‘Hopefully, We’ll Get There; We’ll See’: Maple Leafs’ Jani Hakanpaa Making Progress, But Return For Playoffs Still Uncertain

Nov 16, 2024; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Maple Leafs defenseman Jani Hakanpaa (28) pursues the play against the Edmonton Oilers in the second period at Scotiabank Arena. Mandatory Credit: Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images

As the Toronto Maple Leafs inch closer to the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs, there’s cautious optimism surrounding the status of the return of defenseman Jani Hakanpaa — but no guarantees.

The 6-foot-7 blueliner, who hasn’t played an NHL game since November 16 against the Edmonton Oilers, continues to skate with the team and move forward in his recovery from a lingering knee injury. On Friday, Hakanpaa took reps with the third defensive pair at practice, replacing the absent Oliver Ekman-Larsson and Jake McCabe.

“Pretty good spot right now, been making some good improvements. Getting back out there with the guys has been good,” said Hakanpaa after practice. “Slowly working our way towards playing again here.”

Hakanpaa was filling the void at Friday’s practice, but the Leafs are forced to go with five defensemen on Saturday against the Montreal Canadiens. The Leafs do not have any salary cap room ($195,333) to call up an additional player with Jake McCabe (undisclosed) injured and forward David Kampf still out with an upper-body injury – as well as the new undisclosed injury to Ekman-Larsson.

The 33-year-old underwent minor knee surgery earlier this season in hopes of returning for the second half. He was officially placed on long-term injured reserve (LTIR) on December 2, and despite steady progress over the past month – skating before or with the Leafs at practice – he remains ineligible to return.

Why The Maple Leafs Will Dress 5 Defensemen Against The Canadiens On SaturdayWhy The Maple Leafs Will Dress 5 Defensemen Against The Canadiens On SaturdayThe Toronto Maple Leafs will likely dress one player short when they host the Montreal Canadiens at Scotiabank Arena on Saturday.

Asked if he could suit up come playoff time, Hakanpaa remained hopeful but noncommittal.

“That’s a tough one to kind of say anything really,” Hakanpaa explained. “It’s been trending really good in the gym and on the ice, off the ice, everything. Hopefully, we'll get there; we’ll see.”

Head coach Craig Berube offered little clarity when asked about the status of both Hakanpaa and forward Max Pacioretty, who is also recovering from an injury, for the postseason.

“That I don’t know. I don’t have that answer for you. They’re still working away through things, so that’s all I know on that,” said Berube.

Back on April 1, Berube was slightly more optimistic about the outlook, noting that both players were actively working toward being healthy.

“It’s good that they’re out there,” Berube said at the time. “They’ve been working with our development crew and people back here skating and trying to get healthy. Hopefully, they can get healthy and be part of the team at some point.”

‘It’s Good That They’re Out There’: Max Pacioretty, Jani Hakanpaa, Return To Maple Leafs Practice Amid Long-Term Injury Absence ‘It’s Good That They’re Out There’: Max Pacioretty, Jani Hakanpaa, Return To Maple Leafs Practice Amid Long-Term Injury Absence The Toronto Maple Leafs returned to practice at Ford Performance Centre on Tuesday following their three-game California road trip, preparing for a divisional matchup against the Florida Panthers on Wednesday.

Hakanpaa has had an up-and-down year, only suiting up for two games with the Maple Leafs this season and logging two conditioning stints with the AHL’s Toronto Marlies — going pointless in all four outings. He was initially named to Team Finland’s roster for the 4 Nations Face-Off but was forced to withdraw due to his recovery progress.

“It’s been up and down, highs and lows. It has the good parts to it, too,” said Hakanpaa of the season. “You just have to enjoy the little victories every day. Something feels really good; you can improve on something and really take a lot of joy in that.”

“Obviously, it’s been trying, but just trying to keep that positive mindset and cheer the boys on as much as I can when they’ve been here,” he added.

'I Don't Have A Timeline': Jani Hakanpaa Will Not Play For Finland At 4 Nations Sparking More Questions About His NHL Future'I Don't Have A Timeline': Jani Hakanpaa Will Not Play For Finland At 4 Nations Sparking More Questions About His NHL FutureHakanpaa hasn't played since Nov. 16 and had a second knee procedure in early December.

As for how he’s feeling now, the Finnish defender says it’s a mix of good days and ongoing issues still preventing him from returning to full speed.

“It’s a little bit of both,” Hakanpaa admitted. There are a few things still there that I’d like to be a little better feeling on the ice, and other than that, just stringing good days together. Adding a little more load every day, adding a little more here and there, and then trying to string those good days, and make them good weeks into good months.”

Whether Hakanpaa gets a shot at playoff action remains to be seen. For now, he remains on the outside looking in, but seems to be trending in the right direction. However, a clear timeline has yet to come to the surface.

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Draymond admits he ‘hated' LeBron before building close relationship

Draymond admits he ‘hated' LeBron before building close relationship originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Even as longtime NBA rivals, Draymond Green and LeBron James have become the best of friends over the years — but it wasn’t always that way.

Not even close.

The Warriors forward made a recent appearance on the “Brownie and Rab Show,” where he spoke about how his relationship with the Los Angeles Lakers superstar blossomed into what it is today.

“Hell no. I hated Bron,” Green said of his early relationship with James. “We didn’t have no relationship at all. I had a relationship with [Maverick Carter] and Rich [Paul], I was really tight with [them]. 2017 All-Star [Weekend] was in New Orleans. Bron had a plane going to Anguilla. Mav, Rich, everyone was going. I hadn’t decided where I was going after that All-Star Game, so earlier that day I asked Mav, ‘Mav, where you going after the All-Star Game?’ He’s like we’re going to Anguilla. I’m like can I go? He’s like yeah you can go. I’m like you sure? He’s like yeah let me make sure there’s space on the plane.

“I don’t know if there was no space on the plane or not but I think Bron probably said I ain’t flying on that plane. He gets an entirely different plane so I can fly with them. We had two houses on Four Seasons right next to each other. I also don’t think there was two houses there before. You know why I think Mav got a whole other house? Because I think Bron said that [expletive] ain’t staying in my house.”

