‘He’s mad for it’: Northampton’s Henry Pollock back in Dublin after rise to Lions contender

A year ago he was with the fans: now he’s an England player before Saints’ Champions Cup semi against Leinster

Henry Pollock is bouncing around the south stand at Franklin’s Gardens. He is in demand at Northampton’s media session and in between interviews he seems most preoccupied with reminding his teammate Tommy Freeman who won their latest battle on the golf course. As has been clear since his emergence, Pollock has no problem with the spotlight.

His restless energy is not confined to the pitch but soon he sits down for a chat, ostensibly to preview Northampton’s Champions Cup semi-final against Leinster on Saturday, but essentially to discuss Pollock-mania. How and why it has taken hold and whether at any stage in the 20-year-old’s fledgling career he has experienced a shred of self-doubt.

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Telling Brunson stat hints at blueprint for Celtics beating Knicks

Telling Brunson stat hints at blueprint for Celtics beating Knicks originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Jalen Brunson is the head of the snake for the New York Knicks.

A two-time All-Star and the reigning NBA Clutch Player of the Year, Brunson led the Knicks in scoring (26.0 points per game) and assists (7.3 per game) this season while taking more than 20 percent of their shots. He poured in 31.5 points per game in New York’s first-round playoff series against the Detroit Pistons, including the dagger 3-pointer in Game 6 on Thursday that punched the Knicks’ ticket to the second round.

So naturally, the Celtics’ No. 1 priority in their Round 2 playoff matchup with the Knicks should be keeping Brunson in check.

Or so you’d think. But there’s some compelling evidence to the contrary.

Consider this: Brunson played 65 games this season and was held to 20 points or fewer in 17 of them. The Knicks went 14-3 in those games. When Brunson scored 21 or more, New York was a pedestrian 26-22. So, the fewer points Brunson scored, the better the Knicks’ were chances of winning.

Some context is required: A few of those 14 wins were blowouts in which Brunson rested down the stretch. But he played 30-plus minutes in 13 of his 17 games with 20 points or fewer, suggesting that this was a real pattern for the Knicks and their star player.

The Celtics should hardly be surprised, of course; Brunson scored at least 22 points in all four regular-season matchups vs. Boston and lost all four times. His “best” game against the C’s (36 points) came in New York’s most lopsided loss, a 131-104 Celtics rout on Feb. 8.

What Joe Mazzulla and Co. may have known — and what they’ll try to replicate in this series — is that an essential key to beating the Knicks is shutting down their role players.

Of the five Knicks outside Brunson who averaged 25 minutes or more per game this season, nearly all have the expected correlation of more points leading to more wins. For example, New York was 21-8 when OG Anunoby scored 21 points or more, and just 16-17 when he was held to 15 points or fewer.

The Knicks won 85 percent of their games (22-4) when Mikal Bridges contributed 21 or more points, and 73 percent of their games (8-3) when Miles McBride crossed the 15-point threshold.

While the correlation was less strong with Karl-Anthony Towns — 34-17 record when Towns scored 21 or more; 12-9 when he scored 20 or fewer — the Celtics got a first-hand look at how the Knicks big man can impact a game.

Two of Towns’ worst scoring performances of the season came in New York’s two biggest losses to Boston (nine points in the 27-point loss and 12 points in a 132-109 defeat on Opening Night), while Towns’ best effort against the C’s (34 points) came in the one game the Knicks kept close, an overtime loss on April 8.

The Celtics obviously can’t let Brunson run wild in this series; just ask the Pistons. But the bigger concern for Boston when the second-round matchup begins Monday at TD Garden should be preventing scoring outbursts from Brunson’s supporting cast.

ICYMI in Mets Land: Edwin Diaz's lack of usage; sixth starter needed again

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


MLB Wealth Transfer Drives Fierce NL West Competition

SAN DIEGO – The transfer of playing wealth from the American League East to the National League West is palpable, says veteran San Diego Padres outfielder Jason Heyward, who offered an acute analysis of the issue.

An argument can be made that the NL West, with its investment this season of $1.25 billion in players and MLB-best four teams with a winning record entering Friday, is the best division in the sport.

“That’s fair,” Heyward said Tuesday night after his return from the injured list amid left knee soreness in the Padres’ 7-4 victory over the division rival San Francisco Giants at jam-packed Petco Park. “From the amount of money spent investing in the teams to the amount of guys who’ve played in postseason baseball, it’s pretty top heavy.”

The reigning champion Los Angeles Dodgers lead the league with $400.5 million invested in players for luxury tax purposes, but even the 6-25 Colorado Rockies have spent a 21st-in-MLB $145 million. The Padres, Giants and Arizona Diamondbacks have collectively spent $703.2 million trying to keep up with the Dodgers.

