Winners and Losers: Cavs vs Pistons Game 7 – Donovan Mitchell owns the legacy game

DETROIT, MICHIGAN - MAY 17: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers reacts after a made basket against the Detroit Pistons during the third quarter in Game Seven of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at Little Caesars Arena on May 17, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. 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 Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers did it again, capping off a thrilling series by crushing their opponent in Game 7. Credit to the Detroit Pistons — but the Cavs are all winners tonight.

Let’s go over today’s winners.

WINNER – Donovan Mitchell

The best players in the league aren’t immune to criticism — they respond to it.

This game started with a good omen. Donovan Mitchell drove downhill twice in a row, using his gravity to draw multiple defenders before throwing a pair of dimes to Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen. In just a handful of minutes, Mitchell exceeded his assist total from the previous game and showed a ‘pass first’ mentality that hasn’t been present throughout the postseason.

Mitchell had 6 assists by halftime, already more than he’d collected in any game this postseason. He’s taken flak for his process in the playoffs. He hasn’t always struck the correct balance between scoring and playmaking. That wasn’t an issue tonight. He set the table throughout Game 7, and his teammates had a feast.

There’s value to hitting singles. Safe plays that get a runner on base and apply pressure on a defense can turn into runs. Mitchell took that approach tonight, giving up the ball early and trusting the offense to flow into a quality shot. That made all the difference.

The Cavs had a comfortable lead going into halftime, but the game was far from over. We’ve seen the Pistons claw back to avoid elimination four times already this postseason. I think Mitchell understood what was at stake — and promptly stepped on their throat to close it out. He erupted for 15 points in the third quarter, getting to the basket and making sure there’d be no more resurrections.

Mitchell entered this game with his legacy on the line, and left it with arguably the most sustainable version of a masterclass that we’ve seen from him in the playoffs. Spida ends with 26 points, 8 assists, 6 rebounds, 1 steal, 1 block, and 0 turnovers.

WINNER – Sam Merrill

Detroit let the wrong one in.

The Pistons had managed to avoid a full-on Sam Merrill invasion throughout the previous six games of this series. He’d been kept in a box, unable to break free and do any significant damage from behind the arch. Detroit probably wishes that it could have remained true for one more game.

Merrill started the game by burying his first three-pointer from the corner. A moment later, he drilled another one from the same spot. Add two more three’s, including a four-point play, and Merrill had conjured a game-high 15 points in the first half on 4-6 three-point shooting.

Sammy finished with 23 points.

Take that, Ausar Thompson.

WINNER – The Bigs

Physicality? We got that. Toughness and mental resilience? Check. The Cavs bigs have taken your narratives, crumpled them up, and stuffed them into the trash over Jalen Duren’s head

Allen and Mobley aren’t your typical bruising bigs. But the idea that they can’t handle playoff physicality has been thoroughly debunked in two rounds. They bested an immensely physical Raptors team in the first round, then did it again to a Pistons team that prides itself on toughness.

Cleveland’s bigs set the tone immediately in Game 7, combining for 25 points, 10 rebounds, and 5 assists in the first half. If you remember, Allen had 22 points and 19 rebounds himself in Game 7 versus the Raptors. Dominating multiple games where the lights are brightest should earn Allen (and Mobley) a ton of goodwill moving forward.

Allen finished tonight with 23 points and 7 rebounds. Mobley added 21 points, 12 rebounds, 6 assists, 2 steals and 2 blocks.

Mobley racked up 20 stocks in the final four games of the series. Monster.

Of course, all of that charitability can be erased quickly. This is a ‘what have you done for me lately’ type of business. But we’d be mistaken not to congratulate the bigs for stepping up to the challenge multiple rounds in a row. The season would be over if it weren’t for them.

Mitchell Robinson provides the ultimate test on Tuesday.

Austin Wells not hiding from just ‘how bad’ his Yankees slump has become

New York Yankees catcher Austin Wells (28) hits a single.
Austin Wells swings during a May 12 game against the Orioles.

Austin Wells is not trying to sugarcoat his recent offensive performance at the plate.

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“Not many words to describe how bad I’ve been,” he said. “I got to do better to pick the team up.”

In what was supposed to be a day off, as has been customary for him for day games after night games, the Yankees catcher entered Sunday’s series finale against the Mets as a defensive replacement in the sixth inning and made his slump even worse in the 7-6 walk-off loss at Citi Field.

Wells took two at-bats in key spots — one with the bases loaded and two outs in the seventh inning and the other with runners on first and second and one out in the top of the 10th — both coming right after Anthony Volpe had drawn a 3-2 walk.

Austin Wells swings during a May 12 game against the Orioles. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

Both times, Wells swung at the first pitch and produced groundouts, the second a double play that killed a potential rally.

“Against [Sean] Manaea [in the seventh], I knew he was pretty heavy heater, especially to the lefties early,” Wells said. “So I was looking for a fastball, was a little late. And then next one, I was looking for something up in the zone to get a ball in the air. It was a little above the zone, which I don’t really know how I hit it on the ground. Was looking to move the runner and drive them in.”

Wells finished the day batting .173 with a .556 OPS in 36 games, but it has been especially rough of late, hitting just 3-for-31 (.103) with three walks and a .291 OPS over his past 10 games.

Still, when Aaron Boone was asked before the game whether he would consider sitting Wells multiple games in a row for an offensive reset, the manager was noncommittal.



“We’ll see,” Boone said. “As good as [Wells] is behind the plate, I have a lot of faith and trust in J.C. Escarra behind the plate too, what he brings to the table. Obviously we got to get [Wells] going, want to get him going, because when he’s right, he’s a presence, especially down at the bottom of the order. We got to get him there.”


Elmer Rodríguez has yet to complete five innings, but in his third start as a big leaguer Sunday, he showed some improved command to give the Yankees a chance.

The rookie right-hander lasted 4 ¹/₃ innings while giving up one run on five hits and one walk with one strikeout.

Elmer Rodríguez throws a pitch during the Yankees’ May 17 loss to the Mets. Corey Sipkin for the NY Post

“Felt like I was attacking more, getting more in the zone and having better results,” he said. “I know I got good stuff, so just got to go out there and compete.”

