Yankees Birthday of the Day: Enos Slaughter

Bubble gum card (from Bowman) features baseball player Enos Slaughter, of the New York Yankees, as he holds a baseball bat, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1955. (Photo by Transcendental Graphics/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Some players are remembered for elegance. Others are remembered for effort. Enos Slaughter belongs in the second category. He built a Hall of Fame career on aggression, hustle, and a willingness to play every moment at full speed, helping create the old baseball belief that the dirtier your jersey was by the end of the game, the better you had done your job.

That reputation helped define Slaughter’s legacy. Long before hustle and grit became their own baseball mythology, Slaughter was already charging through the game with a style that later influenced players like Pete Rose. Yet like many stars from earlier eras, his story is layered with championship glory and personal controversy.

Enos Bradsher Slaughter
Born: April 27, 1916 (Roxboro, NC)
Died: August 12, 2002 (Durham, NC)
Yankees Tenure: 1954-55, 1956-59

Slaughter was raised on a 90-acre farm in Allensville, where physical labor helped build the strength and toughness that would later define his playing style. However, after the family took their horse and buggy to watch the minor-league Durham Bulls play, a young Slaughter quickly began dreaming of a life beyond the farm. At Roxboro High School, Slaughter starred in both football and baseball.

Slaughter reportedly passed on a scholarship to Guilford College because professional baseball had already long been the dream. Instead of attending school, he moved to Durham to work in a textile mill by day and played semipro ball at night.

Slaughter’s play got the attention of the St. Louis Cardinals, who—thanks to pioneering executive Branch Rickey—had a farm club in Greensboro. They offered him a 10-day tryout and eventually signed him. Slaughter then spent the next several years working his way through the Cardinals’ system.

Slaughter debuted with St. Louis in 1938 and quickly became a fixture in the outfield. The Cardinals were nearing the end of the Gashouse Gang era, which won two championships in the years before his debut while valuing aggression, pressure, and emotional edge. However, Slaughter’s playing style made him a natural fit and a true bridge between that post-Depression era and the hustle era of the 1960s and 1970s.

In 1941, Slaughter made his first All-Star team while helping power one of baseball’s strongest clubs, which narrowly lost the pennant to the Brooklyn Dodgers. Coming off his first All-Star season Slaughter was even more impressive in 1942 making another Midsunner Classic and finishing second in the MVP race to teammate Mort Cooper. This time, St. Louis surpassed Brooklyn, and Cardinals would beat the Yankees in the 1942 World Series while Slaughter posted an .837 OPS in the five-game victory. That would be the first of four rings Slaughter would win and the only time that a Joe DiMaggio-led pennant winner lost the Fall Classic.

Slaughter’s first Cardinals run was interrupted by military service during World War II, costing him three prime seasons. That lost time likely kept him from even larger career milestones, as he still finished with 2,383 hits and a .300 batting average despite the interruption. Along with DiMaggio, Slaughter was among the notable figures missing from the 1943 Yankees/Cardinals World Series rematch, which went the Yankees’ way.

Slaughter’s time in the military was spent as a physical education instructor, as he was colorblind. In his last year of enlistment along with a few other big names of the era Joe Gordon, Birdie Tebbetts, and Howie Pollet were amongst a group that toured the Pacific playing games in Iwo Jima, Guam, Tinian, and Saipan.

Slaughter returned to the Cardinals in 1946. Picking up right where he left off, he had an All-Star season, finishing third in the MVP race. St. Louis won its fourth pennant in five years, and Slaughter delivered the most famous moment of his career while hitting .320/.433/.560 in the World Series. In Game 7 against the Boston Red Sox, he took advantage of a brief moment of hesitance from second baseman Johnny Pesky, scoring from first on a single in the play remembered forever as the “Mad Dash.”

That play helped secure another championship for St. Louis and it remains one of baseball’s defining hustle plays. Slaughter remained with the Cardinals through 1953, earning All-Star honors in each season and cementing himself as one of the era’s most feared and relentless players. Overall, the man was a 10-time All-Star in St. Louis. Depending how you count the three-year military gap, Slaughter either made 10 consecutive All-Star teams, or made in a row beginning in his age-30 season.

In 1954 the Cardinals traded Slaughter to the New York Yankees for Emil Tellinger, Mel Wright, and future Yankee skipper Bill Virdon. The Cardinals were making room for top prospect Wally Moon and entering a rebuild. The Yankees were hoping to get a steady veteran to keep the good times rolling — just as they had with another future Cardinals Hall of Famer in recent years with Johnny Mize. The move was made just days before the season opener, and after spending his entire career in the Cardinals organization, the move was heartbreaking for Slaughter.

This would kick off the first of his two stints with the Yankees. The 1954 campaign was less than ideal after he broke his wrist and missed over a month. Slaughter only appeared in 69 games on the season. It ended his All-Star streak, and then a few games into the 1955 season, the Yankees traded Slaughter with Johnny Sain to the Kansas City Athletics for Sonny Dixon and cash.

Slaughter got healthy and rebounded with Kansas City. Then in August of 1956 he was placed on waivers and claimed by the Yankees. This move further deepened the feelings around the country that Kansas City was simply a minor-league team for New York. Between 1955 and 1959, the two clubs made 16 trades, involving 61 players. The real outcry was the connection between Arnold Johnson, who owned the Kansas City Athletics and previously owned Yankee Stadium until he bought the then-Philadelphia Athletics, moving them to the Midwest.

Slaughter would be on the Yankees for the next three seasons. Including the Yankees championship clubs in 1956 and 1958, adding two more rings in his second chapter that connected two of baseball’s most decorated organizations. In total Slaughter was on the Yankees across six seasons, appearing in 350 games with 168 hits. He shined brightest in the 1956 World Series made famous by Don Larsen, as Slaughter hit .350/.440/.500 against Brooklyn in 25 plate appearances.

Slaughter’s legacy is also tied to more difficult conversations. He was associated with reported attempts to resist integration, including allegations that Cardinals players discussed boycotting games against Jackie Robinson and the Dodgers. Slaughter denied those reports and argued that his “Country” nickname made him an easy figure to cast in that role.

Gas was poured onto that fire in 1947 when Slaughter spiked Robinson on a play that has been debated as fair or foul ever since. Many called it a dirty slide with the intention and success of hurting Jackie. Slaughter defended his actions on the play as how he always played the game and saying it was not a dirty play. Years later, Slaughter also went as far as to defend himself legally from the allegations, furthering attempting to defend himself from the racist label.

That tension often follows discussions of stars from baseball’s earlier generations. Slaughter was unquestionably accomplished, unquestionably tough, and unquestionably important to the sport’s history. He was also a product of an era, where greatness and ugliness often sat side by side.

For what it is worth, fellow Cardinals great Lou Brock—inducted into the Hall of Fame alongside Slaughter in 1985—said at his funeral, “History finds us together. That is one thing that binds me to him. And, I’ll tell you this, the name of Enos Slaughter will be spoken for generations to come. Players like Enos and Stan Musial really helped me to see what being a Cardinal meant. He’s been my friend for a long time.”

If nothing else, Enos Slaughter remains one of baseball’s original all-out players. Additionally, he lived to see himself enshrined into the Hall of Fame and have his No. 9 retired by the Cardinals. Before hustle became branding and before Rose made full-speed play iconic for another generation, Slaughter was already barreling through baseball at maximum effort and inspiring generations to come.


See more of the “Yankees Birthday of the Day” series here.