It’s created a highly competitive environment with the Dodgers, Padres and Giants each already having at least 19 wins.

“It’s probably the strongest I’ve seen this division in a while,” said Giants starter Robbie Ray, who also has pitched for the D-backs.

To Heyward’s point, the Padres have Manny Machado from the Baltimore Orioles, Nick Pivetta and Xander Bogaerts from the Boston Red Sox and Michael King from the New York Yankees. The Dodgers have Mookie Betts from the Red Sox. The D-backs have Corbin Burnes from the Orioles. The Giants have Willy Adames, who played for Tampa Bay’s 2020 World Series participants.

That’s a transfer of $1.45 billion from the AL East to the NL West in long-term financial obligations via either trades or free-agent signings. And that’s just a sampling. 

“It’s having seasoned vets mixing in with some up-and-coming young guys,” said Heyward, who played for the Chicago Cubs in 2016 when they won the World Series for the first time in 108 years. “That’s the route you have to take. It’s about the character you build on the club, too.”

The AL East is still highly competitive, make no mistake about it, with the Yankees leading the AL in spending at $312.1 million, third in MLB behind the Dodgers and crosstown Mets, the latter of which is at $329.8 million.

Toronto ($267.5 million) and Boston ($247.7 million) are not that far behind the Yanks, with the division as a whole spending a total of $1.1 billion. Tampa Bay is 29th in baseball at $102.9 million.

“You have to spend money to make money,” Heyward said, noting that the seven highest spending teams across the NL West and AL East are among MLB’s top teams thus far this season in attendance and are all highly competitive.

The Padres, who opened 12-0 at home and are 14-4 there after sweeping the Giants in a two-game series, have sold out 15 of their first 18 games at Petco. They drew 47,345 on Tuesday for the umpteenth Tony Gwynn bobblehead night—the gift that keeps on giving—the second-largest crowd in the history of a ballpark that opened in 2004 but has yet to host a World Series game.

It was the first time all season either the Giants or Padres had played one of their top division rivals as April turned into May.

“It’s crazy,” Bob Melvin, in his second season managing the Giants, said. “Usually, the first month of the season there’s a ton of divisional stuff. It’s weird, but it is what it is. The Padres are a good team off to a great start.”

San Diego has been to the World Series twice since expanding into the NL in 1969, but it lost on both occasions—to the Detroit Tigers in 1984 and the Yankees in 1998. The franchise is 1-8 in Fall Classic competition, with all the home games having been played in its original facility—Jack Murphy/Qualcomm Stadium, a multi-purpose edifice in Mission Valley.

This is the fourth season since the Seidler family began pouring money into the team. With the investment into star players and the goal of winning it all, Padres fans have bought in. And despite chaos in ownership since Peter Seidler died after the 2023 season, the spending continues.

Home attendance has risen from 2.1 million in 2017 to a club-record 3.3 million last season when revenue was $448 million, according to Sportico’s MLB valuations. The Padres’ total value is $2.31 million, way up from the $800 million the Seidlers paid John Moores when they purchased the club in 2012.

After missing the playoffs 13 years in a row, the Padres have been to the expanded postseason three times in the past five years. Petco Park has become a destination ballpark.

Melvin, surveying it from the third base side visitor’s dugout pregame on Tuesday night, said, “it’s San Diego, you can’t get any better than this.”

Melvin managed the Padres for two seasons in 2022 and 2023 before moving on to the re-tooling Giants. His 2022 club suffered a five-game NL Championship Series loss to the Philadelphia Phillies, as deep as the Padres have gone in the playoffs since the 1998 World Series.

The current club is replete with players that have either won or gone to the Fall Classic elsewhere—Bogaerts, Machado, Heyward and Yu Darvish. 

“Their body of work speaks for itself,” current manager Mike Shildt said after the Wednesday win. “But we don’t take anything for granted. We know who we are and how we play. This game is challenging.”

The overall challenge will be surviving the NL West.

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SEE IT: NYC back pages react to Jalen Brunson's game-winner in Knicks' clincher over Pistons

With Game 6 against the Pistons tied and just under five seconds remaining in the fourth quarter, Knicks star Jalen Brunson drilled a three-pointer that lifted New York to victory.

Here's how the New York City back pages reacted...

Gregg Popovich done coaching Spurs, will transition to team's front office

Gregg Popovich done coaching Spurs, will transition to team's front office originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

It’s the end of a legendary era in San Antonio.

Basketball Hall of Famer Gregg Popovich will no longer be the head coach of the Spurs and is transitioning into the role as president of basketball operations, he and the team announced on Friday. The Spurs officially named assistant coach Mitch Johnson as their new head coach soon after.

