Dodgers’ Andy Pages perfects art of steal against Brewers

MILWAUKEE — It was either the most sophisticated code for relaying pitch signs. Or, more likely, the most obvious attempt to distract the pitcher with a bluff.

In the top of the fourth inning Saturday, Andy Pages was not being subtle once he reached second base on a double.

The Dodgers’ Andy Pages said his signals to teammates Saturday were a ruse to get in Brewers pitchers’ heads. Getty Images

Almost every time Brewers left-hander Robert Gasser threw a pitch, the young Dodgers slugger was doing something with his hands that looked like a signal to the batter.

This is an age-old — and, to be clear, completely legal — part of gamesmanship in baseball. If a baserunner can get a read on the type of pitch that’s about to be thrown, there are any number of ways they can alert their teammate at the plate.

Over the last couple years, Pages in particular has made the practice a common routine. Rarely does he get to second base without doing something. It doesn’t even matter if he actually knows what’s coming.

“We’re gonna do everything we can in those situations,” Pages, who has been involved in pitch-tipping situations previously this year and even during last October’s National League Division Series, said through an interpreter. 

“When you’re at second base, there’s times where they’re doing stuff, and you could tell that they have some stuff. But sometimes, you’re doing stuff to distract the pitcher as well.”

Saturday, upon further review, appeared to be a case of the latter.

While Pages made a variety of hand motions before eight of the 10 pitches Gasser threw as he stood at second, there did not seem to be much of a pattern correlating with his supposed signs.

During an at-bat by Will Smith, Pages extended his left arm as Gasser threw a changeup, which Smith swung at and lined to center field for an out. When Kyle Tucker came up next, Pages tapped his helmet with his right hand before four different pitches, each of which turned out to be four different pitch types. Tucker took all of them to draw a walk.

The reason Saturday got so much attention is because of what happened next.

With Teoscar Hernández up, Pages did a right-handed helmet tap before a sweeper. Swing and miss. He then did a left-handed helmet tap and arm extension before a changeup. Called strike. 

Brewers pitcher Robert Gasser might have been tipping pitches to Dodgers batters Saturday, and Andy Pages picked up on it. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Finally, in an 0-2 count, Pages went back to just stretching out his left arm before another sweeper from Gasser.

This time, Hernández connected for a go-ahead three-run home run, flipping the momentum in the Dodgers’ eventual 11-3 win.

After the game, Brewers manager Pat Murphy said he believed Pages had caught Gasser tipping, telling reporters that “it was pretty evident that maybe they did [have something] at second base,” according to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

However, in an interview with The California Post on Sunday morning, Pages indicated his signals were simply a ruse.

Los Angeles Dodgers center fielder Andy Pages (44) runs the bases after hitting a two run home run against the Milwaukee Brewers in the fifth inning. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

When asked if he should get an assist for Hernández’s blast, he chuckled and said: “No, not on that one.”

The truth, of course, might be somewhere in the middle. If Pages genuinely was getting reads off Gasser — he stared into the pitcher’s glove as he gripped the ball — it wouldn’t much benefit him to say so publicly.

“There’s times where I will take credit [for relaying the right pitch],” Pages quipped.

But Saturday, even his manager agreed, wasn’t one of them.

“There, honestly, I don’t think we had the signs,” Dave Roberts said. “Teo took a good swing, and it wasn’t really a great pitch. But I’m honestly not certain.”

Either way, such uncertainty is all Pages is usually after.

Whether he has a read or not, there’s no better way to get in pitchers’ heads than making them think he might.

Los Angeles Dodgers left fielder Teoscar Hernandez (37) celebrates with center fielder Andy Pages (44) after hitting a home run during the fourth inning against the Milwaukee Brewers. Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images

“It’s part of the competition, doing stuff like that, just distracting the pitcher, kind of getting him out of rhythm,” Pages said. “Whether he leaves pitches over the plate or not, that has nothing to do with it. It’s part of the competition, just kind of going back and forth with the pitcher, as well.”

Roberts said he has embraced Pages’ penchant for trying to fluster pitchers. 

“If you can make a pitcher feel like you’ve got their signs,” he said, “you’ve already won.”

The only caveat?

“There’s certain times when you want the runner to kind of be more still, to not distract the hitter, because you don’t want that, either,” Roberts said. “But, yeah, I like the way [he] is engaged and trying to get an advantage for the hitter.”

Granted, how much this all helps the Dodgers is another unclear question.

There isn’t much difference in their stats between when it’s Pages at second base (.286 average, .400 slugging percentage, 25% whiff rate this season) or one of his typically less-demonstrative teammates (.269 average, .427 slugging percentage, 25% whiff rate in all at-bats with a runner occupying the bag — good numbers but hardly statistical outliers).

Still, when Gasser was asked about the situation Saturday night, he said he noticed Pages’ gesticulations behind him.

Regardless of if he was actually tipping, that alone represented mission accomplished.

“Whether you have [a read on the pitches] or disguise to act like you have them,” Roberts said, “that’s the gamesmanship part of it.”

Ex-Sabres Key To Game 2 Wins For Carolina And Vegas

The Carolina Hurricanes were flat in their series opener against the Montreal Canadiens after a 12-day layoff, but the Canes called upon some former Buffalo Sabres to pull out Game 2 and even the series with a 3-2 overtime win in Raleigh on Saturday. The Hurricanes fourth line, which consisted of all ex-Sabres Eric Robinson, Mark Jankowski, and William Carrier, combined for Carolina’s opening goal 2:33 into the first period. 

Robinson played seven seasons under GM Jarmo Kekalainen in Columbus and 40 games for Buffalo in 2023-24, scored his second goal of the playoffs, after being set up by Carrier, who played three seasons with Rochester and the Sabres before being claimed by Vegas in the expansion draft in 2017 and winning a Cup with the Golden Knights in 2023. Jankowski, who played 19 games for Buffalo in 2021-22, had two helpers on the night, including setting up Nikolaj Ehlers for the game-winner at 3:29 of overtime. 

Other Sabres Stories

Sabres Emotionally Devastated By Game 7 Overtime Loss

Lindy Ruff gets a two-year contract extension from the Sabres

Former Sabres team captain Jack Eichel is having another excellent post-season with the Vegas Golden Knights. Eichel is second in the NHL in playoff scoring with 18 points, and scored the tying goal and set up Ivan Barbashev’s game-winner in a 3-1 victory over the Colorado Avalanche on Friday. 

Some current and former Sabres are playing in the IIHF World Championships in Switzerland. Ryan O’Reilly is second to Macklin Celebrini in scoring for Team Canada with seven points (5 goals, 2 assists). Henri Jokiharju has six points (2 goals, 4 assists) with Finland, while Dylan Cozens has four goals for Canada in six games. 

Konsta Helenius, who scored two goals in four games against Montreal after replacing the injured Sam Carrick, has played two games for Finland and has an assist. 

