Rays Minor League Roundup: Week 3

PORT ST. LUCIE, FL - MARCH 19: Jacob Melton #29 of the Tampa Bay Rays looks on in the dugout prior to the game between the Tampa Bay Rays and the New York Mets at Clover Park on Thursday, March 19, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Scott Audette/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

This was the 3rd week of full minor league play (stats are entering play on Sunday, April 26th).

According to FanGraphs (which factors in age and proximity to the big leagues), 22-year old backstop Caden Bodine continues to be the top hitter in the Rays system; the Rays acquired the former 1st round pick in the Shane Baz deal. Bodine is currently hitting .408/.457/.662 with 3 HR over 83 PA; notably, he has only struck out twice (2.4%).

Meanwhile, Aidan Cremarosa is still the team’s top minor league pitcher. The 22-year old was taken by the Rays in the 8th round of the 2025 draft out of Fresno State. Thus far over four starts, Cremarosa has a 3.60 ERA | 1.76 FIP with a 39.5 K% & 3.7 BB% over 20 IP.

RUMBLINGS

  • SO MANY INJURIES
    • Jacob Melton looked awkward rounding third base and had to be assisted off the field. The injury would be disclosed as a sprained ankle and he is expected to miss 4-6 weeks.
    • Daniel Pierce was placed on the 7-day Injured List
    • Brendan Summerhill was placed the 7-day Injured List.
    • Other players placed on the IL (Some of these were last week):
      • RHP Jacob Kisting, RHP Nate Knowles, C Brady Donay, OF James Quinn-Irons, RHP Luke Jackson, & LHP Drew Dowd.
  • Baseball America highlighted Taitn Gray as a player that might be rising within the Rays system. The 3rd round 2025 draft pick is having a stellar start to his professional career and launched his 3rd homerun of the season on Sunday.

TEAM LEADERS

  • Must currently be assigned to that team
  • Baseball America’s top ten prospects are featured below each team they’re currently assigned to.
  • (minimum of 30 TBF for pitchers)

Tampa Bay Rays

Top 10 Prospects

  • None currently on active roster

Durham Bulls

Team Offensive Leaders:
AVG: .323, Victor Mesa Jr
OBP: .417, Victor Mesa Jr
SLG: .565, Victor Mesa Jr
HR: 4,Justyn-Henry Malloy and Dom Keegan
wRC+: 157, Victor Mesa Jr
SB: 17, Jacob Melton

Team Pitching Leaders:
ERA: 0.00, Trevor Martin
FIP: 2.93, Andrew Wantz
K%: 35.3%, Logan Workman
BB%: 9.0%, Chase Solesky
WHIP: 1.12, Kodi Whitley
AVG: .171, Trevor Martin
WHIFF%: 16.0%, Alex Cook

Top 10 Prospects

  • #1 Brody Hopkins
    • AAA: 2.96 ERA | 5.03 FIP | 25.0 K% | 19.2 BB% | .195 AVG | 14.0 WHIFF% | 24.1 IP
  • #3 Jacob Melton
    • AAA: .231/.346/.431 | 40.2 K% | 15.9 BB% | 1 HR | 17 SB | 101 wRC+ | 82 PA
      • 4/23: Suffered sprained ankle. Expected to miss 4-6 weeks.

Montgomery Biscuits

Team Offensive Leaders:
AVG: .306, Cooper Kinney
OBP: .431, Xavier Isaac
SLG: .571, Xavier Isaac
HR: 4, Will Simpson & Xavier Isaac
wRC+: 159, Xavier Isaac
SB: 18, Austin Overn

Team Pitching Leaders:
ERA: 1.80, Michael Forret
FIP: 2.79, Derrick Edington
K%: 29.7%, Santiago Suarez
BB%:  2.4%, Tommy McCollum
WHIP 0.73, Garrett Edwards
AVG: .130, Garrett Edwards
WHIFF%: 14.2%, Santiago Suarez

Top 10 Prospects

  • #4 T.J. Nichols
    • AA: 1.80 ERA | 1.79 FIP | 25.0 K% | 0.0 BB% | .300 AVG | 12.3 WHIFF% | 5 IP
      • 4/7: Placed on Injured List
  • #6 Santiago Suarez
    • AA: 5.94 ERA | 5.53 FIP | 29.7 K% | 8.1 BB% | .239 AVG | 14.2 WHIFF% | 16.2 IP
  • #8 Michael Forret
    • AA: 1.80 ERA | 6.52 FIP | 24.1 K% | 17.2 BB% | .146 AVG | 12.3 WHIFF% | 15 IP

Bowling Green Hot Rods

Team Offensive Leaders:
AVG: .364, Nathan Flewelling
OBP: .464, Tony Santa Maria
SLG: .867, Theo Gillen
HR: 6, Theo Gillen & Connor Hujsak
wRC+: 213, Theo Gillen
SB: 9, Tony Santa Maria

Team Pitching Leaders:
ERA: 0.93, Andres Galan
FIP: 2.05, Anderson Brito
K%: 32.8%, Anderson Brito
BB%: 6.3%, Anderson Brito
WHIP: 1.2, Andres Galan
AVG: .216, Trevor Harrison & Andres Galan
WHIFF%: 14.7%, Anderson Brito

Top 10 Prospects

  • #2 Theo Gillen
    • A+: .333/.412/.867 | 23.5 K% | 7.8 BB% | 6 HR | 3 SB | 213 wRC+ | 51 PA
  • #5 Anderson Brito
    • A+: 3.68 ERA | 2.05 FIP | 32.8 K% | 6.3 BB% | .259 AVG | 14.7 WHIFF% | 14.2 IP
  • #10 Aidan Smith
    • A+: Hasn’t played in 2026
      • 4/2: Placed on the Injured List

Charleston River Dogs

Team Offensive Leaders:
AVG: .408, Caden Bodine
OBP: .457, Caden Bodine
SLG: .662, Caden Bodine
HR: 3, Caden Bodine, Cooper Flemming, Brendan Summerhill and Daniel Pierce
wRC+: 190, Caden Bodine
SB: 6, Derek Datil

Team Pitching Leaders:
ERA: 1.80, Trey Pooser
FIP: 1.76, Aidan Cremarosa
K%: 39.5%, Aidan Cremarosa
BB%: 2.3%, Trey Pooser
WHIP: 0.80, Alex Wallace & Trey Pooser
AVG: .156, Jacob Kuhn
WHIFF%: 18.5%, Aidan Cremarosa

Top 10 Prospects

  • #7 Daniel Pierce
    • A: .286/.364/.510 | 34.5 K% | 7.3 BB% | 3 HR | 4 SB | 132 wRC+ | 55 PA
      • 4/22: Placed on the 7-day IL
  • #9 Brendan Summerhill
    • A: .188/.235/.375 | 23.5 K% | 3.9 BB% | 3 HR | 0 SB | 60 wRC+ | 51 PA
      • 4/22: Placed on the 7-day IL

Should a coaching change be made?

Apr 26, 2026; Cumberland, Georgia, USA; Philadelphia Phillies manager Rob Thomson (49) in the dugout during the game against the Atlanta Braves at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images | Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

The Boston Red Sox pulled the trigger on a major coaching staff change this weekend when they fired manager Alex Cora and several assistant coaches. There is a brewing player revolt happening because of it, but the Red Sox made the decision to move in a different direction. They’re not playing particularly well and since you can’t fire the players, the “next best thing” was the option the front office chose.

Should the Phillies be considering a similar move?

If this was something they were truly going to think about, the time is probably right to do so. They have had a dreadful road trip that saw them end it with a 9-19 record, the entire operation feels stagnant at this time and there are actual reasons to do something. Maybe that involves Rob Thomson’s job being on the line, maybe it involves Kevin Long looking for his next place of employment. Maybe even Caleb Cotham should start sweating a little more than usual.

Would they actually do it? I’m not so sure about that.

Are the Orioles about to have a big problem in center field?

BALTIMORE, MD - APRIL 25: Colton Cowser #17 of the Baltimore Orioles at bat against the Boston Red Sox during the seventh inning at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on April 25, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Two years ago, Colton Cowser nearly won AL Rookie of the Year. Last year, he battled through multiple injuries and saw his production decline dramatically. And this year, Orioles President of Baseball Operations Mike Elias is being asked questions about whether or not the former fifth overall pick could be demoted to Triple-A soon.

Elias was pretty clear that Cowser isn’t going anywhere. “He’s frustrated,” Elias said “We know the talent level is there, he’s frustrated. Right now, he’s helping us, and we need him on the team.”

It is obvious to everyone that Cowser has not played up to his expectations or, as Elias said, his talent level. One month into the season, that has forced the Orioles to upend their planned outfield rotation, and it has Cowser’s future with the club in doubt, at least externally.

For the first two weeks of the season, Cowser was the team’s everyday center fielder. Since April 10, he has been used exclusively in the corner outfield spots. And even more recently, he has been treated like a fourth outfielder rather than a starter at all. Over the Orioles’ last 11 games, Cowser has started just four of them. He didn’t start any of the games against the Red Sox this weekend, not even the one against a right-handed starter coming out of an off day.

