result, this offseason, the team's front office looked to ensure that the Rangers have multiple defensive pairings that can provide offensive production and puck possession (rather than just one, Fox and Gavrikov).

The performance of New York's brand new second-line defensive pairing of Sean Durzi -- acquired from the Utah Mammoth in the Vincent Trocheck trade -- and Marcus Pettersson -- acquired via trade from the Vancouver Canucks -- will be a massive factor in whether the Rangers can return to the playoffs next season. Both players join the fray in the prime years of their careers, and on paper, their combined skillsets fit very nicely. Durzi is a right-handed defenseman who is a point producer for himself and his teammates with strong offensive zone passing skills. Pettersson is a left-handed defenseman who is no slouch offensively, but really excels by doing the dirty work: retrieving pucks, eating hits, blocking shots, and killing penalties.

The third-line defense for the Rangers projects to be another lefty-righty pairing in the form of Urho Vaakanainen and Braden Schneider. Vaakanainen is a no-frills defense-first defenseman who played just 34 games last season for the team, but held his own and proved that he's worthy of a full-time spot as a depth piece in the lineup moving forward. Schneider, once tipped as a surefire top-four defenseman for the present and future of the team, has seen his stock fall significantly over the past couple of seasons, and currently slots in as a talented but inconsistent bottom-line defenseman. Schneider is currently an unsigned RFA, and although the Rangers just extended Schneider with a one-year qualifying offer, it isn't certain whether he'll be wearing Ranger blue or a different team's uniform come the fall.

Fifth overall selection Albert Smits was considered by many to be the most "NHL ready" defenseman in the 2026 draft class, but the Rangers will likely be in no rush to insert the 18-year-old Latvian draftee into their lineup. Still, Smits could feature at some point in 2026-27 and should be a player worth watching for years to come.

Goaltenders

Igor Shesterkin missed 13 games due to injury in 2025-26. In the 31 games without their franchise netminder between the pipes, the Rangers went 9-20-2 (this includes games where Shesterkin was rotated out of the starting spot, a common occurrence for "workhorse" starting goalies). When healthy, the 30-year-old is one of the best goaltenders on the planet, able to turn potential losses into wins with stunning stops that demoralize the opposition.

The Rangers acquired Joonas Korpisalo from the Boston Bruins, who will compete with Dylan Garand for the role of Shesterkin's backup. Korpisalo is vastly experienced for a 32-year-old (still in his prime in goalie years), as he will enter his 12th NHL season with a proven track record as a solid backup goalie. Garand, meanwhile, made waves despite playing just three games towards the tail end of last season. In those three starts, the 24-year-old posted a .954 save percentage, saving 3.9 goals above expected as the Rangers went 2-0-1. Garand will be looking to carry over that momentum into next season.

Billy Donovan to become lead assistant coach for San Antonio Spurs

The San Antonio Spurs were just a few wins away from an NBA title in 2026. Rumors have swirled since their defeat regarding their next moves to ensure they can get over the hump and hoist the Larry O'Brien Trophy next season.

Well, they've made their first move, adding Billy Donovan to their coaching staff, per ESPN's Shams Charania.

Donovan had spent the last 11 seasons as a head coach in Oklahoma City and Chicago, but will now take a step back, operating as the Spurs' "lead assistant coach" under Mitch Johnson.

Who is Billy Donovan?

Donovan took over as head coach of the Oklahoma City Thunder in 2015, nearly leading the Thunder to the NBA Finals that season, but falling in seven games to the Golden State Warriors in the Western Conference finals.

Despite losing Kevin Durant the following season, Donovan experienced solid regular season success, reaching the playoffs in each of his next four years as the head coach in OKC. Unfortunately, he never made it out of the first round of the playoffs again.

Donovan and the Thunder mutually agreed to part ways following the 2019-20 season. Donovan then joined the Chicago Bulls and helped lead them to the postseason in just his second year with the team, marking their first postseason appearance in five years. They lost in the first round, though, and have not been back to the playoffs since. In fact, since that season, Donovan's Bulls never posted a record above .500.

Has Billy Donovan ever won Coach of the Year?

No. He finished third in voting in 2020 after leading the Thunder to a 44-28 record and the No. 5 seed in the Western Conference.

That said, he was named the co-recipient of the Michael H. Goldberg NBCA (National Basketball Coaches Association) Coach of the Year award for the 2019-20 season.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY Sports: Billy Donovan to become lead assistant coach for San Antonio Spurs

LeBron James’ Lakers rift stemmed from failed Russell Westbrook saga

LeBron James’ tenure with the Lakers is over after he informed the NBA franchise he’d spent the past eight seasons with that he’ll sign elsewhere in free agency.

While both sides have shown each other nothing but respect since James’ decision went public, it is clear that his and the Lakers’ relationship wasn’t perfect. If it were, then James presumably would’ve stuck around in Los Angeles to end his NBA career.