Follow Michael on X, Instagram @MikeInBuffalo

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Marlins 4, Mets 0: Mets blanked and swept in Miami

The Mets could not capitalize on any of their offensive efforts today, leaving runners in scoring position ten times in nine innings. The Marlins were in the same boat for eight innings, and the game remained scoreless into the ninth inning before Heriberto Hernandez hit a walk-off grand slam to win the game for the Marlins.

The Marlins’ Tyler Phillips, a recently promoted right-handed pitcher who had a hand in ending the Mets’ 2025 season, started his day by striking out Carson Benge and Bo Bichette before A.J. Ewing singled on a line drive to center field. Shortly after, Ewing stole second base, but the inning ended when Mark Vientos flied out to center field, setting the tone for the Mets’ offense for the day.

In the bottom of the first, Christian Scott came out for his sixth start of the year and allowed a one-out double to Xavier Edwards on a line drive to left field, but he then made quick work of the next two batters, ending the first inning just like that.

In the second inning, Marcus Semien reached second base on a throwing error by Marlins third baseman Javier Sanoja, and then Tyrone Taylor walked. However, the Mets could not capitalize, and the top of the inning ended when Hayden Senger flied out to right field. Scott made quick work in a 1-2-3 inning at the bottom of the second, and score stayed 0-0.

At the top of the third inning, Phillips worked a 1-2-3 inning as well. In the bottom of the third, Sanoja hit a line drive just past Semien into center field for a single. Liam Hicks walked, and so did Edwards on four pitches to load the bases with only one out. Scott responded by striking out Owen Caissie and inducing a groundout from Kyle Stowers to end the inning. The score remained 0-0, and Scott remained impeccable with the bases loaded: now 0-7 across 14 games.

At the top of the fourth, Brett Baty smacked a line drive into center field, and MJ Melendez walked with two outs before Phillips was replaced by Calvin Faucher. Unfortunately, Taylor flied out to left field immediately after to end the Mets’ scoring hopes. In the bottom of the fourth, Scott hit Connor Norby on the elbow guard with a pitch, making Norby the fifth batter that Scott has hit in six games. However, Scott again dodged trouble by striking out Morel and getting Sanoja to fly out to center field, and at the end of the fourth inning, neither team had scored any runs.

In the top of the fifth inning, Bichette sneaked a two-out single right under Sanoja’s glove into left field, and A.J. Ewing followed up with a single on a ground ball to right field that held Bichette up for a moment, so that he had to stop at second base. However, Vientos grounded out to end the inning, and the scoring threat, once more. Scott worked another 1-2-3 inning to keep the game scoreless.

John King came in for the Marlins to pitch the sixth inning, and Baty led off with a four-pitch walk. However, Semien followed up by grounding into a double play. Melendez was hit by a pitch to end King’s outing in favor of Anthony Bender, and Bender induced a groundout from Taylor to end the top of the sixth. Scott returned to the mound for the bottom of the sixth, marking his longest outing of 2026. After the first out, there was a kerfuffle about Otto Lopez’s bat, but once the umpires determined that he could not use the bat and it was replaced, the game rolled on. Lopez lined out, and Marsee singled before Huascar Brazobán replaced Scott to get the final out and move on to the seventh inning with the score still 0-0.

In the top of the seventh, Benge walked and stole second base, and Bichette flied out to center field to move Benge to third base with two outs, the first time that the Mets had a runner on third base during this series. The Marlins then brought in yet another pitcher, Michael Peterson, who struck out Ewing on a foul tip and ended the top of the seventh without allowing any runs from the Mets. In the bottom of the seventh, Sanoja socked a line drive into left field for a double. At that point, Brazobán was replaced by Brooks Raley, who came in and walked Hicks. Edwards then smacked a single straight up a center field, where Ewing was waiting to throw directly to Luis Torrens (having replaced Senger earlier), who tagged Sanoja out at home to save the run and get the second out. However, Hernandez then came in as a pinch hitter and hit a single to load the bases. Raley then induced a groundout and also ended without allowing any runs after a close call in the seventh. After everything, the score remained 0-0.

In the top of the eighth inning, Peterson and Luke Weaver both worked 1-2-3 innings, and Pete Fairbanks came in to pitch for the Marlins at the top of the ninth. MJ Melendez belted a single into right field to start the ninth inning, but when Nick Morabito came in to pinch run for him, he was caught stealing second base. Taylor grounded out, and Torrens drew the Mets’ sixth walk of the game, moving to second on a wild pitch by Fairbanks. Ultimately, it did not matter after Benge struck out to end the top of the ninth, marking 27 innings of play for the Mets in which they have scored two runs. Devin Williams came in for the bottom of the ninth and gave up a double to Morel, who was replaced by Esteury Ruiz as a pinch runner. Sanoja put down a sacrifice bunt to move Ruiz to third, bringing up Hicks, who walked after a full count. Williams intentionally walked Edwards, loading the bases for Hernandez to hit a walk-off grand slam and end the game 4-0.

The Mets return home tomorrow to face the Reds with Nolan McLean on the mound in a matchup with Nick Lodolo. Here’s hoping everyone is feeling better, as well.

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Win Probability Added

What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: Christian Scott, +32% WPA
Big Mets loser: Devin Williams, -36% WPA
Mets pitchers: +20% WPA
Mets hitters: -70% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: A.J. Ewing throws Javier Sanoja out at home base, -7.1% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Heriberto Hernandez hits a walk-off grand slam in the ninth, +16.5% WPA

Antonelli surges to F1 Canadian GP win after teammate Russell retires in lead

  • Mercedes teenager claims fourth consecutive victory

  • Lewis Hamilton second; Max Verstappen third

It is too early to be decisive yet but without doubt George Russell was left cursing his damnable luck as his world championship ambitions took a body blow in Montreal. The British driver was left angry and disconsolate as his Mercedes ground to halt on track at the Canadian Grand Prix and his teammate and title rival Kimi Antonelli powered to a record-breaking victory.

Russell must be wondering what he has to do to catch a break in what increasingly looks like a two-way title fight with his Italian teammate. He had claimed victory in the sprint race, then pole and then had an absolutely gripping, toe-to-toe fight with the 19-year-old for the opening 29 laps on the Île Notre-Dame.

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Golden Knights Captain Mark Stone To Return For Game 3 Of Western Conference Final

The Golden Knights will have captain Mark Stone back on the ice for Game 3, coach John Tortorella confirmed before Sunday's game.

Stone hasn't played since suffering a lower-body injury on May 8 during Game 3 in the second round against the Anaheim Ducks.

The 34-year-old missed the last three games of the conference semifinal and the first two of the Western Conference Final against the Colorado Avalanche.

The Golden Knights won Games 1 and 2 in Denver to take a 2-0 series lead. They're now two wins away from returning to the Stanley Cup Final for the first time since 2023, when they defeated the Florida Panthers to win the title in five games.

Stone had seven points (3 goals, 4 assists) in the first nine playoff games. Vegas is 6-3 with Stone on the ice.

"No one wants to be out there more than Mark," defenseman Noah Hanifin said. "He's one of the most competitive guys I've ever played with in my career. How much he loves the game, how passionate he is about the game.

