Kevin Durant’s first season in Houston ends on the bench as Rockets fall short again

HOUSTON — Kevin Durant’s first Houston Rockets season did not go as intended.

On Friday night at Toyota Center, while his teammates attempted to force a decisive Game 7 against the Los Angeles Lakers, Durant sat on the bench in street clothes with a sprained left ankle. He could only watch as the Lakers shifted into cruise control and the Rockets staggered toward the end of their season.

When the final buzzer sounded on the Lakers’ 98-78 win, the Rockets were right back where they were at the end of last season: exiting the playoffs in the first round.

In Houston’s locker room after the game, players exchanged hugs and gifted each other jerseys, relics of a season that failed to meet the raised expectations set when the Rockets traded last summer for Durant, who was injured for all but one playoff game against the Lakers.

The Rockets have suffered first-round playoff exits in back-to-back seasons, both in series where coach Ime Udoka said it felt like his team "got behind the eight ball."

Against the Lakers, who were missing Luka Doncic, the Rockets lost the first three games – two without Durant – but avoided elimination by winning the next two games to force the series back to Houston for Game 6. Friday’s blowout 20-point loss was the Rockets’ lowest-scoring game of the season and among the lowest-scoring playoff games in franchise history.

Udoka highlighted the growth of Houston’s young core, including the group that started the last three games of the series against the Lakers – Alperen Şengün, Amen Thompson, Reed Sheppard, Jabari Smith Jr. and Tari Eason – and said he was proud of his team’s resilience to battle back in the series. But he also acknowledged that change is necessary going forward.

"We do need to address some needs," Udoka said. "The lack of shooting at times, whether it’s a backup point guard or our young guys did enough this year to kind of run that with Fred (VanVleet) back. And so we’ll take a look at all those things, I think, and have some very interesting conversations on having a little bit of more of a mix instead of some duplicates out there."

The Rockets’ fate this season was accompanied by plenty of hypotheticals. What if Durant had been healthy in the playoffs? What if the Rockets had not lost VanVleet, their starting point guard, and center Steven Adams to injuries earlier in the season?

Şengün said none of those questions crossed his mind in the dying moments of Houston’s season.

"We cannot think about (that) stuff. Whoever is in the court, we fight with them," Şengün said. "Losing them, it wasn’t good, but you stay with it. The goal is always same: just fight, go to the end. We did it with the young guys, including myself in the young guys, too."

Rockets players Kevin Durant, left, and Fred VanVleet sit on the bench during the fourth quarter of Game 6 of their playoff series against the Lakers at Toyota Center in Houston on May 1, 2026.

In the end, the Rockets’ main issues boiled down to offense. In the playoff series against the Lakers, Houston shot 46.2% from the field in its two wins and 38.6% in its four losses. The Game 3 loss was particularly excruciating, a last-minute meltdown that felt achingly familiar to anyone who watched the Rockets struggle throughout the season to execute at the end of games.

In Game 6, the Rockets didn’t grab offensive rebounds at their typical rate and reverted to bad habits that plagued them earlier in the season. When the Lakers switched, the Rockets failed to create advantages and became stagnant. The ball stuck. Isolation play prevailed.

"It’s a team thing. It’s not any blame to them (players) or myself," Udoka said. "It’s a little combination of both, no doubt, understanding what works for us, what’s worked well, and then not deviating from that. So on me to get them into the sets, on them to run them and do the things we worked on leading into the series."

Udoka reportedly signed a six-year contract extension last summer. Udoka said he and Rockets general manager Rafael Stone will sit down "ASAP" to discuss the roster.

The Rockets have eight players under contract for next season, including Durant, but the team has plenty of decisions to make this summer. Thompson is extension-eligible ahead of his fourth NBA season while Eason, who was drafted by the Rockets with the 17th overall pick in 2022, will become a restricted free agent this offseason.

"I was drafted here, I’ve grown up here, my family’s here," Eason said. "I love Houston. As far as everything else, God knows."

When the Rockets were eliminated by the Golden State Warriors in last season’s playoffs, it was clear that Houston lacked a go-to scorer to catalyze the offense. Durant was brought in to solve that problem. This season, it’s not as easy to identify one main area of need, Smith said.

"I ain’t gonna say we need to make a trade or go out and get somebody, you know what I’m saying? I just think everything we need is in house," Smith said. "Everything that we need is on the bench, coaching us. Everything we need is on the bench behind us, coaching. I think we got it all, but it’s just on us to not have those mental lapses where we lose leads in the fourth quarter early in the season, where you have random three-game losses and stuff like that."

He continued, "I think maturity’s a big part of it but I think if everybody’s going into the offseason and do what they’ve been doing – that’s improving every year, get better, come back a little smarter, come back a little stronger, a little older – I think everything we need is in house right in front of us."

Whether the Rockets decide to run it back or go for a major change, the sting of how the season ended is sure to linger.

"Back-to-back first-round exits, it’s just – it’s rough," Thompson said. "It’s motivation, for sure. I feel like I’m going to be thinking about this all summer."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: How a season built around Kevin Durant unraveled in the playoffs

MLB End-of-April Check-in: NL Central

CINCINNATI, OHIO - APRIL 28: Elly de la Cruz #44 of the Cincinnati Reds hits a two run home run during the eighth inning against the Colorado Rockies at Great American Ball Park on April 28, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Justin Casterline/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Every day, Pinstripe Alley offers updates on what the Yankees’ top American League opponents are up to through the Rivalry Roundup. The AL East is well-trodden ground there, but with the season’s final month upon us, we’re going to take a peek around MLB as a whole and check in with each of the other five divisions. Who’s surprising? Who’s underwhelming? Who’s simply mediocre at the moment? Read on and find out.

Note: Records and statistics are for games through April 30th.

First Place: Cincinnati Reds (20-11)

Top Position Player: Elly De La Cruz (1.6 fWAR)
Top Pitcher: Rhett Lowder (1.0 fWAR)

Every year, it seems like there’s one team that makes the playoffs, or comes close, who has a good record, but you can’t exactly figure out why. Cincinnati is currently on pace to be that team in 2026. Despite being outscored on the season, the Reds go into May atop the NL Central, tied with the Yankees and Dodgers and behind just the Braves in the overall MLB standings.