LeBron James reportedly had a hand in a failed trade that brought Russell Westbrook to the Lakers. Best Image / BACKGRID

Therefore, there’s interest around when James and the Lakers’ relationship began going awry. On July 2, ESPN’s Dave McMenamin reported the “disconnect” between James and the Lakers began after the franchise traded Russell Westbrook following a failed 2021-22 season and never recovered after that.

The Lakers traded for Westbrook in July 2021, sending Kyle Kuzma, Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Montrezl Harrell and the 22nd overall pick in the 2021 NBA Draft to the Wizards.

James reportedly had a hand in bringing Westbrook to LA. James and Anthony Davis believed adding Westbrook to their star duo would make the Lakers championship favorites again after they were bounced in the first round of the 2021 NBA playoffs.


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James and Westbrook (0) didn’t have the expected success during their time together with the Lakers.

But it didn’t happen. Westbrook struggled alongside James and Davis, failing to produce his typical offensive output and committing too many turnovers. Westbrook was subject to a ton of scrutiny because of this, especially after the Lakers finished the 2021-22 season at 33-49 and missed the playoffs.

Westbrook started coming off the bench for LA during the 2022-23 campaign. While this produced better results than him spending most of his time in a lineup with James, the Lakers’ on-court cohesion never came close to what everyone expected when Westbrook came to LA. He was then traded to the Jazz in February 2023.

LeBron James, Russell Westbrook and Anthony Davis didn’t deliver for the Lakers when they played together. Getty Images

ESPN’s Baxter Holmes reported in January that Jeanie Buss (the Lakers’ president and controlling owner in 2021) was frustrated that James failed to take accountability for the Westbrook trade not working because the Lakers apparently made the move to appease him.

Now it appears that this frustration was never quite solved, despite James staying in LA until now.

Chicago curb stomps San Diego with 23-run outburst

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - JULY 1: Manny Machado #13 of the San Diego Padres strikes out during the seventh inning against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on July 1, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Geoff Stellfox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

One of the least-swept teams in baseball found themselves on the wrong end of history yesterday. The San Diego Padres were swept for just the third time this season after the Chicago Cubs scored 23 runs against the Friars. That total ties the Padres’ record for runs allowed in a game. It was a tough one to stomach for a team that has showed fight the last few games.

With starter Walker Buehler on the mound, it was the first pitcher that the Friar Faithful could feel confident about. Instead, Buehler disappointed and was tagged for nine runs in the blowout loss, seven coming via the long ball. It felt like the ball flew out of the yard for everybody but the Padres, who only put up three runs. They went a miserable 3-for-11 with runners in scoring position.

It’s been a part of a continuing trend toward mediocrity. The Friars need a win now more than ever and the schedule does not get easier from here. They’ll face the rival Los Angeles Dodgers for the second time this week, needing a turnaround to the slump San Diego has been mired in.

Taking the mound

Roki Sasaki (LAD) v. Randy Vásquez (SD)

Sasaki started for L.A. in the only Padres’ win of last week’s series. All things considered, he pitched well apart from an 0-2 mistake to Ty France that ended up in the left field seats. The righty has been serviceable for the Dodgers this year, helping to bolster a rotation struggling with injuries.

He’s also looked better lately, with a 3.99 ERA across his last 38 1/3 innings compared to a 4.88 mark this season. Sasaki’s command has gotten better lately too (1.07 WHIP) despite walking five batters in last week’s contest against San Diego.

Vásquez continues to underwhelm on the mound. He owns a 7.34 ERA in his lasts seven starts. He’s only gone 6 2/3 combined innings across his last two games, and surrendered 10 runs in those frames. It’s been rough going for the young right-hander.

Which is why it’s tough for the Padres to pin their hopes on him as a stopper. San Diego is on a five-game losing streak. They need a win any way they can get it, and Vásquez will need to pitch the game of his life in order to turn things around for the Friars.

Batter up!

Two good things happened in yesterday’s blowout loss. Sung-Mun Song hit his first MLB home run! For a player who was signed for his pop in the KBO, it’s comforting to see that first one. (Hopefully they come in bunches.) And Jake Cronenworth went 3-for-4 at the plate in his second game back. He’s now batting .429 since coming off the IL Monday (7 at-bats).

  1. Fernando Tatis Jr., RF
  2. Samad Taylor, LF
  3. Manny Machado, 3B
  4. Gavin Sheets, DH
  5. Ty France, 1B
  6. Jackson Merrill, CF
  7. Xander Bogaerts, SS
  8. Freddy Fermin, C
  9. Jake Cronenworth, 2B

At this point, the offense looks almost irredeemable. Almost. This is still the team that stormed back from a middling 50-49 record at the 2024 All-Star break to post the best second-half record in all of baseball (43-20). Baseball is a game that can change in the blink of an eye. It’s never over until the last out is recorded. The lineup has shown some potency. If it can add consistency to that, it could be the best in all of MLB.

Relief corps

To call it a 23-run blowout is a bit of a disservice. The Cubs scored eight runs against catcher Rodolfo Durán in their final frame. He covered two innings for the Friars to help rest their ‘pen. Even accounting for that, a 15-3 loss is still a blowout. Thanks to Durán, only Kyle Hart was called on out of the bullpen.

