Kuminga gets up shots after DNP in Warriors' OT loss vs. Clippers

Kuminga gets up shots after DNP in Warriors' OT loss vs. Clippers originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Jonathan Kuminga is doing what he can to stay in rhythm despite not leaving the bench once in the Warriors’ frustrating 124-119 overtime loss to the Los Angeles Clippers on Sunday at Chase Center. 

Following Golden State’s 2024-25 NBA regular-season finale, the four-year forward was seen taking shots in an empty Chase after recording an eyebrow-raising DNP.

The Warriors, who ended as the Western Conference’s No. 7 seed on Sunday, are hosting an NBA play-in tournament game on their home court against the Memphis Grizzlies on Tuesday.

It’s worth considering that Kuminga’s role within coach Steve Kerr’s system this season has been rocky, shifting from starter to reserve to starter and back to reserve.

Kerr, who has managed plenty of roster subplots at the helm of the Warriors this season, recently expressed his opposition to a three-player combination between Draymond Green, Jimmy Butler and Kuminga.

That said, Kerr could benefit by leveraging Kuminga’s athleticism in transition against the Grizzlies.

Ultimately, Dub Nation will have to wait to see if Kerr will utilize Kuminga – even if he’s making time to stay ready.

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McLaren’s Oscar Piastri surges to dominant victory at Bahrain F1 GP

  • George Russell finishes second; Lando Norris third
  • Ferrari’s Leclerc and Hamilton take fourth and fifth

Flawless was the assessment of Oscar Piastri’s race engineer after the Australian delivered a consummate victory at the Bahrain Grand Prix. Calm and controlled throughout, this was a champion’s drive from Piastri that has made it abundantly clear he is in contention to return the championship this season.

Tom Stallard, a 2008 Olympic rowing silver medallist for Great Britain, is Piastri’s engineer but the Australian, unflappable, barely needed so much as a gentle nudge from him all race, such was the ease with which he drove from pole to flag to take McLaren’s first victory at the Sakhir circuit.

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Blackhawks Lock In Second Best Draft Lottery Odds

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The Chicago Blackhawks earned a point in their shootout loss to the Winnipeg Jets on Saturday night. That was their 57th standings point of the season, which ranks 31st in the National Hockey League. 

The Nashville Predators currently sit in 30th with 66. Chicago only has two games left, so it is impossible to catch them. The San Jose Sharks, who currently rank 32nd with 51 points, can no longer catch Chicago now that they are up to 57. 

That means that Chicago locked itself into the second-best draft lottery odds by being the second-to-last place team in the league. They will have a 13.5% chance of winning the first overall selection. 

This upcoming draft isn't like other drafts in the sense that there isn't one guy standing out as a lock to be picked first. There is no Connor McDavid, Auston Matthews, Jack Hughes, or Connor Bedard ready to change a franchise right away. 

Instead, there is a clear-cut top four who could go in any order. That is for Chicago scouts to figure out once the results of the lottery are revealed. 

This makes it three years in a row that the Blackhawks will have top-three draft lottery odds. Of course, they selected Connor Bedard first overall in 2023 and Artyom Levshunov second overall in 2024. Here in 2025, they'd love to add another franchise pillar. 

The lottery will take place during the Stanley Cup Playoffs. The 2025 NHL Draft will start on June 27th and go through June 28th. 

Visit The Hockey News Chicago Blackhawks team site to stay updated on the latest news, game-day coverage, player features, and more.

The Masters 2025: Rory McIlroy seals career grand slam after dramatic play-off – as it happened

Rory McIlroy finally joined the career-slam pantheon after a wild rollercoaster ride around Augusta National

Nothing went right for Justin Rose yesterday. His flat stick was stone cold, he shot 75, he spent a fair proportion of the round grumbling away at his perceived bad luck. But he’s in a much chipper mood this afternoon. Sending your approach on 1 from 162 yards to eight feet, then rolling in the birdie putt tends to help with stuff like that. A little fist pump, then a giggle with his caddie, and he moves to -6. Again, like Collin Morikawa, he’s surely too far behind to have much of a chance of winning, unless both Rory McIlroy and Bryson DeChambeau do a Ken Venturi. (Jack Burke Jr came from eight back on Sunday in 1956 to win, but he needed the then-amateur Venturi to collapse to 80 to pip him by a stroke.) Still, let’s rule nothing out yet.

