PARIS, FRANCE - JANUARY 24: The San Antonio Spurs poses for a team photo as part of the NBA Paris Games 2025 at the Eiffel Tower on January 24, 2025 in Paris, France. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Garrett Ellwood/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
The 2026 NBA Finals has received some of the highest viewership in recent NBA history. These Finals are a global event, and as the Spurs continue to connect with their growing international fanbase in their mission to grow the game of basketball throughout the world, they have added watch parties in international markets.
Already, viewership is up 123% from last year boasting 23.2 M viewers. Wednesday night’s matchup at Madison Square Garden was the most watched NBA Finals Game 4 was the most watched since 1998.
Having New York has increased the interest compared to 2025’s small market matchup. And the addition of Victor Wembanyama has added viewers in France. So it makes sense that there will be a Spurs watch party there.
Per a Spurs press release:
“The San Antonio Spurs announced the organization will host free watch parties across multiple international markets for Game 5 of the NBA Finals on Saturday, June 13 as the team takes on the New York Knicks. The organization will activate free, comprehensive fan experiences for Spurs supporters in Paris, France, and Mexico City, Mexico to come together and root on the Silver and Black at local restaurants and bars in their city.”
Each watch party will feature giveaways, free refreshments and a chance to win Spurs Finals gear.
“Whether our fans are gathering in France, China, Mexico, Texas or around the world, we’re eager to welcome them into our Spurs family,” said RC Buford. “These watch parties create shared experiences that bring our global fanbase closer together and reflect the values of connection, community and belonging that have always defined our organization.”
Sunday, June 14 at 2:30 a.m. CET Belushi’s at Paris Canal 159 Rue de Crimée, 75019 Paris, France
Saturday, June 13 at 6:30 p.m. CST Pinche Gringo BBQ Warehouse Calle Lago Iseo 296, Cuidad de Mexico, Mexico
The organization will also support the NBA’s official watch party at NBA HoopPark, K11 Mall in Shenzhen, China.
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SAN ANTONIO, TX - JUNE 12: Jalen Brunson #11 of the New York Knicks talks to media during 2026 NBA Finals Practice and Media Availability on June 12, 2026 at Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE(Photo by David Nemec/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
The Day has arrived, folks.
It’s win-and-chip for the Knicks in Texas.
Here’s the latest from San Antonio, half a day from the most-anticipated tip-off in Knicks history.
The impossible became reality at Madison Square Garden 🤯
Relive every twist, turn, and jaw-dropping moment from the Knicks' historic 29-point Game 4 comeback win in Chasing History presented by @MichelobULTRA before Game 5 tips off Saturday at 8:30pm/et on ABC! pic.twitter.com/2MktvcFQN5
On the need for staying focused with the title one win away:
“The biggest thing is everybody has to stay present. You have to be present. You can’t think about the outcome. It’s about the process, the next play, the next play, the next play. Sometimes you can think about the process, and it not work out. But when you’re playing against other great teams especially, that’s how you have to take it because anybody’s mind can start wandering when you think about the outcome.”
On the Knicks’ maturity keeping heads level:
“Their level of maturity. Obviously, we have some veteran guys on the team. But you can be a veteran and still have a little bit of immaturity about you, as we all know. From top to bottom, this group is pretty mature. That rubs off on the rest of the group. It makes my job easier. We’ve been preaching all year that it’s about the next possession, the next possession, the next possession. We understand any time you try to play a closeout game, the level of desperation for your opponents increases, the level of desperation for the fans of your opponents is increased. You have to bring your best effort.”
On avoiding complacency after the historic Game 4 win:
“It is hard. We’re all human. It was hard even in the series that we swept. You win two, three, four, five games in a row, there’s a tendency to relax a little bit. That’s just in life. In your job, you have success for 10 months straight, maybe you feel like, I got this, I know what I’m doing. You’re not as sharp then because everybody’s been patting you on your back and telling you how great you are. Trying to manufacture things to help guys lock in, trying to talk to guys individually so they can continue to talk to their teammates to lock in, all that stuff is huge. Having Pat’s presence around, Pat Ewing, so he can talk to guys to help them lock in from a different vantage point, is all huge, especially during this time and coming off a win like we did last time.”
On the Knicks’ closeout-game mentality:
“We’ve been preaching all year: It’s about the next possession, the next possession, the next possession. We understand anytime you try to play a closeout game, the level of desperation for your opponents increases. The level of desperation for the fans of your opponents is increased. You have to bring your best effort, because even if you bring your best effort, it may not happen, especially on the road. That’s the only way you have a chance for it to happen.”
