Ex-Panthers Goaltender Steps Into The Crease For The Hurricanes As Their Comeback Attempt Falls Short; Could He Start Game 4?

On Saturday night, with Game 3 in Vegas after an emotional Game 2 win, the Carolina Hurricanes were looking to take a series lead in the Stanley Cup final. 

The game started fairly similarly to the previous two. Carolina controlled most of the play in the first period, but in the second period, the Vegas Golden Knights flipped the script. 

Through the first two games, the Golden Knights have outscored the Hurricanes 3-1, but in Game 3, they scored four goals, highlighted by a hat trick by Mitch Marner. 

To start the third period, trailing by four goals, Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’Amour pulled goaltender Frederik Andersen out of the crease in favor of ex-Florida Panther netminder Brandon Bussi.

“There’s no reason to leave Freddie in there the way that game was going... (Bussi) gave us a chance,” said Brind’Amour. “The overtime winner is a tough break. I hate it for him, because he was playing great.”

Bussi was put to the test to stop a Marner penalty shot and succeeded. That changed momentum, as the Hurricanes pulled off a four-goal comeback, which included three goals in 39 seconds. The Hurricanes were able to send a second consecutive game to overtime, but luck wasn’t on their side.

The Hurricanes drove play to start the first overtime stanza, but their pressure slowly fizzled out. In the second overtime frame, Shea Theodore fired a slap shot from the point that missed the net but ricocheted off the boards, off Bussi’s foot, and into the goal. 

Pair Of Former Panthers Have Opportunity To Win Stanley Cup With The HurricanesPair Of Former Panthers Have Opportunity To Win Stanley Cup With The HurricanesFormer Florida Panthers defenseman Mike Reilly and goaltender Brandon Bussi will have the opportunity to win the Stanley Cup with the Carolina Hurricanes.

With the tally, the Golden Knights took an emotional Game 3 victory by a score of 5-4. 

Bussi turned away 18 of the 19 shots he faced, but it wasn’t enough. Although could it be enough for coach Brind’Amour to consider turning to Bussi for Game 4? Andersen hasn’t been as stoic as he was in the first three rounds, and the Hurricanes will need a spark in Game 4.

“We’ll figure all that out later,” said the Canes bench boss about the goaltending situation in Game 4. “We’ve got a couple of days to reassess how we’re going to go about the next game.” 

It’s a difficult decision that Brind’Amour will have to ponder between now and Tuesday. 


Image

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Former Flyers Interim Coach Takes Charge of KHL Team

Making a somewhat surprising trip across the pond, a former Philadelphia Flyers interim coach is jumping to the KHL, taking over one of the league's better teams.

After five years, former Flyers coach Scott Gordon has returned to the bench as the head coach of a professional hockey team, following his appointment as the new head coach of the KHL's Traktor Chelyabinsk.

Flyers fans will remember Gordon, 63, as the coach who replaced the fired Dave Hakstol in the 2018-19 season, before returning to his post as Lehigh Valley Phantoms head coach in the AHL.

Gordon coached the Phantoms for six seasons before he was succeeded by Ian Laperriere, and guided the Flyers to a 25-22-4 record in 51 games during his lone season in charge of the big club.

Previously, Gordon served as the head coach of the New York Islanders for parts of three seasons, amassing a dismal record of 64-94-23.

Flyers Make Egregious Mistake in New NHL Mock DraftFlyers Make Egregious Mistake in New NHL Mock DraftPhiladelphia Flyers fans will hate the team's selection in the latest NHL mock draft.

During his time with the Flyers organization, Gordon wasn't given the lay of the land to work with, but the former NHL goalie did help develop players such as Alex Lyon, Anthony Stolarz, Travis Sanheim, Phil Myers, Shayne Gostisbehere, Scott Laughton, Cam York, Morgan Frost, Tyson Foerster, and Joel Farabee over his six-year tenure.

Now in the KHL, Gordon takes over a Traktor team that is just one year removed from an appearance in the Gagarin Cup Final.

"We've had nothing but positive feedback about Scott Gordon from the start, both from his North American colleagues and the players he worked with. Everyone noted his high level of organization and culture in building key team processes: daily life, training, game preparation, and team relations," Traktor GM Alexei Volkov was quoted as saying by Championat.

"The number of players who graduated from his teaching and went on to play at a high level in the NHL is truly impressive. In daily conversations about Chelyabinsk and Traktor, Scott repeatedly emphasized his readiness to apply his vast experience to a new location and would gladly accept the club's offer. We are confident in his personal qualities and have already begun a great deal of work together."

Gordon and his new Traktor team will be seeing quite a bit of Flyers prospect Egor Zavragin, who was just traded to Metallurg Magnitogorsk on Saturday; Metallurg and Traktor both play in the Kharlamov Division in the KHL's Eastern Conference.

After leaving the Flyers organization in 2021, Gordon served as an assistant coach for the San Jose Sharks from 2022 to 2024, went to be an assistant coach for the USHL Youngstown Phantoms, then took over as head coach of the USHL Waterloo Black Hawks.

Now, the one-time Flyers boss is going international for the first time.

Detroit Tigers look to take rubber match vs Seattle Mariners on Sunday

All good things must come to an end, they say, and that applies to the Detroit Tigers as well. On Saturday afternoon, their four-game winning streak came to an end at the hands of the Seattle Mariners, who used some hard contact to hand Keider Montero and Co. a 4-0 loss at Comerica Park.

Never fear, the Motor City Kitties still have a chance to win their second-straight series on Sunday afternoon, but they will have to do it with right-hander Jack Flaherty on the mound. The good news is that the 30-year-old’s last start against the Tampa Bay Rays was a tidy one, shutting out his opponent over five innings, allowing five hits and two walks while striking out six for his first win of the season — an 8-0 triumph in St. Pete.

Flaherty’s last appearance against Seattle came in the ALDS Game 5 last September, in which he tossed a pair of scoreless, hitless frames during the 13th and 14th innings en route to a 3-2 team loss. He also started Game 3, but fared quite a bit worse, surrendering four runs (three earned) on four hits (one home run) and three walks while striking out six across 3 1/3 innings in an 8-4 loss.

For the Mariners, fellow righty Luis Castillo will take the mound for his 10th start of the season. Two of the 33-year-old’s last appearances have come in relief, including his most recent outing in which he earned a blown save and a win after giving up two runs (one earned) on two hits and two walks with three strikeouts over five frames against the Arizona Diamondbacks in Seattle.

Similarly to Flaherty, Castillo faced Detroit twice in the ALDS last fall — once as a starter and as a reliever. Across those two appearances, he held the Tigers to just one hit and four walks while striking out four over six scoreless frames, both resulting in team wins.

Here is how the two matchup in Sunday afternoon’s series finale.

Detroit Tigers (26-39) vs. Seattle Mariners (34-31)

Time (ET): 1:40 p.m.
Place: Comerica Park, Detroit, Michigan
SB Nation Site:Lookout Landing
Media: Detroit SportsNet, MLB.TV, Tigers Radio Network

Game 66: RHP Jack Flaherty (1-7, 5.31 ERA) vs. RHP Luis Castillo (2-5, 5.53 ERA)

PlayerGIPK%BB%GB%FIPfWAR
Flaherty1357.225.811.831.34.400.7
Castillo1255.122.48.836.64.180.6

FLAHERTY

CASTILLO

MLB Predictions and Moneyline Picks for Sunday, June 7

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Sunday’s 15-game MLB slate is filled with opportunity.

On today’s massive card, I’m targeting the sticks and bullpens in strong spots.

Find out more in my MLB picks for Sunday, June 7. 

MLB moneyline picks for June 7

MatchupPick
Red SoxRed Sox
vs
YankeesYankees
Yankees
-150
White SoxWhite Sox
vs
PhilliesPhillies
White Sox
+163
PiratesPirates
vs
BravesBraves
Pirates
+127
OriolesOrioles
vs
Blue JaysBlue Jays
Orioles
+113
MarinersMariners
vs
TigersTigers
Mariners
-117
RaysRays
vs
MarlinsMarlins
Marlins
+104
AthleticsAthletics
vs
AstrosAstros
Astros
-117
RoyalsRoyals
vs
TwinsTwins
Twins
-104
RedsReds
vs
CardinalsCardinals
Cardinals
-127
GuardiansGuardians
vs
RangersRangers
Guardians
+104
BrewersBrewers
vs
RockiesRockies
Rockies
+144
NationalsNationals
vs
DiamondbacksDiamondbacks
Diamondbacks
-122
AngelsAngels
vs
DodgersDodgers
Angels
+150
MetsMets
vs
PadresPadres
Mets
+104
GiantsGiants
vs
CubsCubs
Cubs
-117

Prices courtesy of Polymarket as of 6-7.

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Expert MLB moneyline picks for June 7

Red Sox vs Yankees: Yankees (-150)

Yankees win probability: 60%

The Yankees are comfortable home chalk behind AL Cy Young contender Cam Schlittler.

While New York boasts a superior 125 wRC+ over the past 14 days, Boston's sharper bullpen (3.67 FIP over the past 14 days) looms.

Still, the Yankees' big sticks should secure the win.

White Sox vs Phillies: White Sox (+163)

White Sox win probability: 38%

Philadelphia is heavily favored, but its offense has completely cratered to a dead-last 71 wRC+ over the past 14 days.

David Sandlin faces a Phillies unit whose bullpen owns a 3.01 SIERA over the past 14 days, but Chicago’s hot bats (113 wRC+ over the past 14 days) are a premium road underdog value.

Pirates vs Braves: Pirates (+127)

Pirates win probability: 44.1%

Atlanta is the chalky favorite, but its offense has sported a measly 92 wRC+ over the past 14 days. 

Despite Bubba Chandler’s shortcomings, Pittsburgh’s scorching offense (128 wRC+ and an elite 10.8% walk rate over the past 14 days) can damage Bryce Elder early.