"He did all the work he can, just to make sure he's back, so we're excited for tonight."

In 94 career playoff games with the Knights, the veteran forward has 79 points (39 goals and 40 assists).

PHOTO CAPTION

Vegas Golden Knights right wing Mark Stone (61) skates against the Anaheim Ducks during the first period of game two of the second round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at T-Mobile Arena.

Astros 8, Cubs 5: Shōta Imanaga gets bit by the home run bug. Again.

It rained all morning on the North Side of Chicago, but by game time the rain had left the area and it became a beautiful, sunny, late spring afternoon at Wrigley Field.

The sky might as well have kept on pouring, because the Astros rained down three home runs off Shōta Imanaga and defeated the Cubs 8-5, extending the Cubs’ losing streak to eight.

Jake Meyers hit the first of those homers, a solo shot in the second. Okay, a solo homer, that’s not too terrible. The Cubs, meanwhile, had two runners on with two out in the first but (all together now) failed with RISP. Again.

And the Cubs actually took the lead in the bottom of the second. I say “actually” because when they did take the lead, it was the first time they had led in any game in the entire homestand. With one out, Moisés Ballesteros walked and Carson Kelly singled him to third.

Pedro Ramirez, starting his first MLB game after pinch-hitting Saturday, doubled in Ballesteros [VIDEO].

So that was Ramirez’ first major league hit, and yes, they did get the ball for him.

Kelly took third on that hit and scored on a sacrifice fly by Pete Crow-Armstrong [VIDEO].

That gave the Cubs the lead. Ramirez took third on that play and scored on a single by Nico Hoerner [VIDEO].

Michael Busch followed with a walk and Alex Bregman was hit by a pitch to load the bases with two out. Michael Conforto, who has had his share of heroics this year, could have helped put the game (maybe) out of reach, but he struck out to end the inning.

Still — a 3-1 lead! And, about the three-run inning, from BCB’s JohnW53:

The Cubs’ three-run second inning was their first with more than two runs in their last four games, since they scored three in the fifth inning on Monday vs. the Brewers. They had scored a total of four runs in 41 subsequent innings.

Today’s was their 19th three-run inning of the season. They have scored four runs in eight innings, three runs in five, and seven runs in one.

Could Imanaga hold that lead? Friends, you already know he could not. Here’s how that went down. He served up another solo homer in the third, to Nick Allen. Still, solo homers aren’t what kill you. It’s the three-run jobs, and that’s what Imanaga gave up in the fifth after two runs had scored on a Jeremy Peña single to give Houston a 4-3 lead. That might have been okay, but the three-run job, by Christian Walker, who already had two home runs in this series, was the death blow.

I thought at the time, “There’s no way the Cubs are going to score four more runs in this game,” and indeed, they did not.

The Cubs had put a couple of runners on in the fourth on walks, but Nico hit into a rally-killing double play.

A couple more things about Imanaga. First, his pitch selection, which as you see was mostly offspeed [VIDEO].

And more Imanaga facts from John:

Imanaga is just the sixth Cubs starter since 1901, and first in nearly 20 years, to pitch six innings and give up seven runs with six strikeouts.

The first five:
Fergie Jenkins, June 14, 1972 (11 hits, 2 homers)
Bill Hands, Aug. 15, 1972 (6 hits, 3 homers)
Kerry Wood, Aug. 5, 1998 (9 hits, 2 homers)
Matt Clement, May 16, 2003 (8 hits, 1 homer)
Carlos Zambrano, July 2, 2006 (7 hits, 2 homers)
Jenkins, Wood and Zambrano also did it at Wrigley Field.

Hands and Zambrano walked three, as Imanaga did. Wood walked two; Jenkins and Clement, one.

The bullpen did a decent job in this one, until the ninth. Ethan Roberts and Phil Maton threw scoreless innings in the seventh and eighth. While that was going on, the Cubs did get a bit closer. PCA led off the seventh with a walk, and one out later, Busch smashed an opposite-field home run to make it 7-5 [VIDEO].

But the next two Cubs were routine outs, and in the eighth, Ballesteros walked with one out ane Carson Kelly singled. Kevin Alcántara was sent in to run for Kelly, but Ramirez hit into an inning-ending double play.

In the ninth, Caleb Thielbar allowed the Astros a run to make it 8-5. A leadoff walk helped lead to that, and, well, you know how those leadoff walks generally come back to bite you.

The Cubs did get the leadoff hitter on in the bottom of the ninth off ex-Cub Nate Pearson, another walk drawn by PCA, who had three bases on balls in this game. That, hopefully, is a good sign for PCA. This was the first time in PCA’s MLB career that he had walked three times in one game.

But he wound up stranded. Hoerner and Busch both hit the ball hard (99 miles per hour for Hoerner, 96 for Busch) but right at Astros infielders, and Bregman flied to right to end the game [VIDEO].

This all feels like the end of the world for the Cubs, but it’s clearly not, as we have just reached Memorial Day. At 29-24, the Cubs still trail the first-place Brewers by just 2.5 games, as Milwaukee lost to the Dodgers Sunday. The Cardinals, in second place, are a game ahead of the Cubs. Those are not insurmountable deficits, even if they feel like it right now.

To put this streak into perspective, here’s John:

The Cubs have tied for the longest losing streak in MLB history by a team that also had multiple double-digit winning streaks. The 1916 Giants won 17, 14 and 12 in a row (the last two separated by a tie) and lost eight. The losing streak came before the winning streaks, making the Giants 1-9. They were 2-13 when they won 17. The two subsequent streaks came in September. They finished 86-66, in fourth place, seven games out of first. 

Hopefully, that fourth-place finish will not be the Cubs’ fate.

They will simply have to go on the road and start winning games, and doing so in Pittsburgh and St. Louis is never easy.

A four-game series against the Pirates at PNC Park begins Monday afternoon. Ben Brown will start for the Cubs and Carmen Mlodzinski goes for Pittsburgh. Game time Monday is 12:35 p.m. CT and TV coverage will be via Marquee Sports Network. The BCB game preview will post at 10:30 a.m. CT.

Yankees Social Media Spotlight: Let’s Go Knicks!

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 21: Former Baseball pitcher CC Sabathia (2R) attends Game Two between the Cleveland Cavaliers and the New York Knicks in the NBA Eastern Conference Finals at Madison Square Garden on May 21, 2026 in New York City. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s Sunday once more, and you know what that means — it’s time for our weekly social media roundup! This wasn’t one of the best weeks of the season, as the Yankees decided to start their June Swoon early this year with a couple of bad stretches of baseball in the month of May. Thanks in part to the Knicks’ success, however, social media has remained buzzing within the Yankees Universe. With so much to do, let’s get started!

