Finding meaning in this Dallas Mavericks season

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - MARCH 16: Cooper Flagg #32 of the Dallas Mavericks dunks during the first half against the New Orleans Pelicans at Smoothie King Center on March 16, 2026 in New Orleans, Louisiana. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Tyler Kaufman/Getty Images) | Getty Images

What’s the point of all this?

Not just the last 12 games of this Dallas Mavericks season. They’re probably going to lose a lot of those games, so you’re not watching for the thrill of victory. A lot of the players on the team right now will likely be gone after this summer, so you’re not seeing the beginning of some blossoming young team.

I’m going to watch at least half those games, if not more. Why?

It’s the same when the team is good, too, even when they’re great. Take a moment and think about all the great teams who didn’t win a championship, and then broke apart within five years. If you’re a Golden State Warriors or San Antonio Spurs fan, you’ve seen four championships in the last 25 years. That means 21 years of disappointment for fans of the most successful teams. For fans of less successful teams…well, it’s a lot of disappointment.

But we keep coming back. We watch championship teams, mediocre teams, lottery teams. Mostly it ends badly, sometimes even heartbreak. So why do we do this?

One easy answer is to see Cooper Flagg’s development. It looks like he’s going to be a superstar, and it’s always fun to be there for the beginning of something like that.

There’s also the other young guys, Max Christie and Ryan Nembhard. They’ll likely be role players at best, but it’s fun to get to know players like that and see if they become more.

There’s the chance that Jason Kidd will awake from his slumber and show a human emotion once or twice during a game. Maybe he’ll even raise his voice and get ejected, just for fun or sheer boredom.

If Dwight Powell gets enough minutes, he might break the career record for getting hit in the face with a basketball. Or he might break a real Mavericks franchise record simply by being around for a while (he’s less than thirty rebounds away from passing Erick Dampier for eighth all time).

Maybe you’re in full tank mode and are rooting for them to lose every game for the rest of the season so they get a better pick. That’s one way to stay entertained! Make sure you’re staying up to date on all the mock drafts.

You might just like seeing Klay Thompson shoot 3-pointers. He likely won’t pass any more historical marks this season, but he’s got a great shot, and it’s fun to see him when he’s shooting the lights out. Maybe Thompson has a game where he goes on an absolute heater and hits double digit 3-pointers.

Maybe around mid-March the players will just be sick of this season and get in a fight with another team. It’s not what you’re watching for, obviously, but it would break up the monotony of one of the weirdest and blandest seasons in years.

Maybe the best reason to be here, watching these games, caring about what’s going on, is the relationships you build through this dumb team. It creates bonds with your parents, your kids, your brothers and sisters, your friends, that will likely never go away. It’s why we get so happy when this team succeeds, and why we get so despondent when a historically incompetent GM trades away a top five player for almost no return.

So we keep showing up to see them lose by twenty to a championship contender, or lose by two to a fellow lottery-bound team. We watch the good games and the bad, even if we turn it off and go to bed early sometimes (especially those West Coast games with late start times).

Maybe there’s no real legitimate reason to watch a soon-to-be deconstructed team finish out a miserable season, and we’re all some sort of addicts. Addicted to basketball, whether it’s in it’s best or worst forms. If you stop and think about it too long, it really doesn’t make sense. We’re going to watch this team finish out 2-10, together, for fun?

But here we are, getting excited about Flagg making a play way too advanced for someone his age, or getting mad about Daniel Gafford’s lack of rebounding, or just getting bored. But we’re in it together, in this basketball purgatory together, thinking about better days on the horizon.

Blackhawks Vs Predators: Projected Lineup, How To Watch, & More Ahead Of Game 70

The Chicago Blackhawks and Nashville Predators are at the United Center on Sunday afternoon for a day game within the Central Division. The Blackhawks are trying to finish the season strong, while the Predators are trying to make a late-season push for the playoffs. 

Chicago is coming off a horrendous loss to the Colorado Avalanche on Friday night. Nashville is coming into the second leg of a back-to-back, as they defeated the Vegas Golden Knights on Saturday. 

Scouting Nashville 

The Nashville Predators are on a three-game winning streak, and that has pushed them above the playoff line entering Sunday. Nobody saw that coming, even a month ago, let alone multiple months ago. 

Stamkos - O'Reilly - Evangelista 

Forsberg - Wood  - Marchessault

Jost - Haula - L'Heureux

Schafer - Svechkov - Wiesblatt 

Skjei - Josi

Hague - Perbix

Barron - Ufko

Annunen

Murray

Steven Stamkos, Ryan O’Reilly, Jonathan Marchessault, and Filip Forsberg lead things up front for Nashville. They were sellers at the deadline, but they kept these guys, and they are being rewarded for it late in the season. 

On defense, the bottom two pairs follow the lead of the top pair, comprised of Brady Skjei and Roman Josi. Nashville has been one of the best NHL teams at pumping out impactful defensemen, and this year is no different with their newfound depth.

Juuse Saros is injured, so their options in goal against the Blackhawks are Justus Annunen and Matt Murray. Annunen defeated the Golden Knights on Saturday, but they could go right back to him on Sunday. Andrew Brunette has a decision to make, but it won’t be revealed until closer to game time. 

Projected Lines, Defense Pairs, & Goalie For Chicago

The Blackhawks are not expected to have Sacha Boisvert or Anton Frondell available for Sunday’s game. They are both expected to make their NHL debut on the East Coast later next week. 

Greene-Bedard-Burakovsky  

Bertuzzi-Nazar-Teravainen  

Slaggert-Donato-Mikheyev  

Lardis-Toninato-Lafferty  

Vlasic-Levshunov

Kaiser-Rinzel

Del Mastro-Grzelcyk

Knight

The Chicago Blackhawks are going to be without Andrew Mangiapane and Louis Crevier again on Sunday. They are expected to return to the lineup on the upcoming road trip. 

Going with a traditional lineup was forced on Jeff Blashill in the loss to Colorado, as he used the 11/7 strategy in St. Paul on Thursday. Having Dominic Toninato, Sam Lafferty, and Ethan Del Mastro in the lineup on Sunday will be necessary again. 

Arvid Soderblom played for Spencer Knight on Sunday, the second half of a back-to-back. Against the Predators, expect Knight to get the nod once again. 

How To Watch

The game can be heard locally on AM 720 WGN in the Chicagoland area. To view this game, it can be found on CHSN locally. Nationally, it is available to stream on ESPN+. The puck will drop shortly after 2:00 PM CT. 

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Canadiens Turn Things Around And Bag Big Win

With an incredibly tight playoff race in the Eastern Conference this season, the Montreal Canadiens had a must-win game against the New York Islanders on Saturday at the Bell Centre. Before the game, the organization paid tribute to Rodger Brulotte, a monument of the journalistic scene in Quebec, who passed away on Friday after a battle with cancer. Brulotte will be most remembered for his role as the Montreal Expos play-by-play man on RDS, but he also had a hand in the creation of the Expos’ mascot (at the time), Youppi! After the video tribute, the mascot came out on the ice, wearing his Expos jersey from back in the day, and holding a picture of himself with Brulotte, a nice touch by the organization.

The Canadiens came out strong out of the gate and took a whopping 17 shots on Ilya Sorokin’s net in the first frame, but they still ended up trailing 2-1 after the first 20 minutes of action. While the Habs did well to test the star netminder often, they failed to create any traffic in front of him, and he’s one of those goalies who will stop the puck if he sees it.

Jacob Fowler, who was in the net for the first time since his loss to the Anaheim Ducks last Sunday, only saw six shots in the first stanza, but still surrendered two goals. The first of which was a sharp top-corner shot from former Habs Emil Heineman on the power play, and the second was scored on a breakaway. He could have given up a third after mishandling the puck out of his net and losing it, but Brendan Gallagher cut off the Islanders’ pass.

A Tale Of Two Teams

After dominating in the first frame, the Canadiens came out worryingly flat to start the second frame and stayed flat for much of it. Martin St-Louis’ men didn’t have a single shot on goal until 14 minutes had been played in the frame. Whatever Montreal was trying, it wasn’t working. Asked about that period, the coach explained:

The first tenish minutes of the second, we couldn’t execute. We had so many moments where we could have spent time in their zone, but we missed a pass, we tried to go low to high, and it bounced over our sticks. We could never get going. Eventually, we got it back. You know, I thought our power play was really good, which helped us regain momentum. I just felt tonight, in that third period, the guys understood how we played a lot of good hockey, and, unfortunately, the game is tied right now. Let’s get this game. It was a group decision at that point; we just kept going, and we were hard to handle.
- St-Louis on a tough game to coach

The Canadiens bounced back after a good scare; the Islanders had a goal denied when the puck was touched too high, and it seemed to wake Montreal up. Not long after, Jean-Gabriel Pageau absolutely obliterated Lane Hutson with a bone-crushing hit, and from that point on, the right version of the Canadiens was back. Seconds after that hit, Alex Newhook, who had missed numerous chances up to that point, tied up the game with a one-timer from the side. The goal came at the right time, especially since he had just missed a golden scoring opportunity from the high slot.