Red Sox Minor Lines: Sea Dogs throw no-hitter, narrowly avoid losing anyway

SARASOTA, FL - MARCH 20: Franklin Arias #65 of the Boston Red Sox bats during the game between the Boston Red Sox and the Baltimore Orioles at Ed Smith Stadium on Friday, March 20, 2026 in Sarasota, Florida. (Photo by Scott Audette/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

For the most part this season, I’ve left the monologues out of the beginning of my Minor Lines because the performance of the farm seemed pretty separate from the uninspired performance of the Boston Red Sox. But, this recent plethora of changes directly influences the farm even though the result of the games themselves are inconsequential, so here’s my unsolicited two cents.

While I think the Alex Cora firing is one of many partial solutions that don’t ultimately solve the underlying problem — the real solution being the one that rhymes with “fell the beam”— I do think that when so much of the team isn’t performing at once (even pieces of the puzzle that weren’t just tentatively jammed in) one of the things you have to look at coaching. Breslow, who’s now certainly on a shorter leash than he was two months ago, could not depart before Cora; the CBO position would be unfillable. Sure, it’s all indicative of a bigger problem of a vicious cycle of executives with their hands tied, forbidden from them spending sufficiently to improve the team, but it was time for Alex Cora.

Alex Cora recently gave a quote, perhaps taken out of context, to Ken Rosenthal on the hurried development of homegrown talent. But when 80% of the most exciting guys on the roster are homegrown talent, the context speaks for itself. You look at the backgrounds of the guys who are now on the Major League coaching staff, and the promotions make sense. Roman Anthony, Marcelo Mayer, Brayan Bello, Triston Casas, Payton Tolle, Jarren Duran, Wilyer Abreu, Connelly Early (who had a longer leash Sunday then he had ever gotten with the previous coaching staff) and several more have already worked with Chad Tracy. In an environment where some of the roster is sloppily pieced together, this is an ideal guy to have in the clubhouse at the present moment. Chad Epperson coming up from Portland to be the third base coach is also a good thing for similar reasons.

Tracy winning his first game game isn’t indicative of this being a positive move. He’ll lose games too. But the way the previous manager interacted with younger talent clashed with how Craig Breslow, who remains on the Boston Red Sox payroll as of this moment, operated. More importantly, it interfered with the front office’s goal to make payroll as small as possible while fielding a team that doesn’t completely suck and lead to “sell the team” chants in April. Thus, the team is looking to Chad Tracy to be a “stabilizing” voice within the clubhouse, with the word “stabilizing” doing a lot of heavy lifting. Hopefully, the players lift, too.

Now, there was some action on the farm on Sunday, too, so let’s get into it.

Worcester: W, 6-2 (BOX SCORE)

To say “no Chad Tracy, no problem” may be oversimplifying things, but interim coach Iggy Suarez, a 2003 Red Sox draft pick who was, at one time, a member of the Triple-A Red Sox club (then in Pawtucket), capped off what I’m sure was an exhilarating Sunday by watching his team simply outplay the Syracuse Mets. Jack Anderson looked awesome through four innings. Eduardo Rivera struck out six in his three innings. These are guys who have both made their Major League debuts in recent weeks, and this was because of minor league appearances overseen by… well, I don’t want to beat the dead horse here. Speaking of guys with some time in Boston, Nate Eaton got in on the action, too, hitting a three-run shot to open the scoring up, and the WooSox held the lead for the rest of the afternoon.

Portland: W, 3-2 (BOX SCORE)

You might think that this was a close game from the score alone, and it was, due to a lack of offense. But the result of Kyle Sasala’s first game as Sea Dogs manager against the Yard Goats (Rockies AA) was actually a rarity. One day after Franklin Arias hit another home run in a pinch-hit walk-off situation, the Sea Dogs pitched a no-hitter. This is the team’s second in two years, and it was led by 25-year-old lefty Hayden Mullins, who’s had a really good season thus far, followed by relief innings by Caleb Bolden and Reidis Sena. This was actually Sena’s first appearance after being promoted from Greenville. Hartford’s runs, from runners who reached on walks, were scored off of a botched ground ball from first baseman Ronald Rosario, who normally plays catcher. Nate Baez’s home run was the sole reason this no-hitter didn’t go down as a loss until Rosario hit his redemption arc with a go-ahead RBI single. Portland is now 6-0 in one-run games in 2026.

Greenville: W, 10-7 (F/1o) (BOX SCORE)

The Drive had to rally to take this one in extras from Asheville (Astros High-A) as they entered the eighth inning down 7-3. This was no fault of starting pitching, which was solid organization-wide Sunday. But, again, Marcus Phillips couldn’t get an otherwise effective start past the fourth. But, not to worry, as the clutch trait was unlocked by the offense instead, as Justin Gonzales’ two-out grand slam to tie it up at 7 raised the Drive’s expected winning percentage from six percent all the way up to 42 percent. They’d then score three points in the tenth and Harry Blum, who was on the mound in the eighth, would pitch his third scoreless inning to slam the door.

Salem: : L, 0-7 (BOX SCORE)

After a hot start, Salem is now 4-10 in their last 14 and losers of three straight as they slide below .500. They were shut out, held to just three hits by the Fredricksburg (Nationals A), two of which came from shortstop Anderson Fermin, and stranded eleven including seven RidgeYaks that reached due to walks.

Have an investigative Monday.

Cubs update: Seiya Suzuki, Moisés Ballesteros, Michael Busch

The Cubs had a 5-2 week, which on its face is excellent.

The way it ended, with two losses to the Dodgers after sweeping the Phillies and mounting a stirring comeback Friday in Los Angeles, wasn’t great. But this team is still showing that it can compete with anyone, even with multiple bullpen injuries.

Here’s who was hot and not for the Cubs over the past week.

Three up

Seiya Suzuki is red-hot

It took a while for Suzuki to start hitting, which isn’t surprising as he missed most of Spring Training with an injury suffered in the World Baseball Classic.

Despite going 0-for-4 in Sunday’s loss, Suzuki batted .400/.483/.880 (10-for-25) over the week with four home runs, three walks and six RBI. He’s got a chance to be named NL Player of the Week later today.

In addition to his good hitting week, Suzuki also made several nice defensive plays, including two sliding grabs on Sunday. Here’s the first of those [VIDEO].

Moisés Ballesteros is a hitting machine

Craig Counsell is still protecting Ballesteros from facing left-handed pitching, for the most part, as he’s just 1-for-4 with a walk vs. LHP this year.

Overall, though, he is crushing baseballs no matter which right-hander he faces. For the week, Ballesteros batted .500/.588/1.000 (7-for-14) with four doubles, a home run and three walks.

Eventually, I suppose, the league will adjust to him. Then it will be up to Ballesteros to adjust back. I’m pretty sure he will.

Here’s the home run he hit in Los Angeles on Saturday [VIDEO].

Michael Busch finally started to hit

After being in a slump for the season’s first three-plus weeks, Busch broke out with a 333/.394/.600 week (10-for-30) against the Phillies and Dodgers, with two doubles, two home runs and eight RBI.

Here’s his three-run shot against the Phillies on Thursday [VIDEO].

You knew a guy who hit 34 home runs last year couldn’t be held down too long, so hopefully this is a sign of better things to come for Busch.

H/T to Nico Hoerner and Pete Crow-Armstrong for playing strong defense all week.

Three down

Colin Rea got hit hard by the Dodgers

Rea had been really solid all year, no matter what role he was asked to perform, but the Dodgers hit him really hard — six hits, four walks and six runs over just 3.1 innings.

Hopefully, that’s just a glitch. Rea has been really good for the Cubs over the last year-plus. Assuming the rotation stays in order, his next start will be Friday at Wrigley Field against the Diamondbacks. Small sample size, but Rea has been better at home (2.79 ERA, 9.2 innings) than on the road (5.60 ERA, 17.2 innings). He was also somewhat better at Wrigley last year. Hopefully the home field will be friendly to him on Friday.

Javier Assad also had a rough time in L.A.

