Royals drop series finale to A’s, lose 6-3

Apr 30, 2026; West Sacramento, California, USA; Kansas City Royals third baseman Maikel Garcia (11) advances to third base during the fourth inning of the game against the Athletics at Sutter Health Park. Mandatory Credit: Ed Szczepanski-Imagn Images | Ed Szczepanski-Imagn Images

Despite leading twice in this afternoon’s ballgame, the Royals fell behind in the bottom of the second and never again challenged the Athletics.

The Royals led off the scoring in the bottom of the first on a two-out RBI single by Starling Marte, the first of his three singles of the afternoon. Maikel Garcia, who doubled on the first pitch of the game, scored. Unfortunately, with the bases still loaded, Carter Jensen struck to end the frame. Jensen’s day at the plate would not improve.

In the bottom of the first, Garcia stayed in the spotlight, this time missing a grounder he normally snags, which turned into a double for A’s DH Shea Langeliers (Stephen King’s favorite Athletic) and men on second and third with none out. With one out, the A’s had the bases loaded, but Royals starting pitcher Noah Cameron minimized the damage by giving up only one run.

Garcia homered in his second at-bat of the afternoon, this time in the top of the second, to put the Royals up 2-1. Garcia had an injury scare in the bottom of the first when the Athletics tied things, but he stayed in the game, later adding another double. He finished the day 3-for-5 with two doubles, a homer, two runs, a stolen base, and one RBI.

But the A’s took control in the bottom of the inning and never ceded it. Langeliers doubled in Lawrence Butler to tie the game before Nick Kurtz doubled in both Langeliers and Jacob Wilson. Kurtz would then score on a little dribbler hit to Loftin who made an off-line throw to Salvador Perez, today’s first baseman, who failed to handle it.

5-2, Athletics.

The game settled down after that. The A’s starting pitcher, Jeffrey Springs, threw a lot of pitches in a short period of time before leaving due to the injury. The A’s bullpen took over, tossing six innings of five-hit, two-run ball. In the bottom of the seventh, the A’s scored another run before Elias Diaz homered in the top of the eighth to cut the lead to 6-3.

That was pretty much it. Jac Caglianone reached base in the top of the ninth, and with the Royals down to their last out, Vinnie Pasquantino pinch-hit. Like a lot of Royals today, he hit the ball hard, but right at an Athletic.

Game, set, match. Oakland takes the day, 6-3, and the series, 2-1.

Now the Royals are off to Seattle to take on the Mariners in a weekend series.

The Katie Woo Reunion Tour: Cardinals, Dodgers, Shohei, and Pretzels

ST. LOUIS, MO - AUGUST 17: Shohei Ohtani #17 of the Los Angeles Dodgers slides safely after stealing second base in the third inning during the game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium on Saturday, August 17, 2024 in St. Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Jeff Curry/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

In the biggest return to St. Louis Cardinals since Albert Pujols, Katie Woo made time in her Hollywood schedule to come onto Cardinals on My Time to talk the upcoming series! I know you all miss her, but she has been enjoying her well-deserved promotion to cover the most talked about team in baseball.

Don’t worry! Katie misses us too, but not as much as she misses the “best pretzels in the world” from Busch Stadium. We had an awesome time getting to talk to one of our all-time favorites and break down the differences between the two organizations, from the fanbase to ownership. We had a blast and hope you do too!

In this episode, we discuss:

The “Hollywood” Life: Katie addresses her transition to LA, her aggressive new driving habits, and why she still misses those Busch Stadium press box pretzels.

Shohei Ohtani & The Dodgers: What it’s actually like to cover the “Beatles of Baseball” and why there’s no ego in the star-studded LA clubhouse.

The Chaim Bloom Era: Katie’s perspective on the Cardinals’ front office shift and why she believes the “Runway” (we mean, rebuild) is heading in the right direction.

Young Core vs. Veteran Stars: Analysis of Jordan Walker’s growth and the pressure (or lack thereof) on the Cardinals’ young roster.

Series Preview: Which pitching matchups to watch and why Katie is leaning “Dodger Stadium” for the views, but “Busch Stadium” for the vibes.

We ended it with a little LA vs. St. Louis “This or That” and she made some tough decisions, but it was a fun way to head into the tough three-game series this weekend!

Thanks as always!

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A’s Hold off Royals to Win Series Finale

Apr 30, 2026; West Sacramento, California, USA; Athletics third baseman Darell Hernaiz (2) hits an RBI single against the Kansas City Royals during the first inning at Sutter Health Park. Mandatory Credit: Ed Szczepanski-Imagn Images | Ed Szczepanski-Imagn Images

The Athletics and Kansas City Royals battled in the rubber game of their three-game series Thursday afternoon in West Sacramento. After exchanging early blows, the Athletics took the lead and never gave it back, fending off several Royals comeback attempts to win 6-3.