Orioles vs Blue Jays: Orioles (+113)

Orioles win probability: 46.9%

This features a tight underdog price for Baltimore.

Both offenses are neck-and-neck over the past 14 days, but Toronto's bullpen has unraveled to a messy 4.44 SIERA over the past 14 days. 

Take the plus-money side holding the safer late-game bullpen safety net (3.65 SIERA over the past 14 days).

Mariners vs Tigers: Mariners (-117)

Mariners win probability: 53.9%

With Luis Castillo on the mound and a stable 3.56 SIERA relief crew behind him over the past 14 days, the M's stand tall against a Detroit bullpen carrying a hazardous 5.49 FIP over the past two weeks.

Rays vs Marlins: Marlins (+104)

Marlins win probability: 49%

The market completely overlooks Miami here. Tampa Bay's bullpen is a certified fade zone, dragging a brutal 6.28 FIP over the past 14 days.

Sandy Alcantara stifles the Rays early while Miami's superior rolling 105 wRC+ offense over the past two weeks takes over.

Athletics vs Astros: Astros (-117)

Astros win probability: 53.9%

Houston targets a solid road win with hidden bullpen dominance.

Under the hood, Astro relievers flash an elite 3.61 SIERA and a stifling .163 opponent average over the past 14 days, giving them a massive mathematical advantage to shut down the Athletics' bats late.

Royals vs Twins: Twins (-104)

Twins win probability: 51%

A coin-flip matchup with Minnesota as the short favorite.

With both offenses stuck below a sub-90 wRC+ over the past 14 days, the decision is to run completely away from a melting Kansas City bullpen that has yielded a catastrophic 6.49 FIP over the same span.

Reds vs Cardinals: Cardinals (-127)

Cardinals win probability: 55.9%

St. Louis commands the edge against a reckless Cincinnati offense striking out at a league-worst 28.4% rate over the past 14 days.

The disciplined Cardinals bullpen features a stellar 3.19 SIERA over the past 14 days, allowing them to cruise.

Guardians vs Rangers: Guardians (+104)

Guardians win probability: 49%

Texas is favored behind Jacob deGrom, but the advanced metrics flip the script.

Joey Cantillo only needs to keep it close before handing over to Cleveland's MLB-best bullpen (2.92 SIERA and 20.5% K-BB% over the past 14 days) to steal a road win.

Brewers vs Rockies: Rockies (+144)

Rockies win probability: 41%

Milwaukee starter Shane Drohan is walking the world with an 8.10 BB/9 rate.

His volatile control faces a Rockies bullpen carrying a league-worst 5.04 xFIP over the past 14 days, but the altitude will punish Drohan first.

Nationals vs Diamondbacks: Diamondbacks (-122)

Diamondbacks win probability: 55%

Arizona holds a sound probability edge.

Washington's worn-down bullpen has completely hit a wall over the past 14 days (4.90 FIP and 4.49 SIERA), leaving the Diamondbacks' steadier bullpen (3.50 SIERA over the past 14 days) to lock it down.

Angels vs Dodgers: Angels (+150)

Angels win probability: 40%

The Dodgers sit as heavy favorites, but the prices are wrong.

Both lineups are raking over the past 14 days, yet both bullpens sport identical, bloated 4.89 FIPs. Grab the Angels at a plus-money shootout price.

Mets vs Padres: Mets (+104)

Mets win probability: 49%

With both offenses ice-cold and sitting bottom-five in wRC+ over the past 14 days, the edge belongs to the Mets' superior relief core, which boasts a high 26.0% strikeout rate and 3.47 SIERA over the past 14 days.

Giants vs Cubs: Cubs (-117)

Cubs win probability: 53.9%

The Cubs carry the advantage tonight.

Even with San Francisco's elite 142 wRC+ over the past 14 days, its bullpen is a toxic waste site (4.94 SIERA over the same span).

Jameson Taillon navigates early, allowing Chicago's steadier relievers to close.

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Orioles news: Bradish struggles, Basallo’s MRI clean

TORONTO, ON- JUNE 6 - Colton Cowser #17 of the Baltimore Orioles misses a Ernie Clement #22 of the Toronto Blue Jays triple in the fifth inning as the Toronto Blue Jays play the Baltimore Orioles at Rogers Centre in Toronto. June 6, 2026. Steve Russell/Toronto Star (Steve Russell/Toronto Star via Getty Images) | Toronto Star via Getty Images

Hello, friends.

Not as fun a day of Orioles baseball yesterday. The narrative of improvement for Kyle Bradish was put on pause, hopefully for just that one game. At times his defense didn’t do him favors, but even so, there’s only so much to blame others when the pitcher gives up nine hits and three walks in four innings. Friends, that’s a WHIP of 3. That is bad. The Orioles lost, 6-4. Check out Stacey’s recap of the game for more of the not-so-lovely totals.

If you are inclined to try to find silver linings in losses, you could feel a little bit better about a few things in the game. Colton Cowser homered. If he is improving, that’s a plus for the team’s fortunes. Pete Alonso hit a two-run homer against a current Birdland heel, Jeff Hoffman. That was fun. Gunnar Henderson had three hits. The Orioles need that guy to heat up. They need all of those guys to heat up. It’s nice to see them fight to make it closer after they fell behind, 6-1.

Still, a loss is a loss. The Orioles have already lost too many games this year to feel like they can take away moral victories out of losses. Although they have improved lately, they dug themselves a hole earlier. Not as deep of a hole as they dug last year, but still a hole. It’s not any less deep just because at the moment they are within a game of a wild card spot. Other teams are going to get hot eventually and if the Orioles do not keep pace, we’ll be looking back on their record through May 20 or so with regret.

As bad as yesterday’s game was, the Orioles have a chance to take this series in Toronto if they can put together a better game today. That would give them a 4-2 record across this little AL East road trip. It’s not enough to put them in a good place, but it would be good enough to feel good about.

They will be going up against former Oriole Kevin Gausman as they attempt to take the series today. Gausman did not pitch in the series between these two teams in Baltimore. He’s doing great so far this season, with a 3.36 ERA and 2.95 FIP through 13 starts. The Jays have gotten a lot of value out of the five-year contract they signed him to ahead of the 2022 season.

One guy the Orioles actually did sign to a five-year contract is pitching for them today. Shane Baz has also been working on a narrative of improvement lately. He’s turned in four good starts in a row. It might take another four in a row for him to make up for his early season struggles. It’s been good to see him on the right track. Hopefully, unlike Bradish, he can stay on the right track in his outing against the Jays. The finale is set to begin at 1:37 Eastern.

Orioles stuff you might have missed

Samuel Basallo’s MRI clean after leaving Friday’s game with abdominal discomfort (The Baltimore Banner)
The best news from yesterday was that there wasn’t anything bad on Basallo’s MRI, particularly regarding a potential oblique problem. Still, if he needs to heal for a couple of days, I hope they give him the chance to do that.

Orioles add Huff and subtract Wilson before Saturday’s game (School of Roch)
One thing that’s going to enable the team to rest Basallo a little bit is the presence of a third catcher on the roster. Sam Huff is back. Perhaps not for long.

Wild card gives Orioles more chances to dream of October (Baltimore Baseball)
Orioles in October? With this offense, maybe. (The Baltimore Sun)
How Orioles climbed back into the AL playoff race behind a resurgent starting rotation (CBS Sports)
On some level, it is absurd to talk about the Orioles being in the playoff picture when they’re 31-34. But the reality is, they are in it. They were a game back after losing yesterday. If they can consistently sustain good play for the rest of June, they’ll probably be at least .500 and then it won’t feel as weird to talk about their wild card positions. They’ve gotta get the last few wins out of the way to get there, though.

Birthdays and Orioles anniversaries

In their 65th game last year, the Orioles lost to the Tigers, 5-3, falling to 26-39 on the season. Cade Povich took the loss after allowing five runs in 4.2 innings, while the offense combined for just six hits in a Tigers bullpen game. Six of the 14 O’s players who appeared in this game will be active today. The 2026 Orioles are currently five games better than that team was. It’s better than we feared a month ago, but more work remains to be done.

There are a few former Orioles who were born on this day. They are: 2000-02 first baseman/outfielder Chris Richard, 1999 reliever Heathcliff Slocumb, and 1968 pitcher Roger Nelson. Today is Nelson’s 82nd birthday, so an extra happy birthday to him.

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday to you! Your birthday buddies for today include: author Elizabeth Bowen (1899), Wienermobile designer Brooks Stevens (1911), actor Liam Neeson (1952), musician Prince (1958), and wilderness survival expert Bear Grylls (1974).

On this day in history…

In 1099, Crusaders initiated a siege of Jerusalem. The city was captured about a month later, leading to the founding of the Christian Kingdom of Jerusalem.

In 1776, Richard Henry Lee of Virginia presented a resolution to the Second Continental Congress declaring that “these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States.” The Lee Resolution is what ultimately led to the Declaration of Independence the next month.

In 1892, Mr. Homer Plessy was arrested in a “whites only” car on a train after refusing to leave his seat. The appeals case resulting from this arrest, Plessy v. Ferguson, shamefully enshrined the “separate but equal” doctrine for a long time afterwards.

In 1938, Chinese Nationalist forces destroyed a series of levees on the Yellow River to flood the area and halt the Japanese advance through the country. Somewhere between 500,000 and 1,000,000 civilians were killed as a result of this flooding.

In 1975, Sony debuted its Betamax product, the first video cassette recorder product. Betamax ultimately lost the “format wars” to the later-arriving VHS.

**

And that’s the way it is in Birdland on June 7. Have a safe Sunday. Go O’s!