Usually, teams that pull this off do so by having a wildly good record in close games, and lo-and-behold the Reds are 7-0 in one-run games and 3-0 in extra innings. Weirdly except for closer Emilio Pagán, their bullpen has been very good with five pitchers having a ERA of 2.00ish or lower.

Meanwhile, the rest of their roster has been a bit of a mixed bag. Rhett Lowder and Chase Burns have been excellent, but the rest of their rotation has been below average. Elly De La Cruz and Sal Stewart have starred in their lineup, but a good chunk of the rest of their lineup has been worth negative fWAR. Whether they can keep this up remains to be seen, but they have the ingredients to be this year’s “How?” team.

Second Place: Chicago Cubs (19-12)

Top Position Player: Nico Hoerner (1.6 fWAR)
Top Pitcher: Shota Imanaga (1.0 fWAR)

Then there’s the Cubs, where you don’t have to look all that hard to figure out how they’ve gotten their record. Chicago’s 169 runs is the third most in baseball through April and they lead the league in OPS+. They only have five individual hitters who have a below 100 OPS+. Two of them aren’t with the big league team at the moment, and two of them are 2025 breakout stars Pete Crow-Armstrong and Michael Busch, who you’d expect to rebound to some degree.

One negative for the Cubs has been that they lost star pitcher Cade Horton to Tommy John surgery after just a couple starts. However, Shota Imanaga and offseason acquisition Edward Cabrera have held things down in his absence, and Chicago’s roster just seems pretty solid in general.

Third Place: St. Louis Cardinals (18-13)

Top Position Player: JJ Weatherholt (1.5 fWAR)
Top Pitcher: Riley O’Brien (0.7 fWAR)

It’s not to the degree of the Reds, but the Cardinals are another team that have outplayed what you would expect by glancing at their stats.

The Cardinals’ story has been the play of their youngsters, specifically JJ Weatherholt and Jordan Walker. Weatherholt was a former first round draft pick of St. Louis and was a highly rated prospect coming into 2026. The Cardinals brought him to the big leagues, and he’s hit the ground running, posting a 143 wRC+ so far. Meanwhile, Walker has been around a couple years, but has mostly struggled at the big league level. However, this has been a breakout year so far, as he has a 151 wRC+ with nine home runs.

Like the Reds, they have a bullpen that’s been able to win them some close games, although for them it’s mainly just been closer Riley O’Brien, who’s been lights out with a 1.17 ERA and a 1.50 FIP. You do worry about regression to some degree with some of the rest of their staff as they have a couple pitchers who have a way lower ERA than they do FIP.

Fourth Place: Milwaukee Brewers (16-14)

Top Position Player: Brice Turang (1.6 fWAR)
Top Pitcher: Jacob Misiorowski (0.8 fWAR)

The unexpected early success of the Reds and Cardinals has the reigning division champ Brewers down in fourth place, even with a slightly above .500 record. A non-zero part of the Brewers’ issue is the inverse of Cincinnati and St. Louis in that they haven’t been as good in close games. Their 16 wins have come by an average margin of five runs. Their 14 defeats have had an average margin of 2.9 runs.

On offense, Milwaukee has gotten good seasons out of the likes of Turang, Wilson Contreras, and a resurgent Gary Sánchez. Their rotation has also been pretty solid, albeit their starters aren’t usually going super deep into games. The ingredients seem to be there for them to rise back up in the standings, especially if Cincinnati cools off.

Fifth Place: Pittsburgh Pirates (16-16)

Top Position Player: Brandon Lowe (1.2 fWAR)
Top Pitcher: Carmen Mlodzinski (1.0 fWAR)

The Pirates have been dinged even more by the rest of the division getting off to good starts. Pittsburgh would be alone or tied for second in either the AL Central, AL West, and NL East, but are all the way in last in the NL Central.

How far up, if at all, they can climb from this point forward probably depends on their young players. Reigning NL Cy Young Paul Skenes has had a weird season in that he’s had some gems featuring deep perfect game bids, but then also has a couple duds. His numbers are still very good, just not as close to dominant as his first two big league seasons have been.

Meanwhile, Pittsburgh also recently called up Konnor Griffin, who was the top prospect in baseball according to several sources. He’s put up below average hitting numbers so far, but with that type of talent, he very well could figure things out any day. Other Pirates players have done well enough that if he figures things out, this could be a fun season for them, even if they don’t threaten the playoffs.

Saturday morning Rangers stuff

DETROIT, MI - MAY 01: Texas Rangers right-fielder Ezequiel Duran (20) makes a diving catch during the game between Texas Rangers and Detroit Tigers on May 1, 2026 at Comerica Park in Detroit, MI (Photo by Allan Dranberg/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Good morning, LSB.

The Rangers scored late to beat the Tigers 5-4.

Shawn McFarland writes about Zeke Duran’s big night and big catch.

On the downside Brandon Nimmo is still being bothered by a pesky hamstring.

The Rangers provided injury updates on Chris Martin, Robert Garcia and Carter Baumler.

Still waiting on a Wyatt Langford update after he was removed from a rehab game.

Elsewhere FanGraphs takes an early look at what ABS has done to offense around the league.

And Evan Grant did a long Q&A session where he fielded Rangers questions, among other topics.

That’s all for this morning. The Rangers continue their series with the Tigers tonight at 6:15 with Kumar Rocker on the mound for Texas.

Have a great weekend!

Mets at Angels: How to watch on SNY on May 2, 2026

The Mets continue their three-game series against the Angels in Anaheim on Saturday at 9:38 p.m. on SNY.


Mets Notes

  • Nolan McLean gets the start for New York. He allowed one earned run on five hits with seven strikeouts over 5.0 IP last time out vs. the Rockies
  • Juan Soto is slashing .375/.483/.708 over his last seven games with two home runs and three RBI
  • Ronny Mauricio snapped his 0-for-12 streak at the plate with the go-ahead home run in Friday's 4-3 win

Today's Lineups

METS
ANGELS
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What channel is SNY?

Check your TV or streaming provider's website or channel finder to find your local listings.

How can I stream the game?

The way to stream SNY games is via the MLB App or MLB.tv.

