We got our second win of the season folks! The A’s throttled the Astros on Friday evening, opening their home stand with a win against a squad that is expected to compete for the division crown.
More to come…
Worldwide Sports News
We got our second win of the season folks! The A’s throttled the Astros on Friday evening, opening their home stand with a win against a squad that is expected to compete for the division crown.
More to come…
SAN FRANCISCO — Jorge Polanco’s left Achilles is becoming a real pain for the Mets.
After progressing in recent days, according to manager Carlos Mendoza, the first baseman’s ankle discomfort resurfaced on Thursday, removing him from Friday’s starting lineup.
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Try it freeIt was the second time in four games that Polanco, who has been used as a DH since Sunday, was absent from the starting lineup.
“I am not going to say concern, but it’s a day to day,” Mendoza said before the Mets’ 10-3 win over the Giants. “He’s got days where he feels it more and for the past couple of days he was in a pretty good place until [Thursday] night.”
Polanco hasn’t played first base since last Saturday because of the discomfort, which Mendoza is terming as tendonitis. Brett Baty got the start at the position on Friday, but Mark Vientos and Jared Young have also received starts there.
Mendoza said he’s been pleased with Vientos’ development at the position.
“[Thursday] night the way he moved, a couple of plays there,” Mendoza said. “He’s moving around well, not only when he’s fielding the baseball, but just how he’s receiving the throws. He’s looked really good there.”
David Peterson committed an error fielding a toss from Vientos on a ball that appeared thrown behind the left-hander, and Mendoza indicated it’s part of the “learning curve” for Vientos.
“[Vientos] made a hell of a play there,” Mendoza said. “You have got a moving target and you just continue to practice that.”
Carson Benge (0-for-4, one RBI) received his first career start in Oracle Park’s vast right field, which includes various angles due to the ballpark’s unique layout. Mendoza said the rookie worked with outfield coach Gilbert Gomez before Thursday’s series opener to become acquainted with the various nuances.
The Mets entered play sixth in MLB and second in the National League with 71 strikeouts by their pitchers. The team’s 3.02 ERA was sixth in MLB and tied for fifth in the NL.
The Mets entered play sixth in MLB and second in the National League with 71 strikeouts by their pitchers. The team’s 3.02 ERA was sixth in MLB and tied for fifth in the NL.
The Utah Jazz’s eight-man skeleton crew space walked to another important loss, falling to Houston 106-140 on Friday night. It’s the latest stage in the team’s moon shoot to mediocrity, losing 12 out of the last 13 games, as it navigates a tricky trajectory between competing and not winning. With a Kings loss tonight, the Jazz and Sacramento will have identical records (21-57) as each team races to plant its flag on the fourth worst record in the league. For the Jazz it’s a vital effort as they try to secure the best odds possible in the upcoming lottery, hopefully landing a star who will help them re-enter the atmosphere next season as a playoff contender. As a fan, there are times when you can’t help but cheer on the grit and fight of the group of largely second- and third-unit players who are steering the team through the last games of the season. But there are other times (tonight is one example) when you have to remind yourself that in space no one can hear you scream.
Kyle Filipowski – B+
Kyle’s decisiveness in driving to the basket was on display tonight, including a couple of spin moves in the paint which left the defender in a whirl. He had the highlight of the night, defying gravity to pass the ball off the glass to himself in midair for a dunk. His three-point shot was off tonight, going 0-4, but he was active on the boards, grabbing 7 rebounds to go along with his 17 points. Like most of the team, he struggled to contain Durant and Sengun without fouling and ended up fouling out in the 4th Quarter.
Ace Bailey – B
Ace had a hard time getting into a rhythm in the first half, starting the game with a travel, a missed jumper and a turnover and picking up two early fouls. He made some adjustments at half-time and ended the game with 22 points, 6 rebounds, 1 assist and a block. It wasn’t his best shooting night from three, going 2-8, but his mid-range game continues to impress as he skillfully finds his spot within the arc.
Brice Sensabaugh – B+
Brice continues to play with an edge, using his 235 lb frame to battle in the paint and scrap for loose balls. He also showed his playmaking ability, doling out a team high 5 assists, including a 2nd Quarter steal and pass to Ace for three. The development of his mid-range game and drives to the basket show the work he’s put in to expand his offensive skills. He finished the game with 20 points, 3 rebounds and a block, but also had a team high 6 turnovers.
Cody Williams – A
Cody’s impact on the game is light years from where it was at the beginning of this season. He recorded a double double tonight, leading the team with 27 points and 11 rebounds. He was particularly active on the offensive glass, snagging 5 offensive rebounds. His confidence in his mid-range game and in driving to the basket is at an all-time high. In the 1st quarter he even pulled off a Kareem-like hook shot. Once he adds a consistent three- pointer, he will be a tough player to defend.
John Konchar – C+
A rough shooting night for John, going 1-7 from the field and 1-4 from three-point territory. He was his usual scrappy self on defense, grabbing 2 offensive rebounds, creating 2 steals and blocking a shot. He also showed off his playmaking skills, dishing out 3 assists, including a no look pass to Cody for a basket in the third quarter. But his struggles in scoring hurt the Jazz in trying to compete with a red-hot Rockets squad.