Eastern Conference Finals

During the offseason, members of the New York Yankees, both past and present, spend quite a bit of time at Madison Square Garden to catch the Knicks and the Rangers. The regular season, of course, brings this to a grinding halt, as the players have a few more important things to worry about, but a deep playoff run causes a lot of former players to forego Yankee Stadium for a trip to the world’s most famous arena. This week, Alex Rodriguez and CC Sabathia were in attendance for the Knicks’ Game 2 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers.

Earlier in the week, Sabathia also commented on his Facebook about the Knicks’ improbable 22-point comeback that gave them a 1-0 series lead:

What an unbelievable comeback…LFG New York Knicks!!!

Congrats, Gio!

Earlier this week, former Yankees infielder Gio Urshela announced his retirement.

A-Rod Teaches Base Stealing

Speaking of third basemen, Alex Rodriguez took to Instagram to post a video on the art of the stolen base. While more known for his power, A-Rod did have some wheels, stealing 329 bases over the course of his career.

Game Belts

The Yanks may not have passed around the Game Belt as much as we’d have liked, but we still saw a couple of Ws this week.

Dave’s Thoughts

As always, Yankees radio voice Dave Sims took to Instagram to react to the Yankees’ games this week.

Player Grades: Lakers 2025-26 season

HOUSTON, TX - APRIL 24: Rui Hachimura #28 and Deandre Ayton #5 of the Los Angeles Lakers celebrate during the game against the Houston Rockets during Round One Game Three of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 24, 2026 at the Toyota Center in Houston, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

This week, we’ll be kicking off our season recap series with each player on the roster. To set things off right, and because everyone loves discussing player grades so much, let’s give some grades based on the season as a whole.

In many ways, this felt like multiple seasons packed into one. The Lakers not only endured being without LeBron James at the start of the season, but excelled. His return, and an injury to Austin Reaves, led to some growing pains in the ensuing months but the Lakers figured everything out in March, leading to one of the best stretches of basketball the franchise has seen in multiple seasons.

The ending was bittersweet as a shorthanded team did all they could in the postseason before succumbing to the defending champions in the second round. It was a season full of brilliance, surprises and disappointments.

So, let’s look back on the season. Similar to the regular season version, grades will be based on the player’s expectations coming into the year. A “B” grade represents the average performance, or meeting expectations, for that player.

Luka Dončić

64 games, 33.5 points, 7.7 rebounds, 8.3 assists, 1.6 steals, 0.5 blocks, 4 turnovers, 47.6% FG, 36.6% 3PT, 78% FT

After his first season featured flashes of his MVP form, a refocused Luka came into this year and returned to his top form. He carried the Lakers through so many games this year and, once the team got right, looked like the league’s best in March.

Injuries were the only downside, but those are hard to avoid and hard to knock him for given how much he focused on his body in the offseason.

Grade: A+

Austin Reaves

51 games, 23.3 points, 4.7 rebounds, 5.5 assists, 1.1 steals, 0.4 blocks, 3 turnovers, 49% FG, 36% 3PT, 87.1% FT

Reaves’ constant ascension reached yet another level this season. We learned right away what kind of season he was going to have, as without Luka and LeBron, Austin showed he was up to the task of carrying a team.

Austin did well to ease many of the concerns about his viability alongside Luka. The biggest knock on him was how little the two shared the court. Hopefully, he spends the summer getting on the Luka plan for his body.

Grade: A

LeBron James

60 games, 20.9 points, 6.1 rebounds, 7.2 assists, 1.2 steals, 0.6 blocks, 3 turnovers, 51.5% FG, 31.7% 3PT, 73.7% FT

It took a while for LeBron to get things going this season and find his groove. It was a new role with new expectations and LeBron had to adjust.

For portions of the season, it felt like the LeBron era in LA was going to come to an end. But his play in March changed the outlook on things and he showed in the playoffs that he can still carry a team when needed.

Grade: B+

Marcus Smart

62 games, 9.3 points, 2.8 assists, 3 assists, 1.4 steals, 0.4 blocks, 1.5 turnovers, 39.5% FG, 33.1% 3PT, 82.2% FT

After two injury-riddled seasons, Smart proved he could still be a reliable contributor on a contending team. When the team was at it’s best in March, Smart was a valuable member of the starting lineup, contributing on both ends of the court.

His ability and willingness to do the little things and the dirty work made him an important piece of the team and may have earned him a longer contract this summer.

Grade: B+

Rui Hachimura

68 games, 11.5 points, 2.7 assists, 3.3 rebounds, 0.8 steals, 0.3 blocks, 0.6 turnovers, 51.4% FG, 44.3% 3PT, 69.4% FT

In the delineation between 82-game and 16-game players, Rui definitely falls closer to the latter side of that spectrum. The regular season was solid as he jumped between roles, including moving to the bench once everyone was healthy.

But his postseason performance certainly made up for however underwhelming his regular season was.

Grade: B

Deandre Ayton

72 games, 12.5 points, 8 rebounds, 0.8 assists, 0.6 steals, 1 block, 1.2 turnovers, 67.1% FG, 64.5% 3PT

The Lakers signed Ayton with the hopes of him being a long-term solution to their center position.

He certainly was not that. In a different role than he’s had before in his career, Ayton’s production fluctuated throughout the year, including in the playoffs.

In the end, the only certainty about his season is he is not the long-term answer.

Grade: B-

Jake LaRavia

82 games, 8.2 points, 4 rebounds, 1.8 assists, 1.3 steals, 0.5 blocks, 1.1 turnovers, 45.9% FG, 32.1% 3PT, 76.3% FT

The only player to play more than 72 games, LaRavia featured in 82 games, indicating how important he was during the regular season as an innings eater.

His energy and length defensively were valuable, but his offensive shortcomings eventually made him unplayable when it mattered. Still, given how small his contract is, he still was productive this year.

Grade: B

Luke Kennard

32 games, 9 points, 2.6 rebounds, 2.4 assists, 0.7 steals, 0.1 blocks, 0.9 turnovers, 52.7% FG, 44.8% 3PT, 91.2% FT

Considering who he was replacing, the bar was on the floor for Kennard to be an improvement at the trade deadline. He was every bit of that and then more, including having an out-of-body experience in the postseason to help the team win a series.

Grade: A

Jaxson Hayes

66 games, 7.5 points, 4.1 rebounds, 0.9 assists, 0.4 steals, 0.8 blocks, 0.5 turnovers, 75.6% FG, 65.3% FT

While it may have looked different in certain spots and at certain times, Hayes was ultimately still the same player he has always been. He had his most efficient season, but still was closer to unplayable than valuable in the playoffs.

Grade: B

Jarred Vanderbilt

65 games, 4.4 points, 4.5 rebounds, 1.3 assists, 0.8 steals, 0.3 blocks, 0.9 turnovers, 47.1% FG, 29.3% 3PT, 58.9% FT

All those videos of Vando shooting corner threes last summer amounted to yet another poor shooting season. Vando was on the edge of the rotation most of the season and often made the decision relatively easy with how ineffective he was offensively.

Grade: C

Nick Smith Jr.