The Royals scored first against A’s starting pitcher Jeffrey Springs. The first batter of the game, third baseman Maikel Garcia doubled. With two outs and the bases loaded, outfielder Starling Marte singled to right, giving his team an early 1-0 lead. Springs proceeded to limit the damage by striking out Carter Jensen, the lone lefty in his team’s lineup, to end the inning and get out of the bases-loaded jam.

The A’s immediately answered back against Kansas City’s starting pitcher Noah Cameron. Shortstop Jacob Wilson singled to right and then designated hitter Shea Langeliers doubled down the left field line past Garcia at third. With one out, right fielder Colby Thomas walked to load the bases. That set the stage for third baseman Darell Hernáiz, whose hard-hit infield single off of Garcia’s hand scored Wilson to tie the game at one. Like his counterpart, Cameron got out of a bases loaded jam by retiring the next two A’s hitters.

Garcia showed his wrist was ok, hitting a two-out solo home run in the second inning that just eluded leaping left fielder Carlos Cortes to put his team back in front.

Once again, the A’s answered. Lawrence Butler walked, Wilson singled and Langeliers lined his second double in as many innings to score Butler and tie the game. The team’s potent offense was not done yet. First baseman Nick Kurtz, who struck out in an RBI opportunity in the first inning, crushed a two-RBI double to give the Athletics their first lead of the game.

With two outs, Kurtz scored from second when Royals second baseman Nick Loftin threw errantly to first after ranging to field the grounder off Hernáiz’s bat.

With the A’s holding a 5-2 advantage heading into the third inning, it was the Royals turn to rally. However, Springs finally turned in a shutdown inning, striking out Jensen for a second-straight at-bat as the Royals stranded two runners on base.

Following three laborious innings, right-handed reliever Luis Medina replaced Springs, who went to the clubhouse with the team’s trainer. According to the team’s MLB.com reporter Martin Gallegos, Springs exited the game with right hip soreness.

As a result, the team had to turn to their bullpen earlier than they would have liked. Medina got the first two hitters he faced out before the Royals loaded the bases via a double, walk and a hit by pitch. The A’s reliever averted disaster by getting first baseman Salvador Perez to harmlessly fly out to Butler in center field.

In the middle innings of this game, the Athletics offense went quiet, although Cortes did single in the fifth, extending his hitting streak to ten games. Cameron settled down after his early struggles. He allowed just two more hits and worked into the sixth inning before being removed with one on and one out.

Medina ended up getting the win. He threw 51 pitches over 2 2/3 scoreless innings. The Royals squared up several pitches against the A’s long reliever, but failed to bring a run home. Scott Barlow replaced Medina with two Royals on base and two outs in the sixth. He got Kansas City’s outfielder Lane Thomas to ground out as the Royals continued their struggles with runners in scoring position.

Seeking insurance runs, Langeliers led off the bottom of the seventh with his third double of the afternoon. Today was the first time he had ever hit three doubles in one game. With first base open, the Royals intentionally walked Kurtz, extending his record-breaking walk streak to 19 consecutive games. Hernáiz made the visitors rue that decision as his third infield single of the game scored Langeliers to pad the A’s lead.

In the top of the eighth, the Royals got one back. Facing left-hander Brady Basso, catcher Elias Díaz hit his first home run of the season over the right-field fence to trim the deficit to three. That was the closest they would come. Right-hander Jack Perkins only gave up one hit in a scoreless ninth, securing his third save and more importantly the series victory.

Tomorrow, the first-place A’s begins a weekend series against fan-favorite Stephen Vogt’s Cleveland Guardians. Right-hander J.T Ginn is scheduled to start for the A’s. He is good to go despite exiting his last start early with arm soreness. Ginn will be opposed by Guardians’ left-hander Joey Cantillo, who is 1-1 with a 2.97 ERA through his first six starts of the season.

Premier League: 10 things to look out for this weekend

Eddie Howe is under pressure, Rayan needs protection at Bournemouth and John Stones returns to Everton with City

The equation is simple. If Leeds beat relegated – and now managerless - Burnley at Elland Road on Friday they will reach 43 points and be extremely unlikely to meet the same fate as their opponents. Daniel Farke’s losing FA Cup semi-finalists are then scheduled to travel to Tottenham, but victory against Burnley, who they pipped to the Championship title last season, would settle nerves in West Yorkshire. Farke, though, does not necessarily expect a straightforward match. “There’s definitely no complacency,” he said, speaking before the news of Scott Parker’s departure. “I’ve got so much respect for Scott. I’d say there’s not one time this season Burnley were played off the field. They’re always very competitive, they’ve had many tight games.” As Mike Jackson takes caretaker charge at Turf Moor, Farke hopes another three points will persuade Leeds to extend his own contract. Louise Taylor

Leeds v Burnley, Friday 8pm (all times BST)

Brentford v West Ham, Saturday 3pm

Newcastle v Brighton, Saturday 3pm

Wolves v Sunderland, Saturday 3pm

Arsenal v Fulham, Saturday 5.30pm

Bournemouth v Crystal Palace, Sunday 2pm

Manchester United v Liverpool, Sunday 3.30pm

Continue reading...

