The Minnesota Timberwolves are effectively locked into the No. 6 seed out West, so they will trot out a lineup tonight that looks nothing like what will be seen in the playoffs.
The Orlando Magic are the lucky beneficiaries. Apologies to all fans of the Hornets, 76ers and Raptors.
My Timberwolves vs. Magic predictions and NBA picks expect exactly one key piece of Minnesota’s rotation to shine on Wednesday, April 8, and that's Rudy Gobert.
Timberwolves vs Magic prediction
Timberwolves vs Magic best bet: Rudy Gobert Over 11.5 points (-115)
This spread has moved a bucket today, because it is more and more clear that Minnesota may coast the rest of the week.
Anthony Edwards and Jaden McDaniels are both recovering from knee worries. The Timberwolves have declared Mike Conely out for rest, Ayo Dosunmu out to tend to a right calf injury, and Julius Randle out amid “right hand soreness.”
Gobert is listed as questionable, “rest.” Expect him to play.
Why? Because he should rest the final two games of the regular season. One more flagrant foul from Gobert elicits a two-game suspension that would roll over into the postseason. Minnesota should not risk that in either of its last two games. So given Gobert is likely to rest to close the week, expect him to play tonight and to play genuine minutes.
With so much other production removed from the Timberwolves’ lineup, genuine minutes from Gobert should result in more field-goal attempts than usual.
Timberwolves vs Magic same-game parlay
Get ready to learn about Zyon Pullin, NBA bettors. He played three minutes in last night’s Timberwolves’ win at Indiana. The second-year guard has not played even five minutes in a game this season, but it is distinctly possible he plays 10+ minutes tonight.
Perhaps Pullin does not see such action, but that mere possibility should underscore how unseriously Minnesota is taking this game.
Timberwolves vs Magic SGP
Magic -5 1H
Magic -9.5
Under 228.5
Our "from downtown" SGP: Sit Suggs
The Timberwolves not worrying about tonight should lead to the Magic easing up in certain areas, and no piece of the Orlando rotation needs rest more than Jalen Suggs does. He is clearly playing through injury, if not injuries, as the Magic try to claw their way out of the Play-In Tournament.
Timberwolves vs Magic SGP
Magic -5 1H
Magic -9.5
Under 228.5
Jalen Suggs Under 13.5 points
Timberwolves vs Magic odds
Spread: Timberwolves +9.5 | Magic -9.5
Moneyline: Timberwolves +300 | Magic -380
Over/Under: Over 228.5 | Under 228.5
Timberwolves vs Magic betting trend to know
Orlando has won three straight games outright, each of them vital as the Magic sit tied for No. 7 in the East with life ahead of the Play-In Tournament only a game away. Find more NBA betting trends for Timberwolves vs. Magic.
How to watch Timberwolves vs Magic
Location
Kia Center, Orlando, FL
Date
Wednesday, April 8, 2026
Tip-off
7:00 p.m. ET
TV
FDSN North, FDSN Florida
Timberwolves vs Magic latest injuries
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CLEVELAND, OHIO - AUGUST 17: Sean Murphy #12 of the Atlanta Braves looks on during the seventh inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field on August 17, 2025 in Cleveland, Ohio. (Photo by Nick Cammett/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images
Last night, Walt Weiss told the assorted Braves media that catcher Sean Murphy would be heading on a rehab assignment as soon as Friday. While we knew that Friday would be the day, we didn’t know which of the four Braves minor league teams that Murphy would be playing for as he makes his final preparations to return to Atlanta’s squad following offseason hip labrum surgery.
We now have an answer to that. Per a press release from the Braves and the Gwinnett Stripers, Sean Murphy will be playing at Gwinnett Field this Friday as the Stripers take on the Nashville Sounds from the Milwaukee Brewers organization.
Return of the Murph‼️
2023 All-Star and #Braves catcher Sean Murphy is scheduled to begin a rehab assignment in Gwinnett THIS FRIDAY, April 10th, presented by @NorthsideHosp.
Here’s an excerpt from the Stripers’ press relase on the matter:
Murphy, on Atlanta’s 10-day injured list (right hip labrum repair), is scheduled to play in Gwinnett’s 7:05 p.m. game that night vs. Nashville at Gwinnett Field.