30 games, 6.2 points, 0.8 rebounds, 1 assist, 0.3 steals, 0.1 blocks, 0.7 turnovers, 43.5% FG, 39.5% 3PT, 73.3% FT

After spending most of the season on a two-way deal, Smith Jr. signed a standard deal late in the season. After helping the Lakers to a huge win in Portland early in the year, it was a relatively uneventful season with the parent Lakers.

Grade: B

Maxi Kleber

43 games, 2 points, 2 rebounds, 0.6 assists, 0.4 steals, 0.3 blocks, 0.4 turnovers, 45.2% FG, 23.1% 3PT, 53.8% FT

Whatever ideas there were of Kleber being a useful on-court option this season were extinguished. In spurts, he was valuable and was a notable contributor in a couple of wins. But he was never able to string together a run of games.

Grade: C

Dalton Knecht

54 games, 4.2 points, 1.4 rebounds, 0.4 assists, 0.2 steals, 0.2 blocks, 0.4 turnovers, 45.5% FG, 34.2% 3PT, 72.7% FT

It’s incredible how far Knecht has fallen. After a rough summer, Knecht did not bounce back and Redick stopped giving him chances. And rightfully so. It wouldn’t be a surprise if this was his last year in LA.

Grade: F

Bronny James

42 games, 2.9 points, 0.5 rebounds, 1.2 assists, 0.5 steals, 0.1 blocks, 0.6 turnovers, 40.9% FG, 38.6% 3PT, 85.7% FT

Imagine telling someone in November of 2024, as Knecht was leading the Lakers to wins that, by the postseason in 2026, Bronny would be the rookie getting playoff minutes. It’s a testament to the work he’s done, mostly in the G League.

Grade: B+

Adou Thiero

25 games, 1.9 points, 1.1 rebounds, 0.4 assists, 0.3 steals, 0.1 blocks, 0.4 turnovers, 51.6% FG, 33.3% 3PT, 63.6% FT

Injuries largely upended Thiero’s rookie season. He got a late start to the campaign due to injury, then suffered another one midseason that lingered.

Still, he was able to show flashes of what he could be, including in the playoffs.

Grade: C-

Drew Timme, Chris Mañon

The pair of two-way players at season’s end had different kinds of seasons. Drew Timme briefly became a rotation player and had a case for the final standard contract at season’s end. Mañon, meanwhile, made next to no impact on the parent team.

JJ Redick

Redick’s 50-win rookie season felt hollow after a terrible showing in the playoffs. He cleared the 50-win benchmark again this season and followed it up with a much more encouraging postseason showing.

He again navigated injuries and kept adapting admirably to the circumstances. It looks set to be a fruitful future with Redick and Luka at the helm.

Grade: A

You can follow Jacob on Twitter at @JacobRude or on Bluesky at @jacobrude.bsky.social.

Carlos Mendoza talks Mets' 'scuffling' lineup: 'We gotta figure it out'

During the Mets' three games in Miami, they managed to score just two runs, culminating with getting shut out in Sunday’s series finale to finish off a sweep at the hands of the Marlins who began the series in the NL-East cellar.

Despite at least one baserunner in every inning on Sunday, New York, without Juan Soto because of an illness, couldn’t get the big hit and finished 0-for-8 with runners in scoring position while leaving 10 men on base.

The Mets’ lack of offense looked eerily similar to how it looked when Soto was out with a calf injury and when they were losing 12 in a row.

“We’re scuffling,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “We got a lot of guys that are going through it right now, we’re not grinding [out] at-bats. … We gotta figure it out because you gotta be able to score runs.”

While nobody in the lineup is safe from criticism, one player, in particular, who had a tough series and a rough road trip was Marcus Semien.

Semien finished the weekend series 0-for-10 after an 0-for-4 performance on Sunday and has struggled all season long in his first year in Queens after coming over in an offseason trade with the Texas Rangers.

Now in his age-35 season, Semien is hitting .214 with a .560 OPS, tied for the eighth-worst mark in MLB among qualified hitters. Right behind Semien is his teammate Bo Bichette (.581 OPS).

“What I’m feeling is I’m putting the ball in play but not driving the ball,” Semien said. “Like I said, that's a good pitching staff over there so just trying to do everything I can to be on time, be ready for high velocity and be able to handle the offspeed they throw.

“Unfortunately, I wasn’t able to get anything really in the air or in the gaps this series and ended up with a tough series.”

Asked if he was concerned that age is starting to catch up with the veteran, who had even struggled in the past few seasons with the Rangers, Mendoza pointed to Semien’s track record and work ethic “behind the scenes” as reasons why he still believes in his second baseman.

“This is a guy that continues to show up and continues to put the work in, day in and day out,” the skipper said. “You hope that at some point he’s gonna come out of it. He’s been in this league for a long time and there’s a reason why and we’re gonna continue to run him out there.”

Where exactly the Mets go from here remains to be seen.

Even with some injured players possibly on their way back soon, New York’s offense has been a problem all season, even at full strength.

“We gotta find a way,” Mendoza said. “We gotta keep going here, we gotta continue to make adjustments because what we’re doing right now is not good enough. It’s as simple as that.

“We got a few guys that are having a hard time, we’re having a hard time creating traffic, we’re having a hard time squaring the ball up and we gotta figure it out.”

Mendoza added: “We can’t be making excuses because of the players that aren’t here. We have 26 MLB players who are capable of executing, but right now we’re going through a tough situation offensively. Obviously we can’t score runs and we’ve got to get back to the basics which is compete, have good at-bats and trust in the guy behind you. We have to create opportunities and right now we’re not doing that.”

Kenny Atkinson impressed by Knicks’ ability to avoid ‘a letdown’ during historic winning streak

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows New York Knicks players Josh Hart and OG Anunoby celebrate a win against the Cleveland Cavaliers, Image 2 shows Cleveland Cavaliers head coach Kenny Atkinson reacts during the second quarter
The Knicks have impressed Kenny Atkinson during their dominant playoff run.

CLEVELAND — These aren’t the regular-season Knicks — at least not since they trailed the Hawks in the first round of the playoffs.

They haven’t lost in a month, reeling off a franchise record 10 consecutive wins in the postseason, mostly in dominant fashion.

Take it from someone who would know.

“Teams that make that next step, it’s the balance that’s impressed me the most,” Cavaliers coach Kenny Atkinson said after practice Sunday, the eve of Game 4 of the Eastern Conference finals series that could end Monday night at Rocket Arena with one more Knicks victory. “They have so many contributors right now, and I think that is what’s different from the regular season.

“We all know they had ups and downs, they had periods where they weren’t playing well. The sustainability of it, you’re expecting a letdown. We haven’t seen a letdown from them yet.”

During this 10-game winning streak, the Knicks have won by an average of 22.5 points.

Kenny Atkinson reacts during Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals May 23. Charles Wenzelberg

Only two games were really undecided late: The second game of the Eastern Conference semifinals against the 76ers, which the Knicks won by six, and Game 1 of this series, when they rallied from 22 points down in the fourth quarter.

Otherwise, it has been a parade of blowouts.