Less than a minute and 20 seconds later, Cole Caufield scored his 41st of the season, walking in with the puck on the near post and lodging it above Sorokin’s shoulder. A power play goal made possible by the fact that Juraj Slafkovsky made a good read on the other side to stop a zone exit from the Isles.

After 40 minutes, the Canadiens had a 3-2 lead, somehow. Still, Brendan Gallagher had put them in hot water again by taking an incredibly silly penalty, a tripping call in the offensive zone with six seconds left in the frame.

Gallagher Bounced Back

While the penalty ended up being costly, with New York tying up the game on that power play, the veteran wasn’t made to skip a shift. Some might have liked the coach to have held him accountable, but on his very next shift, the Habs got the lead back as the veteran was creating traffic in front of the Isles’ netminder. Gallagher had an assist on the play and redeemed himself in the best possible way. Perhaps the coach felt his veteran knew what he had done was wrong, so there was no need to hammer the point home.

An Offensive Feast For The Top Line

In this 7-3 win, the top line combined for 13 points. Caufield got a hat-trick and a pair of helpers for five points, while Nick Suzuki and Juraj Slafkovsky both recorded four points. They were a thorn in the Islanders’ side all night, and they frustrated their first line so much that Matthew Barzal ended up dropping his gloves and trying to fight the captain in the third. Suzuki was wise enough to decline the invite, and Kaiden Guhle soon came to his rescue.

Montreal now has 13 games left to play, and Caufield has 43 goals, making a 50-goal season a real possibility; he is on pace for 51 as things stand. As for Slafkovsky, he now has 61 points in 69 games, and each new point sets a new career high. As for Suzuki, with 85 points, he only needs four to tie his record-breaking 89 output from last season. The question is, though, will they remain together or will they have to be split up to kick-start the second line?

The Canadiens will have a day off on Sunday and be back to work in Brossard on Monday morning.


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Orioles news: Dean Kremer optioned, injury updates

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 02: Dean Kremer #64 of the Baltimore Orioles licks his fingers after giving up a lead-off home run to LaMonte Wade Jr. #31 of the San Francisco Giants in the first inning on June 02, 2023 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Hello, friends.

There are now just four days remaining until Orioles Opening Day. It’s coming on Thursday! As of yesterday, the team has wrapped up its exhibition schedule in Florida, with a home-and-home pair of exhibitions in Baltimore (today) and Washington (tomorrow) still to come before everything starts getting finalized for the regular season. Today’s 1:35 afternoon game will be televised on MASN.

In yesterday’s Grapefruit League finale, the Orioles beat the Phillies, 10-8. Jhonkensy Noel hit a grand slam in the game, which is nice for him but is not going to make much difference in his roster chances. Several pitchers who will not be on the Opening Day roster were in action in the game and gave up runs. One guy who will be on the roster had a scoreless inning: Tyler Wells struck out three guys.

The Orioles made some news yesterday that still has me surprised. Dean Kremer was optioned to minor league camp. This was essentially the obvious move ever since the team signed Chris Bassitt, yet it still surprised me because I couldn’t believe they would actually do it. Kremer has been a remarkably consistent guy across the last three years – seriously, his three ERAs are within 0.09 of one another. They weren’t good ERAs, but they are good enough that he has earned a spot in a major league rotation. Just, you know, the back, not the middle or even the front.

Kremer might still get that spot. The Orioles could still be intending to go with a six-man rotation. The thing is that with the early off days on March 27 and April 2, they don’t even really need a fifth starter more than once over the first week-plus of game action. Perhaps they’ll try to bring up Kremer when they want to transition to six, and in the meantime he’s keeping his innings built up in Triple-A Norfolk. We’ll see what they end up doing. Somebody could get hurt before they try to go to six guys. Or they might have a different plan entirely.

Another angle to is it that Kremer has generally stunk in April, with last year’s 7.04 ERA being representative of what he’s done in his career. If it is possible to absorb the rocky April in the minors and then get him up to MLB after that’s out of his system for the year, that’s a plus for the fortunes of the 2026 Orioles. Your guess is as good as mine whether Kremer could come up to MLB in May and avoid his career-long April struggles. Maybe he’s just going to stink in the first month he’s facing MLB hitters, whatever month that ends up being.

The Orioles also delivered a variety of injury updates that could have had a potential impact on the Opening Day roster. Manager Craig Albernaz told reporters before yesterday’s game that the knee soreness for Dylan Beavers shouldn’t have him out for the start of the season. On the other hand, Heston Kjerstad, who was unlikely to make the Opening Day roster anyway, is getting an MRI done on his hamstring. It seems that injured reliever Andrew Kittredge is trying to keep his injured list stint to the minimum. We’ll see how that works out.

Although spring training is over, the Orioles have not cut down the roster to close to the 26-man limit just yet. There are 42 players remaining in camp, two of whom are certainly ticketed for the IL. The team has probably already made the choices, it’s just a question of when they will reveal them. Or if Mike Elias does another end of spring training waiver wire/cash considerations surprise. It’s happened before.

Orioles stuff you might have missed

Keegan Akin suffers hip injury, muddling bullpen picture (The Baltimore Sun)
One more bit of injury news from yesterday that could shake up the Opening Day roster. If Akin can’t go, will Elias decide it’s Anthony Nunez time? That’s what I’d do, but I don’t think he’s going to ask me.

Takeaways from Elias’s end-of-spring comments about Mountcastle, Eflin, and more (The Baltimore Banner)
“We believe in his stick,” said Elias of Ryan Mountcastle, particularly when it comes to hitting left-handed pitching.

Opening Day rotation appears set as Kremer optioned to minors (Orioles.com)
The Orioles still haven’t announced the order in which their starters will go after Trevor Rogers. Beat writer Jake Rill takes his best guess here. What do you think?

Albernaz on Eflin: “He’s checked every box” (School of Roch)
The fact that Zach Eflin has looked healthy and seemed to be pitching well through spring training, including in his most recent outing a couple of days ago, seems to be the thing that sealed Kremer being sent to the minors. If Eflin was two weeks behind schedule, Kremer is on the team. But he’s seemed to be in good shape, so that’s how it is.

Birthdays and Orioles anniversaries

Today in 1981, Earl Weaver was suspended after removing the Orioles from the field during a spring training game and forfeiting the remainder of the game in protest that he was not provided a correct batting order after the opponent, the Royals, made a number of substitutions. I’ll go ahead and guess he was right about it.

There are a few former Orioles who were born on this day. They are: 2018 catcher Andrew Susac, 2013 outfielder Mike Morse, and 1957 super utility man Billy Goodman.

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday to you! Your birthday buddies for today include: Declaration of Independence signer and Marylander Charles Carroll (1723), actor Chico Marx (1887), Broadway composer Stephen Sondheim (1930), Broadway composer Andrew Lloyd Webber (1948), and actor Keegan-Michael Key (1971).

On this day in history…

In 1765, the Parliament of Britain passed the Stamp Act, levying taxes directly on the North American colonies. Over time they were rather famously unhappy about this.

In 1871, North Carolina’s governor, William Woods Holden, was impeached and removed from office. He was the first governor of a state to be removed from office in this way. If the Wikipedia article about this is accurate, there have been a total of six more governors removed from then to now.

In 1963, the debut album for The Beatles, titled Please Please Me, was released.

In 1972, the Equal Rights Amendment, which proposed to enshrine that equality of rights shall not be denied on account of sex, was sent to the states for ratification. This effort has to date proved unsuccessful, though many states, including Maryland, include such a clause in their state constitutions.

A random Orioles trivia question

I received a random book of Orioles trivia questions for Christmas. I’ll ask a question in this space each time it’s my turn until I run out of questions or forget. There are 100 questions and because I’ve skipped stupid ones, we are already on 65. Here’s today’s question:

How many Gold Glove winners did the Orioles have in 1996? Bonus: Name the players.

**

And that’s the way it is in Birdland on March 22. Have a safe Sunday.

Phillies news: Justin Crawford, Bryce Harper, Konnor Griffin

Mar 14, 2026; Tampa, Florida, USA; Philadelphia Phillies center fielder Justin Crawford (80) looks on after scoring a run against the New York Yankees in the eighth inning during spring training at George M. Steinbrenner Field. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images | Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images

With the announcement that Andrew Painter had made the starting rotation and that Justin Crawford had his contract selected, the team’s final roster is starting to take shape. We should know the fate of the 26th man on the roster soon enough (please don’t be Stubbs, please don’t be Stubbs…), at which point we will have the final team ready to open against the Rangers on Thursday.