Rodríguez had walked four batters in each of his first two starts, neither of which made it out of the fifth inning, as a fill-in replacement between Luis Gil and Carlos Rodón.

Now with Max Fried on the IL, Rodríguez returned and is expected to make one more spot start before Gerrit Cole returns and takes his spot in the rotation.

“Couple strong innings to start the game,” Boone said. “Felt like they were starting to take some tough at-bats against him in the fourth and fifth, some of the lefties starting to have some better looks at him. But overall, I thought he did his job and gave us a real opportunity to win a game.”

The “plan right now” is for Cole to make one more rehab start, Boone said Sunday morning, though that description left some room for changing that plan as the right-hander comes back from Tommy John surgery.

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“Just looks like he’s in a good place,” Boone said. “But right now, the plan is one more and then we’ll go from there.”


Ben Rice crushed his 15th home run of the season in the third inning off Freddy Peralta. … The Yankees drew nine walks for the sixth time this season, which leads the majors.

NBA reveals Cavs vs. Knicks Eastern Conference Finals schedule

NEW YORK, NY - DECEMBER 25: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers drives to the basket during the game against the New York Knicks on December 25, 2025 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, 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 Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers won’t be able to celebrate their Game 7 victory over the Detroit Pistons for long. They’ll have less than 48 hours to turn around and play the New York Knicks in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Finals on Tuesday.

All games in the Eastern Conference Finals will be on either ESPN or ABC.

The schedule is as follows:

  • Game 1 in New York: Tue., May 19, 8 PM on ESPN
  • Game 2 in New York: Thur., May 21, 8 PM on ESPN
  • Game 3 in Cleveland: Sat., May 23, 8 PM on ABC
  • Game 4 in Cleveland: Mon., May 25, 8 PM on ESPN
  • Game 5 in New York: Wed., May 27, 8 PM on ESPN
  • Game 6 in Cleveland: Fri., May 29, 8 PM on ESPN
  • Game 7 in New York: Sun. May 31, 8 PM on ESPN

Games five through seven will only be played if necessary.

The Cavs haven’t had more than one day between games since playing Game 5 on April 29 in the first-round series against the Toronto Raptors. That won’t happen here either, as they’re scheduled to play every other day in this series.

The Cavs and Knicks faced off just three times during the regular season, with the home team winning each one. Cleveland won their most recent and only matchup that featured James Harden on Feb. 24, 109-94.

Right now, FanDuel currently has the Knicks favored to win the series as they’re -240 to come out of the East. The Cavs are +190 to win the series.

Cavaliers crush Pistons to reach conference finals: Instant takeaways

We now have the full picture of the final four teams in the NBA.

The No. 4 Cleveland Cavaliers stunned the top-seeded Detroit Pistons Sunday, May 17 in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference semifinals 125-94, setting up a showdown against the No. 3 New York Knicks in the conference finals.

It was evident, pretty quickly after tip-off Sunday night in Detroit, that the Cavaliers had moved on from their Game 6 letdown. Cleveland played with more force and intention, relentlessly attacking the paint and outworking the Pistons on the glass.

The Cavaliers had four players — Donovan Mitchell, Jarrett Allen, Sam Merrill and Evan Mobley — each score at least 21 points.

Here are takeaways from Sunday’s Eastern Conference semifinal Game 7 between the Cavaliers and Pistons:

Congratulations, Cleveland. Now you get to run into the buzzsaw that is the Knicks

This is the kind of performance Cleveland will need to consistently produce in order to have a chance against New York, which has easily been the hottest team in the East thus far in the postseason.

The Cavaliers were far more active from the jump and won nearly every hustle metric.

Yet, there were still flaws in Cleveland’s game. James Harden scored just 6 points in the first half and finished the game with just 9 on 2-of-10 shooting. At times, he appeared more focused on trying to draw fouls than get clean looks. Perimeter shooting was inconsistent; removing Sam Merrill’s 5-of-8 night, the rest of the Cavs went just 6-of-26 (23.1%) from deep.

The Knicks will be fresh and rested and have homecourt advantage. They’re the most cohesive team in the East, the one with the most continuity. Cleveland did do a far better job of protecting the ball, committing just 11 turnovers, but the Knicks are far better than Detroit. The Cavaliers will need to be even more efficient.

The Pistons, simply put, cannot win when shooting this poorly. That wasn’t even their biggest issue

Going back to last season, this Detroit squad has lacked reliable and consistent shooting, which has made it difficult to sustain offense. It has also made things difficult for Cade Cunningham, where he has often had to play the role of savior.

Detroit’s starters combined to shoot just 14-of-48 (29.2%) from the field, contributing just 47 combined points. Cleveland’s starting five, by the way, dropped 88 combined points.

Somehow, Detroit’s defense was even worse

Detroit suffered uncharacteristic breakdowns, struggling to communicate on switches, leaving players streaking to the rim unobstructed. There were some solid individual efforts — Ausar Thompson was effective, as always — but Detroit’s effort and persistence on defense simply wasn’t there.

They were a step slow, a step late and that sluggishness carried over into other parts of their game. After a tremendous regular season, a loss like this exposes serious limitations and shows how far this team still is from being legitimate contenders in the conference.

Distributing Donovan Mitchell plays most meaningful basketball of career

In January 2023, Donovan Mitchell scored a career-high 71 points. This game may have been even better.

Mitchell erased the narrative that he cannot elevate his team to a conference finals with a complete game that showcased how dangerous he can be.

Mitchell used his gravity to draw additional defensive attention, at times almost as a decoy, working his way into the paint to then find open teammates. With those open looks, Cleveland converted easier buckets, but it also opened up the entire offensive rhythm for the Cavaliers; in the first half, Cleveland generated 18 assists on 22 made field goals, with six of those coming from Mitchell.

Mitchell finished the game with 26 points and 8 assists, both of which were game highs, and added 6 rebounds. He set the tone and was, unquestionably, the best player on the floor Friday night.

Game 7 Jarrett Allen shows up

The Cleveland Cavaliers' Jarrett Allen (31) dunks the ball against the Detroit Pistons during Game 7 of their second-round playoff series on May 17, 2026.