The 31-year-old Murphy will begin his third career rehab assignment with the Stripers. He played in four games with the club in 2024 while out with a strained left oblique, and three games in 2025 while working his way back from a left ribcage fracture. In seven career games with Gwinnett, he’s batting .250 (7-for-28) with one double, three home runs, six RBIs, and an .883 OPS.
In case you’re interested in watching or keeping track with the game, you can watch on Bally Sports Live (link here) and you can listen on My Country 993 WCON-FM (link here). We still don’t know the exact date of Sean Murphy’s return to the Braves but as long as this is happening, a return is certainly imminent. We’ll see what happens.
PITTSBURGH, PA - APRIL 03: Kyle Bradish #38 of the Baltimore Orioles in action the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park on April 3, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Justin K. Aller/Getty Images) | Getty Images
It is Kyle Bradish day for the Orioles, and hopefully that is a good thing. Prior to the start of this season, you’d have bet for sure that it was, as the one-time Top 5 Cy Young Award finisher has been a dark wizard on the mound, even after missing time for Tommy John surgery. In the spring, Bradish said he felt healthier than he had in a long time, and expectations were high to match. Yet so far in two starts he’s 0-2 with a 6.23 ERA, having yet to complete five innings in either outing while walking a highly atypical 6.23 hitters per nine innings. The velocity is back, just not the control. The White Sox, though, are probably about as good a matchup as Bradish could ask for right now: think of it as an extended spring training. A strong performance here would go a long way toward settling the question of whether the right handers’ early-season struggles are a sign of something concerning or just early-season noise.
The Orioles batters face Sean Burke (0-1, 3.60 ERA, 12 K in 10 IP), who has looked considerably better than his rotation-mate (and yesterday’s starter) Shane Smith this season. Burke was something of a Dean Kremer-tier pitcher for the White Sox last year (4-11, 4.22 ERA, 133 K in 133.1 IP), but he’s off to a nice start in 2026, with 12 strikeouts and no home runs allowed across his first 10 innings. The key for Burke is his four-seam fastball: he relies on swings-and-misses with the heater, but his changeup is a threat, too. Burke could be a real challenge for this free-swinging Orioles lineup, which has been somewhat stymied by hard throwers this year.
The Orioles come in fresh off a win yesterday against these same White Sox, taking a 2-0 lead in the series and in a position to sweep today. A win would put this team back at .500 and give them something to feel good about heading into their next two series, rare clashes against two NL West teams, the struggling Giants and about-as-good-as-the-Orioles Diamondbacks.
Mar 29, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Texas Rangers pitcher MacKenzie Gore (1) throws a pitch against the Philadelphia Phillies during the first inning at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images | Eric Hartline-Imagn Images
Despite flashes of electric stuff, Shane Smith struggled with command in Wednesday’s start, prompting a move to Triple-A. | (Geoff Stellfox/Getty Images)
Shane Smith, the South Siders’ 2026 Opening Day starter, was optioned to Triple-A Charlotte on Wednesday. Smith’s demotion comes after his start on Tuesday, where he flashed some of that nasty swing-and-miss stuff we saw for stretches last season.
Smith was still erratic, however. He walked five Orioles, plunked a sixth, and burned through 99 pitches in 3 2/3 innings. Despite failing to end the fourth inning, Wednesday was still Smith’s longest outing of the year. That kind of tells you everything you need to know right there.
The issues are easy to diagnose. Smith has completely lost the ability to spot his fastball. Compare his 2025 heat map to 2026:
At his best, Smith features one of the liveliest four-seam fastballs in baseball. The pitch can overpower hitters even when they are sitting on it. Smith also added 1.3 inches of rise to his four-seamer early in 2026, which could help generate more swings and misses in the strike zone. None of this does a pitcher any good, however, when he’s constantly missing wide of the zone.
James Fegan got Smith and some of the White Sox development staff to talk about the fastball issues on Monday, and I was struck by this quote from Brian Bannister:
“He lost some of the qualities that made him unique,” Bannister said. “He had this unique little step forward that threw hitters off on their timing, and then he would speed up right after that to go slow, fast. You get some visual deception in a way that Tarik Skubal does.”
This isn’t the first time Bannister has talked about “visual deception” this season. Bannister is one of those guys who is always looking for the next big thing; in 2024 and 2025, he bet on the kick changeup and was correct. He’s now wagering on “funky,” a concept that has long been a staple of Japanese baseball culture but has grown more en vogue recently in MLB, from the more obvious (Nestor Cortes’s double leg kick) to the more subtle, like Shane Smith’s herky-jerky tempo from last year. The organization even has a term for them: “residuals.”
Smith took it upon himself over the offseason to regulate his windup tempo — we’re left to infer that Bannister hadn’t communicated his philosophy of funk to his pitchers before the offseason — and in doing so, he took away a piece of what made him a budding star last year. It’s like taking the loud parts out of “Smells Like Teen Spirit”—now the song is just some mumbly guy playing two notes over and over.
While an early-season demotion does not seem so bleak after last year’s extended Spring Training, where Colson Montgomery got his groove back, it also doesn’t instill much confidence in a ballclub when the Opening Day starter can’t make it to Tax Day. It’ll be up to the White Sox brain trust to get Smith back to the funk.
The Central Division and Metropolitan Division title races have been settled but the other two NHL division races are tight.
After games on Tuesday, April 7, the Tampa Bay Lightning, Buffalo Sabres and Montreal Canadiens are tied atop the Atlantic Division with 102 points each. In the Pacific Division race, the Edmonton Oilers and Vegas Golden Knights are tied with 88 points and the Anaheim Ducks are one point back at 87.
So which team has the edge for the division title and which would finish second and have home-ice advantage in the second round?
That comes down to tiebreakers.
Here's an explanation of NHL tiebreakers and how they will affect the 2026 playoff races:
NHL tiebreakers: What is the first tiebreaker in NHL standings?
If two teams are tied in points at the end of the regular season, here are the tiebreakers:
Regulation wins
Regulation and overtime wins (ROW)
Total wins
Most points earned in head-to-head competition: If teams had an uneven number of meetings, the first game played in the city that has the extra game is excluded. When more than two clubs are tied, the percentage of available points earned in games among each other (and not including any odd games) shall be used to determine standings.
Goal differential
Total goals
How NHL tiebreakers affect the Atlantic Division race
The Lightning and Sabres entered Wednesday's game tied with 39 regulation wins, so that would go to the second tiebreaker. Tampa Bay leads 44 to 42 in ROW, giving it the division lead. The Canadiens have only 32 regulation wins and can't catch the other two teams in that category, so they'd have to finish ahead of the Lightning and Sabres in points to finish first or second in the division.
Buffalo plays on Wednesday and Thursday, April 9, while Tampa Bay visits Montreal on Thursday.
How NHL tiebreakers affect the Pacific Division race
Edmonton leads Vegas 30-28 in regulation wins and in ROW 39-35, so the Golden Knights will have to finish with more points or regulation wins than the Oilers to win the division. Anaheim has only 24 regulation wins.
How NHL tiebreakers affect the race for the Eastern Conference top seed
The Carolina Hurricanes have 106 points, but if the Lightning or Sabres can catch them, they have three more regulation wins than the Hurricanes.
How NHL tiebreakers affect the Eastern Conference wild-card race
The Boston Bruins (96 points) and Ottawa Senators (92) hold the two spots, with four other teams within five points of Ottawa. The Senators have the most regulation wins in that group (35) with only the Washington Capitals (33) able to catch them in that category, but they're five points back. Ottawa would take the first wild-card slot if they and Boston are tied in points at season's end.
How NHL tiebreakers affect the Western Conference wild-card race
The Utah Mammoth (88 points) are trending toward finishing with the first wild-card spot. The Nashville Predators (84) are sitting in the second wild-card spot, but they have played one or two more games than their closest pursuers: the Los Angeles Kings (83), San Jose Sharks (81), Winnipeg Jets (80) and St. Louis Blues (78).
The Kings currently have only 19 regulation wins, so they'd lose out in the event of a tie. The Predators have 27, the Sharks have 25, the Jets have 27 and the Blues have 29. The Sharks have the most ROW at 35 if it comes down to a second tiebreaker.
Nashville and Winnipeg are currently tied in regulation wins and ROW, but the Predators have three more total wins. If it comes down to a fourth tiebreaker between those teams. the Jets have the edge in the season series.
How NHL tiebreakers affect the second seed in the Central Division
The Dallas Stars vs. Minnesota Wild first-round series is the only one that is set, but home-ice advantage hasn't been determined. The Stars lead by two points and by an insurmountable five regulation wins, so the Wild can't win a tiebreaker. They would get home ice only if they finish with more points.
Feb 24, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers infielder Miguel Rojas against the Cleveland Guardians during a spring training game at Camelback Ranch-Glendale. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
Veteran Dodgers infielder Miguel Rojas announced Wednesday on Instagram that his father Miguel Rojas Sr. died.
“With immense sorrow on behalf of the entire Rojas family, I must inform everyone who had the opportunity to know and share time with my father, Miguel Rojas—known as “Micky”—that he passed away suddenly yesterday afternoon, April 7th,“ Rojas said in Spanish, translated roughly here to English. ”I wish to express my heartfelt gratitude to everyone who has reached out to me and my family to offer their love and let us know just how deeply cherished my father was throughout his life. May God welcome him into His glory, and may he rest in peace.“
Rojas was originally slated to start at shortstop on Tuesday night against the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre, but was a late scratch, replaced in the lineup by Hyeseong Kim. At the time, the Dodgers announced Rojas was scratched “to tend to a family matter.”
Dave Roberts said he does expect Miguel Rojas to go on leave at some point following the passing of his father, but said Rojas approached him and said he wanted to be in the lineup today.
Miguel Rojas said he spoke with his father yesterday afternoon. Said he was looking forward to watching #Dodgers game that night. Miggy got another call 40 minutes before game time, saying his father suffered a heart attack. Miguel Sr. died on the way to the hospital
Should the Dodgers decide to place Rojas on bereavement leave and call up a replacement on the roster once the team returns home on Friday, the minimum stay on the bereavement list is three days, with a maximum of seven days.
Feb 26, 2026; Peoria, Arizona, USA; Seattle Mariners right fielder Connor Joe (9) hits a single against the Cleveland Guardians in the second inning at Peoria Sports Complex. Mandatory Credit: Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images | Rick Scuteri-Imagn Images
The Seattle Mariners announced today that they have placed OF Victor Robles on the 10-day IL with a right pectoral strain. To take Robles’s place on the roster, the Mariners have selected INF/OF Connor Joe. Joe will wear #9, last worn by INF Ben Williamson.
Joe, 33, is a journeyman player who’s been with several organizations, most known as a member of the Pittsburgh Pirates, the team that drafted him, and the Rockies, where he played two seasons. The Mariners brought him in this spring on a minor-league deal and invited him to camp as an NRI, where he saw significant playing time while many Mariners regulars were away at the WBC.
Joe impressed in camp, knocking in six doubles, a triple and a homer over 20 games, showing some surprising thump and recording consistently loud exit velocities for a player who’s never been known as a power threat. Joe credited that this spring to the Mariners’ up-the-middle philosophy, saying it suits him well as a hitter. He told me this spring how quickly he took to the Mariners’ offensive philosophy, and coaching specifically:
“From [Kevin] Seitzer to Mags [Bobby Magallanes] to Pap [Ed Papprella], we had such productive talks, and Mags even pulled up some video from when I was going really well with the Pirates and compared it to some of the moves I was making when I first got to camp, and talked about how I could add some more rhythm in there, get a little bit more separation, just be more athletic in the box, and it’s really helped me. The work with them and the communication with them has been very, very consistent.”
What the Mariners were really excited about when acquiring Joe, however, is his plus makeup and leadership abilities. Joe, whose father ran Chinese restaurants in the San Diego area and often worked 15-hour days, is a testicular cancer survivor who speaks often about the importance of early detection and his difficult journey to fatherhood. (I strongly recommend you read the linked article, written by now-Mariners AP beat reporter Andrew Destin, who covered Joe back when he was in Pittsburgh.)
In addition to these moves, the Mariners also moved RHP Carlos Vargas to the 60-day IL with a lat strain. Vargas was placed on the 15-day IL on March 27th after feeling discomfort during his regular throwing routine. RHP Cole Wilcox was selected from Tacoma to replace Vargas and has since appeared in three games, punching out six of the sixteen hitters he’s faced so far.
Mar 28, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Phoenix Suns head coach Jordan Ott reacts against the Utah Jazz in the second half at Mortgage Matchup Center. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
April showers might bring May flowers, sure, but quality basketball in April opens the door to May games. Perhaps even June. This is the stretch where teams tighten things up, clean their rotations, and get ready for the games that actually matter. Unless you are tanking, of course. Thankfully, the Phoenix Suns are not in that lane. They do not have a draft pick waiting to reward losing, so the mission is simple. Compete. Use these games to learn who shows up when the lights get hot, who fades, and what you actually have before a very real offseason arrives.
And yet, things feel off in Phoenix.
This is not a team sharpening its tools. This is a team still rummaging through the toolbox, trying to find those damn needlenose pliers. Health has been part of the story all season, and now that bodies are back, it almost feels like there are too many levers to pull. There are too many tools in the proverbial toolbox. There are too many options and not enough clarity. They are not honing an edge. They are still deciding which blade to pick up.
That early-season run? It was real. They took the league by surprise and stacked wins. It is also worth remembering how it happened. Jalen Green, the $33.6 million man, missed 45 games. During that stretch, something formed. Roles made sense. Chemistry showed up. Guys knew where to be and what to do. The team is 16-15 in games in which he has played. They were 27-21 in games without him. Not a singular cause, but worth noting.
Now he is back. Dillon Brooks is back. Mark Williams is back. The team is the healthiest it’s been all season. And somehow, the picture is less clear. The Suns feel uneven, the roles are less defined, and the team is sputtering. Possession to possession, quarter to quarter, game to game. The identity that once felt loud now feels distant.
If you zoom out and look at the month-by-month counting stats for the Phoenix Suns, you can start to see where things are drifting. April is a small sample. Three games are not enough to plant a flag and call it a full-blown trend. But when you layer it on top of what we have been watching in the weeks leading up to it, the picture becomes a little clearer.
The numbers do not exist in a vacuum. They are confirming what the eye test has been telling you. Certain areas are slipping. Possessions that used to be under control are now loosening. Defensive breakdowns that used to be occasional are becoming routine. Fourth quarters are a barren offensive landscape. And when you connect those dots from late March into April, it stops feeling like a blip and starts feeling like direction. And right now, that direction is not the one you want heading into the postseason.
What is concerning? Let’s delve.
Opposing Points in the Paint
We talked about it in the Weekly Recap, and the numbers keep reinforcing it. Month by month, Phoenix is allowing more damage in the paint, not less. They are allowing 56.0 points in the paint in April, whereas they were permitting 48.5 during the first six months of the year. An extra 8 points nightly is not what anyone would label as “ideal”. That is the wrong direction this time of year. You already know why it matters. The paint is where the highest percentage shots live. Layups, dunks, second-chance looks; all of it adds up quickly when you do not protect that space.
And right now, teams are getting there far too easily. Opposing teams’ offensive rebound percentage in the month of April is 46.5%. It was 32.0% between October and March. The team, as they’ve navigated away from size, has permitted the opposition to roam free to snag offensive rebounds. There is no deterrent, there is no resistance.
Whether it is guards turning the corner without resistance or bigs cleaning up on the glass, as we saw with the Houston Rockets on Tuesday, it becomes a steady diet of easy points. Missed box outs become putbacks. Broken containment becomes a layup line.
That is not something you can live with. Good teams identify this early. They adjust. They tighten things up. They make the paint uncomfortable. Phoenix is going the other way.
Steals Per Game
The calling card for the Phoenix Suns this season, at least for the first half of it, has been defense. Not passive defense, not sit back and react, but pressure. Disruption. The kind that makes teams uncomfortable and speeds them up. That is the identity. Or at least it was. That is what has separated Phoenix when they are right.
But as the season has moved forward, that edge has dulled.
The steals are not showing up at the same rate. This was the league’s top team in steals at one point. They are now ranked 4th, which obviously isn’t horrible. But they are not trending upward, especially when compared to the front-end of the season.
The activity might still be there, the intent might still exist, but the results are not matching it. Hands are a half step late. Rotations are a beat behind. What used to turn into turnovers is now turning into clean looks.
You can point to fatigue and you can point to injuries. Both are part of the story. None of this happens in isolation. But it is still something you have to acknowledge. Because when your identity is built on disruption, and the disruption starts to fade, everything else becomes harder.
Assist Percentage
One of the more concerning developments with the Phoenix Suns is how sharp the drop has been in certain areas, and assists sit right at the center of it. Yes, the April sample is small. Three games are not enough to paint the full picture. But the recent results have been alarming. Their 49.6 assist percentage is dead last in the NBA.
The scoring is still there, although 110.7 points per game in April is 4th least in the league. A primary reason for this is that the assist numbers have fallen off. 19.7 assists on 39.7 made field goals is a significant shift from what the first six months of the season carried, which was 25 assists on 41 field goals made, a 60.8 assist percentage.
The ball is sticking more. The natural flow that defined this team earlier in the season is not showing up with the same consistency.
When the ball moves, the offense breathes. When it doesn’t, everything tightens. Shots become tougher, possessions become more predictable, and the margin for error shrinks. What you are seeing is a lack of cohesion. Not complete dysfunction, but enough of a drop to notice. Enough to question.
And that is the part that lingers. Because when you move into the postseason, those cracks do not hide. They get exposed.
Fourth Quarter Net Rating
Ummm…gross, right?
This team is not closing well. The execution slips, the flow disappears, and possessions start to feel heavy. Devin Booker has not elevated in those moments, and when he shifts into deferment mode, the response around him has not been there either. No one is picking up the slack. No one is carrying the weight.
And that is where games are decided. The fourth quarter is where you win or lose, and right now, Phoenix is not holding up in those minutes. Especially in April. The same issue keeps showing up. The same script keeps playing out. When the moments matter most, the Suns are coming up short.
It’s been a season-long issue. The Suns are the worst team in the NBA in fourth quarter scoring, averaging 25.9 points per Q4.
Thankfully, there is still time. Not much, but some. Three games left for the Phoenix Suns before the Play-In, before everything tightens, before every possession carries a little more weight. And that is where the focus turns to Jordan Ott and the rotations.
He is tightening them. That part is clear. But the question that keeps hanging in the air is whether he is tightening in the right places. Because right now, the productivity is not matching the decisions. The lineups are not producing the consistency you need this time of year.
How long do you keep searching? How long do you keep running out combinations that are not giving you what you need, hoping that something clicks? Because at some point, the window for experimentation closes, and the need for clarity takes over.
That is where Phoenix is right now. Three games to figure it out. Three games to find the groups you trust. Three games to build something that can hold when the pressure rises. After that, there is no more searching. Only results.
We got everybody in the league looking down, staring at their shoes.
Honestly, answer me…. Who in their right mind wants to see the Phoenix Suns right now?
My guess is that the answer to that question is a lot of teams.
That disruptive identity they built early in the season? It has faded. Teams are getting into the paint whenever they want. The activity is there at times, but it is not turning into steals. The ball is not moving with purpose, assists are down, and possessions feel heavier. And when the game tightens in the fourth, things fall apart.
Those are all symptoms of the same thing. Execution.
You can point in a lot of directions. Jordan Ott and the rotations. The players and their ability to carry out what is being asked. Even the roster construction itself. It sounds strange, but this team might be too deep for its own good right now. Too many options, not enough clarity. And when you are still trying to figure out who plays, when they play, and how they fit together this late in the season, it shows.
Because instead of leaning into an identity, you drift away from one. Instead of being disruptive, you become disjointed. Disconnected. Discombobulated. The version of this team we saw early, the one that had a clear edge and a clear purpose, that version feels distant. And with the postseason around the corner, that is the part that should make you uneasy.
As talks begin over fixing the controversial regulations, the FIA’s Nikolas Tombazis says changes to ‘specific aspects’ are needed, not a total overhaul
Formula One has endured a somewhat turbulent opening this season under the sport’s new regulations. Amid the sound and fury of some driver dissatisfaction with the new formula and safety concerns brought sharply into focus by a huge accident at the Japanese Grand Prix, three races in there is now an opportunity to propose changes, with the man who has been at the heart of the process since it began quietly confident that F1 can adapt successfully.
Nikolas Tombazis is the single-seater director for F1’s governing body, the FIA, and has been with the organisation since 2018. He was there when the very first discussions of the 2026 regulations took place in January 2021 and has been central to their evolution since. In his calm and articulate fashion, Tombazis says the noise around the new regulations is overstated.
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - APRIL 06: Jake Bauers #9 of the Milwaukee Brewers greets Christian Yelich #22 at home after Yelich scored in the eighth inning against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on April 06, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Jaiden Tripi/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Milwaukee Brewers have a chance to win their first four series of the regular season today if they can take the rubber match against the Boston Red Sox.
On the mound today for the Brewers is Shane Drohan, who will be making his MLB debut. Drohan was acquired from the Red Sox right before spring training along with Kyle Harrison and David Hamilton in exchange for Caleb Durbin, Andruw Monasterio, and Anthony Siegler. Drohan impressed the Brewers in spring training, but wasn’t able to make the Opening Day roster in the crowded rotation picture.
With Chad Patrick needing an extra day of rest following the rainout and double-header forcing his last start back a day, the Brewers decided to give Drohan his first opportunity.
On the field, Brice Turang is out for the second straight game as he’s dealing with a minor ankle/foot issue. This will allow Turang three straight days off his ankle before the Brewers play on Friday against the Nationals. William Contreras also gets the day off in a day game after a night game.
Sal Frelick and Garrett Mitchell lead things off for the Brewers, followed by Christian Yelich, Jake Bauers, and Gary Sanchez. Sonny Gray is on the mound for the Red Sox for this series finale.
First pitch is at 12:35 p.m. on Brewers.TV, WTMJ 620, and the Brewers Radio Network.
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Victor Wembanyama and Stephon Castle were ruled out for the San Antonio Spurs ’ game against the Portland Trail Blazers on Wednesday night.
Wembanyama is out after suffering a rib contusion on Monday and Castle is out with right knee soreness, the team announced.
Wembanyama needs to play at least 20 minutes in one more game to reach the league-required minimum of 65 games for award eligibility.
The Spurs have two games left in the regular season after Wednesday night: Friday against the Dallas Mavericks and Sunday against the Denver Nuggets.
The Spurs said they are hopeful Wembanyama and Castle will play Friday.
They both participated in shootaround on Wednesday.
“I can’t tell you too much of how (Wembanyama) looked, but he heals fast,” Spurs veteran Harrison Barnes said.
Wembanyama suffered the injury in the first half of a 115-102 victory over the Philadelphia 76ers. Castle had 17 points, 13 assists and 10 rebounds in that game.
Wembanyama had 17 points, five rebounds and three blocks in just under 16 minutes. That time constituted an official game played per the NBA guidelines, which allow two exceptions of 15 to 19:59 minutes to count toward the league-required minimum.
San Antonio (60-19) has clinched the Southwest Division title and is assured of finishing no worse than second in the Western Conference. It trails the conference-leading Oklahoma City Thunder (63-16) by three games.
INGLEWOOD, CA - APRIL 7: Cooper Flagg #32 of the Dallas Mavericks dribbles the ball during the game against the LA Clippers on April 7, 2026 at Intuit Dome in Los Angeles, California. 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 Juan Ocampo/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NBA. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Mavs fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.
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NEW YORK, NEW YORK - APRIL 04: Ryan McMahon #19 of the New York Yankees throws to first after fielding a ground ball against the Miami Marlins during the game at Yankee Stadium on April 04, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Caean Couto/Getty Images) | Getty Images
When the Yankees acquired third baseman Ryan McMahon last July, the general consensus was that they were bringing in a player who made up for his lack of pop at the plate with some of the best defense in the game. Although he has yet to earn a Gold Glove, this lack of hardware has been less the result of his defensive prowess and more the unfortunate reality of manning the hot corner at the same time as Nolan Arenado and Matt Chapman: his 66 Defensive Runs Saved and 46 Outs Above Average since 2017 trail only these two. McMahon’s first few months in pinstripes last season reinforced this expectation, for as he struggled with the bat down the stretch, the third baseman flashed the leather repeatedly, putting together a nice defensive highlight reel that culminated in a timely catch falling into the Red Sox dugout during Game 3 of the Wild Card Series.
Heading into 2026, the Yankees hoped that they would be able to unlock some of his potential at the plate, but were ultimately content with him serving as the defensively-strong left-handed half of a third base platoon with Amed Rosario. Unfortunately, while his offensive woes to start the season were not unexpected (even if this season-opening slump is particularly bad), it has been his early-season defense that has attracted the most attention — and not in a good way. After accruing 10 DRS and 7 OAA last season, making him a finalist for the NL Gold Glove at third despite only spending half the season there, McMahon has struggled out of the gate this season, having accrued -3 DRS and -2 OAA in just 67 innings heading into action last night.
While these numbers are drastic, we are still just a few games into the season, and defense is something that can take some time to stabilize. A quick film analysis, though, can give us a bit of insight into whether or not we should worry just yet, or if we can pump the brakes on the defensive alarms and instead focus all our criticism about McMahon’s bat rather than his glove. And so, I dove into the MLB Film Room, which had 14 plays listing McMahon as the primary fielder heading into last night’s game — six groundouts, three popups, three singles, one double, and one E5. Of these plays, I found a handful worth going through.
Let’s get started with the one E5, a throwing error by McMahon against the Seattle Mariners back on March 30th.
At first glance, this error might not look like a throwing error, as the ball reaches first baseman Ben Rice on one hop, and indeed, you can make the argument that a more experienced first baseman than Rice probably makes that play—even if he’s improved early on. But the truth is, this shouldn’t have been a tough play in the first place. The ball gets to McMahon on a fairly easy hop, and the batter, Seattle backup catcher Mitch Garver, is not a fast runner (he ranked in the 16th percentile last season). There’s no reason for McMahon to underthrow it to such an extent that the ball bounces on the grass as far out as it did, especially since he took a second to set himself before throwing.
Fortunately, while throws from the hot corner are more likely to need a scoop than one from the shortstop or second baseman, McMahon’s arm being this wild seemed to be very much a fluke thing. Here’s another play from the very next day:
Of these two, the first was an almost impossible play, with the ball winding up in no-man’s land. The second is a play I would’ve liked to see McMahon make, and indeed one that he has made frequently; but there is ultimately a reason why it was listed as a single, not a throwing error.
The third single, on the other hand, is a bit more concerning to me:
I’m not quite sure what happened here; thanks to the lefty shift, McMahon was playing in the role of the shortstop, and wound up in a position where he could neither make the play or get to the third base bag with enough time to give Cody Bellinger a target to throw the ball, resulting in A) the pitcher essentially covering the bag as the same time as him, and B) because of that, nobody backing up the throw. The good thing about this play, though, is that this isn’t so much an issue to watch for than it is a weird confluence of events. If it happens again, would I be concerned? Absolutely — but not about McMahon’s defense, but about the infield’s assignments when in the shift.
Ouch! The ball, 104.1 mph off the bat, deflected off McMahon — first off his glove, then possibly off his head — before careening into left field for a double off the bat of Randy Arozarena. Yea, these plays happen; I’m not too concerned.
And ultimately, that’s where I think I current stand after watching McMahon’s defensive highlights so far: not too concerned. At the end of the day, good, dependable defense doesn’t exactly skyrocket up the OAA and DRS charts, while one or two misplays can drop you down quite a bit, allowing statistical noise to rear its head in the early going. Now, if the metrics remain negative in May and June, then it’ll be time to start looking more deeply under the hood; but for now, we don’t need to stress it when the ball gets hit to third — only when the third baseman comes up to the plate, with Amed Rosario perhaps breathing down his neck.
Sean Burke looks to build on his last strong outing and play stopper as the White Sox try to avoid the sweep. | (Mark J. Rebilas/Imagn Images)
The Chicago White Sox are once again looking to avoid yet another series loss. They’ll try to salvage the finale against the Baltimore Orioles this afternoon after dropping the first two games of the set. It’s not quite panic time because it’s far too early for that, but a win would at least allow fans to feel slightly less miserable.
There is, however, a reason for a bit of cautious optimism today: Sean Burke.
The righthander (0-1, 3.60 ERA) was sharp his last time out on April 3, tossing six innings of one-run ball while allowing just four hits and striking out seven. It was the kind of outing the South Siders desperately need more of, as he was competitive and, most importantly, efficient. Manager Will Venable didn’t have to start burning the bullpen in the third inning. If Burke can come anywhere close to that form again today, the Sox might actually have a chance to keep things respectable.
On the other side, the Orioles hand the ball to Kyle Bradish (0-2, 6.23 ERA), who, on paper, looks like an opportunity. Baltimore’s righty has been hittable to start the season, and if there were ever a time for the Sox lineup to resemble a functional offense, this would be it. That said, we’ve been here before, as “get-right” spots have not exactly been automatic for this group.
Chicago’s skipper will once again try to piece together enough offense to support a starter who’s giving them a fighting chance. With the injuries starting to pile up, this lineup is looking more and more like a patchwork quilt.
The first pitch is set for this afternoon at 1:10 p.m. The weather is finally warmer, and hopefully the bats take notice. You can watch on CHSN or listen in on ESPN 1000.