On preventing a Game 4 hangover:
“I can’t 100% say, ‘This is what I’m going to do to make them not have the hangover from the win two nights ago.’ The biggest thing is, continuing to preach 0-0. Continuing to preach, ‘Stay present.’ Continuing to preach, ‘Next possession, next possession, next possession,’ and hope the experiences they’ve gone through as a group already, and their maturity — as well as our standards, which they’ve really hung onto all year — will help us lock into this game. It’s going to be hard. San Antonio’s a great team. They’re desperate. I still think they believe. It’s going to be hard for us. But it’s natural for that to creep in a little bit. You just hope that it doesn’t creep in too long throughout the course of the game.”
On Jalen Brunson still not getting enough recognition:
“He definitely has not — or did not — get the attention that he deserved during the regular season. I think he’s a top-three MVP candidate. And when it comes down to those things, his name wasn’t mentioned much.”
On what he learned the most from Steve Kerr and Gregg Popovich:
“I’ve been fortunate, blessed, lucky to be a part of some good coaching staffs and be with some great coaches, Steve Kerr, Gregg Popovich, they were guys that went deep into their bench. You keep guys engaged by doing that, and you do develop not just a bench but the team, as well, because guys get used to playing with other guys. I’ve seen it work in the past, and that’s kind of what I thought I wanted to do here.”
On lessons learned from Gregg Popovich:
“That’s a great question. I mean, I’d have to think about it. But, you know, you draw a lot from the people that you’ve worked with in the past—people that you’ve experienced things with. For me, working for Pop, I drew a lot. I feel like I drew a lot from a lot of the guys I’ve worked with, but he always used to say: during the regular season, that’s the time to get up, go crazy on the sidelines and all that stuff, because it’s just one game at a time—you practice and you move on to the next game.”
"Let's play basketball now. Be smart. Stick together. We've come back from worse. Chip away"
On the Knicks’ mindset entering Game 5 with a 3-1 lead in the NBA Finals:
“Zero-zero.”
On turning the page after Game 4:
“Whenever you win or lose a game, that night, you’re going to think about it, think about the things you’ve done well or what you did wrong, [but] I’ve always told myself when you wake up the next day, it’s time to turn the page. Yes, we won [Game 4], but we still have a lot of work to do. We have a lot to learn. We didn’t play our best basketball. We still have a lot to revisit to make sure that we don’t really put ourselves in that position again. But honestly, we still have to continue to have the belief that we’ve had. It’s really important from that aspect.”
On appreciating the opportunity ahead:
“I think I’ve been able to understand what a unique opportunity this is. When you’re doing the things that help you prepare for a game, prepare for moments, put yourself in routines that you’ve done your whole career, your whole life, when it comes game time, you’re ready to go because you put yourself, you put your mind in a position to be ready.”
On Karl-Anthony Towns’ career and teamming up with him:
“The narrative was placed on him by the outside world. You never really know a person until you meet them face to face, and you see what they say and what their actions are. And being the teammate that he is and seeing his sacrifices and seeing what he’s done his entire career puts him in a position to become a hall of famer. And honestly, I wouldn’t trade that for the world. And the things that he’s done have been extraordinary, and I’m not really sure how he’s going to respond to me saying all these nice things about him, but he’s one hell of a basketball player, but he’s honestly a better teammate.”
On the Knicks’ approach to Game 5:
“Obviously, when we practice, we have film, we talk about situations, what we have to do. You’re always preparing worst-possible-case scenario. If it happens, we have to prepare for this. Our mindset and focus is on one possession at a time, one play at a time, one quarter at a time. You’re thinking about the now, how you can be better the next possession, how can you turn the page, positive or negative. Regardless of what’s going on, our mindset and approach has to stay the same. I think we’ve done a very good job of that. It’s something that has grown over the season. It’s really important, especially obviously now.”
On not fearing failure:
“I think the one thing that stays constant is I’ve always told myself, and always been taught by my parents, ‘Never be afraid to fail.’ You put yourself in those positions in the summertime when you’re envisioning what’s going on the court, when you’re by yourself on the court. When those opportunities come about, you’re not afraid of the moment because you worked hard enough to where if you do fail, you’re going to learn anyway. You put the confidence you have in everything you do when the lights aren’t on, when no one’s watching.”