Assad also has a pronounced home/road split this year, again in a very small sample size, but that 10.95 ERA in 12.1 road innings is pretty ugly, and it includes six walks. He’s walked no one in 6.2 innings at Wrigley this year. Maybe try the glasses again, Javier?

The bullpen injuries are mounting

It’s getting difficult to even know who’s in the Cubs bullpen on a daily basis. Right now, only three relievers who were in the pen on Opening Day are still there — Ben Brown, Hoby Milner and Jacob Webb. (Colin Rea, who was in the Opening Day bullpen, is now in the rotation.)

Hunter Harvey, Riley Martin, Phil Maton, Daniel Palencia, Ethan Roberts and Caleb Thielbar, all guys who have contributed this year, remain on the IL, along with Jordan Wicks, who is currently on rehab assignment. Roberts’ injury was a laceration, not anything with an elbow or shoulder, and he could be back soon. Maton could be activated as soon as today. And there’s potential good news about Palencia:

So, perhaps a rehab assignment for Palencia could follow.

And even with all the injuries, the Cubs reeled off 10 straight wins. Impressive.

Seattle Mariners Minor League Roundup – Week Five

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MARCH 20, 2026: Ryan Sloan #97 of the Seattle Mariners throws a pitch during the second inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Fields of Phoenix on March 20, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Bernacchi/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

Tacoma Rainiers

Tacoma took the weekly slate with a series score of 4-2, securing a heroic comeback in the final game of the six game series to secure an extra-innings W. The bats, once icy cold, have emerged from their hibernation and are looking far more like we’ve come to expect. It wouldn’t be a major shock to see some promotions in the coming month, particularly from the heart of this Tacoma lineup.

Brennen Davis has arrived. After a slower start to the season, Davis is back to pulverizing baseballs and has raised his OPS all the way up to .915, firmly leading the way in this Rainiers lineup. The righty corner-outfielder is an easy fit for the big league roster as currently constructed, and though he carries legitimate injury risk with him, his ability has never been in question. He’s graced top 100 prospect lists in years past, only removed due to the significant time he spent on the IL. Health permitting, it’s not “if”, it’s “when” he makes his big league debut with the Mariners. 

Scheduled Colt Emerson check-in: After missing a few games this week with a wrist injury, Emerson is back healthy and producing in all facets of the game. Reaching base six times across three games, Emerson yet again went oppo for his third homer of the year and looks comfortable doing damage to the opposite field. Very professional AB’s, superb defense, etc., etc. It’s been textbook Colt Emerson all around.

Arkansas Travelers

The Travs have finally started to get things moving in the right direction, capping a convincing 5-1 series victory with an extra-innings win on Sunday afternoon. The offense, while not overwhelming, has been showing signs of life as of late, and with as dominant as their pitching staff has been through the first month of the season, expect the Travelers to be in the win column more often than not.

It’s official: Kade Anderson is appointment television. Working another 4.2 scoreless innings on Friday night, the only things thwarting his excellence was a rain delay that ended his night early. Regardless of weather, Anderson racked up eight more punchouts with zero walks, lowering his season ERA to 0.48 through four starts. He’s striking out the world, walking nobody, and running a ~58% GB rate, essentially checking every single box possible as a starting pitcher bidding for a big league debut. Whether he ascends to the majors this year or not seems like it will largely be out of his hands, but he’s yet to show a hole in his repertoire and looks every bit of a top minor league arm. Should the opportunity present itself, he’ll be ready.

Ryan Sloan had his best start in Double-A this weekend, hurling 4.2 innings of two run ball, his only wart being a two run homer he surrendered in his third inning of work. Punching seven tickets and walking two, Sloan looked much more like himself on the mound, dotting up the edges of the plate and drawing a healthy amount of swing and miss. Hopefully the young 20 year old can take this start and build on it, ideally beginning a string of quality outings to put under his belt and prove he’s adjusting to Double-A successfully.

Welcome back, Ty Cummings! The return in the recent Casey Legumina trade, Cummings was drafted by the Mariners in 2023 but was shipped off as a PTBNL in the Randy Arozarena deal. Now making his return, Cummings joins an already strong Travelers staff that’s held this team together.

Everett AquaSox

Locking down a 4-2 series victory against Spokane this week, Everett’s lineup is really starting to take shape. The bats they absolutely have to have producing are finally looking like their typical selves, and even though the starting pitching has been rough thus far, they’ve got enough interesting bullpen arms to piece together something on the back end. This roster’s a super fun watch that should produce several big leaguers when it’s all said and done.

Hello, Felnin Celesten! After a cold start to the season, Celesten is on a bit of a heater at the plate as of late, reaching base 12 times in five games and striking out just twice. He’s starting to find some holes and is coming into his own in the power department, now getting to some extra-base thump that wasn’t happening early in the year. The switch-hitter still has a silky smooth glove on the dirt and a sky high ceiling if he can put it all together, but proving it has been rocky thus far. Hopefully this stretch is a sign of what’s to come for the uber-talented shortstop.

Luke Stevenson continues to be a revelation at the plate, refusing to give the opposing pitcher free strikes with chase off the plate. He’s walking as much as he’s punching out and is displaying supreme patience at the plate, consistently seeing a ton of pitches and forcing the pitcher into long at bats. Now with an OBP at .485, Stevenson seems like a strong candidate for a promotion to Double-A sometime this summer.

Axel Sanchez has had an up-and-down career in the minors, but he’s off to a torrid start to the 2026 season. Rocking an OPS north of 1.000, Sanchez deserves a ton of credit for being a run-producing force in this lineup. Somehow already in his fourth season (!!!) in Everett, the results need to be taken with a grain of salt, but the production has been a major key for this lineup regardless of any caveats attached to it.

Inland Empire 66ers

The 66ers split this week’s series with the Ports, unable to push for a victory despite some excellent starting pitching performances. This team has some incredibly compelling performers from game to game, but as a whole, the fringes of the roster have proven to be fallible thus far. The strength of the Arkansas and Everett squads had to come from somewhere, and unfortunately for the newest affiliate of the organization, the 66ers paid the price.

Jackson Steensma continues to vie for the title of “staff ace” for this 66ers ball club. Last year’s ninth rounder, the physical right hander worked another four innings of one run ball, striking out seven along the way and raising his season total to 17 through ten innings. Generating 18 whiffs across those four innings, Steensma had his entire arsenal working flawlessly on Sunday afternoon, dominating with fastballs above the top rail and sliders down and away. He’s got just one walk all year, moves well down the mound, and brings the physical frame of a prototypical starter. He checks a ton of boxes and looks like an incredibly interesting late round arm that’s worth monitoring.

After a down week last week, Korbyn Dickerson returned to form and helped carry a lackluster lineup all week. Recording at least one knock in all six games, Dickerson has cut back on the K’s and is walking at an exceptional rate, a promising sign that bodes well for his future success against better competition. He’s knocking the ball around the ballpark, swiping bases, and locking down centerfield, effectively accomplishing everything you could ask out of a player in his first full season of professional baseball. His tools alone make him a fascinating prospect to follow; if this level of production continues, don’t be shocked to see his prospect pedigree ascend a tier or two by midseason.

Ricardo Cova continues to be an optimal table setter atop this lineup. The undersized infielder has great bat-to-ball skills and is showing some better power this season, a major facet of his game that’s been missing to this point. Hopefully he’s able to keep this power stroke up and prove he’s made some tangible changes to his skillset.

The Week Ahead for Atlanta: The one where Tarik Skubal comes to town

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - APRIL 18: Starting pitcher Tarik Skubal #29 of the Detroit Tigers throws in the first inning against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park on April 18, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Jaiden Tripi/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Baseball life is good for the Atlanta Braves at the moment. They’ve already put a gap between them and the rest of the division and the gap keeps growing between them and the Phillies and the Mets as well. The vibes are very positive and the week ahead for the Braves could be a promising one if everything goes according to plan.