Quite a few experts tipped the in-form Collin Morikawa this week. It’s not quite happened for the 2020 PGA and 2021 Open champion, but he’s not been far off, coming into the final day having posted two level-par rounds of 72 sandwiching a 69. He’s surely too far off the pace to threaten today, unless the wheels come off all three of the leading trio, but he’s just followed up birdie at 2 by stroking a 25-footer across 3 for another. Im Sung-jae meanwhile birdies 2, and these lads are the first pair to make inroads near the top of the leader board.

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Peter Laviolette Is ‘Not Blind’ About Potentially Getting Fired By Rangers

James Guillory-Imagn Images

With the New York Rangers officially eliminated from playoff contention, all eyes are on Peter Laviolette to see if he gets fired. 

Laviolette is in the second year of a three-year contract with the Rangers and it’s no secret he’s on the hot seat. 

One year after leading the Rangers to win the Presidents’ Trophy and record their best record in franchise history, they missed the playoffs, which has led to some pressing questions and concerns. 

On multiple occasions, fans have chanted “Fire Lavy” as the Rangers’ struggles became increasingly apparent.

Laviolette was finally asked about his job security and gave an honest answer on where he potentially stands.

“I think everything gets looked at when a year is not good like this. I’m not blind to anything. I love being here with these guys and the New York Rangers,” Laviolette said via Mollie Walker of The New York Post. “It’s a year where everything went right to a year where things didn’t go right. When things don’t go right, I’m sure everything gets looked at. I’m not naive. That being said, this is the place I want to be was New York City, the New York Rangers. It’s a great organization, great city, great family…”

“It's just tough right now, everybody's faced with disappointment. Everybody I just mentioned is faced with disappointment today and I get that. There's always things that are looked at.”

Nothing is confirmed yet, but it appears as if the writing is on the wall for Laviolette and his time in New York. 

The word around Laviolette’s future has been kept under wraps at least for now. However, TSN’s Pierre LeBrun believes that Laviolette will ultimately be relieved of his duties. 

“I can tell you that there’s absolutely no word out of the Rangers, themselves,” LeBrun said. “Very tight-lipped about what might transpire here over the next week, or so. But in talking to other people around the League, the low-hanging fruit, the expectations from a lot of people I’ve talked to is that Peter Laviolette could get fired.

“He’s got another year on his deal, so certainly not a sure thing. But when you look at the body language and the performance of the team over the last month, again, when I’ve talked to other people around the League, that’s probably the easiest conclusion, and so, we’ll see whether or not that happens.”

The Rangers have two games remaining with so many questions still left unanswered about what the team’s future will look like.

Struggling Brandon Marsh: ‘Just feel like I'm letting my guys down'

Struggling Brandon Marsh: ‘Just feel like I'm letting my guys down' originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

ST. LOUIS – When an offense succeeds, it’s typically not because of the nine-hole hitter. When an offense struggles, it’s typically not because of the nine-hole hitter.

But when the nine-hole hitter is riding an 0-for-26 slump without many competitive at-bats, it’s hard to overlook, even if larger issues exist.

Brandon Marsh is going through it. He’s batting .108 on the season and doesn’t have a hit in the last 11 games he’s played.

The Phillies face a right-handed pitcher in three of their next four games at home against the Giants but it may be time to sit him nonetheless.

“I gotta think about that one,” manager Rob Thomson said after Sunday’s 7-0 loss. “He’s really frustrated and understandably.”

Marsh hit .292/.387/.477 against right-handed pitching in 2023. He hit .262/.342/.450 against right-handed pitching in 2024. His pathway to consistent playing time is hitting righties and he’s done so the last two years, but so far this season, he’s just 2-for-24.

Saturday was one of Marsh’s better recent games. He walked and scored a run, then later sacrificed Alec Bohm to second, making it easier for Bohm to score on a single.

Marsh is in the mode right now of trying to do anything he can to have a productive day. Sunday was another rough one. He struck out swinging in his first at-bat on a fastball well above the zone, then chased a couple of sliders to strike out his next time up. His final at-bat of the day ended on a groundout on a sinker far inside off the plate.

“Yeah, you know…” he said Sunday afternoon before taking a long pause. “It’s been a rough start to the season for sure. I’m not doing my part, which stinks the worst. Just feel like I’m letting my guys down. I need to be better for them.”