Mets Daily Prospect Report, 6/7/26: Full-season sweep

Jonathan Santucci throws a pitch in a white Binghamton Rumble Ponies uniform with dark blue pinstripes and a dark blue hat
Jonathan Santucci | (Photo: Chris McShane)

Triple-A: Syracuse Mets (32-30)

SYRACUSE 5, SCRANTON/WILKES-BARRE 0 (BOX)

One night after getting no-hit, Syracuse blanked the RailRiders, with opener Nate Lavender, starter Jack Weisenburger, and Jonathan Pintaro combining to keep Scranton/Wilkes-Barre off the board, scattering seven hits and walking one. Ji Hwan Bae homered in the bottom of the first to give Binghamton the lead and they held it for the entirety of the ballgame. Ryan Clifford hit his 14th homer to drive in a pair, Cristian Pache doubled in a run, and Matt Rudick scored on a wild pitch.

·  RF Nick Morabito: 1-5, 2B, K

·  2B Ji Hwan Bae: 1-3, R, HR (3), RBI, BB, K, SB (20)

·  1B Christian Arroyo: 1-4, R, 2B, K

·  LF Ryan Clifford: 1-4, R, HR (14), 2 RBI, 2 K

·  3B Andy Ibáñez: 1-4, 2B, K

·  SS Yonny Hernández: 1-4, R, 2B

·  CF Cristian Pache: 2-4, 2B, RBI, K

·  C Kevin Parada: 1-4, K

·  DH Matt Rudick: 1-3, R, BB, SB (4)

·  LHP Nate Lavender: 1.2 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 4 K

·  RHP Jack Weisenburger: 5.1 IP, 3 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 4 K, W (1-2)

·  RHP Jonathan Pintaro: 2.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K

Double-A: Binghamton Rumble Ponies (22-34)

BINGHAMTON 4, READING 1 (BOX)

The red-hot Rumble Ponies won another one, their fourth in a row, this time powered by a strong performance by Jonathan Santucci. The left-hander got off to a somewhat slow start in April, but he’s since gotten back into the groove of things, allowing one run over 6.2 innings, his longest outing of the year. An Eli Serrano sac fly put Binghamton on the board in the bottom of the first and they held that lead for the entire game. Vincent Perozo added a run in the bottom of the second with a solo homer and Nick Lorusso chipped in with a two-run homer of his own.

·  DH Chris Suero: 1-4, R, 2B, BB, 2 K, SB (17)

·  CF Eli Serrano III: 1-3, R, RBI, BB

·  RF Jose Ramos: 0-4, K

·  3B Nick Lorusso: 3-4, R, HR (9), 2 RBI, K

·  C Vincent Perozo: 2-4, R, HR (3), RBI, K

·  LF Jaylen Palmer: 0-4, K

·  SS Wyatt Young: 3-4, 2B, SB (7)

·  1B TT Bowens: 0-4, 3 K

·  2B Kevin Villavicencio: 0-3, BB, K

·  LHP Jonathan Santucci: 6.2 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 5 K, WP, W (1-5)

·  RHP Saul Garcia: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 1 K, WP, H (4)

·  RH Guillo Zuñiga: 1.1 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, WP, S (1)

High-A: Brooklyn Cyclones (21-34)

BROOKLYN 12, JERSEY SHORE 4 (BOX)

The Brooklyn bats brought fireworks to the Jersey Shore (big time asterisk Lakewood, but as a New Yorker, I cannot adjudicate whether Lakewood should rightly be called the Jersey Shore or not), tying a season-high by scoring 10 runs. Every hitter got on base at least once, with multiple Cyclones reaching base twice, with Mitch Voit and Ronald Hernandez both reaching base three times and Grae Kissinger five times. Cuban left-hander Daviel Hurtado looked solid in 5.1 innings of work, and while the bullpen was a little shaky after he left, Brooklyn’s lead was almost unsurmountable.

·  2B Mitch Voit: 1-4, 2 R, HR (7), 2 RBI, BB, HBP, SB (17)

·  SS Grae Kessinger: 1-2, 3 R, 2B, 2 RBI, 3 BB, HBP, E (1)

·  C Ronald Hernandez: 1-4, R, 2B, RBI, 2 BB, K

·  1B Corey Collins: 1-5, R, 2B, 2 RBI, BB, 3 K

·  CF Yonatan Henriquez: 1-6, 2 K

·  RF John Bay: 1-4, R, BB, 2 K, SB (14)

·  3B Colin Houck: 1-4, R, BB, 2 K

·  LF Trace Willhoite: 2-4, 2 R, 2 2B, 2 RBI, K, HBP

·  DH Jamari Baylor: 1-4, R, 2B, 2 RBI, BB, K

·  LHP Daviel Hurtado: 5.1 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 5 K, W (1-0)

·  RHP Tanner Witt: 1.2 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 1 K, HBP

·  RHP Cristofer Gomez: 1.0 IP, 1 H, 2 R, 2 ER, 2 BB, 1 K

·  LHP Gregori Louis: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 0 K

Single-A: St. Lucie Mets (24-27)

ST. LUCIE 5, CLEARWATER 1 (BOX)

It was one of those games where there weren’t any standout pitching or hitting performances, but St. Lucie got it done. The offense pounded out 5 runs on 9 hits and a pair of walks, while Joel Lara, Christian Rodriguez, and Luis Alvarez combined to throw eight scoreless innings, with Franyel Diaz giving up a run in the fifth in his lone inning of work.

·  SS Elian Peña: 1-3, 2 R, BB, K, SB (18)

·  2B Trey Snyder: 2-4, 2 R, 2 SB (1, 2)

·  DH Antonio Jimenez: 2-4, RBI, 2 K, 2 SB (5, 6)

·  LF Yohairo Cuevas: 1-3, 2B, RBI, BB, K, SB (1)

·  RF Simon Juan: 0-4, 3 K, E (4)

·  C Chase Meggers: 1-3, R, SB (2)

·  CF Branny De Oleo: 1-3, 2 K

·  3B Jeremy Rodriguez: 0-3, K

·  1B Jackson Hauge: 1-3

·  RHP Joel Lara: 4.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 3 BB, 4 K, HBP

·  RHP Franyel Diaz: 1.0 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 2 BB, 2 K, W (1-0)

·  RHP Christian Rodriguez: 2.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, H (3)

·  RHP Luis Alvarez: 2.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 3 K, S (1)

Rookie: FCL Mets (12-12)

FCL CARDINALS 12, FCL METS 8 (BOX)

·  RF Bohan Adderley: 2-4, R, HR (4), 2 RBI, BB, K

·  2B Vladi Gomez: 2-5, R, K, E (2)

·  CF Wyatt Vincent: 0-5, 2 K

·  C Josmir Reyes: 0-2, R, 3 BB, E (3)

·  SS Anthony Frobose: 3-4, 3 R, 2B, 3B, RBI, BB

·  DH Roybert Herrera: 3-4, R, 2B, HR (1), 3 RBI, BB, K

·  LF Heriberto Rincon: 1-5, 3 K

·  1B Yeider Mindiola: 0-4, K

·  3B Diover De Aza: 1-3, R, 2B, BB

·  RHP Joel Díaz: 1.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K

·  RHP Dillon Stiltner: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 1 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 3 K, E (3)

·  RHP Camden Lohman: 0.1 IP, 2 H, 6 R, 6 ER, 4 BB, 1 K, L (0-1)

·  RHP Omar Victorino: 1.1 IP, 3 H, 4 R, 4 ER, 4 BB, 1 K, WP

·  RHP Yoralbert Cadiz: 2.1 IP, 0 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 3 BB, 5 K, HBP

·  RHP Jean Brito: 2.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K

STAR OF THE NIGHT

Jonathan Santucci

GOAT OF THE NIGHT

Cam Lohman

Historical Comparisons For This Year’s NBA Finals Matchup

CLEVELAND, OH - JUNE 16: The Golden State Warriors hoist the Larry O'Brien Trophy after a victory over the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game Six to win the 2015 NBA Finals at The Quicken Loans Arena on June 16, 2015 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 2015 NBAE (Photo by Andrew D. Bernstein/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The New York Knicks are just two wins from earning their first championship since they last hoisted the Larry O’Brien trophy all the way back in 1973. They might as well have won it already.

After Friday’s 105-104 win over the San Antonio Spurs in Game 2 of the NBA Finals, New York is standing in one of the rarest spots in history—certified rarefied air—as one of just three teams ever to win the first two games of the title series on the road.

The other two: the 1993 Chicago Bulls (57-25 in the regular season, 11-2 in the playoffs) and the 1995 Houston Rockets (47-35, 15-7).

The outcome of those Bulls and Rockets finals runs? Jobs finished and happy endings.

The 1993 Bulls opened the Finals with two wins against the Suns, beating them in Phoenix twice and in six games overall before Michael Jordan announced his first retirement.

Two years later, the 1995 Rockets took Games 1 and 2 in Orlando against the Magic, went back to Houston, and swept Shaquille O’Neal, Penny Hardaway, and a supremely inexperienced Magic squad that resembles a certain contemporary squad we’ve gotten familiar with this week.

That is the regal company the Knicks joined as Friday leaked into Saturday.

New York surely sweated getting there, but to the disbelief of many—both on the haters’ ship and within the Garden faithful—the Knicks are mammoth favorites to win the chip on FanDuel, boasting -520 odds to the Spurs’ +400.

The Knickerbockers trailed by 14 in Game 1 but ended up winning 105-95. They once again trailed by 12 in the first half of Game 2, led by 14 in the fourth, then watched San Antonio rip off a 14-0 run before Jalen Brunson bailed them out late.

Brunson was kinda awful, let’s admit it, shooting just 7-for-25 in Game 2 but putting on his Captain Clutch cape at the perfect time to tie the game with a midrange jumper, grab a gift from Victor Wembanyama, and hit the go-ahead free throw with 9.5 seconds left.

Karl-Anthony Towns kept building his NBA Finals resume by leading New York with 21 points and 13 rebounds. A desperate-as-you’ve-never-seen-him Mikal Bridges added 20 points, six rebounds and six assists. Brunson finished 20 points, six assists, five rebounds and five steals. Josh Hart decided it was a nice evening to improve his cardio. Mitch and Shamet were off-the-pine saviors again. Jeremy Sochan didn’t play.