It’s hard to make an argument for Cowser to play any more than he is. The numbers just aren’t good enough. He owns a .200/.274/.236 batting line with two doubles, zero home runs, six walks, and 20 strikeouts.

Strikeouts have always been a problem for Cowser. His 31.7% K-rate this year is actually better than his career number (32.2%), though both are awful. And, as usual, he is pairing it with a fine walk rate (9.5%). The bigger problem is that he has shown no power in 2026. As a rookie, Cowser popped 24 home runs and had a .447 slugging percentage. Last year he hit 16 homers and had a .385 slug despite a myriad of injuries. This year his slugging percentage is the dumps at .236 and he is yet to go deep.

What has saved the Orioles center field position from being an offensive black hole yet again is the presence of Leody Taveras. Signed for $2 million this past offseason, the expectation was for Taveras to be a depth option across the outfield. Instead, he has earned the everyday spot in center with his .288/.400/.441 batting line that includes two home runs, 15 RBI, 11 walks, and 14 strikeouts.

This version of Taveras is much different than the one that found success with the World Series-winning Rangers in 2023. That year saw him post a 101 wRC+ while playing Gold Glove-caliber defense in center. This year, he has a 141 wRC+ and is just passable in the field.

How long can Taveras keep this offensive production up? That’s where things get tricky. His 15.5% walk rate is more than double his career rate (6.9%), and he has a .349 BABIP. Negative regression is probably coming for both of those numbers. He also has below average exit velocities, barrel rates, and hard hit rates.

We may be seeing the numbers start to slip already. Taveras is hitting .143/.217/.286 over his last 23 plate appearances. That has brought his season OPS from 1.016 on April 18 to .841 today. One bad week isn’t enough to take Taveras out of the lineup, especially with Cowser still scuffling. But it could be a warning sign that the Orioles need to figure something out in center field.

Dylan Beavers and Blaze Alexander are the other two Orioles that have played in center this year. Neither looks like a natural fit at the position, and should probably only be used there in emergency situations. But it could be an avenue to go down when one of them is hot at the plate and manager Craig Albernaz is looking to juice his lineup. That seemed to be the logic for Beavers to start there on Sunday.

Down in Triple-A Norfolk, there are two center field options that are at least somewhat intriguing.

Enrique Bradfield Jr. was the team’s top draft pick in 2023. He came out of Vanderbilt as an old school lead-off type. It’s good bat control, limited power, but elite speed and a great glove. The Orioles probably hoped for better batting averages out of Bradfield—he hit .242 last year and is at .224 so far this year—but he still walks a lot and can steal a base at any time. If you need a sparkplug type, he could be the answer. It just might be more a of bottom-of-the-order type of bat than a lead-off man.

Jud Fabian is another name to watch, though probably not an everyday solution. The Orioles coveted Fabian in the 2021 draft, but the Red Sox swooped in and took him instead. He declined to sign with them, returning to Florida for a year, which allowed the Orioles to get their man the following year. The guy is lauded for his physical skills, but has always been killed for his lack of a hit tool. That hasn’t changed this year. He is striking out 29.6% of the time, but he is also walking a ton (21.4%) and has shown tremendous power (five home runs, .440 SLG). The glove and arm are good too. He feels like a fourth outfielder type, but could plug and play with the O’s pretty soon.

Elias didn’t pursue any other center field upgrades this offseason beyond Taveras. He seemingly assumed that Cowser would be fine, and when he needed a breather the club had suitable fill-ins. All the while Bradfield could further develop and prove worthy of being the heir-apparent at the position. For now, that has been a reasonable solution. But if Taveras’ production dries up, which it may already be doing, it will exploit a hole in the Orioles roster than many pointed out all winter long.

Minor League Recap: Justin Campbell makes his case for promotion, Hill City has miracle rally

Columbus Clippers Travis Bazzana (12) throws the ball to first base during home opener at Huntington Park on Tuesday, March 31, 2026, in Columbus, Ohio. | Samantha Madar/Columbus Dispatch / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Columbus Clippers 3, Buffalo Bisons 6 (F/7) Game 1
Columbus Clippers 6, Buffalo Bisons 4 (F/8) Game 2

Clippers move to 14-13

Pedro Avila was tagged for five runs in the second inning of game one of the doubleheader, pretty much removing any chance of Columbus getting back into the game.

Nolan Jones went 2-for-3 with a home run and a walk while Kody Huff homered and walked. Petey Halpin also reached base three times, going 1-for-2 with a pair of walks.

Game two was much more fun. Starting pitcher Logan Allen allowed four runs on six hits through 5.1 innings, but the bullpen was sensational after that. Daniel Espino pitched a scoreless 0.2 innings, coming in mid-inning for the first time with a strikeout.

Franco Aleman followed with a scoreless inning and a pair of strikeout to send the game to extra innings and Tanner Burns was downright sensational, striking out all three batters he faced in the 10th inning to earn his second save of the season.

Offensively, Juan Benjamin blasted off for his second home run of the season and he timed it perfectly in extra innings to give Columbus the lead.

Petey Halpin doubled and walked while Nolan Jones went 1-for-2 with a walk and a hit by pitch.

Kody Huff and Dom Nunez both went 2-for-4 with Huff stealing a base while Dayan Frias walked, stole a base and scored a pair of runs.

Akron RubberDucks 10, Bowie Baysox 5

RubberDucks improve to 13-8

Akron took advantage of wild Bowie pitching, walking 13 times with nine hits to score 10 runs.

Nick Mitchell had the big hit of the game, going 1-for-5 with a three-run home run and a walk.

Ralphy Velazquez had a solid game, going 2-for-5 with a walk and three RBIs while Jacob Cozart went 2-for-3 with three walks to reach base a whopping five times.Alex Mooney went 1-for-4 with a double, a walk and a stolen base while Jose Devers went 2-for-4 with a walk. Conner Barstad also walked three times and was hit by a pitch.

Starting pitcher Khal Stephen didn’t have his best stuff and also was a bit unlucky with sequencing. He only allowed three hits and walked one, but he gave up four runs in 4.0 innings with six strikeouts.

Adam Tulloch, Carter Rustad and Jack Carey all had scoreless appearances in relief.

Lake County Captains 5, West Michigan Whitecaps 3

Captains improve to 11-10

I know I talk about him every time he starts, but Justin Campbell is too good to still be at High-A. He pitched 3.0 nearly immaculate innings on Sunday with four strikeouts, no walks, no runs allowed and just one hit allowed.

Melkis Hernandez followed and was solid, allowing one run on two hits in 4.0 innings while striking out five and walking three.

Luis Flores held on to preserve the win, allowing a pair of runs in his two innings of work to get a save.

Offensively, Lake County didn’t have any major standouts, but everyone contributed. The team’s nine hits were spread between eight players and the one player who didn’t get a hit (Dean Curley) walked three times.

Jace LaViolette went 1-for-3 with a pair of walks, Aaron Walton went 1-for-3 with a double and was hit by two pitches. Nolan Schubart went 1-for-4 with a hit by pitch. Ryan Cesarini went 1-for-4 with a walk. Bennett Thompson went 1-for-3 with two walks.

Esteban Gonzalez only went 1-for-5, but he blasted a two-run home run. Jeffrey Mercedes went 2-for-4 and Spencer Howe doubled and stole a base.

Hill City Howlers 9, Hickory Crawdads 8 (F/11)

Howlers improve to 12-9

You can learn a lot about a team by how they perform against some of the best teams, and Hill City proved itself Sunday against the then 15-5 Hickory Crawdads. who have one of the best records in minor league baseball.

Trailing 8-4 in the bottom of the ninth inning, the Howlers rallied for four runs to tie the game, then held Hickory scoreless in the 10th and 11th innings before walking off in the bottom of the 11th to earn a massive come-from-behind victory.

The walk-off wasn’t anything particularly crazy. Robert Arias was the ghost runner and advanced to third base on a balk before trotting home on a game-winning sacrifice fly from Juneiker Caceres.

How Hill City tied the game was more exciting. The Howlers loaded the bases with no one out, then Anthony Martinez walked to bring in the first run. Jose Pirela then was hit by a pitch to bring in the second run. Tyler Howard walked to bring in run No. 3 and Jhorvic Abreus hit into a 4-6-3 double play, which scored the tying run.

Incredibly, Hill City managed nine runs on just four hits thanks in part to walking a whopping 13 times and getting hit by one pitch.

Caceres went 1-for-3 with two walks and the game-winning sacrifice fly. Robert Arias was a beast, going 1-for-3 with three walks and two stolen bases. Martinez went 0-for-2, but walked three times as well. The lone extra base hit came from Abreus, who doubled and walked. Yerlin Luis also walked twice and stole a base.

Starting pitcher Chase Mobley didn’t have his best stuff, allowing two runs on three hits with three walks and no strikeouts in 2.0 innings.