Thankfully, Vásquez will have some breathing room with the entire bullpen (excluding Hart) available tonight. Jason Adam, Ron Marinaccio, Yuki Matsui, Mason Miller, Adrian Morejon, Wandy Peralta and Bradgley Rodriguez are all available to pitch out of the ‘pen. That said, San Diego doesn’t have an off day until the All-Star break. It would be nice to give the relief corps a rest after covering 10 innings in Chicago.

The pitching staff has been asked to be perfect time and again, and now that has begun to implode San Diego’s club. San Diego pitchers have surrendered 47 runs in their last six games. During the five-game losing streak, it’s 46 runs. The lineup needs to produce more to give their pitching some leeway.

Anton Watson Named to Los Angeles Lakers Summer League Roster

EL SEGUNDO, CA - APRIL 3: Anton Watson #22 of the South Bay Lakers drives to the basket during the game against the Rio Grande Valley Vipers during the 2026 G League Playoffs Semifinals on April 3, 2026 at UCLA Health Training Center in El Segundo, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Juan Ocampo/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

After spending the full season with the G League’s South Bay Lakers, forward Anton Watson was listed on the Los Angeles Lakers Summer League roster. Watson averaged 10.4 points, 4.4 rebounds, 2.4 assists, and 1.6 steals per game in 2025-26.

Forward Drew Timme, who was on a two-way contract with the Los Angeles and South Bay organizations for the 2026-27 season, was not named to the roster alongside Watson.

That now makes for five Gonzaga Bulldogs alumni participating in the different NBA Summer Leagues during the month of July.

Dallas Mavericks guard Ryan Nembhard

Golden State Warriors forward Graham Ike

San Antonio Spurs wing Tyon Grant-Foster

Indiana Pacers wing Jalen Warley

Los Angeles Lakers forward Anton Watson

The 2026 California Classic, a summer league taking place inside both the Golden State Warriors’ Chase Center and Sacramento Kings’ Golden 1 Center, starts on July 3 through 6.

San Antonio’s Grant-Foster will kick everything off at the Chase Center against the Miami Heat on Friday, July 3, at 5 p.m. PT on ESPN/Prime Video. The second game of the day will be Ike and Golden State’s Gold squad against Los Angeles’ Watson at 7:30 p.m. PT on ESPNU/Prime Video.

Following the California Classic, the 2026 NBA 2K27 Summer League in Las Vegas, Nevada, runs from July 9 through 19.

Arden Cravalho is a Gonzaga University graduate from the Bay Area… Follow him on X @a_cravalho

Royals vs Rays game discussion, July 2

Stephen Kolek throws a pitch
KANSAS CITY, MO - JUNE 14: Kansas City Royals starting pitcher Stephen Kolek (32) throws a warm up pitch before a MLB game between the Houston Astros and the Kansas City Royals on June 14, 2026, at Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, MO. (Photo by Keith Gillett/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Despite having been a fan for nearly 30 years, this is quite possibly the most painful season I’ve ever watched. I think I was shielded a bit during the aughts by my childish belief that the Royals could go on a 15-game winning streak at any moment. I used to believe that pitcher ERAs entering a game significantly influenced who likely had the upper hand. And, honestly, I simply didn’t pay as close attention because I was so much busier during the times baseball was being played and didn’t have a computer in my pocket to keep me up to date on every single play.

Few series this year have been as painful as the ones against AL East opponents. The Royals are 3-15 against AL East opponents. The series against the Orioles, where they won that third game, feels so long ago I’d almost forgotten it. Of course, they won their first two matches against Tampa Bay in Tampa, so things were feeling quite a bit better this time last week, but, these are the 2026 Royals. They’ll win 5 of 6 just so they can lose 9 of their next 10 and really drive home how disappointing all these losses are.

The good news is that Stephen Kolek will return to the mound for KC tonight. He went on the Parental Leave list last weekend ahead of the birth of his first child. Then, because she was born prematurely, he was shifted to the Family Medical Emergency List (There are a lot of lists for players to be on) earlier this week to spend more time with his family. But he’s back now, so hopefully that means good things for the health of his growing family, and it also means we don’t have to watch Mitch Spence tonight.

Jose Cuas is the one who got demoted after throwing two innings last night, which is unfortunate for him, but hopefully, he’ll be back soon.

The Rays will be using Ian Seymour, the author of the beginning of the latest disaster period. (I like to think of Griffin Jax’s victory in the third game of the series last week as the prologue.) Last time, Seymour pitched as a bulk reliever and pitched a hitless 6.2 innings. This time I guess the Rays thought they’d let him see if he could get the no-hitter by himself. I’m not betting against him.

Lineups

Salvador Perez is getting another day off after hitting into two double plays last night. Unfortunately, that means the middle third of the Royals’ lineup goes Lane Thomas, Starling Marte, and Nick Loftin. In an ideal world, none of those guys would be batting in those positions either. But the Royals stopped playing in an ideal world almost before the season started.