Popovich, 76, has been with the Spurs since 1994 and served as head coach since the 1996-97 season. He is the NBA’s all-time winningest coach with 1,422 regular season victories to go along with five NBA championships, three NBA Coach of the Year awards and a gold medal from the Tokyo Olympics in 2021.

“While my love and passion for the game remain, I’ve decided it’s time to step away as head coach,” Popovich said in a statement released by the team. “I’m forever grateful to the wonderful players, coaches, staff and fans who allowed me to serve them as the Spurs head coach and am excited for the opportunity to continue to support the organization, community and city that are so meaningful to me.”

Popovich suffered a mild stroke in November, and the team announced in February that he would not be returning to the sidelines the rest of the season. Johnson filled in as interim coach, guiding the Spurs to a 34-48 record and missing the playoffs.

Popovich spent nearly 35 years in all with the Spurs. He was an assistant coach from 1988-92 and returned to the team as its executive vice president for basketball operations and general manager in May 1994. He fired head coach Bob Hill in December 1996 and named himself head coach, holding the role until Friday’s announcement.

During the 2023 offseason, Popovich signed a five-year extension with the team to remain head coach and team president. That announcement came weeks after the team selected French phenom Victor Wembanyama with the first pick in the NBA draft.

“Coach Pop’s extraordinary impact on our family, San Antonio, the Spurs and the game of basketball is profound,” Spurs managing partner Peter J. Holt said. “His accolades and awards don’t do justice to the impact he has had on so many people. He is truly one-of-one as a person, leader and coach. Our entire family, alongside fans from across the globe, are grateful for his remarkable 29-year run as the head coach of the San Antonio Spurs.”

Johnson has been a Spurs assistant coach for the last six seasons after joining Popovich’s staff in 2019. He served as the Spurs’ acting head coach for the final 77 games of the 2024-25 season and was officially named Popovich’s successor.

“I am truly grateful and honored to receive this incredible opportunity,” said Johnson. “I am thankful for Coach Pop, RC (Buford), Brian (Wright) and Peter trusting me to carry on our culture and I promise to give this responsibility everything I have to make Spurs fans proud.”

The Spurs have young core featuring the NBA’s last two Rookie of the Year winners in Wembanyama and Stephon Castle. The team added point guard De’Aaron Fox in a February trade and enters the 2025 NBA Draft Lottery with the eighth-best odds (6.0%) at landing the No. 1 pick and a chance to select Duke star Cooper Flagg.

Gregg Popovich done coaching Spurs, will transition to team's front office

Gregg Popovich done coaching Spurs, will transition to team's front office originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

It’s the end of a legendary era in San Antonio.

Basketball Hall of Famer Gregg Popovich will no longer be the head coach of the Spurs and is transitioning into the role as president of basketball operations, he and the team announced on Friday. The Spurs officially named assistant coach Mitch Johnson as their new head coach soon after.

Popovich, 76, has been with the Spurs since 1994 and served as head coach since the 1996-97 season. He is the NBA’s all-time winningest coach with 1,422 regular season victories to go along with five NBA championships, three NBA Coach of the Year awards and a gold medal from the Tokyo Olympics in 2021.

“While my love and passion for the game remain, I’ve decided it’s time to step away as head coach,” Popovich said in a statement released by the team. “I’m forever grateful to the wonderful players, coaches, staff and fans who allowed me to serve them as the Spurs head coach and am excited for the opportunity to continue to support the organization, community and city that are so meaningful to me.”

Popovich suffered a mild stroke in November, and the team announced in February that he would not be returning to the sidelines the rest of the season. Johnson filled in as interim coach, guiding the Spurs to a 34-48 record and missing the playoffs.

Popovich spent nearly 35 years in all with the Spurs. He was an assistant coach from 1988-92 and returned to the team as its executive vice president for basketball operations and general manager in May 1994. He fired head coach Bob Hill in December 1996 and named himself head coach, holding the role until Friday’s announcement.

During the 2023 offseason, Popovich signed a five-year extension with the team to remain head coach and team president. That announcement came weeks after the team selected French phenom Victor Wembanyama with the first pick in the NBA draft.

“Coach Pop’s extraordinary impact on our family, San Antonio, the Spurs and the game of basketball is profound,” Spurs managing partner Peter J. Holt said. “His accolades and awards don’t do justice to the impact he has had on so many people. He is truly one-of-one as a person, leader and coach. Our entire family, alongside fans from across the globe, are grateful for his remarkable 29-year run as the head coach of the San Antonio Spurs.”