In the final game of the first round of the playoffs, Cavaliers center Jarrett Allen was a menace, dropping 22 points and 19 rebounds against the Raptors.

Friday night, Allen was stellar once again in a Game 7, impacting winning.

Not only did he attack and create his shot down low, he also got to the line, leading all players with 13 free throw attempts. Allen was also active on defense, contesting shots. His 3 offensive rebounds were tied for a game-high.

Allen scored 23 points on 8-of-14 shooting, adding 7 rebounds.

Against the height and low-post presence of the Knicks, Cleveland will need much of the same.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Cavaliers beat Pistons in Game 7 to reach NBA Eastern Conference final

Pistons vs Cavaliers final score: Detroit’s season is over

May 17, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers center Evan Mobley (4) dunks in the first half against the Detroit Pistons during game seven of the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Little Caesars Arena. Mandatory Credit: Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images | Rick Osentoski-Imagn Images

I considered Game 6 a complete team effort in Detroit’s 115-94 win in Cleveland. Things were reversed in Game 7 tonight as Cleveland saw big games from their role players en route to a 125-94 victory. Detroit falls one game short from making it to the Eastern Conference Finals.

The game started slow as both teams struggled to find offense. Cleveland took an early 8-7 lead after two Daniss Jenkins three-pointers and a Caris LeVert steal and score tied it up at 13. The Cavs were able to end the quarter on a 9-3 run capped off by a 40 ft buzzer-beater from Donovan Mitchell to take a 31-22 lead over Detroit.

Things didn’t look good early in the second as the Pistons missed eight consecutive field goals and Cleveland extended their lead to 15 after another Sam Merrill made three. Merrill would make his fourth three and the foul shortly after and Cleveland was able to reach a 20-point lead. They led 64-47 at halftime.

Cleveland was shooting 52% from the field while Detroit shot 38%. Not only did Cleveland’s defense look good, but Detroit’s offense wasn’t doing them any favors either. They struggled to generate good looks and find an impact outside of Cade Cunningham. Cade had 12 points at the half while bench guards Caris LeVert and Duncan Robinson each had seven.

The reason the Cavs were so far ahead was due to the impact being made by Sam Merrill and Jarrett Allen who both had 15 points. Evan Mobley had 12 while Mitchell had 11 and Harden added six points. Cleveland will be a hard team to beat when Mitchell and Harden aren’t one of their top-three scorers.

Things got worse quick.

The Cavs started off on an 8-2 run that forced JB Bickerstaff to call a timeout with a score of 72-49. You could see the energy and hope draining from the Pistons players. Halfway through the third quarter, they gave up three consecutive extra possessions to Cleveland: Robinson fouled Harden for free throws, Stew fouled Allen on the boxout, Allen grabbed another rebound off his own missed free throw and was fouled again. It was clear Detroit knew they couldn’t win this game any longer. Cleveland added in an 11-0 run near the end of the third quarter and took a 99-73 lead heading into the fourth.

Detroit trailed by 30 for majority of the final quarter and would lose 125-94.

Daniss Jenkins was the leading scorer for Detroit with 17 points. Both Cunningham and Robinson had 13 points, though, Cade took 16 shots. Caris LeVert was the only other Piston in double figures. Starters Ausar Thompson, Tobias Harris, and Jalen Duren all finished with less than eight points.

Frankly, nobody on Detroit looked great or stood out. And yet, four Cleveland players finished with 20+ points and none of them were James Harden.

This is a rough way to go out. However, Detroit won 60 games, finished as the top seed in the Eastern Conference, and won a playoff series for the first time in 18 years. There’s still a lot to be excited about. This roster has holes, some that were largely shown throughout this postseason, and Trajan Langdon can address those this summer.

As much as this loss is going to sting now, this team has come a long way in just the past two years – and the future is something to be excited about.

Go Stones.

A way too early preview for Cavs vs. Knicks: From rock fight to shootout

CLEVELAND, OH - FEBRUARY 24: James Harden #1 and Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers high five during the game against the New York Knicks on February 24, 2026 at Rocket Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. 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 David Liam Kyle/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers have punched their ticket to the Eastern Conference Finals, where they’ll take on the New York Knicks in a series that starts on Tuesday.

New York’s path to the Conference Finals was far less stressful than Cleveland’s. Their first-round series against the Atlanta Hawks went six games, but the Knicks were firmly in control of that series except for a few standout showings from CJ McCollum. They then took care of business against a worn-out Philadelphia 76ers team by sweeping them in a matchup that never felt competitive.

The Knicks have been elite on both sides of the ball throughout this postseason, but are a far different test than what the Cavs have faced so far. They’ll be going from two straight rock fights to a shootout.

The Toronto Raptors and Detroit Pistons challenge opponents with their brute force. Conversely, the Knicks beat you with more finesse and skill. That’s a style the Cavs are more equipped to play, even if New York is more talented than either of their previous opponents.

Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns define the Knicks on both ends of the floor for better or for worse.

Their offense is dynamic because of this duo. Brunson is one of the most electric scoring guards in the league, who is efficient at all three levels. You can do things to make it difficult for him to get to his spots, but you can’t take Brunson’s scoring away entirely. He’s going to get his points.

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Towns’s shooting changes any offense he plays with. He’s one of the few legit stretch fives in the league, as he knocked down 36.8% of his 4.1 outside attempts a game. You simply have to stay with him on the perimeter. And unlike other stretch bigs, he’s elite at beating mismatches inside. Towns has one of the best post games as a scorer and a playmaker. So if you send help, he’s going to find one of New York’s open shooters on the perimeter.

On top of that, they have high-level wings in OG Anunoby and Mikal Bridges. Both are elite shooters and can beat teams off the dribble.

In short, the Cavs haven’t faced an offense with this many weapons. Containing them will be far more difficult than locking down their previous opponents.

However, the Cavaliers also haven’t faced a defense that their guards and bigs can attack as easily as New York’s.

New York has the second-best defensive rating in the postseason (106.1) and has held their opponent under 105 points in seven of their 10 postseason games. That’s unbelievably impressive. That said, a closer look under the hood shows that maybe there’s some fool’s gold there.

