CLEVELAND -- You might remember back in October, when one quote from Karl-Anthony Towns set off a loud alarm for the fan base.
Towns was asked about his role in Mike Brown’s offense.
“Honestly, I don’t know,” Towns said a couple days before the regular season. “I just don’t know. But we figuring it out. It’s just different. It’s different. So we’re still figuring it out.”
It wasn’t just the words Towns used. It was the way he delivered them. You didn’t need to be a body language expert to see that Towns wasn’t in love with his role in the new offense.
Fast-forward to Saturday night in Cleveland. About 90 minutes after the Knicks beat the Cavs to take a 3-0 series lead, Towns was asked to assess the job Brown has done this season.
Towns’ answer told you a lot about the connection between these Knicks players and their head coach and how it’s grown over the past seven months.
“With Mike, he had to learn us and adjust to us,” Towns said after the Knicks’ Game 3 win over Cleveland. “On the flip side, we had to do the same as well. Now, we are at a point where we are both working seamlessly. We understand each other’s language. He is getting the best from us and we are getting the best from him.
“I think that speaks to a season, especially a first season with a new coach and a new system and a new philosophy. It’s a testament to the players to do an amazing job coming together and showing that unity that made us special last year. But the coaching staff being receptive to the players and adjusting with us and finding the way to get the most out of us.”
It's always difficult to assess how well a coach is doing. We don’t get to see 90 percent of the work that they do behind the scenes. But what we have seen over the past month has been remarkable.
From the offensive adjustments to the big nights from role players, Brown has pushed nearly all of the right buttons during the Knicks’ 10-game win streak.
“He was put in a tough situation with a lot of expectations but he’s handled that unbelievably,” Josh Hart said. “He’s coaching us in his way, his style. He’s taking input from everybody. His ability to lead us to adapt to things has been great. That’s just the kind of person he is. He’s a high-character, and a great person first and foremost.”
Throughout the current streak, Brown has reminded his group to maintain their edge.
“It’s human nature to kind of get comfortable sometimes,” Landry Shamet said late Saturday night. “So he’s always checking us on that. Reminding us of fighting that off. It’s a lot of intangible stuff like that that I think he’s spectacular at. Keeping us in the right headspace. Obviously Xs and Os, the gameplan. He communicates with everyone. Just a great coach.”
Brown, as you know, was saddled with incredibly high expectations this season.
The Knicks reached the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time in 25 seasons last year under former coach Tom Thibodeau. Leon Rose, James Dolan and the Knicks concluded that the Knicks couldn’t take the next step under Thibodeau.
After a lengthy coaching search, they landed on Brown. Every game this season, in some way, was a referendum on that decision.
Now, with Brown and the Knicks one win away from their first NBA Finals trip in 27 years, the decision is validated. Not fully validated. But it certainly seems to be working out the way Rose and company had hoped when they made the change.
Would the Knicks have reached this point in the season -- up 3-0 in the Eastern Conference Finals -- under Thibodeau? Who knows? They’re here under Brown. They’ll have a chance to clinch a trip to the NBA Finals on Monday night.
LEANING ON THE BENCH
One of Brown’s edicts coming into the season? Establish a reliable bench. He’s checked that box this postseason, getting contributions from Shamet, Jordan Clarkson and Jose Alvarado alongside maintstays Miles McBride and Mitchell Robinson.
Here's Brown on his philosophy with bench players:
“I’ve been fortunate, blessed, lucky to be a part of some good coaching staffs and be with some great coaches. Steve Kerr, Gregg Popovich, they were guys that went deep into their bench. And they both always used to say, it’s not about now; it’s about the postseason. It’s not about now; it’s about the postseason. And you keep guys engaged by doing that, and you do develop not just a bench but the team, as well, because guys get used to playing with other guys, just in case something goes down.
“And so, again, it’s something I stole from them. Very few things I came up with on my own. I’ve seen it work in the past, and that’s kind of what I thought I wanted to do here. Tried to do it in Sacramento, too. So again, you’ve kind of been through it. You learn.
“You develop a philosophy from what you learn from and you believe in it, you try to stick with it as best you can, and that’s what we try to do here. Our guys, they’re doing a nice job getting rest, taking care of their bodies and their minds and trying to play as hard as they can. Every second they’re out on the floor, we have to keep doing that.”
Shamet, who is 6-for-7 from beyond the arc against Cleveland, has been in and out of Brown’s rotation at different points in the season. Shamet offered interesting insight into the makeup of the Knick locker room on Saturday night.
“Everybody wants to see each other do well genuinely,” Shamet said. “I mean that. If you guys write that in your report, it's not some locker room banter or BS. It’s like spiritual with this group. You know, we’ve got a lot of guys who are more than capable of being in certain situations, and we cheer each other on. Next man up. It's a beautiful thing, and it's what we have, and this locker room. So it's special.”
INTENSE FOCUS
Brown was asked about the Knicks’ identity on Saturday night.
“They’re so resilient,” Brown said. “We hit adversity during the regular season, which was fantastic. I embraced it. I wanted it to happen. We hit it numerous times. And our guys were tested then, and they stayed connected. And to see the ups and down, especially early in these playoffs against Atlanta and to see them stay connected while trying to sacrifice and believe, it’s fantastic. You don’t know if there’s gonna be carryover with those things in the postseason until you go through it, and going through it with these guys, these coaches and seeing it gives you hope for a lot of things, because the group has been fantastic.”
Both Brown and the players have cited a higher level of focus since their Game 3 loss in Atlanta.
“They’ve been fantastic trying to pay attention to all the details that we’ve been throwing at them. And we’ve thrown a lot of adjustments offensively and defensively at them throughout the course of these playoffs,” Brown said on Saturday. “And to still see them locked in and try to be focused on the details at hand, again, that just speaks volumes of my coaching staff and the way that they’re presenting and changing and all that stuff. But more so about these players and their want to go try to get a ring.”
The Golden Knights celebrate a goal during their May 24 win against the Avalanche.
LAS VEGAS — There are a number of adjectives that could be applied to how the Golden Knights have found various ways to win in the regular season and playoffs.
Vegas coach John Tortorella had his own description.
“This is a game where we showed some balls,” the man known as Torts said after the Golden Knights’ latest Houdini act.
Tomas Hertl weaved his way toward the slot and broke a tie at 8:21 of the third period as the Golden Knights overcame a three-goal deficit Sunday night to beat Colorado 5-3 and move within a victory of their third Stanley Cup Final appearance in nine years.
“It obviously feels really good right now, but we’re playing a hell of a hockey team,” Golden Knights forward Mitch Marner said. “We know that the next game is going to be even tougher now. Enjoy this for the next 10 minutes, 30 minutes, go home and then try to take care of yourself, and do what you got to do to be ready tomorrow.”
The Golden Knights celebrate a goal during their May 24 win against the Avalanche. AP Photo
The Golden Knights go for what would be a stunning sweep over the Presidents’ Trophy winners on Tuesday night. Chicago in 2013 was the last team to win the Presidents’ Trophy and the Stanley Cup in the same season.
Colorado will try to become just the fifth team to win a series after falling behind 3-0. Los Angeles in 2014 was the most recent team to accomplish that in eliminating San Jose in their first-round series.
Vegas, which trailed 3-0 after the first period, was 0-19 in the playoffs when behind that many goals. The Avalanche were 74-1 when holding such a lead.
“As low as it can get,” Avalanche coach Jared Bednar said of the team’s emotions. “It’s a big hill to climb. The next 24-to-36 hours is for … you’ve got to find a way to get over it, regroup and go again.”