Now, looking at it from a Spurs point of view—if you’re into that or are one of the two San Antonio fans still not mad enough to read this blog—I’m sorry to inform you that here comes another ominous warning.

Five teams have come back from 0-2 to win the NBA Finals: the 1969 Celtics, 1977 Trail Blazers, 2006 Heat, 2016 Cavaliers and 2021 Bucks (yay!)… but those comebacks all came after the trailing team lost the first two games on the road, not in their supposedly strong feud. Ugh, sorry to disappoint you, Coyote.

The Spurs have lost the first two at their own Alamo Frost AT&T Arenadome or whatever the name of that thing is these days. No Finals team has ever recovered from that specific start to win the championship.

So, yeah. The Knicks still need two more wins. The Spurs have five chances to win four games. The math works for both heading into Game 3, but facts are facts, not Kenny Atkinson’s analytics.

The Bulls got there and won. The Rockets got there and won. New York is halfway there, and why not Knicks in four?

Open Thread: Tony Parker on inspiring Victor Wembanyama

PARIS, FRANCE - JANUARY 23: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs greets Tony Parker before the game against the Indiana Pacers on January 23, 2025 at The Accor Arena in Paris, France. 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 Garrett Ellwood/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Spurs legend Tony Parker spoke regarding the time he discovered Victor Wembanyama had worn his #9 Spurs jersey and what it meant to him.

“Victor was with me in ASVEL, my team, the French team that I own. And the whole time you know he was with us I had a great time and we had great talks and we won a championship. When the Spurs drafted him number one, he put a picture on his social media with my jersey when he was ten-years-old. He had a picture of my jersey. And I saw that picture and I was like ‘wow,’ he never showed it to me when he was with me in ASVEL. And he waited that moment where when he got drafted to show that picture to the world. And I saw him with my jersey. I was like ‘oh, wow.’ So the way that Michael [Jordan] inspired me, I felt very proud that I inspire some one like that.”

It stands to reason. Parker was one of the players from France to make it into the NBA. He met unprecedented success with the Spurs earning a Finals MVP in 2007, one of his four NBA titles. He’s inspired so many players over the years. But for one of his proteges and members of his team to become the biggest player on the planet, that must be quite an honor.

N ow Victor is in the NBA Finals on the same team which Parker spent a majority of his career.

Victor and the Spurs landed in New York on Saturday. They meet with media on Sunday. Game 3 is Monday night. The Spurs are facing the Knicks in Madison Square Garden. With an 0-2 hole, they have their work cut out for them.


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How Gregg Popovich helped Knicks’ Mike Brown arrive at this moment: ‘A special human being’

Even though Knicks coach Mike Brown earned some of his coaching chops as a Spurs assistant under Gregg Popovich from 2000–2003, he didn’t dare to reach out to him ahead of the NBA Finals.

The fear? Sabotage.

Knicks coach Mike Brown is two wins from an NBA championship. Daniel Dunn-Imagn Images

“He’s savvy,” Brown said before Game 1 against the Spurs. “He’s very competitive. If I reached out to him and asked him for some advice, he’d give me some BS that worked against us.”

Brown’s joke had Popovich’s fingerprints all over it.

See, when you’re raised in Popovich’s coaching tree, certain values are emphasized above all others, namely humor.

During Popovich’s 29 seasons at the helm of the Spurs, he wanted people around him who could laugh at themselves. He turned to humor to cut through the weighty pressure of 82-game marathon seasons.

Though he was fiercely competitive, he emphasized that basketball is just a silly game. He has been known to cut people from his staff who couldn’t dish or take a joke.

Perhaps that’s why the partnership between Popovich and Brown worked.

Brown is deeply likable. He’s quick to laugh. He doesn’t hesitate to poke fun at himself.

And now, after leading the Knicks to a 105-104 win over the Spurs in Game 2 on Friday, Brown is two wins from his first NBA championship as a head coach.

It has been a long road for Brown, who has spent the last 29 years as either an assistant or head coach for eight NBA franchises, including getting fired four times as the leading man.

Brown has coached some of the league’s biggest stars, including LeBron James and Kobe Bryant. He coached under some of the most venerated coaches, including Popovich and Steve Kerr. But now, for the first time in his career, the Larry O’Brien Trophy is within his grasp as the head of a locker room.

Brown points to his time under Popovich as one of the biggest reasons he has arrived at this moment.

“It was huge,” Brown said. “Pop — I talk about MSG being iconic, New York City being iconic — Pop is iconic, especially here in San Antonio. When you talk about the game of basketball, he’s iconic to everybody that enjoys the game of basketball.”

During Brown’s three seasons under Popovich, he watched firsthand how the winningest coach in NBA history operated. They won a championship together in 2003, the second of Popovich’s five rings amid his historic 22 straight years in the postseason.

Brown said his biggest takeaway from Popovich actually has very little to do with basketball.

“The neat part about him is it’s not just about the X’s and O’s that you learn,” Brown said. “You know you can never be him, but you learn people skills. You learn how to connect, not just the 15 or 18 players, you learn how to connect an entire city, maybe even an entire state.”

That insight has proven instrumental for Brown, who’s in his first season at the helm of the Knicks after being fired by the Kings in December 2024. In just a short period of time, Brown has won over Jalen Brunson, Karl-Anthony Towns and the biggest-market city in the NBA.

Gregg Popovich (right) has had a major impact on Mike Brown’s life. Getty Images

But Popovich’s impact on Brown goes deeper than that.

When Brown separated from his wife in 2002, Popovich famously threatened to fire him if he traveled with the team instead of spending a little extra time with his two young sons, who were crying as he took them to the airport to say goodbye.

Popovich also famously offered Brown a lifeline after he was fired by the Cavaliers in 2014. He joined the Spurs as a volunteer consultant, which helped put him back on the map ahead of getting hired as an assistant with the Warriors in 2016.

“He’s second to none [in] how he treats people off the floor in their personal lives,” Brown said. “I grew a lot personally. Everybody goes through good times and bad times off the floor in their personal life. When I was here, I went through good times and bad times. He helped me tremendously with those.”

The 77-year-old Popovich is now watching the Spurs from the stands, having retired after suffering a stroke in November 2024.

After games, he regularly texts Spurs phenom Victor Wembanyama, trying to help the future face of the league reach his full potential. But down the sideline, in enemy territory, sits another one of his protégés.

Brown is immensely grateful to Popovich for not only helping him reach the apex of his career but for being his friend.

“He’s a special human being,” Brown said.


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The MLB trade deadline demands bravery. Go get Tarik Skubal like he's CC Sabathia.

Let’s see if we can get this straight.

The New York Mets, the National League’s greatest failure at 28-35 and going nowhere even after winning six of their last eight games, still have no interest in shopping Freddy Peralta or anyone else President of baseball operations David Stearns still has faith they can make a postseason run.

The Detroit Tigers, easily the American League’s biggest bust at 26-38, are telling teams that two-time Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal is off limits for now, and after winning four consecutive games against the first-place Tampa Bay Rays and Seattle Mariners, they may even decide to keep him in hopes of a miraculous comeback.

The San Francisco Giants just scored 30 runs in consecutive games against the Chicago Cubs and Milwaukee Brewers – their biggest output since 1944 – and tell you that a sell-off isn’t even whispered about in their front office.

CC Sabathia went 11-2 for the Brewers in 2008 after a July trade from Cleveland.

The Kansas City Royals and Minnesota Twins, two more teams going nowhere, say they aren’t ready to sell considering the AL absolutely stinks, and they are somehow still alive in the wild-card race.

Considering this delusional wave of optimism, they’ll soon have you believing that Rob Manfred and Bruce Meyer are about to enjoy a golf outing and a new collective bargaining agreement finalized over a candlelight dinner.

Seven weeks remain before the Aug. 3 trade deadline, and you have no further to look than the historic collapses by the Tigers and Mets last year, along with the miraculous run by the Cleveland Guardians, to know that wild and crazy things can happen in a pennant race.

Still, let’s have a little dose of reality, can we?

These teams aren’t going anywhere.

So why not at least pick up the phone, start engaging in preliminary trade talks, and see if there’s a potential match, you know, before the deadline?

Would that really be so nuts?

“I understand there are times to do value trades," longtime general manager Doug Melvin and now special assistant for the Brewers, tells USA TODAY Sports, “but sometimes, you’ve just got to go get guys and not worry about that. That’s what holds up some of trade deadline deals. Everyone is worrying about value trades instead of just getting the guys they need.

“Teams are just so afraid to engage early."

Maybe it’s time to take a page out of Melvin’s playbook, who played a vital role in making the Brewers who they are today.

Melvin pulled off one of the greatest deals in Brewers’ history, forever changing the franchise’s destiny in 2008, with a move that will live forever in MLB folklore.

Melvin didn’t worry about hoarding his top prospects. He didn’t freak out over the possibility that one of his prospects could become a future All-Star. He wasn’t panicking about how his move would be perceived by the media.

He just pulled the trigger on July 7, 2008, more than three weeks before the trade deadline, and traded four of his top prospects for impending free agent CC Sabathia of Cleveland.

It changed the course of history.

Sabathia, who was 6-8 with a 3.83 ERA, was acquired for the Brewers’ No. 1 prospect Matt LaPorta, their first-round draft pick a year earlier, along with left-handed pitcher Zach Jackson, right-hander Rob Bryson, and a player to be named later.

The only real hold-up, says Melvin, who began telephoning Cleveland a month earlier to express interest, was with GM Mark Shapiro and assistant Chris Antonetti trying to decide between outfield prospect Michel Brantley and prized infield prospect Taylor Greene as part of the package.

“They were torn, they wanted to see them a little more," Melvin said. “Both were really talented. So I finally said, 'Mark, how about we do this: If we don’t get to the playoffs, we pick the player. If we go to the playoffs, you get the choice and pick the player you want.'"

That player to be named turned out to be Brantley, who became a five-time All-Star and played 15 years in the big leagues.