The Knicks gave up the second-most threes in the regular season and are giving up the fourth-most among playoff teams. In the regular season, their opponents knocked down 36.6% of their threes against them (21st). In the playoffs, they’re hitting just 32.2%. Shooting that poorly is why the Knicks have given up so few points so far.

Evaluating three-point defense is difficult. Not all outside looks are created equally. Part of a playoff game plan is to give up open threes to non-shooters. At the same time, this percentage is far below what you’d expect from a playoff team.

On top of that, teams are still getting to the rim against the Knicks.

New York gives up the eighth most shots at the basket among the 20 postseason teams, and teams are converting them. Teams have completed 71.2% of their looks at the rim (the 7th highest of the playoffs). That’s not an ideal percentage.

The Knicks are vulnerable in the pick-and-roll. Brunson isn’t a good point of attack defender, and Towns struggles to defend in space. Towns can hold his own in the post with his size and length, but if you get him moving, his poor body control can lead to him getting in foul trouble.

This will be by far the easiest matchup offensively for Donovan Mitchell and James Harden. They will have much more room to operate in the pick-and-roll and won’t have to finish inside through as many sturdy defenders.

Establishing the pick-and-roll will help get the bigs going, as well. Harden has shown great chemistry with both bigs, but particularly with Jarrett Allen. That hasn’t been on display as much in the postseason due to the opponent. It will be again in this matchup.

The Cavs only played the Knicks once in the regular season with Harden, but they were able to establish the pick-and-roll easily. This resulted in New York attempting to send wings to slow down the action, which opened up the floor for the Cavs to playmake from the perimeter.

Evan Mobey has elevated his offensive game this postseason. He’s done a good job of beating mismatches, and New York will give him plenty of opportunities to continue that trend.

Combine that with them giving up far more outside shots, and there are simply way more ways for the Cavs to attack this opponent than they had versus the Raptors and Pistons.

This will be a much freer-flowing series with two elite offenses. Whoever gets the more consistent contributions from their stars and better shooting from the role players will likely head to the NBA Finals.

Cavs dominate Game 7, punch ticket to Eastern Conference Finals

DETROIT, MICHIGAN - MAY 17: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers reacts during the fourth quarter against the Detroit Pistons in Game Seven of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at Little Caesars Arena on May 17, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. 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 Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers booked their tickets to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time since 2018, defeating the Detroit Pistons behind a dominant Game 7 showing.

Cleveland’s process was strong from the jump. Donovan Mitchell got them rolling with his playmaking, racking up 5 assists in the first half as the Cavs had 10 assists on their first 13 field goals. That, combined with starting Max Strus in place of Dean Wade, allowed the Cavalier offense to get off to a hot start.

The Cavs won the first quarter for what felt like the first time all series and carried that momentum forward.

Sam Merrill leaped off the bench and nailed four three-pointers in the first half. His three-point barrage fueled the Cavs while both Evan Mobley and Jarrett Allen pounded the paint to build a comfortable 20-point lead. Defense turned into offense, and it felt like this team could do no wrong.

At one point in the second quarter, the Cavs had more assists (17) than the Pistons had made field goals (14). The ball was humming, and Cleveland reaped the rewards.

The lead only swelled from there.

Cleveland’s execution was relentless. They generated a clean look every time down the floor, with mounting pressure on the rim from Allen. He stormed downhill repeatedly, thundering multiple dunks in the third quarter. On the other end, the Cavs defended on a string, ramping up the intensity even as their lead was in the 20s.

That’s how you deliver a knockout blow.

Mitchell deserves credit. He’s struggled throughout the postseason and has let some of his worst tendencies lead the way in Cleveland’s losses. As such, Mitchell faced more pressure than anyone entering this game. He had a lot on the line, and he responded by playing arguably the best game (from a process standpoint) of his playoff career.

The Cavs were led in scoring by Mitchell with 26 points, to go with 8 assists and 0 turnovers. Allen added 23 points while Mobley (21 points) and Merrill (23 points) contributed in key stretches.

It’s fitting that Cleveland has shown so much growth in the last two rounds, and will now receive the ultimate test of that growth by facing the opponent who gave them their first whooping in 2023. Tonight’s win is worth celebrating. On Tuesday, we’re right back in the fire.

Knicks will face Cavaliers in Eastern Conference finals — here’s how the two teams stack up

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Jalen Brunson in action for the Knicks in the second round of the playoffs, Image 2 shows Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell (45) drives to the basket against Detroit Pistons forward Duncan Robinson (55) during the first half in game six of the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Rocket Arena.

The Knicks’ extended break is finally over. It’s back to game mode.

There is no more sitting back and watching to learn who their opponent will be in the Eastern Conference finals. It will be the Cavaliers, after their 125-94 Game 7 win over the Pistons in Detroit.

Game 1 is set for Tuesday at 8 p.m. at Madison Square Garden.

For most of the regular season and entering the postseason, it seemed a given that the Knicks would have to go through the Celtics and Pistons to reach the Finals. As it turns out, they won’t face either.

Jalen Brunson in action for the Knicks in the second round of the playoffs. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Now with the matchup set, let’s break down the top storylines:

The rest factor 

The Knicks last played May 10 — which means they will have had nine days of rest before Tuesday’s Game 1. That was critical for OG Anunoby, who has been recovering from a right hamstring strain that kept him out of Games 3 and 4 of the second round.

The Cavaliers, on the other hand, will have less than 48 hours between Sunday’s win and Game 1. The two teams will begin the series on complete opposite ends of the rest spectrum.

“It’s good to give your body some rest,” Miles McBride said after practice Friday. “Be able to sit back and watch your opponents beat each other up in a sense.”

The Karl-Anthony Towns transformation 

It has certainly been well documented how, after trailing 2-1 in the first round against the Hawks, the Knicks changed their offense. They’ve implemented a system that has Towns — not Jalen Brunson — facilitate with the ball in his hands at the elbows, allowing the others, including Brunson, to cut and set screens for each other around him.

But that was with Onyeka Okongwu, the shell of Joel Embiid and the past-his-prime Andre Drummond guarding Towns. The conference finals will be a different story.