Also, apparently, it might mean Salvy is hurting. The Royals designated Eric Cerantola for assignment and demoted John Rave (who absolutely did not deserve it, but what can you do) to add Luke Maile back to the roster. If the Royals think they need three catchers and one of those guys is catching and leading off tonight, you don’t have to be all that good at math to know something is adding up bad for the other guy.

Of course, the Rays have Victor Mesa Jr., Chandler Simpson, and Cedric Mullins in the same spots. They wouldn’t be my first, second, or third choices to bat there either. The Royals will have to find another reason for their failures than having guys out of position in the lineup, perhaps.

Junior Caminero is still in the Rays’ lineup. I’m torn between wanting the Royals to intentionally walk him every time and just let the guy hit some more dingers because what harm can it do KC, and it would be awful to end his homer streak by intentionally walking him in every AB. Don’t forget, no baseball tomorrow because of the World Cup. Enjoy the break!

Game 88 Game Day Thread – Detroit Tigers @ Texas Rangers

Apr 29, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers pitcher Nathan Eovaldi (17) pitches during the game between the Rangers and the Yankees at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images | Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Detroit Tigers @ Texas Rangers

Thursday, July 02, 2026, 7:05 PM CDT (105.3 The Fan / Rangers Sports Network)

The Shed

LHP Framber Valdez vs. RHP Nathan Eovaldi

Today’s Lineups

TIGERSRANGERS
Kevin McGonigle – 3BJustin Foscue – 2B
Dillon Dingler – CJosh Jung – 3B
Kerry Carpenter – RFEzequiel Duran – RF
Riley Greene – LFJake Burger – 1B
Colt Keith – DHKyle Higashioka – C
Spencer Torkelson – 1BCameron Cauley – CF
Zach McKinstry – SSElias Diaz – DH
James Outman – CFAlejandro Osuna – LF
Hao-Yu Lee – 2BNicky Lopez – SS
Framber Valdez – LHPNathan Eovaldi – RHP

Go Rangers!

Suns add Pat Spencer on a two-way contract

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 05: Jordan Goodwin #23 of the Phoenix Suns pressures Pat Spencer #61 of the Golden State Warriors during the first half at Mortgage Matchup Center on February 05, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. 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 Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I think we might be looking at what the Phoenix Suns roster might look like come opening day after the team signed former Golden State Warriors guard Pat Spencer to a two-way NBA contract, according to ESPN NBA Insider Shams Charania. Suns officials completed the contract on Thursday evening with Mark Bartelstein and Ross Aroyo of Priority Sports.

Spencer, who turns 30 on Saturday, had the best season of his three-year career last season, averaging 7.2 points, 3.5 assists, and 2.4 rebounds per game on 42.7% shooting from the field, 35.7% from deep, and 77.2% from the charity stripe. As a starter, his numbers ballooned to 11.4 points, 5.1 assists, and 3.4 rebounds per game on 45.1/40/60 shooting splits.

One of Spencer’s best games last season came against the Suns back in February, where he scored a career-high 20 points and was one of the Warriors’ main contributors in their fourth quarter double-digit comeback with Steph Curry, Draymond Green, and Jimmy Butler sidelined.

Every season of his career, Spencer has increased his minutes, points per game, and games played, and has built a reputation as a pesky defender, which fits right in with the physical culture that the team is building, spearheaded by Dillon Brooks. As the season went on, Spencer’s role with the Warriors continued to expand, as he averaged 10 or more points in two of the last three months of the season, including shooting 40% from downtown in the month of February, and dished out 5.4 assists per game.

After the team resigned guards Collin Gillespie and Jordan Goodwin, picked up the team option on Jamaree Bouyea’s deal, and now signed Spencer, Phoenix has fortified its guard rotation after some concerns about its depth heading into the offseason.

Spencer joins CJ Huntley and Koby Brea as the team’s other two-way players. The roster is up to 18 players, with 15 standard and three two-way deals.

Braves vs Cardinals chat and discussion: Hurston Waldrep vs Dustin May

The Atlanta Braves are taking on the St. Louis Cardinals looking to secure their first series win since the twentieth of June, almost two full weeks ago.

Hurston Waldrep is making his much anticipated first start of the season after making one appearance this year where he went two innings. It will be interesting to see if he will be on a strict pitch count and how long he will go if he is pitching well. He will be facing Dustin May who had a one hit shutout two starts ago but followed that up with a six earned run start where he was removed after two innings.

If the Braves can get the bats going early, they may have a shot to get a two-game winning streak going for the first time since that series win previously mentioned.

First pitch is at 7:15 EDT. Follow along in the comments.

Lineup

Preview

Are The Senators Planning To Carry Three Goalies On Their Roster?

The Senators have taken care of another piece of their goaltending puzzle, signing Leevi Merilainen to a one-year contract worth $1.1 million for the 2026-27 season.