On This Date: Panthers Have Closed Out Multiple Playoff Series' On April 30, Including 2023 Shocker In Boston

The Florida Panthers have had some very positive experiences on April 30.

Twice over the past several years, Florida has emerged victorious during the first round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs on the final day of April.

Back in 2023 came one of the biggest and perhaps most surprising playoff wins not only in Panthers postseason history, but in the history of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

That’s because the eighth-seed Panthers, who snuck into the playoffs at the end of the regular season, took down the historically-good Boston Bruins in a seven-game shocker.

Boston not only won the Presidents’ Trophy that season, but they also finished with more wins and more points than any other team in the existence of the NHL.

Unsurprisingly, the Bruins jumped out to a 3-1 series lead on the Panthers, shipping back up to Boston after winning Games 3 and 4 in Florida by a combined score of 10-4.

A gritty overtime win in Game 5 was followed up with a comeback victory at home in Game 6, setting up the seventh game showdown at TD Garden.

The Panthers jumped out to a 2-0 lead, but by the first TV timeout of the third period, the Bruins had re-taken the lead and were trying to put the clamps down on Florida.

With goaltender Sergei Bobrovsky on the bench for an extra attacker, former Cats defenseman Brandon Montour fired a shot that snuck between the post and Bruins netminder Jeremy Swayman, sending the game to sudden death overtime.

It took less than nine minutes for Florida to finish off the Bruins.

Picking up a loose puck at the side of Boston’s net, Sam Bennett found Carter Verhaeghe in the right circle, and he wired a wrist shot that zoomed past Swayman’s left ear and into the top of the net.

Ballgame. Series over.

Florida, as we all remember, went on a hell of a run that postseason, marching all the way to the Stanley Cup Final after reeling off wins in 10 of 11.

Fast forward a couple of years and we arrive at last season.

During the Cats’ 2025 run to the Stanley Cup Final, they dispatched their cross-state rival, the Tampa Bay Lightning, in a quick five-game series.

That Game 5 was played on April 30 at Amalie Arena in Tampa.

Defending the first Stanley Cup victory in franchise history, the Panthers entered the 2025 postseason as the third seed in the Atlantic Division.

Florida quickly jumped out to a 2-0 lead, winning the first two games in Tampa by a combined score of 8-2.

After a split in Sunrise, the Cats headed back up to Tampa with a chance to knock out the Bolts and advance to round two.

The Panthers and Lightning went toe-to-toe for first half of the game, with each putting up three goals, before Florida slowly started to take over.

A goal by Bennett moments after the Panthers finished killing off his slashing penalty gave Florida a 4-3 lead late in the second period, one they would never relinquish.

Eetu Luostarinen fourth point of the night was a goal that put the Cats up by two, and a Sam Reinhert empty-net goal sealed the deal.

Following the five-game win over Tampa Bay, the Panthers went through familiar playoff foes – the Toronto Maple Leafs in seven games and the Carolina Hurricanes in five – en route to their third consecutive Stanley Cup Final appearance and second straight championship. 

So yeah, April 30 has become a good day to recall some Panthers playoff success.

We’ll have to wait and see if they can add to that list in the coming years.

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Photo caption: Apr 30, 2023; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Florida Panthers left wing Matthew Tkachuk (19) reacts on the winning goal during overtime in game seven of the first round of the 2023 Stanley Cup Playoffs against the Boston Bruins at TD Garden. (Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images)

Game 32: Blue Jays at Twins

ST PETERSBURG, FLORIDA - APRIL 25: Bailey Ober #17 of the Minnesota Twins pitches in the sixth inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field on April 25, 2026 in St Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Parker S. Freedman/Getty Images) | Getty Images

First Pitch (CT):6:40 PM
TV: Twins.TV
Radio: TIBN/830 WCCO/102.9 The Wolf /Audacy App
Know Yo’ Foe: Bluebird Banter

Bad news: The Twins keep losing extremely winnable games either due to offensive ineptitude, a bullpen built like it’s 2003, or a combination of the two.

Good news: every other team in the AL is also bad.

As I write this, there are only 3 teams in the entire American League with a record over .500, and none of them are in the AL Central. Despite this losing streak and sitting at 13-18 overall, the Twins sit just 2.5 games back of both the division and a Wild Card berth on the final day of April. The record isn’t ideal, but if you told me that going into the season, I would be absolutely thrilled.

Bailey Ober will do his best to keep the bullpen from factoring into the game, but he’ll have to do it facing Jays starter Kevin Gausman, who looks to have regained his All-Star form in his age 35 season. Ober has reinvented himself despite the lack of velocity, relying on movement and deception to induce weak contact rather than the strikeouts he used to generate. He’s walked way too many batters this season, especially compared to his historic numbers, but especially now that he doesn’t have the strikeout stuff he used to.