Evan Mobley — the reigning Defensive Player of the Year — and Jarrett Allen are much more athletic and stronger defenders than anyone Towns has faced this postseason. Will Towns still be able to command the offense? Or will Mobley and Allen limit his impact?

Knicks perimeter defense 

It’s been a roller coaster in this department for the Knicks. For the first half of the year, they struggled. For the second half of the year, it was much improved.

For the first half of the first round, CJ McCollum torched them. For the second half of that series, after switching Josh Hart onto him, the Knicks made him a nonfactor. Then last round, Mikal Bridges did a terrific job stifling Tyrese Maxey.

Cleveland Cavaliers guard Donovan Mitchell (45) drives to the basket against Detroit Pistons forward Duncan Robinson (55) during the first half in game six of the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Rocket Arena. Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

The Cavaliers present a two-headed threat on the perimeter with Donovan Mitchell and James Harden. Bridges will presumably guard one of them, likely Mitchell. Hart could match up with the other. Anunoby is an option as well.

“Point of attack is important, it’s the most important thing,” Towns said Friday. “To have our wings and our guards playing defense at the perimeter at a high level, it makes my job easier but also makes our team better.”

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Brunson’s takeovers 

Dyson Daniels gave Brunson a few issues early in the first round before Brunson, like he seemingly does with everyone, figured him out, particularly after the Knicks offensive change. The 76ers had no answer for Brunson, who torched VJ Edgecombe.

For the postseason, Brunson is averaging 27.4 points per game — on excellent 48.5 percent shooting from the field and 40.9 percent from 3-point range — along with 6.1 assists.

New York Knicks head coach Mike Brown speaking to the media after practice at the New York Knicks training facility in Tarrytown, New York. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Dean Wade, though, guarded Brunson about as well as anyone in the regular season. Can he bother Brunson?

Those regular-season matchups were before the Knicks offensive change, also.

Home court advantage 

The Knicks would have had to start on the road if it was the Pistons, but now own home-court advantage since it’s the Cavaliers. Playing the first two games at MSG — with the Cavaliers coming off a tiring series — could have a big impact. As can having a potential Game 7 at home.

Mike Brown’s full circle moment 

The only time Brown has made the Finals as a head coach was with the Cavaliers in 2007. It would be poetic if he returns by toppling the team that gave him his first opportunity as a head coach.

Anthony Volpe nearly plays Subway Series hero with Yankees future in flux: ‘That’s the guy we know’

New York Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe hitting a 2-run RBI single.
New York Yankees shortstop Anthony Volpe (11) 2-run RBI single during the sixth inning when the New York Mets played the New York Yankees Sunday, May 17, 2026 at Citi...

By the end of Sunday, the Yankees turned a potential feel-good game for Anthony Volpe into a brutal loss.

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But they need Volpe’s big day to matter more in the long run than the 7-6 walk-off loss to the Mets at Citi Field.

In his fourth game of the season, after undergoing offseason shoulder surgery and then losing his starting shortstop job to José Caballero, Volpe went 2-for-3 with three RBIs, a double and two walks.

It looked like he was going to be the hero after his two-run single in the sixth inning broke a 1-1 tie, but the bullpen surrendered leads of 5-1 and 6-3 to overshadow any positives.

“Incredible: That’s the guy we know,” Aaron Judge said. “That’s why he’s been our shortstop for the last couple seasons, is when we need him in a big spot, he comes up big for us. Made some good plays, had some big swings for us, took his walks when he needed to in some tough situations. He keeps getting more at-bats, more at-bats — he’s coming off a big shoulder surgery, so the first couple games are going to be a little tough.

Anthony Volpe connects on a single during the Yankees’ May 17 loss. Robert Sabo for the NY Post

“But I was definitely encouraged by what I saw today.”

Volpe, who collided with Max Schuemann as both tried to make a play on Carson Benge’s walk-off chopper over the mound in the bottom of the 10th, reached base in nine of his 13 plate appearances in the Subway Series, going 2-for-6 with seven walks — one of which came with the bases loaded Sunday to drive in another run in the seventh inning.

“I’m just trying to stay within myself, stay within my approach and put good swings on good pitches,” Volpe said. “Obviously, it fluctuates, but I just want to stay locked into that. Every day, that’s what I can control.”

Volpe cannot control that Caballero expects to miss only the minimum 10 days on the injured list with a fracture in his right middle finger — he is eligible to return Friday — and that manager Aaron Boone has already said he expects Caballero will get his starting job back when he returns.

But the 25-year-old Volpe at least has the opportunity to give the Yankees something to think about if he can show enough on both sides of the ball while Caballero is out.

Volpe’s first hit of the season came on a 104.5 mph double to the gap off Freddy Peralta in the second inning before he struck out in his second at-bat.

He delivered a two-run single off lefty Sean Manaea with the bases loaded in the sixth to put the Yankees ahead 3-1.

After walking in a run in the seventh, Volpe drew another 3-2 walk against Devin Williams in the top of the 10th, only for Austin Wells to follow by grounding into an inning-ending double play.

“Just trying to do my job and contribute in any way I can,” Volpe said. “I got some good pitches to hit and put some good swings on them.”

Should the Utah Jazz trade up for the #1 pick?

CHICAGO, IL - MAY 12: Darryn Peterson looks on during the 2026 NBA Draft Combine on May 12, 2026 at Wintrust Arena in Chicago, Illinois. 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 Melissa Tamez/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Outside of drafting two hall-of-famers in a row in John Stockton and Karl Malone, the Utah Jazz jumping to #2 in the 2026 could be considered the second-best stroke of luck in franchise history. But it’s so much more than simply jumping in the lottery. If we’re just looking at that in a vacuum, it probably doesn’t have more gravitas than drafting Deron Williams #3 overall and getting Carlos Boozer in restricted free agency or Donovan Mitchell and Rudy Gobert being drafted somewhat close together. It’s the moves that led up to jumping to #2 that make it that much more impactful. Those moves included:

  • Keeping Lauri Markkanen while still managing a high-lottery finish.
  • Drafting Keyonte George at #16 and developing him into a rising star.
  • Trading non-Jazz picks acquired during the rebuild for Jaren Jackson Jr.
  • Trading for Walker Kessler (and potentially re-sizing)
  • Drafting Ace Bailey at #5.