Kennedy Chandler – C-
As the only true point guard in the rotation, Kennedy had an opportunity to display the ball-handling and scoring skills that have earned him a second 10 day contract. Unfortunately, it was not his night as he struggled mightily from the field, going 1-9 for 2 points and sitting on the bench the entire 3rd Quarter.
Oscar Tshiebwe – A-
Short of growing a few inches, it’s hard to see what else Oscar can do to avoid being sucked into the gravitational pull of another long stint in the G League. His scoring is much improved (15 points tonight to go along with 10 rebounds) and he vacuums up offensive rebounds like an overcharged Roomba. His effort is never in question, running the length of the floor to put home a lob from Kennedy in the 4th Quarter. His one weakness is being overpowered and outmaneuvered by bigger, stronger players and he faced one of the best tonight in Sengun.
Bez Mbeng – C-
Bez must feel like he’s still floating in zero gravity after being signed to a 2 year contract by the Jazz earlier this week. Unfortunately, the offensive onslaught from the Rockets quickly brought him back to earth. The defensive effort was certainly there—he recorded 2 steals and a block—but like the rest of his teammates, he had no answers for Sengun, Durant and company, who swarmed the court like a Klingon war party. To make matters worse, Bez was 0-4 from the field, on a night when the Jazz needed all the scoring they could get.
Despite a season-ending surgery, Day’Ron Sharpe had a career year.
But he’s intent on honing his body to be even better in 2026-27.
“Everything’s been going pretty good post-surgery, just rehabbing now, trying to stay in shape and stuff like that so I have a good summer,” Sharpe said. “I’d say I feel like I could do better, but I’ve shown growth this season. So it’s just all about showing growth and getting better overall.
“From Year 1 to now, I feel like this season was another year of growth, so I’m just trying to build off that and continue to show growth in my career.”
Speaking to the local media for the first time since undergoing surgery to repair an ulnar collateral ligament tear in his left thumb, Sharpe was coming off his best season.
Sharpe averaged career highs of 8.7 points, 6.7 rebounds, 2.3 assists and shot a team-best 60.1 percent overall. He’d always struggled finishing around the rim amid taller centers, but he took a quantum leap in that category as well.
He’s worked to reshape his body over the years, dropping baby fat and leaning out. But Sharpe will look to take another step toward that end.
“My body still has been one of my biggest things,” said Sharpe, 24. “So just my body in general because I want to be more explosive next season. I’m trying to dunk on guys more next season.
“My 3-pointer — I believe I can shoot the ball great — so just keep building my confidence in that area and just being more comfortable with the ball in my hands. The style of basketball we play, we run a lot of split game, so just being more comfortable with the basketball in my hand so I can make better decisions when I have the basketball in my hand.”
Part of that focus on reshaping his body was to make himself more explosive vertically, to dunk on one end and to protect the rim on the other.
But it’s also to enable him to play more extended minutes, and possibly vie with Nic Claxton for a starting role.
“I’d say both,” Sharpe said. “Me working on my body helps me be more vertical overall, just losing some weight, also. And then the style of basketball I play, for me to be able to play that style of basketball for longer periods of time. So I’d just say both.”
Since joining the Nets, Sharpe has been a backup, but as he has consistently improved, he’s become more and more of a viable contender for the starting job.
After inking Sharpe to a team-friendly two-year, $12.5 million contract last summer, the Nets hold a $6.25 million team option for next season. But he’s outperformed his contract, despite the abbreviated campaign.
Would he negotiate a long-term extension this summer?
“I don’t know,” Sharpe said. “Whatever the team has in plan for me, that’s what they got.”
Sharpe’s offensive rebound percentage (18.5) is the best in league history for players who’ve logged 200 games. But he’s rebounding out other parts of his game.
“It’s been his work ethic and how much he’s matured, and credit to him to put the work in and being consistent, how he’s changed his body,” coach Jordi Fernández said. “Very happy. Not just the work ethic and the production, but also the type of person that we have in the locker room. Day’Ron has got a big personality, fills the room, everybody loves him and that’s important for a group. And he cares and he wants to compete and he wants to get better. The sky’s the limit for him.
“We’ve been working with him playing longer stretches, and when Nic’s been out, he’s been able to do it.
“Those experiences are important. And it’s not just me saying it, it is within those two that are our centers and the anchor of defense. When they’ve played very well, our defense has been very good. There’s areas of improvement from efficiency to percentages and shots, but I’m not really worried because if he continues with this trend, everything is going to work out very well.”
There’s always a little drama in Philadelphia.
The Sixers on Friday overcame a slow start to beat the Minnesota Timberwolves 115-103 at Xfinity Mobile Arena. The win, their eighth victory in their last 11 games, improved their record to 43-34. They sit in the sixth seed and final guaranteed playoff spot with five games remaining.