Colorado has other concerns because front-line center Nathan MacKinnon might not be fully healthy going forward. MacKinnon, who has 15 points this postseason and led the league in the regular season with 53 goals, took a puck to his right knee in the second period and played through the injury.
That comes just as the Avalanche got back star defenseman Cale Makar, who missed the first two games this series because of an upper-body injury.
Tomas Hertl celebrates a goal during the Golden Knights’ May 24 win. Imagn Images
Vegas keeps finding aways, going this deep into the postseason despite being outshot in 11 of 15 games, including now nine in a row. The Golden Knights erased deficits the past two games against Colorado, though Game 2 was just 1-0.
“We’ve been all season long many times down,” Hertl said. “We’ve come back so many times. Even after the first when we were down 3-0 we knew we could do it.”
Hertl, Mark Stone and William Karlsson each had a goal and assist. Keegan Kolesar and Brett Howden scored the other Golden Knights goals, and Mitch Marner and Kaedan Korczak each tallied two assists. Carter Hart made 32 saves.
Cale Makar looks to move the puck during the Avalanche’s May 24 loss to the Golden Knights. AP Photo
Stone’s goal came on his first appearance since suffering a lower-body injury in Game 3 of the second-round series against Anaheim. Kolesar, who had gone 37 playoff games without a goal, picked up his first point of the postseason.
Gabriel Landeskog, Nazem Kadri and Jack Drury scored for the Avalanche, and Devon Toews had two assists. Scott Wedgewood stopped 18 shots.
The Avalanche dominated the first period by taking a 3-0 lead, but the Golden Knights thought they had cut the deficit to 2-1 when Pavel Dorofeyev appeared to score a power-play goal with 7:26 left. Officials immediately waved it off and the decision was upheld on video review.
Colorado then made the Golden Knights pay when Drury found himself alone on a breakaway, deking Vegas goalie Hart to score the short-handed goal with 6:45 left for the three-goal lead.
But the Golden Knights didn’t let the two-goal swing trouble them too much, with Stone’s power-play goal 19 seconds into the second period sparking a three-goal answer to tie the game heading into the final period of regulation.
Then Hertl broke the deadlock — and now the Golden Knights just need to win one of four games.
“I want them to feel it for a little bit, as far as what they just did against a really good hockey club,” Tortorella said, “but then we get back to work tomorrow.”
There was a moment of silence before the game for two-time NASCAR champion driver and Las Vegas native Kyle Busch. He died Thursday at 41 after severe pneumonia developed into sepsis, according to a statement from Busch’s family.
It was the perfect start for the Avalanche heading into Game 3. Cale Makar is returning, and they set the tone early by going up 3-0 in the first period. Though things turned for the worse, as we might have seen the Avalanche's worst meltdown this season, as they crumbled, blew a lead, and fell 5-3 to the Vegas Golden Knights, now facing the prospect of being swept heading into Game 4.
Period 1:
The Avalanche start strong, just three minutes into the period as Devon Toews makes a strong move to the net to draw a penalty, but it's captain Gabriel Landeskog who follows up right behind him to clean up the loose puck rebound and in to make it 1-0.
Avalanche keep their foot on the gas pedal as Josh Manson sends a great stretch pass to Martin Necas entering the offensive zone, who makes a pretty behind-the-back pass to Nazem Kadri and rifles it in to make it 2-0. Cole Smith takes the first penalty of the game as he is called for tripping, but the Avalanche can’t convert on their first power play.
Nazem Kadri is called for high-sticking Jack Eichel; it's only a minor. The Knights would convert on the play as Pavel Dorofeyev would track down his round and bat it in, but the referees immediately called the play dead as they motioned that the puck was pushed in with his glove.
The Golden Knights have a goal called back after the officials determine the puck deflected off Pavel Dorofeyev’s glove. pic.twitter.com/7eM1fQ7Wis
The Avalanche continue on the penalty kill but manage to capitalize short-handed. Parker Kelly clears the puck, and it goes over the heads of the Knights players, leading to a Jack Drury short-handed breakaway, and he converts with a nifty backhanded shot to make it 3-0. Brock Nelson would take a tripping penalty just under a minute left in the period, giving the Knights a power play heading into the second.
Period 2
It takes just 19 seconds into the period as Mark Stone taps in Mitch Marner's pass to quickly get the Knights on the board to make it 3-1. The Knights, early in this period, start as the more aggressive team, and it doesn’t help that the Avalanche are making a bunch of errors and giving the Knights more chances to get back into the game.
— Vegas Golden Knights (@GoldenKnights) May 25, 2026
The Knights' continued pressure is rewarded as William Karlsson finds a bobbling puck and rifles it past Wedgewood to make it 3-2 just four minutes after Stone got them on the board. Brent Burns is called for cross-checking, but the Avalanche penalty kill continues to stand strong and kills it off.
Then disaster strikes, MacKinnon takes a shot from the blueline right to his knee and is down in pain, badly. He does need some help to get up and skate off the ice, but nothing too serious. He doesn’t head off into the dressing room immediately and tries to get some shifts in, but seeing him on the ice, he doesn't look good, no explosiveness, one bit.
The Avalanche get another chance on the power play when Cole Smith is called for high-sticking, but come up short. The Knights' pressure and the Avalanche's continued strong lead lead to more chances, and it continues to hurt them. Keegan Kolesar bats down Dylan Coghlan's shot from the point and pokes it past Wedgewood to tie the game with seven minutes left in the period.
— Vegas Golden Knights (@GoldenKnights) May 25, 2026
The period ends, and it might go down as the Avalanche’s worst period in the playoffs, if not the season entirely. Defensive breakdowns, errors in their own zone, and just not putting more pressure when being up 3-0 entering the period in a series down 2-0.
Period 3:
Stone is called for slashing Wedgewood, but Ross Colton is called for roughing Stone, so both are sent off, and it's two minutes of 4-on-4 that go scoreless. On a Knights rush, Tomas Hertl dekes out Sam Malinski, who has been having a bad game, and sends a backhand shot past Wedgwood to give the Knights the lead at 4-3.
— Vegas Golden Knights (@GoldenKnights) May 25, 2026
The Avalanche gets another chance to tie the game when Marner is called for tripping Necas, but the Avalanche's power play continues to fall flat. MacKinnon tries his best with a bad knee with the Avalanche to mount a comeback, with Wedgewood pulled with two minutes left in the period, but a Brett Howden goal seals the deal, and the Avalanche fall 5-3.
Despite the Avalanche getting Cale Makar back and going up 3-0 in the first period, disaster after mistake after error follows suit, and the Avalanche collapse, now trailing 3-0. History doesn't help them either, as the last time there was a reverse sweep in the playoffs was 2014, when the San Jose Sharks blew a 3-0 lead to the Los Angeles Kings.
Next Game
Game 4 falls on Tuesday, May 26th, which could either see the Knights sweep the Avalanche and advance to the Stanley Cup Finals or force a Game 5 back in Ball Arena.
DETROIT, MICHIGAN - DECEMBER 12: The Brooklyn Nets logo is pictured during the second quarter against the Detroit Pistons at Little Caesars Arena on December 12, 2021 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 Nic Antaya/Getty Images) | Getty Images
So the Knicks are one win away from their first NBA Finals in 27 years. They’ve also matched the Nets mark of 10 straight post-season wins, set in 2003. Good for them.
Moving on.