Toronto’s lineup has been ravaged with injuries early this year, but that is beginning to turn already with All-Star George Springer making his return after fracturing his toe in the last series between these two clubs. They’re still missing All-Star catcher Alejandro Kirk, starting outfielders Addison Barger, Nathan Lukes and Anthony Santander, and an entire starting rotation that several teams would consider an upgrade.

Meanwhile, Austin Martin gets the start in right field as Matt Wallner continues to struggle. Gausman’s signature pitch is his filthy splitter, something that works much better against lefties than righties, so that also likely played into Derek Shelton’s decision to give Martin some run. His .476 OBP helps too, of course.

Lineups

TwinsOpponent
SP: Bailey OberSP: Kevin Gausman
1. Byron Buxton, CF1. George Springer, DH
2. Trevor Larnach, LF2. Jesus Sanchez, RF
3. Ryan Jeffers, C3. Vladimir Guerrero Jr., 1B
4. Josh Bell, DH4. Kazuma Okamoto, 3B
5. Austin Martin, RF5. Daulton Varsho, CF
6. Kody Clemens, 1B6. Ernie Clement, 2B
7. Luke Keaschall, 2B7. Yohendrick Pinango, LF
8. Brooks Lee, SS8. Andres Gimenez, SS
9. Royce Lewis, 3B9. Brandon Valenzuela, C

April 2026 White Sox check-up: Things could be much worse

Wait a minute, the White Sox aren’t the worst team in baseball? It’s time for fans to pick their heads up and enjoy this moment. | (Patrick Gorski/Imagn Images)

Somehow, the White Sox have managed to meet the wildest of expectations in the first month of the 2026 season. Get embarrassingly swept? Check. Sweep the defending AL pennant-winner? Check. Lose several players for the season? Again, check. Be somehow one of the best but also worst teams in several hitting and pitching categories? You guessed it, check.

In the first article of a monthly series examining the health of the franchise from minors to majors, I’m diving into what has and hasn’t worked for Chicago in April, and realistic improvements the Sox need to make.

The gap between quality andquantity prospects still exists
The Sox still haven’t figured out how to put “calculated” and “call-ups” in the same sentence. Only two of the 14 guys promoted from Triple-A seem to be panning out. Sam Antonacci assumed his role as the spark plug in the lineup and has repeatedly shown that sometimes you have to play the cards you’re dealt and walk your way to home plate. He has demonstrated that he can stay true to the player he was in the minors by avoiding strikeouts — only three in the month — and inducing walks, resulting in a .347 OBP that has helped keep offensive pressure and momentum going throughout the game.

Noah Schultz’s seven runs and 18 strikeouts/no walks in his first three games have led many to believe he’ll be a complementary lefty arm alongside Anthony Kay in the rotation. Every other call-up arm has gone through the cycle of being optioned back to Charlotte or outright DFA’d. 

Braden Montgomery is the next top prospect awaiting a debut, and his arrival will make or break the next two years of the White Sox farm system. If he can stay afloat and contribute at least a 1.2 WAR or better, which would signal adequate contributions from a rookie, the South Siders will be able to wipe the carousel of failed prospects from their minds and feel confident that they can at least identify and maintain a semblance of a talent pipeline. If Montgomery, reasonably and humanly, struggles, there will be much more finger-pointing at the minor league brain trust.

Balance is the key to sustained success
April has seen a turn away from extremes toward a more gradual balance. Chicago’s -3 run differential and 13-13 record mark the emergence of sustained, watchable baseball. For the first time since June 2023, the team’s monthly record was at .500 or better. These baby steps may seem rudimentary, but they are a big leap for the franchise. 

Beyond the watch test, several key stats back this up. Only 33% of the lineup has a negative WAR, and no one has a WAR worse than -0.6 (cough, cough, Andrew Benintendi). And only one pitcher currently on the 26-man roster has a negative WAR — Jordan Leasure. Finally, the only category the Sox rank last in between team hitting and pitching metrics is doubles, which doesn’t say much about their ability to hit or get on base. Even after their 20 strikeouts against the Brewers on Opening Day, the Sox have surprisingly laid off pitches outside the zone to place 12th-best in chase percentage (28.7%). 

Given where they were a year ago, this team has some good stuff going for them. It’s hard to nitpick when they’re playing how they are, especially after winning three of their last four series. Though Munetaka Murakami is by far the best player on the team, the rest of the pack isn’t that far behind. As the headline says, things could be much worse. 

Summary Metrics

Prospect Confidence (Percentage of prospects that are contributing meaningfully?): 15%

Average Innings Watched (Average number of innings fans have patience for): 6 1/3

Rebuild Index (1 is full rebuild, 5 is sustaining current pace, 10 is aggressively pursuing the World Series): 4

A’s first baseman breaks one of Barry Bonds’ modern records

Barry Bonds has come company in the record books:

A’s first baseman Nick Kurtz.