In the postseason, the Knicks are outscoring the opposition by 18.5 points per 100 possessions, by far the best in the league.

OG Anunoby and Josh Hart celebrate after the Knicks won Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals May 23. Charles Wenzelberg

They are second in offensive rating and first in defensive rating.

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The entire starting five of Karl-Anthony Towns, Mikal Bridges, Jalen Brunson, OG Anunoby and Josh Hart are averaging double figures in the postseason, and Anunoby, Towns and Bridges are all shooting better than 55 percent from the field.

“It comes down to performing better, individually. Bridges is 27 of 38 [in this series]. [Landry] Shamet is 7-for-8 from 3 in this series. They’re getting stellar performances across the board,” Atkinson said. “Josh Hart in Game 2 had an incredible game. Jalen’s great and Towns is great, but we’ve kind of done a decent job on those guys, you can argue. … OG’s two wing 3s [in Game 3], like the jab, jab 3, are you kidding me? …

“The goal was to slow down their momentum, and that mojo they got, and we haven’t been able to do that. That’s the frustrating thing for me. Part of that is them playing great. We haven’t found a formula to slow their mojo down.”

Walker, Allen Power Astros to 8-5 Win, Sweep Cubs at Wrigley

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - MAY 23: Christian Walker #8 of the Houston Astros hits a two-run home run in the first inning against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on May 23, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Sage Zipeto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Christian Walker continued his hot streak with a 3-run homer, and Nick Allen went 3-for-3 with a solo HR and 2 RBI as the Astros (23-31) held off the Cubs (29-24) 8-5 to complete a 3 game sweep in Chicago.

Peter Lambert (W, 3-4) survived a tough 2nd inning in which he allowed 3 ER before settling down to get through 5 innings without allowing any additional damage. Lambert finished with 5 IP, 3 ER, 5 H, 4 BB and 5 K.

Nate Pearson (S, 1) pitched a scoreless 9th for his first save as an Astro and his 4th career save. It was his first save since 2024.

The Astros struck first in the second inning, when Jake Meyers drove the first pitch he saw from Cubs SP Shota Imanaga (L, 4-5) 388 feet to left for his 2nd HR of the season to give Houston a 1-0 lead.

In the bottom of the second, the Cubs would take the lead. Moises Ballesteros drew a 1-out walk before Carson Kelly singled to center, putting runners on the corners with one out. Pedro Ramirez then doubled to right center past a diving Meyers to drive in Ballesteros to tie the game at 1. Pete Crow-Armstrong then hit a sacrifice fly to center to drive in Kelly to make it 2-1 Cubs, with Ramirez advancing to third. Nico Hoerner then singled to right to drive in Ramirez and make it 3-1 Chicago.

After a mound visit from Astros pitching coach Josh Miller, Lambert walked Michael Busch and hit Alex Bregman with a pitch to load the bases. Lambert finally escaped the inning by striking out the next batter, Michael Conforto, to end the inning.

Lambert, who appeared frustrated with his inability to consistently throw strikes in the inning, was pumped up after striking out Conforto, and it seemed to rejuvenate him. Over the next 3 innings, Lambert would not allow a run or a hit, and struck out 4. That effort helped an already overtaxed bullpen from being grossly overexposed, as Bryan King, Enyel De Los Santos and Steven Okert were all unavailable after pitching back-to-back days.

In the top of the 3rd, Nick Allen would get one back for the Astros, sending a 3-2 fastball from Imanaga over the wall in left for a solo HR to cut the deficit to 3-2.

The Astros would break the game open in the 5th. Cam Smith (1-3, BB, 2 R) doubled to lead off the inning, followed by a walk by Zach Dezenzo. After a failed bunt by Vazquez led to a pop out, Allen was hit by a pitch to load the bases. After a Brice Matthews infield pop up for the second out, Jeremy Pena singled to center to score Smith and Dezenzo, giving the Astros a 4-3 lead and runners on the corners with 2 out for Christian Walker.

Walker blasted a 2-0 pitch from Imanaga 426 ft to left center for his 14th HR of the season and a 7-3 Houston lead.

A.J. Blubaugh, who has not allowed a run when pitching only one inning since April 8, breezed through a 1-2-3 6th, but because of a shorthanded bullpen was asked to go a second inning. In his second inning of work, Blubaugh allowed a 2-run HR to Michael Busch that cut the lead to 7-5.

Bryan Abreu came on to pitch the 8th and it was a white knuckle ride the whole way. After getting Seiya Suzuki to ground out to start the inning, Abreu walked Ballesteros on 4 pitches, none of which were close. He then went 3-0 to Kelly before surrendering a single, giving the Cubs 1st and 2nd with 1 out.

Josh Miller then came out to the mound, and seemed to be trying to settle Abreu down with some positive reinforcement. To this point, Abreu had thrown 12 pitches, only 4 fastballs, with none of the fastballs exceeding 93.9 MPH.

After the meeting, Abreu would find a little extra on the heat, and on a 95.6 MPH fastball Abreu got Ramirez to bounce into a 6-3 double play to end the inning and hold the lead at 7-5.

In the 9th, the Astros would tack on an insurance run, as Allen knocked a 2-out single to right to score Smith and extend the lead to 8-5.

Nate Pearson would lock it down in the 9th, and the Astros completed the sweep of the Cubs at Wrigley. It’s the Astros second series sweep of the season, and first since their second series of the year against the Boston Red Sox.

Houston currently sits 4 games out of first place in the AL West. Hunter Brown, Josh Hader, Joey Loperfido and Taylor Trammell are all scheduled to play today for Corpus Christi on rehab assignments.

Tomorrow the Astros start a 4-game series in Arlington against the Rangers.

Pitching probables:

Monday: RHP Tatsuya Imai (1-2, 8.31) vs. RHP Kumar Rocker (2-4, 3.60) 6:05 pm start

Tuesday: RHP Jason Alexander (1-0, 7.30) vs. RHP Jack Leiter (1-4, 4.61) 7:05 pm start

Wednesday: RHP Mike Burrows (2-6, 5.75) vs. RHP Jacob deGrom (3-4, 3.86) 7:05 pm start

Thursday: RHP Spencer Arrighetti (6-1, 1.32) vs. RHP Nathan Eovaldi (5-5, 3.65) 7:05 pm start

Series Preview: Milwaukee Brewers vs. St. Louis Cardinals

May 6, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; Milwaukee Brewers first baseman Jake Bauers (9) shortstop Joey Ortiz (3) second baseman Brice Turang (2) and third baseman David Hamilton (6) celebrate after the Brewers defeated the St. Louis Cardinals at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images | Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

The Milwaukee Brewers are set to host the St. Louis Cardinals this week, beginning with an afternoon game on Memorial Day Monday. Milwaukee, who leads the NL Central at 30-20 on the season, swept the Cubs earlier in the week but dropped two of three to the Dodgers over the weekend. The Cardinals are coming off a rough weather weekend in Cincinnati, as they had a pair of rainouts on Friday and Sunday, wrapped around a 1-1 doubleheader on Saturday. They currently sit in second place in the Central, 1.5 games behind Milwaukee.