In order to stream games in SNY’s regional territory, you will need to have SNY as part of your TV package (cable or streaming), or you can now purchase an in-market SNY subscription package via MLB or Amazon. Both ways will allow fans to watch the Mets on their computer, tablet or mobile phone.

How can I watch the game on my computer via MLB?

To get started on your computer, click here and then follow these steps:

  • Log in using your provider credentials. If you are unsure of your provider credentials, please contact your provider.
  • Link your provider credentials with a new or existing MLB.com account.
  • Log in using your MLB.com credentials to watch Mets games on SNY.

How can I watch the game on the MLB App?

MLB App access is included for FREE with SNY. To access SNY on your favorite supported Apple or Android mobile device, please follow the steps below.

  • Open “MLB” and tap on “Subscriber Login” for Apple Devices or “Sign in with MLB.com” for Android Devices.
  • Type in your MLB.com credentials and tap “Log In.” 
  • To access live or on-demand content, tap on the "Watch" tab from the bottom navigation bar. Select the "Games" sub-tab to see a listing of available games. You can scroll to previous dates using the left and right arrows. Tap on a game to select from the game feeds available. 

For more information on how to stream Mets games on SNY, please click here.

Lakers defied all odds in first round, but can they do it again: ‘Written off’

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows LeBron James in a yellow Lakers jersey walks on the court past teammates in black

HOUSTON — The Lakers did it.  

They clawed. They scrapped. They refused to give up. 

The team that was counted out reached the second round of the NBA playoffs after clinching its first-round series against the Rockets with a 98-78 win in Game 6 on Friday. 

LeBron James led the Lakers to a series-clinching Game 6 victory over the Rockets by finishing with 28 points, eight rebounds and seven assists. NBAE via Getty Images

What they went through over the last month transformed them, making them ready for their date with the reigning champion Thunder. 

Before everything went wrong for them, they had no chance. 

Now they do.

Game 6 was a huge test.

After the Lakers roared to a 3-0 series lead, the Rockets won the next two contests. Momentum had wildly swung. The Lakers had to win in Houston or else they’d face elimination. 

What was on the line?

Oh, just the Lakers’ reputation and LeBron James avoiding a dent on his legacy. No team in NBA history had ever blown a 3-0 series lead. 

How did they respond? 

The Lakers, who aren’t known as a great defensive team, held the Rockets to fewer than 80 points for just the 10th time in a playoff game since 2000. 

Marcus Smart turned back the clock with devastating defense throughout the series, including a great effort on Kevin Durant in Game 2. Getty Images

Deandre Ayton and Marcus Smart were bulldogs, preventing the Rockets’ scorers from getting hot. 

As for James, he wasn’t about to let the Lakers — or himself — free-fall into infamy. He met the moment with the perfect combination of poise and ferocity, single-handedly outscoring the Rockets in the second quarter, 14-13. 

As the Lakers huddled after the game, everyone bleated to honor him as the greatest player of all time (the GOAT). The 41-year-old James had just led all scorers for the fourth time this series, finishing with 28 points, seven rebounds and eight assists. 

“It speaks to his greatness,” Lakers coach JJ Redick said. “To me, he’s had the greatest career of any NBA player.”

It was the Lakers’ latest test amid a series of seemingly impossible quizzes that they’ve somehow aced over the last month. 

When the Lakers lost Luka Doncic (hamstring) and Austin Reaves (oblique) with five games remaining in the regular season, no one thought they had any chance in the playoffs. They were missing their leading scorers, who left a 60-point crater in their absence.  

After a four-week absence due to a Grade 2 oblique strain, Austin Reaves returned in Game 5 and played a key role in the Game 6 win. NBAE via Getty Images

But the Lakers have learned they’re so much deeper than they thought. 

James is still a superstar, ready and willing to be the first option. Luke Kennard’s talents extend far beyond the 3-point line. Ayton is capable of playing with force. Smart can look like the best defender in the league on any given night. Rui Hachimura and Jake LaRavia are capable of stepping up in big moments. 

For the Lakers, cutting off their two biggest limbs made the rest of their body grow stronger. 

It took a lot for this Lakers team to believe in itself. The negative noise was deafening. 

What they just accomplished is stunning. 

“It felt bleak,” Redick said. “… For us to be written off a few weeks ago and to win a playoff series is a big deal. And it just speaks to the character of our team and the leaders of our team. They didn’t let go of the rope.”

Now the Lakers may just be ready for the Thunder. It’s a crazy thought. But they’ve risen above the impossible. 

That can change a team. It can seed a belief that’s infectious. 

While Luka Doncic’s status is still unknown following a Grade 2 hamstring strain, the Lakers have given him a chance to return in the second round against the Oklahoma City Thunder. AP

If Doncic returns in the second round of the playoffs, his teammates will no longer feel as though they live or die on his 40-point scoring flurries. 

Everyone in the rotation tapped into being the best version of themselves at various points this series. 

That’s powerful. 

There’s no denying that the Lakers have an enormous challenge ahead of them. Their last two games against the Thunder were disastrous. There was a 43-point loss on April 2, followed by a 36-point loss on April 7. 

But the Lakers are battle-tested now in a way they weren’t before. 

They’ve gone through something. They survived. They persevered. 

Everyone played a part in it.   

There will be no questioning LeBron James’ legacy after he led the undermanned Lakers to a first-round victory over the Rockets. AP

James proved he’s still James. 

Reaves returned from a painful oblique injury in Game 5 after pouring himself into getting back onto the court. There were some days he left his house at 7:30 a.m. and didn’t return until 7:30 p.m. after seeking various treatments. 

“Literally, did literally everything we could possibly do to get myself back in this opportunity,” said Reaves, who had 15 points on 7-for-14 shooting.

Deandre Ayton averaged 11.8 points and 10.8 rebounds per game in the first-round series vs. the Rockets. AP

Then there’s Smart, who was on the verge of falling out of the league before resuscitating his career this postseason, including bottling up Kevin Durant in Game 2.

As for Ayton, his maturity and professionalism had fallen into question before he recently showed he can star in his role, including holding Alperen Sengun to 17 points on 5-for-12 shooting in Game 6.