The first four pitchers all allowed runs, but the back half of the bullpen locked things down, not allowing a single hit or run over the game’s final 4.1 innings.

Wes Burton pitched 1.1 perfect frames with a strikeout. Miguel Flores pitched a perfect scoreless ninth inning with a strikeout and most impressively, Angel Perez didn’t allow a run in either the 10th or 11th innings despite starting both with a ghost runner on second base.

Knicks vs. Hawks: 3 keys for New York in Game 5 of first-round playoff series

After a resounding 114-98 win against the Hawks on Saturday in Atlanta, the Knicks regained homecourt advantage in their first-round playoff series. That wasn’t the only thing. 

The Knicks rediscovered their mojo after two close losses. After notable performances from Karl-Anthony Towns, OG Anunoby, and Josh Hart, New York has a chance to take a 3-2 series lead on Tuesday night.

Here are three keys ahead of Game 5 at Madison Square Garden...

Point KAT

It’s been a season of push-and-pull between head coach Mike Brown and Towns. 

The All-Star has slowly become more acclimated to a role where he is more of an offensive hub with the power to score and facilitate. Towns had the first playoff triple-double of his career in Game 4, notching 20 points, 10 rebounds, and 10 assists. Towns has also been more under control over the last few months -- he had just two turnovers on Saturday.

It was clear from the jump that the Knicks wanted to emphasize Towns as an initiator of the offense, and he excelled. New York found comfort in repeatedly having the big man with the ball at the top of the key, and Anunoby making a lex cut off a screen from Jalen Brunson. Since Atlanta was looking to prevent Jalen Johnson from switching onto Brunson, it opened up several easy passes for Towns to make for Anunoby at the rim.

The trouble with performances like these is consistency. Can the Knicks continue to operate the offense through Towns on Tuesday night? Or will they revert to a bogged down offense? 

Going into Game 5, the Knicks should continue running the offense through Towns. As we saw on Saturday, he doesn’t need to score on every play, but the attention he draws should continue to open up opportunities for his teammates. 

Halfcourt series

When this series has been played in the halfcourt, the Knicks have the advantage.

After giving up 20 fast break points in Game 3, New York held the Hawks to just seven in Game 4. Many of those quick strike opportunities came after the game was in hand. One of the keys to controlling the pace comes from mitigating turnovers.

New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) works against Atlanta Hawks forward Onyeka Okongwu (17) during the first half at State Farm Arena.
New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) works against Atlanta Hawks forward Onyeka Okongwu (17) during the first half at State Farm Arena. / Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

New York had 10 turnovers through the third quarter in Game 4. Four of the turnovers were live-ball miscues, limiting opportunities for the Hawks to run out. Also, in some of the live-ball turnovers, New York did a good job of getting back to limit easy scoring opportunities.

One concern has been Brunson’s struggles with full court pressure. Atlanta’s Dyson Daniels gave the Knicks captain fits as he brought the ball up in Game 4. Brunson finished the night with six turnovers, as the Knicks made more of a concerted effort to have Hart bring the ball up.

If New York can keep Atlanta in the halfcourt, the team should have control of this series the rest of the way.

Scoring leap

Anunoby has been New York’s most consistent player in the postseason. Through four games, the Knicks forward is averaging 20.8 points on 56 percent from the field and 8.8 rebounds. It’s arguably the best stretch of the nine-year veteran’s career.

Anunoby has made an impact on both ends, making him a must-have on the court. He played a game-high 40 minutes on Saturday, scoring 22 points and collecting 10 rebounds.

Defensively, he’s been the defensive force that the Knicks have come to expect every night. With Hart moving over to guard CJ McCollum more often, we’ve seen an increased amount of Anunoby defending Johnson.

That two-way play has been successful. In 152 minutes with Anunoby on the court during the first round, New York has a net rating of plus-6.7, per NBA Stats. When he has been off the floor, the Knicks have been outscored by 1.2 points per 100 possessions.

Amid Mikal Bridges' struggles and subsequent decrease in playing time in the series, Anunoby’s continued production on both ends has been paramount to picking up wins.

Game 5 Preview: Timberwolves at Nuggets

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - OCTOBER 27: Nikola Jokic #15 of the Denver Nuggets reacts while Jaden McDaniels #3 of the Minnesota Timberwolves looks to the bench during the second quarter at Target Center on October 27, 2025 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. 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 Ellen Schmidt/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Minnesota Timberwolves at Denver Nuggets
Date: April 27th, 2026
Time: 9:30 PM CDT
Location: Ball Arena
Television Coverage: NBC, Peacock

Before we get to Game 5, the elimination stakes, the wounded Nuggets, and the suddenly very real possibility that Minnesota could end this thing in Denver again, we need to start with Donte DiVincenzo.

Those 79 seconds of Game 4 were certainly the lasat of his season, and given the time it takes to recover from an achilles tear, his contract situation, and the unforgiving NBA aprons, it’s very possible they were his last in a Timberwolves uniform. It’s worth pausing for a second and appreciating what he has meant to this team since arriving before the 2024-25 season.

Since arriving in Minnesota before the 2024-25 season, DiVincenzo has been exactly the kind of player every serious team needs. He’s been one of the hardest-working, scrappiest, most competitive players on the roster. On a team that has spent large chunks of this season having its effort questioned, Donte was never one of the guys you worried about.

Loose ball? He was diving. Extra rotation? He was making it. Broken nose? He was playing through it. Unfortunately, an Achilles tear is not the kind of thing you just slap a mask on and play through. DiVincenzo underwent surgery Sunday afternoon and now begins the long recovery process. It’s a brutal break for a player who has given this franchise so much toughness, and for a Wolves team that could use every ounce of his fire as it tries to finish off Denver.

The same goes for Anthony Edwards, who is now dealing with a second knee injury after clearly gutting his way through the first three-and-a-half games of this series. There’s no questioning Ant’s toughness. You could see him fighting through pain, trying to summon the explosiveness that usually defines him, trying to be the guy this team has leaned on for two straight postseason runs. But he wasn’t himself, and unfortunately, pushing through one issue may have helped lead to another.

The timeline for Edwards’ return remains uncertain, but you know it is killing him that he won’t be on the floor Monday night with a chance to end Denver’s season. That is the kind of stage he lives for. The kind of moment where his competitive wiring usually takes over and turns a playoff game into his personal superhero audition tape. Instead, he has to watch and hope his teammates can keep doing what they’ve somehow managed to do lately: pick up the slack, carry the burden collectively, and give him a chance to rest for whatever comes next.

So yes, there’s a somber cloud hanging over this team even after one of its most satisfying wins of the season. Two starting backcourt pieces down. One of them done for the year. One of them uncertain.

But here’s the thing about Game 4: the Wolves did not look like a team asking for pity.

They looked like a team that had found something.

It was obvious from the jump that Game 4 wasn’t going to be the start-to-finish demolition that Game 3 became. Denver is too good, too proud, and too experienced to simply roll over because Minnesota punched it in the mouth once. The Nuggets were always going to respond. Nikola Jokic was always going to push back (we’ll get to that in a minute…). A former champion does not usually go quietly into the night just because Target Center got loud and Jaden McDaniels started taking up space in everyone’s head.

But to Minnesota’s credit, it did not get high on its own supply. The Wolves came out in Game 4 with the same defensive intensity, the same physical edge, and the same willingness to make Denver uncomfortable. For the second straight game, the Nuggets failed to crack 100 points. In an NBA where everybody scores 120 by accident, Minnesota has turned one of the league’s smartest, most dangerous offenses into a team searching for loose change between couch cushions.

And then came Ayo Dosunmu. What else can you even say about that performance? Forty-three points. Five-for-five from three. Constant rim pressure. Transition bursts. Confidence dripping off every touch. A masterclass from a player who was asked to step into a void left by Edwards and DiVincenzo and responded by authoring one of the most stunning bench performances in NBA playoff history.

Now, let’s be realistic for one second: 43 points from Ayo is not something you can just pencil in again. If your Game 5 strategy is “Ayo turns into playoff Steph Curry with downhill burst,” that’s probably not the soundest plan. But what made the performance so encouraging is that it did not feel fake. He did not play outside himself. He did not hijack the offense. He did not stumble into a bunch of absurd, unsustainable nonsense. He played his game of fast, aggressive, decisive, efficient basketball and simply got enough touches, minutes, and opportunity for the whole world to see what Wolves fans have been watching in flashes since he arrived.

Even if the 43-point explosion was the outlier, the player underneath it is real. The pace, the rim pressure, the three-point accuracy is real, and the confidence is real. With Edwards and DiVincenzo unavailable, the Wolves need every bit of that to survive this series and maybe, somehow, extend this playoff run into something bigger.

But as electric as Ayo was, the foundation remained the same: Rudy Gobert and Jaden McDaniels turning Denver’s two best players into frustrated problem-solvers.