The Brewers’ injured list is primarily occupied by pitchers, with right-handers Quinn Priester and Brandon Woodruff shelved along with lefties Angel Zerpa, Rob Zastryzny, and Jared Koenig. Zastryzny, Koenig, and Woodruff are all pretty close to returning, while Priester is aiming for a June return. Zerpa is out for the season after undergoing Tommy John surgery. On the position player side, outfielders Akil Baddoo and Brandon Lockridge are both out, with Baddoo currently rehabbing at Triple-A Nashville and Lockridge out until mid- to late June.

St. Louis’ injured list is fairly short, with three position players making up the whole group. Outfielders Lars Nootbaar and Nathan Church are both out, with Nootbaar aiming for a June return after double heel surgery — he’s currently rehabbing at Triple-A Memphis. Church was placed on the IL with a left shoulder strain over the weekend, with his return currently TBD. Infielder Ramón Urías rounds out the IL, as he’s also TBD with a right elbow injury that has kept him out since May 5.

Jake Bauers and Brice Turang sit atop Milwaukee’s home run leaderboard with seven each, while William Contreras has been one of the better hitters over the last month or so, boosting his season line to .303/.371/.410 with four homers, eight doubles, 30 RBIs, and 28 runs. With a healthy offense, Christian Yelich, Garrett Mitchell, Sal Frelick, Jackson Chourio, Gary Sánchez, and Andrew Vaughn are also regularly in the mix, with Joey Ortiz, David Hamilton, Blake Perkins, and Luis Rengifo rounding things out. As a team, the Brewers are hitting .246/.333/.361 (.694 OPS ranks tied for 18th), with 34 homers (last), 246 runs (eighth), and 54 steals (tied for second).

The St. Louis offense is led by Jordan Walker, who is turning in a career year with 15 homers, 11 doubles, seven steals, and a .302/.372/.594 line through 50 games. Rookie JJ Wetherholt is second on the team with nine homers and is a perfect 6-for-6 on the basepaths, while Alec Burleson has seven homers. Pedro Pagés, Nolan Gorman, Masyn Winn, Victor Scott II, and Iván Herrera round out the regulars for the Cards, with Bryan Torres, José Fermín, César Prieto, Thomas Saggese, and Yohel Pozo providing the depth. As a team, the Cardinals are hitting .242/.323/.393 (.716 OPS ranks 11th), with 60 homers (tied for 10th), 233 runs (tied for 11th), and 34 steals (tied for 18th).

Aaron Ashby anchors the Milwaukee bullpen with a 2.61 ERA and a perfect 8-0 record across 23 appearances, totaling 31 innings with 46 strikeouts. Grant Anderson and DL Hall are right there with Ashby with ERAs below 3.00, while Abner Uribe and Trevor Megill round out the “A” bullpen. Jake Woodford, Shane Drohan, and Carlos Rodriguez give Milwaukee plenty of depth in the innings-eater category. As a staff, the Brewers have a 3.31 team ERA (fourth), including a 3.19 starter ERA (fourth) and a 3.47 bullpen ERA (10th). They’ve struck out 488 batters (fourth) over 445 1/3 innings.

The Cardinals’ bullpen has been less than great thus far, though they’ve had a pretty group, as seven players have 23 or more appearances. Justin Bruihl leads the bullpen with 25 appearances, though he has a 5.56 ERA over 22 2/3 innings. Riley O’Brien, JoJo Romero, and Gordon Graceffo are the best of the bunch, as O’Brien leads the way with 13 saves in 17 tries and a 2.96 ERA, Romero has a 2.92 ERA, and Graceffo has a 1.65 ERA. George Soriano (3.32 ERA over 21 2/3 IP), Ryne Stanek (6.00 ERA over 21 IP), Matt Pushard (6.23 ERA over 4 1/3 IP), and Brycen Mautz (no MLB appearances) round out the group, after Mautz was recalled on Sunday to replace Matt Svanson, who was optioned. As a staff, the Cardinals have a 4.20 team ERA (22nd), including a 4.07 starter ERA (13th) and a 4.39 bullpen ERA (21st). They’ve struck out 380 batters (29th) over 462 2/3 innings.

Probable Pitchers

Monday, May 25 @ 1:10 p.m.: RHP Jacob Misiorowski (4-2, 1.89 ERA, 2.13 FIP) vs. LHP Matthew Liberatore (2-2, 4.70 ERA, 4.85 FIP)

Misiorowski has simply dominated in May. Over his last four starts, dating back to May 1, he’s totaled 24 1/3 innings with no runs allowed on just nine hits and five walks (0.575 WHIP), striking out 37 to maintain his lead atop MLB’s leaderboard with 88 this season. He went six scoreless with eight strikeouts on just 74 pitches in his last outing against the Cubs, a 5-2 win as part of a three-game sweep. Including his MLB debut last June, Miz has made three career starts against St. Louis, with a 3.95 ERA and 12 strikeouts over 13 2/3 innings, though all of those appearances came last season.

After a rainout in Sunday’s series finale against the Reds, the Cardinals pushed their probables back a day. That means Matthew Liberatore gets the ball in the series opener opposite Misiorowski. Liberatore, 26, hasn’t quite panned out as the top prospect he once was, with a 4.64 ERA and 4.28 FIP over 385 2/3 career innings. He’s made 10 starts this year, with a 4.70 ERA, 4.85 FIP, and 43 strikeouts over 51 2/3 innings. He went 4 2/3 innings in a no-decision his last time out, allowing four runs on seven hits and two walks with nine strikeouts against the Pirates. A common opponent for Milwaukee, Liberatore has made 11 career appearances (four starts), spanning 28 2/3 innings with a 1.26 ERA, 31 strikeouts, and a perfect 4-0 record.

Tuesday, May 26 @ 6:40 p.m.: LHP Kyle Harrison (5-1, 1.77 ERA, 2.48 FIP) vs. RHP Michael McGreevy (3-3, 2.40 ERA, 4.03 FIP)

As good as Miz has been, Harrison has been about as good. He’s made nine starts this season, with a sterling 1.77 ERA, 2.48 FIP, and 59 strikeouts across 45 2/3 innings. He’s won each of his last four decisions, and the Brewers have won in each of his last six starts, dating back to early April. He went seven scoreless against the Cubs in his last outing, allowing just two hits and a walk with 11 strikeouts at Wrigley. This marks Harrison’s first career appearance against the Cardinals.

McGreevy, 25, is in his third MLB season with the Cardinals after being drafted in the first round out of UC Santa Barbara in 2021. Though he has a 2.40 ERA, his underlying 4.03 FIP is less than sterling, though that’s at least in part due to low strikeout numbers, with just 37 across 56 1/3 innings. He went five innings in a loss against the Pirates in his last start, allowing three runs on 10 hits and a walk, striking out just one. This marks McGreevy’s first career start against Milwaukee.