We are in a bit of a news lull right now, between the Lottery and the Draft, to be followed by the Nets two summer leagues and free agency, During the news lull, a lot of the hard work on the Draft gets done. There’s the workouts and interviews; results from the NBA Combine; medical data; interviews with everyone the prospects have ever come in contact with: high school, AAU and college coaches, community leaders etc; as well as video clips, media, social media offerings, and if applicable, police reports. All of it gets pumped into the scouting database to be mulled by the front office as they make their decisions.
Again, part of the lull is due to the Nets historic unwillingness to share much about the process, particularly who’s been in for workouts. Hoopshype keeps a list of who’s been in around the league and as of this week, the list has only one Nets entry: Keba Keita a 6’8” 22-year-old big who played with both Egor Demin and A.J. Dybantsa at BYU.
As a senior last season, Keita averaged 6.2 points and led the team in rebounds (7.2) and blocks (1.8), a complementary piece for Brigham Young.’s stars. He’s on nobody’s Big Board of top 100 prospects but workouts aren’t just about the Draft. The Nets are looking at players for their two Summer League rosters, training camp and finally, the Long Island Nets. There could be other motivations as well. Did Demin recommend him? The native of Mali in west Africa does have a great story.
If you’re looking for hints as to who might have been in, the Hoopshype list includes 19 prospects who’ve been seen by the Knicks at their Greenburgh, N.Y. facility. Agents will schedule visits to give their clients as little travel time and as much rest as they can … and the Nets and Knicks facilities are about an hour apart.
So who’s been in for the Knicks, who hold the 24th, 31st and 55th picks? The big names New York has looked at, per Hoopshype, include Morez Johnson, the 6’9” 20-year-old power forward from Michigan who looked good at the Combine, as well as Zuby Ejiofor, the 6’9” 22-year-old PF from St. John’s and Malachi Moreno, the 7’0” 19-year-old big from Kentucky. Of course, we don’t know. With the Nets holding that sixth pick, top prospects are likely to accept an invitation for Brooklyn.
May is also around the time that the Nets scouting staff gathers at HSS to debate prospects, as the Nets excellent docu-series, SCOUT, showed us last year.
So, we wait. Not long. But we wait.
Waiting on Aspiration
At some point, presumably soon, the NBA will release its report on the Clippers reported manipulation of the NBA’s salary cap by using a company named Aspiration to illegally funnel as much as $28 million to Kawhi Leonard. In the last month, Pablo Torre, the freelance podcaster, has won both the Pulitzer Prize and National Magazine Award for his groundbreaking reporting on the scandal.
The league hired outside counsel Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz, a powerhouse New York law firm with its fair share of former federal prosecutors, to investigate. Its progress remains a closely guarded secret. Once the report is in the hands of Adam Silver, it will be up to him to assess penalties which if he follows history could include heavy fines and other sanctions for the team and the league’s richest owner, Steve Ballmer, but also a loss of future picks.
In a similar circumstances back in 2000 involving the Minnesota Timberwolves and Joe Smith, David Stern fined the Minnesota Timberwolves $3.5 million in cash, voided Smith’s deal with the Timberwolves and stripped the T’Wolves of first first round picks. One was later restored. Owner Glen Taylor was suspended for a year and GM was forced to take a leave of absence.
Virtually any fine for Ballmer, worth $132.9 billion as of Friday’s Forbes estimate, would amount to pocket lint and there’s informed speculation that the league will not tinker with Leonard’s contract. That leaves the draft picks.
Let’s say Silver follows his predecessor’s precedent and vacates some Clippers first round picks. It’s complicated. The Clippers don’t have clear title to their own first rounder till 2029. Their 2026 first is owed to the Thunder but they hold the Pacers pick at No. 5. Their 2027 pick may have to be swapped with the Thunder and their 2028 selection is owed to the 76ers. It seems that a penalty docking them picks starting in 2029 and running through, say, 2033, would likely be greeted by a sigh of relief inside the Intuit Dome. Three years is plenty of time to adjust to new realities.
Could the penalties affect the Nets plans in this year’s Draft? For example:
Might the Clippers decide to resist trade offers for the fifth pick, understanding their cache of picks will be diluted and so, hang on to what they got? That would limit the Nets ability to move up.
Might they decide to trade the fifth pick for future firsts to lessen the pain of future losses? With the Nets having the most draft assets in the NBA by far, could that provide an opportunity for Brooklyn?
Might they decide to use the fifth pick in a trade for a star like say Giannis Antetokounmpo, forgetting any semblance of an organic route contention, knowing how constrained that route will become? That would also eliminate the possibility of a trade and add a new player and new needs to the mix at the top of the Draft.
Yes, we are deep in the weeds and yes, it’s all speculation and yes, we don’t know when the league will move — it will be after the Finals, that’s for sure! Before the 2026 Draft which takes place days after the Finals conclude? But every team, particularly the Nets, wants to know what the commissioner is planning and how the Clips will respond to whatever law he lays down.
A final bit of speculation: Silver seems ornery of late. The proposed anti-tanking rules would permit to pull picks from teams that continue to lose on purpose. That was a bit of a shocker. Unlike Stern, he cajols and threatens rather than lowering the hammer. Maybe he plans to assert himself in general.
Joe Tsai’s sports empire expands
Back in July of last year, we catalogued Joe Tsai’s burgeoning sports empire, centered on Brooklyn Sports & Entertainment properties, but noting that he’s gone well beyond the NBA and WNBA, citing ownership positions in the NFL’s Dolphins, both lacrosse leagues, the LAFC of the MLS, e-sports, the Asian University Basketball League and chunks of various sports services like Fanatics, Michael Rubin’s $30 billion digital sports empire that has its hands in everything from apparel to gambling; and Genius Sports, which supplies sports data to virtually every pro league and owns Second Spectrum, every crazed basketball fan’s go-to site for analytics.
Since then, we’ve noted a few changes in his thinking. He sold his stake in LAFC, exiting a group of investors that included mostly Hollywood celebrity types, while adding two interesting new sports. Last month, Sportico noted that his family office, Blue Pool Capital, has invested in the NFL’s growing flag football program. No details on how much or how it’s structured, but the league is putting a lot of money in the league. Sportico explained why:
Flag football comes with many benefits when compared to traditional football. It doesn’t carry the same head injury concerns that worry many parents, it’s easier to adapt to smaller rosters and it’s grown popular among young women who wouldn’t otherwise play the sport. Participation in the U.S. grew 15% from 2019 through 2024, according to data from the Sports & Fitness Industry Association…
The league successfully pushed to have the sport added to the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles and has granted players approval to play in the Olympics. NFL teams have also issued grants to help launch collegiate programs.
He also joined David Blitzer, managing partner of the Philadelphia 76ers and New Jersey Devils, and Ralf Reichert, founder of the e-sports league ESL, in investing in the new international catamaran-racing league, SailGP, now in its fifth year. According to reports in Yacht Magazine, Tsai et al are part of the group that owns the German team license.
Blitzer has also joined Tsai and other sports investors in the Asian University Basketball League which Tsai helped found, as we reported earlier this year in another story on his ambitions to help revive Chinese basketball. Per Sportico. the group includes Tsai, Blitzer, former Bucks principal owner Marc Lasry and Yao Ming, the basketball Hall of Famer who previously headed the Chinese Basketball Association.
A valuation of the league, featuring colleges across greater Asia, isn’t known, but a person familiar with the fundraise characterized it as being at least eight figures. The Tsai family office, Blue Pool Capital, led the round, on top of the seed funding it provided AUBL last year.
The investments will allow the league to expand from 12 to 16 university teams and from six to eight countries, including basketball hotbeds of Australia and the Philippines.
As we noted when we wrote about Tsai’s sports investments last year, they are now roughly equal to his Alibaba holdings.