“We were pretty clear defining what the market was and who we thought would be involved," said then-Cleveland GM Mark Shapiro, now president of baseball operations for the Toronto Blue Jays. “If you look back at the history of the deals, I did, I was definitely an early mover."

It was a deal the two teams liked at the time and would do all over again 18 years later.

“We liked this deal a lot," Shapiro said. “Matt LaPorta was the key guy, but getting Brantley made it an incredible trade."

Just like that, the Brewers’ destiny was dramatically altered.

“It showed our players and our fans," Melvin said, “that we're committed to winning, and winning now."

Sabathia, who cried after getting the news, was given the option to spend a few days with his family and join the Brewers late. He declined. He showed up two days later, walked into an elated Brewers clubhouse and beat the Colorado Rockies in his first game, 7-3, pitching six innings and allowing two earned runs in front of a sold-out crowd. Five days later, he pitched a complete game and homered in a 3-2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds. He threw another complete game and struck out 10 in his next start against the Giants. And in the next, a three-hit shutout against the St. Louis Cardinals.

He become one of the greatest trade deadline acquisitions in baseball history.

Sabathia went 11-2 with a 1.64 ERA with seven complete games in 17 starts. He ignored the advice of his agent and pitched on short rest in his last three starts of the season, throwing 335 pitches the final nine days. And he clinched the Brewers’ first playoff berth since 1982 on the final day of the season, a 3-1, four-hit complete game victory over the Cubs.

A legend was born.

“That was the jolt that we needed," Melvin said. “It meant so much to our players. When you see the players busting their balls and working so hard, the front office has to work harder themselves and see what we can do for them.’’

It also turned out to be a stroke of genius acquiring him early. The Brewers got an extra five starts out of Sabathia, who went 4-1 with a 1.82 in July, pitching three complete games and racking up 39.2 innings.

Sabathia departed after the season for a record seven-year, $161 million contract with the New York Yankees, winning the World Series the next year in 2009, but he left an indelible mark on the Brewers and was inducted into their Wall of Honor last month.

“That jump-started the entire organization," Melvin said.

The Brewers became the ultimate role model for small-market teams, drawing 3 million fans in three of four seasons, beginning with Sabathia’s arrival. They started winning and never stopped, coming within two games of the World Series in 2011, and have now produced nine consecutive winning seasons with seven playoffs berths and five division titles.

It was the single-most impactful trade in Brewers history.

And it was one of the biggest “what-if" misses in Los Angeles Dodgers history.

The Dodgers also were in on Sabathia. Ned Colletti, the former Dodgers GM, believed they were on the verge of reaching a potential deal with Cleveland that would have left the Brewers empty-handed.

The Dodgers offered catcher Carlos Santana, a future All-Star and Gold Glove first baseman; infielder Andy LaRoche; pitcher James McDonald; infielder Ivan DeJesus; and a fifth prospect. Cleveland was sending Sabathia, third baseman Casey Blake and utility man James Carroll to Los Angeles.

Colletti remembers getting a stamp of approval from manager Joe Torre that afternoon (“he was all fired up"), but when he approached owner Frank McCourt, he didn’t want to assume the $10 million in salary while also parting with prospects.

“A few weeks later, we still got Manny Ramirez with Boston paying his salary. And then we got [Greg] Maddux in August. Can you imagine if we had all three of those guys when we played Philly in the postseason?

“If we had gotten those guys, we might have had the guns to beat those guys."

The Dodgers had to wait another dozen years before they won the World Series.

Skubal could be the greatest pitcher to hit the trade block since Sabathia. Just like Sabathia, Skubal will be a rental too, set for the free agent market after the season where he’s expected to command $400 million. And just like Sabathia, Skubal is expected to make that kind of impact, yielding a 41-15 record and 2.41 ERA since 2024.

So, who has the guts like Melvin to pull off a deal for Skubal?

The Yankees? Dodgers? Padres? Cubs? Rays? How about those Brewers again?

“If I’m the Tigers," Melvin said, “I’d think about putting Skubal out there right now."

Skubal, who had arthroscopic elbow surgery five weeks ago, first must prove he is healthy. He’s pitching in a minor league rehab start Sunday, and if all goes well, could return to the Tigers rotation next weekend against Cleveland.

Rival executives believe that Skubal will need to make at least three starts to convince teams he’s healthy.

Perhaps even more important, the Tigers also have to convince themselves they have no chance to get back in the playoff race before moving him.

The trouble is that with expanded playoffs, and the AL being appallingly mediocre, every team believes they still have a chance. The Royals, Angels, Giants and Rockies were the only teams facing a deficit larger than six games entering Saturday.

And there are a bunch of clubs that share the same philosophy waiting until nearly the last possible moment to make deals.

“I think there’s a much more definitive valuation in players," Shapiro says. “Teams have the ability to precisely measure the expected return.

“Back then, we didn’t have the firm capability to determine the impact in value. A lot of it was intuitive. Now, you’re more cautious and more hesitant to move before understanding what the full market value might be.’’

The expanded postseason also decreases the value of making major moves to simply make the playoffs. If they are going to give up a significant part of their future, they want a legitimate chance to win a division title, and not a wild-card berth, to secure a first-round bye.

“Your World Series odds are probably going to be correlated to your odds of getting a bye,” Jed Hoyer, Cubs president of baseball operations, said in his Friday gathering with reporters. “Getting a bye is such a big deal. It’s effectively not only winning one round but also, by getting a bye. In theory, you’re playing an opponent that should be in a lesser state. … The bye is that important.

“If you want to look at it differently, I’d say a lot of the aggressiveness is based on the ability to get a bye.”

Then again, it could be a cop-out. The Dodgers didn’t have a first-round bye last season and still won their second consecutive postseason World Series championship. The Texas Rangers and Arizona Diamondbacks didn’t have byes as wild-card teams in 2023 and were playing one another in the World Series.

When the opportunity presents itself, you better be ready to pounce.

“When I was in San Francisco with Sabes [Giants GM Brian Sabean]," Colletti said, “we were always making rounds of calls in the middle of May, just in case. If you know who you want, there’s no reason to wait.

“I remember learning from my first boss, Dallas Green, and his philosophy: If you are sure who you want, and your team has a chance, don’t wait. These opportunities don’t come around too often.

“You better go for it."

Yes, just like 10 years ago, when Theo Epstein, the Cubs’ president of baseball operations, traded for Yankees All-Star closer Aroldis Chapman. The price was steep. It cost them their top prospect, infielder Gleyber Torres, with Epstein left answering why he was willing to sacrifice the Cubs’ future for the ultimate prize.

“If not now," Epstein said, “when?"

Three months later, Epstein was standing on stage hoisting the World Series trophy, the Cubs’ first championship in 108 years.

“There are times," Melvin says, “that you’ve just got to step up."

It’s beginning to be that time.

Around the basepaths

– If a team acquires New York Mets ace Freddy Peralta at the trade deadline and wants to keep him, they better be ready to pay up. Peralta will be seeking a free agent contract similar to Max Fried’s eight-year, $218 million deal, according to those familiar with Peralta’s expectations.

– MLB executives believe there will be a slow trickle of free agent signings before the CBA expires Dec. 1 but that most agents will prefer to wait to see if a lot more small- and mid-market teams will be involved in free agency when a CBA is finalized.

Boston Red Sox closer Aroldis Chapman is expected to join his eighth different team, and potentially be in the postseason with his sixth different team. He is the top reliever available on every contender’s target list, converting 28 consecutive saves dating back to last season, one shy of his career record.

– St. Louis Cardinals manager Oli Marmol, a candidate for the NL Manager of the Year award, has accepted Dave Roberts’ invitation to be on the National League coaching staff at the All-Star Game. Marmol and Phillies manager Don Mattingly will be the non-Dodger coaches with Roberts.

Minnesota Twins manager Derek Shelton will be on Blue Jays manager John Schneider’s All-Star staff.

– Just in case you wondered why Yankees star Aaron Judge is considered one of the greatest teammates in the game, all you have to know is his response when asked why he didn’t go on the injured list to have his ribs checked out on April 26 when he felt the injury instead of waiting until June.

“Big G [Giancarlo Stanton] is hurt," Judge said. “Max Fried’s hurt. We had a lot of guys banged up. You’ve got to be out there. That’s what they’re paying me to do, to go out there and play."

The Yankees entered Saturday with a .419 winning percentage when Judge doesn’t start since 2022, averaging 3.8 runs a game. They have a .592 winning percentage, averaging five runs a game, when he starts.

– Meanwhile, Diamondbacks second baseman Ketel Marte, who the D-backs tried to trade during the winter, continues to frustrate segments of the organization by opting to take days off. He sat last week when Shohei Ohtani the Los Angeles Dodgers pitched against the Diamondbacks, and then played the next day and hit a walk-off homer.

– There’s no hiding that the Chicago Cubs are desperate for another starter, with their rotation yielding a 6.35 ERA since their 10-game winning streak that ended May 10.

Their starting rotation:

  • Colin Rea: 4.59 ERA.
  • Shota Imanaga: 4.74 ERA.
  • Edward Cabrera: 4.99 ERA.
  • Jameson Taillon: 5.13 ERA.
  • Matthew Boyd: 6.00 ERA.

Still, Hoyer made it clear this week that it’s absurd for them to think about mortgaging the future for Skubal, Peralta or someone else unless they dramatically start playing better, losing 18 of their last 24 games.

“The trade deadline is the furthest thing from my mind right now …” Hoyer said. “Sitting here talking about the deadline, given how we played, seems like the wrong thing to talk about. We have to play better, and we have to put ourselves in a position to do that.’’

The Cubs, who had two 10-game winning streaks, went 37 consecutive days without losing a single game at Wrigley Field. It took them 28 days to win another game at Wrigley this week.

– The Athletics have shown interest in Royals starter Kris Bubic to help out their struggling rotation.

– The free-falling San Diego Padres don’t need Skubal as much as they need someone who can hit.