Gobert has been magnificent. Not just good. Magnificent. He has neutralized Jokic in ways we almost never see. Rudy has made him work. He has made him feel size, length, resistance, fatigue, and the constant presence of someone who has fully embraced the biggest defensive assignment of the playoffs.

McDaniels has been every bit as important on Murray. He has hounded him, smothered him, picked him up full court, and made every dribble feel contested. That is what McDaniels can do when he’s fully engaged, and right now he is not just engaged, he is thriving in the villain role Denver seems desperate to cast him in.

The recipe has become clear. Attack the rim. Push the pace. Turn defensive stops into transition chances. Make Jokic and Murray run until the legs start to go. Then clamp down defensively, with Gobert owning the paint and McDaniels crawling inside Murray’s jersey.

That is what Minnesota did in Game 4. That is why the Wolves now lead 3-1. And that is why, even without Edwards and DiVincenzo, there should not be one person in that locker room who believes this cannot be finished Monday night.

Which brings us to the end-of-game chaos…

If you watched the final seconds, and if you’re reading this, let’s be honest, of course you watched the final seconds, you knew what was coming the second Mike Conley tipped that ball ahead to a wide-open Jaden McDaniels.

Jaden was going to score.

There was no universe where he was dribbling that out. Not after the way this series has unfolded. Not after his comments following Game 2 about Denver’s defenders. Not after spending four games buying up real estate inside the Nuggets’ collective brain like he was flipping mental duplexes. With the Wolves about to go up 3-1, with Denver already simmering, McDaniels putting two more points on the board was not just a layup. It was a cherry on top of Denver’s turd sundae.

Jokic did not appreciate the garnish.

He sprinted the length of the floor to confront McDaniels and shoved him toward the Wolves bench. Chaos followed. Julius Randle rushed in aggressively to defend his teammate. There were forceful arm movements, a lot of bodies, a lot of barking, and just enough uncertainty to leave everyone waiting on the league office. Jonas Valanciunas and Aaron Gordon appeared to leave Denver’s bench area to enter the scuffle, which by the strict letter of the law could carry consequences. Jokic, of course, was the one who initiated the whole thing by charging across the floor to start the confrontation in the first place.

And now we wait.

Hopefully, common sense wins. No one appeared to be hurt. This was mostly smoke. The last thing this series needs is more rotation players removed from the equation, especially with DiVincenzo already out, Edwards injured, and Gordon clearly hobbled. This might be the best rivalry in the league right now. Let it breathe. Let it play out. Let the players settle it in Game 5.

Of course, Wolves fans know how these things tend to go. If there is an opportunity for the league to turn the screws on Minnesota, history suggests the screwdriver will at least be removed from the toolbox. Suspending Randle would be weak given that Jokic clearly instigated the incident. But this is the NBA, and logic does not always get the final possession.

Either way, the situation now is brutally simple. Minnesota is one win away from ending Denver’s season. One win away from eliminating the best player on the planet. One win away from finishing off its biggest rival, in Denver, for the second time in three postseasons.

And with that, here are the keys to Game 5.

1. Defense Has to Remain the Anchor

This entire series has changed because Minnesota found the formula defensively.

It starts with Rudy Gobert and Jaden McDaniels, the two players who have become Denver’s personal haunted house. Rudy has embraced the Jokic challenge in a way that should end any lingering doubt about his importance to this roster. What Rudy can do is make Jokic work. Make him finish through length. Make him think twice near the rim. Make him spend 48 minutes dealing with a defender who has decided this matchup is personal.

That version of Rudy changes everything.

And Jaden? Jaden has turned Jamal Murray into a man searching for clean oxygen. The full-court pressure, the length, the constant harassment, and the refusal to give him comfortable touches has worn Murray down possession by possession, quarter by quarter. Murray can still hit tough shots, but the Wolves have made him work for every inch, and by the end of these games he has looked like someone who just finished running a marathon while being chased by a very angry spider.

That has to continue. The Wolves cannot let Jokic and Murray breathe life back into this series. They cannot let Denver’s supporting cast get comfortable because the primary actions are generating clean looks. The defensive standard has been set. It has to travel back to Denver.

If Gobert and McDaniels continue to win their battles, the Nuggets simply may do have enough scoring punch to survive, especially with Aaron Gordon hobbled and the rest of the roster looking increasingly unreliable under pressure.

The Wolves don’t need a pretty game.

They need a suffocating one.

2. Keep Running Until Denver’s Legs Give Out

The Wolves have found another pressure point, and it’s not complicated: run Denver into the ground.

The Nuggets are not as deep. They are not as young. They do not have the same supply of fresh legs. And because their offense leans so heavily on Jokic and Murray, the minutes add up.

Minnesota has to make this game feel long. Every defensive rebound should be an invitation to push. Every Denver miss should become a footrace. Every turnover should turn into a sprint the other way. Make Denver’s thin rotation feel every second of the altitude that is supposed to be their advantage.

This is where missing DiVincenzo hurts, because he is one of the guys who naturally plays with that kind of force and chaos. But Minnesota still has enough. Ayo Dosunmu can push. Bones Hyland can fly. Terrence Shannon Jr. can attack. Jaden can run lanes. Even Mike Conley, in a smaller role, can make the right pass to trigger the break.

The Wolves cannot let this become a slow, comfortable, half-court Jokic clinic. That is where Denver regains control.

Make it fast. Make it exhausting. Make it uncomfortable.

And when the fourth quarter arrives, make Denver feel like it has already played five.

3. Attack the Rim Before Falling in Love With the Three

For most of the season, the Wolves lived and died by the three-point line. This series has shifted the equation.

Minnesota’s best offense has not come from launching threes first. It has come from putting pressure on the rim, forcing Denver to collapse, and then letting the perimeter game open naturally from there. That has to remain the offensive identity in Game 5. The Wolves need to collectively generate paint pressure and make Denver’s weak rim protection prove it can hold up for 48 minutes.

That does not mean ignoring the three. Far from it. The threes are going to matter, especially without Donte and Ant spacing the floor. But the threes need to come after the defense bends. Drive first, kick second. Collapse first, punish second.

Denver wants Minnesota to settle. Minnesota has to refuse.

If the Wolves win the points in the paint battle and keep generating high-efficiency looks around the rim, they can survive even without a volcanic three-point night. If they also hit a respectable percentage from deep? That is when this series ends.

4. Maintain Composure

The Nuggets are on the verge of snapping. We already saw the first cracks.

Jaden is in their heads. Rudy is frustrating them. The Wolves’ pace is wearing them down. Their defense is choking off Denver’s preferred actions. And now the defending champs are one loss away from going home.

That is when desperate teams start looking for emotional edges.

Expect the chippiness. Expect the foul baiting. Expect the flopping. Expect the extra shoulder after the whistle, the “accidental” contact, the verbal jabs, the crowd feeding into every complaint, and the officials being put in positions where the Wolves have to decide whether they want to play basketball or argue about injustice.

They have to choose basketball.

That does not mean backing down. Actually, it means the opposite. Minnesota has to be physical, mean, aggressive, and relentless, but under control. No stupid technicals. No retaliation that gives Denver free points. No letting Jokic, Murray, or anyone else turn this into a whistle-and-emotions game.

The Wolves have been the better team for three straight games because they have imposed their style. They cannot give that away by chasing the drama.

Let Denver be the team that unravels.

5. Put Down the Kill Shot

This is the moment.

There is no gentle way to say it. The Wolves have the Nuggets wounded. They have Denver down 3-1. They have the formula. They have the defensive answers. They have proven they can win without peak Edwards and, in Game 4, without their starting backcourt carrying the offense. They have taken Denver’s best punch, adjusted, punched back, and now they are standing over the Nuggets with a chance to end it.

You do not mess around with opportunities like this.

Because if Denver wins Game 5, this series changes. Suddenly it is 3-2 and Game 6 becomes a pressure cooker. Suddenly the Nuggets start believing in the old “one game at a time” mantra that every dangerous team convinces itself of when it is trying to crawl out of a grave.

Minnesota cannot allow that. This has to be a full-team effort. Ayo does not need to score 43 again, because expecting that would be insane. But he has to be confident and aggressive. Randle has to be forceful without being reckless. Jaden has to keep defending like a man who enjoys ruining evenings. Rudy has to keep anchoring everything. Naz has to bring the bench punch. Bones has to supply a few scoring bursts. Shannon has to be ready. Conley has to steady the ship if needed. Kyle Anderson has to glue possessions together. Every available player has to give Minnesota something.

This is not about one guy saving them.

This is about the pack finishing the hunt.

Finish It

The Wolves have Denver exactly where they want them.

They are one win away from ending the season of their biggest rival. One win away from eliminating the best player on the planet. One win away from proving, once again, that this roster was built for this matchup and that Minnesota is not just some annoying playoff obstacle for Denver, it is the problem Denver cannot solve.

But the hardest win in a series is often the closing one. Especially against a team with pride. Especially against a team with Jokic. Especially in Denver. Especially after a game that ended with tempers flaring and everyone in that building ready to treat Game 5 like a street fight with a scoreboard.