Wednesday, May 27 @ 12:40 p.m.: TBD vs. RHP Dustin May (3-5, 5.00 ERA, 3.90 FIP)

Assuming the Brewers are following their recent rotation, this would be Logan Henderson’s game. Henderson has made five starts this season, totaling 23 innings with seven runs allowed (2.74 ERA, 2.39 FIP), striking out 30. The 24-year-old righty went five scoreless against the Dodgers his last time out, allowing three walks and two hits with seven strikeouts. This would mark Henderson’s first career appearance against St. Louis.

May, 28, is now with his third team in St. Louis after agreeing to a one-year, $12.5 million contract in the offseason. A former third-round pick by the Dodgers, May has made 10 starts for the Cards this year, with a 5.00 ERA, 3.90 FIP, and 42 strikeouts across 54 innings. He took the loss in his last appearance, allowing four runs on six hits and two walks, striking out seven over 5 1/3 innings against the Pirates. May’s only career appearance came all the way back in 2021 while with the Dodgers. He went just 1 2/3 innings in that one, allowing a run on one hit (a solo homer) and a walk, striking out three.

How to Watch & Listen

Monday, May 25: Brewers TV; listen via radio on the Brewers Radio Network (620 WTMJ in Milwaukee)

Tuesday, May 26: Brewers TV; listen via radio on the Brewers Radio Network (620 WTMJ in Milwaukee)

Wednesday, May 27: Brewers TV; listen via radio on the Brewers Radio Network (620 WTMJ in Milwaukee)

Prediction

The Brewers hit a bit of a roadblock with the Dodgers over the weekend, but I expect they’ll bounce back against the Cardinals at home this week. Give me the Crew to take two of three.

Thunder vs Spurs Expert Picks & Game 4 Best Bets

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The Oklahoma City Thunder will look to take a commanding 3-1 series lead when they face the San Antonio Spurs in Game 4.

Our NBA experts have you covered for when the action gets underway at Frost Bank Center tonight, with a trio of NBA picks for Sunday, May 24.

Thunder vs Spurs Expert Picks Tonight

PickOdds
Jon Metler Jon Metler: Spurs Spurs -2.5-110
Jason Logan Jason Logan: Thunder Luguentz Dort Over 1.5 assists+145
Joe Osborne Joe Osborne: Over 219.5-110

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Jon Metler's expert pick: Spurs -2.5

Price: -110 at bet365

Give me the San Antonio Spurs -2.5 in Game 4 here against the Oklahoma City Thunder. I think they should be closer to a 4-point favorite in this spot.

I don’t think Jalen Williams will be playing, and it'll be De’Aaron Fox’s second game back, removing some injury friction in their starting lineup — which I also like for San Antonio.

The Thunder may be up 2-1, but they're living dangerously by heavily relying on their role players — such as Jared McCain, Alex Caruso, and even Jaylin Williams

The Spurs have the length and defensive pieces to make life miserable for Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, and Oklahoma City's supporting cast is due for some serious regression.

Jason Logan's expert pick: Luguentz Dort Over 1.5 assists

Price: +145 at bet365

With Jalen Williams hurting and Ajay Mitchell out, OKC is running short on playmakers. Luguentz Dort hasn’t logged more than 23 minutes in the series, but he’s needed in a thinning OKC backcourt in Game 4. 

In the past two games, Dort has dished out six total dimes on 10 potential assists. His assist total has jumped from 0.5 to 1.5, but we’re seeing a solid return from a player with a likely uptick in minutes and involvement in the offense.

Joe Osborne's expert pick: Over 219.5

Price: -110 at bet365

After a slower opener, this series has completely shifted to a faster tempo, with Games 2 and 3 producing 235 and 231 combined points.

San Antonio naturally prefers to push the pace, but the up-and-down style has benefited Oklahoma City as well, with the Thunder erupting offensively over the last two games.

The Spurs have now gone Over the total in eight straight playoff games, while OKC enters tonight leading all postseason teams in both points per game and offensive rating.


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Red Sox 5, Twins 6: Sloppy Sweep

May 24, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Minnesota Twins catcher Victor Caratini (37) tags out Boston Red Sox pinch runner Connor Wong (12) during the ninth inning at Fenway Park. Mandatory Credit: Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images | Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images

The conditions at Fenway Park were sloppy for Sunday’s series finale between the Red Sox and Twins. It rained at various intensities from the first pitch to the last, and while the grounds crew did an excellent job keeping the field playable, the conditions were a factor. For the Red Sox, that manifested in the form of sloppy baseball.

It first appeared in Sonny Gray’s performance. He managed just four innings, allowing three runs on 75 pitches. The outing wasn’t a disaster, but he clearly had a difficult time spinning the baseball, couldn’t land his cutter in the zone, and didn’t execute with two strikes. In the first inning, he failed to back up a throw home from Wilyer Abreu. It ultimately didn’t matter, but good teams get those details correct. In the third inning, the Twins took advantage of two infield singles — one of which looked like an easy double play ball that deflected off of Gray’s foot — and grabbed two runs to retake the lead.

Later on, in the sixth inning with the Red Sox in the lead, Tyron Guerrero gave up two singles on jam shots through the infield. Garrett Whitlock took over and surrendered a hit to plate a run. Jarren Duran fielded the ball at the wall and made an out-of-control, high-arching throw to third base that allowed the hitter to easily take second base. The next hitter singled, Duran threw home, and Carlos Narvaez couldn’t handle the throw. Two runs scored on the play, the second being the runner who took an extra base on Duran’s throw.

Skipping ahead to the ninth inning with the Red Sox trailing by two, Isaiah Kiner-Falefa doubled off the wall with runners on the corners. Third base coach Chad Epperson tried to have Connor Wong score from first on the play, and he was cut down at the plate. The send came with one out, and the rain was so bad at that point that the grounds crew came out to work on the field. After the delay, Twins pitcher Yoendrys Gomez balked and then hit Jarren Duran with a wild pitch. Neither of those things is guaranteed to happen with Wong on first base, but they’re both evidence that the send was reckless.

Ceddanne Rafaela flew out for the final out after a pitching change, and the Red Sox lost 6-5. After sweeping the Royals, the Twins do the same to the Red Sox. It’s one step forward and six steps back this season, seemingly.

Three Studs

Masataka Yoshida

He hit an absolute bomb of a home run. I really wish he were better.

Willson Contreras

Two more RBIs for Willson, who continues to put the offense on his back.

Grounds Crew

I thought there was no way this game was played, but the grounds crew somehow kept the field in good enough shape. Time to go walk my dog in the rain. Maybe they can help.

Three Duds

Chad Epperson

Hindsight is 20-20, but that send was terrible.

Tyron Guerrero

He got tagged with two runs, although I think he was unfortunate. He was in the zone, and the two hits weren’t hit hard. With his velocity, if he’s in the zone as he was today, he’ll be successful more often than not.

Carlos Narvaez

0-3, two strikeouts, and he dropped the ball when he should have been able to tag a runner out at the plate to prevent a run.