Separate planes. Separate houses.

Not for long, though.

Green and James saw a lot of each other on the court, too, during those thrilling Warriors vs. Cavaliers NBA Finals matchups during James’ time with Cleveland.

Those rivalries weren’t friendly, but years later, all is forgiven.

“Bron used to be like, ‘Man, why you guys dealing with this dude?’ So just me being around Rich and Mav, me and Bron naturally ended up being around each other more. And then we started to build a relationship because I realized dang, bro is really just like me. He uses the same lingo I use. He’s from a place just like me. And we started to build from there. But it started off hectic.”

Things could return to that hectic feeling if James’ Lakers meet up with Green’s Warriors in the first round of the Western Conference playoffs, which would be the case if Golden State defeats the Los Angeles Clippers on Sunday.

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Columbus Blue Jackets (81 pts) vs. Washington Capitals (109 pts) Game Preview

Joseph Maiorana-Imagn Images

The Columbus Blue Jackets and the Washington Capitals play the first of back-to-back games this weekend, today at 12:30 PM.

The Blue Jackets survived another day after the Montréal Canadiens were beaten by the Ottawa Senators on Friday night. 

Today, the CBJ and Caps will play the first game of a home-and-home back-to-back, and the Jackets need to win the games. The Canadiens play the Toronto Maple Leafs on Saturday night, so if the Jackets can get past the Caps, and the Leafs can beat the Habs, the CBJ will survive until Sunday. 

Just win, baby! 

Blue Jackets Stats

  • Power Play - 19.7% - 22nd in NHL
  • Penalty Kill - 76.1% - 25th in NHL
  • Goals For - 247 - 11th - 3.17 GPG - 11th
  • Goals Against - 265 - 26th - 3.40 GPG - 27th

Capitals Stats

  • Power Play – 23.7% - 12th in NHL
  • Penalty Kill – 81.6% - 6th in NHL
  • Goals For - 280 – 1st – 3.59 GPG – 1st
  • Goals Against – 212 – 8th – 2.72 GPG – 9th

Series History vs. The Capitals

  • Columbus is 10-12-6 at home and 19-26-11 in 56 all-time meetings vs. the Capitals.
  • The Jackets are 8-9-4 in the last 21 games at Capital One Arena. 

Who To Watch For The Capitals

  • Dylan Strome leads the team with 51 assists and 77 points.
  • Alex Ovechkin leads the Caps with 42 goals. 
  • Charlie Lindgren is 19-13-3 with a SV% of .893. 

CBJ Player Notes vs. Capitals

  • Boone Jenner has 12 points in 33 career games against Washington.  
  • Zach Werenski has 9 points in 23 games.  
  • Sean Monahan has 15 points in 22 games against the Capitals. 

Injuries

  • Kevin Labanc (shoulder) is on Injured Reserve as of Feb. 21 and is out for the season (21 Games) 
  • Elvis Merzlikins (upper body) has missed 1 game. 

TOTAL MAN GAMES LOST: 312

How to Watch & Listen: Tonight's game will be on ABC, ESPN+. Sean McDonough will be on the play-by-play. The radio broadcast will be on  93.3 The Bus, with Bob McElligott behind the mic doing the play-by-play.

Let us know what you think below.

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Celtics converting JD Davison to two-year NBA contract, per agent

Celtics converting JD Davison to two-year NBA contract, per agent originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The G League MVP is getting his NBA call-up.

The Boston Celtics are converting the JD Davison’s two-way contract to a standard, two-year NBA contract, Davison’s agent told ESPN’s Shams Charania.

Davison, Drew Peterson and Miles Norris all were on two-way contracts with Boston, which had an open roster spot ahead of Sunday’s regular-season finale against the Charlotte Hornets. Converting Davison to an NBA contract fills the Celtics’ final roster spot and allows the 22-year-old guard to join Boston for its 2025 playoff run.

The Celtics made a similar move with Neemias Queta near the end of last season, converting the big man’s two-way contract to a two-year deal. Queta has appeared in 61 games this season, and Davison will have a similar opportunity to make an impact off the bench for the C’s during the 2025-26 campaign.

Davison averaged 25.1 points, 7.6 assists and 5.6 rebounds per game with the Maine Celtics during a dominant season that earned him G League MVP honors. He also participated in the Rising Stars game at NBA All-Star Weekend, helping the G League squad advance to the finals of the mini-tournament.

Davison has appeared in 15 games for Boston’s NBA club this season, averaging 5.1 minutes per contest. He’s seen action in two straight games for the C’s, however, scoring a combined two points on 1 of 7 shooting in 18 total minutes.

Three Takeaways From A Missed Opportunity

The Senators were the better team tonight - Photo credit:  Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images

After a couple of days off, the Montreal Canadiens were taking on the Ottawa Senators on Friday night. They had an opportunity to officially punch their ticket for the Spring dance and sweep their Ontarian rivals. Unfortunately for Martin St-Louis, it became apparent that neither would happen early on.

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Learning To Win Is One Thing, But Learning To Be Ready Is Just As Important

The Canadiens had six wins in a row before Friday night’s game, but there’s one part of their game that they can never seem to get right: being ready for puck drop. St-Louis won’t complain that his team has developed a knack for third-period comebacks, but he must be fuming about those late starts as evidenced by his use of the word "unacceptable" when asked about yet another late start.

So far this season, the Canadiens have scored 64 goals in the first period and given up 82. They've given up 81 in the second and 83 in the third, so the issue is not how many they give up but how many they score. They put up 78 in the second and 84 in the third. Whatever the problem is, it must be addressed, and the sooner, the better. Since their previous game in Ottawa in February, the Canadiens have been outscored 17-7 in the first frame and only once they managed to keep their opponent from scoring in the first 20 minutes. 

The fact that they were unable to pull off the third-period comeback against the Sens is not a bad thing. It is much better to get this stern warning in the regular season than in the playoffs, which they will likely make, even though they could not seal the deal in this game. The coach often tells us that a considerable part of his job is selling his game plan to the players; this 5-2 loss will be a good selling point.