Why does this matter to Nets (and Liberty) fans? It shows that Tsai and his wife Clara Wu Tsai are more and more committed to sports and particularly BSE which among their sports investments is the cash cow.
Beyond their investments in catamarans and Asian basketball and flag football, the Tsais are mid-way through a $150 million enhancement of Barclays Center, in the early stages of the Liberty’s $80 million practice facility in Greenpoint and working on plans for an arena-centric entertainment district in Brooklyn. The latest iteration of that master plan is an announcement this week that BSE is converting the bottom floor of One Hanson Place, formerly the Williamsburgh Savings Bank, to yet another high-end restaurant. Appropriately, among those reporting on it was Brooklyn Magazine, also part of BSE.
Draft Sleeper of the Week
We’ve written about Mikel Brown Jr. on the site. Now it’s his turn to be featured here. Increasingly, the draftniks see him as the Nets pick at No. 6 if indeed that’s where the Nets pick on the night of June 23 at Barclays Center. Brown, who played for Louisville this past season, seems to tick off more boxes than his rival lead guards. He’s just short of 6’5” and although on the skinny side, he’s athletic and plays on both ends of the court.
Among the four guard prospects, he finished second in height (6’3.5”), first in standing reach (8’ 4.5”), wingspan (6’ 7.50”) in anthrometric measurements; second in both the shuttle run (2.89 seconds), third in 3/4-court sprint (3.24 seconds), and max vertical (39.5 inches). Kingston Flemings finished first in most of the athletic testing.
Among Moreover, Brown is high character. He knows what to say, too, about the prospect of playing in Brooklyn…
Mikel Brown Jr. met with the #Nets: “Yeah. It would be a great opportunity right there. Just continuing to build relationships with them at the time goes on…I mean, it's something that we're definitely interested in and looking forward to building a relationship with.” #nbapic.twitter.com/5CMFKbPYyE
“It would be a great opportunity right there,” Brown told Brian Lewis at the Combine about being drafted by the Nets. “Just continuing to build relationships with them as the time goes on and continue to talk to my family and my circle and my agent and the people behind me.
“It’s something that we’re definitely interested in, and looking forward to building a relationship with [the Nets].”
“I honestly don’t pay attention to the mock drafts,” Brown said. “You never know where you’re going to go on draft night. If you want me to be honest with you, it’s all about which team fits you the best. … I just know what I can bring to a team right now. I’m more focused on myself rather than trying to compete with [others]. I’m competing with myself at this point.”
He’s also highly likeable, as Corey Taluba of No Ceilings told our Collin Helwig on the Brooklyn Podcast…
A piggyback-proof back, Steph Curry numbers, and a coachable mindset?
The case for Mikel Brown Jr. is getting stronger 👀
Perfect. A little touch of humility amid the promise of star power.
As a freshman, Brown averaged 18.2 points and 4.7 assists per game for the Cardinals. He scored 45 points during a 118-77 win over N.C. State, breaking Cooper Flagg’s ACC freshman single game scoring record. A troublesome back injury kept him out of the NCAA Tournament.
The 45-point explosion showed a wide variety of offensive skills including a quick release on his three and a willingness to drive the lane, a refreshing trait for a Nets guard.
He hits 10 threes and grabbed nine board as well. He tied the Louisville single-game scoring record as well as breaking the ACC’s rookie record.
The back injury is troublesome, although Brown says he feels fine and looked fine at the Combine. As ESPN reported at the time of the injury, his back bothered him more than once during the season. He missed four games prior to March Madness after missing eight earlier in the season.
That said, he did well in big games. N.C. State was 18-6 when he exploded for 45. He also scored 29 vs. Kentucky and 20 each in back to back vs. Baylor and SMU. As Taluba also told Helwig, he’s got that Trae Young/Steph Curry combo of 3-point shooting and high-level passing.
Will be there? That could indeed be an issue.
Final Note
No, the Nets are not moving back to New Jersey. Not now. Not ever. Period, end of story. The state of New Jersey, now headed by Governor Mikie Sherrill, did not support the Nets while in New Jersey.
It’s particularly bothersome since the Tsais are spending more than $140 million of their own money in upgrades at Barclays Center after renovating the abandoned Modell’s store across the street into a community basketball center. More millions. Then there’s the Liberty’s $80 million practice facility in Greenpoint. That’s commitment, one that New Jersey never ever made.
LAS VEGAS , NV - MAY 24: Josh Manson (42) of the Colorado Avalanche defends Tomas Hertl (48) of the Vegas Golden Knights during the second period of Game 3 of the NHL Western Conference Final at T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas, Nevada on Sunday, May 24, 2026. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post)
Denver Post via Getty Images
LAS VEGAS — Tomas Hertl weaved his way toward the slot and scored the winner at 8:21 of the third period to rally the Golden Knights from a three-goal deficit Sunday night and defeat the Colorado Avalanche 5-3 and move to within one game of their third Stanley Cup Final appearance in nine years.
The Golden Knights go for what would be a stunning sweep over the President’s Trophy winners on Tuesday night. Chicago in 2013 was the last team to win the President’s Trophy and the Stanley Cup in the same season.
Colorado will try to become just the fifth team to win a series after falling behind 3-0. Los Angeles in 2014 was the most recent team to accomplish that in eliminating San Jose in their first-round series.
Vegas, which trailed 3-0 after the first period, was 0-19 in the playoffs when behind that many goals. The Avalanche were 74-1 when holding such a lead.
Colorado has other concerns because front-line center Nathan MacKinnon might not be fully healthy going forward. MacKinnon, who has 15 points this postseason and led the league in the regular season with 53 goals, took a puck to his right knee in the second period and played through the injury.
That comes just as the Avalanche got back star defenseman Cale Makar, who missed the first two games this series because of an upper-body injury.
Hertl, Mark Stone and William Karlsson each had a goal and assist. Keegan Kolesar and Brett Howden scored the other Golden Knights goals, and Mitch Marner and Kaedan Korczak each tallied two assists. Carter Hart made 32 saves.
Stone’s goal came on his first appearance since suffering a lower-body injury in Game 3 of the second-round series against Anaheim. Kolesar, who had gone 37 playoff games without a goal, picked up his first point of the postseason.
Gabriel Landeskog, Nazem Kadri and Jack Drury scored for the Avalanche, and Devon Toews had two assists. Scott Wedgewood stopped 18 shots.
The Avalanche dominated the first period by taking a 3-0 lead, but the Golden Knights thought they had cut the deficit to 2-1 when Pavel Dorofeyev appeared to score a power-play goal with 7:26 left. Officials immediately waved it off and the decision was upheld on video review.
Colorado then made the Golden Knights pay when Drury found himself alone on a breakaway, deking Vegas goalie Hart to score the short-handed goal with 6:45 left for the three-goal lead.
But the Golden Knights didn’t let the two-goal swing trouble them too much, with Stone’s power-play goal 19 seconds into the second period sparking a three-goal answer to tie the game heading into the final period of regulation.
Then Hertl broke the deadlock — and now the Golden Knights just need to win one of four games.
There was a moment of silence before the game for two-time NASCAR champion driver and Las Vegas native Kyle Busch. He died Thursday at 41 after severe pneumonia developed into sepsis, according to a statement from Busch’s family.
The Spurs defeated the Thunder in Game 4 of the Western Conference finals.
SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Victor Wembanyama had 33 points, eight rebounds, five assists and three blocks and the San Antonio Spurs held Oklahoma City to its second-lowest postseason total, beating the Thunder 103-82 in Game 4 on Sunday night to tie the Western Conference finals.