The Giants’ legendary slugger set numerous marks that still stand on his way to becoming the sports’ all-time home run king. One of them fell Thursday, in a Triple-A ballpark, no less.

Giants legend Barry Bonds’ modern-day record of consecutive games with a walk in a season was broken by the Athletics’ Nick Kurtz on Thursday. Getty Images

Kurtz, 23, surpassed Bonds’ modern-day record when Royals reliever John Schreiber intentionally put him on base in his last plate appearance of the A’s 6-3 win Thursday at their temporary home in Sacramento.

It was his 19th consecutive game with a base on balls. Few other hitters had come close since Bonds ended the 2002 season with walks in all of his final 18 games.

Bonds, in addition to the single-season and all-time home run records, holds the top-three single-season walk totals in MLB history. He ended the 2002 campaign with 198, second only to the astounding 234 free passes opposing pitchers issued him in 2004.

Kurtz, the No. 4 overall pick in the 2024 draft, has earned his own reputation as a fearsome lefty in short time. He was the American League Rookie of the Year and the AL Silver Slugger winner at first base last year, batting .290 with 36 homers and a 1.002 OPS in his first big-league season.

But nobody is Bonds.

The Athletics’ Nick Kurtz broke Barry Bonds’ single-season record for consecutive games with a walk. AP

Over the course of his 18-game streak, Bonds drew 34 total bases on balls — 14 intentional passes. He struck out only seven times and batted .409 with a 1.389 OPS.

Kurtz, to his credit, has five homers in his 19 games to Bonds’ four during his streak. He has produced a respectable .963 OPS. But he has also struck out 25 times — more than his number of walks (24). Only four have come intentionally, fewer than Shohei Ohtani or the Nationals’ James Woods in that span.

Bonds extended his streak by walking in the first two games of the 2003 season, including a pair of intentional passes on Opening Day. The only player in MLB history with more consecutive games with a walk is the Tigers’ Roy Cullenbine, who went 22 in a row during the 1947 season.

That puts Kurtz in a tie for second on the all-time leaderboard for the single-season record with Ted Williams, who also walked in 19 consecutive games in 1941.

Just six others have drawn a walk in 15 straight games since Cullenbine in 1947: Yankees first baseman Nick Johnson (2003), Braves third baseman Chipper Jones (1999), Rangers infielder Toby Harrah (1985), Phillies outfielder Lenny Dykstra (1980) and Braves infielder Darrell Evans (1976).

Observations after Sixers earn emphatic Game 6 win over Celtics, stave off elimination again

Observations after Sixers earn emphatic Game 6 win over Celtics, stave off elimination again  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Sixers’ hope of storming back to win their first-round playoff series vs. the Celtics remain alive and well.

With a 106-93 victory on Thursday night at Xfinity Mobile Arena, the Sixers earned the right to play a Game 7. They’ll visit Boston on Saturday and look for a third consecutive win.

Tyrese Maxey had 30 points and five assists in Game 6.

Paul George scored 23 points. Joel Embiid tallied 19 points, 10 rebounds and eight assists.

Jayson Tatum posted 17 points and 11 rebounds for Boston. Jaylen Brown had 18 points.

Here are observations on the Sixers’ emphatic Game 6 victory:

Celtics tweak defense on Embiid 

Embiid carried over the momentum from his stellar second half in the Sixers’ Game 5 win. He scored the team’s first five points with a mid-range jumper and an off-balance, and-one layup. 

With three-pointers from George and Maxey, the Sixers jumped out to an 11-4 lead. The Celtics started 2 for 9 from the field. 

Boston varied its defensive looks against Embiid and predictably showed him less pure single coverage than in Game 5. 

While the Celtics’ changes weren’t dramatic out of the gate, they were clearly wary of Embiid’s post scoring and preferred to make him a passer. Embiid notched a first-quarter assist from the post after the Celtics double teamed him on the dribble. Kelly Oubre Jr. cut free and Embiid found him for a dunk. 

Embiid got several good early mid-range looks off of his two-man game with Maxey. He was still a tad off as a jump shooter and went 6 for 18 from the floor in the game. 

Brown runs into foul trouble, Sixers capitalize 

Both Brown and VJ Edgecombe were called for their second fouls around the midpoint of the first quarter. Celtics head coach Joe Mazzulla didn’t take any dramatic steps to curb Brown’s first-half minutes, trusting he would avoid a third foul. 

Crucially, Oubre drew Brown’s third at the 5:05 mark of the second quarter. The Sixers got the off-arm push call on Brown they’ve been seeking throughout the series. Brown protested the whistle but had to sit for the remainder of the first half. He was called for his fourth personal just 31 seconds into the third quarter on another offensive foul.

Also significant in the foul department: The Celtics had a poor start at the free throw line. They missed 6 of their first 8 foul shots, all on attempts by Brown and Tatum. That included three straight Brown misses. 