On to the links.

Phillies news:

MLB news:

Seven Games In: A Jayson Tatum Progress Report

The Jayson Tatum return has been riveting. Every shot attempt, rebound, pass, and even high-five over these first seven games has been scrutinized. The overall early returns on the Tatum comeback have been sensational; however, his performance against the Memphis Grizzlies is a good reminder that he still has a way to go before he fully regains his superpowers. 

Coming out of the game against the Golden State Warriors on Wednesday night, the Jayson Tatum and Boston Celtics Hype Train had left the station. The three-point efficiency, the explosive drives…it was easy to envision the Boston Celtics playing in the NBA Finals, with Jayson Tatum playing an integral role.

For at least another couple of days, the hype train has returned to the station for some maintenance.

Tatum’s performance against the Grizzlies doesn’t need to be belaboured. It was easily his worst game since returning – missed layups, sloppy turnovers, questionable shot selection, and a general lack of the intensity that has become a staple of the 2025-2026 Boston Celtics. I don’t want that assessment to be misconstrued. Tatum played poorly by his standards. We have to remember how incredible Jayson Tatum was before he ruptured his Achilles. In his final game before the injury, Tatum had 42 points, 8 rebounds, 4 assists, 4 steals, 2 blocks in what was one of the best games anyone on the planet played last season. It was a rough outing against the Grizzlies, but that doesn’t mean Tatum hasn’t already exceeded expectations since returning. 

It has been 313 days since Jayson Tatum ruptured his Achilles, and he is playing impactful NBA basketball for the two seed in the Eastern Conference. That’s the real story through seven games. In 29.6 minutes per game, Tatum has put up 20 points, 9 rebounds, and 3 assists. The headline from that stat line to me is the 29.6 minutes per game. And over his last four games, Tatum is playing 31.6 minutes per game. I think if you told Jayson Tatum on the night of his injury that he would be back playing 32 minutes a night in just 313 days, both Jayson and Celtics fans would be overjoyed. They might even be tempted to fire up the duckboats. 

The fact that Tatum being out there playing basketball is the biggest win of all, but Tatum isn’t just out there. The Celtics have been crushing teams while Jayson Tatum has been on the court through seven games. With Tatum on the court, the Celtics are beating teams by 14.1 points per 100 possessions. And that’s despite Tatum struggling to put the orange ball in the basket consistently.

How is Tatum impacting the game at such a high level despite not being able to score efficiently? A significant factor is Tatum’s impact on the team’s turnover rate. The 2025-2026 Boston Celtics already led the league in fewest turnovers. Tatum has only amplified that strength. When Tatum has been on the court, the Celtics’ turnover percentage has been 9.5%. When Tatum is off the court this season (now 2,718 minutes), the Celtics’ turnover percentage has been 12.6% — best in the league. This year’s Celtics success has been driven by their dominance on the margins. Jayson Tatum has been a margins machine for years. He suppresses the team’s turnovers, he limits opponents’ offensive rebounding rate, he creates three-pointers for himself and others, and he defends without fouling. It’s almost as if Jayson Tatum was built in a lab for Mazzulla Ball. 

The most encouraging aspect of Jayson Tatum’s return has been his driving. There is still a lack of burst relative to pre-injury times. However, Tatum’s ability to get to the basket this early in his return is encouraging. Through seven games, Tatum is averaging 9.7 drives per game and shooting 54.3% on them, not far off his 2024-2025 season (10.3 drives per game, 56%). Tatum already being able to collapse defenses consistently should be a terrifying sign for opposing teams. 

One aspect of Jayson Tatum’s game that has been a glaring struggle since returning has been his scoring efficiency. Tatum currently has a true shooting percentage of 51.3%. For context, Tatum had a true shooting efficiency of 59% over his previous four seasons. The lackluster scoring efficiency can be mainly attributed to his cold start from three-point range. That number currently sits at 29.4%.

I’m not sure if we can attribute this cold shooting to rust or the Achilles injury. Sometimes players, and specifically Jayson Tatum, go through cold stretches. Derrick White has been ice-cold for large stretches this season. Tatum himself had a true shooting percentage of 50.5% and a three-point percentage of 26.3% in the 2024 NBA Finals. It’s hard to say if Tatum is missing shots due to getting back into rhythm or due to standard shooting variance. 

Lastly, the answer to the question that everyone was waiting for: could Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown, a duo who have played over 14,000 minutes together, co-exist after Jaylen Brown submitted his resumé for the All-NBA First Team? A huge surprise to no one who has been paying attention to the previous eight years of Jays era basketball, Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum have been slaughtering opposing teams when they share the court through seven games. In 94 minutes on the court together, the Celtics are beating teams by 17.7 points per 100 possessions. Death, taxes, and Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum winning basketball games. 

Former, current NBA players sound off on NBA expansion as vote looms

It seems like a foregone conclusion that the NBA will lean toward adding more teams to its league.

The league's board of governors will meet next week to further discuss an expansion to a 32-league team and approve moving forward on bid offers for a future market in Las Vegas and returning to Seattle, according to ESPN.

NBA commissioner Adam Silver said during a February news conference that in the March meeting the league won't be officially voting, but "will likely come out of those meetings ready, prepared to take a next step in terms of potentially talking to interested parties."

"It doesn't have to be a two-team expansion. Frankly, it doesn't have to be any number of teams. I think the logical next move would be to say, all right, we've had those discussions internally, we've made decisions about cities to focus on and what the opportunity is, and now we've got to go out into the marketplace," Silver said. "I think that's probably the most important step, to find out who is potentially interested in owning a franchise in particular cities, what's the value of that franchise. There's some work to do in terms of potential conference realignment. That's the next step there."

When is the vote and how does it work?

If passed, it potentially would bring NBA franchises to Las Vegas and back to Seattle, for the assumed return of the SuperSonics, starting in the 2028-29 season.

"I think in fairness to the cities, Seattle and Las Vegas in particular, I've been very clear I don't want to tease teams, I don't want to tease cities or mislead anyone," Silver said. "I think we wanted to get through collective bargaining, national television deals. We've done that, and now we've turned to it as a league."

The meeting is expected to take place March 24 or 25.

Although an official decision won't come until July, it gives reassurance to potential suitors and bidders that an NBA team could come to a city near them.

To make it happen, 23 of the 30 league owners would need to agree to add teams to the Association. Additionally, bids would cost anywhere between $7 and $10 billion per team, according to ESPN.

Seattle-raised NBA players building excitement

Just the thought of the possibility has brought excitement to many within the NBA community whom were raised in Seattle.

Orlando Magic forward Paolo Banchero was born and raised in Seattle. He was a five-star power forward out of O'Dea High School, which he led to a Class 3A state title as a sophomore.

Banchero was 5 years old when the team relocated to Oklahoma City. Although he has no recollection of Sonics basketball, he understands the magnitude of a return and what that'd do for the city.

"If that was to happen that would be a crazy experience just for me. I never got to watch the NBA in Seattle so I don't know what that's like but I know that the city loves basketball," Banchero told USA TODAY Sports. "Big basketball town, even when the NBA did leave, obviously I grew up in that culture. Everyone's been talking about it for going on 10 years about them coming back so if the NBA was to make that happen then I'm sure that the city would be really excited."

Golden State Warriors guard Gary Payton II, another Seattle native, already has his sights set on suiting up for the same franchise that drafted his dad, Gary Payton Sr., with the second pick of the 1990 NBA Draft.

"I would probably request a trade immediately," Payton said, joking with reporter Brian "Scoop B" Robinson. "Even though I love where I’m at, it’s about being able to throw on that Sonics jersey before my career is over. I really hope they end up getting that done so I can go hoop for the hometown one time."

Playing NBA games in your hometown is special

There's a special feeling that comes with playing in your hometown as you see all your family members, old teammates and friends that you grew up with.

Memphis Grizzlies second-year guard Jaylen Wells still gets a joy out of going home to play the Sacramento Kings. The Grizzlies visited California's capital twice this season, winning both, most recently on Feb. 4 when Wells had nearly 100 people − fans, friends, you name it − waiting to greet him after the game.

"Never gets old man, just seeing familiar faces after a game. Can't complain," Wells, a Sacramento-native, told USA TODAY Sports. "It's fun. It kind of like, reminds me, kind of like a high school game where you kind of just know a lot of people in the crowd, so kind of just feels like a second home game.”

Wells graduated from Folsom (Calif.) High School, where he averaged 26.3 points and 3.2 rebounds as a senior. He said he made some of his best memories in Sacramento at Folsom and at Sacramento Country Day School, a private, co-ed college preparatory school which has served pre-kindergarten to 12th graders since 1964.