With that being said, there’s always reason to take any opponent seriously — and yes, that includes the Colorado Rockies, who would love nothing more than to make a statement of their own at the expense of our Braves. Before Atlanta can get to Colorado, they’ll have to deal with one of the main favorites in the AL Central and their All-World caliber pitcher in the form of two-time defending AL Cy Young Award winner, Tarik Skubal. It’s time to take a look at what’s in store for the Braves for this coming week.


April 28-30: Detroit Tigers

Current Record: 15-14 Projected Record (via FanGraphs): 86-76

Don’t let Detroit’s current record fool you — this’ll likely be a tough series for the Braves and it’s mostly due to the fact that they’ll be catching three really good starters from the Tigers. Casey Mize will be entering his start on Tuesday with a very good track record so far. He’s made five starts and he’s given up one or fewer runs in four of those starts. Framber Valdez’s metrics (particularly his xERA and xBA) suggest that the Braves could do some damage against him but if they get stuck in a ground ball vortex against him on Thursday afternoon, watch out.

Tarik Skubal is, well, Tarik Skubal. Granted, he has had a couple of starts where he’s looked human but if he gets on a roll, it’ll basically just be a matter of waiting until Detroit’s currently-struggling bullpen gets involved and hoping that Bryce Elder continues to do a good job of limiting runs, himself.

When it comes to Detroit’s lineup, they’ve got a nice little core going. Kevin McGonigle is the new hotness around here and the 21-year-old has gotten off to a blazing start at the plate as a big leaguer. Riley Greene has also done his fair share of mashing as well. Kerry Carpenter leads the team in homers and Dillon Dingler is not to far behind him as well. Colt Keith has also been getting his fair share of knocks when called upon. This will be similar to what the Braves had to deal with against the Nationals, as Detroit has some eerily-similar plate numbers to what Washington is putting up right now. If that’s the case, then Elder, Martín Pérez and JR Ritchie will have their hands full trying to keep this lineup quiet.

Tuesday, April 28 at 7:15 p.m. ET (BravesVision)
Wednesday, April 29 at 7:15 p.m. ET (BravesVision, TBS (out-of-market only))
Thursday, April 30 at 12:15 p.m. ET (BravesVision)

May 1-3: Colorado Rockies

Current Record: 13-16 Projected Record: 65-97

As usual, the Rockies are probably going to end up being not-so-good this season. With that being said, this series will take place in Colorado and whenever that’s the case, anything is on the table as far as results go. If you don’t believe me then go ask the Dodgers, who ended up leaving Denver with “just” a four-game series split — and they had to salvage that split too, as the Rockies got up 2-1 in the series on them! I’m not saying that to say that Coors Field is a fortress or anything like that but the Rockies have been playing some decent baseball at home so far and they’ll also be thrilled to be back home after a road trip sent them to New York this past weekend (thanks for the sweep, Rox) and Cincinnati in the midweek series.

With that being said, this is totally doable for the Braves to pull off a series win. So far, the Rockies have only produced a team wRC+ of 89 at Coors Field, where they’ve hit a combined .275/.334/.444 with a team wOBA of .344. Meanwhile, the Braves on the road have hit .258/.328/.458 with a .346 wOBA and a wRC+ of 117. The main difference is the power hitting — Atlanta’s carrying an Isolated Power number of .200 on the road while the Rockies have only hit for .169 Isolated Power within Coors Field. If any slugfests do break out, I’d like Atlanta’s chances in them. Still, you’d like to see the Braves make sure that guys like Mickey Moniak, Hunter Goodman and Troy Johnston stay quiet.

It’ll come down to Atlanta’s pitching staff keeping the Rockies under control and preventing Colorado from sticking around and making things interesting (in a bad way). The good news is that they’ll likely have Chris Sale going for that series and Spencer Strider’s most recent rehab start went very well so he could be activated in time for this series as well. We’ll see who is the third for that rotation since Walt Weiss has indicated that they’re essentially going on a series-by-series basis when it comes to the starting pitching but you have to like Atlanta’s chances if those two guys will be going for them this weekend. We’ll see what happens!

Friday, May 1 at 8:40 p.m. ET (BravesVision)
Saturday, May 2 at 8:10 p.m. ET (BravesVision)
Sunday, May 3 at 3:10 p.m. ET (BravesVision)

The Timberwolves Have Found Their Sense of the Moment

MINNEAPOLIS , MN - APRIL 25: Head coach Chris Finch of the Minnesota Timberwolves exchanges with Tim Hardaway Jr. (10) of the Denver Nuggets during the third quarter of the Timberwolves' 112-96 win in game four of their NBA Playoffs series at the Target Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota on Saturday, April 25, 2026. (Photo by AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post) | Denver Post via Getty Images

All season long, members of the Minnesota Timberwolves had insisted to the coaching staff that things would be different come playoff time.

During a December back-to-back series in New Orleans, Anthony Edwards mentioned that the team was already looking forward to the playoffs.

IN DECEMBER.

Only four months to go!

So, all included, surely game one would wake a team up from a malaise of a season in which they said would get better once the postseason started, right?

Not quite.

“They kept telling me it would be different when we get there, and game one wasn’t any different…so we jumped their ass,” coach Chris Finch said at the podium after a rollercoaster game two. “They lied to us, and they responded.”

Did they ever. Over the last three games, the Wolves have played with a composure that has them sustaining runs and preventing the Nuggets from going on them, locking in defensively, and sharing the ball in the half court that allows them to get to the teeth of the defense.

None of this, and I repeat NONE, was visible in the regular season for multi-game stretches. Quarters? Sure. A game? Sure, I can hear that out. A whole run? No way.

“I knew it was there,” Finch said.

But he continued – and it’s worth the whole quote.

“It was very frustrating. Sometimes it was focus, sometimes it was effort, sometimes it was execution. We couldn’t sustain what we wanted to in order to be a top team at the time. Guys were admittedly probably bored. Some immaturity of two long runs in the playoffs and we thought we would take a step forward there, and we didn’t.”

He would go on to talk about the banter heading into the playoffs, and the ensuing game one loss and motivation that would follow.

But the product of all of this is a night that everyone will remember for a really long time. Donte DiVincenzo went down just 1:19 into the game holding his calf, the worst becoming true with a torn achilles. An injury of that magnitude that can surely take the wind out of the sails of a team playing so well up until that point, and starting out game four on a tear.

For a team that so often would pack it up and mail it in over the course of the season, a reason to do so dropped right into their lap. It’s a pretty traumatic event, and obviously shakes up a rotation well beyond what the coaching staff is going into the game expecting.

Then your best player goes down for the rest of the game. The powerhouse of the team.

Though Anthony Edwards was playing poorly up until that point, it’s never an actual good thing for a player of his caliber to leave the game, believe it or not. It left a team beginning to really find itself in an immediate place of searching for answers in a playoff setting they had been hoping to see all season.

Multiple people had just become more important at work.

Hampered with a shoulder injury, Naz Reid would need to step up his game beyond what he was giving. Bones Hyland would need to become a more important scorer and collapse defenses (he will moving forward as well). Terrence Shannon Jr. will need to become a version of himself that was expected heading into the season.

“These playoff games really matter,” Naz Reid said afterward. “Every possession, every moment, every second. Making sure that we make smart plays..we want to make things happen in our favor, try not to have boneheaded mistakes we had throughout the season, and right now it’s super crucial.”

Reid would go one to live by it, putting up his best game in over a month, and helping to chip in on the production left out on the floor by his injured counterparts.

Injuries independent, the theme now moving forward lies in the mentality of this group heading into game five.