The deal is a one-way contract, a detail that could have important implications for the Sens' roster decisions heading into training camp. He was also arbitration-eligible, but after the season he just had, that may not have gone so well for the young Finn.

Steve Staios spoke last week about what his staff likes about Samuel Ersson.

Merilainen entered last season as the undisputed backup to Linus Ullmark after showing excellent promise during a brief NHL stint in 2024-25. But that opportunity slipped away with some below-average performances early in the year.

He struggled with an 8-10-1 record, a 3.51 goals-against average and an .860 save percentage in 20 appearances.

As his confidence waned, the Senators turned to veteran James Reimer, who had signed as a free agent just before the season. Reimer stabilized the position, playing well enough to keep the backup job for the remainder of the regular season and into the playoffs, while Merilainen returned to Belleville.

With the B-Sens, Merilainen looked closer to the kind of prospect Ottawa had envisioned to start the year. He posted an 8-8-1 record in 19 games with a 2.77 goals-against average and a .909 save percentage.

The Senators selected the Finnish netminder in the third round (71st overall) of the 2020 NHL Draft. He has since appeared in 34 NHL games. Meanwhile, he's compiled a 39-29-6 record, a 2.59 goals-against average, and a .911 save percentage across 84 career AHL games.

The extension also raises an interesting question: Could Ottawa carry three goaltenders on its NHL roster next season?

That approach, used by the Stanley Cup-champion Carolina Hurricanes this season, has become increasingly common around the league. It could be particularly appealing for the Senators given Linus Ullmark's history.

Ullmark has never started more than 50 games in a single NHL season. Last year also served as a reminder that his availability can't always be taken for granted. Ullmark has been injury-prone in Ottawa, and he's also been open about his mental health challenges. To get the best version of Ullmark, the Senators know they'll need to carefully monitor both his workload and overall well-being throughout the season.

Keeping Merilainen alongside Ullmark and newcomer Samuel Ersson would give head coach Travis Green plenty of flexibility while ensuring the club has experienced NHL depth if injuries arise. 

But at the same time, it's probably not the best development model for the 23-year-old Merilainen.

So if the Senators decide against the notion of carrying three goaltenders, they'll face a difficult decision because nobody is waiver-exempt. Both Meriläinen and Ersson would need to clear before being assigned to Belleville.

One thing is clear. The Senators weren't prepared to lose Merilainen for nothing. By giving him a one-way contract, they've signalled they still believe he can become an NHL goaltender.

The challenge now is figuring out where he fits.

By Steve Warne
The Hockey News 

This article was first published on The Hockey News Ottawa Senators site. For full coverage of the Senators, check out one of the latest headlines below:

Free Agency: Senators Officially Sign Samuel Ersson As Their Backup Goalie
The Senators May Have Just Chosen Burakovsky Over Giroux
Senators Walk Away From AHL's Top Goal Scorer
Meet The Future: Senators Draft Offensive Skill With Two First-Round Picks
At A Glance, Senators' Draft Day Trades Are Head Scratchers
Brady Tkachuk Had a Chance to Write His Own Story. He Chose Matthew's

Why tempers might flare in latest Dodgers-Padres rivalry series

Welcome to The California Post’s weekly Dodgers recap, where baseball writers Dylan Hernández and Jack Harris review the week that was, hand out very official awards and take stock of the state of the season.

QUESTION OF THE WEEK

Will tempers flare in Padres rematch?

Around this time last year, the Dodgers-Padres rivalry reached its boiling point, after a flurry of hit batters amid a stretch of seven games in 10 days between the clubs led to a benches-clearing incident at Dodger Stadium.

The second-place Padres are visiting Dodger Stadium this weekend, and tempers might flare during the rivalry series against the first-place Dodgers. AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh

This weekend, similar circumstances could be in place.

The teams, fresh off the Dodgers’ series win in San Diego last weekend, are again engaged in a seven-games-in-10-days stretch. And last Sunday’s finale at Petco Park saw five batters get hit –– including Fernando Tatis Jr., whose repeated plunkings last year served as kindling to the rivalry’s eventual blowup.

Granted, tempers didn’t flare then. And a key piece of last year’s hot-blooded equation — former Padres manager Mike Shildt, who confronted Dave Roberts during the June 2025 melee — is no longer in the picture.

Another key difference now: The Dodgers have pulled away in the National League West race, entering with a 12-game division lead that already feels almost insurmountable.

Still, if the Padres are going to get back into the division picture, this four-game trip to Chavez Ravine represents their best opportunity. That could enhance the stakes of the series and perhaps the emotions of a quick-turn rematch, too.

“We try to take every series with the same importance,” Roberts said on the eve of this weekend’s series. “But obviously you know winning that series would be [big]. That is the goal.”

AP Photo/Matt Krohn

PLAYER OF THE WEEK

Tommy Edman (.366 average, 1 home run, 8 RBIs in 12 games back from offseason ankle surgery)

After he played through — and was clearly hampered by — an ankle injury for most of last year, it was easy to forget how impactful a healthy Edman can be.