But Joel Embiid, who shook off early struggles to have a solid overall game, was still unhappy with the team’s decision to not allow him to play in Wednesday’s win over the Wizards in D.C. The star center was dealing with an illness in the Sixers’ loss to the Heat in Miami on Monday. The team then listed him as out Wednesday after he didn’t participate in shootaround that morning.
That led Embiid to confuse everyone on April Fools, a day where his Tr-oel persona usually shines. He made multiple posts signifying his desire to play that night in the nation’s capital.
It was president of basketball operations Daryl Morey who seemingly made the call. Gina Mizell of The Inquirer cited a phone call with Morey to get Embiid’s definitive status.
And it was Morey who Embiid deferred to during his postgame availability Friday:
“I was pissed off. I wanted to play basketball. I wasn’t allowed to play basketball, so I think this is more of a question for Daryl Morey and whoever makes the decisions. Going into Miami, I was pretty sick, but I understood how important the game was and I still want to go out there and give us a chance to try to do something. … Felt a little better going into Washington. Definitely much better than I felt against Miami. Woke up [Wednesday], didn’t sleep until like 5 or 6 in the morning, with that, I couldn’t make it to shootaround. And then after that I found out online that I wasn’t playing that night. So, that kind of caught me off guard and that pissed me off. But then again, I guess they make the decisions, so it doesn’t matter what I think or not. I just got to follow. So, to answer your question, it’s more of a question for Daryl and them. I don’t know what’s going on. I just want to play basketball.”
It sounds like Embiid’s frustration comes in part because he found out about his playing status on social media. At the same time, this is his version of events and surely the team tried to get a hold of him before officially declaring him out.
Ultimately, this could be nothing. Embiid wanted to play. He missed shootaround (and they were playing an aggressively tanking team), so he was ruled out. Could there be a disconnect there between Embiid and the front office? Maybe, but this is also the kind of thing that could just as easily blow over.
While it seems highly unlikely Embiid would be available for both legs of a back-to-back, the former MVP didn’t rule out playing Saturday night against the Detroit Pistons.
“There’s a chance,” Embiid said. “I don’t know. I guess these guys decide to let me play or not. So, whatever they tell me, I guess I got to follow.”
Ozzie Guillen couldn’t believe it.
As he was on the Chicago Sports Network during the broadcast of a White Sox’s 5-4 win over the Blue Jays on Friday in Chicago’s home opener, Guillen was joined by Scott Podsednik.
Podsednik, best known for his All-Star and World Series title season of 2005 with the Guillen-managed White Sox, opened an envelope on-air, suggesting he didn’t know what it was.
Guillen, who was eagerly looking over Podsednik’s shoulder for an attempt at a clearer view of the letter, was then shocked to learn of what it contained.
“The Chicago White Sox announce today,” Podsednik began before he paused and appeared to look over in Guillen’s direction.
Podsednik’s voice continued, as it now echoed throughout Rate Field, “That 2005 World Series winning manager Ozzie Guillen will be honored on Saturday, Aug. 8.”
Guillen interjected, “Another bobblehead?” with a chuckle.
Podsednik continued, “With a special ceremony retiring his No. 13 uniform.”
Guillen immediately began to feel the emotions, which coincided with the crowd unleashing a round of cheers and applause for the former manager, who is now 62.
“Where’s my wife?” Guillen asked, overcome with emotion, as she immediately entered the set, and the two embraced.
No. 13 is forever
— White Sox on CHSN (@CHSN_WhiteSox) April 3, 2026
The White Sox will retire Ozzie Guillen’s number 13 on August 8th!
A South Side legend cemented in historypic.twitter.com/kmDYrKK39x
Guillen, a native of the 2026 World Baseball Classic Champion Venezuela, remains a very popular name in Chicago years after his tenure.
He managed the White Sox from 2004 to 2011, winning Manager of the Year and leading the team to their first World Series in 88 years in 2005.
With the White Sox, Guillen went 678-617 with one title and two playoff trips; the run also included four seasons of at least 88 wins.
Guillen later managed the Marlins for one season in 2012.
As a player, the former shortstop was a three-time All-Star with the White Sox in 1988, 1990 and 1991.
He also won a Gold Glove in 1990 and was the American League Rookie of the Year in 1985.
Guillen played for the Sox from 1985 to 1997, and enjoyed stints with the Orioles, Braves and Rays, retiring after the 2000 season.
In a game dominated by the two starting pitchers, it was Ozzie Albies and Matt Olson who stepped to the plate with the score 0-0 in the ninth inning and answered the bell to give the Braves their third consecutive win and improve their record on the young season to 6-2.
The Braves have now recorded three shutouts in the first week of the season.
Albies stood in against veteran reliever Paul Sewald and hammered a ball down the right field line to give the Braves a 1-0 lead. Chase Field erupted with a big contingent of Braves fans in attendance.
Olson followed with a solo blast of his own three pitches later, a no-doubter to center field to go back-to-back and make it 2-0. Olson has absolutely mashed throughout his career in Chase Field, and it appears the desert has gotten his season on track in a hurry.