The Sixers’ defensive energy and playmaking were pluses in the second quarter, too. 

Justin Edwards returned to the rotation and worked hard in his possessions against Brown. Oubre picked up a block and a steal. George rotated over sharply and rejected big man Neemias Queta’s layup. Not much came easily for the Celtics, who committed nine first-half turnovers, and the Sixers were rock-solid on the defensive boards. 

Sensational third quarter for Sixers

On the other end, Maxey poured in 21 points over the first two quarters. A Maxey runner with 3.5 second left in the second period gave the Sixers a 58-49 lead. 

Maxey turned to his two-man game with Embiid a ton, including on plenty of side pick-and-rolls. As a pair, Maxey and Embiid struck a nice balance in the first half between probing the defense and attacking without hesitation when the moment was right. 

The Sixers expanded their advantage early in the third quarter. In a crowd-thrilling sequence, Oubre swatted a Brown layup, leading to a fast break that finished with George dishing a behind-the-back pass and Edgecombe jamming the ball home. 

The Celtics asked for timeout. They soon trailed by 17 points with a George pull-up triple. George’s high-quality two-way play and outstanding three-point shooting in this series continued Thursday night. He made five threes in Game 6 and has gone 19 for 35 (54.3 percent) beyond the arc.

Though the Sixers benefited from Boston missing some open jumpers, they maintained strong defensive focus and prevented the Celtics from eating into their lead late in the third quarter. The Sixers thought Andre Drummond beat the third-quarter buzzer with a corner three, but replays showed he didn’t release his shot in time.

Boston still found itself down 23 points early in the fourth quarter after Embiid fed George for a backdoor lay-in. Mazzulla called timeout again and played an all-bench lineup.

That unit fared well. The Sixers’ offense grew cold and sloppy. George was assessed a technical foul for his complaints about a no-call. Ron Harper Jr. drained a corner three. Luka Garza’s dunk cut the Celtics’ deficit to 88-76.

The Sixers eventually restored order and steered clear of a horrendous collapse. They didn’t close the night in especially clean fashion, but the final score is all that matters. The Sixers thoroughly deserved the win and a chance to complete their series comeback on Saturday.

Playoff Game Thread: Knicks at Hawks, Game 6, April 30, 2026

Apr 28, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) controls the ball against Atlanta Hawks guard Dyson Daniels (5) during the third quarter of game five of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

The Knicks face the Hawks tonight at State Farm Arena in Game six of their Eastern Conference first-round series. New York leads the series 3-2, and a win would close out the series, sending them to the second round to battle either the Boston Celtics (boo) or the Philadelphia 76ers (also boo). The Knicks mostly breezed through the last two games against Atlanta and are favored tonight.

Tip-off is 7:00 pm EST on ESPN. This is your game thread. This is Peachtree Hoops. Please don’t post large photos, GIFs, or links to illegal streams in the thread. Make your dead ancestors proud. And go Knickerbockers!

Mets waste Freddy Peralta’s second six-inning outing of season

Freddy Peralta said following his last outing that the thought of working deep into games has come into his mind at times early on this season.

While the right-hander had struggled to complete six innings over his first six outings in a Mets uniform, Carlos Mendoza said that he wasn’t too concerned.

“He’s an ace, he’ll get there,” the skipper emphasized. 

And just five days later Peralta was able to get there, as he delivered the Mets six efficient innings in what ended as a disappointing series finale loss to the Nationals

It wasn’t always pretty, though, as he was hurt by his own error at one point. 

After issuing a leadoff walk in the second, Peralta botched a comebacker which could’ve been a routine double play had it been let go to the shortstop or fielded cleanly. 

Instead, he threw it away and the Nats scratched across the first two runs of the game. 

“You know, mistakes happen,” he said. “I knew that [Ronny] Mauricio was behind me but the reaction of the play that I had there was just trying to catch the ball and then I felt stupid because I made the error, but things happen.”

Washington struck again in the third, but then Peralta settled in nicely after the Mets’ offense picked him up, retiring the next eight before running into trouble in that elusive sixth inning. 

Thoughts of those struggles began to creep back in as he issued back-to-back walks, but the righty was able to calm himself and retired the next two to escape the threat.

“I’m not going to lie when that happened it came into my mind again,” Peralta admitted. “I was just focused and telling myself I have to get the job done and I was able to do it -- still getting better and I know there’s a lot more in there.”

Peralta finished with three runs (one earned) on four hits, three walks, and six strikeouts as he completed six innings for just the second time this year. 

The effort ended up being wasted, though, as Luke Weaver gave up a go-ahead two-run homer to CJ Abrams in the top of the eighth to result in another ugly Mets loss. 

“I think it’s frustrating because we all want to win,” Peralta said. “We’ve been putting the work in every day to win but this game is really hard and things are not going our way right now.”