I tried to ask as many members of the group as possible what they’ve found in the playoffs that they previously didn’t have in the regular season.

The hero of the night’s answer put it all in a bow.

“I’m not gonna lie, I knew we guarded like that, but the intesnity…each and every possession, just seeing the guys fight,” 43-point scorer Ayo Dosunmu said.

Just arriving in February, Dosunmu’s arrival was in the middle of the season’s doldrums, and the guard would have a unique perspective on the personality resurgence currently taking place.

“Everytime [Jaden] was on the court guarding Murray, he was guarding him like his life depended on it.”

Like their life depends on it.

Surely a mental place that this team has gotten to. But now, the challenge is much more unique. The Wolves will now head on the road to try and close a talented team out down two starters, and in desperate need of their bench to find the continuous life they did on Saturday night. More crucial will be showing one of the more talented two man pairings in the league that there isn’t a way forward in the series in Nikola Jokic and Jamal Murray – smothered offensively for the last three games.

While things look positive, there is still basketball to be played.

More importantly, up 3-1, the Wolves will need to channel their their “life depends on it” mindset, even though it doesn’t right now – and fight off the demons that prevented a sense of urgency in the first place.

Northwestern transfer center Cade Bennerman commits to North Carolina

Jan 3, 2026; Dallas, Texas, USA; A view of the North Carolina Tar Heels logo on the shorts of forward Caleb Wilson (8) during the second half against the SMU Mustangs at Moody Coliseum. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Former Northwestern center Cade Bennerman has committed to North Carolina via the NCAA Transfer Portal. He didn’t see any action as a true freshman in the 2025-26 season and ultimately redshirted.

Cade Bennerman played high school basketball at Father Ryan (TN), where he was a three-star prospect. The 7-foot center was the No. 219 overall player and No. 26 center in the 2025 recruiting cycle, according to the Rivals Industry Rankings.

At the time of his commitment to Louisville, Bennerman was the No. 30 center in On3’s 2026 Transfer Portal Player Rankings. On April 21, North Carolina also landed a front-court commitment from former FAU forward Maxim Logue.

Bennerman and Logue will help fill the roster hole left by Henri Veesar, who declared for the 2026 NBA Draft. Veesar averaged 17.0 points, 8.7 rebounds and 2.1 assists per game this past season, while shooting 60.8% from the field and 42.6% from beyond the arc.

For his efforts, Veesar was named an All-ACC Second-Team selection this year.Veesar was offered up to $6 million by teams attempting to lure him into the transfer portal this offseason, per CBS Sports‘ Matt Norlander. Nonetheless, he opted to move onto the next chapter of his career.

The Tar Heels are undergoing significant roster turnover after firing head coach Hubert Davis this offseason and replacing him with longtime NBA HC Michael Malone. Malone coached in the NBA from 2001-25.

He led the Denver Nuggets to an NBA championship in 2023. Now, he’s ready to guide North Carolina to similar success.

“Carolina is one of the most historic programs in college basketball, and I am honored to be the head coach of the Tar Heels,” Malone said. “It is humbling to follow so many legends in Chapel Hill. I know from the many Tar Heels in the NBA how special the Carolina Basketball Family is, and I will do everything I can to continue UNC’s championship legacy while preparing our players for professional careers and life after basketball.”

The NCAA Transfer Portal officially opened on April 7 and closed on April 21. The new 15-day window was enacted following a recommendation by the men’s basketball oversight committee. Athletes did not have to commit to a new school by the April 21 deadline.

To keep up with the latest players on the move, check out On3’s Transfer Portal wire. The On3 Transfer Portal Instagram account and Twitter account are excellent resources to stay up to date with the latest moves.

The Mets, Red Sox and Phillies aren’t out — but they’re very much down

Alex Cora was fired as manager of the Boston Red Sox.

That news could have come from any of three major markets.

The Red Sox actually took two of three at Baltimore, but they’re still in last place in their division at 11-17. The New York Mets have been even worse, scoring one run while getting swept in a home doubleheader against lowly Colorado. The Mets have lost 15 of 17 to fall to 9-19.

And they actually have company in the NL East cellar, because the Philadelphia Phillies have dropped 11 of 12 and have the same 9-19 record.

Mets manager Carlos Mendoza is still employed, and so is Philadelphia’s Rob Thomson. And all three of these big-market teams can take solace in the notion that it’s hard to play your way out of contention before the end of April — if you have enough talent to recover.

Right now, FanGraphs still gives the Red Sox a 34% chance of making the playoffs, and the Phillies and Mets each a 33% chance. That means there’s a decent shot one of those three teams will turn it around and reach the postseason.

But so far this season has been dire for each of them. The Mets and Phillies have the two worst run differentials in baseball, and New York will be without shortstop Francisco Lindor at least for a few weeks because of a calf injury. That won’t help an offense that has scored the fewest runs in baseball.

Ace Zack Wheeler finally made his 2026 debut for Philadelphia, and the Phillies snapped a 10-game skid, but another loss dropped them to 10 1/2 games behind first-place Atlanta.

The Red Sox are a little closer to first place, trailing the Yankees by seven, but their run differential (minus-11) looks tolerable only because of a 17-1 win in which the Orioles brought in a position player to pitch during a 10-run ninth inning.

The next month is critical for these three teams. If they keep playing like this through Memorial Day, then it really might be too late to come back.

Trivia time

Both the lowest batting average in the National League and the highest ERA — among qualifying players — belong to members of the Phillies. Who are they?

Unfriendly schedule

The Milwaukee Brewers had to face each of last year’s Cy Young Award winners in back-to-back games. Tarik Skubal took the mound for Detroit against Milwaukee, and the Tigers eventually won 5-4 on a home run by Spencer Torkelson. Then Paul Skenes took a perfect game into the seventh against the Brewers in a game Pittsburgh won 6-0.

Slugfests

The most surprising pitchers’ duel of the week may have occurred when the Nationals and White Sox played nine scoreless innings before Washington won 2-1 in 10. The Nationals are averaging 5.38 runs per game, the fourth-most in the major leagues. They’ve allowed 5.9, the second-most in baseball. Washington was actually leading the majors in both runs scored and runs allowed.

The pitching was expected to be bad. The offense has made the team watchable thanks to James Wood (10 homers), CJ Abrams (.897 OPS) and a good start from Joey Wiemer (.320 average).

In 14 of Washington’s 29 games, at least one team has scored eight runs.

Performance of the week

Milwaukee’s Kyle Harrison struck out 12 in six one-hit innings in a 5-0 win over Pittsburgh. That prevented the Pirates from sweeping a series at Milwaukee for the first time since 2016.

Comeback of the week

Kansas City was down by three with two outs and nobody on in the bottom of the ninth before rallying to tie it against the Los Angeles Angels. The Royals eventually won 11-9 in 10 innings.

The Angels actually led 6-0 in the fifth, and it was 8-5 in the ninth before a triple by Vinnie Pasquantino, an RBI single by Salvador Perez and a two-run homer by Jac Caglianone sent the game to extra innings. Kansas City’s win probability had been 0.5%, according to Baseball Savant.

The Royals were down to their last out again in the 10th when Lane Thomas’ three-run homer won it.

Trivia answer

Alec Bohm is batting .143, and Jesús Luzardo has a 6.91 ERA.

Milwaukee Bucks End-of-Season Player Review & Quiz: Bobby Portis, Jericho Sims & Pete Nance

MILWAUKEE, WI - MARCH 8: Jericho Sims #00 and Pete Nance #35 of the Milwaukee Bucks box out Moritz Wagner #21 of the Orlando Magic during the game on March 8, 2026 at Fiserv Forum Center in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Gary Dineen/NBAE via Getty Images). | NBAE via Getty Images

Up next in our pop quiz series are the Bucks’ backup bigs: Bobby Portis, Jericho Sims, and Pete Nance. But while they share on-court positions, these guys play completely different games. How well do you know them?