De’Aaron Fox had 12 points, 10 rebounds and five assists for San Antonio, which has not lost three consecutive games all season. Stephon Castle and Devin Vassell added 13 points each.
“You definitely don’t want to go down 3-1 going into their house,” Vassell said. “We knew we had to respond and that’s how you respond. You get stops. You don’t try and focus on the offensive end, you get stops, you get out of transition. You guard your yard and that’s what we did.”
Game 5 is Tuesday in Oklahoma City, followed by Game 6 on Thursday in San Antonio.
Victor Wembanyama drives to the basket during the Spurs’ win against the Thunder on May 24. NBAE via Getty Images
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander had 19 points on 6-for-15 shooting for the Thunder.
Wembanyama took Oklahoma City’s 123-108 victory Friday in Game 3 personally. The 7-foot-4 star from France said he needed to be better to make his teammates better. He was monumentally better Sunday night — and so was San Antonio.
“We all have high standards and I know I have a lot of responsibilities, but I’m here for it,” Wembanyama said. “Yeah, it was better today. It wasn’t perfect. But, you know, all of us, I’m talking about the whole organization, so we’re going to have to do things that we didn’t sign up for.”
The Spurs limited the Thunder to 33% shooting from the field, including 6 for 33 on 3-pointers (18%).
“I think we made a great defensive adjustment,” Vassell said. “I don’t want to say what it was. We were just able to rotate the shooters and not give them so many wide-open 3s. I feel like they had so many wide-open 3s over the past couple games and you’ve got to respect them, especially if they’re making them. So, we were trying to cut them out with that and just stay playing fast.”
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander attempts a shot during the Thunder’s May 24 loss to the Spurs. NBAE via Getty Images
After being outscored 76-23 in bench points in Game 3, San Antonio’s reserves scored 30 points while limiting Oklahoma City to 34.
The Spurs had another hot start in Game 4 after opening the previous game on a 15-0 run. Unlike Friday’s lopsided loss, the Spurs never relinquished that lead.
Victor Wembanyama celebrates after the Spurs defeated the Thunder on May 24. Getty Images
“They just punched us in our face early,” Gilgeous-Alexander said. “It’s two games in a row they’ve come out the aggressor. The last game we were able to course correct. Tonight, we just didn’t do so.”
After blocking Jared McCain’s layup under the rim, Vassell tossed an alley-oop pass to Wembanyama for a dunk as part of 16-0 run that gave the Spurs a 23-8 lead with 4:19 remaining.
“I feel like with who we are, we need to start games like this,” Wembanyama said, “but it really doesn’t mean anything for the way it holds. I mean, it helps for sure, but it’s a whole ‘nother type of effort to be consistent rather than just hitting first.”
San Antonio had an assist on all 10 field goals in the first quarter.
San Antonio held Oklahoma City to 38 points in the first half, tied for its second-lowest half in the past four regular and postseasons. The Thunder are 2-9 when they score less than 40 points in any half over the last five seasons.
Oklahoma City’s franchise low is 65 points in a playoff loss to Memphis on May 3, 2014, and its second-fewest points had been 85 against San Antonio on May 21, 2014.
The Cavaliers are still believing despite trailing the Knicks 3-0 in the Eastern Conference finals.
CLEVELAND — Sunday morning, after watching film, Kenny Atkinson met with his team.
The Cavaliers coach opened up the floor to anyone who wanted to speak.
He asked his players a question: Why do you believe we can come back?
“I had eight great answers,” Atkinson said. “I said, ‘Well that makes me believe more because you guys really believe in yourselves.’ Each guy had a different reason or two. I don’t want me to get up and say, ‘Hey we got to believe.’ It’s not that. It’s, do they believe? They do believe.
“They’re probably not steeped in the stats that you guys all know, how hard this is. But I don’t think they care about that. They believe in the group, they believe in each other, they believe we’ve had really good stretches against this team.”
The Cavaliers are facing an incredibly difficult climb, trailing the rampaging Knicks 3-0 in this Eastern Conference finals series.
Kenny Atkinson reacts during the Cavaliers’ Game 3 loss to the Knicks on May 23. Getty Images
No NBA team has ever rallied from being down 3-0 in the history of the playoffs.
Only four teams have ever forced a Game 7 after facing this kind of a deficit.
Cleveland has dropped the past two games by a combined 29 points, after blowing a 22-point fourth quarter lead in the series opener.
Yet the Cavs still have faith, even if it might be unfounded.
Jaylon Tyson looks to move the ball during the Cavaliers’ Game 3 loss to the Knicks on May 23. AP Photo
“I still feel like we’re the better ballclub,” reserve guard Jaylon Tyson said. “Obviously, we haven’t shown that. We have another opportunity Monday to keep this thing going.”
The Cavaliers point to outplaying the Knicks for most of Game 1 and their ability to respond to adversity throughout the playoffs.
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They have won a pair of Game 7s in dominant fashion and don’t believe they have played a complete game against the Knicks yet.
They are running out of time.
It has to happen Monday night, or their season will be over.
“I think, ultimately, it’s a pride thing,” Tyson said. “Tomorrow is going to be a big test for where we are mentally. We’re at home — we don’t lose at home. We should take pride in that. These dudes, call a spade a spade, they’re trying to sweep us. Me, personally, I don’t take that lightly.
“Whether I’m playing five minutes or 15 minutes, whatever it is, I’m going to put my best foot forward and I know my teammates are going to put their best foot forward and try not to let that happen. I think that’s a pride thing.”
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — Reid Detmers was nearly perfect for eight innings while striking out a career-high 14, and the Los Angeles Angels beat the Texas Rangers 2-1 Sunday night on Justin Foscue’s ninth-inning throwing error for their first series sweep this season.
Detmers retired 24 of 25 batters, allowing a home run to Jake Burger on a changeup leading off the second. He induced 23 misses among 51 swings and his strikeouts tied Seattle’s Emerson Hancock on May 2 against Kansas City for the most in the major leagues this season.
Mike Trout tied the score with a broken-bat RBI single off MacKenzie Gore in the third.
After Sam Bachman (1-0) struck out Burger to strand the bases loaded in the ninth, Jorge Soler singled against Gavin Collyer (1-1) with one out in the bottom half. Jo Adell was hit by a pitch, Donovan Walton pinch ran for Soler and Oswald Peraza flared a potential double-play, one-hopper over the mound.
Foscue fielded the ball near second and juggled the ball as pulled it out of his glove for a throw while stepping on the base. His throw to first bounced away from Burger, and Walton scored standing up.
Los Angeles’ sweep followed a 1-9 skid.
Up Next
Rangers: RHP Kumar Rocker (2-4, 3.60 ERA) will oppose Astros RHP Tatsuya Imai (1-3, 8.31) at Houston on Monday night.
Angels: RHP Jack Kochanowicz (2-3, 4.55 ERA) will face Tigers RHP Keider Montero (2-3, 3.83) at Detroit Tuesday night.
May 24, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; San Antonio Spurs center Victor Wembanyama (1) reacts in the first quarter against the Oklahoma City Thunder during game four of the western conference finals for the 2026 NBA playoffs at Frost Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Scott Wachter-Imagn Images | Scott Wachter-Imagn Images
San Antonio avoided losing three games in a row for the first time all season and routed Oklahoma City 103-82 in a Game 4 blowout. The Spurs earned and built upon their advantage by staying home on Shai Gilgeous-Alexander defensively and depriving his teammates of open looks throughout many minutes of hellacious fullcourt coverage. San Antonio better shepherded their possessions tonight, while making life very difficult for Oklahoma City, as they were held to 33% shooting overall and 6-for-33 from three.