When you add everything up, adding the #2 pick to this series of building blocks has a chance to be the final piece to a championship core.

Before the season started, Darryn Peterson was the consensus #1 pick by most draft experts. Even this week, Jonathan Givony had him at #1 still, despite his up-and-down season at Kansas.

Therefore, if the Washington Wizards end up picking AJ Dybantsa, then the Jazz come out of the draft with a #1-caliber player. The laziest trade idea making the rounds is to trade Ace Bailey and the #2 pick for the #1 pick. But if you have Darryn Peterson on the board to be picked up for nothing, why would you give up the assets that led to you having one of the top up-and-coming rosters in the league? On top of that, the fact that the Wizards might be willing to trade the #1 pick to the Jazz for #2 tells you everything you need to know. You wouldn’t dream of trading the #1 pick if you didn’t think the #2 pick was just as valuable.

Utah is going to end up with a franchise-altering talent in this draft without moving up, and so, no, the Utah Jazz should not trade up. They have done the necessary work already to put them in this position. They’ll keep their top prospect in Ace Bailey and keep building one of the best young rosters in the NBA.

Sorry, Wizards fans, the Utah Jazz are absolutely fine where they are. The #2 pick is just as valuable as the #1 and the Jazz come out the winner regardless of what happens this draft.

Purple Row After Dark: Who would make the 2026 Rockies more fun to watch?

DENVER, CO - SEPTEMBER 11: Manager Bud Black of the Colorado Rockies locker at Coors Field on Tuesday, September 11, 2018. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post via Getty Images) | Denver Post via Getty Images

The 2026 Rockies appear poised to win more games than they did the past couple seasons, but realistically, they are only fighting to avoid 100 losses. That’s improvement, but the season is clearly a transitional one attempting to set the stage for a more exciting future.

Given that, let’s imagine a world where we could magically have any player don a Rockies uniform for the rest of the season.

If you could add any one player to the 2026 Rockies roster, with the sole purpose of making them more fun to watch despite knowing that they aren’t playoff bound, who would it be?

Some rules for this:

  • This player could not be kept beyond this season. They’d be returned to their actual team next year.
  • The Rockies couldn’t trade this player in order to try and get long-term value from them.
  • This should be an active player. No picking Babe Ruth just to see if he could adjust to 100+ mph velocity.

With all that being said, who would you most enjoy seeing in a Rockies uniform the rest of the season?

Is it an MVP candidate able to make more games close and tense? Maybe you have a sentimental favorite that you’d just like to see in the purple pinstripes again? Perhaps you are just curious about what effect playing home games at Coors would have on someone in particular?

Whatever your pick or reasoning, share it in the comments!


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San Antonio Spurs vs. Oklahoma City Thunder series preview, predictions: Can Wembanyama slow Thunder?

Before the playoffs even started, this was the series everybody pointed to, the one everybody wanted to see.

The San Antonio Spurs vs. the Oklahoma City Thunder. The battle of the two best teams in the NBA. The first playoff meeting of what shapes up to be the rivalry that will define the NBA's next five years (at least). Victor Wembanyama vs. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, two of the top three vote getters in the MVP race. It's the first time two 62-win teams have met in the playoffs since the 1988 NBA Finals (when Chicago beat Utah)

"They're playing really well right now. We're playing really well right now," the Spurs' Stephon Castle said. "We're in each other's way of going to the finals, so I think it'll be a good series."

Here's everything you need to know about the series.

San Antonio vs. Oklahoma City Playoffs Schedule 2026

All times are Eastern (* = if necessary).
Game 1: San Antonio at Oklahoma City, Monday, May 18 (8:30 ET, NBC and Peacock)
Game 2: San Antonio at Oklahoma City, Wednesday, May 20 (8:30 ET, NBC and Peacock)
Game 3: Oklahoma City at San Antonio, Friday, May 22 (8:30 ET, NBC and Peacock)
Game 4: Oklahoma City at San Antonio, May 24, (8 ET, NBC and Peacock)
*Game 5: San Antonio at Oklahoma City, May 26 (8:30 ET, NBC and Peacock)
*Game 6: Oklahoma City at San Antonio, May 28, (8:30 ET, NBC and Peacock)
*Game 7: San Antonio at Oklahoma City, May 30 (8:30 ET, NBC and Peacock)

Player to watch: Victor Wembanyama

Raphielle Johnson, NBC Sports Fantasy Basketball Lead writer
Through two rounds, Wembanyama and the Spurs have not been hampered much by their collective lack of NBA Playoff experience. Sure, he was ejected from Game 4 due to a moment of frustration, but he responded with a dominant showing in Game 5 and then eliminated Rudy Gobert from the proceedings in Game 6 of the Minnesota series. The matchup with Oklahoma City's frontcourt, particularly Chet Holmgren, is likely to be far more challenging for Wembanyama.

In 10 games this postseason, Wemby is averaging 20.3 points, 10.7 rebounds, 2.4 assists, 4.1 blocks and 1.4 three-pointers per, while shooting 53.8 percent from the field and 84.5 percent from the foul line. Given what he's achieved thus far, a dominant showing in the conference finals would go a long way toward kicking off the NBA's "Wemby Era." And even with San Antonio's mastery of the Thunder during the regular season, they're going to need dominance from their 7-foot-4 phenom to take down the reigning champs.

Keys to watch for in Spurs vs. Thunder

Chet Holmgren vs. Victor Wembanyama

Nothing brings out the fire in Wembanyama like going against Chet Holmgren. They both play down any rivalry between the "unicorn" big men, but both seem to get up for facing each other.

Now we get up to seven games of it, with a trip to the Finals on the line.

Holmgren has to score in this matchup. In the regular season meeting, Wembanyama played off Holmgren at the arc, daring him to shoot 3-pointers — he shot 36.2% from deep this season — and then using his length and athleticism to take away drives and plays inside from Holmgren. That also lets Wembanyama play back more in the paint and try to clog things up for Gilgeous-Alexander and other Thunder players looking to drive. If he can do that again, it's a big plus for San Antonio. Holmgren has to do enough to keep him from camping out inside and getting comfortable.