Season in a snippet

Bobby Portis

67 GP, 24.2 MPG, 13.6 PPG, 6.4 RPG, 1.6 APG, 0.6 SPG, 0.2 BPG, .488/.456/.706

Kyle’s end-of-season grade: B-

Bobby Portis’ season started slowly, with the veteran averaging just 8.8 PPG on less than 40% shooting from the field through Milwaukee’s first eight games, and it seemed his flaws were becoming too much to gloss over. But you can’t keep a good shooter down for long, and by the end of November he was up to 11.2 PPG, shooting nearly 50% from the floor (48%) and three (47%). Portis’ hot streak continued, so much so that he was invited to participate in the three-point contest during All-Star Weekend. But with Milwaukee continuing to struggle and looking to rectify this by making a splash at the trade deadline, Portis’ contract and skillset had him in nearly every Bucks trade rumour. Of course, none of those scenarios came to fruition, and Portis finished the season with his typical Bucks’ numbers—albeit with a near-career-low rebounding percentage.

Jericho Sims

67 GP, 19.7 MPG, 5.0 PPG, 5.5 RPG, 1.6 APG, 0.3 SPG, 0.3 BPG, .784/.000/.620

Kyle’s end-of-season grade: B-

Jericho Sims’ season was a tale of two halves. In the first, he played sporadically—13.9 MPG in 32 of the Bucks’ opening 46 games—averaging just 2.8 PPG, 3.6 RPG, and 0.6 APG, while turning the ball over way too often (1.0 per game) for a guy with such low usage. In the second half, everything changed. No longer relegated to the dunker spot, Sims became something of an offensive hub, his confidence increasing seemingly by the day. In this second half stretch, Sims played 35 of a possible 36 games, increasing his averages to 24.9 MPG, 7.0 PPG, 7.3 RPG, and 2.4 APG, while turning it over just 1.2 times per game. He even posted a triple-double in a late-season game against the Detroit Pistons. Metamorphosis complete, Sims enters the offseason in a good spot—pick up his player option for 2026–27 or enter free agency following the best basketball of his career.

Pete Nance

46 GP, 15.7 MPG, 5.4 PPG, 2.7 RPG, 1.0 APG, 0.3SPG, 0.3 BPG, .515/.420/.364

Kyle’s end-of-season grade: B

Despite a strong Summer League, Pete Nance started the year as an afterthought, finishing 18th in our Ranking the Roster series. As a mature two-way player who was ineligible for postseason play, this was completely understandable. But Nance was not deterred, making the most of his opportunities when he got them. By the end of February—after a strong stretch where he played 16 consecutive games, shooting 61% from the field and 53% from three—Nance had won his way into fans’ hearts. In fact, 77% of them wanted him converted into a standard contract and were happy to waive Andre Jackson Jr., Gary Harris, Taurean Prince, Gary Trent Jr., or Cam Thomas to do so. By late March, they got their wish, with the Bucks signing Nance to a multi-year deal and surprisingly cutting Thomas to do so. Locked up for the next two seasons, Nance’s 2025–26 campaign is yet another chapter in the book of two-way success stories.

Tantalising totals

(1) Portis hit a career-high 135 three-pointers across the season. How many times did he hit five or more?

Click to reveal answer Four, including a season-high six against the Indiana Pacers.

(2) Sims dished out a career-high 10 assists in an end-of-season triple-double vs. the Detroit Pistons. How many times did he set or tie his career high in assists across the season?

Click to reveal answer Six.

(3) In his 47 games, how many times did Nance score double digits?

Click to reveal answer 12, including a career-high 23 against the Houston Rockets.

Atypically advanced

(1) True or false: Portis had both a better true shooting percentage and assist percentage this season than he did in either of the last two seasons he finished top three in Sixth Man of the Year voting?

Click to reveal answer True. Shooting: .587 vs. .581 and .575. Assists: 10.5% vs. 7.8% and 8.7%.

(2) True or false: Sims finished with a lower block percentage than Gary Harris, Mike Conley, and Desmond Bane?

Click to reveal answer True—0.6% compared to Harris’ 0.8%, Conley’s 0.7%, and Bane’s 0.7%.

Obscure optics   

(1) Match Nance’s splits:

  • 10.7 PPG, 5.2 RPG, 1.5 APG, .463/.371/.500, -21.5
  • 4.7 PPG, 2.7 RPG, 0.9 APG, .479/.424/.333, -9.1
  • 9.7 PPG, 5.1 RPG, 2.4 APG, .600/.500/.333, +5.9

to the minute range:

  • 10–19 MPG.
  • 20–29 MPG.
  • 30–39 MPG.
Click to reveal answer 10-19 minutes: 4.7 PPG, 2.7 RPG, 0.9 APG, .479/.424/.333, -9.1. 20-29 minutes: 9.7 PPG, 5.1 RPG, 2.4 APG, .600/.500/.333, +5.9. 30-39 minutes: 10.7 PPG, 5.2 RPG, 1.5 APG, .463/.371/.500, -21.5.

How did you fare? Share your score in the comments, and don’t forget to drop your thoughts along with it—which stat stands out?

Anze Kopitar’s 2-decade career with the Los Angeles Kings ends in cheers and tears with playoff loss

Anze Kopitar

Apr 26, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Kings center Anze Kopitar (11) looks on during the third period in game four of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs against the Colorado Avalanche at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: William Liang-Imagn Images

William Liang/William Liang-Imagn Images

LOS ANGELES — Anze Kopitar skated to center ice and slowly circled, his arm raised in gratitude, while he took in one last standing ovation. His Los Angeles Kings teammates pounded their sticks on the ice before escorting him to the bench and up the tunnel for the final time.

The Kings captain’s two-decade NHL career ended with the pain of a first-round playoff sweep by the Colorado Avalanche, yet he also basked in the love and well-wishes of every fan and teammate who came along for the last stretch of this remarkable journey.

“It was hard to keep it together, really,” Kopitar said. “Being here for 20 years, more than half of my lifetime, it’s extremely special. I really appreciate the fans.”

After arriving in Los Angeles as a raw Slovenian teenager, Kopitar played more games and scored more points than anybody in Kings history. He grew into a team captain and a family man with a wife and two children.

And he won two Stanley Cups, of course.

With a formidable legacy secured, Kopitar could smile through tears as he began the next chapter of his life in retirement.

“It’s very bittersweet, for sure,” Kopitar said afterward with his kids standing nearby. “There’s going to be some tears, yes, but that’s the way life goes, right? It’s a circle. It’s been one hell of a ride for 20 years. The good, the bad and the ugly. Not the way we wanted to go out, but it happened, and we’ve got to live with it.”

Kopitar’s 20th season with the Kings ended with their 5-1 loss to the powerhouse Avalanche, who have looked like the NHL’s best team for most of this season. Kopitar had experience in being on the best team during Los Angeles’ run to its only two championships and a Western Conference finals in a three-season stretch of glory from 2012-14.

The Kings never recaptured that excellence in his second decade, losing seven consecutive first-round playoff series, but he served as their captain for 10 years and cemented his status as a beloved sports figure in Southern California.

Even after the Avalanche won the first three games of this series, Kopitar was hopeful his career wasn’t quite over. When Colorado went up 4-1 in the third period of Game 4, he realized time was short.

“It hit me with about five, six minutes to go that this could be it,” Kopitar said. “For the last 20 years, I’ve never experienced that. There’s always a next game, there’s always a next year, and now it’s done. So it’s hard to comprehend.”

His fans in Los Angeles didn’t want to say goodbye: They repeatedly chanted his name in the third period and serenaded him with “Thank you Kopi!” He got standing ovations on his final two shifts before the final horn.