Then there’s Kennard, who made people question whether he had been playing the wrong role his entire career after shining as a playmaker in the first two games of this series. 

There are so many success stories this postseason on the Lakers’ roster. They did this as a collective. They overcame adversity together. That makes them dangerous. 

They didn’t have a chance. Now they’re going to the Western Conference semifinals. 

It would be foolish to count them out again. 


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Top prospects Josue De Paula, Zyhir Hope, Emil Morales shine Friday

TULSA, OKLAHOMA - APRIL 19: Josue de Paula #55 of the Tulsa Drillers stands in the batter's box during a game against the Arkansas Travelers at ONEOK Field on April 19, 2026 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

While we wait for Blake Snell and Brock Stewart to continue their rehab assignments on Sunday with Triple-A Oklahoma City, here’s a recap of Friday night in the Dodgers minor leagues.

Player of the day

Earlier on Friday, outfielder Josue De Paula remained in the top spot in Kiley McDaniel’s updated Dodgers team prospect rankings at ESPN, though there was some movement in the top five, including Zyhir Hope up to second in the system and shortstop Emil Morales up to fourth.

De Paula had two hits for Tulsa on Friday, including a three-run double in the seventh inning that broke the game open.

Triple-A Oklahoma City

The Comets added three runs in the seventh inning and three more in the ninth to pull away from the Round Rock Express (Rangers).

Jack Suwinski’s two hits drove in the first two runs for the Comets, with a second-inning double and fourth-inning single. The outfielder has a seven-game hitting streak, including an extra-base hit in each of those seven contests. His last three games have been two-hit affairs.

Suwinski also walked to open up a three-run seventh, during which Oklahoma City benefitted from a no-out fielder’s choice, an error, and a wild pitch by old friend Alexis Díaz.

Jerming Rosario struck out five in two scoreless innings of relief, but after the Comets widened their lead to 8-1, he was not brought back out for the ninth, robbing us of a potential three-inning save.

Double-A Tulsa

The Drillers outfield was productive in a win over the San Antonio Missions (Padres). In addition to De Paula, Hope had two hits as well and drove in Tulsa’s first run of the night. Kendall George drove in the go-ahead run by getting hit by a pitch in the seventh, also singled, and scored twice. The outfielders combined for five hits, five RBI, and four runs scored.

After a one of his two blow-up starts this season last Friday, Payton Martin matched his season high with five innings with deuces wild against San Antonio, allowing two runs with two walks and two strikeouts.

Shortstop Elijah Hainline was hit by a pitch in the right hand in the fourth inning and was examined by a team trainer, but remained in the game and played the rest of the way.

High-A Great Lakes

Great Lakes in April set franchise records for both wins (16) and home runs (28) while averaging 5.92 runs per game, and started off May with a shutout loss to the Peoria Chiefs (Cardinals). The game was tight nearly the whole way, 1-0 until Peoria piled on with five runs in the top of the ninth inning. It’s the first time the Loons were shut out in 2026.

Starter Logan Tabeling pitched a career-high six innings, and struck out six with only one walk, and allowed a run on four hits in a tough-luck loss. The 24-year-old right-hander has a 2.37 ERA with a 19.2-percent strikeout-minus-walk rate in his 19 innings this year.

The Loons had only five hits in the game, including a double and single by center fielder Eduardo Quintero.

Class-A Ontario

Ricardo Montero and Jecsua Liborius combined to allow five runs in a busy seventh inning in Ontario’s home loss to the Lake Elsinore Storm (Padres).

Morales homered, tripled, walked, drove in two runs, and scored two. He leads the Tower Buzzers in hits (32), extra-base hits (16), and runs batted in (27) in his 23 games.

Mairo Martinus had a two-run triple. He played right field on Friday, for the fourth time this season, to go with 13 starts at second base and two games in center field. Last year he started games at second, third, shortstop, and all three outfield positions.

Isaac Ayon struck out four and walked one with one unearned run allowed in his four-inning start.

Transaction

Class-A: Nineteen-year-old catcher Francisco Espinoza joined Ontario from Arizona, filling in for Anson Aroz, the switch-hitter drafted in the 19th round last year out of Oregon who is still active but last played on Sunday.

Friday scores

Saturday schedule

  • 3:35 p.m. PT: Great Lakes (Christian Zazueta) vs. Peoria (Nate Dohm)
  • 5 p.m.: Tulsa (Wyatt Crowell) vs. San Antonio (Ian Koenig)
  • 5:05 p.m.: Oklahoma City (TBA) at Round Rock (Kyle Funkhouser)
  • 6:05 p.m.: Ontario (TBA) vs. Lake Elsinore (Tyler Schmitt)

Kansas City Royals news: Carter Jensen develops defensively

Apr 7, 2026; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Kansas City Royals catcher Carter Jensen (22) stands on the field in the fifth inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field. Mandatory Credit: David Richard-Imagn Images | David Richard-Imagn Images

Anne Rogers writes how Carter Jensen is still developing behind the plate.

Jensen has just 173 2/3 career innings behind the plate with Kansas City, and mistakes are going to happen for any player in this game, no matter how young and inexperienced they are. What matters most is how they respond, and Jensen is focused on learning from all of his mistakes.

“A lot of it is with Hoov, going over my game,” Jensen said. “We’re looking at strikes stolen, strikes lost. The throws I make. The blocks. Looking at everything as a whole and reflecting on pitch-calling and all that stuff. Learning how we attack guys and putting that to use for the next time.”

David Lesky is puzzled by the Royals’ road woes.

But leave Missouri and it gets real dark. They go from fifth-best to worst. And while they’ve closed the gap a bit, their wRC+ is 68 on the road. Next worst is at 75. They’ve averaged 2.6 runs per game on the road. Some of this is explained by opponent. They’ve played the Braves, Guardians, Tigers, Yankees and now A’s on the road. Just looking at ERA, those are the second-best, seventh-best, 11th-best, best and 17th-best pitching staffs in baseball, respectively. The A’s are the one meh staff there, and the Royals at least had some better at bats against them. At home, they’ve had the Twins, Brewers, White Sox, Orioles and Angels. Only one of those staffs is in the top half of the league.