Grant Holmes was superb over six innings, flirting with a no-hitter until Ketel Marte finally broke the seal with a single in the bottom of the sixth. That was the lone hit Holmes would surrender in addition to three walks. He struck out four and generated 14 whiffs on 85 pitches.
In relief of Holmes, the trio of Dylan Lee, Robert Suarez and Raisel Iglesias brought the win home. The Braves pitching staff through the first week of the season has been, to put it mildly, stellar.
A night after scoring 17 runs, the Braves were pretty helpless against veteran lefty Eduardo Rodriguez. They had a scoring opportunity in the first and sixth innings with two runners on, but they were unable to capitalize and support Holmes’ efforts.
The four-game tilt continues tomorrow night with Bryce Elder set to face old friend Michael Soroka, who pitched really well in his season debut against the Tigers earlier in the week. It’ll be a 7:15 p.m. ET first pitch on FOX.
SAN FRANCISCO — Sean Manaea could take a glimmer of satisfaction from his latest outing.
Yes, the left-hander created traffic in his relief appearance Thursday night, but there was an uptick in his velocity. The final result — one earned run allowed over 3 ²/₃ innings — was respectable, despite the four hits and two walks he allowed.
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Try it free“I was just throwing free and easy and just throwing with confidence,” Manaea said.
The appearance in a low-leverage spot — the Mets trailed by four runs when he entered and ultimately lost 7-2 to the Giants — allowed Manaea an opportunity to stay stretched out as the sixth starter in what has been a five-man rotation to begin the season.
Manaea averaged 89.9 mph with his four-seam fastball — still down from last season but up from spring training and his 1 ¹/₃-inning relief appearance against the Pirates last Sunday.
The lone run Manaea allowed Thursday was on a four-seamer that Rafael Devers smashed for a homer.
“I thought it was a positive step,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “[Manaea] was aggressive and his fastball had life, swings and misses, and for him to finish that game and save the bullpen is huge. There were a lot of good signs.”
The Mets used plenty of relievers in the first week, with three games that went extra innings. Manaea could help ensure Mendoza wouldn’t need to summon another arm.
“This is a family; this is a team,” Manaea said. “Everyone has got work to do, and I am really glad that I was able to help out.”
Manaea’s next step is unclear, but he’s unlikely to be available for the remainder of this series after throwing 74 pitches. The Mets have a day off Monday and then have games scheduled the following nine days, so it’s possible Manaea would be inserted into the rotation as a sixth starter as soon as the next homestand.
Nolan McLean took the mound on Friday, and the Mets have Clay Holmes and Kodai Senga aligned for the final two games in the series. Freddy Peralta and David Peterson are the other members of the five-man rotation.
“We’ve got five extremely talented starters, and my role right now is to help this team in the capacity that I am doing,” Manaea said.
The early results have been positive from the rotation, Peterson’s latest start notwithstanding — the lefty was knocked out in the fifth inning on Thursday after allowing six runs, five of which were earned. That got the ball to Manaea with the chance for an extended outing. He had thrown only 29 pitches in his appearance on Sunday.
Last season was disastrous for Manaea, who strained an oblique in spring training and didn’t appear in a game for the Mets until July. But he struggled upon his return and pitched to a 5.64 ERA in 15 appearances.
The Mets re-signed Manaea before last season to a three-year contract worth $75 million.
Manaea had thrived the previous season and emerged as a de facto ace for a team that reached the NL Championship Series, crediting a drop in arm angle against left-handed hitters for much of his success.
But Manaea indicated he may have dropped his arm slot too low last year in trying to replicate that success.
“I think the arm slot getting too low was a byproduct of the rest of my body,” Manaea said. “If I am more upright the arm slot doesn’t matter.”
The Dallas Mavericks played the Orlando Magic on Friday night, losing 138-127. Dallas kept things close for most of the first half, but fell behind big in the third quarter and couldn’t recover from there despite a big game from Cooper Flagg.
Flagg was in peak form Friday night, making a push for Rookie of the Year while still playing within both himself and the team’s flow. Flagg is aware there is precious little time left to make his case for ROY, and may have caught wind of ESPN’s straw poll that currently has him as runner up. He put on a highly efficient show against Orlando, going 19-for-30 from the floor including 6-for-9 from deep. He scored from everywhere – dunks that ended with him hanging from the rim like Spider-Man, a variety of midrange jumpers, and a few from beyond the arc including a nice step-back. According to Statsmuse, Flagg joins Michael Jordan as the only rookies with multiple 45-point games since the NBA-ABA merger. He is also the youngest player (and first teenager) to ever have a 50-point game!
Offense was not lacking for either team, but if you believed Dallas took a lead into halftime with their 58 points, no one would blame you. Instead, they trailed by 13 points. They allowed Orlando to shoot just north of 57% from both beyond the arc and overall in the first half. Things didn’t improve much from there, as the Magic carried nearly those same absurdly inflated percentages throughout the rest of the game as well.
The Mavericks are not the most prolific or effective three-point shooting team, so it was nice to see Klay Thompson and Max Christie get hot in the early going. Cooper Flagg joined them and the trio combined to make 13 from beyond the arc (Naji Marshall made one as well). Matching the other teams’ makes from deep is an accomplishment for the Mavs, however it took Dallas 16 more attempts than Orlando to make those 14 treys.