He then got hugs from Colorado captain Gabriel Landeskog and superstars Nathan MacKinnon and Cale Makar in a warm postgame handshake line.

“He’s a special guy on and off the ice with what he’s done and what he’s meant to this city,” said Avalanche defenseman Brent Burns, who spent many years playing against Kopitar with the rival San Jose Sharks.

Adrian Kempe and other Kings were in tears afterward when they contemplated life after Kopitar’s captaincy. Drew Doughty, Kopitar’s teammate since 2008, uncharacteristically was lost for words.

“I’m trying not to think about it right now, but man, he had an unbelievable career,” said Doughty, now the only player left in Los Angeles from its two championship teams. “He means so much to this organization. It’s going to be tough without him.”

The Kings made 11 playoff appearances with Kopitar, who played in a franchise-record 107 postseason games. Only Wayne Gretzky scored more points for Los Angeles in the playoffs than Kopitar.

He ended the regular season as the Kings’ career leader in games played (1,521), assists (864), points (1,316 after finally passing Marcel Dionne), overtime points (34) and game-winning goals (79). He scored his final goal on March 28, and he went scoreless in the four-game series against Colorado.

The farewell that began in September with his retirement announcement finally ended in late April. Kopitar has said he is moving his family back to Slovenia next year to allow his children to pursue their passions in hockey and figure skating.

“That’s what they deserve,” Kopitar said of his kids. “They’ve been 11 years (and) 9 years with a so-called part-time dad, and now they’ll get full time.”

'Kopi Never Cheats': Kempe Tears Up As Kopitar's Teammates Reflect On His Kings Career

As of Sunday, Los Angeles Kings captain Anze Kopitar has officially retired from the NHL following a 4-0 series loss to the Colorado Avalanche in the first round of the Stanley Cup playoffs.

It was an emotional ending for Kopitar and Kings fans, but no one was more emotional than his teammates after the game.

In the aftermath of Sunday's 5-1 defeat, Drew Doughty, Trevor Moore and Adrian Kempe spoke to the media and were asked to reflect on Kopitar's 20-year career in Los Angeles. 

Kempe, teammate of Kopitar's since being drafted by the Kings in 2014, had trouble sharing his thoughts because of how emotional he was, choking up and having tears in his eyes.

"He's been there my entire career," Kempe told reporters. "(I) want to thank him for everything he's done."

Later, he was asked about how different the team's leadership would be with Kopitar no longer a part of the group, and he could barely get through his answer.

"It's going to be different, obviously, leadership," he admitted. "Other guys, myself, have to step up."

How Kopitar Went From The Slovenian Kid to The Greatest King Ever How Kopitar Went From The Slovenian Kid to The Greatest King Ever With the Kings losing 5-1 to the Colorado Avalanche, it marks the end of the season for the Kings, but it also means the NHL is losing one of the greatest players ever to play.

Doughty, another longtime teammate of Kopitar's, also didn't say much in his media availability. But that didn't stop him from looking back on the career he's had.

"He had an unbelievable career," the Kings' defenseman told reporters. "Means so much to this organization, and yeah, it's going to be tough without him."

With Kopitar now retired, Doughty becomes the longest-active tenured player for Los Angeles, just completing his 18th campaign with the organization.

Family, Golf And F1 Races: Kings' Kopitar Reveals His Retirement PlansFamily, Golf And F1 Races: Kings' Kopitar Reveals His Retirement PlansWith just a sliver of the 2025-26 season and Anze Kopitar's NHL career remaining, the Los Angeles Kings captain was asked about his plans for retirement in a recent interview with Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman.

Left winger Trevor Moore was able to provide more of an assessment regarding what Kopitar meant to the franchise, but also to his teammates and the guys in the dressing room over the years.

"I think the culture that he brought, the no nonsense, be a pro when you come to the rink, play the game the right way," Moore said to the media. "If you cheat, it's unacceptable because Kopi never cheats.

"He's just a guy that everyone looks to. 'What do we wear in meetings?' All that kind of stuff… runs through Kopi."


Image

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Mets spiral from contender to major league cellar, 47-74 since June as pressure on Carlos Mendoza builds

NEW YORK — Table tennis and shuffleboard have been removed from the New York Mets clubhouse this season, replaced by a chessboard and cribbage table.

Recreational activities have changed, but the spiral from contender to cellar remains unchecked.

New York has lost 15 of its last 17 games after getting swept 3-1 and 3-0 in a doubleheader by the Colorado Rockies, a 119-game loser last year. The Mets are tied with NL East rival Philadelphia at a major league-worst 9-19.

“It’s hard to explain,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said. “It’s just not a good showing. Not good at-bats up and down.”

A big league-best 45-23 at the start of play on June 13 last year, the Mets are 47-74 since. The offseason makeover that saw Pete Alonso, Brandon Nimmo and Edwin Díaz depart, and Bo Bichette, Marcus Semien and Devin Williams arrive thus far has fizzled.

“We all know what kind of talent we have in that lineup and what kind of hitters we have and how much damage they can do,” star outfielder Juan Soto said. “So it’s a matter of time that they’re going to wake up and bring the best out of themselves.”

New York is 10 1/2 games behind NL East-leading Atlanta and seven games back for the last NL wild card. Its 28-game start matches the expansion 1962 Mets — who lost 120 games — along with 1964 and 1983 for the second-worst in team history behind an 8-20 opening in 1981.

“It’s not great. We got to be better,” Brett Baty said. “We’re putting in the work. All the guys are working really hard.”

New York’s 92 runs are the fewest in the major leagues and its 20 homers are one above the big league low. Its .625 OPS ranks last. The Mets have scored one run or none 10 times, including five shutouts.

A day after Boston’s Alex Cora became the first major league manager jettisoned this season, Mendoza said his job security isn’t a concern.

“The only thing I’m worried about here is I’ve got to get the guys going,” Mendoza said. “I know the questions will continue to come up, but my job is to find a way to get those guys out of the funk.”

Mendoza said president of baseball operations David Stearns had not given him any assurances.

“I come here every day. I have a relationship with David, with everyone,” he said. “I come here every day to do my job.”

Kodai Senga dropped to 0-4 with his third straight poor outing, getting chased in the third inning of the second game. An All-Star in 2023, when he was second in the NL with a 2.98 ERA, Senga has a 9.00 ERA and has allowed a team-high five homers in just 20 innings.

“Obviously not good enough,” Mendoza said.

He planned to have a conversation with the 33-year-old Japanese right-hander. Senga’s five-year, $75 million contract, which runs through the 2027 season, specifies the pitcher cannot be assigned to the minor leagues without his consent.

“That warrants a lot of discussions with a lot of different people,” Senga said through a translator. “I can’t give you a yes or no answer right now.”

He would consider a relief role.

“I’ve done it in the past so I don’t think that’s an issue.” he said.

Seeking offense, New York plans to designate Tommy Pham for assignment and has agreed to a major league contract with Austin Slater, a pair of people familiar with the move said, speaking to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the decisions were not announced.

Pham, 38, is 0 for 13 in nine games since he was called up on April 13. Slater, 33, hit .174 in 28 plate appearances for Miami, which designated him for assignment.

New York began the season with a big league high payroll of $358.4 million, according to Major League Baseball’s projections, and a total spend including luxury tax of $482.5 million, second to only the two-time World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers.

“At the end of the day, we got to go out and do it. That’s as simple as that,” Mendoza said. “You watch film. You talk to players individually, support them, encourage them, challenge them. There’s a lot that goes (on) behind the scene as a manager. You’ve got to stay positive obviously but, yeah, it’s just finding ways to get the guys going.”