Whether he knows it or not, he's a hometown hero and a positive example to those who come from the same city, or even play on the same high school or AAU teams as he did growing up.

"I hope that's what I could be labeled as," Wells said. "I feel a lot of people kind of leave Sacramento to get the spotlight, so I was happy to be able to stay in Sacramento, go to Sacramento trainers and play on Sacramento teams just to make a name for myself in Sacramento instead of having to leave."

That homecoming feel that Wells gets at least twice a season is a feeling that Banchero would absolutely welcome given the opportunity.

Hypothetically, maybe in a venue in Uptown Seattle such as Climate Pledge Arena, in front of its capacity-filled 18,300 attendees who would be there to cheer on the SuperSonics but also show love to one of their many homegrown hoopers.

"For me to get to go back and play there one day, that would be a hell of an experience for me and my family. So if that was to happen I would definitely excited for that," Banchero told USA TODAY Sports.

SuperSonic significance in Seattle

If anyone knows how special the Sonics are to Seattle, it's Kings head coach Doug Christie.

Christie is born and raised in Seattle, having attended Rainier Beach High School after spending time in Longview, Washington. He saw the positive effects of the city's lone NBA championship in 1979, and he's seen the team leave for Oklahoma City in 2008.

He told USA TODAY Sports that he'd be "crazy excited" for the Sonics return.

"As a kid, growing up in the inner city of Seattle, that's what probably in many ways saved my life was the Sonics," Christie said. "Gus Williams and DJ [Dennis Johnson], and Jack Sikma and the '79 team that beat the Bullets. Like all of a sudden, you got hope that there's a greater capacity for your life than just what you're seeing everyday."

A city's sports team can have that affect. They breathe life and inspiration. Their presence allows some kid watching them to see a version of themselves they've never imagine.

It gives an opportunity for them dream. For the everyday working person to have a moment where they forget about the problems in their life but instead fraternize amongst fellow sports fans -alike.

"Those people in Seattle are rabid, they want a team," Christie told USA TODAY Sports. "There is everything that is built in there to make it happen. So I would be very excited, on top of the fact that, you know, Portland, Seattle, it just makes a lot of sense. A lot of money there. I would be super excited for that."

It's time that the NBA pays its debt to the city of Seattle and bring back the SuperSonics.

The team left after the city wouldn't renovate KeyArena or build an arena. The owner then decided to take the team to Oklahoma and rename them the Oklahoma City Thunder, taking their history with them in 2008.

The league pump faked the town with discussions of relocating the Kings to Seattle and rebranding them as the Sonics, however the vote was rightfully denied by the board of governors in 2013.

Years later, KeyArena is now Climate Pledge Arena and has since been redeveloped with private financing and reopened as of 2021.

It's one of the state-of-the-art facilities which house the four-time WNBA champion Seattle Storm and NHL's Seattle Kraken. The best part is it's co-owned by Seattle and a group known as Oak View Group.

Let bygones be bygones. Bring back Seattle's NBA team.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NBA expansion sparks thoughts from former and current NBA players

Kevin Durant Reacts to Passing Michael Jordan on NBA All-Time Scoring List

Kevin Durant Reacts to Passing Michael Jordan on NBA All-Time Scoring List
KD passes MJ on the NBA scoring list and reflects on the milestone, consistency, and legacy in a candid conversation for Boardroom Talks.

On a quiet night late in his career, with the rhythm of a season already deep in its grind, Kevin Durant squared up for another jumper with the same smooth motion basketball fans have watched for nearly two decades. The ball rose high, spun softly, and dropped through the net like it had thousands of times before, but each bucket now carries extra weight. Every point nudged him closer to Michael Jordan on the NBA’s all-time scoring list, with Durant finally passing him on Saturday night against the Miami Heat.

Durant sat down with Rich Kleiman for a special episode of Boardroom Talks to reflect on what it means to pass someone he's looked up to his entire life.

"It's cool because it speaks to how long I've been around and how consistent I've been as a player," Durant said. "It's cool to know that the formula works for you to be around for so long. But at the end of the day, it's really just another milestone that I'll hit, and I just want to keep going and see where I end up. But passing guys is just always cool to be in that same conversation as them more than anything."

Durant’s journey to this moment didn’t begin in packed arenas or under championship banners. It started in the gyms of Prince George’s County, Maryland, where a skinny kid with impossibly long arms learned that scoring wasn’t just about strength, it was about feel. Anyone who knows basketball noticed early that Durant didn’t shoot like other players his size. He glided across the floor, rose over defenders, and released the ball from a height few could contest.

By the time he arrived in the NBA in 2007, the league had seen prolific scorers before. But Durant’s game unfolded differently. He wasn’t just piling up points; he was perfecting a craft. The high-release jumper. The effortless handle for someone nearly 7 feet tall. The patience to let the game come to him. Four scoring titles followed, along with an MVP award and the sense that the league was watching one of the purest offensive players it had ever seen.

Now, as Durant passes Jordan on the scoring list, the moment feels less like a surprise and more like the natural evolution of a career defined by one thing: buckets. Because Durant didn’t chase scoring history loudly. He built it quietly, jumper by jumper, until one day, the numbers placed him alongside the legends he grew up watching.

“His imprint, his impact on the game is so big that it’s always historical, even coming close to what he’s done,” Durant said.

Be sure to catch the full conversation on Boardroom's YouTube page here.

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Fantasy Basketball Week 22 Schedule Primer: Will Anthony Edwards, Stephen Curry be available?

In Yahoo! default leagues, Week 22 is the semifinal round of the fantasy playoffs. While most NBA teams play four games, a few have bad schedules, either because of the games they play or where those matchups fall on the schedule. And there are key injuries that will significantly affect how managers craft their lineups. Let's look at the Week 22 schedule primer.

Week 22 Games Played

4 Games: ATL, BKN, CHA, CHI, DEN, DET, GSW, HOU, IND, LAC, MEM, MIA, MIL, NOR, OKC, ORL, POR, SAC, TOR, UTA

3 Games: BOS, CLE, DAL, LAL, NYK, PHI, SAS, WAS

2 Games: MIN, PHX

Week 22 Back-to-backs

Sunday (Week 21)-Monday: BKN, POR, TOR

Monday-Tuesday: ORL

Tuesday-Wednesday: CLE, DEN

Wednesday-Thursday: DET

Thursday-Friday: NOP

Friday-Saturday: ATL, CHI, MEM, UTA

Saturday-Sunday: CHA, MIL, SAC

Sunday-Monday (Week 23): BOS, MIA, OKC, WAS

Week 22 Storylines of Note

- Suns, Timberwolves boast the worst schedules of Week 22.

Regarding low-rostered players, Phoenix and Minnesota are the teams to avoid next week due to their two-game slates. While the Suns are scheduled to play on Tuesday, one of the lighter game days, the Timberwolves play their first game of Week 22 on Wednesday, the busiest day of the week due to a 12-game slate. For the Suns, Tuesday's matchup with the Nuggets, as part of a four-game slate, could be a spot where managers who can update their lineups daily will look to players like Collin Gillespie or Oso Ighodaro for fantasy value.

However, for players on these teams who are dealing with injuries, the light schedules could prove beneficial. Anthony Edwards is the biggest name, and as of March 17, he was expected to be re-evaluated in one to two weeks. So, it's possible that he's available for Minnesota's final game of Week 22 on March 28 against the Pistons. Ayo Dosunmu and Bones Hyland have picked up their production in Edwards' absence and may be worth holding onto, even with the poor schedule.

- Will Stephen Curry or Joel Embiid be available to play?

Curry, who is progressing in his recovery from a knee injury, is expected to be re-evaluated on Tuesday after the Warriors return home from their current road trip. Before that, he will reportedly scrimmage on Sunday, so a return to game action may not be far away. Would it happen sometime during Week 22, when the Warriors are scheduled to play four games? Whenever Curry is cleared to play, it would be surprising if his playing time is not monitored closely. Still, Curry under a minutes restriction is more productive than most players at his position.

The same can be said for Embiid, who has been sidelined with a strained oblique muscle. He went through an on-court workout on March 20; however, while there has not been a setback, the 7-footer is still dealing with some soreness in his oblique, according to Gina Mizell of the Philadelphia Inquirer.

The 76ers are scheduled to play three games in Week 22, the last of which is on March 28 against the Hornets. We'll see if Embiid can get back at some point during this period. Even if he doesn't return, the rotation could look much different than it did to end Week 21. Paul George will be eligible to return from his 25-game suspension on March 25 against the Bulls, and Kelly Oubre Jr. was given a two-week re-evaluation timeline after spraining his left elbow on March 11.

- The Cavaliers, Mavericks and Lakers are done with Week 22 on Friday.