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When asked about the Knicks’ recent slow starts before Friday’s matchup with the Bulls, Josh Hart was candid.
It’s something the team’s dealt with for multiple years, and he couldn’t pinpoint why.
“We’ve been getting off to slow starts for two years now,” Hart said. “If I had the answers, we would be better.”
In their past four games before Friday, the Knicks had varying first-quarter results, trailing early in losses to Charlotte, Oklahoma City and Houston before a 48-point frame kick-started a win over Memphis.
But on Friday against the Bulls, the Knicks looked like a completely different animal. They jumped up 20-1 and held Chicago without a basket until seven minutes in. That led to a 78-41 halftime advantage, putting the game away early.
The Knicks eventually prevailed 136-96, maintaining their position as the No. 3 seed in the Eastern Conference with four regular-season games remaining.
“Tonight we started the right way, and when we do, we might jump on somebody,” Knicks head coach Mike Brown said postgame. “It’s about making our opponents feel us executing our defense the right way every possession, not giving up any easy baskets in transition and finishing it with the defense rebound.”
Before the game, Brown credited the Knicks’ recent sluggish starts to poor defense. With the playoffs on the horizon, his team had to start on the right foot.
“A lot of it has been our defense,” Brown said. “In the first quarter, we’re 19th [in the league] right now, and fourth quarter, we’re first by a mile. So for us to bring that same sense of urgency to start the games defensively, it’s going to be big for us.”
Against Charlotte, the Knicks were down 24-14 early and eventually trailed by 21. Versus the Thunder, they started down seven. In Houston, those struggles were glaring when they faced an early 22-5 deficit.
But across their past two games — albeit against subpar opponents — the Knicks have improved.
The Knicks led the Grizzlies by 17 after one half. Hart credited the offensive success to aggressive ball movement. Friday, that stretched to a whopping 37-point halftime lead.
“Tonight, we just came out with a different energy,” Miles McBride said. “The first five really set a tone, and the bench follows.”
Early on, the Knicks had success wanted inside, accruing 40 first-half points in the paint. Usually known for his rebounding, Mitchell Robinson dropped 15 of his 17 points in the opening half — his most in a game since mid-December.
Defensively, they lived up to Brown’s wishes, too. Chicago had one point and zero made buckets until about five minutes left in the first quarter and shot 35 percent at halftime.
The blistering start helped New York easily close out the win. For a team looking like it was headed south, it was a welcome sign as the postseason looms.
Entering the final stretch of the 2025-2026 season, there was never a question whether the Rockets should win against a young, inexperienced, and oft injured Utah Jazz. The question was, can the Rockets get up big and be able to rest their key players in the 4th quarter, rather than let yet another inferior team hang around and threaten to steal a game the Rockets should win? Thankfully for the hometown faithful, the answer to that question is yes.
After knotting the game up at 11 in the first quarter, the Rockets would go on a 23-11 run and never look back. The Rockets flexed their muscle over the Jazz shooting 55.4 percent for the game, including 46.9 percent from the three-point line. With 30 assists and just 10 turnovers the Rockets were able to avoid a let down late in the game.
Six players scored in double-figures with Kevin Durant leading the way with 25 points on 8-of-12 shooting. Alperen Sengun scored 19 points, also shooting 8-of-12 from the field. Amen Thompson chipped in with 21 points, 8 rebounds and Reed Sheppard had another quality game at starting point guard with 12 points, 7 assists and shooting 4-of-8 from the arc. Jabari Smith and Tari Eason scored 18 points and 16 points respectively.
Now that the Rockets have clinched a playoff spot in the Western Conference, the bar is obviously set higher than winning what was really a meaningless game to the Jazz, who organizationally had more incentive to lose than win. However a five-game win streak with just five games left on the schedule is nothing to shake a stick at. The Rockets can’t really afford to try and play the matchup game headed into the postseason. They need to win as many games as possible and be playing their best brand of basketball of the season if they hope to make any type of deep run. Other than perhaps health, that will be the most important thing moving forward.
The Rockets get to experience a playoff atmosphere in San Francisco as their next game will be against the Warriors with Stephen Curry returning to the lineup hoping to help his team clinch a play-in spot. The game starts at 9:00 PM CST and as always we will have all the coverage yo need right here on TDS.
Dallas Mavericks rookie Cooper Flagg isn't ready to be ruled out of the Rookie of the Year race just yet.
The race between Flagg and his former Duke teammate, Kon Knueppel of the Charlotte Hornets, has been close.
But Flagg sent a message Friday night, becoming the first teenager to score at least 50 points in an NBA regular-season game.
Despite the strong individual performance, the Mavericks suffered a 138-127 loss to the Orlando Magic.
51 POINTS FOR COOPER FLAGG.
— NBA (@NBA) April 4, 2026
FIRST TEENAGER TO SCORE 50 IN AN NBA GAME 🚨 pic.twitter.com/kaZiyOTczI
Flagg surpassed his career high of 49 points, which he set against the Hornets on Jan. 29.