Table tennis in the clubhouse was a favorite of Alonso, and it was removed as soon as he left town. From last year’s clubhouse diversions, the basketball hoop and the pool table remain.

In the pool table after the doubleheader defeat, several balls were sitting in a corner pocket. Prominent was an 8-ball.

NHL Player Props & Best Bets for Today, April 27: Saves Add Up for Silovs

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The NHL playoffs continue to deliver, and I’ve got a trio of NHL player props for the pair of games on the ice this Monday, April 27.

My NHL picks begin with Pittsburgh Penguins goalie Arturs Silovs in the early game, and wrap up with Utah Mammoth starter Karel Vejmelka in the nightcap.

Best NHL player prop bets today

PlayerBet99
Penguins Silovs Over 22.5 saves-110
Mammoth Schmaltz Under 0.5 points+120
Mammoth Vejmelka Over 24.5 saves-130

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(not available in Ontario)

Our best NHL player props for Monday, April 27

Take a look at our best bets and expert analysis below.

Prop #1: Arturs Silovs Over 22.5 saves

-110 at BET99

Pittsburgh Penguins goalie Arturs Silovs turned away 28 of 30 shots with 1.68 goals saved above expected to extend the series in Game 4, and he’s no stranger to postseason success.

The 25-year-old Latvian played 10 playoff games for the Vancouver Canucks in 2024, and he was the Calder Cup Playoffs MVP after a championship run with the AHL Abbotsford Canucks last spring.

The Philadelphia Flyers have also recorded 27.7 shots per game across the past three, so Silovs stands to see enough rubber to go Over the number again tonight.

  • Time: 7:00 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: ESPN, Sportsnet

Prop #2: Nick Schmaltz Under 0.5 points

+120 at BET99

Utah Mammoth center Nick Schmaltz plays go-to minutes. It’s just that those minutes are coming against the best players jumping the boards for the Vegas Golden Knights, and Schmaltz is overmatched.

He’s only been on the ice for 0.83 expected goals and a 31.0 xGF% while combining with wingers Lawson Crouse and Clayton Keller for a 34.9 Corsi For percentage at 5-on-5.

I'm backing Schmaltz to go pointless for the third time in four games in this series.

  • Time: 7:00 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: ESPN, Sportsnet

Prop #3: Karel Vejmelka Over 24.5 saves

-130 at BET99

It’s been a solid series for Mammoth starter Karel Vejmelka. He’s posted a .916 SV% with 2.75 GSAx, and despite Utah posting just a 42.6 CF% and 44.4 xGF% at 5-on-5 through the first three games, the Mammoth hold the 2-1 series lead.

With the Golden Knights driving the play, behind in the series and averaging 28.0 shots per game, look for the ice to continue tilting in their direction in Game 4.

  • Time: 7:00 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: ESPN, Sportsnet

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Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
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Sidney Crosby, Penguins aim to extend season again vs. Flyers. Mammoth look for 3-1 lead on Golden Knights

Sidney Crosby

Apr 25, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins center Sidney Crosby (87) skates back to the bench after scoring a goal against the Philadelphia Flyers during the first period in game four of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

Eric Hartline/Eric Hartline-Imagn Images

At one point, Sidney Crosby could have seen more of himself on an interstate billboard than on a playoff highlight reel for the Penguins.

Ask anyone who has followed his career, the two-time NHL MVP doesn’t stay down for long.

Crosby responded like a captain should with his Pittsburgh Penguins in a 0-3 series hole to the in-state rival Philadelphia Flyers, notching his first goal, an assist and a screen that set up longtime teammate Kris Letang’s crucial goal in a 4-2 series-extending win.

“With every game of the series, it’s more difficult,” Crosby said. “But we’ve got some life and we’ve got to take advantage of the opportunity of going back home now.”

The 38-year-old Crosby, now in his 21st NHL season, long had tormented the Flyers. He has more points against them than any other player has scored against Philadelphia, along with thrice raising the Stanley Cup since the Flyers won their two titles in 1974 and 1975.

He still has to absorb the boos and profane chants directed at him from the moment he hits the ice for warmups to his final shift. The sports travel group Phans of Philly even paid for a billboard of Crosby lying face down on the ice along with the definition of embellishment after he was penalized for it in Game 3. And he managed one assist through the first three games.

But he made a heads-up play when he kicked the puck to Letang and also set a savvy screen on defenseman Travis Sanheim, allowing Letang to have a clean look when beating Flyers goaltender Dan Vladar for a 3-1 third-period lead.

“It’s all those little details sometimes,” Letang said. “It’s not the crazy play or the passes. Finding a guy back post sometimes, it’s little details, like, picking the guy giving me a lot of time to pick my shot was an amazing play. So it just shows you how much IQ he has on the ice and, you know, what to do at every moment in every situation.”

Philadelphia Flyers at Pittsburgh Penguins

When/Where to Watch: Game 5, Monday, 7 p.m. EDT (ESPN)

Series: Flyers lead 3-1

The Flyers missed their chance to advance to play the Carolina Hurricanes, who never trailed at any point in the series in their four-game sweep of Ottawa. The Hurricanes will take the breather — while the NHL will gladly take at least one extra game in the first round’s signature rivalry series.

The Flyers still are in control with a significant lead. Coach Rick Tocchet preached in the moments after Game 3 that clinchers are often the toughest to win. The Flyers proved their coach right once.

“I don’t know if it’s complacent, we didn’t do the little small things,” Tocchet said.

The Flyers overcame youth and inconsistencies to reach the playoffs courtesy of a 14-4-1 run, becoming the NHL’s first team to make it after being 10 points out of contention with 22 or fewer games remaining. Then they surprised the NHL — and probably themselves — by winning twice in Pittsburgh and then Game 3 at home in their first postseason appearance since 2020.

“If somebody told you before the series it was going to be 3-1 after four games, you guys wouldn’t believe us,” Vladar said. “So we are good. Nothing’s changing for us. Still being positive in here. They are a really good team. It’s not easy to win four in a row against a team like that.”

Vegas Golden Knights at Utah Mammoth

When/Where to Watch: Game 4, Monday, 9:30 pm EDT (ESPN)

Series: Mammoth lead 2-1

Utah won its first-ever home playoff game by maximizing limited scoring chances.

Vegas only allowed 12 shots on goal, a franchise low for any playoff game. The Golden Knights even held the Mammoth to a single shot in the third period. It didn’t matter. Utah ripped off four unanswered goals over the first 30 minutes — converting half of their first eight shots on goal — while cruising to a 4-2 victory for the 2-1 lead in the first-round series. Lawson Crouse led the way, scoring twice over a six-minute span early in the second period.

“I think we stuck with it,” Utah forward Clayton Keller said. “They’re a great team, and they make you work for everything.”

Vegas allowed far fewer chances to score than it did during its Game 2 loss at home. The Golden Knights are feeling confident that’s a trend they can carry into Game 4 and perhaps steal a road win in Salt Lake City.

“We defend the proper way, then our offense will come, and I have full trust in the guys that way,” Vegas coach John Tortorella said.

Ridly Greig To Have Hearing For Sucker Punch On Sean Walker

It looks like the NHL is going to be adding insult to injury for the Ottawa Senators.

Just a day after they were eliminated in a four-game sweep by the Carolina Hurricanes, the league announced that Senators forward Ridly Greig would be having a hearing related to a sucker punch he threw at Hurricanes defenseman Sean Walker.

During a second period scrum, Walker was already engaged with Senators forward Warren Foegele when Greig decided to throw an uppercut on Walker.

There was no penalty called on the play, but there was significant outcry around the league from the media, fans and former players regarding the dirty cheap shot. 

According to Ottawa Citizen's Bruce Garrioch, the hearing will be over the phone, meaning Greig can be suspended for only a maximum of five games to begin next season.


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