“They come out with a lot of energy. They’ve been doing it all playoffs, and we’ve been very up and down with that a lot this year. We have to make sure we come in focus with a great attention to detail, and taking things a possession at a time. If we do that, and we play our style of basketball, we’re going to put ourselves in a good position to be successful. But we can’t keep getting into a hole and trying to dig ourselves out of a hole. We were fortunate to do that last game — all three of our wins. We’ve got to do a better job of starting games off.”
On representing New York:
“This city is built on toughness, grit, blue-collar people, and I feel like I’m the same person. They can look in the mirror and they can see myself, just because that’s how I look at myself and I just happen to hoop.”
On the Knicks’ belief in themselves:
“I just think we have a belief in ourselves and a belief in our team as a collection. We all had adverse situations independently in our careers and we made it through. And I think if we have that mentality individually and as a team, nothing else matters.”
On preparing for Game 5:
“We know they come out with a lot of energy. They’ve been doing it all playoffs. We’ve been very up and down with that a lot this year. So we’ve got to make sure we come in focused with a great attention to detail and taking things a possession at a time. We know if we do that and we play our style of basketball, we’re going to put ourselves in a good position to be successful. But we can’t keep getting into a hole and trying to dig ourselves out of a hole. We were fortunate to do that last game — actually, all three games, all three of our wins — but we’ve got to do a better job of starting games off.”
“We’ve got to go in there with the understanding of no comfortability, just really be desperate, execute at a high level. Game-plan discipline has to be at a high level. I’ve said this multiple times: The hardest game to win is the one that ends someone’s season. So we’ve got to be our best version tomorrow.”
On the approach to Game 5:
“We spoke about it multiple times. We’ve got to approach every game like it’s 0-0. We’ve got to have that kind of desperation that it is to win Game 1 of a playoff series. We’ve got to go in there with the understanding of no comfortability, just really be desperate, execute at a high level. Gameplan discipline has to be at a high level.”
On resetting after Game 4:
“Obviously that game is a hardwood classic, something that the NBA has never seen before. But I’ve also seen things, being in that situation, where the joy is at an all-time high and it could be at an all-time low pretty quick. So we understand the magnitude of locking back in, getting back to work. Of course that night, we all enjoyed the shell-shock of what happened, and obviously we were the ones that were part of it. But we all understood the next morning that we had to get back to work, and we had to lock back in, and get ready to find a way to win another one.”
On the Game 4 comeback and concerns going forward:
“Also, in that moment of jubilation [after Game 4], that moment of absolute joy, we have to talk about the elephant in the room — we just didn’t play well at all, and we put ourselves in that deficit. So while there is joy, there is also frustration that we even allowed ourselves to be in that kind of position, especially as much as the deficit was.”
On OG Anunoby’s Game 4 winner meaning within the New York sports fabric:
“You can’t spell God without OG. I tried to explain it to him, but you know OG barely gives you any reaction. So I don’t know if he’s understanding it or not. Like you said, it’s a great moment. It’s one of the best sports moments in New York history. But we’ve got to solidify it with one more win.”
"As players, we know our job's not finished. We're ready."
Mikal Bridges talks about the Knicks' success in close-out games and their mindset going into tomorrow's Game 5: pic.twitter.com/2uXC8wwVBI
“I think it’s pretty easy for us. I think that’s probably the most I can say. I think it’s pretty easy for us. As a player, we know our job’s not finished. Yeah, we’re ready.”
Mitchell Robinson
On the Knicks’ mindset entering Game 5:
“We’re still desperate. It ain’t over. Until it’s said and done, that’s got to be our mindset going into everything.”
On the Game 4 win:
“Getting that win the other night was truly amazing.”
On balancing the Game 4 celebration with staying focused for Game 5:
“You can enjoy it that night, that evening, obviously — soaking it up, with the magnitude of what happened. But quickly turning around and understand there’s more to be done. It’s a tough balance, but one that’s necessary, and I think our whole group’s done that.”
Who is the “most New York” on the New York Knicks?
The team weighs in… and the vote is pretty unanimous 😂
“It’s easy. We’re coming in and trying to win this game. This one is the most important game. It’s something — you know, we enjoyed it, it was a crazy game, and we love how we got the win. But at the end of the day, we gotta leave that behind us and come out here and worry about tomorrow.”
On Mike Brown’s trust in the bench:
“This bench is deep and he trusts everybody. Some days it’s my day, some days it’s somebody else’s day. … These are the times and moments you wait for.”
“That’s the key. Can’t have a hangover of winning a game like that. Obviously it’s special, but we don’t want to repeat it. We want to go out there and take care of business.”