He becomes just the 10th rookie in NBA history to score 50-plus points, and the third since the NBA/ABA merger (1976-77), according to the Mavericks.
Flagg's performance followed up on what was a memorable night for Knueppel on Thursday.
Here’s how Flagg’s performance went on Friday night:
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Cooper Flagg points tonight, Magic vs Mavericks stats
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Paul George scored 23 points, Tyrese Maxey and Kelly Oubre Jr. each had 21 and the Philadelphia 76ers beat the Minnesota Timberwolves 115-103 on Friday night.
Joel Embiid had 19 points, 13 rebounds and seven assists in his return to the lineup to help the 76ers remain sixth in the Eastern Conference with five games to play.
Julius Randle and Bones Hyland each had 21 points for the Timberwolves. Anthony Edwards struggled to eight points. Edwards was back in action after sitting out Thursday night in a 113-108 loss at Detroit due to illness. He missed 12 of 15 shots overall, including all seven 3-point tries.
Embiid, who didn’t play Wednesday night in a 153-131 victory at Washington due to illness, scored 13 points in the third period when the 76ers outscored Minnesota 42-24. The 76ers trailed 70-68 with 2:50 remaining in the period before scoring 15 of the final 16 points of the quarter to enter the fourth ahead 83-71. Maxey had six points during the stretch, and Quentin Grimes finished the spurt with back-to-back fast-break layups.
George’s 3-pointer with 6 1/2 minutes to play put Philadelphia ahead by a game-high 17 points. But Minnesota got as close as within six points in the final 1 1/2 minutes before Oubre put it away with consecutive 3-pointers.
HORNETS 129, PACERS 108
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Brandon Miller scored 22 points, Kon Knueppel added 20 and Charlotte beat Indiana for its eighth victory in 10 games.
Miles Bridges scored 19 points and LaMelo Ball had 18 points and nine assists to help the Hornets improve to 42-26. Charlotte was 24 of 49 from 3-point range.
Pascal Siakam led Indiana with 30 points. The Pacers (18-59) had won two in a row.
The Hornets entered the night in eighth place in the Eastern Conference standings — 1 1/2 games behind Philadelphia and Toronto.
They left no doubt about this one.
Behind a flurry of early 3-pointers — including three in the first quarter from reserve Sion James — the Hornets raced to a 31-11 lead. Charlotte shot 14 of 27 from 3-point range in the first half to take a 69-50 lead.
Knueppel, who set the franchise record for 3s in a season Thursday night against Phoenix, finished 3 of 7 from beyond the arc and also showed versatility in his game with a coast-to-coast layup.
HAWKS 141, NETS 107
NEW YORK (AP) — CJ McCollum had 25 points and seven assists and surging Atlanta routed Brooklyn for its fourth straight victory and 18th in 20 games.
Fifth in the Eastern Conference at 45-33, the Hawks remained 1 1/2 games ahead of sixth-place Philadelphia and moved within 3 1/2 games of fourth-place Cleveland. Atlanta and Cleveland will play a home-and-set next week.
McCollum was 8 of 12 from the field, hitting 4 of 7 3-pointers.
Nickeil Alexander-Walker added 21 points, and Jalen Johnson had 18 points and 11 rebounds. Onyeka Okongwu scored 15 points.
Nic Claxton led Brooklyn with 16 points, and Malachi Smith had 15. The Nets lost their second straight to fall to 18-59.
Atlanta scored the first 10 points and led 35-17 with 1:28 left in the first quarter. It was 71-55 at the half, with McCollum scoring 16 points and Johnson 13. McCollum was 4 of 5 from the field in the half, hitting three 3-pointers without a miss.
KNICKS 136, BULLS 96
NEW YORK (AP) — OG Anunoby scored 31 points, Mitchell Robinson had 17 points and 11 rebounds, and New York routed Chicago in a game they led by 47 points.
Anunoby was 9 for 15 from the field, including 7 for 10 from 3-point range, and Robinson made each of his seven shots starting in place of All-Star center Karl-Anthony Towns, who did not play because of a right elbow impingement.
All-Star point guard Jalen Brunson had 17 points and 10 assists to help the Knicks win their second consecutive game after dropping three in a row.
For New York (50-28), the blowout victory cemented its third consecutive season with at least 50 wins — a feat the club had not accomplished since the 1991-92 to 1993-94 campaigns. The Knicks lost the 1994 NBA Finals to Houston and were able to surpass the 50-win plateau the following season.
Collin Sexton had 19 points for the Bulls. They have lost their last six games and 10 of 12.
CELTICS 133, BUCKS 101
MILWAUKEE (AP) — Jaylen Brown scored 26 points, Jayson Tatum added 23, and hot-shooting Boston capitalized on another fast start in a victory over short-handed Milwaukee.
Tatum was an assist shy of his second straight triple-double despite sitting out the entire fourth quarter of a game the Celtics never trailed. He had 11 rebounds and nine assists Friday after collecting 25 points, 18 rebounds and 11 assists Wednesday in a 147-129 triumph over the Miami Heat.