Johnson has been a Spurs assistant coach for the last six seasons after joining Popovich’s staff in 2019. He served as the Spurs’ acting head coach for the final 77 games of the 2024-25 season and was officially named Popovich’s successor.

“I am truly grateful and honored to receive this incredible opportunity,” said Johnson. “I am thankful for Coach Pop, RC (Buford), Brian (Wright) and Peter trusting me to carry on our culture and I promise to give this responsibility everything I have to make Spurs fans proud.”

The Spurs have young core featuring the NBA’s last two Rookie of the Year winners in Wembanyama and Stephon Castle. The team added point guard De’Aaron Fox in a February trade and enters the 2025 NBA Draft Lottery with the eighth-best odds (6.0%) at landing the No. 1 pick and a chance to select Duke star Cooper Flagg.

Former Avalanche Defender New Coaching Candidate

Adam Foote (Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images)

When your team doesn’t perform, firing the coach is typically the first move in a GM’s arsenal.

And the offseason is the next best time to fire off your underperforming coach into the sun.

Luckily, the Colorado Avalanche have a Stanley Cup-winning coach at the helm. Jared Bednar isn’t going anywhere, but someone who once played for the Avalanche (who now coaches) is on the move.

Bookmark The Hockey News Colorado Avalanche team site so you never miss the latest newsgame day coverage, and information on the Avalanche players.

And they are a dark horse option for several head coach openings.

Adam Foote served on Rick Tocchet’s coaching staff with the Vancouver Canucks. He served in that position for two years and change.

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With Tocchet moving on from the Canucks, Foote’s future is not being called into question. According to a Daily Faceoff report, Foote is being considered for multiple head coaching vacancies and is expected to interview for a few.

Before then, Foote spent one year as the head coach of the WHL’s Kelowna Rockets. He posted a 29-28-6 record that year in 2019-20.

Foote had a long playing career as a hard-nosed defender. He spent the majority of his 20-year career with the Avalanche. He played nearly three years wit the Columbus Blue Jackets as well. 

He played 1154 games and recorded 1534 penalty minutes over his career. Foote won two Stanley Cups as a player.

It’s a long offseason but long-time Avalanche fans will be keeping their eyes and ears peeled on where Foote goes.

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Warriors' Game 6 approach vs. Rockets simple: Feed Steph and Jimmy

Warriors' Game 6 approach vs. Rockets simple: Feed Steph and Jimmy originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The subjects were Stephen Curry and Jimmy Butler III, and the question was directed to Warriors coach Steve Kerr.

How do you feel about possessions when Steph and Jimmy are both on the floor and neither one of them touches the ball?

Kerr did not skip a beat, his reply coming a fraction of a second after I closed my mouth.

“I’m not a big fan of that,” Kerr said Thursday afternoon.

As the Warriors prepare for Game 6 of their playoff series against the Houston Rockets on Friday night, this was Kerr’s message for everyone on the roster not named Curry or Butler: Feed them.

Give Curry another opportunity to prove his right thumb doesn’t fear the worst intentions of Dillon Brooks and Amen Thompson. Give Butler chances to outsmart Houston defenders or send them to the bench with foul trouble.

In each of the first five games, three of which the Warriors won, there have been several possessions during which the ball never reaches the team’s primary offensive engines. With the Rockets effectively taming Draymond Green’s playmaking, the task falls to others, with Brandin Podziemski first in line.

Though Kerr trusts Podziemski, the coach does not want the team’s fate dictated by a postseason rookie. Not when he’s sharing the court with two of the most dynamic playoff performers in the NBA.

The second-year guard lacks Green’s devotion to giving Curry and Butler opportunities to make a play for themselves or a teammate. Podziemski continues to fight a tendency to overdribble, which eats into the shot clock and relegates Curry and Butler to spectators.

Podziemski has gotten better at recognizing this oversight but still lapses into possessions in which the ball stays with him and ends with him taking the shot.

Kerr is “not a big fan” of zero-pass possessions – unless it’s Curry dipping into his wizardry warehouse. That’s allowed because, well, there is a history of success. Butler’s pass-first mentality guides his decisions, so his forays into paint often represent his last, and maybe best, option to score. He has a gift for navigating his way to the foul line.

Everyone not named Curry or Butler is there to benefit from their presence. Golden State’s offense is designed with those two as the primary impact players. The offense in these playoffs will go as far as they take it.

“I prefer when each one touches the ball, or at least one of them,” Kerr said. “There were several possessions like that. And it’s something that we’ve talked about all season. We have to play off Steph because of the attention he draws. And then once we got Jimmy, that became a part of the mantra as well. Get the ball to Jimmy.

“So, we’ll do a better job of that (Friday) night.”