The Spurs received a far more complete effort in game 4 that they glaringly lacked in the previous two games. Wembanyama (33 points, 8 rebounds, 5 assists, and 3 blocks) and Castle (13 points, 6 assists, and 3 rebounds) found a timely third contributor in Devin Vassell (13 points, 6 rebounds, and 3 assists). The team’s ailing point guards – De’Aaron Fox (12 points, 10 rebounds, and 5 assists) and Dylan Harper (7 points, 5 rebounds, and 2 assists) looked no worse for the wear and steadied the Spur attack. San Antonio also benefitted from spirited bench minutes – in just the right dosages by Coach Johnson – from veterans Luke Kornet (6 points and 7 rebounds), Harrison Barnes (5 points and 3 rebounds) and Keldon Johnson (6 points and 3 rebounds).
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (19 points, 7 rebounds, and 4 turnovers) and Isaiah Harteinstein (12 points and 7 rebounds) paced Oklahoma City in defeat tonight. Chet Holmgren (10 points and 9 rebounds) competed capably in the first half. The Thunder’s vaunted bench production (16 points) was far muted than in Games 1-3.
San Antonio leapt ahead again in the opening frame, but in a vastly different manner than game 3, they were able to harrass the Thunder players into numerous forced looks. All of Oklahoma City’s offense – over the first 8+ minutes – came from none other than Hartenstein. The Spurs pieced together a 14-0 run spanning the middle minutes in the frame, and Oklahoma City could not find any open airspace for their shooters. Gilgeous-Alexander broke a nearly nine minute non-Hartenstein drought with a jumper, and then meekly fell to the floor on a Fox contest a minute later. A 5-0 burst brought the Thunder to within nine with Wembanyama (11) and Vassell (6) almost matching OKC’s total.
San Antonio played arguably its finest defense in this series so far over several sequences to start the second period. Unfortunately their offense could not match that excellence (5-for-23 in the first 10+ minutes), and Harteinstein continued to add to his team-leading total with a floater and dunk. San Antonio continued to squander handfuls of possessions, and Holmgren kept his team within three possessions with free throws and second-chance tips. With the Thunder continuing to hover close, Vassell’s jumper and Wembanyama’s buzzer-beating 47-footer extended San Antonio’s lead to 12.
A 7-0 run featuring Area 51 forced Dort to the bench with his fourth foul and put Oklahoma City down 16 early in the third quarter. Castle found Wembanyama in transition for a near free throw line dunk to put the Spurs back up 18. Harper rewarded Castle for his efforts with a rim-rattling lob to grow the lead to 22. Oklahoma City’s offense looked ever-so-slightly flustered. But even though the Thunder stayed under 50 points for 3/4 of the period, they were able to slice the deficit to 60-78 going to the fourth.
Observations
The Dirk Nowitzki ‘let’s go home’ sequence: Harper, after dribbling an head-scratching 15 seconds on the perimeter, split two defenders, and thre down a monstrous slam on Jaylin Williams to make it 92-70.
After Harteinstein bearhugged Wembanyama on an early loose ball, Scott Foster flew in from midcourt to call the foul on Harteinstein.
Just as I was about to type “Julian Champagnie might shoot us out of this series, (9-for-28 after the first quarter for the series)” he did an upfake and drove it right to the rim for a layup. He’s going to need to turn into Bruce Bowen 2.0 over these next 2-3 games to justify his playing time.
Reggie Miller – referencing San Antonio’s other rookie – called him ‘Bryant Carter’ pregame.
It’s not just the foul merchant stuff on the offensive end, but when Gilgeous-Alexander stood up Vassell as he went upcourt on the dribble late in the half, the Spurs guard (6’5” / 195 lb) stayed upright, while the MVP (6’6” /195 lb) crumpled into a heap.
My three sisters met up in San Antonio to go to game 4 in honor of dad. My mom (out of nowhere) said we lost game 3 because wer’re ‘too comfortable.’ We truly are a Spurs family now.
Sequence of the Game #1: 90 seconds into game action and during what looked like yet another OKC second chance bucket, Wembanyama met Holmgren at the rim and turned away his dunk try.
Sequence of the Game #2: During the Spurs’ 14-0 run in the first, Vassell looked like he might get beat for a reverse lay-up, but erased McCain’s attempt, and took it downcourt and fed Wembanyama for a lob slam.
Sequence of the Game #3: To close the first half, Castle doggedly grabbed a rebound away from Jaylin Williams, and the ball ended up in Wembanyama’s hands – who knocked down a Curry-like pull-up from half court.
Sequence of the Game #4: Partway through the third period, Vassell, after stealing an errant Holmgren pass, fed it to a streaking Harper – who (while completely neglecting the franchise superstar) tossed a soaring lob to Castle to make it 75-53.
Game Rundown
The teams’ centers traded buckets from the opening tip. While Wembanyama played well off of him, Harteinstein surprisingly added two more floaters. Castle connected on a contested jumper and spoonfed a lob to Wembanyama. Shockingly, Harteinstein’s fourth pop-a-shot put the Thunder up one. After Champagnie failed to convert several long-distance attempts, he drove deep into the paint for a lay-up. Nearly five minutes in, the three big OKC bench contributors (Caruso, Jaylin Williams, and McCain) from game 3 were inserted, but it was Johnson who immediately deflected two passes and willed home a shot over Williams. Castle and Vassell’s catch-and-shoot threes put the Spurs up 19-8. Vassell deflected the ball away on one Thunder possession, and Castle forced Holmgren to dribble the ball off of his foot on another. San Antonio’s offense stalled out a bit near the end of the stanza; yet they left it still up 28-19.
Isaiah Joe’s and-1 finished a 10-0 Thunder run spanning the first and second quarters. Harper drew Holmgren’s and Caruso’s second fouls in succession. But San Antonio concerningly missed free throws (8-for-15 at one point). Kornet’s second field goal put the Spurs up nine, which was answered by Harteinstein’s FIFTH FLOATER. San Antonio then forced a shotclock violation and unforced turnover – both on Gilgeous-Alexander. Coach Daigneault’s challenge on the latter sequence was upheld and Oklahoma City lost the ability to pose any more challenges. Barnes drew Lu Dort’s third foul halfway through the period, which put San Antonio into the foul bonus, too; Mr. 100%‘s hustle either extended San Antonio possessions or prevented the Thunder from leaking out in transition. Harper forced yet another Gilgeous-Alexander turnover, and Wembanyama drew Caruso’s third foul at the other end. Vassell’s shotclock beating fadeaway was outdone by Wembanyama’s audacious pull-up jumper from halfcourt to make it 50-38.
Wembanyama started the third by answering Cason Wallace’s three with an emphatic and-1 lob over Hartenstein and Dort, and Castle powered through Thunder defenders for a pair of lay-ups. Wembanyama (on Hartenstein) and Castle (on Wallace) combined to swat away two more shots to force another OKC shotclock violation. Vassell’s free throws put the Spurs up 25. Bryant committed a charge, and then inexplicably fouled McCain 40 feet from the basket #rookiemistakes. The Thunder finally passed 50 points 9 1/2 minutes into the quarter as part of 7-0 run. Kenrich William’s two triples negated Wembanyama’s microburst, and the Spurs went to the fourth up 18.
Angels fans wave their shirts and chant "sell the team" during the eighth inning of a game at Angel Stadium on Wednesday. (Ronaldo Bolaños/Los Angeles Times)
Lifelong Angels fan Johnny Gonzalez has reached his boiling point as the team sits at the bottom of the standings, but he’s not giving up. And he’s not alone.