It’s not as if the Phillies have a host of other options. Johan Rojas is the other centerfielder on the roster and is off to a nice start, but on an at-bat by at-bat basis, he doesn’t offer the Phils more of a chance for offense than Marsh. Justin Crawford is in Triple A, where he started hot before cooling off a bit. If Marsh, who does have minor-league options remaining, continues to struggle, Crawford could become a possibility. But it doesn’t seem like the Phillies are quite there yet. The left-handed-hitting Crawford’s spent a grand total of two weeks at Triple A.

Marsh isn’t the only cold Phillie. Alec Bohm is 5-for-50 since the third day of the season, and though he hit the ball hard for a bulk of that time with some bad luck, he hasn’t done so the last few days.

“It’s tough to struggle but obviously, it’s the big leagues so you’ve got to pull out of it and understand you’re gonna go through ups and downs in the season,” Bryce Harper said. “But just try to stay as even-keeled as you can and always remember it’s not about the name on the back, it’s about the one on the front. We’re trying to win series and no matter what you’re doing, you’ve got to keep rolling. I don’t want to be hitting .250 right now. Just want to win every day. You’ve got to have that mindset and come in and try to win ballgames.”

Sunday’s plane ride home probably wasn’t the most fun one Marsh and Bohm have had as Phillies. They’ve both delivered for this team and been a part of plenty of rallies and big moments, but their successes and failures matter more now than ever before. They’re getting older, they’re getting more expensive, they’re getting closer to free agency and their own improvement will help determine whether an offense that was largely unchanged will be able to take the next step.

“I’ve got to do anything I can to help this ballclub win and right now I’m not doing that,” Marsh said. “So I’ve got to figure some things out.”

NBA playoff bracket set for 2025: Here all the matchups entering the postseason

NBA playoff bracket set for 2025: Here all the matchups entering the postseason originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

After a grueling regular season, it’s time to crown a champion.

The 2024-25 NBA regular season concluded on Sunday after nearly six months of non-stop action.

The upcoming playoffs will feature all of the best teams from across the league, including the defending champion Boston Celtics and 68-win Oklahoma City Thunder.

How do the seeds stack up in each conference? Who will compete in the Play-In Tournament? And what is the bracket looking like? Here’s everything to know entering the postseason:

When do the NBA playoffs start?

The 2025 NBA playoffs tip off on Saturday, April 19, with Game 1 of four first-round series’ being held.

The remaining four series will play Game 1 on Sunday, April 20.

What are the NBA playoff matchups and seeds?

The top six seeds in each conference are locked into the playoffs, which means matchups for four of the eight first-round series are set. The bottom two seeds in each conference will be determined in the Play-In Tournament.

Here are the seeds and matchups for both conferences:

EAST

  • No. 1 Cleveland Cavaliers vs. No. 7 Orlando Magic/No. 8 Atlanta Hawks/No. 9 Chicago Bulls/No. 10 Miami Heat
  • No. 2 Boston Celtics vs. No. 7 Orlando Magic/No. 8 Atlanta Hawks
  • No. 3 New York Knicks vs. No. 6 Detroit Pistons
  • No. 4 Indiana Pacers vs. No. 5 Milwaukee Bucks

WEST

Who is in the NBA Play-In Tournament?

The Play-In Tournament will feature the seventh through 10th seeds in each conference.

The No. 7 seeds will face the No. 8 seeds, with the winners moving to the first-round against the No. 2 seeds. The losers will face the winner of the No. 9 vs. No. 10 games, with the winners of those games moving on to face the No. 1 seeds. Here’s the Play-In Tournament matchups:

EAST

  • Game 1: No. 8 Atlanta Hawks at No. 7 Orlando Magic (Tuesday, April 15)
  • Game 2: No. 10 Miami Heat at No. 9 Chicago Bulls (Wednesday, April 16)
  • Game 3: Winner of Game 2 at Loser of Game 1 (Friday, April 18)

WEST

  • Game 1: No. 8 Memphis Grizzlies at No. 7 Golden State Warriors (Tuesday, April 15)
  • Game 2: No. 10 Dallas Mavericks at No. 9 Sacramento Kings (Wednesday, April 16)
  • Game 3: Winner of Game 2 at Loser of Game 1 (Friday, April 18)

How to watch the NBA playoffs and NBA Finals

The NBA playoffs will air on ESPN, ABC, TNT and NBA TV. The exact partners for each series and game are still to be determined.

For the 23rd consecutive season dating back to 2003, the NBA Finals will be broadcasted on ABC.