They are batting .216, which not only is the lowest in MLB, but the lowest in franchise history after 60 games.

Thy also are last in on-base percentage (.291), last in OPS (.651) and second-to-last in slugging (.360).

They are the only team in baseball not to have a single regular with an OPS+ of at least 100, meaning they don’t have even one average hitter on the team.

“The game’s evolving, man," All-Star third baseman Manny Machado, who’s having his worst season, .175 with a .617 OPS, told reporters. “It’s definitely getting harder to play. It’s definitely getting more strategic. I just wish we can get the analytics out of the way. I think there’s too many stats out there. Too many stats, way too many numbers."

– Pitchers are echoing the complaints of Twins pitcher Bailey Ober, who filed a formal complaint with MLB about the quality of baseballs, believing it was the cause of his recent pitching injury, according to the Minnesota Star-Tribune.

– While there has been speculation that San Francisco Giants manager Tony Vitello is so frustrated in his new job and could return to the college ranks after the season, he insists that he’s still happy he took the job, paying him $3.5 million a year, a record salary for first-year managers.

– The Chicago White Sox and St. Louis Cardinals have been two of the biggest surprises in baseball the first half, but please, they’re not about to trade prospects at the deadline to go all-in.

The Cardinals, in fact, are expected to trade reliever JoJo Romero and starter Dustin May at the trade deadline, providing they slip further back in the wild-card race.

A year from now, it may be a completely different story.

– Former Dodgers GM Ned Colletti conveyed a story to Hall of Famer CC Sabathia at the World Baseball Classic that had him laughing.

Colletti, who was the assistant GM with the San Francisco Giants at the time, drove with Giants GM Brian Sabean to Vallejo, California, Sabathia’s hometown, in between games of a doubleheader at Candlestick Park to watch Sabathia pitch as a high school player before the 1998 draft.

“He hit a towering home run to center field," Colletti said. “He was like a man playing with kids. As soon as he hit the homer, we got into the car and went back to Candlestick. Sabes says, 'He’s not falling to us.' And went home."

Well, it turns out they actually did, and missed out.

The Giants, with the 19th pick overall, drafted third baseman Anthony Torcato of Woodland, Hills, California. Cleveland drafted Sabathia with the 20th pick.

Torcato’s big-league career lasted just 47 at-bats. Sabathia pitched 19 seasons, won 251 games, and went to the Hall of Fame.

– The Boston Red Sox are an absolute mess and are 10-21 at Fenway Park. They are on pace to go 26-55 at home. The last time they played a full season and won fewer than 30 home games was in 1932 when they finished the season with a 43-111 record.

The Red Sox, who slashed their scouting department to add more analytics, may want to take a hard look at the Tampa Bay Rays, Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Yankees, Philadelphia Phillies and San Diego Padres.

They have the most pro scouts in MLB and still have a robust analytic department.

– The Cleveland Guardians are the only team that has started only five pitchers this season, while 12 teams have already used 10 or more starters, led by the Houston Astros with 13.

– The Phillies are 29-0 when leading after eight innings this year and are an MLB-best 14-5 in one-run games.

Take a bow, closer Jhoan Duran, who’s 15-for-15 in save opportunities, retiring 21 of the last 23 batters he’s faced.

Follow Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Tarik Skubal trade will require major MLB deadline bravery amid rumors

Where are they now? Pensburgh 2021 Top 25 Under 25 update

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - APRIL 29: John Marino #6 of the Utah Mammoth celebrates his goal against the Vegas Golden Knights in the first period of Game Five of the First Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at T-Mobile Arena on April 29, 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ethan Miller/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Let’s jump back in time to the 2021 prospect pool for the Pittsburgh Penguins. It was not a very good time for the youth in the organization, considering that the Pens only made one first round pick from 2016-21 during their period of maximizing the contending window in those days. Part of the price for banners that will hang forever is a willingness to sacrifice assets for the future.

As you’ll see in the list, the Penguins did that in a major way. Pittsburgh ranked 29th in prospects rankings from The Athletic in Feb. 2021 and were 29th again in Feb. 2022. Not much was expected, and now a few years later it’s clear that lived up to the billing with only three players currently in the NHL and minimal overall impact from the pool at this time.

#25: Santeri Airola: I always liked Airola’s style as a puck mover in the limited looks from the summer development camps he attended in Pittsburgh. In the end, he never signed in North America and has played in the Finnish league his whole career. Now 25, he had his best season for producing points in 2025-26 for SaiPa Lappeenranta with 34 (11G+23A) in 57 games. In the end, he turned out to be a pretty decent player in that league.

#24: Jan Drozg – Drozg stayed in the Pens’ organization until 2022, mostly as an AHL player. Then came four middling years in the KHL before going to the Austrian league in 2025-26.

#23: Will Reilly – Reilly also stayed with the Pens in the AHL through 2022, won the ECHL Kelly Cup with Florida in 2024 and last year played for the KHL team in Shanghai. Pretty interesting career journey for him.

#22: Clayton Phillips – A former third round pick in 2017, Phillips never got his career on track. He only played one game with WBS in 2022 after finishing up at Penn State. He then played for two different ECHL teams in 2022-23 outside of Pittsburgh’s organization and retired.

#21: Chase Yoder – Always saw a lot of Brandon Tanev in the fellow Providence product of Yoder, but he didn’t grit/effort his way to the big time. The Pens didn’t sign Yoder, who finished up his five collegiate seasons in 2025. Last year was his first pro year, split between ECHL (27 points in 39 games) and AHL (five points in 23 games) on an AHL contract.

#20: Kirill Tankov – Tankov, only 24 years old, still has his rights retained by the Pens but it doesn’t look like he’s in the plans for the NHL team. His career hit a bump in the road after suffering a neck injury in 2022, but he did graduate to a full-time KHL spot this season and scored 13 points in 42 games.

#19: Raivis Ansons – Ansons has hung on the very fringes of the organization, he got an entry level contract but couldn’t win a full-time AHL job by the end of it. He signed an AHL contract with Wilkes for 2025-26 and again split time between the ECHL/AHL this year. He has played two playoff games in the current WBS run, but has mostly been a depth player/scratch.

#18: Lukas Svejkovsky – A fourth round pick in 2020, Svejkovsky found his high scoring rates in the WHL and ECHL couldn’t be carried up to the AHL level (19 points in 66 games split over two years with WBS). He’s played in Finland the last two seasons.

#17: Judd Caulfield – Caulfield was traded to Anaheim and has spent his entire three-year pro career with their AHL team in San Diego. Now 25, he did set career-highs in goals (17), assists (21) and points (38) this season, proving to be a decent AHL option.

#16: Jonathan Gruden – Gruden looks like he peaked in 2023-24, playing 13 games with NHL Pittsburgh as an injury call-up. Since then, it’s been a downward trend – his role and points went way down with Wilkes in 2024-25 as organizational priorities shifted and he was traded to New Jersey. Gruden’s spent all his time in the Devils organization with their AHL team in Utica as a nice AHL option.

#15: Kasper Bjorkqvist – Injuries did a number on the 2016 second round pick, who opted to leave the Pens’ organization in 2022 and head back to Finland where he’s played the last four seasons with fairly middling stats (three goals and 12 points in 30 games in 2025-26).

#14: Jordy Bellerive – Another instance of injury derailing a career, Bellerive was never able to get back on track after an off-ice injury. He played in the AHL until 2024, with the Pens until 2022 and ended up playing in the Swedish lower league in 2024-25 and signed with a Slovakian team in 2025-26.

#13: Cam Lee – Lee has played in the KHL for the last four seasons after leaving WBS in 2022.

#12: Drew O’Connor – O’Connor is a rare success story for this pool, scoring 17 goals for NHL Vancouver last season and working on a $5.0 million contract ($2.5m per year). He improved his skating enough to become a solid NHL player.

#11: Joel Blomqvist – Blomqvist has been with AHL Wilkes the last three full seasons. He’s worked his way towards being one of the better goalies in that league, only to find himself passed up by a younger prospect who has been a little better in Sergei Murashov. His upward path might be blocked now, to no real detriment of his own with his contract running out this summer. Where his future plays out will be interesting to see.

#10: Isaac Belliveau – Belliveau played two seasons with PIT, split between ECHL/AHL, then was traded to Buffalo. He was able to avoid the ECHL but only appeared in 36 AHL games this season for Rochester. He’s another player who has been great in the Juniors and ECHL as far as production and role but struggled to make much of an impact in the AHL.

#9: Calle Clang – Clang was traded to Anaheim as part of the Rickard Rakell trade. He’s made his way up to being AHL San Diego’s most used goalie in 2025-26 but his stats look unremarkable with a career AHL save percentage under .900.

#8: Filip Lindberg – Lindberg played 26 total games with WBS from 2021-23 then the goalie opted to go back to his native Finland where it looks like he’s held down a backup position for four different teams in the last three seasons. His high ranking was the result of being dominant in college from 2019-21 at UMass but his path didn’t stay in that direction much longer.

#7: Nathan Legare – A member of the NJD organization since 2024, Legare has been remaking his game from scoring forward into a physical lower liner. He’s played four total NHL games with the Devils in the last two seasons, working mostly out of AHL Utica where he scored 13 goals and 20 points in 65 games this season. Skating concerns and a lack of scoring touch ended up limiting the ceiling for the former third round pick.

#6: Tristan Broz – It feels like Broz, still just 23, has been around forever. The 2021 second round pick spent three years at college and has become one of the better and more clutch players in the AHL (11 points in 13 games on the current WBS run). Unfortunate timing on injury/illnesses has limited him to only one NHL game, though there could be more ahead in the near future.

#5: Valtteri Puustinen – Always a prevalent point producer in Finland and the AHL, Puustinen got a serious look with Pittsburgh and scored 20 points in 52 games in 2023-24. It didn’t quite come together for him for long at the NHL level and he was traded to Colorado – where he is still active on the AHL Eagles playoff run (giving the possibility of Puustinen to play WBS in the Calder Cup Finals, if both win their current series).