Michelle Bogowith at Fox4 talks to Royals analytics head Daniel Mack on the decision to move in the fences.

But the biggest factor was the wind.

“On average, the way the wind patterns blow in Kauffman, makes the walls play as if they were 5 feet further back. So, it makes an already large stadium, even larger. That gave us an opportunity to say, ‘let’s start modeling what different stadium dimensions might do to account for that,” he described.

“Because we can still look at all those fly balls and looking at what the weather did to them, we can neutralize that, to show us what the impact of the wall is, so that we could find a good balance in left field and right field.”

Andres Chavez at Royals Keep writes that Seth Lugo has been the Royals’ most reliable pitcher so far.

Upper Deck Golf is coming to Kauffman Stadium.

Vahe Gregorian writes about how Hall of Fame Negro Leaguer Hilton Smith was memorialized with a new grave marker in Kansas City.

Brewers pitcher Jacob Misiorowski throws 5.1 no-hit innings before exiting the game with cramps.

Munetaka Murakami hits his MLB-leading 13th home run for the White Sox.

How is ABS affecting offenses?

The lowest moments of the Mets’ season so far.

How last year’s free agent class has fared so far.

Brewers pitcher Angel Zerpa may need surgery.

Did the A’s leak a potential new name for when they move to Las Vegas?

Rays pitcher Ryan Pepiot will have hip surgery and miss the rest of the season.

Do manager firings really change team trajectories?

Closer Ryan Helsley becomes the 12th player on the Orioles’ Injured List.

The Orlando Magic suffer an epic collapse to force a Game 7 with the Pistons.

The 152 best names in Kentucky Derby history.

Chonkers the sea lion has become a viral sensation in San Francisco.

Spirit Airlines could shut down operations this weekend.

The most anticipated movies this summer.

Your song of the day is John Cafferty & The Beaver Brown Band with On the Dark Side.

Braves minor league recap: Ethan Bagwell tosses six scoreless innings for Augusta

Two of the three teams that were actually able to step onto the field on Friday came away with a win so let’s five into the action.

(20-11) Gwinnett Stripers 4, (14-17) Charlotte Knights 3

  • Nacho Alvarez Jr., 3B: 1-4, HR, 3 RBI
  • Rowdy Tellez, 1B: 1-3, HR, RBI, R, BB
  • Brett Sears, SP: 3 IP, 2 H, 3 BB, 4 K

Box Score

Gwinnett rode a huge sixth inning while staving off a late-inning comeback attempt en route to a win on Friday.

Making his first start at triple-A on the season — and only his third career start at the level — Brett Sears got the nod and while he only went three innings, he managed to keep Charlotte off the board. In his three frames of work, Sears limited the damage despite issuing three walks and two hits, but he also struck out four on the night as well.

The Stripers offense was held in check for the most part in this one, as Gwinnett was limited to just two baserunners — one hit — through the first five innings. In the sixth, however, things flipped on a dime in favor of the Stripers.

Brewer Hicklen led off the inning with a double and Sean Murphy walked two batters later. The biggest blow came off the bat of Nacho Alvarez Jr. who took a 1-0 fastball and launched it over the right field wall for his first homer of the year — a three-run shot to give the Stripers the 3-1 lead.

In the next at-bat, Rowdy Tellez decided to get in on the fun as he took the very next pitch and deposited it into the right field seats for his sixth homer of the season to extend the lead to 4-1 on the night for Gwinnett.

Despite giving up three runs, the Stripers’ bullpen managed to keep Charlotte at bay for the most part, as the three runs were just enough to allow in order to give Gwinnett the chance to win.

(13-11) Columbus Clingstones, (11-13) Montgomery Biscuits (POSTPONED)

Mother Nature got the better of this one as the game between Columbus and Montgomery was postponed due to weather.

(13-12) Rome Emperors 5, (16-9) Bowling Green Hot Rods 6

  • Eric Hartman, CF: 3-6, 2B, 2 RBI
  • John Gil, SS: 1-5, R, BB
  • Isaiah Drake, RF: 1-6
  • Colin Daniel, SP: 7 IP, 3 H, 2 ER, 2 BB, 6 K

Box Score

Rome ultimately came up short on Friday, losing by one run to Bowling Green. Still, there were a handful of individual performances that stood out on the night.

2025 draftee Colin Daniel made his fifth start of the season for Rome. Across seven innings, Daniel scattered three hits while allowing two runs and two walks. He also struck out six on the night as well.

For Daniel — who set an individual season-high for strikeouts on Friday — he has remarkably limited opposing batters to an average of just .180. However, it’s the walks (11) and homers (five) that have ultimately been his downfall this season. If he can manage to get that under control, Daniel could be a rather intriguing guy to keep an eye on in terms of a swing rotation guy or bullpen piece down the line.

At the plate, Eric Hartman continued his sweet swinging ways as the centerfielder went 3-6 with a double and a pair of RBI to his credit on Friday to pace the Emperors’ offense. So far on the year, Hartman is batting .323 with an OPS of 1.030.

Both John Gil and Isaiah Drake tallied a hit on the night, while Gil added a walk as well in the process.

(14-11) Augusta GreenJackets 4, (8-17) Kannapolis Cannon Ballers 3

  • Tate Southisene, 2B: 1-3, R
  • Juan Mateo, 3B: 2-3, 2B, RBI
  • Alex Lodise, SS: 1-4, RBI, R
  • Luis Guanipa, CF: 0-3, RBI
  • Ethan Bagwell, SP: 6 IP, 4 H, 2 BB, 5 K

Box Score

Ethan Bagwell was dominant on the mound for Augusta on Friday as the GreenJackets parlayed his start into a victory over Kannapolis.

In his six innings of work, Bagwell scattered four hits and issued two walks while striking out five. The biggest pro of his performance is that he managed to keep the Cannon Ballers off the scoreboard.

Friday’s outing moves Bagwell’s ERA to 2.57 on the season and it was a nice bounce back for the young righty who had given up two or more runs in each of his previous three starts. Bagwell showed exellent command of his breaking pitches on Friday, especially his sweeper which he was able to locate extremely well both up and down in the zone.