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The switch-hitting utility man has offered a quick reminder lately, however, returning to action with a flurry of production after missing the first three months of the year recovering from offseason ankle surgery.

Edman has taken his typical quality at-bats (getting on base at a .435 clip) while also flashing the kind of power he failed to maintain last year once his ankle began bothering him (two doubles, one triple and one home run that traveled 428 feet, his longest since 2021).

Of all Dodgers hitters since his return, his .971 OPS trails only Freddie Freeman and Mookie Betts.

“Just a continuation of making sure I’m keeping a good approach, dictated by the situation,” Edman said after a four-hit, four-RBI game Tuesday. “I just feel like I’ve been pretty consistent this far.”

That has also been true of Edman’s switch-hitting abilities, as he’s hit better than .350 from both sides of the plate.

In Edman’s first couple seasons with the Dodgers, his left-handed swing had been noticeably weaker. But so far this year, he’s gone 10-for-27 from that side of the plate.

“I feel like this is kind of one of the rare times where both swings feel good, both from the right and left,” he said. “It’s really tough to maintain both swings over the course of the season, so just happy that I feel that way right now.”

IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

PITCHER OF THE WEEK

Emmet Sheehan (5 innings, 1 run, 5 strikeouts in win vs. Padres; 4-5, 5.08 ERA on season)

The third-year right-hander not only reaffirmed his place in the Dodgers’ starting rotation with a strong outing in San Diego last weekend, but more importantly, he might have unlocked a new pitch.

After working with assistant pitching coach Connor McGuiness on a new curveball grip in a pair of between-starts bullpen sessions, Sheehan showcased the changes effectively while navigating what was arguably his best start in months.

The new version of the pitch was harder (averaging 79.3 mph compared with 76.8 mph before) and had a little less drop (5 inches fewer, to be precise, according to MLB’s Baseball Savant data). 

The result was a breaking ball that was easier to keep in the zone and tougher for opposing hitters to lay off. 

Even while throwing it over the plate more than 70% of the time, Sheehan got six whiffs off nine swings against the pitch (a dramatic shift from the 28% whiff rate it had been inducing this season), and only one ball was put in play against it.

“I think trying to change speeds and make them respect stuff in zone that’s not the fastball is really important,” Sheehan said.

Maybe it’s the thing that will help him turn his previously disappointing season around.

PROSPECT OF THE WEEK

Eduardo Quintero (.294 average, five home runs, 37 RBIs, .834 OPS this year in High-A Great Lakes)

The Dodgers’ reigning Minor League Player of the Year got off to a slow start following an offseason promotion to High-A, hitting just .195 in April.

Ever since then, though, Quintero has rediscovered his scorching form from last season, hitting .372 with a .941 OPS in May and .333 with a 1.011 OPS in June. Those latter stats were boosted by three home runs, including his first career grand slam earlier this week.

And now, the 20-year-old prospect is becoming just the latest outfielder in the club’s pipeline to put together an impressive season.

Their depth at the position is so deep, it figures to be an area for them to trade from as the deadline approaches next month.

AP Photo/Steven Senne

FUTURE DODGER OF THE WEEK

(Where we speculate about potential future Dodgersacquisitions — sometimes far-fetched, sometimes not)

Sonny Gray, Red Sox (ETA: August)

Tyler Glasnow has started throwing again, but the deliberate pace of his recovery remains disconcerting. Glasnow has already missed nearly two months with back problems.

The Dodgers were fortunate to have their four best starting pitchers healthy for the postseason last year, but there’s no guarantee that will be the case again. Unless the team is comfortable with Roki Sasaki or Justin Wrobleski starting games in October, it should monitor the market for starters.

The Tigers’ Tarik Skubal is the grand prize of this trade market, but the cost for him will be extremely high. Gray, 9-1 with a 2.69 ERA, is a potential alternative. Gray’s contract includes a $30 million mutual option for next year that features a $10 million buyout. That added cost would force the Red Sox to ask for less in return since just getting his deal off the books would count as a victory for them. As far as the free-spending Dodgers are concerned, it’s just money. 

Knicks have been rejected in attempts to trade for Pelicans’ Yves Missi — here’s why

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Yves Missi #21 of the New Orleans Pelicans looks on during the game against the Sacramento Kings on April 3, 2026 at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, California. , Image 2 shows Knicks center Mitchell Robinson #23 reacts on the court during the first half
Knicks free agency

The Knicks have been looking for their Mitchell Robinson replacement in the Big Easy, but the Pelicans are telling them to take a hike. 

New York has tried to acquire New Orleans center Yves Missi this offseason, but multiple offers to the Pelicans have been rejected, according to NBA insider Chris Haynes. The Pelicans view the big man as a vital core figure. 

The Pelicans have also reportedly told the Knicks that they have no intention of moving Missi. 

Yves Missi of the New Orleans Pelicans looks on during the game against the Sacramento Kings on April 3, 2026 at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, California. NBAE via Getty Images

It’s not the first time that the Knicks have pursued the 6-foot-11 big man in 2026, with The Post’s Stefan Bondy reporting in February that the team approached New Orleans specifically about Missi. 