The Captain Since The Break

Since the 4 Nations Face-Off break, Nick Suzuki has scored 35 points in 23 matches, four game-winning goals, at least two points in 11 of the 23 games, and has contributed to 47% of the Canadiens’ goals.

In Friday’s game, he scored his 29th goal of the season, leaving him one short of hitting 30 for a second season in a row. His career high is 33, which he hit last year. While he did end the game with a minus-three rating, and his line was dominated by Shane Pinto's unit, it's hard to criticize Suzuki, given how he has carried this team on his back for the last couple of months.

The fact that he went to his GM to plead the team’s case as the trade deadline was approaching shows great leadership. He will have earned even more respect from his teammates by not only doing this but also rising to the challenge given by Kent Hughes.

Time For A Change?

With this loss, perhaps it’s time for St-Louis to reintegrate Arber Xhekaj into the lineup. Sometimes, a big hit can bring a team to its senses. We’ll never know if it could have made a difference tonight, but we know that the gritty defenseman is eager to return.

Jayden Struble was the blueliner with the least ice time in the game and was guilty of two giveaways. If St-Louis does decide to make a change, he’ll be the most likely candidate for a night off. David Savard could probably use the rest, but his role on the penalty kill is crucial, and until the playoff spot is official, I wouldn’t be surprised if the coach felt he had to keep him.

While Michael Pezzetta has some limitations as a hockey player, he has none in the heart and dedication department. For a second time this week, he dropped the gloves to wake his team up. He struggled at the start of the fight but came out on top, doing what he could to pump up his teammates.

If Emil Heineman is ready for Saturday’s game against the Toronto Maple Leafs, he should be inserted into the lineup. He applies excellent forecheck and can also contribute offensively.

The Habs will need to turn the page quickly and, as the coach often says himself, focus on what’s next.


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Warriors' Buddy Hield Experience a historic ride unlike any other

Warriors' Buddy Hield Experience a historic ride unlike any other originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The ballad of Buddy Hield has produced smiles, laughs, celebrations and moments of pure confusion throughout his first year in a Warriors jersey, leading to more history made by the 3-point specialist on the second-to-last game of the 2024-25 NBA regular season Friday night in Golden State’s blowout road win against the Portland Trail Blazers. 

There have been stretches of perfect jazz in unison, and instances of wind strings snapping in your eardrums. 

Earlier this week, Hield went viral for a funny exchange with coach Steve Kerr during the Warriors’ dominant win in Phoenix where Kerr jokingly introduced him to Steph Curry, “the greatest shooter in the world,” who was “wide open” but clearly not in Hield’s view. 

He’s one of Kerr’s favorite players. Ask him about Hield and you’ll get a joyous laugh. You’ll also get some instances of him likely wanting to break a clipboard, and not because of stretches where his shot went ice-cold. 

The next day when the Warriors returned home to play the San Antonio Spurs, Hield further explained the clip to NBC Sports Bay Area’s Kerith Burke after his pregame shooting routine. 

“You know, the NBA didn’t play the whole video,” Hield said. “I was like, I got a strap on me too, Steve. I can shoot, too. But I think Steph was wide-open late and I didn’t see him wide-open late, so you got to pass Steph the ball. It was a funny interaction with us.”

That strap was unleashed Friday night at Moda Center while the rest of the Warriors mostly brought blanks to the arena. The Warriors missed their first five 3-point attempts before Moses Moody broke the streak with six-and-a-half minutes remaining in the first quarter. Hield didn’t connect on his first two tries, but the third time was the charm and unlocked his historically consistent rangefinder from long distance. 

Hield came into the day with 197 threes on the season, eyeing that 200 mark with only two games left in the regular season. After watching one three go through the net in the first quarter, two others followed in the final minute and a half – first to give the Warriors a one-point lead and then to extend it to four points the next possession. 

His third 3-pointer of the first quarter gave Hield 200 threes on the season, making him only the fifth player in NBA history to have seven seasons with at least 200 3-pointers, joining Curry, Klay Thompson, James Harden and Damian Lillard. That’s two NBA MVPs and four future Hall of Famers Hield now finds himself associated within the realms of shooting royalty. 

Additionally, Hield now has done so in seven straight seasons, starting back in 2018-19 when he was then on the Sacramento Kings. 

Joining Bob Fitzgerald and Kelenna Azubuike at halftime, Hield thanked Fitz five straight times for celebrating the achievement and went into detail about his quick release. The historic 200th three was the Warriors’ offense to a tee. Hield curled off a Kevon Looney screen, caught Jimmy Butler’s pass at the top of the arc and immediately was in his shooting motion. 

“Just finding your spots and finding your rhythm,” Hield said. “When you see an opening, just get it off quick. My teammates find me in the right spots.”

Hield hasn’t been shy in saying if it weren’t for Curry, he probably wouldn’t have been picked sixth overall in the 2016 NBA Draft. As Hield was lighting it up behind the 3-point line at Oklahoma, Curry was changing the way basketball will forever be seen and played. Hield made 240 threes with a 41.3 3-point percentage in his final two years of college, the same seasons in which Curry won back-to-back MVPs. 

“I modeled my game behind the 3-point line, just trying to be as consistent as I can,” Hield said to Tim Roye on Warriors Radio after the win. “Being around Steph and watching Klay, he’s a Bahamian brother of mine, to be one of the top gunners in the league is special. Hopefully, I can do it for a few more years.”

The Warriors’ offense had little rhythm and flow, despite what the final score displayed Friday night. They shot 31.8 percent from three on a night where 44 of their 83 shot attempts were 3-pointers. Hield only made one of his next seven 3-point attempts after draining his first three. But his 16 points led the Warriors’ bench, and Hield’s four threes were a game-high for both sides. 