Not only are these teams scheduled to play three games, but they will all be done for the week after Friday's games. Cleveland is active on one of the light game days, as they host the Magic on Tuesday. As for the Mavericks and Lakers, they play on Monday, Wednesday and Friday, the busiest days of Week 22. That will make it more challenging for fantasy managers to gain an advantage, at least with players on those teams. And the Lakers have another concern to address going into Week 22.

- How many games will fantasy managers get out of Luka Dončić?

Dončić got into it with Magic backup center Goga Bitadze during Saturday's game in Orlando, resulting in both players being assessed technical fouls. While Bitadze getting one doesn't affect fantasy basketball, that is not the case for Dončić. The technical foul was his 16th of the season, which triggers an automatic one-game suspension. According to ESPN's Dave McMenamin, the Lakers plan to appeal the technical foul, and there are differing accounts from the players on what was said during their third-quarter exchange.

If the appeal is denied, Dončić would not be available for Monday's game against the Pistons, leaving him with two games to play the rest of Week 22. During the Lakers' nine-game winning streak, he has been on a roll, averaging 40 points per game and being the most productive player in fantasy basketball. With the Lakers facing the Pacers and Nets in their final two games of the week, Dončić can certainly make up for a one-game suspension. But it would be best for the Lakers and fantasy managers if his tech gets rescinded.

- Tuesday and Thursday are the light gamedays of Week 22.

These are the two days to mine for potential streaming value, with Saturday's six-game slate being another opportunity to do so. There are four games on the schedule for Tuesday, and three on Thursday. The teams that will play on both days are Charlotte, New Orleans, New York, Orlando and Sacramento. New Orleans (Thursday/Friday) and Orlando (Monday/Tuesday) will have a back-to-back, which is of greater concern for the former, given their current standing as a team likely headed for the draft lottery. It's possible that fantasy managers only have Dejounte Murray available for one of those light game days, and Trey Murphy may be someone else to keep an eye on regarding availability for back-to-backs.

Wizards Outfought by Thunder for 15th Consecutive Loss

WASHINGTON, DC -  MARCH 21: Jared McCain #3 of the Oklahoma City Thunder goes up for the rebound during the game against the Washington Wizards on March 21, 2026 at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC. 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 Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

If you skipped watching this game and just saw the box score, you’d probably think this was a pro forma elite team stomps on tanking team NBA win. And you wouldn’t be totally wrong: Oklahoma City Thunder scored 132 points, won by 21, and got 40 points from Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and 20 rebounds and 10 assists from Isaiah Hartenstein.

But the details? Worth the watch.

Wizards wing Bilal Coulibaly carried the team’s offense in the third quarter of their loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder. | NBAE via Getty Images

First, the Wizards stayed close for three quarters because they made seemingly every open three-pointer they got, and even a few that weren’t open.

Second, the first half closed with I think the weirdest out-of-nowhere “fights” I’ve seen since I started watching the NBA. In 1978.

It was a competitive affair, but well- and fairly played. No obvious cheap shots or cowardly shoves or even much of the grifter bull butter that can grate on an opponent’s nerves.

And then, Oklahoma City’s Jaylin Williams and Justin Champagnie bumped into each other after Washington scored. And for whatever reason, they both decided that what really needed to happen was that they should bump into each other again. And then push each other.

The two separated, Bilal Coulibaly went over to Champagnie to calm him down, and a ref rushed in to defuse the skirmish. All routine pissing match stuff.

And then, Ajay Mitchell thought it would be a good idea to run up and yell at Champagnie while pushing Coulibaly and Champagnie. To which Champagnie responded by pushing Mitchell in the face. For some reason, Mitchell took umbrage, and he went after Champagnie — somehow kinda getting past Coulibaly, whose reflexes surely rank in the top 1% in all of human history.

At which point frigging everyone on the court and all the assistant coaches from both teams and arena security piled up in a huge scrum that spilled into courtside seats and…well…looked bad, at least live. The actual fight-fight was mostly a few guys pushing and shoving and a bunch of guys trying to break up the fight. While the whole group staggered into the mostly-deserted seats.

As an aside, big-time kudos to the man in black who shielded the woman sitting next to him from the incoming tsunami of NBA players by holding up his drink. Even bigger kudos to the woman, who never flinched from a ton-plus of humanity spilling off the basketball court directly at her.

Another aside: if the team didn’t give the man in black a replacement drink after Anthony Gill accidentally slapped it out of his hand, Gill needs to send the guy a $20.

Anyway, the refs reviewed the footage and emerged from their conclave to announce the ejections of Champagnie, Mitchell, Williams, and Cason Wallace. In the whole fracas, Mitchell and Wallace were the only guys interested in genuine conflict. Even Champagnie mostly seemed like a cranky unc who just wanted people to get out of his way and leave him alone.

My guess is that tomorrow, the NBA will fine and suspend Champagnie, Mitchell and maybe Wallace. It’d be a stretch to turn that push into a punch, but Champagnie’s hand did touch Mitchell’s face in anger, which is a big no-no. So, I’d be surprised if Champagnie gets less than two games. I’d guess one for Mitchell, and maybe two or three for Wallace, who provided much of acceleration of force that moved the conflict from the baseline into the stands.

Oh yeah, there was a game. The general gist of this one was that from the first quarter, it felt like the Wizards would be quickly vanquished if they ever cooled off from three-point range. In the meantime, Oklahoma City bludgeoned Washington on the boards, clowned them with skilled passing, and rode elite scoring from Gilgeous-Alexander. The Wizards started missing in the fourth quarter, and they were quickly vanquished.

How quickly? The Thunder didn’t need to bring Gilgeous-Alexander back in the game, but they did it anyway while up 18 so he could get to 40.

Thoughts & Observations

  • What is the decision-making process that has the Wizards celebrating “Cherry Blossom Night” and the team NOT wearing those cherry blossom uniforms? Lemme just say, “BOOOOOO!” Those pink cherry blossom duds were the best ones the team has had, maybe ever.
  • Kinda weird considering Gilgeous-Alexander went for 40, but I didn’t think the Wizards defended him badly. He’s just that good.
  • The preceding bullet should not be construed as me saying the Wizards defended well. They did not.
  • Odd and interesting offensive possession at 5:10 of the first quarter. The Wizards set a pindown screen for Coulibaly. For some reason, Gilgeous-Alexander top-locked (sought to deny Coulibaly from getting the ball from the off-ball screen). Coulibaly went back door, Sarr hit him with the pass, and Coulibaly converted the layup. Why was Gilgeous-Alexander trying to deny the ball? I have no idea. Most teams are happy to concede threes to Coulibaly. Perhaps Oklahoma City was working on something for a different opponent.
  • At 1:37 of the first quarter, the Wizards ran a nifty backdoor action that got Anthony Gill an and-one. I rewound the play, wanting to give credit to Gill for the cut and Cooper for the pass only to learn that it was a case where OKC simply didn’t guard Gill. Seriously, Alex Caruso matched up with Jamir Watkins and let Gill go by…and there was no one behind him. Oops.
  • General observation: OKC switches on defense are a work of art — and they weren’t even at their best last night.
  • Coulibaly got aggressive offensively in the third quarter — repeatedly attacking and carrying the Wizards offense. Check out the possession at 4:27 of the third — he attacked off the bounce with multiple moves (made necessary by Tristan Vukcevic getting in the way on his first drive attempt). He kept his dribble alive despite aggressive pressure defense from Gilgeous-Alexander, and then finished by snaking past Kenrich Williams for a floater. That was high-level stuff.
  • NBA defenders have a lot of trouble staying in front of Coulibaly when he goes into attack mode.
  • The more he plays, the less like an NBA player Sharife Cooper looks.
  • Cool moment: Early in the fourth quarter, Caruso turned down an open three and Oklahoma City had to reset after Washington nearly got a steal and knocked the ball out of bounds. During the stoppage, Hartenstein came over to Caruso and told him he needed to take that shot.
  • The Wizards commit a lot of dumb and pointless fouls.
  • Amusing moment: Gill erased a Coulibaly score by hanging on the rim while Coulibaly’s shot was in the cylinder. OKC broadcaster Michael Cage called it a youthful mistake.
  • This victory marks 11 in a row for Oklahoma City. The loss is Washington’s 15th in a row.

Four Factors

Below are the four factors that decide wins and losses in basketball — shooting (efg), rebounding (offensive rebounds), ball handling (turnovers), fouling (free throws made).

The four factors are measured by:

  • eFG% (effective field goal percentage, which accounts for the three-point shot)
  • OREB% (offensive rebound percentage)
  • TOV% (turnover percentage — turnovers divided by possessions)
  • FTM/FGA (free throws made divided by field goal attempts)
FOUR FACTORSTHUNDERWIZARDSLGAVG
eFG%59.7%53.8%54.3%
OREB%40.5%19.1%26.1%
TOV%12.8%14.7%12.8%
FTM/FGA0.2260.1430.208
PACE10299.3
ORTG130109115.4

Stats & Metrics

PPA is my overall production metric, which credits players for things they do that help a team win (scoring, rebounding, playmaking, defending) and dings them for things that hurt (missed shots, turnovers, bad defense, fouls).