Though Golden State’s defense is its surest path to winning Game 6 and advancing to the Western Conference semifinals, the offense must find ways to produce against a very good defense making smart use of zones. That, Kerr said, was part of the conversation during the team’s Friday afternoon walk-through.

It’s reasonable to expect more sets designed to give Draymond more opportunities with the ball. To exploit his chemistry with Curry. Or to get the ball to Butler and give him room to maneuver.

“We can definitely get Draymond into spots to help his playmaking,” Kerr said. “And it’s something that we’ve talked a lot about. We’ve walked through a couple things today to get him in spots where he can create a little bit like he normally does. We’ve got to do a better job of it.”

More Draymond with the ball – and less Podz – is a reasonable approach, particularly since Podziemski’s scoring has been more rewarding than his decision-making in this series.

Both teams have made game-by-game adjustments, but it’s imperative that the Warriors find some semblance of offensive flow. The Rockets, long and athletic, have made it difficult. The Warriors are averaging 24 assists per game, well below their regular-season average of 29.1.

The priorities are clear for the Warriors, who are desperate to avoid the danger that would come with making another trip to Houston for Game 7. Limit their live-ball turnovers, keep the Rockets’ offense in the halfcourt as much as possible and make an early statement against an opponent that thrives when generating momentum.

And, yes, remember the importance of riding the offensive production – scoring and playmaking – of Curry and Butler.

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Brilliant Zhao Xintong beats O’Sullivan with session to spare to reach final

  • Chinese sensation wins 17-7 after breathtaking display
  • Williams hits back to level at 8-8 with Trump

Zhao Xintong produced an amazing display of attacking snooker to knock out his hero, the seven-time world champion Ronnie O’Sullivan, with a session to spare and reach the final. O’Sullivan was left helpless to respond to the brilliance of the Chinese sensation who had come through four rounds of qualifying to reach the final stages at the Crucible.

Zhao said: “I can’t believe it. Thank you to Ronnie, he helped me a lot before. He’s my idol.”

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Former Hurricanes Star Has Big Playoff Game

Martin Necas (© James Guillory-Imagn Images)

Since being traded to the Colorado Avalanche in January, former Carolina Hurricanes forward Martin Necas has undoubtedly had plenty of success. In 30 regular-season games following the trade, the 26-year-old forward recorded 11 goals, 28 points, and a plus-1 rating in 30 games. Now, he is only continuing to make a big impact during the post-season.

In a win-or-go-home Game 6 for the Avalanche, Necas delivered in a big way for the Central Division club. The former Hurricanes star had a big night for the Avalanche, as he scored a goal and recorded an assist in Colorado's 7-4 win over the Dallas Stars. With this, the Avalanche have now forced a Game 7 and will look to defeat the Stars in it from here.

For his assist, Necas made a nice pass to Avalanche defenseman Cale Makar. From there, Makar one-timed Necas' feed, and Avalanche forward Artturi Lehkonen put home the superstar blueliner's rebound.

As for his goal, Necas received a perfect feed in front of the net from Makar and one-timed it past Stars goaltender Jake Oettinger. This goal gave the Avalanche a 3-2 lead in the second period.

With this impressive performance from Necas, he now has one goal and four points in his last two games alone for the Avalanche. The Canes' 2017 first-round pick is certainly heating up, and it is coming at the perfect time for Colorado. It will be interesting to see how he builds off it in Game 7 from here.

Recent Hurricanes News

Hurricanes Surging Forward Is Continuing To ImpressHurricanes Surging Forward Is Continuing To ImpressThe Carolina Hurricanes had an excellent first-round series against the New Jersey Devils. The Hurricanes knocked the Devils out in just five games and are now set to face off against the Washington Capitals in the second round because of it.  Hurricanes' Rod Brind'Amour Makes NHL HistoryHurricanes' Rod Brind'Amour Makes NHL HistoryWith their 5-4 double overtime win over the New Jersey Devils on April 29, the Carolina Hurricanes have officially moved on to the second round. The Hurricanes are now set to face off against the Washington Capitals in the next round, which should be a great series between the two Metropolitan Division rivals. Carolina Hurricanes Recall 3 Players From AHLCarolina Hurricanes Recall 3 Players From AHLThe Carolina Hurricanes officially advanced to the second round with their 5-4 double overtime win over the New Jersey Devils in Game 5. Now, they have made some roster moves in preparation for the second round.  Hurricanes Hit Home Run With Taylor Hall ExtensionHurricanes Hit Home Run With Taylor Hall ExtensionThe Carolina Hurricanes made a major move on April 30, signing forward Taylor Hall to a three-year, $9.5 million contract extension. This news was announced shortly after the Hurricanes knocked out the New Jersey Devils in the first round of the post-season. 