The Angels completed a surprise sweep of the Rangers Sunday, but the team still is tied for the worst record in Major League Baseball with a 20-34. Their fans spent the holiday weekend pushing back against the idea that the franchise would never be more than a bargain option amid rising prices all around them.
Frustrated fans have gone shirtless during the Angels’ homestand and chanted for owner Arte Moreno to “sell the team.” And about 75 fans heeded Gonzalez’s call for a protest, gathering in front of the Angel Stadium State College Boulevard entrance on Saturday chanting “sell the team,” “we want playoffs” and “winning matters.” Drivers passing the spectacle honked their horns in support.
“They’re not doing much for us fans,” said Gonzalez, who organized the protest using the Instagram account @AngelsBoycott. “It seems like every other team is just doing a lot more than us, despite us having a huge following [and] having some of the best players to ever play the game. I mean, it’s just like a lack of commitment, to say the least, and that’s why we’re here today.”
Angels fans wave signs and urge owner Arte Moreno to sell the team to an ownership group willing to invest more in winning during a pregame protest Saturday at Angel Stadium. (Joaquin Ruiz / For The Times)
It has been three months since Angels owner Arte Moreno told the Orange County Register that, according to Angels survey results, winning was not a top-five priority for fans and that data showed they valued affordability, safety and a “good experience” first.
Outrage over the remarks has grown as the Angels remain anchored at the bottom of the standings.
With a megaphone in his hand, Gonzalez pointed to the Ducks’ recent Stanley Cup playoff run as proof that Anaheim enjoys winning. He also noted how the nearby Dodgers and even the Padres demonstrate how Southern California teams can play for the postseason.
The Angels have missed the MLB playoffs for 11 consecutive seasons — including six with stars Shohei Ohtani and Mike Trout on the roster — and have reached the postseason six times since Moreno purchased the team in 2003 after the franchise’s sole World Series title win in 2002.
Team officials did not respond to The Times’ request for comment on the fans’ protest, but manager Kurt Suzuki addressed the “sell the team” chants that are so loud they can be heard during Angels television broadcasts.
“I know it’s a thing, the no shirts and waving,” Suzuki said. “But yeah, we see it. We recognize it. They have the right to their opinion, and … they cheer for the guys, they roll-call them. I think it’s pretty neat for them to have that kind of support.”
A fan wears a bag over his head that says "Sell the Team Arte!!!" during a game against the Rangers on Friday at Angel Stadium. (Mark J. Terrill / Ap Photo/mark J. Terrill)
Suzuki added that the Angels remain focused on winning and haven’t paid the chants too much attention.
The Angels entered Sunday’s game ranked No. 9 in MLB attendance with 34,555 announced fans per night, according to ESPN. There are swaths of empty seats during every home game, suggesting some season ticket holders are choosing to stay home.
There is an expanding contingent of fans in the upper deck adjacent to the right-field foul pole who have chanted “sell the team” while waving T-shirts, joining in on a trendy “tarps off” fan movement across MLB sparked by Cardinals fans in St. Louis.
Angels fans who haven’t joined the protests are pleased to see the calls for change.
“I think it’s good that there’s fans that are passionate enough to actually speak out, to want to see a better team and really want to get us back into the playoffs,” Darren Shimasaki, an Angels fan from Yorba Linda, said Friday.
Debbie and Reed Olive, meanwhile, said they usually attend games for the promotions.
“You’re not going to come away with the wins,” Debbie said. “So, we got to get something for our ticket price.”
Even the fan experience unrelated to winning that Moreno touted has taken a hit.
Angels officials said they quickly resolved a rodent infestation Orange County health inspectors flagged at an outdoor food stand in View Level Section 432. Videos of stadium workers capturing a possum in one fan section and spraying gnats on the field during the last few weeks haven’t helped the team’s image.
Reed said the rodent infestation “was a bad look” and that the Angels need a new stadium in addition to a new owner.
Catcher Logan O’Hoppe, who has spent his five-year career with the Angels, said he understands the fans’ frustration.
“We don’t like not doing well, either,” O’Hoppe said. “It’s not OK to us. It doesn’t matter how much we’re getting paid or that we get treated great throughout the league and things like that. We hate it, too. I think people definitely don’t realize that. I think I can speak for a lot of guys in here that we dedicate our lives to this. … We’re not happy with how it’s going, but we’re doing everything we can to fix it.”
O’Hoppe is a New York Rangers fan and gets frustrated when his team struggles, but he said he reminds himself that “we’re all humans.”
The Rangers' Josh Jung is tagged out at home by Angels catcher Logan O'Hoppe on Friday at Angel Stadium. (Mark J. Terrill / Ap Photo/mark J. Terrill)
Angels left fielder Wade Meckler, who made his debut on Friday night, is an Orange County native who grew up cheering for the team.
“I mean, I get it,” Meckler said. “It’s a hungry fan base. The fan base is hungry for a winning team. So I understand, you know, being frustrated. They just really want a winning team.”
Meckler has been following the Angels since age 5 and remembers feeling dejected after attending the Angels’ 4-1 home loss to the Royals in Game 2 of the 2014 American League Division Series.
“It’s a super loyal fan base,” Meckler said. “I feel like they show up with energy every day.”
The Angels are on track to miss the postseason for a 12th consecutive season, prompting restless fans to call for new owners who will invest in building a team capable of reaching the playoffs.
“Arte don’t know what he’s talking about,” said Austin Kleschka, an Angels fan who joined Gonzalez at the front of Saturday’s protest. “Winning is a priority. We want that.”
Angels pitcher Reid Detmers delivers during the first inning of a win over the Rangers on Sunday at Angel Stadium. (Caroline Brehman / Associated Press)
Reid Detmers had a career-high 14 strikeouts and pinch runner Donovan Walton touched home on an errant throw in the ninth to give the Angels a walk-off 2-1 win at Angel Stadium and their first three-game sweep of the season.
With one out and runners on first and second in the ninth, third baseman Oswald Peraza grounded into a fielder’s choice at second. Rangers second baseman Justin Foscue bobbled the ball and first baseman Jake Burger couldn’t cleanly field his throw, allowing Walton to advance from second to score the game-winning run.
The Angels’ dugout erupted as Walton scored.
“That was amazing,” Peraza said. “I went up there and just put the ball in play, and not trying too much. I’m happy for the sweep. And yeah, amazing.”
The win sealed the Angels’ fourth series victory and second three-game winning streak of the year.
Detmers (1-5) entered on a three-game skid and finished dominantly after yielding a second-inning home run to Burger.
The left-handed pitcher ultimately gave up one hit and one run through eight innings — his first time pitching through eight innings in 2026 and first time since his no-hitter as a rookie in 2022 — while setting a new personal best with 14 strikeouts to zero walks.
“I mean, you realize it, but you don’t really think much of it,” Detmers said when asked if he was aware of his strikeout count. “It’s more just, ‘How can I get this next guy out?’ Like I said a little bit ago, just stick with the process, don’t overthink stuff. There’s not a whole lot that goes into it, to be honest with you …”
In front of an announced crowd of 36,903 on “Little League Day” in Anaheim, the 26-year-old used 96 pitches to lower his ERA from 5.07 to 4.57 in the win.
Rangers left-handed starter MacKenzie Gore (3-4) dueled, too, giving up one hit, two walks and one run through six innings.
“Gore was really good today,” Detmers said. “His stuff was really good today. He kept us off balance and got out of a couple of big situations.”
But the Angels’ offense, finishing with four hits, found a way to make do without solely relying on the long ball.