When the Warriors looked like the league’s best again to begin the season, Hield had the hot hand, averaging 16.2 points with a 44.2 3-point percentage in Golden State’s 12-3 start. From the first game in December through the first game in February – a 30-game stretch – Hield only averaged 9.1 points and was 59 of 192 on threes, a lowly 30.7 percent. The Warriors went 13-17 in those games.

They’re now 18-6 when he makes at least four threes. They 14-2 in the 16 games Hield has scored 18 or more points, and 20-18 in the games he has failed to score 10 or more points. He’s Forrest Gump’s box of chocolates, a mystery on most nights. He can ignite the Warriors’ wick on offense or blow out the flame from cold shooting or confounding decisions. 

Whether the Warriors win or lose, Hield’s voice will be heard in the locker room. It’s impossible to miss. He and Butler constantly trade barbs with one another and there’s bound to be laughs following Hield, one way or the other. 

“Buddy’s been incredible,” Draymond Green said to Fitzgerald and Azubuike after the win. “Obviously, we all know what he does on the court. But even off the court is bigger. The energy that he brings on a daily basis. He’s always upbeat. Brings a good vibe. Brings a good vibe to the gym, good vibe to the plane, good vibe to the hotel. Wherever we’re at, he’s always bringing a good vibe to it. Just an incredible teammate. Actually one of my favorite teammates.”

Draymond then looked off-camera to his left, catching Hield doing who knows what. 

“Look at him,” Green continued, laughing. “One of my favorite teammates I’ve ever had, and yet, he will get on your last nerve every day.”

The Buddy Hield Experience has been a ride unlike any other this season. His energy is always invited, and the Warriors have shown they believe his historic 3-point shot can help drive them down the right road. 

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Letters to Sports: Luka Doncic's amazing return to Dallas had it all

Lakers star Luka Doncic waves to the crowd and acknowledges cheers from fans as he walks off the court in Dallas
Lakers star Luka Doncic waves to the crowd as he acknowledges cheers from fans when he walks off the court in Dallas after scoring 45 points in his return Wednesday. (LM Otero / Associated Press)

What an amazing performance by Luka Doncic against his former Dallas team. The pregame video montage was compelling to the point it brought Luka to tears. He is a true competitor and superstar.

Having now watched him extensively with the Lakers, I think the one thing that would raise Luka to even greater heights is for him to stop arguing with the refs after almost every call. As we saw in the Thunder game, it leads to technical fouls and ejections (even if unwarranted). And while he’s at it, he should stop jawing with fans from the other team, nothing good will come of it.

Dave Ring
Manhattan Beach


The Lakers beat Dallas 112-97, with Luka Doncic scoring 45 points and Anthony Davis scoring 13. I guess we know who got the best of that trade.

Vaughn Hardenberg
Westwood

B-I-N-G-O

As the NBA regular season comes to an end this weekend, consider whether you had any of these on your bingo card when the regular season began:

B: The Lakers and Clippers would each win at least 48 games (and perhaps 50).
I: The Pistons would more than triple their win total over the previous season.
N: Nuggets coach Michael Malone would be fired with three games remaining.
G: The Cavaliers would win more regular-season games than the Celtics.
O: Laker Luka Doncic would outscore Maverick Anthony Davis 45-13 in Luka's return to Dallas.

To paraphrase Bob Costas, "Look, it's a wacky business."

Ken Feldman
Tarzana

Reversing course

Kudos to Bill Plaschke for admitting he was dead wrong about Bronny James. And, even more kudos to LeBron and Bronny for both being shining examples of what it means to be a pro, representing your team, your family and your city in such an admirable and stand-up way.

In this era of supremely spoiled, entitled and delusional athletes, they have been humble, hard-working, levelheaded exemplars of everything that make sports great. And, to all the crazy Lakers "fans" who will never accept LeBron as a true Laker, like Plaschke, think again.

William David Stone
Beverly Hills


Bill Plaschke admitted he was wrong when he declared that the Lakers brought the circus to town by drafting Bronny James, who has refuted Plaschke’s harsh characterization by his professionalism, indomitable drive and Herculean work ethic, driving himself to become a quality G League player in his rookie year.

Bronny seized upon the opportunity manipulated by his father LeBron James. He’s stacked 20-point games in the G League, punctuated by a 39-point explosion while shooting better than 60% from the field, proving he’s not just a so-called nepo baby.

Chinese philosopher Lao Tzu wrote, “A journey of a thousand miles must begin with a single step.” Bronny hasn’t taken a halting or hobbling step yet. If he continues his improvement he’ll build a substantial NBA career.

Marc D. Greenwood
Opelika, Ala.

Dodgers dilemma

Is there any connection between the fact that the Dodgers pitching coach had an injury-riddled career and the Dodgers pitching staff being constantly on the IL? Or do they need a whole new training staff? The Dodgers brass has to be asking similar questions.

R.D. McCall
Fallbrook


I remember clearly when Tyler Glasnow came to the Dodgers, my grandson said, “He’ll spend more time on the IL than the mound.“

Terry Snyder
Los Angeles


This will probably change by Sunday, but as I write this on Wednesday, the Dodgers are in third place in their four-team division and the Angels have a better record. Who'd have thought?

Jack Wishard
Los Angeles

Sports ecstasy

How to describe the feeling when my 7-year-old grandson lashes one up the middle and legs it into a triple, and me getting high-fives from the other granddads? How to describe the unbridled joy on Mookie Betts' face as he hops, skips and jumps around the bases after hitting a walk-off blast into the seats, getting a standing ovation from 50,000 of his closest friends, who high-five all around? From Little League to the big leagues, they bring us to our feet. The late, great Jim Murray called them "moments of athletic ecstasy." Oh, yes!

Tim Piatt
Thousand Oaks

Deal or no deal

I agree that the transfer portal is ruining collegiate sports and is in need of a fix. College athletes are no longer amateurs but professionals. Therefore, I suggest they be treated like the pros they are. In the future when they sign a letter of intent it should be in the form of a contract that would bind them to their school of choice for a certain number of years. It would also include the amount of NIL money they would receive.