NBA playoff bracket set for 2025: Here all the matchups entering the postseason

NBA playoff bracket set for 2025: Here all the matchups entering the postseason originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

After a grueling regular season, it’s time to crown a champion.

The 2024-25 NBA regular season concluded on Sunday after nearly six months of non-stop action.

The upcoming playoffs will feature all of the best teams from across the league, including the defending champion Boston Celtics and 68-win Oklahoma City Thunder.

How do the seeds stack up in each conference? Who will compete in the Play-In Tournament? And what is the bracket looking like? Here’s everything to know entering the postseason:

When do the NBA playoffs start?

The 2025 NBA playoffs tip off on Saturday, April 19, with Game 1 of four first-round series’ being held.

The remaining four series will play Game 1 on Sunday, April 20.

What are the NBA playoff matchups and seeds?

The top six seeds in each conference are locked into the playoffs, which means matchups for four of the eight first-round series are set. The bottom two seeds in each conference will be determined in the Play-In Tournament.

Here are the seeds and matchups for both conferences:

EAST

  • No. 1 Cleveland Cavaliers vs. No. 7 Orlando Magic/No. 8 Atlanta Hawks/No. 9 Chicago Bulls/No. 10 Miami Heat
  • No. 2 Boston Celtics vs. No. 7 Orlando Magic/No. 8 Atlanta Hawks
  • No. 3 New York Knicks vs. No. 6 Detroit Pistons
  • No. 4 Indiana Pacers vs. No. 5 Milwaukee Bucks

WEST

Who is in the NBA Play-In Tournament?

The Play-In Tournament will feature the seventh through 10th seeds in each conference.

The No. 7 seeds will face the No. 8 seeds, with the winners moving to the first-round against the No. 2 seeds. The losers will face the winner of the No. 9 vs. No. 10 games, with the winners of those games moving on to face the No. 1 seeds. Here’s the Play-In Tournament matchups:

EAST

  • Game 1: No. 8 Atlanta Hawks at No. 7 Orlando Magic (Tuesday, April 15)
  • Game 2: No. 10 Miami Heat at No. 9 Chicago Bulls (Wednesday, April 16)
  • Game 3: Winner of Game 2 at Loser of Game 1 (Friday, April 18)

WEST

  • Game 1: No. 8 Memphis Grizzlies at No. 7 Golden State Warriors (Tuesday, April 15)
  • Game 2: No. 10 Dallas Mavericks at No. 9 Sacramento Kings (Wednesday, April 16)
  • Game 3: Winner of Game 2 at Loser of Game 1 (Friday, April 18)

How to watch the NBA playoffs and NBA Finals

The NBA playoffs will air on ESPN, ABC, TNT and NBA TV. The exact partners for each series and game are still to be determined.

For the 23rd consecutive season dating back to 2003, the NBA Finals will be broadcasted on ABC.

European football: Mbappé sees red but Real Madrid hold on against Alavés

  • Forward dismissed for reckless first-half tackle
  • Atalanta back in winning ways against Bologna

Kylian Mbappé’s reckless foul left Real Madrid with a nervy second half before they saw out a 1-0 win at relegation-threatened Alavés, who also finished the match with 10 men.

Eduardo Camavinga gave Real the lead in the 34th minute, scoring from outside the box with a brilliant curled shot, after an earlier goal by Raúl Asencio was ruled out following a video assistant referee check.

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Draymond states Warriors aren't ‘senior citizens' ahead of play-in

Draymond states Warriors aren't ‘senior citizens' ahead of play-in originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Programming Note: Tune into “Warriors Pregame Live” at 6 p.m. PT on Tuesday on NBC Sports Bay Area before the Warriors and Grizzlies tip-off. Immediately after the final buzzer, tune back in for “Warriors Postgame Live.”

Steph Curry just turned 37 years old. Draymond Green and Jimmy Butler both are 35.

But, make no mistake — the Warriors’ core stars have plenty of gas in the tank, Green maintains.

After a brutal 124-119 loss in overtime to the Los Angeles Clippers on Sunday, Golden State must earn its ticket to the NBA playoffs through the play-in tournament.

As a result, the Warriors lose out on a week of rest before the first round starts. That could have been important time off for players to heal some nagging injuries, particularly Curry.

Green was asked if Golden State will have the needed energy to make an extended playoff run — assuming it progresses through the play-in — after Sunday’s hard-fought loss to end the regular season.