PPA is a per possession metric designed for larger data sets. In small sample sizes, the numbers can get weird. In PPA, 100 is average, higher is better and replacement level is 45. For a single game, replacement level isn’t much use, and I reiterate the caution about small samples sometimes producing weird results.

POSS is the number of possessions each player was on the floor in this game.

ORTG = offensive rating, which is points produced per individual possessions x 100. League average so far this season is listed in the Four Factors table above. Points produced is not the same as points scored. It includes the value of assists and offensive rebounds, as well as sharing credit when receiving an assist.

USG = offensive usage rate. Average is 20%. Median so far this season is 17.7%.

ORTG and USG are versions of stats created by former Wizards assistant coach Dean Oliver and modified by me. ORTG is an efficiency measure that accounts for the value of shooting, offensive rebounds, assists and turnovers. USG includes shooting from the floor and free throw line, offensive rebounds, assists and turnovers.

+PTS = “Plus Points” is a measure of the points gained or lost by each player based on their efficiency in this game compared to league average efficiency on the same number of possessions. A player with an offensive rating (points produced per possession x 100) of 100 who uses 20 possessions would produce 20 points. If the league average efficiency is 115, the league — on average — would produced 23.0 points in the same 20 possessions. So, the player in this hypothetical would have a +PTS score of -3.0.

Players are sorted by total production in the game.

WIZARDSMINPOSSORTGUSG+PTSPPA+/-
Bilal Coulibaly347213320.0%2.51424
Anthony Gill265513517.0%1.8133-13
Jamir Watkins265513417.1%1.7121-5
Bub Carrington336912519.2%1.388-7
Alex Sarr224710932.9%-0.91094
Jaden Hardy194114915.6%2.1114-22
Justin Champagnie14291279.6%0.376-2
Will Riley28608120.9%-4.3-26-21
Sharife Cooper19405815.3%-3.5-73-19
Tristan Vukcevic20425429.6%-7.7-94-24
THUNDERMINPOSSORTGUSG+PTSPPA+/-
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander326813140.2%4.224611
Isaiah Hartenstein255313723.6%2.727211
Chet Holmgren275715818.5%4.517724
Ajay Mitchell153213927.1%2.1273-5
Jared McCain286012521.0%1.212115
Kenrich Williams142917419.8%3.32077
Cason Wallace153118510.3%2.21351
Alex Caruso204212011.9%0.28619
Isaiah Joe316510412.9%-0.94212
Brooks Barnhizer5112552.2%0.31501
Jaylin Williams91903.8%-0.8328
Aaron Wiggins21445016.8%-4.8-651

Plaschke: The Dodgers and their fans are geared up for a three-peat. Why the quest will fall short

Toronto, Ontario, Saturday, November 1, 2025 - Dodgers player hoist the World Series trophy at Rogers Centre. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)
The Dodgers celebrate with the World Series trophy after defeating the Toronto Blue Jays in Game 7 at the Rogers Centre to secure their second consecutive championship. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

The truth of this Dodgers season was recently found in a place where all sports truths are clipped and tapered and styled into reality.

The barbershop.

Of course, the barbershop, where ball talk is real talk, and where the expectations around the Dodgers upcoming quest for a three-peat recently smothered me like a hot towel to the head.

I was sitting in the chair in mid-shave when a bald gentleman barged into the shop searching not for a cut, but a promise.

“Say it!” he shouted to me from just inside the door. “Say what everybody around here believes!”

What, that LeBron James is not a real Laker?

“No, say it about the Dodgers!” said the man, and he was serious. “Say that they have the best team in history and they’re going to win another championship! Say it, because that’s what everybody thinks!”

The shop quieted, chairs swiveled, and suddenly everyone was looking at me, at which point I said the one word I’ve never written in any of the last dozen or so Dodger preview columns.

“No.”

“No?” the man replied.

“No, I don’t think the Dodgers are going to win a third consecutive World Series championship.”

The man was clearly taken aback, some of the other patrons chuckling in surprise, the Dodger pulse of this town clearly resonating in a completely unusual fashion.

For the first time in forever, the ever-doubting Dodger nation is convinced this team is destined for a title.

It’s not like it used to be, back in the bad old days of crumbles and collapses. For the previous several years, Dodger fans have spent all spring pondering ways this great team would blow it. The playoff defeats by San Diego and Arizona burned into memories, and even after the Dodgers won it in 2024, their fan base invented scenarios in which they could not possibly repeat it.

But now that they have repeated it? Now that their roster has even gotten more stacked than the previous two seasons? The town is all in. The town expects more. The town is not only believing in a three-peat, they are counting on it.

As this barbershop bystander made clear, for the first time, only a prediction of another championship would be acceptable.

Sorry, but, um, no.

After all these years of picking the Dodgers to win, I’m formally picking them to lose. I don’t know exactly how, or precisely when, but it just feels like somebody, at some point, is going to finally end this run.

Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts reacts to losing.
Dodgers manager Dave Roberts hasn't been on the losing end in the postseason since the team was swept by the Arizona Diamondbacks in the 2023 National League Division Series, above. (Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

I know this whole theory sounds crazy. Who’s better than them? Who’s even close to them? That genius Andrew Friedman has seemingly perfectly and tightly sewn together another title team.

But stretch that fabric over six months and look close at its stitching and there’s enough tiny holes to eventually blow the whole thing apart.

Despite mounds of evidence to the contrary, I just can’t bring myself to believe they have all the ingredients to become just the third franchise in baseball history to three-peat.

“They’re not going to win again?” the man shouted as he spun on his heels and marched out of the barbershop. “How can you say that?”

Plenty of reasons, actually.

Start with age.

This is suddenly an older team. They’re seasoned, they’re savvy, but they’re increasingly vulnerable. Too much age can knock you flat with injuries and fatigue. Hangovers are a young person’s game. Hangovers are hell on the old timers.

Did you know a dozen of the Dodgers key players are in their 30s? It happened so quickly, right? Freddie Freeman is 36, Max Muncy is 35, Mookie Betts and Teoscar Hernández are 33, and nobody is getting any younger.

Case in point: For the first time ever, this spring Freeman acknowledged that against his wishes, the Dodgers may not allow him to play every inning of every game. That’s one tiny, huge example.

One of the older players is 33-year-old Blake Snell, which leads to another potential problem, that being the starting rotation.

Did you realize that the staff leader in games started last year, behind Yoshinobu Yamamoto, was that broken-down fighter Clayton Kershaw?

He’s retired, and the rotation is as tenuous as ever. Snell is starting the season on the injured list. Roki Sasaki has had a shaky spring. Tyler Glasnow still has never pitched more than 134 innings. Yamamoto added extra innings to an already battered arm by pitching for Japan in the World Baseball Classic.

That leaves Shohei Ohtani as the only starter with no baggage, yet he continues to carry the weight of the world on his shoulders and, now that he’s the ripe old age of 31, one only hopes Superman can continue to fly.

Dodgers pitcher Blake Snell, left, works out during spring training last month. Shohei Ohtani is at right.
How much will age be a factor for Dodgers left-hander Blake Snell, left, and right-hander Shohei Ohtani, right? (Brynn Anderson / Associated Press)

Here’s guessing the rotation will also miss the stability once offered by Kershaw, and that could be a problem, because here’s guessing the bullpen could be just as shaky.

Yes, they added the best free agent reliever in closer Edwin Díaz, and the fans will go wild at the first notes of Timmy Trumpet, but will the Dodgers have enough middle relief to get to him?

Tanner Scott is back. Blake Treinen is back. Potential chaos is back. The Dodgers will need more revelations like Will Klein and Justin Wrobleski to survive.

Speaking of survival, catcher Will Smith has played in 126 games or more four times in the last five years. Throw in 50 postseason games during that time and the physical toll on this World Series hero has been enormous. One can only hope that Dalton Rushing can improve on last year’s .204-hitting performance enough to allow Smith to take a break, because that becomes a big Dodger weakness if he doesn’t.

Rushing isn’t the only young Dodger with something to prove. After a strong regular season, Andy Pages managed just four hits in 51 postseason at-bats, an average which disappeared beneath his season-saving catch over Kiké Hernández in Game 7 of the World Series. One hopes he has rediscovered his swing, because that’s a problem if he hasn’t.