Robert Speights
San Diego


The NCAA has absolutely ruined college sports as we know it. After hearing UConn coach Dan Hurley state that he has to recruit the players on his own team, that settled it for me. I am done with college sports until they make these kids sign contracts. It's impossible to build a team when these kids are allowed to change schools each year. It's a total joke. If they take the NIL money and accept the scholarship, make them sign a two-year or three-year deal. The only way to change that is if the coach leaves or if they turn professional.

Geno Apicella
Placentia

Truly great one

Wayne Gretzky had more than 1,700 assists along with his 894 goals. While Alex Ovechkin’s new goals record is a great accomplishment, Gretzky played a 200-foot game including defense. Over the past eight years most of what I see from Ovechkin is him lurking in the circle and making a shot. Honestly the two really don’t compare.

Michael Krubiner
Los Angeles

Now that's special

I read the story this week about trying to name the Kings' first line of Anze Kopitar, Adrian Kempe, and Andrei Kuzmenko. Ever since the latter was acquired, my friends and I who attend, watch and listen started calling them the “Special K” line. Seems so obvious.

Can we please beat Edmonton in the playoffs? Now THAT would be special!

Pete Arbogast
Venice Beach


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Email: sports@latimes.com

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Hernández: Yoshinobu Yamamoto can be the first Japanese pitcher to win the Cy Young

LOS ANGELES, CA - APRIL 11: Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto throws.
Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto throws from the mound against the Chicago Cubs during the second inning at Dodger Stadium on Friday. (Kevork Djansezian/For The Times)

Yoshinobu Yamamoto can win the National League Cy Young Award.

The possibility of Yamamoto doing that has felt increasingly real every time he has stepped on the mound this season, reaching the point in the Dodgers’ 3-0 victory over the Chicago Cubs on Friday night to where the previously-reticent right-hander readily embraced it.

“I’ve heard no Japanese pitcher has won it yet, so I’m awfully interested in it,” Yamamoto said in Japanese. “I think that concentrating on each and every game and performing at my best is what will lead to a wonderful award like that, so I’d like to do my best every day.”

The statement was a reflection of how much has changed for the 26-year-old Yamamoto over the last year.

Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto throws against the Chicago Cubs at Dodger Stadium on Friday.
Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto throws against the Chicago Cubs at Dodger Stadium on Friday. (Kevork Djansezian/For The Times)

The apprehension he exhibited in his first major league season has been replaced by assertiveness, leading to him terrorizing hitters of whom he used to be overly respectful.

He pitched six scoreless innings against the Cubs to improve his record to 2-1 and lower his earned-run average to 1.23.

Yamamoto completely overwhelmed the Cubs, not giving up a hit until the fourth inning and not issuing a walk until the sixth. He struck out nine batters, giving him 37 punchouts in 28 innings for the season.

As reluctant as manager Dave Roberts was to compare Yamamoto to another Japanese pitcher, he said Yamamoto reminded him of Hideo Nomo because of his reliance on his fastball and splitter.

Read more:Tommy Edman continues to reveal his inner slugger in Dodgers' win over Cubs

“You have hitters guessing,” Roberts said. “It’s just a split that’s a strike, then it’s a ball that’s a swing and miss or a strikeout there. There’s a good fastball that’s commanded and that’s a lot like Hideo. He doesn’t have the tornado delivery, but it’s a lot like that.”

The start against the Cubs was noteworthy in how comfortable Yamamoto was on the mound. He looked almost as if he was toying with them.

“I think I was able to control my fastball really well and I was able to throw my breaking balls in a good zone, which allowed me to pitch in good counts,” he said. “I think that gave me a lot of options.”

Even when Kyle Tucker advanced to third base in the fourth inning, Yamamoto looked as if he was in control of the situation. Even when Michael Busch worked the count full in that inning, Yamamoto looked as if he was in control.

And he was.

Yamamoto struck out Busch with a splitter for the third out of the inning. The pitch was in the strike zone, meaning that Busch would have still struck out if he had kept the bat on his shoulder.

Dodgers starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto celebrates with teammates in the dugout following the sixth inning
Dodgers starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto celebrates with teammates in the dugout following the sixth inning during a win over the Chicago Cubs on Friday at Dodger Stadium. (Jayne Kamin-Oncea / Associated Press)

Yamamoto’s control is so precise, Fuji Television reporter Yu Suzuki said in Japanese, “He has the luxury of throwing a strike with a 3-2 count.”

Suzuki would know.

A former pitcher for the Orix Buffaloes, the 28-year-old Suzuki was Yamamoto’s teammate for five seasons.

From Suzuki’s vantage point, Yamamoto is “starting to look like the Yoshinobu who pitched in Japan.” Throughout Yamamoto’s injury-plagued rookie season with the Dodgers, Suzuki insisted this would happen.

Suzuki has observed Yamamoto’s greater comfort in the major leagues, noticing how Yamamoto has started changing the intervals between pitches and the speed of his delivery. Suzuki pointed to how Yamamoto is also throwing a wider variety of pitches, which has given him a greater number of ways he can attack hitters.

“This year, he’s mixing in his cutter or two-seamer more,” Suzuki said. “Take tonight. He got a strikeout with a 95-mph two-seamer. When he mixes in a pitch like that, it makes it harder for hitters to sit on particular pitches.”

The ability to throw any pitch in any count is what made Yamamoto a three-time most valuable player in Japan. His showdown against Busch in the fourth inning was one of three at-bats in which the hitter worked the count full. He struck out the batter in each of them.

Yamamoto will continue to improve, Suzuki said.

Mentioning how Yamamoto threw 103 pitches in the six innings he pitched against the Cubs, Suzuki said, “In Japan, he used to pitch eight or nine innings like this, except he would do it in 110 pitches. I still think the pitch count is a little high by Yoshinobu’s standards. The real Yoshinobu can throw this many pitches and get through eight or nine innings.”

That wouldn’t just make him a candidate for the Cy Young Award. That would make him a lock.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Why rediscovering beautiful offense is priority No. 1 for Warriors

Why rediscovering beautiful offense is priority No. 1 for Warriors originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors’ postseason ride begins Sunday down a certifiably bumpy road under adverse conditions, Stephen Curry and his achy shooting hand leading them in against a Los Angeles Clippers squad that has owned them this season and now is greatly enhanced.