Let it be hard.

This is the playoffs. This is the rivalry. This is what they asked for.

The Wolves do not need to be perfect. They need to be connected, physical, fast, and composed. They need to be hungry enough to understand that giving Denver one more breath is the most dangerous thing they can do.

End it now.

End it in their building.

End it the same way they did two years ago, with the Nuggets staring around in disbelief and the Wolves walking off the floor knowing they took something.

The hunt has been long.

The prey is wounded.

Now comes the finish.

Kentucky Wildcats News: Head Coach Rajon Rondo?

May 6, 2018; New Orleans, LA, USA; New Orleans Pelicans player Rajon Rondo controls the ball against the Golden State Warriors for game 4 of the 2018 NBA playoffs in the Smoothie Center. Mandatory Credit: Scott Clause/The Advertiser via USA TODAY NETWORK

Former Kentucky Wildcat and two-time NBA champion Rajon Rondo is reportedly in the running to be a NBA head coach.

According to Marc Stein, the New Orleans Pelicans are largely considering Rondo for their HC position.

He spent the 2017-2018 season as the starting point guard, averaging eight points and as many assists in 65 games.

Clearly the Pelicans brass liked what they saw from Rondo during his time in New Orleans and throughout the rest of his career, as they’ve already interviewed him for the HC position.

Rondo most recently served as a special assistant on the staff of Doc Rivers in Milwaukee, having last played in the NBA during the 2021-2022 season for both the Los Angeles Lakers and Cleveland Cavaliers.

He was always a true floor general and locker room leader during his playing career, even dating back to his first few seasons when he was the starting PG for the 2008 NBA champion Boston Celtics where he was heavily mentored by Kevin Garnett.

Rondo’s basketball IQ has always been seen as one of the best, which should also help him in the coaching scene where the Pelicans have highly talented players such as Trey Murphy and Zion Williamson. He could also be a great mentor for someone like Dejounte Murray.

What do you think about Rondo’s chances of becoming the next young coach in the NBA?

Tweet of the Day

Yes!

Headlines

Kentucky avoids sweep against South Carolina – KSR

Good win yesterday.

QB Diego Pavia accepts invite to Ravens minicamp – ESPN

Chances he earns a roster spot?

UDFA signings are rolling in for former Kentucky standouts – KSR

Love it.

Rockets say Alperen Sengun’s speech helped spark Game 4 win – ESPN

False hope?

Waiting for Stokes, Pope out recruiting, 5-in-5 meetings and more – KSR

Any chance we land him?

Spurs overwhelm Blazers late in Wembanyama’s return – ESPN

Huge relief for San Antonio.

Breaking down Kentucky’s latest football offers – Cats Illustrated

An uddate.

Mike Tomlin talks Steelers exit, new analyst role with NBC – ESPN

Will he soon return to coaching?

Ducks-Oilers NHL playoff game ends in wild goal controversy: ‘Worst call’

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Tristan Jarry #35 of the Edmonton Oilers looks on as a shot by Ryan Poehling #25 of the Anaheim Ducks trickles over the line during the overtime period of Game Four of the First Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Honda Center on April 26, 2026 in Anaheim, California. The goal was confirmed in an officials review, Image 2 shows The Ducks react after Ryan Poehling scored what was eventually ruled the game-winning goal, Image 3 shows The Ducks react after Ryan Poehling scored what was eventually ruled the game-winning goal
Ducks beat Oilers

Did it cross the line? We may never know — but what is certain is that the Oilers season is now on the brink.

The Ducks’ Ryan Poehling scored 2:29 into overtime after his sharp-angle shot hit an Edmonton skate in front and reluctantly trickled under goalie Tristan Jarry for a 4-3 Anaheim victory.

The refs officials made no call on the ice before huddling and ruling it a goal. An extensive video review revealed no reason to overturn the judgment on the ice that the puck had barely crossed the goal line underneath Jarry’s skate.

The puck was partially blocked out on the overhead angle by the goaltender’s skate, making it impossible to tell if it had fully crossed the line.

The puck is behind Oilers goalie Tristan Jarry and ruled a goal by officials. Getty Images

Poehling celebrated immediately, even though he wasn’t totally sure the game was over.

“I thought I saw some white (between the puck and the goal line) when I was behind the net,” Poehling said. “Then everyone was celebrating. Did it go in? I’m like, ‘I think so?’ But yeah, I thought so right away.”

Not all would agree with the Poehiling.

Longtime NHL player Ryan Whitney fumed in a video on X about the controversy.

Warning: Graphic Language

“Bulls—t. This is bulls—t,” Whitney, who hosts the Spittin’ Chiclets podcast on Barstool. “This is a scam, you do not see the puck across the line… I don’t know how it was called a goal on the ice. Nobody can see anything and the replay doesn’t show the puck go over the line all the way.

“I feel like I’m taking crazy pills… This is a disgrace to the National Hockey League. This is the worst call I’ve ever seen in an NHL playoff game.”

Oiler coach Kris Knoblauch felt similarly, even if it didn’t quite use as strong as language as Whitney.

The Ducks react after Ryan Poehling scored what was eventually ruled the game-winning goal. AP

“I can’t see it going in,” Knoblauch said. “I can’t see the line. … The (initial) goal call on the ice was probably about 60 to 90 seconds after (the shot), maybe even more. They huddled when they got to center ice, and then they made the (initial) call that it was a good goal. I don’t know. Wasn’t very definitive.”

The Ducks now lead the first-round series 3-1 with Game 5 back in Edmonton on Tuesday night.

Jeffrey Viel tied it with 6:29 left in regulation for the Ducks, who rallied from an early two-goal deficit and another third-period hole with their third consecutive victory over the back-to-back Western Conference champion Oilers.

The Ducks completed their NHL-best 10th multi-goal comeback of the season when Poehling’s sharp-angled shot hit an Edmonton skate in front and reluctantly trickled under goalie Tristan Jarry, who had played well in his first playoff start for his new team.

Tristan Jarry’s skate blocks the overhead view. TSN/X

Cutter Gauthier and Mikael Granlund scored power-play goals in the second period for the Ducks, who have scored 20 goals in four games to begin their team’s first Stanley Cup playoff series in eight years. Lukas Dostal stopped 24 shots and made a pair of spectacular saves on Connor McDavid in the final minutes.

“We’re just playing so connected right now, and we’re doing a good job of doing the right things,” said Anaheim defenseman Jackson LaCombe, who leads the NHL in postseason scoring with eight points after recording two assists in Game 4. “We’re all just feeling great, and I think we’re all competing to the best of our ability, and it’s just paying off right now.”

Evan Bouchard scored a tiebreaking goal early in the third period and Jarry made 34 saves for the Oilers. Kasperi Kapanen and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins scored first-period goals.

Edmonton nearly won it late in regulation, but Dostal made a sprawling pad save to deny McDavid on a late breakaway — and Dostal added another big stuff of McDavid in the final minute. The Oilers’ superstar center, who is suspected to be dealing with an injury, had two assists in Game 4.

Jarry struggled for Edmonton right after arriving in a midseason trade with Pittsburgh, losing his job to Connor Ingram. But with the Oilers struggling mightily to stop the fast, exciting Ducks, Knoblauch made the switch for Game 4 and got a solid effort from Jarry, who hadn’t played since April 8.

The Oilers also improved their defensive structure after a shambolic Game 3 – and yet the energetic, hungry Ducks still pumped in four more goals despite never leading.

The Ducks celebrate the Game 4 win. Getty Images

Kapanen silenced the raucous sellout crowd at Honda Center 38 seconds after the opening faceoff with his fourth goal in four games. Nugent-Hopkins then scored just Edmonton’s second power-play goal of the series.

The Ducks began yet another comeback with a vicious wrist shot from Gauthier, their 22-year-old top scorer. Anaheim’s once-awful power play has scored in eight consecutive games.

Granlund and Leo Carlsson then teamed up for a fluid give-and-go to tie it.

Bouchard ripped a wrist shot for a tiebreaking goal just 4 seconds into an Oilers power play, but the Ducks’ fourth line tied it again, with Viel punching home a rebound of John Carlson’s shot for his second career playoff goal.

— With AP

In The Lab: An Astros Thought Experiment

This is the lab. In the lab we do experiments. Sometimes it is the moral and ethical equivalent of shining a magnifying glass on an ant. In other times, it is a little more serious. I should note that when I put things like this in the lab, it is not proceeded by “the Astros should…” or “the Astros should not….” This is not a hot take. If it were a hot take I certainly would not put it in a lab.

What we are looking at here is ultimately the value of a superstar. Branch Rickey is obviously known as the executive that broke the color barrier. He was also an executive with the St. Louis Cardinals and Pittsburgh Pirates. He infamously told Ralph Kiner that he could finish in last with him or without him. We have obviously seen the huge numbers that Yordan Alvarez has put up and I have spent the last two labs comparing those numbers with the rest of the team and the best hitters in baseball history.