“We’ll be fine,” Green responded in his postgame media availability. “[In the] playoffs, you’re not playing on back-to-backs or anything like that, so just got to get there. We’ll be all right.

“We’re not senior citizens. We’re high-level basketball players. If we had to play tomorrow, we would be all right. You train all year for this.”

Don’t worry, though. Green clarified his opinions on the elderly community.

“It’s no disrespect to the senior citizens, by the way,” Green added with a smile. “We love our senior citizens. Just throwing that out there.

“But we [aren’t] there yet, so we’ll be just fine.”

With a win Tuesday against the Memphis Grizzlies, the Warriors at least can salvage a few days off before a first-round matchup with the Houston Rockets.

Regardless, Green isn’t worried about Golden State’s ability to make a deep run.

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Two Kings players are secret to team's suddenly improved defense

Two Kings players are secret to team's suddenly improved defense originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Programming Note: Tune into “Kings Pregame Live” at 6:30 p.m. PT on Wednesday on NBC Sports California before the Kings and Mavericks tip-off. Immediately after the final buzzer, tune back in for “Kings Postgame Live.”

SACRAMENTO – There has been plenty to talk about when discussing the Kings’ 2024-25 NBA season, from the early-season firing of Mike Brown to the trade for mercurial scorer Zach LaVine or the double-doubles that Domantas Sabonis collects like stamps.

One thing that hasn’t received nearly the level of attention that it should has been the defense of Keon Ellis and Keegan Murray.

All season the two have been right up front on the battle lines of Sacramento’s defense. Ellis is a 6-foot-6 shooting guard who led the Kings with a career-high 121 steals this season, nearly 60 more than the guy who was second with 66 steals – former franchise star De’Aaron Fox.

Ellis also set a career high with 63 blocks, second on the Kings only to Murray, who swatted away 69 opponent shots.

“That’s kind of my role out there and what I’m out there to do,” Ellis said after the Kings’ win over the Phoenix Suns on Sunday at Golden 1 Center. “Definitely glad that I can perform at that level on that end. Good to see all the preparation or the way that I think about the defensive end is working out.”

Murray, Sacramento’s 6-foot-8 power forward, hasn’t met a matchup yet that he’s incapable of handling. When he’s not matched up against players near his size, Murray frequently can be seen trying to body up and muscle his way against opposing centers who often have a 4- or 5-inch height advantage.

As a team, the Kings have had a fairly mediocre defense, although it has been trending upward lately.

Sacramento owns a 115.3 defensive rating for the season, 22nd in the NBA. Over the last two weeks, however, the Kings have been playing with a top-10 defense.

Most of that improvement is a result of how well the two K’s – Keon and Keegan – have been playing as stoppers.

In turn, that has made it easier at times for interim coach Doug Christie to get his message through.

“What I’m trying to get across is there’s fun in defense, and that’s a hard thing,” Christie said. “When I think of Keon and think of Keegan, I’m going to continue to say it: I think they’re all-league defenders. But then you add Jake [LaRavia] and [rookie Devin Carter] to that, now you have one, two, three defenders on the floor and people feel the gravity, they feel the physicality.

“Keegan and Keon set the tone for that.”

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Lineup lifeless, Wheeler off his game to end Phillies' rough road trip

Lineup lifeless, Wheeler off his game to end Phillies' rough road trip originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

ST. LOUIS — The Phillies had their ace on the mound in search of a series win that would have sent them back home with a .500 road trip, but the lineup was lifeless again and Zack Wheeler’s command was off in the middle innings of a 7-0 loss.

Four of the first 11 Phillies who came to the plate reached base Sunday afternoon against left-hander Matthew Liberatore. Bryce Harper’s third-inning single was their final baserunner of the game, though, with 20 in a row retired to end it.

The Phillies scored just six runs in the final four games of their road trip to Atlanta and St. Louis. They lost both series, going 2-4. They’ve been shut out twice in their last three games and were held without an extra-base hit both times. Series in Atlanta are always tough no matter how the Braves are playing, but the Phillies are much better than the Cardinals team that beat them two out of three this weekend, especially offensively.

“The guy threw the ball well but as an offense, we have to be better,” Harper said. “We had some opportunities to hit some pitches over the zone and it just didn’t happen.

“We’ve got to be better, we’ll find our way. Our eyeballs have been good lately but you’ve got to also hit with guys on base and in scoring position.”