Which is as it should be. The first 48 minutes of a high-stakes journey tends to expose a team’s heart and mind, and the Warriors need plenty of both to get where they want to go.

“Good teams find a way to win big games,” Curry told reporters in Portland on Friday after a 103-86 win over the Trail Blazers.  “That’s what we’re aiming to be.”

It begins with Curry and the offense. The formidable attributes of Jimmy Butler III notwithstanding, Curry is the shepherd of this flock. Golden State’s offense at its best makes defenses dizzy with artful passing and improvised motion that generate open shots. Coach Steve Kerr, with an assist from former assistant Alvin Gentry, devised this “organized chaos” almost 11 years ago to take advantage of Curry’s gravity as well as his spectacular shooting.

When the Warriors operate as designed, it’s beautiful. They are harder to defend than a lie to your mother. When they don’t, they become, well, what they’ve too often been over recent weeks. A team that needs superb defense to offset merely satisfactory offense.

“We could be a lot better (offensively),” Draymond Green conceded to reporters in Portland on Friday. “It’s been too up-and-down as of late, the ball sticking a bit, not moving enough. But defensively, I think we’ve been pretty good for the most part for the most part.”

Curry offered zero disagreement.

“Defensively we’ve been a very consistent team, and our numbers show it,” he said. “Offensively, we’ve been kind of hit or miss.”

Solid defense and average offense likely won’t be enough to conquer the Clippers on Sunday and it surely won’t be enough to provide an extended stay on the NBA playoff calendar. The Warriors are sixth in defensive rating and 15th in offensive rating.

Golden State is seventh in offensive rating since the All-Star break but only 15th over its last 15 games. The defense is third over that span. More telling is that the Warriors have topped their standard of 30 assists only twice since in those 15 games. They’ve recorded 25 or fewer assists four times during that span and failed to reach 100 points three times.

“There’s no rhythm,” Green said. “If the ball is sticking and it’s not moving when it’s supposed to move, you’re not getting the ball when you’re supposed to get the ball. It throws off the rhythm and timing of the game.”

Brandin Podziemski, the second-year guard who has evolved into a primary ballhandler, averaged 3.5 assists over the last 15 games. Fourth-year forward Mose Moody, who handles the ball less frequently, averaging 1.9 per game. Butler averaged 5.9 assists and Green 4.9. Curry, who sometimes plays as much off the ball as much as on it, averaged 5.5. 

Rarely does a game go by that the Warriors don’t commit at least one shot-clock turnover. Those tend to be a direct result of the ball sticking instead of moving. Podziemski, a less-than-ideal isolation player, occasionally has lapses of overdribbling. Butler sometimes holds the ball waiting for a cutter that doesn’t always come. Curry fights a tendency to telegraph risky passes. Green sometimes overpasses or fails to realize that most of his teammates are slow to recognize what he sees.

The result is an offense that stalls nearly as often as it percolates.

“The game’s got to flow,” Kerr said. “We have to pass the ball better. We have to get spaced better. We have to develop a rhythm. We were in a better place, I think, a few weeks ago. We were playing with more rhythm, more flow, more two-way connection. We have to get back to that. The last couple weeks have been a little choppy.

In the 11 games beginning with the March 22 loss to the Hawks in Atlanta, the Warriors are 15th in offensive rating and seventh among teams in the West. They are sixth in defensive rating, third in the West. This is not championship stuff. It’s not the stuff of a deep playoff run.

It’s not exactly crushing it down the stretch, either.

The Warriors won’t practice Saturday, but they’ll conduct a walk-through before the 12:30 p.m. tipoff against the Clippers. Can they fix their offense in a day?

Should the Warriors prevail, can they add polish during the six days before Game 1 of the first round?

“That’s what we need to figure out,” Green said. “Steve always says, just hit the first open man. If you see somebody open, hit him. And we’re not doing a great job of that right now. We’ve got to figure out why.”

Whether the Warriors land in the play-in tournament or avoid it and proceed directly to the playoffs, their postseason fate depends on it.

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Jokic makes history and Lakers secure third spot

Nikola Jokic playing for the Denver Nuggets
Nikola Jokic's tally of 34 triple-doubles is tied for the fourth most in a season in NBA history [Getty Images]

Nikola Jokic ensured he will become only the third player in NBA history to finish the season with a triple-double average as he starred in the Denver Nuggets' win against the Memphis Grizzlies.

The Serb centre will average double digits for points, rebounds and assists after claiming his 34th triple-double of the season.

He scored 26 points, 12 assists and 26 rebounds in the Nuggets' 117-109 victory, which keeps them in a tie for fourth place in the Western Conference with one game of the regular season remaining.

Elsewhere, Luka Doncic scored 39 points to help the Los Angeles Lakers secure third place in the Western Conference with a 140-109 victory at home to the Houston Rockets.

Only two men had previously finished a regular season in the NBA with a triple-double average - Jokic's Denver team-mate Russell Westbrook, who did so three times with Oklahoma City and once with the Washington Wizards, and Oscar Robertson, who did it in the 1961-62 season for Cincinnati.

Jokic's 12 assists against the Grizzlies means he is guaranteed to finish the season with an assist average of more than 10 for the first time in his career.

He is also averaging in double digits for rebounds and needs 47 points in Denver's final game of the regular season to push his points average above 30, which would also be a career best.

The 30-year-old has already been named most valuable player (MVP) three times in the NBA's regular season, and is one of the top candidates again this year, along with Oklahoma City's Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

"If he doesn't win the MVP, it's the greatest season of all time not to win the MVP," said the Nuggets' interim coach David Adelman.

Jokic has 164 regular-season triple-doubles in his career, the second-highest tally in NBA history behind Westbrook's 203.

He will bid to extend that tally in Denver's final game of the regular season at home to the Houston Rockets on Sunday as the Nuggets aim to seal the fourth-place finish they need to earn home-court advantage in the play-offs.