Obviously, if the Astros were shopping Alvarez it would be big news. There have been a few superstar level moves in baseball over the last several years. Heck, Juan Soto was involved in two of those deals as the teams that held him cashed in with prospects. I shouldn’t have to tell anyone that if Yordan became available, there would be at least a half dozen teams waiting in line to make their offer. So, what would a Yordan Alvarez trade even look like?

We should start by accurately pegging his value. Last time, we saw that he is on pace to get close to 12 wins at the pace he is currently at. However, that is not horribly realistic. The best thing we can do is look at what he has done and project from there. There are two ways to do this. We can look at the WAR numbers and project those over 150 games or we can look at the traditional hitting numbers and do the same.

Yordan Alvarez: 25.8 FWAR in 703 career games through Thursday, 5.5 FWAR per 150 games
Yordan Alvarez: .298/.392/.580, 39 HR, 96 Runs, 111 RBI, 2 SB, 78 BB

Those are pretty sparkling numbers. We could surmise that this is a career season for Yordan and he might be closer to a seven or eight win player. This is where things get more dicey than what we might think. It would be simplistic to suggest that you want something equivalent to seven or eight wins to break even on the exchange. However, that misunderstands the designation of a replacement level player. The players coming up to replace injured bench players are replacement level players. Most teams are not employing those players as regulars and the Astros are no different.

I hate to pick sides in a debate over metrics because that would taint the lab and its purpose. However, most sabermetricians seem to prefer Fangraph’s WAR over baseball-reference.com’s WAR. Again, I use both because I like getting a cross-section of thought on a player. In this case, we will use FWAR just to keep everything simple. Below would be the Astros regular lineup according to their 2025 FWAR numbers when Yordan Alvarez is removed from the equation.

FWAR
C Yainer Diaz1.6
1B Christian Walker1.1
2B Jose Altuve2.1
3B Carlos Correa2.6
SS Jeremy Pena5.7
LF Joey Loperfido*0.8
CF Jake Meyers2.3
RF Cam Smith1.0
DH Isaac Paredes2.4

Asterisk: Joey Loperfido’s 2024 and 2025 FWARs were combined to simulate the number of plate appearances he would likely get in a full season.

So, as you can see, none of the regulars would be a replacement level player, so you are not starting at zero. The effective difference between Loperfido and Yordan would be an average of five wins and maybe closer to six or seven wins this season alone. I have to emphasize again that we are not simply looking for six or seven wins. We are looking for players that would be six or seven wins better than the players they are replacing.

For instance, if you wanted to upgrade at catcher then you would take the wins above 1.6 as the net improvement. So, a three win catcher is not a net three wins. It would be a net 1.4 wins. As you might imagine, it would be a group of players (likely three or four) that you would hope would combine to add six or seven wins of value to make up for the six or seven wins you are losing. One could easily look at the lineup and pitching staff and identify the spots where an upgrade would be nice. I’d surmise at least one of the players would be a pitcher if not two. The thinner outfield would also be a place where they would likely add.

Unfortunately, that would not be the end of the ledger on any such trade. A look at the wins added would also have to include the element of time. Yordan would have considerable value this season as someone under contract through the 2028 season on a pretty friendly hometown discount (6 years, 115 million). So, we are not only talking about the seven or eight wins he would produce this season, but also those same wins in 2027 and 2028. If we assume Loperfido is fixed at about a win then the Astros would need to recuperate conservatively 18 wins total.

The good news is that they wouldn’t have to do this only through 2028. The players they would likely get back with have more club control than Yordan. If those players were on the younger side then you would be talking five or six seasons of club control remaining for each player. So, three or four players with an average of five seasons of club control each would need to add 18 net wins over the span of those five seasons.

For instance, the tale of the tape on the Kyle Tucker trade is still ongoing. The Cubs got 4.5 wins out of Tucker last season which is probably three to 3.5 wins more than a marginal starter would have gotten. However, the Astros get the services of Cam Smith for six seasons, Isaac Paredes for this year and next year, and Hayden Wesneski for three additional seasons after this year. The Astros have not recouped the four wins yet, but they have through 2030 to recoup a grand total of four wins.

Obviously, the downside is bringing in prospects that produce zero wins. That is always the chance you take with these kinds of deals. However, while it seems foolish to think that you could get bang for your buck when you trade a superstar, the math actually works out more often than not. Naturally, math is not making these trades and it is a lot harder to do because you have to pick the right prospects and accept the fallout of trading a superstar player. Keep in mind, this is a lab experiment where we explain the math behind a theoretical deal. I am not advocating trading Yordan and I’m certainly not predicting it. What do you think? Could we ever recoup that value back?

Thoughts on a 2-1 Rangers loss

ARLINGTON, TEXAS - APRIL 26: Jake Burger #21 of the Texas Rangers walks back to the dugout after striking out in the fourth inning against the Athletics at Globe Life Field on April 26, 2026 in Arlington, Texas. (Photo by Richard Rodriguez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

A’s 2, Rangers 1

  • And back to .500.
  • So far this year, the Rangers have been at .500 eight times. Well, nine, if you count Opening Day, which I don’t.
  • Kumar Rocker was fine on Sunday. The problem was, he apparently needed to be perfect.
  • A pair of two out walks in the first were followed by a Carlos Cortes triple, and that ended up being the ballgame.
  • It didn’t matter that Rocker didn’t walk anyone the rest of the way, went six innings with only those two runs coming across off of him, that the bullpen threw up three shutout innings.
  • Rocker only struck out three A’s hitters in the game, and generated just eight swinging strikes, none of which came on his fastball or sinker. Not a dominating performance, but at the end of the day, he allowed just two runs in six innings, and you’d like to think that the Rangers offense would take advantage of that.
  • The relievers the Rangers used — Tyler Alexander, Gavin Collyer, and Peyton Gray — are currently sporting a 0.63 ERA, a 0.00 ERA, and a 0.00 ERA. That’s good, it seems like.
  • Offensively, the Rangers put a lot of runners on base but didn’t do anything with them once they were on base. Texas was 1 for 9 with runners in scoring position, and the “1” was a Josh Smith bunt single that loaded the bases.
  • The Rangers totaled six hits and five walks, and also had Evan Carter reach once on an HBP and once on an error on an attempted sac bunt. That Evan Carter sac bunt/error play also brought home the lone run of the game, but with no RBI credited because of the error. So the Rangers didn’t even get an RBI in this game.
  • How sad.
  • Part of the problem was a lack of extra base hits. Josh Jung had a pair of doubles, but every other hit was a single, and its harder to score runs with singles and walks than with extra base hits.
  • Texas left runners on second and third with two outs in the second. Evan Carter reached on an HBP with one out in the fourth, stole second, was joined on the bases by Josh Smith with a two out walk, and both were stranded.
  • In the sixth, after the E1 that brought Jung — who led off the inning again with a double — home and put Carter on base, Jake Burger walked and Smith had that aforementioned bunt single, loading the bases. Danny Jansen then struck out. Sam Haggerty, who had hit for Alejandro Osuna the inning before, struck out. Brandon Nimmo then hit a line drive that, had it been in the gap, would have cleared the bases, but instead was to straightaway center field, and thus was caught for an out.
  • It felt then that it was over, and in fact, the Rangers only had two more baserunners the rest of the way, and didn’t get a runner past first base.
  • The old adage says that you are going to win a third of your games and are going to lose a third of your games, and its what you do with the other third that matters. This was a game squarely in that other third, and the Rangers let it get away.
  • Kumar Rocker hit 95.8 mph with his sinker, averaging 94.4 mph. Tyler Alexander reached 91.8 mph on his sinker. Gavin Collyer hit 97.8 mph with his fastball. Peyton Gray’s fastball touched 92.7 mph.
  • Corey Seager had a 108.4 mph line out. Jake Burger had a 107.9 mph sinlge. Josh Jung had a 107.7 mph fly out and a 100.2 mph fly out. Brandon Nimmo had a 104.6 mph fly out and a 103.0 mph line out.
  • Another game looms on the horizon. Maybe the Rangers will win it.

How the Knicks picked themselves off the mat to win Game 4 and save their season

Apr 25, 2026; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) looses the ball in front of Atlanta Hawks forward Jonathan Kuminga (0) and guard Gabe Vincent (4) during the second half during game four of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at State Farm Arena. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images | Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

How low can the vibes get before you reach a point of no return?

We got pretty close to that after the demoralizing beatdown the Knicks got at the hands of the shorthanded Mavericks back on MLK Day in January to fall to 2-9 in their last 11 games. Even throughout all the frustration in the prior year and a half, it felt like the Knicks were dangerously close to something irreparable that night. Fortunately for them, they solved their woes two nights later.

The Game 3 defeat at the hands of the Atlanta Hawks on Thursday somehow found a lower point. While January is still a ways away from the playoffs and most fans knew they had enough time to shape up, the Knicks were suddenly fighting for their lives in Game 4. A loss would mean a 3-1 deficit and an all-but-assured first-round exit in the season with the highest expectations in nearly three decades.