Spurs defense on Gilgeous-Alexander

While the Lakers were swept out of the playoffs by the Thunder, they did try something different in defending OKC: They double-teamed Gilgeous-Alexander hard and were physical with him from the start. The Lakers threw everything at him and essentially dared anyone else to beat them. It took a bit for Gilgeous-Alexander to adjust.

The problem is, the Thunder do have plenty of other options. Against the Lakers, that started with Ajay Mitchell as a playmaker — he averaged 22.5 points per game against Los Angeles — and Holmgren in the paint. That was too much for the Lakers to handle.

San Antonio is different. What the Spurs bring to the table is bigger, better defending guards in Stephon Castle, Dylan Harper and De'Aaron Fox. They also have Wembanyama patrolling everything behind them. San Antonio isn't going to go as crazy throwing everything at SGA, but they have watched and learned from what the Lakers did, which is why the third key to this series is…

Jalen Williams returns

After missing half of the first-round series against Phoenix and the entire series against Los Angeles with a hamstring strain, Jalen Williams is listed as available and is set to play for the Thunder against the Spurs.

That matters in what is expected to be a long, physical series, though it's worth watching how long it takes Williams and Mitchell to get used to their changed roles. Williams gives the Spurs another high-level shot creator and scorer and another physical, quality defender to throw at San Antonio's guards. We'll see how rusty he is early, but the Thunder need Williams — who battled injuries all season — to be close to his All-NBA self from last season if this team is going back to the NBA Finals.

Predictions

Kurt Helin (NBA lead writer): Thunder in 7

I'm not going to call this the real NBA Finals (because I thought the same thing a year ago, and the Pacers almost proved me wrong), but the winner here will be the heavy favorite in the next round. The Spurs are uniquely constructed to give Oklahoma City trouble, and their defense and maturity make them a legitimate threat to win the series. That said, I am going to bank on the Thunder's experience in these moments and the diversity and depth of their shot creation to be enough to win, but this goes the distance.

Raphielle Johnson (fantasy basketball lead writer): Thunder in 7

This series is poised to be a classic, given what the teams have accomplished thus far and the talent (players and coaches) on display. Some will make a lot of what happened during the regular season, but the playoffs are an entirely different matter. The Spurs clearly aren't interested in "waiting their turn," and rightfully so. However, I like the Thunder to win in seven games. Defending Shai Gilgeous-Alexander without fouling is an immense challenge, and supporting cast members like Ajay Mitchell and Jared McCain have played well in these playoffs.

Jay Coucher (NBA lead betting analyst): Thunder in 7

The Thunder will likely struggle to score in the halfcourt against Victor Wembanyama, who has found an extra gear in the playoffs, but expect the tipping point of the series to be 1) OKC having home court advantage, and 2) OKC generating just enough San Antonio turnovers to juice their own offense.

Dodgers pitcher Roki Sasaki produces career outing vs Angels

Roki Sasaki has begun to turn things around at the right time for the Los Angeles Dodgers rotation.

Sasaki was credited with the win after the Dodgers’ 10-1 victory over the Los Angeles Angels on Sunday after producing a career-high eight strikeouts while allowing just four hits and one earned run in seven innings pitched.

The Japanese pitcher's success comes at a good time for L.A.'s pitching staff. The Dodgers will be without Tyler Glasnow and Blake Snell, who were both placed on the injury list earlier this month.

“(Sasaki) had command of the fastball, command of the split, forkball and mixed in the slider when needed,” Dave Roberts told reporters after the game.

Sakaki deferred some of the credit for his dominant outing to catcher Dalton Rushing.

“I think Rushing did a great job calling a game with the pitch selection,” Sasaki said to reporters through a translator.

Entering the weekend, Sakaki had a 5.88 ERA with 31 strikeouts across 33.2 innings pitched in his first seven starts of the season.

The right-hander came into his own and played a key role for the Dodgers during the 2025 postseason after spending some time in the bullpen last season.

Watch Roki Sasaki throw eight strikeouts vs. Angels

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dodgers pitcher Roki Sasaki produces career outing vs. Angels

To make Subway Series win matter, Mets must hang in through injuries, rotation uncertainty

For a few hours between late Friday night and Saturday afternoon, the pulse of the New York Mets’ 2026 season was faint.

Their best starter, Clay Holmes, was suddenly joining a variety of other key teammates on a growing injured list. Their crosstown rivals, having the exact opposite season to the Mets in every way, looked indisputably superior. Their manager, normally chipper, admitted that after taking jab after jab after jab this spring, his team was finally staggering backward from the blows.

Then came Saturday’s win, which included a gritty showing from the lineup and a gutsy showing from the bullpen. Then came Sunday’s stunner, which featured the Mets’ first ninth-inning comeback since Jose Iglesias wore their jersey. Sometimes wins like those change everything for teams sputtering early in the season. Sometimes, they don’t.

If the Mets are to make this one count, they will have to do exactly what they did this weekend: Make the best of what they have and hang in there.

For example: As they fly to Dulles Airport Sunday night, the Mets’ pitching staff remains in relative disarray. The team has not yet announced a rotation replacement for Holmes, who would normally have pitched Wednesday against the Nationals.

One would-be candidate, red-hot 24-year-old Jack Wenninger, threw 60 pitches for Triple-A Syracuse Sunday, which would almost certainly rule him out for Wednesday. Jonah Tong recorded just five outs in his most recent start.

The likeliest fill-in might be lefty Zach Thornton, a former fifth-round pick who owns a 3.16 ERA  in 37 innings this season and owns a 2.25 ERA in two starts since being promoted to Triple-A. Thornton, 24, also pitched Friday, meaning he is perfectly lined up with Holmes’s turn.

In the meantime, the Mets still face a decision about Sean Manaea, who struggled early in his four innings of relief against the New York Yankees Sunday, but settled in enough that Carlos Mendoza said later he was encouraged by the way Manaea was able to get soft contact from the Yankees lineup in his last two innings.