Doncic stars for Lakers & James injury scare

The Lakers already know they will have home-court advantage in the play-offs after securing third place in the Western Conference with their victory against second seeds Houston.

It stretched their record for the season to 50 wins and 31 defeats.

Doncic continued his fine run of form, leading the way with 39 points, eight rebounds and seven assists while LeBron James added 14 points and eight assists.

James, who has been troubled by a groin injury, grimaced in pain in the third quarter and sat out the remainder of the game with tape on his left hip.

Elsewhere, the Golden State Warriors kept alive their hopes of a fourth-placed finish in the Western Conference with a 103-86 victory against the Portland Traliblazers that was powered by 24 points and seven assists from Jimmy Butler III.

The Warriors, who play their final game of the regular season at home to the Los Angeles Clippers, are in sixth place on 48 wins and 33 defeats, one win behind the Clippers and the Nuggets, who are tied for fourth.

Oklahoma City have already secured top spot in the Western Conference.

Canucks Gameday Preview #80: Vancouver Kicks Off Their Final Homestand Of The Season Against The Wild

Mar 7, 2025; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks forward Kiefer Sherwood (44) scores against Minnesota Wild goalie Filip Gustavsson (32) in the third period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

The Vancouver Canucks (37-29-13) kick off their final homestand of the season when they battle the Minnesota Wild (43-30-7) on Saturday night. While Vancouver has already been eliminated from playoff contention, they could deal a significant blow to the Wild's post-season chances if they can defeat Minnesota in regulation. Through two games this season, the Canucks are 1-0-1 against the Wild, which includes a 3-1 win at Rogers Arena back in early March.

Latest From THN’s Vancouver Canucks Site:

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While he isn't scheduled to start, Saturday will be an opportunity for fans in Vancouver to honour one of the greatest goalies in NHL history, Marc-André Fleury. "Flower" is scheduled to retire at the end of the year, which would conclude a historic 21-season career. A future first-ballot Hall of Famer, do not be surpised if the Canucks players line up to shake his hand at the end of the game.

Players to Watch:

Kiefer Sherwood:

Saturday night could be a historic one for Kiefer Sherwood. He is four hits away from becoming the first player in NHL to throw 450 hits in a season and a goal away from his first 20-goal campaign in the NHL. One of the best signings by any team from the 2024 off-season, fans should expect to see a feisty Sherwood on the ice Saturday night.

Kirill Kaprizov:

After missing the majority of the season due to an injury, Kirill Kaprizov is back and ready for the playoffs. Minnesota's first-line winger has 55 points in 39 games and has developed into one of the most dangerous wingers in the NHL. With his team fighting for a playoff spot, do not be surprised if Kaprizov puts together an offensive performance to remember against Vancouver.

Vancouver Canucks (37–29–13):
Last 10: 5–4–1

Quinn Hughes: 16–58–74
Brock Boeser: 25–24–49
Conor Garland: 19–30–49
Jake DeBrusk: 26–20–46
Pius Suter: 24–21–45

Minnesota Wild (43–30–7):
Last 10: 3-5-2

Matt Boldy: 26-45-71
Marco Rossi: 24-36-60
Kirill Kaprizov: 25-30-55
Mats Zuccarello: 18-33-51
Frédérick Gaudreau: 18-19-37

Game Information: 

Start Time: 7:00 pm PT 
Venue: Rogers Arena
Television: Sportsnet
Radio: Sportsnet 650

Make sure you bookmark THN's Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, be sure to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum.

The Hockey News

Mets Notes: Pete Alonso playing freely, Jose Siri's walk sparks rally

Following the Mets' 7-6 win over the Athletics on Friday night, manager Carlos Mendoza and some of the players spoke about the ebbs and flows of the victory...

Jose Siri sparks rally

The Mets entered the sixth inning only up 3-1. Despite having multiple opportunities to score, the Mets just could not capitalize until the sixth. With one out, Siri came to the plate. He was hitless up to that point and had been struggling so far this season, but he rewarded Mendoza's confidence to start him with a great nine-pitch at-bat that resulted in a walk.

Mendoza called it the at-bat of the night as it set the table for what would come after. Francisco Lindor reached on an error, Juan Soto walked setting up Pete Alonso. The slugger didn't get much on the 3-1 cutter over the plate but he hit it to shallow right field for Lawrence Butler. Despite that, Siri was going and sped his way to home to push the Mets' lead to 4-1.

"This is something we’ve been talking with him since day one in spring training," Mendoza said of Siri. "Making sure you control the strike zone. Once you get to two strikes, stay short control the strike zone, put the ball in play. To work that walk, and get the rally going was pretty impressive. In a time when things aren’t going his way but when the bottom of the lineup is getting on base, what’s behind is a dangerous offense."

"I felt comfortable in that at-bat," Siri said through an interpreter. "I was also comfortable with the way [Mitch Spence] was throwing the slider I was able to get a good read. I felt like I had taken a good at-bat earlier in the game but In that situation like that I was really able to focus in on my approach and I was able to get the results I wanted there."

Mendoza called Siri's decision to go for home "great" and pointed out how Butler wasn't in position to throw a runner out. Siri echoed his manager's critique.

"I saw the right fielder was a little flat-footed there," Siri explained. "When I saw him like that, he needed to get in the right position to throw., he just wasn’t in the right position and I knew I could score there.

"When a runner like me is on base I think they need to be more prepared for the situation that I am actually going to go home," he added.

Alonso called Siri's run and slide "slick" and that it was a huge run for the team at the time. He also pointed out how although Starling Marte's two-run double later in the inning put an exclamation point on that rally, it was Siri who started it. And the team felt the momentum shift.

"From the at-bat that I had it switched some momentum," Siri said. "There was only one out and I was able to get on base. Then Lindor comes up, Soto comes up and they were able to take more comfortable at-bats because they needed to focus on throwing strikes in that situation. I felt the momentum shift over to our side there."