At the time, a source told Bondy that New Orleans was looking for a first-round pick in exchange for Missi. The Knicks did not have any first-rounders to give up. 

The Knicks have seemed to have heightened their search to fill the gap left by Robinson’s departure, which was a foregone conclusion — with owner James Dolan saying he was unwilling to go into the NBA’s second apron — after the celebration of the team’s first title in 53 years settled down. 

A league source also told The Post that the Knicks were among the teams that were vying to sign Marvin Bagley III before he eventually agreed to a deal with the Nuggets. 

Knicks center Mitchell Robinson reacts on the court during the first half. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Missi averaged 5.7 points per game and 5.8 rebounds last season with the Pelicans, while also averaging 1.5 blocks per game. 

The big man is one of New Orleans’ best offensive rebounders and rim protectors, and it makes sense that the Pelicans are not interested in sending him elsewhere. 

The Knicks do need to fill the hole in their frontcourt after Robinson’s departure

The beloved Knick spent eight years with the organization before he agreed to sign with the rival Celtics on a three-year, $47.4 million contract.

Game Discussion for St. Louis Cardinals vs Atlanta Braves Thursday

Jun 21, 2026; Kansas City, Missouri, USA; St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Dustin May (3) pitches during the first inning against the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium. Mandatory Credit: William Purnell-Imagn Images | William Purnell-Imagn Images

The St. Louis Cardinals will finish up their stay in Atlanta before heading to the (not so) friendly confines of Wrigley Field for the 4th of July weekend. Dustin May will make the start for the Cardinals while the Atlanta Braves will send Hurston Waldrep to the mound. First pitch at Truist Park is once again set for 6:15pm central time and the game’s TV broadcast will be available on Cardinals.tv.

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Rockies offensive outburst secures series split with 14-4 win over Marlins

DENVER, CO - JULY 2: Jake McCarthy #31 of the Colorado Rockies is congratulated by Mickey Moniak #22 after hitting a two run home run in the fourth inning at Coors Field on July 2, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After falling behind early from a shaky start by their starting pitcher, the Colorado Rockies rallied offensively and the bullpen shut things down to secure a series split with the Miami Marlins and a 14-4 victory.

Lorenzen’s shaky command

Something seemed to finally start clicking for Michael Lorezen over the month of June and the hope was to keep things rolling into July. His first start this month proved to be a grind.

Lorenzen’s command was shaky from the get-go. Liam Hicks led off the game with a single, followed by a double from Otto Lopez. Both pitches were left over the plate and the Marlins did not miss. Lorenzen then issued a walk to Kyle Stowers to load the bases. Xavier Edwards grounded into a force out that could have been a double play if Edouard Julien hadn’t hesitated on the throwing decision. The play scored the run to give the Marlins a 1-0 lead. Lorenzen then issued another walk to Griffin Conine to load the bases once again. Owen Caissie lifted a sacrifice fly to left field to drive in Lopez and give the Marlins a 2-0 lead.

He escaped the inning on the next hitter and rebounded with a quick 1-2-3 second inning. Lopez smacked a lead-off triple in the top of the third and came in to score on a sacrifice fly by Edwards to extend the lead 3-1. Thanks to a couple of nifty defensive plays about the run, including a sharply hit ball to Julien, Lorenzen ended the inning without any further damage.

The command waned again in the fourth inning when he issued a pair of walks and gave up a single to load the bases for the third time. The Marlins scored their fourth run of the game to take back the lead at the time on a ground ball that was bobbled at first base.

Handed another lead heading into the fifth inning, Lorenzen gave up another pair of walks to force his removal from the game with one out. He ended up going just 4.1 innings, tying a career-high of six walks while striking out just one batter. He allowed four runs on four hits while throwing 51 pitches, 30 for strikes.

It was a gritty start for Lorenzen as he battled himself, but he mitigated catastrophic damage. However, constantly struggling against yourself is a tough way to pitch and is something he’ll try to reassess before his next start.

Stay hot Mickey!

After falling a single shy of a cycle on Wednesday, Mickey Moniak wasted no time starting another bid for a cycle on Thursday. In his at-bat of the game, Moniak once again slugged a home run, his 15th of the season, to get the Rockies on the board. It was the third straight game that he hit a home run in his first at-bat, becoming the first player to do that in franchise history.

In his second at-bat in the third inning, Moniak then laced a double to right field but then struck out in the fourth inning. He struck out in his third at-bat but then came through with an RBI single in the sixth inning.

Moniak would ground out in the seventh inning, ending his day just a triple shy of the cycle which is a much less rare feat than falling a single shy. He ended up going 3-for-5 with two RBI and three runs scored.

Early offensive returns

After Moniak’s home run and TJ Rumfield’s double in the first inning, the Rockies started to find some offensive rhythm in the third inning against Marlins’ starter Ryan Gusto.