At the plate, Juan Mateo led the charge with two hits, including a double, while also driving in a run as well. Tate SOuthisene and Alex Lodise each tacked on a hit with Lodise driving in and scoring a run as well.

While Luis Guanipa went 0-3 on the night, he did bring home a run via sacrifice fly to give himself an RBI on the night.

2026 Cubs Heroes and Goats: Game 32

The Cubs came back home and got right back into a groove. When last we saw this team, they’d swept all seven games on a seven-game homestand. For those not keeping track at home, they also won the home game before that back on April 12. So this is now nine straight wins at Wrigley for the team. The last time the team had nine straight home wins was 2017.

It’s still relatively early. But this team is a study in contradictions. It doesn’t feel in any way like it is hitting on all cylinders. And yet, this team is accomplishing some unusual things. 10 game winning streaks. Nine game home winning streaks. These things don’t grow on trees. And yet, the bullpen feels like someone wrapped a bunch of duct tape around it. It’s hard to even know who some of these guys are if you don’t have a razor sharp awareness of bit players.

Then, even when a guy looks like maybe he’s going to step forward and be something more, he pulls away. Riley Martin felt like he was one of those guys who was maybe getting interesting. Then he got hurt. Ryan Rolison felt like he was someone to keep an eye on. Then he got roughed up by the Diamondbacks Friday afternoon. Granted, that offense will bite some guys along the way. But in just a few short batters, the game went from what looked like a comfortable win to needing to hold your breath. That said, hat tip for coming up with two strikeouts with the tying run on first to escape that inning. Not just any two either, but their third and fourth hitters.

Meanwhile, with the offense sputtering, Phil Maton came on and threw his first clean inning as a Cub, striking out two. He, too, has missed time with an injury. Hopefully, he is healthy now and turning a corner. But the even bigger surprise was Jacob Webb coming on and throwing two hitless innings, yielding only a walk while striking out three. For the first time, we see what the Cubs thought they had when they gave him a multi-year deal. To be fair, his deal isn’t one that particularly breaks the bank. But, the Cubs haven’t given a lot of multi-year deals to relievers.

The offense? It was relatively subdued. They had eight hits and four walks. Among the eight hits were three doubles. 16 times already they’ve had more than nine hits (13-3 record). 16 times they’ve had more walks (11-5). At 12 hits/walks combined, 20 times (15-5). So this was a little less than a middle of the road production-wise. How, then, did this one work? Two things went really well. One, Colin Rea was very good through five innings, running into trouble in the sixth. Secondly, the offense bunched all but one of those baserunners into the first four innings. Zac Gallen is a pretty good pitcher that they chased in less than four. He came into the game with a 3.14 ERA that is now 4.45.

Early offense. Good pitching. It’s a very good formula. Another win.

Three Positives:

  • Michael Busch had two hits, one a double. He drove in two runs.
  • Carson Kelly had two hits, both singles. He scored a run and drove in a run.
  • Jacob Webb, six very important outs protecting a one-run lead.

Hat tip to Colin Rea, two outs short of a quality start.

Game 32, May 1: Cubs 6, Diamondbacks 5 (20-12)

Reminder: Heroes and Goats are determined by WPA scores and are in no way subjective.

THREE HEROES:

  • Superhero: Jacob Webb (.274). 2 IP, 7 BF, BB, 3 K (Sv 1)
  • Hero: Michael Busch (.153). 2-4, 2B, 2 RBI
  • Sidekick: Colin Rea (.130). 5.1 IP, 25 BF, 8 H, 0 BB, 2 ER, 6 K (W 4-1)

THREE GOATS:

  • Billy Goat: Ryan Rolison (-.210). 0.2 IP, 6 BF, 3 H, BB, 3 ER, 2 K
  • Goat: Seiya Suzuki (-.086). 0-3, BB
  • Kid: Matt Shaw (-.040). 0-3

WPA Play of the Game: With the bases loaded and two outs in a scoreless first inning, Michael Busch singled, scoring two runs. (.167)

*Diamondbacks Play of the Game: Geraldo Perdomo batted with runners on second and third with one out, the Cubs up four. He hit a three-run homer. (.159)

Cubs Player of the Game:

Game 31 Winner: Ben Brown 210 of 298 votes.

Rizzo Award Standings: (Top 3/Bottom 3)

The award is named for Anthony Rizzo, who finished first in this category three of the first four years it was in existence and four times overall. He also recorded the highest season total ever at +65.5. The point scale is three points for a Superhero down to negative three points for a Billy Goat.

  • Nico Hoerner +9.5
  • Michael Conforto +7
  • Moisés Ballesteros/Daniel Palencia +5
  • Pete Crow-Armstrong -8
  • Matt Shaw/Seiya Suzuki -9

Current Win Pace: 101.25

Up Next: Game two of the three-game set Saturday afternoon. Shōta Imanaga (2-2, 2.88, 34.1 IP) makes his seventh start of the year. Last time out, he lost, allowing four earned runs in just 5.1 innings of work. He’ll look to bounce back. The Diamondbacks start 28-year-old Ryne Nelson (1-2, 7.71, 25.2 IP). He is also making his seventh start. Last time out, he allowed six runs over five innings of work. The time before that, he allowed eight runs while only recording one out. So he’s struggled of late. He was the 2019 second-round pick of the Diamondbacks (56th overall).

Let’s keep his struggles going and keep our streak rolling.

Go Cubs.

Mariners News: Randy Johnson, Matt Brash, and Ryan Pepiot

SEATTLE - APRIL 12: Former Mariners star Randy Johnson throws out the ceremonial first pitch prior to the Mariners' home opener against the Oakland Athletics at Safeco Field on April 12, 2010 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Otto Greule Jr/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good morning everyone and happy Saturday!

The Mariners lost a late-game thriller to the Royals last night 7-6. Hopefully things turn around soon for Bryan Woo, because we’re going to need him.

Importantly, today is Randy Johnson jersey retirement day! What is your favorite Big Unit memory from his time with the M’s?

In Mariners news…

Around the league…

Mark Cuban was interested in buying Mavericks back — here’s what stopped him

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Mark Cuban giving a thumbs up at an NBA basketball game, Image 2 shows Two smiling celebrities attend the Los Angeles Clippers game

Mark Cuban was interested in getting his team back.