Thurday Bantering: Springer Hitting Leadoff

Apr 29, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Blue Jays designated hitter George Springer (4) congratulates catcher Brandon Valenzuela (59) on hitting a solo home run against the Boston Red Sox in the eighth inning at Rogers Centre. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images | John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

George Springer is back in the lineup and hitting lead off in the first of four games against the Twins.

And Pinango is in the lineup too. It looks like they are going to give him some playing time. Brandon Valenzuela gets a start again, after a great game yesterday.

Austin Martin is having a great start to the season, with a .311/.476/.426 line in 27 games

Today’s Lineups

BLUE JAYSTWINS
George Springer – DHByron Buxton – CF
Jesus Sanchez – RFTrevor Larnach – LF
Vladimir Guerrero – 1BRyan Jeffers – C
Kazuma Okamoto – 3BJosh Bell – DH
Daulton Varsho – CFAustin Martin – RF
Ernie Clement – 2BKody Clemens – 1B
Yohendrick Pinango – LFLuke Keaschall – 2B
Andres Gimenez – SSBrooks Lee – SS
Brandon Valenzuela – CRoyce Lewis – 3B
Kevin Gausman – RHPBailey Ober – RHP

And there is a bunch of ‘injury news’:

  • Addison Barger will start a rehab assignment Sunday. It might be as short as three games.
  • Jose Berrios will throw his between start bullpen in Buffalo tomorrow and then they will decide if he will start against the Twins Sunday or have one more start with the Bisons.
  • Alejandro Kirk has started throwing the ball, but he won’t be hitting or catching for a bit yet.

The life of a manager:

NBA Playoff Thursday dicussion

Apr 28, 2026; New York, New York, USA; Atlanta Hawks forward Onyeka Okongwu (17) drives to the basket against New York Knicks forward OG Anunoby (8) and center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) during the third quarter of game five of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Use this space to chat about tonight’s games!

Penguins Young Goalie Should Build Off Strong Postseason

The Pittsburgh Penguins' season came to a heartbreaking end with their 1-0 overtime loss to the Philadelphia Flyers in Game 6. The Penguins worked hard to try to force a Game 7 after going down 3-0 in the series, but they fell just short. 

While the Penguins lost in Game 6, Arturs Silovs certainly cannot be blamed. The 25-year-old goaltender gave the Penguins everything he had, as he stopped 31 out of 32 Flyers shots he faced. Unfortunately, the Penguins were unable to solve Flyers goalie Dan Vladar. 

Silovs was excellent for the Penguins throughout the series, too. After taking over Pittsburgh's crease in Game 4, Silovs helped lead the Penguins to two straight wins due to his strong goaltender. In Game 4, he stopped 28 out of 30 shots he faced. He then stopped 18 out of 20 shots in Game 5. 

With this, Silovs finished the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs with a 1.52 goals-against average and a .939 save percentage in three games. There is no question that the young Penguins goalie had a strong postseason, and he certainly should build off this for next season.

Silovs demonstrated during this postseason that he has good upside. It will be interesting to see what kind of campaign that he can put together next season, but it seems that the 2019 sixth-round pick may not have hit his ceiling just yet. 

Braves vs. Tigers series recap: April ends on a high note

ATLANTA, GA - APRIL 29: Matt Olson #28 of the Atlanta Braves celebrates his walk-off home run with teammates against the Detroit Tigers at Truist Park on April 29, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Kevin D. Liles/Atlanta Braves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Heading into this series, this matchup felt like a very tricky proposition for a Braves team that came into this rolling at a very high level. Atlanta was clicking but they’d have to deal with three formidable starting pitchers in the form of Casey Mize, Framber Valdez and Tarik Skubal. If the Braves were going to keep their run of not dropping series going, it was likely that they’d be put to the test — whether that meant simply outlasting the opposition and getting into Detroit’s bullpen or just plain ol’ beating the Tigers at their own game.

As it turned out, the Braves ended up getting just enough offense on Tarik Skubal that they were able to get into Detroit’s bullpen and win it (in dramatic fashion) and that was after they took advantage of Casey Mize going down with an unfortunate injury in the first game. The Braves ended up passing the test after all and now it’s time to see exactly how they managed to pull it off.


Tuesday, April 28

Braves 5, Tigers 2

For everybody who’s been waiting to see Ronald Acuña Jr. really get going this season, this game was proof that he’s still got it in him to make a significant impact on any given game. Both of the hits that he had in this one were doubles — he had both of those by the third inning and his second one plated Mike Yastrzemski to put the Braves up in the third inning. Matt Olson brought Acuña home with a sacrifice fly to make it 2-0 and then later on in the fourth inning, Acuña made a jumping catch at the wall to ensure that Kevin McGonigle didn’t at least extend the inning with an extra-base hit.

Once the final three innings of the game rolled around, the Braves were still in control thanks to Martín Pérez delivering five scoreless innings while only giving up two hits. He did walk four batters but he struck out five batters as well, so Pérez was once again able to deliver positive value from his spot in the rotation. That was a good thing, since Yaz was able to provide some insurance with an RBI single in the seventh inning and then Ozzie Albies crushed a two-run dinger to make it a 5-0 game. Aaron Bummer gave up a dinger to Wenceel Pérez in the ninth to ruin the shutout but it didn’t ruin the result as the Braves picked up a pretty solid win to get the series going.