Jake McCarthy led off the inning with a walk and moved up to third base on Moniak’s double. After Rumfield flew out, Willi Castro came through with a huge two-run single to tie the game 3-3.

The Rockies came close to tacking on two more runs when Cole Carrigg sent a ball down the line that went foul. Colorado requested a review, and after a lengthy process, it was determined that the foul ball would stand.

Manager Warren Schaeffer offered his insights after the game, agreeing that it was indeed a foul ball.

“My angle was absolutely terrible,” Schaeffer said, “but on a homer, you get a free challenge so you might as well take it in case something happens. Maybe it goes our way, so there’s no harm in doing that. But I think it was clearly foul. All of the guys that were in line with that — including the home plate umpire, Ramon [De Jesus] — said that it wasn’t even close.”

After falling behind by a run heading into the bottom of the fourth, the Rockies built some opportunities early in the inning. A pitch hit Kyle Karros to start off the inning, ending Gusto’s day having allowed three runs on four hits over three innings.

Brett Sullivan then bounced into a fielder’s choice and was later thrown out trying to steal second base with Julien at the plate. Julien drew a walk against reliever lefty-killer John King to bring McCarthy to the plate. King hung a 2-1 slider up and in, which McCarthy blasted into right field to give the Rockies a 5-4 lead. It was his first home run against a left-handed pitcher since April 2023.

Sixth inning offensive returns

The Rockies weren’t done, as they ended up throwing together a massive rally in the sixth inning to extend their lead 12-4.

Carrigg kicked things off with a bunt single, followed by a strikeout of Karros. The Rockies proceeded to have the next seven straight batters reach as Sullivan singled and Julien walked. McCarthy then dealt another blow with his two-run single.

Moniak followed with his single, while Rumfield added an RBI single of his own. Castro was then hit by a pitch, and Troy Johnston chopped a ball into right field to drive in two more runs.

Carrigg capped the scoring with a sacrifice fly to right field to drive in the seventh run of the inning. The Rockies now have 15 innings in which they have scored five or more runs, which is tied for the most in MLB this season.

“Really solid approach in that inning, ” Schaeffer said, “and most of it, honestly, was left-on-left, which was ultra-impressive for our guys to take those at-bats like that. Mick, Rum, Troy, Jake… the homer left-on-left. I mean, it’s a big day. That’s big time for those guys.”

A few for the road

Later in the eighth inning, with utility player Javier Sanoja on the mound, the Rockies tacked on a few more runs. Rumfield was hit by a pitch and was later followed by a Johnston double. Carrigg delivered another sacrifice fly to drive in his second RBI of the game. Karros then walked, and Sullivan hit an RBI single to drive in Johnston and give the Rockies a 14-4 lead.

The Rockies ended up with 14 hits in the game while striking out just four times and drawing five walks with two hit-by-pitches. McCarthy drove in four runs with his two hits while Rumfield, Johnston, and Sullivan each had two hits. Julien also led the team with two walks on the day. Karros was the only starter for the Rockies to not have a hit. The team also went 5-for-8 with runners in scoring position, and the top four guys went 8-for-16 with nine RBIs on the day.

“Those guys continue to be good,” Schaeffer said. “They take good, solid at-bats every day. They don’t take days off. They grind. And Mick, two days in a row [was] one hit away from the cycle, which is pretty special.”

Bullpen heroes

Plenty of praise deserves to be placed on the bullpen as they tamed the Marlins for the second straight game. After Lorenzen departed the game in the fifth inning with two runners on base in a one-run game, the Rockies turned to Brennan Bernardino. The lone lefty reliever quickly got a fly out and a line out to end the inning and preserve the lead. He then started the sixth inning, recording two outs while allowing a single.

“Bernie’s been extremely consistent,” Schaeffer said. “You always want to give him the ball — no matter if it’s righty or lefty, but most of the time we try to give him left-handed matchups because he’s our only lefty. But he throws strikes consistently, and you know that. And that’s of huge importance to a manager that you’re going to throw strikes. He did a great job again today on a back-to-back, going 1+.”

With Lopez stepping up to the plate with two outs and a runner on second, Victor Vodnik was called upon for the right-on-right matchup. Vodnik won the battle with ease by inducing an infield pop-up to end the inning. He then came out for the seventh inning and faced the minimum after allowing a lead-off single and getting a double-play, followed by a ground out.

“Vic was really good today, which was good to see,” Schaeffer said. “It was a step forward for Vic. And then Ags with two solid ones, saving the ‘pen down there. We didn’t have to use Jimmy [Herget] and Senza today, which were the only two short guys available, so it sets us up again for tomorrow.”

Zach Agnos closed out the game with two quick and clean innings. The bullpen allowed just three hits and didn’t give up a walk while recording just one strikeout.

Up next

The Rockies will celebrate the holiday weekend by welcoming the San Francisco Giants into town. Ryan Feltner (2-2, 4.42 ERA) is scheduled to start for the Rockies. Logan Webb (5-5, 3.09 ERA) takes the mound for the Giants.

First pitch is scheduled for 6:10 pm MDT.


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