The discontent was already beginning. Mike Brown was being flamed for every single decision. Jalen Brunson’s struggles were having fans question his long-term viability as the face of this franchise (don’t believe me? We got that discourse in our very own comment sections!). Mikal Bridges became the most slandered man in basketball. For the sake of the franchise and everyone involved, Game 4 was a must-win, even if they could technically afford to lose.

But they didn’t. They almost led buzzer-to-buzzer, and aside from a brief charge to start the second half, the Hawks were down double digits for essentially the final three quarters. Every small run was answered. Every time Atlanta countered an offensive strategy or found a way to exploit a defensive hole, it was patched immediately. It was 48 minutes of pure execution.

You could not script a better feel-good victory that has you take a step off the ledge and believe better days are ahead. But what exactly changed about how the team played in Game 4 compared to the first three?

Defensive Intensity and Pressure

The No. 1 thing that the Knicks did right in Game 4 was to not make anything easy for the Hawks on offense. There was significantly more full-court pressure, a higher pick-up point, and more physical on-ball defense. CJ McCollum, whose performance in the first three games mirrored the Black Mamba, got a variety of looks to keep him off balance and it wore him down, to the point where he played significantly more off-ball than usual.

The Knicks forced 18 turnovers and made play after play, gambling for steals and deflections to slow down a potent offense that thrives on early shot clock action.

A different referee crew might disrupt the game flow with a litany of fouls on these plays, but the Knicks recognized early that Scott Foster’s crew was going to let them play, and they looked the part of a veteran team playing with the type of desperation they needed against a young, athletic team on the road.

But it wasn’t just the way they were dragging down Atlanta in the halfcourt; it was the way they prevented them from playing to their pace.

Game 4’s pace sat at just 94 possessions, compared to 101 in Game 3.

The Hawks went from scoring 40 combined fast-break points in their two wins to just seven in Game 4.

The Hawks scored 37 points off 29 combined turnovers in Games 2 and 3, but only scored 14 points against 14 turnovers on Saturday. The Knicks turned the Hawks over 18 times on Saturday, a series-high.

All of this is absolutely necessary to continue to take firm control of this series.

Working Through Karl-Anthony Towns

Pretty much everyone here at P&T believed that Karl-Anthony Towns was the X-factor, so there’s no coincidence that Towns’ two best games have been the two wins this series.

What’s fascinating, however, is that you’re not getting the 35-point masterpieces. Instead, you’re getting low shot totals and 20-point triple doubles.

Gravity is extremely impactful in evaluating the impact of an offensive player. Even when Jalen Brunson is struggling with his shot some nights, he can have a big impact by drawing defenders and spraying to open shooters. While that’s not precisely what happened with Towns’ last game, his gravity led to openings for his teammates, specifically using the exact same back screen concept with Brunson and OG Anunoby that worked to perfection over and over again.

When he wasn’t the facilitator, Towns was going right at both Onyeka Okongwu and Jonathan Kuminga. Unlike before, when he was content to sink into the corner when the Hawks switched up the coverages with Kuminga, he was a man on a mission all night long.

The only player that the Hawks have no answer for is Towns. We’ve seen them hound Brunson with a variety of wings that have made him struggle through four games, but no coverage in the world can stop the Big Bodega when he’s decisive and playing with purpose.

Better Rotations

The only time in this series that the minutes with both Brunson and Towns on the bench have been catastrophically bad was the start of the second quarter of Game 2. Outside of that, they’ve played about even.

That said, we saw very few of those minutes in Game 4 as part of a very different rotation.

For one, the struggling Bridges was limited to just 19 minutes, as his impact on offense was incredibly muted and, due to the team-wide priority on more defensive intensity, his defensive impact was more replaceable. That meant more minutes for Deuce McBride, whose minutes alongside Brunson and/or Towns this series have been exceptional this series:

There was still no double big lineups, but Mike Brown’s real stroke of genius was how he deployed Brunson and Towns. He did an effective line change with four minutes left in the first quarter to get all starters but Josh Hart out of the game, but re-inserted Brunson after a one-minute recharge to finish the quarter before starting him on the bench and Towns on the floor in the second.

His trust in Jose Alvarado was also similarly important, and he’s been willing to play the hot hand by putting in the fiery Brooklyn native over Landry Shamet, who’s currently out of the rotation. There’s still potentially more moves to be made, but the moves made thus far have stabilized this series.

Effort. Pure Effort.

At the end of the day, this is what it’s all about.

The Hawks have flat-out played harder through three games in this series. Talent can overcome intensity every so often, but the Knicks put themselves in the muck for long enough that energy won out in Games 2 and 3. The Knicks needed to match the intensity, and they played the type of ankle-biting basketball that we haven’t seen enough from this group.

They’re diving for loose balls. They’re communicating on defense. They’re getting in each other’s faces to lock in. Just look at what Rick Brunson was saying to his own son.

Every time this team faces any sort of adversity, there are detractors in the media who want to tear down everything that this team has built. Regardless of how Boston, Detroit, and Cleveland have fared in the playoffs so far, it’s the Knicks that have the most negative coverage. It’s not just the fanbase that was ready to write the Knicks’ obituary after Game 3; it was the national media. What other team gets mentioned on a WWE show as “cursed”

For the Knicks, the No. 1 key is intensity and effort. They played Game 4 like they only had 96 minutes left in their season, and that mentality needs to remain. Dropping Game 5 in MSG is a similar death sentence to dropping Game 4. The season is in similar peril on Tuesday, even if you feel a helluva lot more confident now than you probably did going into Saturday.

Keep Atlanta on their heels, and the series is yours. They’ve shown you the blueprint.

New York Yankees vs. texas Rangers Series Preview

HOUSTON, TEXAS - SEPTEMBER 02: Max Fried #54 of the New York Yankees pitches during the first inning against the Houston Astros at Daikin Park on September 02, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Outside that pair of series against the Athletics and Rays, this Yankees team has been pretty adept at quickly brushing off losses. That’s something they’ll look to do in the backend of this road trip after missing out on a sweep opportunity against the Houston Astros. After Luis Gil’s increasingly disappointing efforts on Sunday—ultimately leading to his demotion—the Yankees will start the series against the Rangers with the best they have to offer on the mound in a three-game set of high-profile pitching matchups.

Monday: Max Fried vs. Jack Leiter (8:05 pm ET)

Already making his fifth start on the road in 2026, Max Fried has been superb early on, but if there is one element to his game that’s lacked a bit, it is in the strikeout department—not that this is ever the primary aspect of his game. The Rangers’ offense presents quite the opportunity for Fried and other left-handers on the Yankees pitching staff—Texas has struggled the most against southpaws in the big leagues, only one of 30 clubs with a strikeout rate of at least 30 percent against them, and also boasts a pitiful 67 wRC+. Further damaging the Rangers’ prospects against left-handers is the absence of Wyatt Langford, their premier right-handed hitter and one of the more exciting young players in the American League, currently on the IL.

One of the few pleasant pieces of news for the Rangers last season was that Jack Leiter established himself as a solid starter. However, in the middle of a campaign that placed him seventh on the Rookie of the Year voting roll call, Leiter had his shortest outing against the Yankees. The young right-hander struggled with the free passes—conceding four of them—and not even finishing four innings. Yankee hitters will once again look to work deep counts against Leiter. It’s a bumpy start to 2026 for the former Vanderbilt standout, as he hasn’t finished the sixth since March and has allowed 12 runs on 17 hits and 9 walks across his last trio of outings (14.1 innings) against the Dodgers, A’s, and Pirates.

Tuesday: Cam Schlittler vs. Jacob deGrom (8:05 pm ET)

For the first time since he squared off against George Kirby in his second start of the season, Cam Schlittler will not be the center of attention of a pitching matchup, as he and the Yankees face one of the more dominant starters of this century of baseball. There is not a whiff of hyperbole in that statement when you assess what deGrom has done—the two-time near-unanimous Cy Young Award winner’s level of dominance in a post-prime period with the Rangers only enhances his legend, still just about as good as it gets out there. He has a 2.13 ERA and a 1.066 WHIP in his five starts for 2026, fanning 35 — including 10 Bucs his last time out.

It remains to be seen how Giancarlo Stanton will recover in the following days, having been out of the lineup on Sunday. Jasson Domínguez’s reported promotion seems to indicate that an IL stint is a lock (and Domínguez will be ready to face the Rangers’ righties from his superior side). If the Yankees’ designated hitter is indeed unable to suit up on Tuesday, it’ll be a particularly impactful hit; Stanton has potent numbers he has shown against deGrom over the years, hitting four home runs in 27 at-bats against him, doing so with a .333 batting average. Other than Stanton, the Yankee hitter who has faced deGrom the most is Cody Bellinger, also featuring quality numbers against the Rangers ace with a pair of bombs in 19 at-bats.