In the Miami game, Boston scored 53 points in the opening period — its highest first-quarter point total in franchise history. The Celtics didn’t quite match that Friday, but they made eight of their first nine 3-point attempts and led 43-26 after the opening period.
That represented the most first-quarter points Milwaukee had allowed all season.
Boston remained 2 1/2 games ahead of the New York Knicks in the competition for the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs. The Celtics are four games behind the Eastern Conference-leading Detroit Pistons.
Neemias Queta had 19 points and 10 rebounds for the Celtics, who shot 56.2% overall and 17 of 37 from 3-point range. Derrick White scored 17, Payton Pritchard 16 and Sam Hauser 13.
Taurean Prince scored 18 points to lead Milwaukee. Pete Nance had 14 points and a career-high 10 rebounds.
ROCKETS 140, JAZZ 106
HOUSTON (AP) — Kevin Durant scored 25 points and Houston won its fifth straight game, beating Utah.
Durant shot 8 of 12 from the field and added five assists. It was the 45th time this season he’s scored 20 or more points while shooting 50% or better. That’s second among NBA players behind Oklahoma City star Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, who has done it 47 times.
Amen Thompson had 21 points and Alperen Sengun scored 19 for the Rockets (48-29), who clinched a playoff spot Thursday. They are a game behind Denver for fourth place in the Western Conference.
Cody Williams led the Jazz with 27 points and 11 rebounds, but they shot just 5 of 27 from behind the 3-point line.
Utah (21-57) has lost eight consecutive games and 12 of 13.
RAPTORS 128, GRIZZLIES 96
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) — RJ Barrett scored 25 points, Brandon Ingram had 17 points and seven rebounds and Toronto built a first-half lead, extended it in the third and coasted to a victory over Memphis.
Rookie Collin Murray-Boyles, the ninth overall pick last summer, added 19 points on 7-of-10 shooting to help Toronto snap a two-game skid. Murray-Boyles had a career-high 20 points against Sacramento on Wednesday night.
Trying to avoid the Eastern Conference play-in tournament, Toronto remained seventh in the standings, through it has the same record as sixth-place Philadelphia.
GG Jackson led Memphis with 30 points, and Cedric Coward had 15. The Grizzlies lost for the eighth time in nine games. Jackson was 10 of 16 from the field.
A 13-4 run by Toronto to end the first half gave the Raptors a 59-41 lead at the break. The advantage would stretch to 31 near the five-minute mark of the third, and reach 33 in the fourth quarter.
MAGIC 138, MAVERICKS 127
DALLAS (AP) — Wendell Carter Jr. scored 28 points and Orlando beat Dallas, overcoming a 51-point showing from rookie No. 1 pick Cooper Flagg and handing the Mavericks their 14th consecutive loss at home.
Desmond Bane had 27 points as the Magic remained a half-game behind eighth-place Charlotte in the Eastern Conference. Orlando is safely in the play-in tournament with an outside shot at the top six and automatic entry into the East playoffs.
Coach Jason Kidd and Maji Marshall were ejected seconds apart early in the fourth quarter for the lottery-bound Mavericks, who are on their longest home losing streak at 25-year-old American Airlines Center. Dallas lost the first 19 games of the 1993-94 season at since-demolished Reunion Arena.
Flagg was caught up in the disagreement that led to Kidd’s ejection, drawing his own technical foul before Kidd went onto the court apparently to protest the same non-call that drew Flagg’s ire.
The 19-year-old responded with 24 points in the fourth quarter to become the youngest in NBA history with a 50-point game.
2025-26 Sixers Bell Ringer season standings:
Tyrese Maxey – 22.5
VJ Edgecombe – 12
Joel Embiid – 10.5
Paul George – 8
Justin Edwards – 4
Kelly Oubre Jr. – 4
Quentin Grimes – 3
Jared McCain :’( – 3
Dominick Barlow – 2
Andre Drummond – 2
MarJon Beauchamp – 2
Adem Bona – 1
Cam Payne – 1
Jabari Walker – 1
Trendon Watford – 1
15th roster spot – 1
On a night those near them in the Eastern Conference standings drew easier assignments, the Sixers overcame a low-scoring first half to defeat the Minnesota Timberwolves, 115-103. For a change, it was Philadelphia laying the smackdown in the third quarter, outscoring the Wolves in the period, 42-24. That effort flipped a six-point halftime deficit and proved just enough to hold on for the victory. As a result, the Sixers maintained their spot in sixth place in the East, with Toronto and Charlotte both winning behind them. Things could change when Philadelphia is right back at it on Saturday night against Detroit, but let’s focus for now on Friday night’s Bell Ringer nominees.
Paul George: 23 points, 6 rebounds, 6 assists, 3 steals, 1 block, 6 turnovers
For those arguing that the league should shorten the number of games in the regular season, they could point to how much better Paul George looks with 25 fewer contests on the schedule. Coming off his suspension, PG has been a new man, wreaking havoc on both ends of the court with a spring in his step. George almost singlehandedly kept the Sixers hanging around in the first half, scoring 15 points when no teammate had more than five. His stepback jumper off the dribble against Donte DiVincenzo was some vintage And 1 mixtape stuff. Highlighting his great defensive work, George picked Ayo Dosunmu’s pocket with around one minute left in the game to help seal the victory.