'It Was F—–g Unbelievable': Senators Reflect On The Support After First Playoff Round Since 2017

Thomas Chabot and Auston Matthews (Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images)

The Ottawa Senators finished their season on home ice in front of 19,007 people in attendance.

That number wasn't all Sens fans, with the blue and white jerseys of their rival visible in parts of the crowd. But the team's prioritization of season ticket holders and newsletter followers in its ticket sales seems to have paid off.

Although the Senators couldn't come back from 3-0 down in their first-round series to force a potentially historic Game 7 against the Toronto Maple Leafs, the Sens crowd gave a standing ovation and chanted "Go Sens Go" after the game for a team with lots to look forward to.

The fans also chanted "Brady, Brady, Brady" in honor of Ottawa's captain, Brady Tkachuk, who scored his fourth goal of the series Thursday night to cut the Leafs' lead to 2-1. David Perron tied the game in the third period before Leafs left winger Max Pacioretty retook the lead in an eventual 4-2 Toronto victory.

Tkachuk led the Senators in scoring in the series with seven points, one for every season the team missed the playoffs as it went through a full rebuild and worked its way back up with a new core.

The 25-year-old captain remarked on the crowd's support at the end of the game and over the years.

"It's been a long eight years for them, and to experience it, honestly, I don't really realize the impact that it's made on me and this team," Tkachuk told reporters in the dressing room post-game. "Just really want to do it for them. They were absolutely amazing, and I know it sucks right now, but I really can't wait for what the future holds."

Tkachuk was Ottawa's first player drafted when the rebuild unofficially began. Only two players have been with the organization for longer, including defenseman Thomas Chabot, who was drafted 18th overall in 2015.

While Chabot played his first NHL game in 2016-17, he did not play in the Senators' run to the Eastern Conference final that campaign. This year was his first time on the ice experiencing Stanley Cup playoff hockey.

"It was f-----g unbelievable, to be honest," Chabot told reporters. "The fans, everybody, the city, everyone. Get off the plane the other night from the airport, there's about 30, 40 people there waiting at whatever on a Tuesday night at 1 a.m. You don't get that anywhere else. 

"We have said it all along, even in the tough years, we do have the best fans in the league, I believe. They've been there all eight years that I've been... I think that's what hurts the most right now is we thought for sure coming back home, we were going to pull it off for them."

Brady Tkachuk (Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images)

The Senators drafted seven players in between their playoff appearances who played for them against the Maple Leafs this post-season. They include Tim Stutzle (five points in the round), Jake Sanderson (overtime-winner in Game 4), Shane Pinto (shorthanded breakaway goal in Game 5) and Drake Batherson (scored the Senators' first playoff goal since May 2017). 

Ottawa also made trades and free agent signings to strengthen the squad as it looked to take the next step. On came Claude Giroux, Linus Ullmark, David Perron, Dylan Cozens and more.

"I'm really happy with the way that we have taken strides to become a better, a more stable team, that's going – hopefully, for a long time going to always be up there and battle for the playoffs and the Stanley Cup," goaltender Ullmark said to reporters.

Toronto nearly swept the Senators in the Battle of Ontario, but Ottawa won Game 4 at home and Game 5 in enemy territory to raise questions about whether the Leafs could finish the job. The Senators could have become the 11th team in NHL history to tie a series 3-3 after trailing 3-0. The stat that the Leafs have been 1-13 in closeout games since 2018 circulated all week long.

The Leafs are now 2-13 in closeout games during that span. The top seed in the Atlantic Division will now face the defending Cup champions, the Florida Panthers

That matchup should remind everyone how challenging the Atlantic Division can be. The Panthers and Tampa Bay Lightning have won the Stanley Cup a combined three times in five years. The Leafs have the longest active playoff streak. The rebuilding Montreal Canadiens even made the playoffs. The Boston Bruins earned a record-breaking 135 points in 2022-23 and only dropped out of the playoff race this year, opening a spot for Ottawa to take.

That means for the team and its fan base to see more progress and playoff hockey, there's still much work to do.

"Crazy thing is, it's not going to get easier – next year is going to get harder to get back in the same position," Perron said to the media. "If we asked the team over there, that's what they would tell you. You make one step, and then the next step is a little bit even harder to win one round, win two rounds, all that. But I'm proud of these guys, the way we worked all year to get better and put ourselves in this situation."

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Sam Cook selected for England Test squad as injured Chris Woakes misses out

  • Essex bowler, 27, gets first call-up for Trent Bridge Test
  • Four-day game against Zimbabwe starts on 22 May

Sam Cook has been selected for England’s one-off Test against Zimbabwe later this month – reward not only for his excellence in the County Championship but also a commendable, unwavering desire to play the longest format.