Mike Trout started the Angels’ scoring in the third with a two-out single to score Sebastián Rivero from second and tie the score at one.
The Angels’ run support behind Detmers was far from ideal. But Angels manager Kurt Suzuki is proud of his team’s effort in what was a pitcher’s duel.
“Like we talked about, you put the ball in play, things happen,” Suzuki said. “You never know what can happen when you put the ball in play. And you know, [Peraza] showed right there with the speed and putting it in play … forcing the issue a little bit.”
After Detmers and Gore sat down, Gavin Collyer (0-1) earned the loss, and Angels right-handed reliever Sam Bachman earned his first win of the year after striking out Rangers right fielder Brandon Nimmo to get out of a two-out, bases-loaded jam in the ninth.
Glad his team won, Detmers considers Sunday’s game his second-best career performance after his no-hitter. Suzuki, who was Angels teammates with Detmers during his no-hitter from four seasons ago, also chimed in.
“Yeah, I mean, never discredit a no-hitter, right?” Suzuki said. “A no-hitter is special. But for him, I think what made [Sunday] … he was better was the strikeouts, right? It was not many balls put in play, that’s for sure … He struck out 14 guys, [and] to do it under 100 pitches, that’s even more impressive. That means you’re getting in, getting out of there really quick. So, I think … just probably the best start he’s had.”
Despite the recent uproar among fans frustrated with the Angels, whose 20-34 record is tied for worst in MLB with the Rockies, the Angels aim to stay hot.
“Well, as you know, we need more wins,” Peraza said. “[We’re] working very hard every day for that result.”
The Detroit Red Wings entered the 2008 Stanley Cup Finals as the favorites over the young Pittsburgh Penguins, who were only three years into the Sidney Crosby era.
The Red Wings had defeated the Nashville Predators in six games in the Western Conference Final, swept the rival Colorado Avalanche in four games in round two, and held off a rally by the Dallas Stars in the Western Conference Final, winning in six games.
Following a special ceremonial puck drop at center ice featuring Steve Yzerman and Mario Lemieux, the game was on.
While it appeared that the Red Wings had taken a 1-0 lead thanks to a goal from Nicklas Lidstrom, it was called back thanks to Tomas Holmstrom's reputation of being a net-front presence.
However, their fellow Swede Mikael Samuelsson would eventually break the ice in the second period, beating Marc-Andre Fleury with a backhanded wraparound shot. Samuelsson struck again early in the third period, doubling Detroit's lead with his second goal of the evening.
Detroit's Dan Cleary tallied a shorthanded goal later in the period, followed by a late power-play goal from eventual Conn Smythe Trophy winner Henrik Zetterberg in the waning seconds.
Goaltender Chris Osgood stopped all 19 shots that he faced for the shutout.
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National coach Andrew MacDonald has “full trust” that Australia’s multi-format cricketers will make the tough decision to skip next year’s Indian Premier League if they feel it would jeopardise their Ashes preparation.
CLEVELAND, OHIO - MARCH 27: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers brings the ball up court during the third quarter against the Miami Heat at Rocket Arena on March 27, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. The Cavaliers defeated the Heat 149-128. 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 Jason Miller/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Cleveland Cavaliers had a turbulent regular season after seemingly everything went exactly their way the year before. The one player who was dependable night in and night out to keep things on the rails was Donovan Mitchell. They don’t come close to putting up 52 wins if it wasn’t for his steady hand on the wheel.
The individual consistency and stellar play have landed Mitchell on the All-NBA Second Team. This is the third time he’s made an All-NBA team, with all of them coming in Cleveland. He was named to the second team in 2022-23 and the first team last year.
Mitchell averaged 27.9 points and 5.7 assists per game with an effective field goal percentage of 56.3%. All three of those categories are the second-best marks of his career. He participated in 70 regular-season games.
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All-NBA votes aren’t done by position anymore. The first team slot goes to the five players who receive the most All-NBA votes, and so forth. Mitchell received the eighth most points. He was behind Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Nikola Jokic, Victor Wembanyama, Luka Doncic, Cade Cunningham, Jaylen Brown, and Kawhi Leonard.
Players must participate in at least 65 games to be eligible for All-NBA votes. The league made an exception for both Luka Doncic and Cade Cunningham. Both of their seasons were cut short at 64 games due to injuries.
James Harden received one second-team vote and three third-team votes. Evan Mobley received one third team votes. Both Harden and Mobley made All-NBA teams the year before.
Mar 13, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Chicago Cubs shortstop Ben Cowles against the Chicago White Sox during a spring training game at Camelback Ranch-Glendale. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images
It was a Sunday bullpen game for Iowa today as Gabe Klobosits started and allowed three runs in the top of the first inning. Memphis didn’t score again until the ninth. The final line on Klobosits was three runs on four hits over two innings. He walked one and struck out four.
Ryan Jensen threw the next two innings and got the win, retiring all six batters he faced. Jensen struck out one.
Iowa took the lead for good with a nine-run second inning, highlighted by a grand slam by shortstop Ben Cowles. It was Cowles third home run of the season. He also had a two-run double in the eighth, giving him six total RBI on the game. Cowles final line was 4 for 6 with two doubles and the grand slam. He also walked once and scored three runs.
DH Chase McCormick clubbed a solo home run in the fourth inning, his fifth one the season. McCormick went 2 for 4 with a double, the home run and a walk. He scored three runs and drove in two.
Right fielder Justin Dean was 2 for 5 with a walk and three RBI. He scored two runs.
Third baseman Owen Miller went 3 for 5 with an RBI double. Miller had two total runs batted in and scored twice.
Second baseman Scott Kingery was 2 for 5 with two runs scored.
Catcher Eric Yang was 1 for 3 with two walks and three runs scored.
Center fielder Brett Bateman was 2 for 3 with a walk and a sacrifice fly. Bateman scored once and drove in two.
Dawson Netz was activated off the injured list to make this start, which unfortunately did not last long. Netz struck out the side in order in the first, but he got knocked around in the second and didn’t finish the inning. He took the loss after giving up three runs on three hits over 1.1 innings. Netz struck out three and walked one.
Jace Beck tossed two scoreless innings of relief. He gave up just one hit and issued one walk while striking out four.
DH Edgar Alvarez was 2 for 4 with a double and two runs scored.
Catcher Ariel Armas doubled in a run in the fifth inning. Armas went 1 for 3 with two overall RBI.
Koen Moreno gave South Bend a great start to the game with four scoreless innings. Moreno only allowed one hit and one walk while striking out four.
Nazier Mulé kept the shutout going in the fifth and sixth innings, but he got hammered in the seventh to cough up the lead. Mulé’s final line was four runs on two hits and three walks over 2.1 innings. He also had two wild pitches. Mulé struck out three.
Grayson Moore let two runners inherited from Mulé score, but finished out the inning and got the win after the Cubs retook the lead in the top of the eighth. The final line on Moore was no runs on one hit over two-thirds of an inning. He struck out one and did not walk anyone.
Eli Jerzembeck went the rest of the way for a two-inning save. The only baserunner Jerzembeck allowed was a one-out walk in the eighth. He struck out three.
Center fielder Christian Olivo hit a two-run single in the top of the eighth that ended up being the winning hit. Olivo went 2 for 4 with the two runs batted in. He also stole a base.
Third baseman Alex Madera was 2 for 3 with a walk and one run scored.
Shortstop Ty Southisene went 1 for 2 with three walks and two steals. He scored one run.
A two-run single in the first inning by first baseman Cole Mathis, who was 1 for 5.