The billionaire sold 73 percent of his stake in the Mavericks to the Adelson family for $3.5 billion in December 2023 after 23 years as an owner, only to see the franchise’s fortunes take a turn for the worse in the years that followed — including the ill-fated trade of superstar Luka Doncic to the Lakers in February 2025.

Dallas, which has NBA Rookie of the Year Cooper Flagg, still missed the playoffs over the past two seasons, with a combined record of 65-99, after losing in the NBA Finals in 2023-24. 

Injuries to aging stars Anthony Davis and Kyrie Irving have been the main culprit.

Mark Cuban attends the Round 1 Game 2 of the 2024 NBA Playoffs between the Los Angeles Clippers and the Dallas Mavericks game at Crypto.com Arena on April 23, 2024 in Los Angeles, California. Getty Images

The 67-year-old Cuban, who was outspoken against the Doncic trade, was asked by FrontOffice Sports if he was interested in buying back the club and was clear about his willingness to do so and the hurdles that way face. 

“If there was any chance of being able to do that anymore, I would, but that’s just not the game anymore,” he said.

Cuban, who still owns 27 percent of the team, noted that “a bunch of people” contacted him, unhappy with the direction of the franchise.  He was willing to do his part to get control of the team back if the Adelsons were interested in selling, but strongly believed that wasn’t a viable scenario.

“I was like, ‘Look, if you can get them to sell, I would be more than happy to contribute my equity, et cetera, et cetera, and help.’ But I didn’t expect that to materialize,” Cuban said. “I told them I didn’t think it would happen, that I didn’t think the Adelsons had any interest in selling. And they don’t.” 

Mavericks owner Miriam Adelson and Gary Barber attend a basketball game between the Los Angeles Clippers and the Dallas Mavericks at Crypto.com Arena on May 1, 2024 Getty Images

Such a proposition could grow even more expensive in the coming years as the Adelsons have the option to buy 20 percent more of the Mavericks from Cuban within four years of ownership. 

Cuban, who saw the Mavericks win the 2011 NBA championship during his stewardship, expressed mixed feelings about the sale itself during an appearance on the “Intersections” podcast in late March.  

“I don’t regret selling,” Cuban said. “I regret who I sold to. I made a lot of mistakes in the process, and I’ll leave it at that.” 

ICYMI in Mets Land: Road trip starts with win in Anaheim; New York backing Carlos Mendoza

Here's what happened in Mets Land on Friday, in case you missed it...


How one unsuspecting hero stripped Rockets of their superpower: ‘Played his a– off’

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows A player in a yellow Lakers jersey goes for a layup as a player in a red Rockets jersey jumps to block it, Image 2 shows Basketball player Deandre Ayton, looking focused while playing for the Lakers

Entering their first-round playoff series with the Rockets, the Lakers knew they had to take away their opponent’s superpower. 

During the regular season, the Rockets averaged an astonishing 15 offensive rebounds per game — the most in the NBA and the most by a team in 25 years. They also forced an average of 13 turnovers per game. Layer those together and you’re not just playing an opponent, you’re playing a second invisible game that is allowing them more shots, more chaos and more chances to bury you. 

Through the first four games of the series, the Lakers were losing that game badly. 

Deandre Ayton finished with 16 rebounds in the series-clinching Game 6 victory. NBAE via Getty Images

They gave up 21 offensive rebounds in Game 1. Then 17. Then 18. Their turnovers were piling up like traffic on the 110 freeway. 18, 20, 20 and then 23 turnovers in Game 4. By the time the dust settled, Houston had accrued 69 more possessions than the Lakers across the first four games. 

And yet somehow, despite flirting with disaster, and dancing with bad habits, the Lakers built a 3-1 series lead while hemorrhaging the very thing that defines playoff basketball: extra possessions. 

Which tells you everything you need to know: They were surviving these games, not solving them. 

“In order for us to win, we had to protect the ball and rebound,” LeBron James said. “We understood that giving them extra possessions is a kryptonite for any team. If you give them extra possessions and you don’t take care of the ball, it’s not going to be an ingredient for success against Houston.”

In Game 5, something shifted. 

The Lakers didn’t just compete on the glass — they punched back. They outrebounded Houston 41-34, and more importantly, they flipped the offensive rebound battle for the first time in the series, 13-6. 

What changed from the first four games?

Deandre Ayton. 

Ayton, who has had an up-and-down season, showed up when the Lakers needed him most. Getty Images

Ayton played like a man who finally understood his assignment.

He finished with 18 points, 17 rebounds and two blocks. He became the first Lakers player to have 15 or more points, 15 or more rebounds and at least two blocks in a playoff game since Pau Gasol in 2010. He also was the first Laker since Gasol in 2012 to have 10 offensive rebounds.

“You have to have some type of stop sign where enough is enough,” Ayton said. “I just tried to play as I am, the biggest dude on the court, and just go out and get every damn rebound.”

And that’s exactly what he did.

Even though they won the rebounding battle, they couldn’t get out of their own way. They shot 25% from 3 and lost the turnover battle again. They also lost the game 99-93, leaving the door open for a historic collapse. 

But in Game 6, they finally slammed it shut. 

Ayton averaged 11.8 points and 10.8 rebounds per game in the first-round series vs. the Rockets. AP

Inside hostile territory in Houston, the Lakers finally put it all together for one game. They executed the game plan to perfection. They ended the Rockets’ season with a 98-78 victory.

They secured 15 offensive rebounds, their highest total of the series. They allowed only eight. They once again outrebounded the Rockets, 54-45. And for the first time all series, they won the turnover battle, committing just 10. 

“I challenged them before the game to box out and have their lowest turnover game tonight,” coach JJ Redick said. “The attention to detail was the important thing.”

That’s coach-speak for this: They finally did what I’ve been asking them to do all series.

Houston scored just 78 points — the lowest output by any team this entire postseason. Their superpower didn’t just disappear. It was taken away from them.

Ripped out of their hands by a Lakers team that decided, finally, that enough was enough.

Once again, Ayton was the anchor. He pulled down 16 rebounds and controlled the paint like it was his own personal property. 