Aged 27 and having taken a truckload of wickets for Essex at just 18 runs apiece, Cook could have been forgiven for wondering if the call would ever come. During the most recent winter, with six-figure offers from three different franchise tournaments, he could also have been forgiven for putting his bank balance first.

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NBA’s National TV Rights Rise Forces RSN Playoff Demise

If the NBA’s ownership class remains justifiably delighted about the league’s new $76 billionrights package, that’s not to say that sacrifices weren’t made in order to secure what amounts to a compound annual growth rate of 8% and an 11-year stretch of guaranteed stability. As New York Knicks owner James Dolan memorably groused last summer in a memo to the NBA’s board of governors, the terms of the new national media deal threaten to make a hash of the legacy RSN model.

In adding a second broadcast partner and thereby increasing the volume of regular-season games that will air nationally—with NBC set to suit up for the first time since 2002, the number of over-the-air NBA games will increase from 20 this season to approximately 75 in 2025-26—the league has had to pull a corresponding chunk of inventory from the RSNs.

As Dolan wrote last summer, “The increased number of exclusive and non-exclusive games means that national partners would have the ability to air nearly half of the regular season and all postseason games.” The owner went on to predict that the subsequent “reduction in available games for RSNs risks rendering the entire RSN model unviable.”

Dolan’s discomfiture is understandable, as cord-cutting was already doing a number on the legacy RSN model well before the NBA began beefing up its national TV slate at the expense of the local sports channels. Between 2019 and 2024, the RSNs formerly housed under the Diamond Sports Group banner lost as many as 25 million subscribers, and with an annual churn rate of 12%, the traditional cable/satellite/telco-TV bundle is shrinking like a salted slug.

For all that, the volume of regular-season games that will be lost to the national media partners starting next year isn’t expected to be unmanageably disruptive. “Once the schedules are released, we expect that the average team will lose about three games, which is hardly debilitating,” Playfly Sports CEO Craig Sloan said during a recent Zoom call. (Playfly sells NBA, MLB and NHL ad inventory across the RSNs.) “Some teams will have zero disruption, and others will have a bit more, but they should on average be about three per club, is our understanding.”

Sloan credited Adam Silver for his judicious approach to kicking inventory upstairs, saying that the NBA commissioner “managed to manufacture that without having to degrade any significant value from the local media side.” More to the point, the reduction in the number of games carried in the home markets isn’t expected to be sufficient to trigger any complaints from pay-TV operators, which are guaranteed a set number of games under the terms of their various carriage deals.

Nor are fans likely to notice the reduction of in-market offerings, although your milage may vary depending on which team you root for. Big-market RSNs linked to high-value franchises will be more susceptible to losing games than low-profile clubs based in second- and third-tier DMAs.

Where the RSNs can expect to get dinged is during the first round of the NBA playoffs, which for decades has functioned as a shared space. Starting next season, the first eight best-of-seven series will no longer be available on the respective local platforms, as the league’s national media partners will assume full control of the round. And while it remains to be seen what sort of impact the end of “side-by-side” local/national coverage will have on the Nielsen ratings, the contributions of those in-market channels are significant. On average, the RSNs and other local TV outlets contribute as much as 40% of each first-round games’ overall deliveries.

Sloan concedes that the loss of those playoff games will have an impact, as postseason inventory “is a helpful driver for regular-season ad sales.” In other words, marketers who want to take advantage of the big playoff ratings are generally required to purchase regular-season inventory, although that’s not to say that the premium units are deployed as a cudgel to move the more quotidian spots.

The loss of all that early playoff inventory will be marked by a concomitant reduction in ad sales revenue, although not so much as to put anyone in the poor house. “There’s so much volume in the regular season that there’s actually not going to be a dramatic reduction in overall revenue,” Sloan said. “It will equate to a high-single-digit percentage of our total NBA dollars. And of that, it’ll be interesting to see how much we can replace next season with incentives.” As such, fans may notice an uptick in experimental/non-traditional ad formats and other on-screen premiums when the 2025-26 NBA season tips off in October.

While Sloan did not volunteer a hard dollar amount, a little back-of-the-envelope math based on legal filings and other financial documentation suggests that the RSNs and other in-market platforms may expect to lose a grand total of $60 million in ad revenue next season. A good chunk of that sum should be recoupable during the regular season.