Kyle Schwarber has been hot through much of these first 2½ weeks, Edmundo Sosa has had big moments and Harper has reached base at a near-.400 clip, but the Phillies haven’t yet had a stretch where several hitters are firing at the same time. Trea Turner is hitting .240 with a .661 OPS; J.T. Realmuto’s at .238 and .629.

A few others are ice cold, most notably Brandon Marsh and Alec Bohm, who are 0-for-26 and 5-for-45 since the Phillies left D.C. on March 30.

“It’s tough to struggle but obviously, it’s the big leagues so you’ve got to pull out of it and understand you’re gonna go through ups and downs in the season,” Harper said. “But just try to stay as even-keeled as you can and always remember it’s not about the name on the back, it’s about the one on the front. We’re trying to win series and no matter what you’re doing, you’ve got to keep rolling. I don’t want to be hitting .250 right now. Just want to win every day. You’ve got to have that mindset and come in and try to win ballgames.”

It’s only mid-April and the Phillies’ offense is much better than this. It’s hard to ignore, though, given the way the last two Octobers ended, with their streaky lineup struggling top to bottom. Every shutout, every down offensive stretch is a reminder of the offense’s floor, of how quickly hot can turn to cold.

It was a long week for the Phillies. They played through a 2-hour, 45-minute rain delay on Thursday night in Atlanta and got to the team hotel around 4 a.m. Friday. They were shut out Friday night, they controlled Saturday’s win from start to finish and were shut out again Sunday.

“Oof,” manager Rob Thomson said. “We had a chance in the third inning there but then we didn’t swing it after that. We’ve got to get home, get some energy, get this team starting to hit this ball in the middle of the diamond again and we’ll be all right.

“There’s some little things we didn’t do well today. We didn’t execute a bunt play (on defense). It looked like some of the outfielders were having a little trouble seeing the ball off the bat. There’s some things we need to clean it up and get back to playing our game.”

Without any run support, it wouldn’t have mattered if Wheeler pitched a gem, but he’s been uncharacteristically off these last two starts. His velocity was down in Atlanta and back up in St. Louis, but both times the command was below his standard. Willson Contreras started the scoring with a two-run homer in the fourth inning on a middle-in fastball Wheeler intended to throw outside. He allowed three doubles in a two-run sixth inning, missing over the middle on two of them.

“Command just wasn’t really there today and hasn’t been for a couple of games now,” Wheeler said. “Just gotta dig into that a little bit and figure out what’s going. I don’t think it’s anything crazy but velo’s down and the command’s off a little bit so got to fix that.”

Wheeler did hit 97 mph on Sunday and he averaged 95.4 mph with his four-seamer, the same velocity as last season. The bigger issue seems to be command. Some of his fastballs have been backing up over the plate and he wants to figure out why.

“Maybe, yeah,” he said when asked if he’s experienced this in consecutive starts at any point the last few years, “but the velo was there and that also helps get some swings-and-misses and maybe not so many barrels. You can get away with a little bit more when you have more velo. Just kinda the combo of that hurt me a little bit today.”

Even with Wheeler carrying a 4.07 ERA through four starts, the Phillies’ rotation has still been their main strength 15 games in. Jesus Luzardo has been effective all three times. Cristopher Sanchez induced five double plays on Saturday and has a 3.12 ERA. Taijuan Walker hasn’t allowed a run in his first two starts. Sunday’s game was the first one they’ve been truly out of thus far.

“I think at the beginning of the season we all knew the starting pitching was going to be a strength for us,” Harper said. “Obviously, our offense needs to be a strength too because if you don’t score runs, you’re not gonna win games.”

Thomson didn’t think fatigue played a role in Friday’s loss after the marathon rain delay and extra innings the night before, but he acknowledged it after the series finale.

“I felt it today,” he said. “I didn’t feel it the first day or the second day but I felt it a little bit today, they were kinda dragging a little bit. We’ve got to get home, get a good night’s sleep and get back after it tomorrow.”

Newcastle 4-1 Manchester United: Premier League – as it happened

Harvey Barnes’ double set up a convincing win and moved Newcastle up to fourth in the Premier League

Hey Jude rings out around St James’ Park. KEEGAN, says a tifo in the stands. “He saved us in 82,” adds a banner, “he entertained us in 92.”

In a dramatic development, I have received an email. “G’Day Tim,” says Chris Paraskevas. “Hope you’re well!” I am, thanks, hope you are too. “And seriously, sending best wishes to Toon Legend® Eddie Howe, who also seems like a top bloke!

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