#4: Filip Hallander – Hallander’s had quite the journey, playing mostly in the AHL from 2021-23, opting to sign with a Swedish team where he spent two seasons, and then a return to the NHL in 2025-26. A blood clot issue shut down his season in November, what happens from here with that remains outwardly unknown. He is under contract for 2026-27 with Pittsburgh and could be a fringe player in the lineup, assuming the health situation is cleared. Seemingly just as easily, he might not be an NHL option with other younger players pushing for a lineup spot, plus re-signings of players like Connor Dewar and Blake Lizotte.

#3: Samuel Poulin – Poulin’s time with the Pens came to an end late in 2025, being a part of the Stuart Skinner/Tristan Jarry trade. He didn’t sniff NHL Edmonton for the rest of the season, playing 49 games with AHL Bakersfield to wrap up the year. Poulin qualifies as a Group VI unrestricted free agent this offseason, his next step remains unknown at this point.

#2: Pierre-Olivier Joseph – Appearing mostly as an AHL player from 2019-22, Joseph made the jump to full-time NHLer in 2023. It’s been spotty since then, changing teams three times in the last two seasons. He caught on with Vancouver for 2025-26 but was a depth player appearing in 31 NHL games for the worst team in the league. His contract is up, Vancouver could opt to keep his rights as a restricted free agent if they choose to do it under new management.

#1: John Marino – Marino was traded to New Jersey in 2022, endured some up and down seasons and was moved to Utah in 2024. He’s appeared to find a good fit with the Mammoth, appearing in the second most TOI for them in the playoffs and a close third in the regular season. In 2025-26 Marino finally broke his single-season point best of 26 from his rookie year with the Pens in 2019-20, where he scored 36 points. Amazingly, he’s still got one more season to go on the contract that Pittsburgh signed him to back in January of 2021, which is like a hockey lifetime ago considering all the changes to the Pens and for Marino since that point.

Today on Pinstripe Alley – 6/7/26

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 05: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees looks on from the dugout during the eighth inning against the Boston Red Sox at Yankee Stadium on June 05, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The weather decided not to cooperate with the Yankees last night, as the rain would’ve had the team waiting around until well after 10 p.m. to start Saturday’s scheduled game. With a matinee on deck today, that timeline was deemed too brutal to wait things out, and thus we have another two-game set with a division rival on deck that the Yankees are looking to split.

Today will be a slow morning while we wait for the Yankees to take the field again, with just a couple things of note. Andrew has the Rivalry Roundup featuring the Rays giving back a half-game with the Yankees inactive, Nick honors the legacy of Thurman Munson on what would’ve been his 76th birthday, and John has the weekly social media spotlight. After the game, Scott will be on hand with a look at the history of Scranton’s no-hitters after they penned their latest one this weekend.

Today’s Matchup:

New York Yankees vs. Boston Red Sox

Time: 1:35 p.m. EST

TV: YES Network, NESN

Venue: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY

Questions/Prompts:

1. Will we see Cam Schlittler have continued velo problems or will he have his fastball back to form?

2. Are we witnessing an all-time Stanley Cup Finals after the third straight wild finish in Game 3?

Hao-Yu Lee homers twice as Hens split doubleheader, Brett Callahan homers again for Erie

Iowa Cubs 7, Toledo Mud Hens 5 (Gm1)(F/7)(box)

The Hens swung the bats well in Game 1 but Dylan File took a beating from the Cubs. The right-hander gave up seven runs, six earned on 10 hits and a walk, with five strikeouts.

Hao-Yu Lee opened the scoring in the top of the first with a two-run shot with Gage Workman aboard. The Cubs tied it up against File in the bottom of the first. Tyler Gentry’s solo shot in the second inning made it 3-2 Hens, but the Cubs tied it back up in the bottom half.

File lost it a bit in the bottom of the third, and the Cubs racked up four more runs to take a commanding lead. Eduardo Valencia launched a solo shot, his 12th homer, in the fourth to make it 7-3 Cubs. In the fifth, Workman doubled and scored on a Lee single to make it 7-5, but they couldn’t complete a comeback.

Lee: 2-4, R, 3 RBI, HR, 2 K

Anderson: 2-4

File (L, 4-2): 6.0 IP, 7 R, 6 ER, 10 H, BB, 5 K

Toledo Mud Hens 8, Iowa Cubs 1 (Gm2)(F/7)(box)

Excellent outings from Carl Edwards Jr. and Tyler Mattison locked down the Cubs, and the Hens built a lead and then erupted late to take Game 2 on Saturday.

Ricky Vanasco was the opener, but he allowed a run in the first inning. Edwards Jr. took over, and after several pretty grim outings since the Tigers picked him up, the veteran right-hander blanked the Cubs for 3.1 innings, striking out seven without a walk allowed.

Edwards Jr. got whiffs on fastballs and curveballs, and particularly with a mid-80’s offering that was registering on Statcast as a fourseamer, but looked like a nascient cutter in development. Tyler Mattison took over to close out the fifth and then handled the sixth, striking out four with one hit allowed.

The Hens tied the game in the second inning when Hao-Yu Lee walked and scored on a Jace Jung double. In the fourth, Lee was hit by a pitch to start the inning, and both pitcher Vince Velasquez and Cubs’ manager Denver Dangerfield were ejected in a lengthy row. A batter’s interference call on Tyler Gentry to end the inning led to more frustration from the coaching staffs, and Hens’ manager Gary Jones was tossed out of the game on that one. Pitching coach Doug Bochtler took over the argument, and he got tossed out there as well. On a long hot day for the doubleheader, tensions were running high.

Back to baseball, as Cal Stevenson led off the fifth with a triple. Max Clark singled him in, and then in the top of the sixth, Workman and Lee both hit solo shots to make it 4-1 Hens. Three batters later, Gentry hit a homer with Jace Jung aboard, and Tomás Nido capped a big inning with a solo shot as the Hens batted around. 7-1 Hens. Gage Workman doubled, took second on a Lee single, and scored on a Trei Cruz sacrifice fly.

Lee: 2-2, 2 R, RBI, HR, BB

Workman: 2-4, 2 R, RBI, 2B, HR, K

Jung: 1-3, R, RBI, 2B, BB, K

Edwards Jr. (W, 2-4): 3.1 IP, 0 R, 3 H, 0 BB, 7 K

Coming Up Next: The Hens lead the series 4-1 heading into a 2:08 p.m. ET matchup on Sunday.

Richmond Flying Squirrels 8, Erie SeaWolves 7 (box)

The Seawolves had this one in the bag until Wandisson Charles melted down late to blow a big lead.

Erie jumped all over the Squirrels in this one. Seth Stephenson led off the game with a walk and Peyton Graham drew a walk. John Peck doubled in Stephenson, and Brett Callahan drilled an opposite field, three-run shot to make it 4-0. Callahan’s 9th homer took him to a .n .877 OPS on the year. They weren’t done either, as Justice Bigbie singled and was wild pitched to second and then to third, scoring on a wild pickoff attempt. 5-0 SeaWolves.

On a bullpen day after Joe Miller left due to what looked like an arm injury after an inning, Johan Simon allowed a run in the second and then the third, but in the fourth, Stephenson led off with a single and stole second and third, scoring on a Peyton Graham single. 6-2 Erie.

Tyler Owens tossed two scoreless innings of relief, and Luke Taggart and Trevin Michael gave them an inning of scoreless relief as well. In the eighth, Graham walked with two outs and scored on Peck single.

So it was 7-2 heading into the bottom of the ninth. Wandisson Charles then melted down to allow five runs. Infielder Andrew Jenkins took over with the SeaWolves out of arms, and he allowed a walk off double to Onil Perez to lose it.

Callahan: 3-5, R, 3 RBI, 2B, HR

Peck: 2-4, R, 2 RBI, 2B, BB

Graham: 1-3, 2 R, RBI, 2 BB

Charles: 1.2 IP, 5 ER, 5 H, 0 BB, 2 K

Coming Up Next: The SeaWolves need to bounce back and win on Sunday to split the series. First pitch is at 5:05 p.m. ET on Sunday.

West Michigan Whitecaps 11, Dayton Dragons 3 (box)

The Whitecaps got a nice outing from Rayner Castillo and a nice offensive performance to win on Saturday to take a 3-2 lead in the series.

Castillo fired 4.2 innings of one-run ball, walking two against four strikeouts. He allowed a run in the second inning and then really settled in. It’s been a frustrating season so far for the young right-hander, so hopefully he can build on this one.

The offense got going early as Jackson Strong and Ricardo Hurtado singled in the first inning. Bryce Rainer lofted a sacrifice fly to score Strong for a 1-0 lead. Luke Shliger cracked a two-run shot with Clayton Campbell aboard for a 3-1 lead in the second inning.

In the third, Hurtado walked, and Bryce Rainer singled him to third, then stole second base. Campbell was hit by a pitch, and Junior Tilien cleared the bases with a three-run double. 6-1 Whitecaps. Rainer singled in Strong in the fourth to make it 7-1.

In the fifth, they kept pouring it on. Shliger singled in Woody Hadeen, and later in the inning Strong cracked a three-run shot, his fourth of the year, to make it 11-1.

Jalen Evans allowed two late runs, but this one was in the bag already.

Rainer: 2-4, R, 2 RBI, 2 K, SB

Strong: 2-4, 3 R, 3 RBI, HR, BB, 2 K

Tilien: 2-5, R, 3 RBI, 2B, K

Castillo: 4.2 IP, ER, 4 H, 2 BB, 4 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 2:00 p.m. ET matchup in Comstock Park with Tarik Skubal starting in his first rehab outing for the Whitecaps. One would think they’ll have a good chance to win the series. We’ll see how many pitches Skubal is allowed to throw.

Fort Myers Mighty Mussels, 5, Lakeland Flying Tigers 0 (box)

Caleb Leys was knocked around a bit, while the offense struggled to get anything going on Saturday.