Kelly Oubre Jr.: 21 points, 5 rebounds, 1 assist, 0 turnovers
For one night, Jhoan Duran was not the best closer in Philadelphia. With the Wolves threatening to make a game of it with two minutes remaining, Oubre took Julius Randle off the dribble from the top of the key and converted an and-one play. Less than a minute later, he sank a huge catch-and-shoot three from the corner to make it a three-possession game again. On the following possession, he sank the nail in the coffin three from the top of the arc. Overall, Oubre was 4-of-6 from behind the arc. It’s such a huge boost on nights when he’s hitting his outside shots given what he brings to the table in all the other aspects of the game.
Tyrese Maxey: 21 points, 6 rebounds, 8 assists, 2 blocks, 3 turnovers
It was a quieter night than most for Tyrese, but he still found a lot of ways to contribute to the victory. Maxey was the catalyst in the third-quarter turnaround, scoring 17 points and five assists in the period. Tyrese attacked from all levels, nailing a three from a couple feet behind the arc, knocking down a mid-range jumper, and getting into the paint for a few buckets. On one, he converted a lefty floater off the dribble that felt like a new tool on his belt. Maxey also made two great blocks to recover from behind on drives from Bones Hyland and Ayo Dosunmu in what was an efficient, two-way performance from the star guard.
Maybe the joke’s on me.
Before the season even started, as baseball experts and national publications kept insisting that Lance McCullers Jr. would be part of the Houston Astros’ starting rotation, I wasn’t buying it. Not even a little. I questioned it constantly. I doubted it openly. And realistically, I believed there was no chance McCullers would not only make the rotation, but stay in it.
Truth be told, I was done with him.
At least three different times last season, I reached my breaking point. I even said on my radio show that I didn’t want to talk about McCullers again until he actually earned it—until he performed at a level worthy of the attention. His track record, paired with the endless cycle of injuries, setbacks, and uncertainty over the past few years, made it hard to believe anything else. It felt far more likely that 2026 would be his last season in an Astros uniform, if he even made it through the year.
And then came his first start.
To my surprise, it was nothing short of impressive.
Sure, there were a couple of hard-hit balls that just barely stayed foul, but at the end of the day, he did his job. He pitched effectively. He competed. And most importantly, he helped the Astros secure a win. It wasn’t just serviceable, it was encouraging.
At the same time, my confidence in another arm was trending in the opposite direction.
Coming into the season, I was far more bullish on Cristian Javier. I believed he was the one poised to return to form, the one the Astros could count on again. In my mind, Javier had a legitimate shot to work his way into the top three of the rotation by midseason.
Instead, we’ve seen the exact opposite.
Javier has looked nothing like the pitcher Astros fans remember. He’s committing the cardinal sins of starting pitching: issuing walks, hitting batters, and consistently putting runners on base to start innings. And as any pitcher knows, that’s a recipe for disaster.
Those runners? They’re scoring.
Despite a noticeable uptick in fastball velocity, Javier’s inability to locate his pitches has completely undermined his effectiveness. His command is off. His control is shaky. And his inability to consistently throw strikes has led to a spike in walks and a lack of trust on the mound. His “invisaball” has been located anywhere but near the zone.
Through two starts, he hasn’t looked like a reliable major league option, especially not for a team with the expectations the Astros carry into 2026. In fact, he’s looked more like a pitcher who belongs in Triple-A than one you can depend on every fifth day.
And that’s where things get interesting.
With Spencer Arrighetti closing in on a return and the Astros considering a six-man rotation, there are real decisions looming. We’ve seen this movie before. Last year, “mysterious” or conveniently timed injuries played a role in managing struggling arms, most notably with McCullers himself.
Could that scenario play out again, this time with Javier?
It’s not out of the question.
The good news for Houston Astros is that they have depth. Between options at the major league level and reinforcements in Sugar Land, Dana Brown and Joe Espada have flexibility. If Javier continues to struggle, there are viable replacements ready to step in and stabilize the rotation.
But before we go too far in either direction, before we anoint McCullers as “back” or write Javier off completely, it’s worth remembering something.
We’ve been here before.
Last season, after one strong outing against the Dodgers, McCullers had everyone believing he had turned the corner for good. It didn’t last. That memory alone is enough to pump the brakes on any sweeping conclusions based on a single start.
So where does that leave us?
For me, it means staying cautious.
McCullers deserves credit for what he showed, but I need to see more. A few more quality outings. Consistency. Durability. Proof that this isn’t just another flash before a setback.
As for Javier, the leash might be shorter than expected. The potential is still there because of his track record, but the results have to follow, and soon.
Because in a season where expectations are high, the Astros don’t have the luxury of waiting too long for anyone to figure it out.
So I’ll ask you:
Who do you trust more right now? And how do you see this rotation shaking out between now and the All-Star break?