“He played his ass off … he was locked in from the start to the finish,” said Marcus Smart of Ayton’s performance. 

In Game 5, Ayton finished with 18 points, 17 rebounds, and two blocks. He became the first Lakers player to have 15+ points, 15+ rebounds, and at least two blocks in a playoff game since Pau Gasol in 2010. Erik Williams-Imagn Images

Austin Reaves, fresh off a four-week absence because of an oblique injury, saw it the same way.

“I told him he was one of the biggest factors for us winning tonight … his physicality …16 rebounds is a big number.”

Ayton’s effort finally flipped the script, but it wasn’t just about him. The entire series was a team effort. Game 6 was about discipline, restraint and a veteran team choosing to take control over the narrative. 

“That’s the story of this playoff series for us,” Redick said. “Each guy had moments that helped us win the game. I thought the collective tonight was awesome.”

It took a while, but the Lakers finally figured out how to take away the Rockets’ greatest strength and beat them with it. 

Now they’re tasked with doing it again against the reigning champion Thunder. 

Only the Thunder don’t have one superpower, they have several. 

And if the Lakers want to shock the world and upset the champs, they’ll need to take away all of them. To do that, they’ll have to play every possession like it’s their last.


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Golden Knights Eliminate Mammoth, Set Up Second-Round Clash With Ducks

Mitch Marner delivered when Vegas needed him most, scoring twice and adding an assist as the Golden Knights rolled past the Utah Mammoth 5-1 on Friday night in Game 6 to close out their first-round playoff series in emphatic fashion.

With the victory, Vegas advances to the Western Conference semifinals, where a showdown with Anaheim now awaits. The Ducks punched their ticket Thursday after a convincing 5-2 win over Edmonton in their own Game 6 clincher.

What once looked like a team searching for direction has quickly transformed into one gathering real momentum. Since John Tortorella replaced Bruce Cassidy behind the bench, the Golden Knights have rediscovered their edge. Vegas finished the regular season 7-0-1 after the coaching change, then responded to a 2-1 series deficit against Utah by rattling off three consecutive wins.

“This is what I hoped for,” Marner said. “There’s a lot more work to keep going.”

Marner Takes Over Under The Bright Lights

Marner was electric throughout the series, totaling two goals and five assists, but Friday marked his most dominant outing yet. It was also his first multi-goal playoff performance since April 20, 2023, when he accomplished the feat against Tampa Bay.

“It was his best game of the series. He just looked comfortable,” Tortorella said.

Vegas opened the scoring late in the first period when Brett Howden continued his scorching run. Marner fired a shot wide of the net, but the rebound kicked directly into the slot, where Howden buried it with 4:58 remaining. It was Howden’s fourth goal of the series, all of them coming over the final three games.

Howden had already been a difference-maker earlier in the week, scoring the winner in Vegas’ dramatic 5-4 double-overtime triumph in Game 5. He also netted twice in regulation during the club’s Game 4 overtime win.

Marner doubled the lead with just 45 seconds left in the second period after Vegas controlled possession in Utah’s zone for more than two straight minutes. Stationed high in the right circle, he hammered a slap shot that deflected off Ian Cole’s knee and found the back of the net.

“I’ve had a couple opportunities in that same area that I had just missed on,” Marner said. “That’s why I just decided to quickly wind one up and see if I could get a clapper though.”

Vegas Calmly Slams The Door

Utah finally answered in the third period when Kailer Yamamoto trimmed the deficit to 2-1, briefly giving the home crowd hope. But Vegas responded immediately, refusing to let the game tighten.

Colton Sissons restored the two-goal cushion moments later, Marner buried a power-play goal for his second of the night, and Cole Smith sealed the result with an empty-net finish.

“We’ve been here before,” Vegas captain Mark Stone said. “We don’t have the panic. Maybe some teams do. We can calm ourselves pretty quickly.”

Carter Hart turned aside 21 shots in a steady performance, while Utah goaltender Karel Vejmelka also made 21 saves in defeat.

For the Mammoth, the ending was especially jarring. Utah had led in the third period of each of the first five games in the series, only to spend all of Game 6 chasing from behind.

“I didn’t have that in my bingo card,” Utah coach Andre Tourigny said. “I was really confident we would go to Vegas tomorrow.”

Instead, the Mammoth are going home early. But it was not a failed season by any sense of the word. 

The Mammoth are a young squad and if they can acquire some new players in the offseason that can help them on special teams and between the pipes, that would be a healthy start. 

Image

Good Morning San Diego: Missed opportunities, poor outing from German Marquez result in Padres’ loss to White Sox

SAN DIEGO, CA - MAY 01: Manny Machado #13 of the San Diego Padres looks on during the game between the Chicago White Sox and the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on Friday, May 1, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Ryan Levy/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The San Diego Padres had the bases loaded with two outs in the bottom of the first inning. Ty France was standing in the batter’s box after Xander Bogaerts battled through an at-bat to draw a walk. France has been one of the hottest hitters on the Padres roster in recent weeks, but he was unable to help his team and grounded out to second base to end the inning, stranding three runners, two of which were in scoring position. As hard as that was to watch for San Diego fans, the top of the second inning was worse. German Marquez allowed six runs in the inning and the Padres were playing catchup for the rest of the game. San Diego was unable to overcome the deficit, despite the efforts of Fernando Tatis Jr. who had three hits in the game, and took an 8-2 loss at Petco Park to open the three-game series with Chicago. The Padres will look to have better performances all around when they host the White Sox at 5:40 p.m.

Padres News:

  • It is not wrong to say the Padres are holding their starting rotation together with gum and paperclips. Walker Buehler, German Marquez and Matt Waldron have each had moments of success but have lacked consistency. That type of play has fans clamoring for Griffin Canning and Lucas Giolito, two pitchers who have yet to take the mound for the Padres, but either one could immediately step in as the No. 3 starter behind Michael King and Randy Vasquez.
  • Xander Bogaerts took a lot of criticism during his first seasons in San Diego and rightfully so. After signing a massive free-agent contract he failed to live up to the expectations of the fanbase. To his credit, Bogaerts took the criticism in stride, kept his head down and kept working. He is seeing that work payoff with his most impactful and consistent start as a Padre.

Baseball News: