NetsDaily Off-Season Report – No. 4

BROOKLYN, NY - JUNE 26: A detailed view of an NBA New Era hat during the 2025 NBA Draft - Round Two on June 26, 2025 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. 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 2025 NBAE (Photo by Jeff Haynes/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Things are bad, objectively bad. The Nets have lost 118 games in two years, having missed the post-season three straight seasons. There’s not an All-Star, past or current, on the roster. No matter what you believe, their decision to draft five rookies in the first round continues to be excoriated. Going back further, they haven’t won more than 45 games in any of the last ten seasons. They’ve won a single playoff series in that stretch.

Then, there’s this non-fun fact from Nets Insider if you want to go wayway back…

Well, something didn’t give on Lottery night so going into the 2026-season, a couple of Nets losses and Timberwolves wins and Brooklyn moves to the top of that list. Ugh.

While the plan to get into the top three of lottery odds succeeded, the tank ultimately failed Sunday when the Nets fell to No. 6 in the Draft, three spots lower than what they had hoped for. The effect on everyone from the owner to lowest fan was devastating.

Read what Bucks beat writer Mike Owczarski, the Bucks beat writer who was in the Draft Room, wrote about Joe Tsai’s reaction when, by just one ping pong ball, the Nets’ season-long hopes were dashed.

The most expressive reaction, however, came Brooklyn Nets owner Joe Tsai who slumped in his chair and stared dejectedly at the board.

Fans, of course, did more than slump in their chairs. They threw them.

Of course, the palpable fan anger is about more than Lottery luck. The drop has become the most recent manifestation of the team’s history of not just bad luck, but bad losses, bad trades, bad picks and now a growing reputation as a cursed franchise. It is the cumulative effect. (When NBA writers see your team as cursed and pitiable, that’s pretty bad.)

Plans for the coming season may have to be adjusted, too. After all, the Nets had hoped that getting a top three or four pick would improve their ability to snag free agents or players unhappy with their current situations.

And so, fans want the GM fired and/or the owner to sell, a new start! This week we saw this being marketed…

Not very flattering. The reality is there’s no indication that Sean Marks is in trouble. Tsai has been telling people he is patient as an owner and just two days ago, the Nets hired a third assistant GM, Makar Gevorkian, after going with two for well over a decade. That’s a commitment to the current front office.

Falling from a top three or four pick to the sixth isn’t necessarily devasting, as history shows. Hell, it looks like the NBA Finals may feature lead guards who were picked 11th (Shai Gilgeous-Alexander) and 33rd (Jalen Brunson.) Plus the drop was bad luck. You can recover from that. The next five picks or so are seen as solid prospects if not franchise-changers. And it will be years before we know just how lucky or unlucky the Nets were in Chicago.

They could still succeed. They have plenty of money and play in New York. Also, the Nets could wind up with a terrific player at No. 6 or move up or down or add a second first round pick, get a steal in the second round.

But all the positives that the Nets enjoy — money, picks, location, etc,, respected performance and medical teams, .— are not likely to assuage anyone at the moment. Fans are neither naive nor stupid. They want wins and considering their loyalty, they (aka we) deserve them.

Performance now

So, our next chance to gauge success in this Draft and the rebuild will be the two, count ’em, two Summer Leagues, which start July 4 with a back-to-back-to back holiday weekend at the California Classic in Sacramento. Then, after a three-day respite, they’ll move to Las Vegas for the NBA Summer League which will run from July 9 through 19. The Nets will play a minimum of five games there.

So at the least, the front office, pundits and fans will have eight games to measure all the Nets youngsters which will likely include whoever they take in the Draft plus the Flatbush 5 and some but not all of the various two ways and 10-days who played for them last season, players like Chaney Johnson, E.J. Liddell, Malachi Smith, Tyson Etienne, maybe Grant Nelson. Of the group, all but Etienne are 25 or younger. He turns 27 in September.

Yes, Egor Demin has suggested that his situation is uncertain, but we’d be surprised if he doesn’t play. After all in their March medical update on his plantar fascia issue, the Nets stated they expected him to be “a full participant in the summer development program.”

Don’t expect Josh Minott or Ochai Agbaji to play. They are approaching their fifth career years. Also, Minott has a player option and Agbaji will be restricted free agent.

Sounds like a lot and certainly it could be … but that’s why you play in two leagues. With two leagues comes the possibility of slightly different rosters and rotations, as well as minutes.

Bottom line: we’ll be able to gauge the readiness of who they picked in the Draft and what improvements last year’s players had made. It’s a lot of basketball. Hopefully good basketball.

We may see different coach or coaches, too. Steve Hetzel who handled Summer League last season, is a serious candidate for the head coaching job in New Orleans. We should know more about that this week.

Draft Sleeper of the Week

Despite the fall, Tankathon still ranks the Nets current draft picks at Nos. 6, 33 and 43 the fifth best in the NBA, behind the Memphis Grizzlies, Chicago Bulls, Washington Wizards and Oklahoma City Thunder. We could speculate that there’s no better partner for the Nets in various scenarios than OKC with the 12th, 17th and 37th picks and apron issues, but that’s a discussion for a different day and one unlikely to have much relevance for a month or so.

We’ve written this week about both Darius Acuff and Mikel Brown Jr. who sit at around No. 6 in most mock drafts. So what about Keaton Wagler, the 6’6” Illinois combo guard. In our latest survey of mock drafts, written two days after the Lottery, he finished second to Acuff with three out of 10 sites liking him as a future Net. NBADraft.net wrote this:

Brooklyn continues its long-term rebuild by adding one of the premier upside swings in the class in Wagler, a dynamic scoring guard with outstanding pace, shot-making ability, and offensive creativity. At No. 6, the Nets can afford to prioritize talent and star upside, and Wagler offers the type of offensive centerpiece potential the franchise has lacked in recent years. His ability to operate both on and off the ball gives Brooklyn lineup flexibility moving forward, while his advanced feel and shot-making instincts allow him to impact games.

Of course, there are others who warn that despite his height, his smarts and his maturity, Wagler has issues with his athleticism particularly if you pair him with Egor Demin who while 6’9.5” in shoes and a great volume shooter for his age, is not known for his atheticism.

Troubling to some was this stat…

He hit 36.0” in that vertical leap. Overall, his combine numbers were only okay but as our Collin Helwig noted in his excellent break down among the five lead guard prospects, he was fifth and last in the shuttle run, the three-quarter court sprint and max vertical leap. Among the 70 Combine participants, his worst performance was in the shuttle run, he finished 50th. Surprisingly, he finished last in spot-up shooting (44%) but first among the five in shooting off the dribble (83%) which was the second best overall at the Combine.

Compared to historical numbers, that’s not awful, as Billy Reinhardt pointed out…

But like any prospect, his game is not about his numbers. He is a smart, poised, mature player who has overcome whatever physical deficits he may have. Take this breakdown from Sam Vecenie’s Game Theory.

Wagler has his advocates, chief among them Albert Ghim of No Ceilings. He absolutely loves Wagler:

I believe Keaton Wagler could be a future MVP candidate. I think he’s going to make multiple All-Star teams and All-NBA teams if all breaks right.

His excitement about Wagler is based on his basketball history so far:

The quick synopsis is that he went to public school in Kansas, played AAU for a non-shoe-sponsored program, and wasn’t even a Top 100-ranked prospect coming out of high school. Kansas and Kansas State didn’t even recruit him, even though he played in-state. He committed to Illinois, had a ridiculous freshman season that led the Fighting Illini to the Final Four, and was named a consensus All-American and won the Jerry West Award, just to name a few of his accolades.

Ghim even compares Wagler favorably to Jalen Brunson and Tyrese Haliburton.

Sounds ever so Sean Marks-ey. He met with the Nets in Chicago on Thursday.

Another set of numbers

Stefania Rizzo was a veteran member of the Nets performance staff for years, in charge of rehabilitation therapy among other things. She was also a founder of the NBPTA, the National Basketball Physical Therapists Association, which tries to point up the value of their craft. This week, they looked at what physical theorists look for at the Combine…

While the scouts have their stopwatches out at the NBA Combine, we’re looking at a different set of numbers.

Beyond the vertical jump and the lane agility times, a Physical Therapist’s eye is tuned to the subtle durability markers that often fly under the radar. We aren’t just watching how high an athlete jumps: we’re watching how they land, how they decelerate, and how they manage asymmetrical loads.

Scouting for movement means identifying the biomechanical patterns that translate to a long, healthy career versus those that might signal future risk. It’s about bridging the gap between elite performance and sustainable health.

Whether it’s ankle dorsiflexion during a squat or pelvic control during a change of direction, these details are the foundation of professional success.

The point being that the draft process is more detailed and complex than most fans understand. It all feeds into the team database and their discussions.

Final Note

Jordi Fernandez is still head coach of the Brooklyn Nets.

Where to watch Cleveland Cavaliers vs. Detroit Pistons Game 7 NBA playoffs: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Sunday, May 17

The Cleveland Cavaliers and Detroit Pistons meet in a winner-take-all Game 7. The winning team will advance to the Eastern Conference finals to face the New York Knicks. The Pistons are favored by 4.5 points. Detroit forced the decisive final game with a 115-94 victory in Game 6.

  • Spread: Detroit Pistons -4.5

  • Moneyline: Detroit Pistons -186 (62.3%) / Cleveland Cavaliers +154 (37.7%)

  • Over/Under: 206.5

Game 1:Pistons 111, Cavaliers 101
Game 2:Pistons 107, Cavaliers 97
Game 3:Cavaliers 116, Pistons 109
Game 4: Cavaliers 112, Pistons 103
Game 5:Cavaliers 117, Pistons 113 (OT)
Game 6:Pistons 115, Cavaliers 94
Game 7: Cleveland at Detroit (Sunday May 17, 8 p.m. ET, Amazon)

Game #46 GameThread: Jays @ Tigers

Apr 11, 2025; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; A general view of a Detroit Tigers hat with the Major League Baseball logo sitting in the dugout in a game against the Minnesota Twins at Target Field. Mandatory Credit: Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images | Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images

Game Three with the Tigers and then the Jays head off for four games in New York against the Yankees.

And Adam Macko is up with the team. He told reporters that he rushed around to buy ‘collared shirts’ to wear on the team bus, saying that he only had hoodies. It seems that I’ve been following his journey up the ladder forever. He was drafted by the Mariners in 2019 from Vauxhall high school here in Alberta (a 2.5 hour driving time from Calgary), and we got him in trade for Teoscar Hernandez.

Vlad is in the two-spot today. I’m all for moving guys around when they are slumping. It likely won’t do much, but you never know.

Today’s Lineups

BLUE JAYSTIGERS
Yohendrick Pinango – LFKevin McGonigle – SS
Vladimir Guerrero – DHDillon Dingler – C
Daulton Varsho – CFColt Keith – DH
Jesus Sanchez – RFRiley Greene – LF
Lenyn Sosa – 1BMatt Vierling – CF
Ernie Clement – 3BGage Workman – 3B
Andres Gimenez – SSZach McKinstry – 2B
Brandon Valenzuela – CSpencer Torkelson – 1B
Davis Schneider – 2BWenceel Perez – RF
Kevin Gausman – RHPJack Flaherty – RHP

GO JAYS GO.

Round Three Preview: How Colorado and Vegas’ forward groups stack up

The Colorado Avalanche have successfully reached the conference final for the first time since the 2022 cup season and will host the Las Vegas Golden Knights for game one on Wednesday evening at Ball Arena.

We should get a feel for the matchup before the much-anticipated series begins, and with the benefit of time and importance, we will be able to bring you a preview piece for each position group, like old times!

Let’s start with two star-studded, accomplished forward groups on each side and see how they compare, what advantages they offer, and ultimately who I think has the edge!

Golden Knights Projected Forwards:

Ivan BarbashevJack EichelPavel Dorofeyev
Brett HowdenWilliam KarlssonMitch Marner
Brandon SaadTomas HertlColton Sissons
Cole SmithNic DowdKeegan KolesarMark Stone

Vegas brings its own Stanley Cup pedigree, with past champions like Jack Eichel and a wounded Mark Stone still on the roster. In fact, the Golden Knights currently roster 11 players who were a part of their 2023 Stanley Cup achievement.

It’s the sort of experience and talent in the top group that can actually rival the Avalanche, but with a slightly different approach. Attrition and forechecking are the focus for the Golden Knights, and although not as flashy as Colorado’s, it’s an approach that has proven plenty effective.

Ivan Barbashev is coming off a standout regular season and has followed it up with a great tournament performance, accumulating nine points in eleven playoff games so far, and a playoff-leading 54 hits through two rounds.

For Vegas, the story is Mitch Marner and his playoff success. Despite what we’ve heard from Toronto fans for years, Mitch Marner is a gamer, and he has proven it already this postseason, reaching a point in the bracket Toronto hasn’t reached since 2002.

This series will be won and lost in the neutral zone, as it’s likely to be John Torterella’s point of emphasis to muddy the waters, disrupt Colorado’s attack, and effectively deploy a counterstrike.

Avalanche Projected Forwards:

Gabriel LandeskogNathan MacKinnonMartin Necas
Ross ColtonBrock NelsonNicolas Roy
Valeri NichushkinNazem KadriLogan O’Connor
Parker KellyJack DruryJoel KivirantaArtturi Lehkonen

The Avalanche are capable of a measured approach, but are at their best when they can work their transition game and active defenders.

Nathan MacKinnon is on an absolute tear this postseason, and if he continues that trend, it’s hard to imagine the Avalanche losing many games.

Marty Necas has officially brought the party to the postseason with a beautiful and patient assist of the series-clinching game winner that left the stick of Brett Kulak.

The Avalanche have also been the benefactors of a downright effective Gabe Landeskog. Last postseason, he spoke about riding on adrenaline, but this time around, he has the legs, the frame, and the work ethic to thrive.

All things considered, these top six groups are talented and, although different in approach, highly competitive in their own right.

The status of Artturi Lehkonen and Mark Stone will be worth monitoring as we get closer to puck drop.

Both teams have already practiced some misdirection or tactic regarding the reporting of certain players’ health status.

Bednar iced both Malinski and Lehkonen in the morning skate to pull them from the lineup at puck drop against the Wild, and Vegas is catching fines for avoiding the press altogether. Wish us luck!

Bottom Six Depth

The kicker in this series could be the bottom six, as both teams have groups that have contributed timely goals and gutsy effort. Vegas’ Brett Howden is currently sporting a ridiculous shooting percentage (40%), and additions Colton Sissons and Nic Dowd have fit right in.

The Avalanche got a game-winner from Parker Kelly in the second round and saw the third and fourth lines at their best against the Wild in general.

How these groups match up will be interesting, with both sides capable of some shuffling in the middle six. In a series that’s Torts vs. Bedsy, I’m thinking the focus will be on coverage and limiting the opposition, so expect a similar series to Avs vs. LA but with Vegas having actual scoring potential.

Advantage: Nathan MacKinnon’s Revenge

This one is hard to give to either side because, although I think the Avalanche have a better forward group both in terms of top-end talent and depth, I feel that Vegas is equally effective with who they have and what they aim to accomplish.

Colorado’s roster is more like a cup champion, but Vegas-style is the kind that can win any game on any given night, no matter who their opponent is.

When I look for the kicker, I see Nathan MacKinnon and Mitch Marner as the best candidates for each side, and I’ll have to defer to the talents of Nate. I have nothing but respect for Mitch Marner, but this Nathan MacKinnon we have seen in the postseason feels unstoppable.

Let us know what you think in the comments!

LeBron James says it’s been ‘amazing’ to watch Austin Reaves grow throughout his career

LOS ANGELES, CA - FEBRUARY 5, 2026: Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) gets a high-five from Los Angeles Lakers guard Austin Reaves (15) after he scored and was fouled during the game against the Philadelphia 76ers at Crypto.com Arena on February 5, 2026 in Los Angeles, California.(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)

The career Austin Reaves has had so far has been special. Not only has he gone from being a kid from Oklahoma to a superstar in Los Angeles, but the progression of his career has been a dream.

Every year, Reaves’ role has increased, and his production has continued to grow alongside it. His minutes played, points and rebounds per game have gone up every single season. Reaves has gone from being an undrafted player back in 2021 to one who is set to earn a huge payday this summer.

One person who has been along for every step of Reaves’ Lakers journey has been LeBron James. Having played more basketball than anyone ever, LeBron has seen the start and end of many careers and is well aware of how special Reaves’ journey has been.

“Just seeing AR grow over these five years, it’s been nothing short of amazing,” LeBron said in his exit interview. “I mean, he’s just a hard worker. He loves the game. He wants to get better and he’s not afraid of constructive criticism, and, and I kind of knew that. I saw the talent, but I also saw that he was willing to put the work in and he wasn’t afraid of the moment.

“To see where he is today’s, it’s awesome. I knew he could be a big-time player for our ball club. I knew if he just got the opportunity and also he gained the confidence in himself that he knows he belongs in this league that he could do some special things in this league. He’s, obviously, showed that.”

It’s got to feel great for Reaves to get such a glowing endorsement from not only a teammate, but a player who’s in the argument for the greatest of all time. LeBron has seen all of Redick’s great moments, like his “I’m Him” game to his game-winner against the Warriors on Christmas.

What’s even more important than those moments, though, is the work LeBron is talking about that we don’t see. Reaves is willing to get coached hard and he puts in the work in the gym to get better.

LeBron is notorious for his physical regimen, and even his podcast “Mind The Game” focuses on the details of the sport. If he appreciates the time you’re putting into your craft, that says a lot about you as a player.

While Reaves is already a leader, LeBron has remained a guide for him. After Reaves missed his game-tying shot against the Thunder in Game 4, LeBron was the first to encourage him.

The LeBron-Reaves journey has been an incredible one. Over five years, LeBron has seen every moment of Reaves’ career, and hopefully, there are more seasons together to come.

But, even if they never step on the court together again, it’s been an amazing journey.

Reaves has more years left in his career, and LeBron will most certainly be rooting for him, whether he’s playing with him or not.

You can follow Edwin on Twitter at @ECreates88 or on Bluesky at @ecreates88.bsky.social.

New York Yankees @ New York Mets: Elmer Rodríguez vs. Freddy Peralta

The Yankees are not playing their best baseball at the moment, winning just two of their last eight games to fall several games back of first. That three of those losses have come against a pair of struggling teams in the Orioles and Mets makes the Bombers’ deficiencies appear all the most glaring — and they’re at risk of their third consecutive series loss. All the same, they can get back in the series win column with a good performance in the rubber game against their crosstown rivals this afternoon.

Elmer Rodríguez got the call up after Max Fried was placd on the IL with a bone bruise in his pitching elbow. Lauded for his command in the high minors, the walks have been the biggest issue in his first two MLB starts, though it is worth commending him for settling down and tossing 3.2 scoreless after a three-run first threatened to derail his last start against the Rangers. In those two starts, both against Texas, Rodríguez has given up five runs on ten hits and eight walks across 8.2 innings.

Freddy Peralta has performed largely as advertised since the Mets acquired him from Brewers over the winter to be their long-sought-after ace of the rotation. The whiffs and strikeouts are down as he has lost about one mph off all of his pitches, but he is doing a much better job of keeping the ball off the barrel of the bat than in his previous three seasons. In nine starts, Peralta is 3-3 with a 3.10 ERA (128 ERA+), 3.66 FIP, and 50 strikeouts in 49.1 innings.

The Yankees lineup has been one of the principal culprits in the recent downturn in form, scoring three or fewer runs in six out of the last eight games. Austin Wells is probably their most struggling player and he gets the day off after the night game with J.C. Escarra taking his place behind the plate. It has been nice to see Jazz Chisholm Jr. get the bat going of late, while Anthony Volpe has been getting on base despite not registering a hit since making his season debut.

The Mets meanwhile field the worst offense in MLB, yet still managed to push six runs across last night. They make a pair of changes to their lineup, MJ Melendez coming in to play left, moving Juan Soto to DH and Austin Slater to the bench. Hayden Senger takes over catching duties from Luis Torrens.

How to watch

Location: Citi Field – Flushing, NY

First pitch: 1:40 pm ET

TV broadcast: YES, SNY

Radio broadcast: WFAN 660/101.9 FM, WADO 1280 (NYY) | Audacy Mets Radio WHSQ 880AM, Audacy App 92.3 HD2 (NYM)

Streaming: Gotham Sports App, MLB.tv (out-of-market only)

For updates, follow us on BlueSkyTwitter, and Instagram, and like us on Facebook.

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Game 46 Game Day Thread – Texas Rangers @ Houston Astros

TOKYO, JAPAN - MARCH 17: A guest is seen wearing silver boots during Rakuten Fashion Week Tokyo A/W 2026 on March 17, 2026 in Tokyo, Japan. (Photo by Mila Gruber/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Texas Rangers @ Houston Astros

Sunday, May 17, 2026, 1:10 PM CDT (105.3 The Fan / Rangers Sports Network)

Daikin Park

RHP Nathan Eovaldi vs. RHP Peter Lambert

Today’s Lineups

RANGERSASTROS
Evan Carter – CFBrice Matthews – 2B
Brandon Nimmo – RFYordan Alvarez – DH
Josh Jung – 3BChristian Walker – 1B
Joc Pederson – DHZach Cole – CF
Ezequiel Duran – SSZach Dezenzo – LF
Alejandro Osuna – LFBraden Shewmake – 3B
Jake Burger – 1BCam Smith – RF
Justin Foscue – 2BCesar Salazar – C
Kyle Higashioka – CNick Allen – SS
Nathan Eovaldi – RHPPeter Lambert – RHP

Go Rangers!

Washington Nationals vs Baltimore Orioles Game Thread

WASHINGTON, DC - MAY 16: Nasim Nuñez #26 and James Wood #29 of the Washington Nationals celebrate after defeating the Baltimore Orioles at Nationals Park on Saturday, May 16, 2026 in Washington, District of Columbia. (Photo by Hannah Foslien/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

After a deeply gratifying win to get to .500 yesterday, the Nats have a chance to sweep the O’s. Getting to .500 is cool, but getting over that hump would be even better. They will have a chance to do just that in front of what should be another stellar crowd at Nationals Park.

The Nats are not making too many adjustments to the lineup that got them 13 runs yesterday. After a great performance off the bench, Brady House will be starting again at third base. That pushed Jose Tena to DH and down the lineup. Keibert Ruiz stays behind the plate after his big day. Richard Lovelady will be the opener and Miles Mikolas will follow him.

The O’s are making more changes. Adley Rutschman will get the day off. That means young Samuel Basallo will do the catching. Taylor Ward moves up to the leadoff spot and takes Basallo’s place as the DH. Colton Cowser will be back in the lineup as the left fielder. Right hander Brandon Young will be on the mound for the birds.

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Game Info:

Stadium: Nationals Park

Time: 1:35 PM EST

TV: Nationals.TV

Radio: 106.7 The Fan

This series has already been a huge success for the Nats. They have performed well in front of big crowds and brought a new buzz around the team. Now they have a chance to put a cherry on top today. They will go for the sweep and a winning record. Follow along in the comments down below and let’s go Nats.

Braves vs. Red Sox chat and discussion: Grant Holmes vs. Brayan Bello

After eking out a win Friday night and blowing a late lead Saturday night, the series is on the line when the Braves and Red Sox face off Sunday afternoon at 1:35 p.m. EDT.

Grant Holmes gets a regular-rest turnaround on the Braves’ starter carousel against Brayan Bello, who has been bad as a starter but good as a bulk reliever this season.

Let’s see if the Braves can close out the homestand with a winning record.

Game Notes

Preview

Lineups

Sunday afternoon Orioles game thread: at Nationals, 1:35

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - MAY 11: Pete Alonso #25 of the Baltimore Orioles runs to first base against the New York Yankees at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on May 11, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Taylor Ward will bat first and serve as the designated hitter today as the Orioles look to avoid a sweep in DC. Ward will be followed by shortstop Gunnar Henderson and first baseman Pete Alonso. Samuel Basallo will do the catching with Adley Rutschman starting the game on the bench.

Tyler O’Neill, Colton Cowser, and Leody Taveras will handle the outfield duties with Ward penciled in as the DH. Coby Mayo will play third, and Jeremiah Jackson will take second base against Nationals opener Richard Lovelady. Miles Mikolas is expected to follow Lovelady.

Struggling teams look to their stars. With Rutschman on the bench, the Orioles need Henderson and Alonso to spark the offense today.

The Orioles will send out right-handed pitcher Brandon Young. Young was forced into the rotation after some early injuries, and the 27-year-old has an opportunity to cement his place with a few more strong outings.

Orioles lineup

  1. Taylor Ward DH
  2. Gunnar Henderson SS
  3. Pete Alonso 1B
  4. Tyler O’Neill RF
  5. Samuel Basallo C
  6. Leody Taveras CF
  7. Coby Mayo 3B
  8. Colton Cowser LF
  9. Jeremiah Jackson 2B

Starter: RHP Brandon Young

Crawfish Boil: Altuve Injury, Pena, Pearson & Meyers Return, Hader & Brown Updates, & More

HOUSTON, TEXAS - MAY 16: Jose Altuve #27 of the Houston Astros gestures as he rounds the bases after hitting a solo home run in the first inning against the Texas Rangers at Daikin Park on May 16, 2026 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Houston Astros/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The latest news on the Houston Astros and from around MLB:

The Astros could potentially be without franchise icon Jose Altuve for a while:

Reinforcements are on the way for Houston:

Hunter Brown making progress:

Josh Hader will not be back when first eligible on May 24, but it’s not because of a setback.

Spencer Arrighetti still has faith the Astros can turn season around:

Bryan Abreu getting back on track:

Astros pitching coach Josh Miller on Astros’ league-leading walks totals & how they are trying to get better:

Of course, walks are up everywhere, and it’s no secret why. Jayson Stark on the impact of ABS on the the strike zone, as well as why the NL looks so much better than the AL, the impact of the WBC on MLB team so far and more:

Kai-Wei Teng wasn’t supposed to be the Astros best starting pitching acquisition this offseason, but he’s making his case:

The Astros hit 4 home runs off Jacob deGrom Saturday. Here they are, in case you missed them or just want to bask in the glory again:

In his Sunday Notebook, Bob Nightengale asserts that Astros manager Joe Espada’s job security grows more tenuous by the day:

Phillies DH Kyle Schwarber is racking up HRs:

Mets get another bad break with SP Clay Holmes:

Dodgers SP Blake Snell is the latest casualty of “loose bodies”:

Yankees SP Max Fried will avoid the knife, for now:

No fire sales yet in San Francisco, Flushing:

Unicorns.

You can make a case the Mariners have played without Big Dumper all season long, but…

The White Sox have been the newest version of the Bash Brothers:

The Red Sox might be screwed:

The Stephen F. Austin baseball team got to meet the St. Louis Cardinals #TarpsOff

It helps to know the rules of the field, especially your own field:

After 11 years in the minors, Rodolfo Duran finally got a call up. Saturday, he hit his first MLB HR:

NBA trade, free agency rumors 2026: Cavaliers to retain James Harden, LeBron landing spots

As we move closer and closer to the NBA Draft next month, the free agency and trade rumor mill is heating up — and there's more than just Giannis Antetokounmpo talk (although there’s plenty of that, too). Here's the latest on some other fronts.

Cavaliers to extend Harden

Whatever happens in Game 7 on Sunday night between Cleveland and Detroit, however James Harden performs in that game, expect the Cavaliers to reach a contract extension with Harden this offseason.

That's not a surprise to anyone who followed his trade from the LA Clippers to Cleveland, but ESPN’s Brian Windhorst reminded us on Sunday.

Harden wanted contract certainty after this season, and the Clippers made it clear at midseason that they hadn't decided whether to pick up his $42 million team option — $13 million guaranteed — for next season. When both sides showed their cards, Harden's representation got permission to find a team willing to commit to him.

The Cavs were willing. Though a formal agreement is not allowed to be completed before the offseason, there is an understanding that the Cavs plan to work out a new deal to retain Harden, sources said.

There is zero chance Harden and his team okay that trade unless a handshake deal is in place for his next contract (and teams don't go back on those kinds of deals, it's bad for their reputation and getting other free agents to come). Cleveland will re-sign Harden this summer, and next summer will give Donovan Mitchell a new max — essentially locking the team into this core. (While Mitchell is extension eligible this summer, if he waits a year, he gets to 10 years of service and becomes eligible for a 35% of the cap max, as opposed to the 30% now, plus he can get a no-trade clause. It's in his interest to wait.)

That means if Cleveland wants to shake things up (especially if they fall in Game 7 on Sunday and again don't get out of the second round), the focus will shift to Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen potentially being put into the trade market.

If you think that all of this makes the Cavaliers sound expensive, you're right — and they are already the only team over the second apron right now. Which ties into our next note...

Four potential LeBron landing spots

LeBron James has said he doesn’t know if he’ll play another season and hasn't thought much about free agency. I don't doubt his sincerity.

Also, around the league, the general consensus is that he will play one more season, and very possibly not for the Lakers (who are prioritizing rebuilding the roster around Luka Doncic). Marc Stein at the Stein Line listed four possible new teams: Golden State, Cleveland, New York or the LA Clippers.

However, then Stein gets to the real point (which we have written about at NBC Sports): What matters most is how big a pay cut is LeBron willing to take off of the $52 million he made last season because most of the teams Stein mentioned can offer a veteran minimum contract or maybe the taxpayer mid-level exception ($6.1 million).

The Golden State Warriors, who league sources say have maintained a longstanding interest in bringing James to Northern California, will be severely limited in what they can offer. James' hometown Cleveland Cavaliers have even less financial flexibility than the Warriors and are so far away from all the Tinseltown ties that LeBron and his family have established during this run as a Laker...

James' deep fondness for Madison Square Garden has been known for years, but the Knicks — suddenly favorites to win the East and go to the NBA Finals for the first time since 1999 — could certainly opt to stay on their current path. The only other team you could credibly add to the shortlist is the Clippers, who employ James' former Cavaliers coach (Tyronn Lue) and do play in Los Angeles.

I'll start with the Clippers — it's not happening. Never say never in the NBA, and yes, this move would allow LeBron to stay in his adopted hometown. However, it would not play well. First, the Clippers are not going to be contenders next season (barring landing Giannis Antetokounmpo, which is unlikely at best) and they have a massive cloud hanging over them with the Aspiration investigation; the Lakers are better positioned to win in the short term with LeBron as a third option. More importantly, in Los Angeles, this would be seen as a betrayal by the league's largest, most vocal fan base. The backlash would be tremendous. All for what?

LeBron is going to have to let the Antetokounmpo saga play out before he makes his call, in part because the Warriors and Cavaliers are two teams that could get in the running for the Bucks' two-time MVP. Would LeBron go to the Knicks on a cheap contract and be a third option behind Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns (and does that really help New York's defense)? Right now, the future for LeBron is foggy, he's going to be patient and wait for the fog to lift, then he can make his call.

Wizards trade No. 1 pick to Utah?

There is a desire among the Utah Jazz fan base to keep AJ Dybantsa in the state — he went to prep school there and then BYU. With that, Utah has reached out to Washington about potentially trading for the No. 1 pick in June's NBA Draft, reports Marc J. Spears of Andscape.

Don't bet on this happening. Washington is going to ask for a lot to swap picks — they really liked Ace Bailey in last year's draft, the Jazz selected him at No. 5, so the Wizards likely ask for him and another first-round pick. Even if Bailey isn't on the table, the price is going to be a good young player and an extra first-rounder.

That only makes sense for Utah if it grades Dybantsa out as dramatically better than Kansas' Darryn Peterson (or even Duke's Cameron Boozer) — and I don't know any scouts or front office people who see it that way. Most have Dybantsa on top of their boards because he is a combination of a very high ceiling with a pretty high floor — what a GM really fears with a high pick is missing altogether. Peterson, with his cramping and health issues last season, is seen as having a similar (or, often, higher) ceiling than Dybantsa but also a considerably lower floor. That's not worth the risk. (Boozer has the highest floor of the group but is not seen as having as high a ceiling as the other two.)

Expect the draft order to stay the way it is — and Jazz fans are going to love Peterson next to Keyonte George in the backcourt.

Scott Hastings, Scotland rugby union great, dies aged 61

  • Centre won 65 caps, with 51 alongside his brother Gavin

  • Also selected for two British and Irish Lions tours

Scotland’s 1990 grand slam-winning centre Scott Hastings has died at the age of 61, his family have announced, four years after he revealed he had been diagnosed with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

Hastings won 65 caps for his country and played in two Tests on the victorious 1989 British & Irish Lions tour to Australia, as well as being in the squad that toured New Zealand in 1993. He made his international debut in January 1986 against France, alongside his elder brother, Gavin, the first of 51 Scotland games the centre and full-back pair played together.

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Mets vs. Yankees: Lineups, broadcast info, and open thread, 5/17/26 – Peralta vs Rodriguez

Mar 26, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets starting pitcher Freddy Peralta (51) pitches against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the fourth inning at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Mets lineup

Carson Benge – RF
Bo Bichette – SS
Juan Soto – DH
Mark Vientos – 1B
MJ Melendez – LF
Brett Baty – 3B
Marcus Semien – 2B
A.J. Ewing – CF
Hayden Senger – C

SP: Freddy Peralta – RHP

Yankees lineup

Trent Grisham – CF
Ben Rice – 1B
Aaron Judge – DH
Cody Bellinger – LF
Jazz Chisholm – 2B
Ryan McMahon – 3B
Spencer Jones – RF
Anthony Volpe – SS
J.C. Escarra – C

SP: Elmer Rodriguez – RHP

Broadcast info

First pitch: 1:40pm EDT
TV: SNY
Radio: Audacy Mets Radio WHSQ 880AM, Audacy App, 92.3 HD2

Is Stephon Castle now an elite shooter?

Over the course of the regular season, it became clear Stephon Castle was not going to suffer a sophomore slump following up his Rookie of the Year season. Castle, at only 21 years old, improved in every nearly counting stat he could. From points (14.7 per game to 16.7), rebounds (3.7 to 5.3), assists (4.1 to 7.4), and effective field goal percentage (47.6 to 52.1), Castle improved his marks. And of course, his trademark trait, his defense, only continued to strike fear into the hearts of the rest of the league.

The combo-guard appeared to have only one flaw to his game: shooting. From his first to second year, he rose from 28.5 to 33.2 percent from three; however, it remained at several ticks below league average.

And then the playoffs happened. Through two rounds, Castle is now shooting at an outstanding 44.0 percent on 4.5 attempts per game. If he can continue to make teams pay from deep, there is no telling the limit on the offensive capabilities of this Spurs team. The only question is if he can keep it up.

Over the recent history of the league, there have been several players who have developed their perimeter shot, turning from complete non-shooters to deadly if left unguarded. Remaining consistent with it, though, that’s another story altogether.

For a recent example, look to the Spurs’ previous opponent. Anthony Edwards in Minnesota entered the league as a promising young two-guard, but his three-point shooting was slightly below average. Over time, he built on that. In the 2024-2025 season, he came out of the gate launching from deep, attempting over 10 per game and sinking them at a 41.4 percent clip pre-All-Star break. Time would tell if he could remain consistent. He did. Over his last two seasons, he remained at 39.6 percent at 9.5 attempts per game.

Edwards is a case of a player finding his shot and keeping it, but there are examples of a player finding a shot for even a full season, only to then regress towards the mean. Keldon Johnson has had an interesting relationship with his shot in this regard.

In Johnson’s third year, it was looking like he might be on the verge of turning into one of the league’s best shooters. He finished the season averaging 39.8 percent from three and 49.5 percent from the corners. But that wouldn’t stick, averaging 33.8 percent over the last four seasons. Still an efficient player, but now in more ways than just shooting.

The point is, players’ shooting abilities are malleable. Plenty have developed into real threats: Edwards, Al Horford, and Kawhi Leonard, to name a few. While others have a more fluctuant relationship with their shooting from year to year: Johnson, Jrue Holiday, and even LeBron James have had seasons and post-seasons drifting below and above average shooting.

Right now, for Castle, he has the hot hand. And by its nature, the playoffs are a very small sample size. The only thing that will tell if he can keep it up is time. So far, he’s gotten great looks, and he’s picking his spots well. All of his post-season threes are with a defender, at minimum, four feet away, and a good majority are from catch-and-shoot attempts.

If he continues to make teams pay for leaving him open, the next level will be how he adjusts to defenses guarding him closer and closing out harder on him. All he needs to do is make them pay for leaving him open. Because even if his percentage goes down due to defenses responding, that just means more levers to pull for Coach Mitch Johnson and the Spurs.

Castle has already shown that he has the athleticism to attack closeouts and the basketball IQ to find the right play. Even if his being more closely guarded leads to the ball not ending up in his hands on the perimeter, that only means more space for De’Aaron Fox and Dylan Harper to slash and one less defender to bang and hang on Victor Wembanyama down low.

For now, the Spurs and Castle can only take it one game at a time, but they show no signs of slowing down entering the conference finals. Oklahoma City’s defense is fast and twitchy; it will be their toughest playoff challenge yet.