Wednesday: Will Warren vs. Nathan Eovaldi (2:35 pm ET)

On one side, an undefeated pitcher, who has been quietly solid early on in 2026 (only 11 qualified pitchers have topped Warren’s 0.9 fWAR in 31.1 innings); on the other, a starter that, as of Sunday, April 26th, is tied for the league lead in losses with four. As a former Yankee, it’s weird to think that Nathan Eovaldi has faced them more than any other club in his career as a big leaguer. Eovaldi was so magnificent last year that with this disappointing beginning to his 2026 campaign, the veteran is only four earned runs away from matching his total the previous season (25), achieved in exactly 130 innings of work.

While the results for Eovaldi have been vastly underwhelming, nothing under the hood corroborates the potential expectation of a rapid decline, so the Yankees should expect the usual customer who has a 3.22 ERA in 24 career appearances against them. While Stanton’s numbers against deGrom stand out more and the impact of his potential absence might be especially hurtful, his career stats against Eovaldi are also impressive. The currently sidelined Yankees DH has four bombs in 38 at-bats against Eovaldi, facing him one more time than Judge, who has gone deep twice with a .324 average facing him.

Mets Morning News: In the dark times, should the stars also go out?

Apr 26, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; A fan sits alone in the sixth inning of the game between the Colorado Rockies and the New York Mets at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images | Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Meet the Mets

The Mets lost twice to the Rockes in the span of six hours. Do you really want to hear any more?

Choose your recap: Amazin’ Avenue Game One and Game Two, MLB.com Game One and Game Two, Newsday, New York Daily News, New York Post, The Athletic

Following Sunday’s losses, the Mets designated Tommy Pham for assignment and signed Austin Slater to take his place in a move I am sure will right all wrongs.

After another bad start in a stretch of 10 months worth of bad starts, the future of Kodai Senga in the Mets rotation or on the team at all isn’t well-defined.

Around the National League East

Chris Sale passed Chuck Finley on the strikeouts leaderboard and recorded the 150th win of his career in the Braves’ 6-2 win over the Phillies.

In a 10-inning contest, Dicky Lovelady enjoyed the greener pastures of Washington got his first victory in a Nationals uniform in a 2-1 contest against the White Sox.

Graham Pauley hit his first home run of the season, but a home run from Casey Schmidt in the seventh inning canceled that out and put the Giants ahead of the Marlins in what ended up a 6-3 game.

Around Major League Baseball

An age-old question for professionals and children alike: how the hell do you break in a new glove?

In the aftermath of the Red Sox’s mass firing of coaches, John Henry remains a silent and looming force in the entire process.

On the field, Not That Chad Tracy made his managerial debut in the Red Sox dugout and recorded a win in his first game.

Future trivia question answer and former Rookie of the Year Luis Gil was demoted to Triple-A by the Yankees after another disappointing start, this time in Houston.

At the stage in his career where every move he makes moves him up some sort of leaderboard, Mike Trout’s home run on Sunday put him ahead of Alfonso Soriano on the all time list and made him the Angels franchise leader in extra base hits.

Thanks to MLB’s oddly-terrible job marketing it, you may not have known that the Diamondbacks and Padres were playing in Mexico, but they were!

A bad day for their battery, the Angels placed Logan O’Hoppe on the 10-day injured list with a broken wrist and designated beleaguered closer Jordan Romano for assignment.

On his 34th birthday, Aaron Judge homered for the Yankees, but they lost the game leaving his level of birthday happiness a mystery.

This Date in Mets History

Happy birthday to esteemed Mets legends Frank Catalanotto, Orber Moreno, and and J.D Davis.

Box Grades: Dominant second half propels Spurs to 3-1 lead

Apr 26, 2026; Portland, Oregon, USA; San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama (1) embraces guard Stephon Castle (5) after a game against the Portland Trail Blazers during game four of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Moda Center. Mandatory Credit: Troy Wayrynen-Imagn Images | Troy Wayrynen-Imagn Images

Talk about a tale of two halves! I’ll be honest, as halftime approached, I was comforting myself with the argument that this game represented an unfortunate but understandable stumble for a young, inexperienced team that was still coming off a critical Game 3 win without its superstar. It certainly wasn’t an ideal scenario, but I kept telling myself that this would be another one of those playoff scars that ultimately leads to winning.

Fortunately, my insincere, grasping rationalizations quickly gave way to delight, as the Spurs narrowed a 15-point deficit to just four via a 2-and-a-half minute burst early in the third. To their credit, Portland did not immediately crumble after this onslaught, as the remainder of the quarter was a back-and-forth affair that ended with the score knotted up at 74. The Blazers continued to keep things close for several minutes in the fourth; however, by the middle of the quarter San Antonio had a double-digit lead that continued to grow as the game drew to a close.

In pulling off this comeback, the Spurs became the only team in NBA playoff history to win a game by 15+ after being down by 15+ at half. As you might imagine, a performance like this produces some wild stats, as we will discuss below:

Note: Now that we’ve moved into the postseason, the reference period used for grading changes from the set of regular season games since 2012-2013 to the set of postseason games since 2012-2013. Unless otherwise noted below, this set DOES include play-in games. As of the end of April 26, 2026, this group include 1,151 games.

Factors that decided the game

  • This is one of those games in which the overall box score obscures wild variation in play for both teams over the course of the game. Of course, the factors discussed here are still completely valid, but it is important to note that essentially all of the Spurs’ key advantages were built in the second half.
  • San Antonio invested heavily in stocks (steals + blocks) in this game, logging 22 as a team to Portland’s 11. That Blazers total is unspectacular but perfectly respectable; unfortunately for them, Wemby matched it by himself.
  • The Spurs’ stifling defense produced a turnover margin of -5, which helped them build a FGA edge of +7. However, another reason that San Antonio attempted more field goals is that they fouled more often and at worse times, giving Portland a +6 advantage in FTA.
  • The Blazers’ notable edge at the free throw line (+5 FTM) was completely swamped by the Spurs’ massive advantage from the field, which was partly driver by volume but mostly the result of big margins in FG% (+9.43 percentage points) and 3P% (+10.17 percentage points). As a result, San Antonio made 11 more shots, four more threes, and outscored Portland by 26 from the field.

Rare Box Score Stats

  • I mentioned above that Victor had 11 stocks in this game (seven blocks and four steals). Only seven other players have met of surpassed this total in a true playoff game (i.e., no play-in contests) since the start of the 1996-1997 postseason.
  • The Spurs’ team total of 22 stocks is not nearly as rare a feat, but still far from common. In the 1,151 postseason games since 2012-2013, a stock total of 22+ has happened 30 times, including 22 times for winners and eight times for losers. That’s about once in every 39 contests, or a bit more than twice per postseason.
  • This was just the 19th postseason contest since 2012-2013 in which a winning team had an assist margin of +12 or more while having no more than 26 assists.
  • In the 2,380 true playoff games played since the start of the 1996-1997 postseason, this game marked just the 29th time that any team (winner or loser) recorded 10+ blocks as a team while no more than three members of that team had a block. Furthermore, it is was just the 21st time in the same period that 9+ players on one team had at least one steal.

What are Team Graded Box Scores?

Very briefly, these box scores grade winner-loser differentials for basic box score statistics, with the grade being based on the winning team’s differential relative to other NBA winners during a defined reference period. Think of it like a report card for understanding how a given winner performed relative to other winners. The reference period used runs from the start of the 2012-2013 season to the latest date of play, including only games in the same season category (i.e., regular season and playoff games are not compared to each other).

Data Source: The underlying data used to create these box scores was collected from Basketball Reference. In all cases, the data are collected the morning after the game is played. Although rare, postgame statistical revisions after data collection do occur and may affect the results after the fact.

Guardians News and Notes: Two Series Losses in a Row

CLEVELAND, OHIO - APRIL 17: Catcher Bo Naylor #23 of the Cleveland Guardians watches the scoreboard during the top of the fifth inning against the Baltimore Orioles at Progressive Field on April 17, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Russell Lee Verlinger/Cleveland Guardians/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Good feeling’s gone.

The Guardians have now lost two straight series to the injury-depleted Astros and injury-depleted Blue Jays. Not great, Bob.

Nicole has the recap of a feckless performance by the hitters against Patrick Corbin. I had forgotten that Corbin inexplicably owns Jose Ramirez. Meanwhile, Steven Kwan has a 73 wRC+, Kyle Manzardo has a 58 wRC+, George Valera has a 55 wRC+, Juan Brito has a 44 wRC+ and Bo Naylor has a 9 wRC+. Those numbers have to change, one way or another. Also, I don’t know that they can continue to play Fry in right field or Brito at second base, defensively.

Aside from that, how was the play, Mrs. Lincoln?

Guardians Weekly featured Gavin Williams and Peyton Pallette, and a focus on the Hill City Howlers.

AROUND MLB:

The Tigers beat the Reds, the Royals beat the Angels, and the Twins and White Sox lost.