Edwin Diaz gets job done

It was another adventure for Diaz on Friday night. Following his clunker in the series finale against the Marlins, Diaz was tasked with finishing the save against the Athletics.

With a three-run lead, Diaz walked batters and allowed some hard-hit balls, resulting in two runs. But when he needed it, Diaz got the final out and secured the first win on the road trip.

"He got the job done. That's the bottom line," Mendoza said of Diaz. "On a night where he had a hard time feeling the strike zone. He was missing, especially against the left-handed hitters. I thought the experience, he was able to calm down, continue to make pitches and got the third out and we got the W."

Diaz is a perfect 3-for-3 in save opportunities this season, but in six total appearances, he's allowed five earned runs in 5.2 innings.

Pete Alonso playing freely at the plate

Although the Siri walk and Marte double were big, it was Alonso's performance that put the Mets over the top. He not only got three hits, he hit his fourth home run of the season and drove in three runs.

When asked if there's any difference in his mechanics that has gotten him off to such a great start, the slugger put it plainly.

"Just feeling like myself pitch to pitch at-bat to at-bat," Alonso explained. "I just want to make quality swing decisions and put the ball in play hard when pitchers come over the plate."

When asked to elaborate on "feeling like myself", Alonso said it meant he could "play freely and feel like I’m in control." 

In addition to his four home runs, Alonso has driven in 18 runs while hitting .378 through the first 13 games of the season. On Friday, he had some lengthy at-bats, showcasing how well he's seeing pitches at the plate. Alonso said he prefers to not let his at-bats go that long.

"I'd rather hit it hard when I get the opportunity," he said. "I just want to make good swings on good pitches whenever they come over the plate. When they're not, just take and let it be a ball."

Mets hit two home runs, hold on for 7-6 win over Athletics

The Mets were cruising in Sacramento when the Athletics made a furious comeback late, but Pete Alonso's eight-inning home run gave New York enough juice to pull out the 7-6 victory on Friday night.

Alonso's fourth home run of the season followed three unanswered runs from the Athletics, and his three RBI were the difference in Friday's game. The Mets bullpen also collected 2.2 scoreless innings before Edwin Diaz allowed two runs in the ninth before finally closing it out.

Here are the takeaways...

-Entering Friday, there have already been 18 home runs in Sutter Health Park, and the Mets added to that total. Brandon Nimmo demolished a 92 mph fastball from lefty JP Sears that went 400 feet to give the Mets a 1-0 lead in the second.

The Mets would add on in the inning with back-to-back one-out doubles from Luisangel Acuña and Luis Torrens. Alonso added another run in the fifth with a booming double that scored Juan Soto from first. Alonso's extra-base hit chased Sears who threw 101 pitches in just 4.2 innings -- he did pick up seven strikeouts though.

-After the Mets' offense squandered some opportunities to score runs, they would finally break things open in the sixth. Jose Siri (walk), Francisco Lindor (reached on error) and Soto (walk) loaded the bases with one out before Alonso hit a sac fly to increase the Mets' lead to 4-1. Starling Marte, starting at DH, blasted a two-run double to give the road team a nice five-run cushion, one Griffin Canning would not be able to hold.

-After a 1-2-3 first inning, the Athletics would square up Griffin Canning in the second. A leadoff walk was followed by a single but Jacob Wilson swung at the first pitch and grounded into a double play. Miguel Andujar hit a sharp single into right field to score the Athletics' first run, and Gio Urshela followed with a single of his own. Max Muncy -- unrelated to the Dodgers' Max Muncy -- then hit a sharp liner toward Nimmo in left and the outfielder lept up to snag the ball before falling backward, averting potential disaster for the third out.

Brent Rooker smashed a one-out triple that missed being a home run by just a few feet in the third. Rooker was running on contact when Tyler Soderstrom hit a hard grounder to first base but Alonso quickly threw it home to get Rooker out by a large margin.

There have only been four games where a Mets starter recorded an out in the sixth inning, and Friday was the fifth but it unraveled quickly for Canning. He entered the sixth with a 6-1 lead, but the Athletics began to hit him. Shea Langeliers led off with a double before Wilson's one-out single drove in the Athletics catcher. Andujar then followed with a laster down the left-field line for a two-run homer that cut the Mets' lead to two runs.

Canning's night was done after that. He threw 86 pitches (53 strikes) across 5.1 innings allowing four runs on seven hits and four walks while striking out three batters.

-Reed Garrett was first out of the bullpen and he had trouble in the sixth. After getting a strikeout, he allowed a double and two walks to load the bases for Soderstrom. The big lefty lined a bullet (109.3 mph off the bat) on a 3-2 pitch into right field, but right at a waiting Soto to end the threat.

The rest of the Mets bullpen would steady the ship. Ryne Stanek dominated in a 1-2-3 seventh and A.J. Minter did the same for the eighth.

After a disastrous last outing, Edwin Diaz came out for the save in the ninth. The closer allowed a leadoff walk, but after Diaz got a strikeout he walked Soderstrom. Langeliers lined a double into left field to cut the Mets' lead to 7-5. A sac fly pushes across another run but got Wilson to ground out and complete the save.

-With Jeff McNeil rehabbing, Acuña's time with the Mets could be coming to an end. The young infielder did get the start against the left-handed starter and had a solid day at the dish. He finished 2-for-4 with a walk (on nine pitches) and a stolen base.

Torrens made his first appearance in a few games after being down with a strained forearm. The catcher had the big RBI double but went hitless (1-5) the rest of the way.

Mark Vientos, in an early-season slump, finished 0-for-4 with a walk and a strikeout. He was robbed of a potential hit when Soderstrom dove to smother a groundball that would have likely gone into the outfield.

Game MVP: Pete Alonso

The Mets bullpen was great, but when the momentum seemed to be shifting, Alonso's home run felt like the nail New York needed. Alonso also drove in three of the team's seven runs.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets continue their weekend series with the Athletics on Saturday afternoon. First pitch is scheduled for 4:05 p.m.

David Peterson will be on the mound for New York while the Athletics have yet to announce a starter.