As a former starter relegated to occasional mop-up duty, Manaea also represents an obvious choice to replace Holmes for purely logistical reasons. But the 57 pitches he threw today likely rule out a Wednesday start – though perhaps not a Wednesday opening.

Thus far, the Mets have avoided any firmer decision on Manaea, who has $43 million remaining on his contract but has struggled enough that Mendoza has had to work around him in the bullpen at times – a concession they have hardly been able to afford amid their early season struggles.

That he settled in and kept the Mets close through four innings Sunday preserved every reliever but Devin Williams, meaning they do not necessarily need to find a fresh arm by the time they play the Nationals Monday. Still, if the bullpen finds itself needing reinforcements before Manaea can safely pitch again, the Mets could find themselves choosing between keeping him on the roster and giving themselves enough arms at a time when they cannot afford to give away any late leads.

Getting him right – and the fact that Manaea’s sinker sat around 92 miles per hour is promising – would increase the Mets’ chances of revival. But the Mets do not have time to waste.

As a result, they seem to be showing increased urgency with first baseman Jorge Polanco, who has been out since mid-April with Achilles bursitis. Last week, Mets President of Baseball Operations David Stearns said the team was waiting for Polanco to be asymptomatic before ramping him up for everyday duty. But in the days since, Polanco has hit during batting practice more than once, done defensive work, and gone through agility drills.

Mendoza said Sunday that Polanco will travel with the team to Washington this week so he can continue baseball activities and suggested for the first time that Polanco will either have to play through some discomfort or concede a long injured list stint.

“It’s getting to a point where, he’s gonna feel it, right? But just keeping it to a point where like, I can tolerate this,” Mendoza said. “Because if not, he’s going to be shut down for long period of time. So I think we just continue to go through baseball activities, continue to push it running-wise, and see how he reacts to that.”

Polanco would add depth to the Mets lineup – though in his absence, the Mets have had no choice but to allow for the emergence of A.J. Ewing and Carson Benge. Similarly, they will have to rely on Christian Scott to evolve into a reliable MLB starter and David Peterson to reestablish himself as one. Peterson expressed frustration with the Mets’ continued reliance on an opener before he pitches, but the results are indisputable: In 20 innings of bulk relief this year, his ERA is 2.25. In 23 1/3 innings as a starter, it is 8.10.

So the Mets must keep using an opener and crossing their fingers and doing whatever it takes to put whoever they have in the best position to succeed. They will have to make up ground with a tattered lineup while they wait for injuries to heal and sew them back together. Sunday, they proved it is possible. Monday, they must do it again.

Yankees’ recent woes captured in one ‘no-man’s land’ collision as road trip ends with Subway Series disaster

New York Yankees players Anthony Volpe and Max Schuemann walking off the field after a loss.
Anthony Volpe and Ma

In one agonizing play to end Sunday’s crushing finale against the Mets, the Yankees offered a snapshot to encapsulate a brutal road trip.

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With runners on the corners and one out in a tie game, Tim Hill on the mound and the Yankees using a five-man infield, Carson Benge hit a chopper over the mound between Anthony Volpe and Max Schuemann.

The two collided, both going for the ball, costing them any chance of throwing out the runner at home as the Mets walked off with a 7-6 win at Citi Field.

It is impossible to know whether Schuemann or Volpe would have gotten the runner at the plate had either of them fielded it cleanly and without obstacles, but they never got to find out, ending a 2-7 trip against the Brewers, Orioles and Mets.

Anthony Volpe and Max Schuemann are pictured after the Yankees’ May 17 loss to the Mets. Corey Sipkin for the NY Post

“Maybe, but we’re both just treating it do or die,” Volpe said. “That was the game.”

“I was just going to be aggressive. We have to be quick,” Schuemann said. “Tough play at the plate either way. I talked to Volpe about it, it’s just one of those things that we’re both going to be aggressive to that baseball no matter what. We both want to make a play.”

“It’s in no-man’s-land,” said manager Aaron Boone, who did not think the Yankees would have gotten Marcus Semien out at home even if the chopper had been fielded cleanly.

The Yankees had won nine of 12 series this season and tied in another before this road trip, when they dropped three straight series.

Four of their seven losses came by one run, giving them 10 on the season.

And two of those included walk-offs in games where David Bednar gave up a first-pitch home run on a curveball — last Sunday in Milwaukee, when Brice Turang walked him off, and this Sunday when Tyrone Taylor crushed a game-tying three-run homer in the bottom of the ninth when the Yankees were one out away from the win.

Now they finally return home for four games against the Blue Jays — the Yankees’ nemesis last season that crushed them in the ALDS — and three against the Rays, who swept the Yankees last month and lead the AL East.

“Couple [of] close games, but it’s just about finishing the job,” Aaron Judge said. “A couple games here where we got to close it out or some games in extras where we got to get a couple runs across and just don’t get the job done. The boys are playing hard though, that’s the biggest thing. Guys are playing tough and making the plays they need to, but just coming up a little bit short. We got to have a short memory and move on and get ready for the [homestand] because we got a big division opponent coming in.”

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A day after leaving 11 men on base, the Yankees stranded 10 more while going 1-for-10 with runners in scoring position.

They had still looked to be in good position to take the series by getting out to leads of 5-1 in the top of the sixth and 6-3 in the top of the seventh.



But it all came crashing down late, first in the bottom of the ninth, when Bednar capped off a rough trip for the bullpen.

He allowed back-to-back singles to lead off the frame, then got two outs before leaving a curveball over the plate to Taylor.

Anthony Volpe reacts during the Yankees’ May 17 loss to the Mets. AP Photo

“Just not putting guys away early,” Bednar said. “Overall, that’s unacceptable, but especially in that spot, it’s just very frustrating.”

Then came the excruciating end.

After the Yankees pulled Schuemann in from left field with a runner on third, Hill hit Luis Torrens to bring up Benge.

Schuemann hovered as a third infielder on the right side, shaded just to the right of second base, and Benge chopped it between him and Volpe.

Schuemann picked it with his backhand but Volpe ran into him while also trying to make the play, preventing a throw, providing a fitting end for a forgettable trip.

“It’s very frustrating,” Schuemann said. “We’re a really good team. I think it’ll turn.”