Andy Pages reaches to catch the fly ball hit by Ernie Clement as he collides with Kike Hernandez, left, to end the ninth.
Andy Pages' catch in the ninth inning of Game 7 of the World Series will be remembered forever, but can he bounce back at the plate this season? (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

Same with Betts. Last year’s struggles, which ended with a .138 average in the World Series, have been blamed on an early-season stomach ailment and all-season adjustment to shortstop. It’s unfair to doubt those reasons or his commitment to fixing it.

But it is fair to note that he’s coming off the worst two-season OPS since early in his career and that he must become the old Mookie for his teammates to remain the great Dodgers.

Yet even if all those question marks are positively answered, even if every perceived weakness becomes a real strength, even if these Dodgers have the best regular season in baseball history as so many have predicted…

They’ll still need one thing that seems impossible to buy or teach.

They’ll need the sort of incredible good fortune and great breaks that allowed them to win each of their last two titles.

Can any team be that lucky three years in a row?

Even the Dodgers admit that there were many key plays in the last two postseasons that could have gone the other way and changed history forever. Seemingly every one of those breaks broke for the Dodgers. How can this keep happening?

Is Aaron Judge going to drop another fly ball? Will Gerrit Cole forget to cover first base again?

Will a Philadelphia Phillies reliever lose his mind again? Will the Toronto Blue Jays melt under pressure in consecutive home games again? Will they have the baserunning blunders, the bullpen breakdowns, the terrible at-bats?

Does Miguel Rojas have another miracle in him? For that matter, does Freddie Freeman?

Bottom line, can any team create that many breaks three years in a row?

Los Angeles thinks the Dodgers can, and should, and will.

Sorry, barbershop, but I think not.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Today on Pinstripe Alley – 3/22/26

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JULY 06: Tim Hill #54 of the New York Yankees pitches against the Boston Red Sox during the fifth inning at Yankee Stadium on July 06, 2024 in in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Photo by Luke Hales/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees’ Opening Day roster became a lot clearer yesterday, as the team made it official that Randal Grichuk would be traveling to San Francisco and Oswaldo Cabrera will begin the year in the minor leagues. They made a few other cuts to the roster, trimming down more of the infield depth options, and now the only question remaining is which pitchers will occupy the final couple of bullpen slots. It’s been far from a flashy spring with only minor competitions, but that was to be expected with how many returning starters they brought with them.

On the site we’ve got a chill Sunday lined up, with two Matt posts going back-to-back to start us off. The first entry wishes Rich Monteleone a happy birthday and remembers the early 90s reliever and his short but decent career in pinstripes, while the second looks at the Philadelphia Phillies ahead of their push for a third consecutive NL East title. Then, John stops by to deliver the latest social media spotlight featuring the end of the WBC.

Today’s Matchup

New York Yankees vs. Philadelphia Phillies

Time: 1:05 p.m. EST

Video: YES Network, Gotham Sports App, NBCSP, MLB Network (out-of-market, only)

Venue: George M. Steinbrenner Field, Tampa, FL

Questions/Prompts:

1. Who is your favorite Yankee reliever that didn’t serve as their closer during this decade?

2. Now that the WBC is in the rearview mirror, what do you think are the odds of MLB permitting a break midseason for players to participate in the Olympics in 2028?

March Madness games today: Breaking down Sunday's men's NCAA Tournament matchups

Selection Sunday was just one week ago, but the men's NCAA Tournament has already seen 44 teams eliminated from the field of 68. And by the end of Sunday, we will have our Sweet 16 locked in after eight second-round matchups take place across the country.

There's plenty of storylines to watch. No. 1 seeds Florida and Arizona hoping to avoid the upset bug that has typified previous editions of March Madness. Likewise, there's some potential danger for No. 2 seeds Purdue and Connecticut.

So how will the day unfold and where should you be focusing your attention with 12 hours of action on tap? We ranked all eight games and broke down each of the matchups. Enjoy the drama sure to unfold.

1. No. 4 St. John's vs. No. 5 Kansas

Time/TV: 5:15 p.m. ET, CBS

These are the classic matchups in the second round that match traditional powerhouses with teams capable of making deep tournament runs. And you've got one of the best coaching matchups of the second round with Rick Pitino facing off against Bill Self. Only one get advance to the regional round. St. John's, which has won 20 of its last 21 games, made light work of Northern Iowa with a balanced effort. Kansas got a needed big game for freshman standout Darryn Peterson, which could bode well for their hopes of advancing.

Kansas guard Darryn Peterson (22) dribbles the ball against Texas Tech guard Jazz Henderson (2) during their game at United Supermarkets Arena.

2. No. 4 Alabama vs. No. 5 Texas Tech

Time/TV: 9:45 p.m. ET, TBS

Both teams with be without standout players with the Crimson Tide missing point guard Aden Holloway after his arrest earlier this week and the Red Raiders dealing with a season-ending injury to forward JT Toppin. This game should be played at a frenetic pace with both teams shooting first and asking questions later. The depth of Alabama could play a critical role, but Texas Tech guard Christian Anderson has the ability to carry his team to the Sweet 16 for the second year in a row.

3. No. 2 Iowa State vs. No. 7 Kentucky

Time/TV: 2:45 p.m. ET, CBS

The Wildcats were seconds away from being out of the tournament before heroics by Otega Oweh forced overtime and they got past Santa Clara. The challenge will be much greater now with the Cyclones playing their best basketball of the season. Iowa State blew away Tennessee State in its opener with role players Killyan Toure and Nate Heise doing much of the damage. Veteran guard Tamin Lipsey may have more of the heavy lifting against Kentucky with forward Joshua Jefferson dealing with an ankle injury suffered in the first round.

4. No. 3 Virginia vs. No. 6 Tennessee

Time/TV: 6:10 p.m. ET, TNT

Orange will be the color of the day in Philadelphia with these border-state schools squaring off. The Cavaliers had a bumpy start against Wright State before pulling away late. They've not faced many teams of the caliber of the Volunteers in their ACC schedule, so a more-complete effort is needed. Ja'Kobi Gillispie was outstanding in Tennessee's blowout of Miami (Ohio) and will need to be on point again with freshman Nate Ament struggling to play effectively due to an ankle injury.

5. No. 2 Connecticut vs. No. 7 UCLA

Time/TV: 8:45 p.m. ET, TNT

It was a smooth start for the Huskies against pesky Furman in the first round, but a remarkable 31-point, 27-rebound effort by Tarris Reed carried them through. The bid for third national title in three years gets more difficult against the Bruins, who are playing their best basketball of the season. Others stepped up after an off night by Donovan Dent in the first round. Dent's ability to control the game will be critical as UConn will be forced to defend a group of five scorers that all average double figures.

6. No. 2 Purdue vs. No. 7 Miami (Fla.)

Time/TV: 12:10 p.m. ET, CBS

Riding the momentum of their Big Ten tournament title, the Boilermakers look to get back into the Sweet 16 for the third year in a row. They have the enough veterans, including Braden Smith and Trey Kaufman-Renn, that know not to overlook the Hurricanes. It's been a resurgent year for Miami under first-year coach Jai Lucas. Showing resolve in a hostile environment, Malik Reneau and sub Tru Washington led the way in a first-round defeat of Missouri. Point guard Tre Donaldson, who previously played at Michigan, will know Smith well, and that matchup could prove pivotal.

7. No. 1 Arizona vs. No. 9 Utah State

Time/TV: 7:50 p.m. ET, truTV

It was an easy day for the Wildcats in their opener against Long Island. After their recent tournament disappointments, they should be focused against the Aggies, who have been consistent NCAA participants but haven't put together a run to the Sweet 16 since 1970. The task of taking down Arizona will fall to the veteran backcourt of Mason Falslev and MJ Collins Jr. But the interior defense must also do its part against the bigger Wildcats.

8. No. 1 Florida vs. No. 9 Iowa

Time/TV: 7:10 p.m. ET, TBS

The quest to be the second Gators to defend a national title got off to easy start with seven players scoring double figures. Frontcourt stalwarts Thomas Haugh and Alex Condon will look to assert themselves more in this round. Finally past the first round for the first time since 2021, the Hawkeyes are playing with house money. They'll look to slow the tempo and limit possessions. Bennett Stirtz should attract much of the attention from the Florida defense, meaning secondary scorers Tavion Banks and Alvaro Folgueiras will have to take advantage of openings.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness schedule: Ranking best NCAA Tournament Round 2 games today

Rick Pitino, Bill Self meet in March Madness after Hall of Fame coaches stood test of time

SAN DIEGO –  St. John’s men’s basketball coach Rick Pitino wasn’t ready to announce his retirement yet or anything. But a day before his team played a first-round game here in the NCAA tournament, the Hall of Fame coach did look into a future where nothing is certain, especially at age 73.

“I could be out of coaching next year,” Pitino said Thursday, March 19. “I really can be. You're 73.  And I want to have the greatest time of my life.”