Wednesday, April 29

Braves 4, Tigers 3

This one essentially came down to the Braves bookending this game with two big flies. The first one gave the Braves a 2-0 lead in the first inning when Ozzie Albies continued his hot run by hitting a dinger at the expense of All-World pitcher Tarik Skubal. Sadly for the Braves, the lead didn’t last too long.

Detroit tied it up on their first attempt in the top of the second after Kevin McGonigle delivered an RBI single on a looping liner and then JR Ritchie made a rookie mistake by throwing away a pickoff attempt on an 0-2 count with two outs. The error brought in another run and just like that, the game was tied. The tie was eventualy broken in the third inning after Riley Greene hit a long ball that put Detroit in front. Tarik Skubal had a lead to work with and eventually cruised his way through seven innings of work.

Fortunately, Ritchie went 5.1 innings and Atlanta’s bullpen was able to hold the Tigers at just three runs. That was crucial since the game really got going again once Detroit’s beleaguered bullpen got involved. It took a lot of effort on Kyle Finnegan’s part to keep the Braves from tying it in the eighth inning but Kenley Jansen wouldn’t be as fortunate. In fact, Jansen failed to get just one out — Ozzie Albies coaxed a walk out of him (which should’ve been the first sign that Jansen was in real trouble) and then Matt Olson took what he saw from that plate appearance and waited until he got a cutter that was middle-middle and sent it flying into the night sky. By the time it landed, the Braves were winners and Truist Park was in complete bedlam.

Thursday, April 30

Tigers 5, Braves 2

This one got off to an encouraging enough start, as the Braves got off to an early lead after pushing across one run in both the second and third innings. Eli White delivered the first RBI knock and then Maurcio Dubón followed it up with an RBI single of his own to give the Braves an early 2-0 edge. Bryce Elder delivered another strong six innings of work where he only gave up one run on his way out. He did have to deal with a bunch of traffic as he gave up six hits and three walks but he escaped most of the jams he found himself in and managed to make sure that the Braves held the lead while he was out there.

Framber Valdez was able to match Elder’s six innings and he kept the Tigers in the game. This time, it was Atlanta’s bullpen that eventually stumbled. Joel Payamps got the ball for the eighth inning and the Tigers jumped on him immediately with a Kerry Carpenter triple and an RBI double from Matt Vierling that tied the game up at two. While Payamps was able to strike out Dillon Dingler to get his first out, he left the game right after that with two men on and one out for Aaron Bummer to work with.

Bummer walked the bases loaded and then surrendered a sacrifice fly to make it 3-2 Detroit. Bummer actually didn’t do too badly keeping it at 3-2 but unfortunately, José Suarez had another rough outing which put the game to bed. Suarez got the first two outs but walked Wenceel Pérez (who had come into this game with a wRC+ of 25 (twenty-five), mind you), who ended up scoring on an RBI single that was exacerbated after Mike Yastrzemski booted the ball in the outfield while attempting to field it. Dillon Dingler delivered the finishing blow with an RBI double and the three-run deficit proved to be too much for the Braves on this particular day. You can’t win ‘em all!


As far as this series goes, it was certainly huge for the Braves to get the series win out of the way with the first two wins — the win during the Skubal game was particularly big as well, as it’s always a bonus to pick up a win with that dynamo on the mound for the Tigers. Aside from the mistake pitch to Ozzie Albies, Skubal was very tough on the Braves. Fortunately, Atlanta was able to take advantage of Detroit’s bullpen in both of the first two games of the series and that ended up giving them the edge.

The Braves are now done with the month of April and they’re 12 games over .500. Again, this is a reminder that Atlanta spent a grand total of one (1) day over .500 during the entire 2025 season and the last time the Braves had reached these heights was back in late-September when they were busy fighting and clawing for a Wild Card spot.

Needless to say, things have gotten a lot better for the Braves and the fact that they were able to keep this up for a whole month and also able to do it with a few key players still on the inured list or struggling a is a very good indicator for the future. The team isn’t perfect and there’s still some shoring up that needs to be done as the pitching starts to slow down a bit but at the same time, they’ve done this while banking in 22 wins in their first 32 games. The gap between them and the rest of the NL East is still there and as long as the Braves can at least maintain a decent type of form, Atlanta’s going to be A-OK going forward as the season progresses.

They will now be embarking on another gauntlet of sorts — nine games on the road against West division clubs. A trip to Coors Field is always tricky and unpredictable, the Mariners could also provide a tough test in Seattle and the Dodgers are the Dodgers. For now, it’s good to know that the Braves will embarking on that long trip with plenty of confidence and wins under their belt so far. Long may it continue!