That said, the loss of the local connection that’s forged season after season could have a bit of a chilling effect on the NBA’s national ratings during next year’s opening round. When markets like Boston and New York are in play, in-market deliveries can account for nearly half of all the impressions that are credited to the national media partners. As such, it’ll be well worth keeping an eye on the first-round playoff ratings in 2026. As Playfly head of research Gregg Liebman notes, “first-round viewership is largely driven by the home-team fans, and it’s not until the later rounds, the Eastern and Western Conference Finals, that the more casual fans start coming in.”

If you’re a Knicks fan, this all means that you’re going to have to steel yourself for a postseason devoid of the stylin’ and profilin’ of MSG’s Walt Frazier. Clyde has said that he’ll be devastated to leave his playoff booth duties behind, and local Knicks supporters who hang on his every word for six months each year are equally bummed at the prospect. (Meanwhile, Frazier’s boss now has a lot more to worry about than a handful of games that must be surrendered to ABC and NBC; as part of a bid to restructure MSG’s debt, the Knicks owner last week agreed to a 28% rights-fee haircut, with the team’s media dollars next season set to shrink from a planned-for $148 million to about $106 million.)

If the absence of Clyde promises to take some of the fun out of the Knicks’ future playoff runs, the ramifications of the NBA’s new media deal will resonate far beyond New York. “Certainly, you lose that affinity component in the local home market,” Sloan said. “I think the fans are going to miss that local voice, even with all the drama that happens in the playoffs. To lose out on that familiarity is a real miss.”

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Celtics' looming roster changes shouldn't distract from Banner 19 quest

Celtics' looming roster changes shouldn't distract from Banner 19 quest originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Can we all just enjoy the ride?

The Boston Celtics are fast approaching a roster reckoning that we all knew was coming. But for the next seven weeks, our entire focus should be on the quest for a second title, and not the second apron.

Change was inevitable. The Celtics’ roster is prohibitively expensive and the punitive measures placed on big spenders under a new collective bargaining agreement will soon force Boston to trim costs in order to remain competitive long term.

But there is no sense worrying about those changes now. We couldn’t help feeling like Ferris Bueller after consternation about Boston’s future cropped up on Thursday with the Celtics still in the afterglow of a Round 1 victory over the Magic.

The NBA moves pretty fast. If you don’t stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it.

Things almost will certainly look different in July — although we’d quietly remind you that if Boston keeps winning titles, we suspect every effort will be made to keep as much of this core in place (even if Bill Chisholm and his new ownership group will be forced to spend big money in the short term to do so). Getting below the second apron will be a priority sooner than later, and key pieces of this roster invariably will be moved to keep the Celtics in position to compete long term.

But the roster looks the same right now. A Boston team that steamrolled the competition en route to Banner 18 last spring remains well positioned to make a run at being the first Celtics team in more than a half century to win consecutive titles. 

The focus right now should be on a Round 2 matchup with the Knicks. And not the nickels and dimes of the 2025-26 roster.

From the moment the Celtics traded for Jrue Holiday, we knew there would be a narrow window with this core. Brad Stevens handed out $1 billion in extensions in little more than a year’s span to secure all of Boston’s assets, but everyone knew the team eventually would have to make tough decisions on which pieces would comprise its long-term core. 

Jayson Tatum’s maximum-salary contract extensions kicks in next summer and the Celtics have $228 million worth of salaries on the books before addressing the futures of free-agents-to-be Al Horford and Luke Kornet. Boston is already $20 million above next year’s projected second apron.

Derrick White would be Boston’s cheapest member of the projected starting five next season, earning $28.1 million. Tatum and Jaylen Brown will combine to earn $107.2 million in a league with a projected salary cap at $154.6 million next season. It’s fair to question if Boston can carry championship luxuries like Holiday long-term when he’ll earn $32.4 million in the second season of a four-year, $134.4 million extension

Sam Hauser’s four-year, $45 million extension kicks in next season, too. Can the Celtics afford that splurge, or would it make more sense to throw the keys of that role to a rookie-contract player like Baylor Scheierman? Payton Pritchard’s $7.2 million salary for next season is one of the best values in the NBA; could he elevate to a starter role if the team elects to move on from a member of its starting five?

The Celtics have multiple pathways to get below the tax. They must examine all options and identify the deals that can help both shed salary and bring back players who will take some of the sting away from losing core pieces. 

But there will be ample time to examine the team’s options in late June/early July. Invariably, it’s going to sting to see the Celtics move pieces from this title core. That doesn’t mean Boston won’t still be in the title mix; it’s just going to look a little different.

But we’ll say it again: It’s not different now. This Celtics team, with only minor tweaks from a season ago, has a chance to be the first NBA squad in nearly a decade to repeat as champs.

Joe Mazzulla routinely implores his players to stay in the moment. We ought to do the same. Savor this playoff journey rather than fret what comes after it.