Judging by what's happened so far in San Diego, he might be doing that right now. No. 5 seed St. John’s defeated No. 12-seed Northern Iowa 79-53 in the first round Friday.

And now comes the main event on Sunday:

Pitino and St. John’s vs. fellow Hall of Fame coach Bill Self and No. 4 seed Kansas.

Rick Pitino, Bill Self are 'standing the test of time'

Pitino has won more than 900 games in his career. Self, 63, has won more than 800.

Each has won two national championships.

But they’ve only faced each other once. And this time there are huge stakes as both keep battling two larger forces – time and change. Almost nobody has survived them quite like these two.

“There's so many great coaches out there, but they have a tough time standing the test of time,” Pitino said Saturday. “Bill has stood the test of time every single year.”

Self took it a step further when asked about Pitino Saturday. Consider the fact that Pitino is the answer to a certain trivia question.

Who’s the oldest head coach in Division I men’s basketball?

That would be Pitino, but then consider this: Pitino has thrived despite massive change to the game since he started his head coaching career at Boston University in 1978. A 45-second shot clock was introduced in 1985. Then the 3-point shot came in 1986. Pitino led Providence to the Final Four in 1987.

“The coaches that are so impressive to me are the coaches that coached without a 3-point line and then became efficient with the 3-point line, without a shot clock, then became one of the best with the shot clock, always evolving with the game,” Self said Saturday. “And I think that he's done that as well as anybody maybe ever has.”

In recent years, more change has roiled the game, leading some top coaches to quit.  Since 2024, players have been allowed to transfer without restriction after previously being required to first sit out a year before playing with their new team. Since 2021, players were allowed to earn money for the first time from their names, images and likenesses.

Pitino then adapted to become the transfer portal king at St. John’s in 2023, when he flipped the roster and revitalized the program by bringing in 10 transfer players.

Likewise, Self has adjusted successfully, too, after starting his head coaching career at Oral Roberts in 1993. He’s kept Kansas at a high level and successfully lured phenom freshman guard Darryn Peterson, who might be the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft later this year.

Not everyone can do that or even wants to. Top coaches have quit amid the turmoil and changes to the sport, including Virginia’s Tony Bennett and Miami’s Jim Larrañaga.

Then there’s Pitino, who has evolved strategically, too.

“He's done it different ways,” Self said. “He's done it by pressing and zone pressing.  He's done it by just man-to-man pressure.  He's done it by being one of the first to take advantage of the 3-point line.  And now he's doing it by pummeling people inside and stuff, too. He's certainly adjusted to his roster, I think, probably as well as anybody in the game.”

This is the second time Pitino and Self have faced off

Pitino and Self are among three active head coaches with two national championships, though Pitino’s at Louisville in 2013 technically was vacated because of NCAA rules violations. Dan Hurley at Connecticut is the other.

One of those three still could win a third national title this year, but the road to it goes through Sunday’s game at 5:15 p.m. ET on CBS.

“We’re going to play probably a little bit of a road game tomorrow,” Pitino said Saturday. “They're going to have most of the fans.  But that's OK. We've played a lot of road games this year where we've played well.”

The two coaches faced each other previously, in November 2021, when Pitino was coach at Iona. His team lost against Kansas, 96-83, in the ESPN Events Invitational in Florida.

“He sent us home crying,’ Pitino said. “So we're looking forward to this matchup.”

In Pitino’s case, it could be a career capstone if he leads St. John’s to its first Sweet 16 since 1999.  He declined to reflect on that possible breakthrough for his program Saturday.

That's because he was up against an even larger adversary once again, even bigger than Self.

Time.

“I don't really look at the significance of it,” Pitino said. “We just have to play for 40 minutes as hard as we can.  If we win, we're going to be in the Sweet 16.  I'm not looking ahead.  I'm just looking at every possession.”

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Rick Pitino, Bill Self embrace March Madness clash after long history

Zuby Ejiofor leading St. John's into March Madness matchup with former team Kansas

SAN DIEGO – The big man of the moment here in Southern California goes by the name of “Zuby,” which is pronounced as “Zoobie” and is the nickname his mom gave him because it was easier to say than his real name – Chukwuebuka Ejiofor.

Get ready to hear it a lot on Sunday.

Zuby Ejiofor, a 6-foot-9 forward, started his college career at Kansas in 2022,  where he played for Hall of Fame coach Bill Self. Then he transferred to St. John’s in 2023 to play for Hall of Fame coach Rick Pitino.

Three years later, Ejiofor, Pitino and No. 5 seed St. John’s face off against Self and No. 4 seed Kansas in a second-round men's NCAA Tournament game at Viejas Arena.

“We didn’t want him to leave,” Self said Saturday. “We’re really happy for his success. We just don’t … We just hope it doesn’t come against us.”

Unfortunately for Self, Ejiofor happens to be on a monster run right now. He is the reigning Big East Conference player of the year, reigning Big East defensive player of the year and the leader of his team in scoring (16.3 ppg), rebounding (7.3 rpg), assists (121) and blocks (77).

Now comes the peak of his college career against his old team. Just don’t call it a revenge game. It’s not.

St. John's forward Zuby Ejiofor drives to the basket against Northern Iowa defenders Will Hornseth (13) and Ben Schwieger (7) in the first round of the 2026 NCAA men's basketball tournament at Viejas Arena in San Diego.

Why did Zuby Ejiofor transfer from Kansas to St. John’s?

Ejiofor (pronounced “edge-o-for”) sat in a chair Saturday surrounded by about 15 reporters and photographers at Viejas Arena. They wanted to know the story again: What happened at Kansas and why did he choose St. John’s?

“I had a fun time at Kansas,” Ejiofor said. “I wouldn’t lie: I didn’t really want to leave. But I knew that in order for my future to keep progressing the way I wanted to go, that I had to probably look elsewhere for a bigger opportunity.”

Ejiofor played in 25 games for Kansas as a freshman, when he averaged only 5.1 minutes per game. The Jayhawks finished with a 28-8 record that season and lost in the second round of the tournament against Arkansas. Ejiofor played seven minutes in that game and tallied two rebounds, one block and no points.

Then Kansas brought in a big transfer from Michigan in May 2023: 7-foot-1 Hunter Dickinson, who made the move in pursuit of more money for his name, image and likeness (NIL).

One day later, Ejiofor announced he was transferring out. He simply wanted more playing time and didn’t see him getting much of it with Dickinson there.

So Ejiofor signed with St. John’s, where Pitino had just been hired and was remaking his roster with 10 transfer players out of a roster of 14, including Ejiofor.

“I don't think I've enjoyed coaching a player as much since 1987 when I coached Billy Donovan (at Providence),” Pitino said of Ejiofor. “And I'm going to miss him terribly.  And I'm just going to appreciate him while I have him.”

No hard feelings between Kansas and Zuby Ejiofor

Self recruited Ejiofor out of Garland, Texas, where he was a late bloomer of sorts. He didn’t start playing basketball until eighth grade. He has Nigerian-born parents and another set of basketball “parents” of sorts, including his “dad,” Andy Philachack, a 5-foot-4 coach who influenced his decision to leave Kansas.

“Everybody embraced me my first year (at KU), so there’s no bad blood there,” Ejiofor said

Self confirmed the same.

“I love Zuby,” Self said.

And he’s not surprised by how well he’s done.

“Rick was obviously a great fit for him,” Self said. “I've enjoyed watching him grow, be a complete player, because when you talk about complete, you're talking about a skill set, posting, drawing fouls, using both hands, passing, stretching it, blocking and altering. When you lead a team that good in four major categories, you know you're a good player.”

Zuby Ejiofor considered other schools besides St. John’s

He took his first visit Villanova and considered Kentucky and Texas.

Why St. John’s?

“New York is a great city,” Ejiofor told USA TODAY Sports. “I had never been to New York before I visited St. John’s. And then everything that Coach Pitino stood for.”

Pitino credited assistant coach Ricky Johns for finding him. He came in for a visit and worked out in front of Pitino.

“I worked him out for about an hour, put him through a really tough work out, and I thought he was a terrific athlete, but he never – I gave him an extra hard workout to see if he could hold up against it, and he never tired,” Pitino said. “He just worked his butt off, and I said to his ‘dad,’ `I'd really love to have him.’”

Ejiofor since helped Pitino restore a dormant program in the heart of New York City. His photo recently even loomed large in Times Square in New York City.

“I wouldn’t say it’s a dream come true,” Ejiofor said. “I never dreamt of my picture ever being in Times Square. But man, it’s just crazy, you know, from where I came from and everything I had to go through.”                    Now comes his next big moment in the spotlight, this time against his old team at 5:15 p.m. ET on CBS. The winner advances to the Sweet 16 in Washington, D.C.

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer @Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: St. John's star Zuby Ejiofor left Kansas, now wants to beat them