The southpaw allowed a run in the first, then two more in the fourth. He wasn’t hit that hard, but a pair of walks and a two-run shot allowed didn’t help his cause.

Eliseo Mota allowed a pair of runs in the sixth.

The offense managed just five hits in this one, and then couldn’t capitalize on its few opportunties.

Ankeney: 1-3, 2B, BB, K

Yost: 1-4

Leys (L, 0-3): 4.0 IP, 3 ER, 5 H, 2 BB, 3 K

Coming Up Next: The Mussels are up 4-1 in the series, which concludes on Sunday at 12:00 p.m. ET.

FCL Yankees 8, FCL Tigers 1 (box)

Owen Hall was charged with six runs in this one, but it wasn’t as bad as the statline. Hall was rocked in the first. He gave up a single, two doubles, and two walks before he was lifted due to pitch count per inning restrictions. Gabriel Rosado came on and immediately allowed a grand slam. Hall came back out to pitch the second, third, and first out of the fourth, allowing just one hit, while striking out three the rest of the way. Cris Rodriguez and Steven Madero each had a hit but it was a rough game for the Tigers’ offense.

ANALYSIS: How should Brooklyn Nets fans feel about Nate Ament?

Michael Reaves/Getty Images

I will always appreciate writing for NetsDaily. There are nearly 600 comments on Friday’s article, where I reported the league-wide consensus that the Brooklyn Nets have interest in Tennessee’s Nate Ament, whether at the #6 spot or in a trade-down. Thank you all for the engagement and consistent readership; I don’t even remember the Nets playing in the NBA Finals, and yet, my fandom-turned-coverage of the team has, somehow, been as rewarding as it has been tormenting, thanks to the people who visit this site regularly.

So let’s just clarify a couple things about that report. I am not reporting that it is “likely” that the Nets take Ament, but rather, that is what people around the league believe. Brian Lewis of the New York Post, ever a trustworthy reporter, says that Ament hasn’t even been in for a workout…

I personally doubt it’s “likely” the Nets take anybody at this juncture, over a fortnight before the NBA Draft, though their interest in Ament certainly seems legit. The noise, though, is undeniable. No prospect is linked to Brooklyn more often — it’s not even close.

And again, part of that comes from Brooklyn’s recent draft history. But just because it seems like the Nets would take Ament at No. 6 — after Egor Dëmin, everybody now knows this front office isn’t afraid to “reach” in the lottery — doesn’t actually make it more likely.

Perhaps the Nets are preying on their rivals’ preconceived notions to create some smoke, maybe they’re doing their best to facilitate a trade-down, who knows? For what it’s worth, major sportsbooks still don’t think Ament is “likely” to go at #6, though the odds are climbing. On Kalshi (sorry), Ament’s odds of being drafted at No. 6 overall have jumped from 4% to 17% in the past week, but that’s still lower than Mikel Brown Jr. and Darius Acuff.

In any case, there’s enough smoke to strongly consider Ament’s strengths and weaknesses, even if Brooklyn doesn’t trade down, which would have seemed unthinkable a couple weeks ago. He was not good at Tennessee in his freshman year, and to discuss his talents further, I held a brief Q&A with NBA Draft analyst Ben Pfeifer.

Benny Pfeif is a friend of mine and a tremendous tape-eater; no analyst has a crystal ball, but he’s demonstrated the value of his opinion many times over…

His social media is, obviously, linked in that post above, and I’ll link his YouTube channel here. So, without further ado, let’s get started.


Q: Nate Ament was the #4 high school prospect in the country upon graduation. What to that point made him such an exciting prospect. What, for lack of better wording, was the high-end sell?

A: Nate Ament looked to join the long line of tall wings oozing shotmaking talent and theoretical upside that the NBA typically covets. Ament coupled his 6’10” frame with dynamic on and off-ball shooting from beyond and inside the arc, some basic ball skills and impressive defensive versatility, especially on the ball. His prospect profile sat clearly below the level of Darryn Peterson, Cameron Boozer and AJ Dybantsa but the promise of a 3-and-D plus wing with latent on-ball creation enticed evaluators (myself included).

Q: Let’s break his NCAA season down into parts — how good of an outside shooter is he, really? 33.3% from deep, 37.3% on long twos, 79% from the line isn’t terrible, but that’s not the profile of a sniper. I know it’s just one season of college data, but what level of shooter do you think we’re really talking about here?

A: While Ament’s shooting profile is indeed solid, his 3-point volume, efficiency and free-throw numbers all dipped from his final AAU season (and his most recent reliable pre-NCAA dataset). He traded some of those outside shots for mid-range jumpers, which contributed to some volume deflation from 3-point range, but <8 threes per 100 possession is undeniably disappointing for a prospect with shooting as a primary sell. Plenty of prospects with similar shooting profiles have developed into effective NBA shooters, but they rarely become truly elite outside of fringe cases like Kawhi Leonard. Ament’s mid-range off-the-dribble shotmaking and flashes of movement shooting are enticing, but I view Ament as a good-to-great outside shooter rather than a game-changing one.

Q: Let’s get to the main reason most draft nerds don’t have Ament in the lottery. He shot 43% from two this season, and under 40% from two against top 100 teams. What the hell is going on there? Can we blame Tennessee’s offensive environment, does he just not have wiggle/explosiveness? How does that happen?

A: Since 2008, 11 drafted college players 6’7” or taller logged a career 2-point percentage under 45%, according to Bart Torvik. The best of these players is Jaden McDaniels, who still isn’t a scoring ace after tons of offensive development. Jabari Smith (an apt comparison for Ament, IMO) is there too, but the rest of the list consists of the Cam Reddishes, Ziaire Williamses, and Brandon Bostons of the world. It’s an undeniably concerning indicator and speaks to Ament’s lack of burst, ball-handling chops and standout contested touch.

He’s a far better foul-drawer and strength creator than in high school, but notable strength gains zapped much of the mobility he previously relied on to outmaneuver defenders with the ball. Tennessee’s spacing and supporting cast weren’t pristine by any means and and Ament occasionally flashed effective driving and finishing off two feet with a runway. Maybe he leans into the strength creation, adds a ton of muscle and takes the bully route, but it will be a tight needle to thread regardless on the path to efficient NBA scoring, especially with any on-ball creation involved.

Q: Penultimate question: What are his most enticing secondary skills? Plus-rebounder? Rim protector/switchy? Secret passing guru despite a 1.0 assist:turnover? In other words, when the ball ain’t going in, what are you most confident he’ll contribute to an NBA team?

A: Based on my pre-college expectations, Ament’s defense significantly disappointed this past season. The aforementioned muscle gain and lessened mobility really hurt his defense, especially moving in space and making plays as a helper. At his best, Ament should develop into a fine defender, but he lacks high-end traits and feel on that end (and on offense). His off-ball lapses and technical worries aren’t as concerning as his frequently poor instincts, awareness and change of direction on closeouts and long rotations.

He’ll occasionally flash as a help-side shot blocker, but those moments were few and far between. Ament is one of the class’s least threatening playmakers, often struggling to convert easy reads in favor of tough off-dribble jumpers. He’ll high point some rebounds and his cleanest path to ancillary value comes from being extremely large and (hopefully) positioning himself well, but it’s unfortunately bleak projecting any non-scoring facets of his game to impact winning at a playoff level.

Q: Well, this has been kinda depressing, but let’s ask the big question(s) now. Assuming their interest is real, what do you think Brooklyn sees in him, like what’s the high-end scenario? Lastly, let’s say they take him at #6. Is that fine? Crazy?

A: Viewing Ament’s projection through the rosiest lens possible could lead one to value him near the top of a loaded draft class, especially if said person really values physical traits and shotmaking. Maybe the Tennessee context cloaked his true offensive self, and NBA spacing/movement unlock his game. Even for players without standout feel, ball handling or defensive chops, there’s value in sheer size and scoring, especially in certain postseason matchups. If Ament fleshes out his strength creation and becomes a high-level contested shotmaker, it’s possible he’d fit in as a stabilizing force with the size to add value on the defensive end.

However, that outcome sits at the tail end of Ament’s range and even if a player of the Tobias Harris/Jabari Smith progeny isn’t a terrible result for a top-6 pick, it’s a bleak one in a draft as loaded as 2026. In 2025, Brooklyn drafted a smattering of future complementary pieces, and that’s what Ament projects as. Maybe the Nets view themselves as such a marquee free agent/trade destination that they’ll intentionally eschew high-end star swings like Mikel Brown Jr., Aday Mara, or Kingston Flemings for better roster/size fits. But if Ament is Brooklyn’s sixth pick, it would be an undeniably disappointing selection with potentially damaging long-term ramifications. For your sake (Lucas and his lovely readers), let’s hope this is just typical draft season smoke and mirrors.


Again, another thanks to Mr. Pfeifer for his time and words. He also made this comprehensive video on Ament a couple days ago…

Again, the NBA Draft beings on June 23rd at 8:00 p.m. ET. Until then, get ready way more rumors, analysis, and everything in between.

England beat New Zealand by 115 runs: first cricket Test, day four – as it happened

Gus Atkinson claimed three more wickets as England wrapped up victory despite resistance from Devon Conway and Glenn Phillips

25th over: New Zealand 77-6 (Conway 26, Phillips 9) Conway, facing Tongue, decides that he may as well come to the party. First he steers a four to gully’s right, then he tries to leave a lifter, reacts too late, pats it to Harry Brook at second slip – and is dropped as Brook can only tip it over the bar.

24th over: New Zealand 71-6 (Conway 20, Phillips 9) Robinson continues, moving the ball both ways. Phillips finds the boundary in no time – but only off the inside edge. And again, with his first shot of some authority, punched past cover. “You need to be playing Twenty20 here,” says Stuart Broad, and Phillips, unlike the rest of the Kiwis, seems to agree. He’s been there five minutes and has already made more runs than Latham, O’Rourke, Ravindra and Mitchell put together.

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