On staying confident amid his shooting slump:
“I’m always going to stay confident, knowing I can impact the game in a lot of different ways. I’m going to make shots. I’m never worried about that. … Anybody is capable of it, 1 through 15 on this team. We’re pushing each other to be better. That’s how our team has been. We’re motivators. We want to uplift everybody. I think having a team like that, you can do a lot of great things.”
OG Anunoby was asked about having "OG Anunoby Appreciation Day" in New York:
“It’s really cool. Just everyone has been telling me how much it means, and obviously I can see how much it means. It’s just really cool to be a part of it, and I’m very grateful. Everyone’s been telling me how much it means. I obviously see how much it means. It’s just really cool to be a part of it, and I’m very grateful.”
Mitch Johnson:
"I don't get into social media. I think I've probably been fired 212 times, and we've traded Fox 72 times. People have their opinions. I don't care. De'Aaron Fox will have the ball in his hands at the end of the game tomorrow and I have nothing but the utmost… pic.twitter.com/BOneKeoItn
“I think that’s what gives someone a lot of clarity on what went well and what didn’t, what led to it. There’s a lot of times (when) themes of the game that may not necessarily show themselves in a box score on the surface level, that when you start peeling back the layers, you start to understand the ripple effect, good and bad, of what you do or what you did.”
On the criticism of De’Aaron Fox’s Game 4 decisions:
“I think I’ve been fired 212 times and we’ve traded Fox 72 times. We still have to show up and play tomorrow, and I’ve got to coach. The people that matter, we bond together, we stick together through the highs and lows. De’Aaron Fox will have the basketball in his hands at the end of the game tomorrow, and I have the utmost confidence he’s going to deliver like he’s done countless times for us.”
On what went wrong in Game 4:
“It’s a good question. I think every game takes on different personalities. A lot of times when you watch the games back, with the level of detail that I would guess all staffs do, but I can speak for our staff, there’s so much that starts to happen, whether on a certain play before you make the shot or before the runs happen. I think that’s what gives someone a lot of clarity on what went well and what didn’t, what led to it. … When you start peeling back the layers, you start to understand the ripple effect, good and bad, of what you do or what you did.”
On his own shortcomings in Game 4:
“There [were] a lot of things that we did, where it felt like we could have put our energy into the right spots in that third quarter. Some things that I could have done to help that, as well. I think that quarter probably was the most disappointing for me. There’s some learning things in every quarter, don’t get me wrong, some things we want to be sharper with, better at, finish games. We weren’t as connected and disciplined as we should have been.”
On the need for better management of Wembanyama’s energy:
“Looking back on it, I do believe that I have to make sure that I help him have the energy required to finish the game as strong as he needs to finish the game. I think I could have done better in that regard. That’s not a number of minutes. That’s not meaning he’s going to play this many minutes tomorrow. It’s looking back on the game, and that game in itself, I got to make sure that I help with that. I think I could have been better in that regard looking back from that game.”
“Everybody thinks—everybody knows—that we’re gonna do it.
On taking the series one game at a time:
“I feel like we need to isolate that one game and take it one game at a time. I think it would be a mistake to waste our energy on multiple games. It’s one game at a time.”
On moving past Game 4:
“We’re very confident. I wouldn’t say it was so hard to, like, shake it off. Harder than any other game before, by far, for sure. I mean, now we’re over it. It’s the playoffs. There’s no time to regret things for too long.”
On the Game 4 collapse:
“Of course, there were 1,000 ways that we could have not lost that game. But it feels like there was a time to process that and really dwell on it, but not anymore.”
On what went wrong:
“Absolutely, greediness was [an issue for us]. I guess the general thing would be giving them less opportunities rather than [us] doing something incredible.”
On his showing fatigue:
“Definitely a factor. But it’s the playoffs. Everybody’s just as tired. I mean, it shouldn’t even be a factor in the game. I mean, now we’ve got two days between games. It’s not going to be a factor.”
On the egg-throwing incident:
“I don’t dislike it. Obviously, it’s not good at all. But it doesn’t bother me.”
On Mitch Johnson’s coaching:
“He understands people very well and knows how to speak to them. I am no exception. He knows how to speak to me. In-game, it feels like non-verbal communication as much as verbal because sometimes it’s loud, sometimes we’re far away. He knows what I need. He knows what I need to get to. I also know what he needs, what signals he needs. We’ve grown very much in that sense.”
On the wave of Knicks fans set to invade Frost Bank Center:
“No, it’s not a concern. I mean, we got good defense here in the crowd.”
De’Aaron Fox on the criticism he got after game 4:
"It's not like people have my phone number and can call me. I don't watch those shows. It doesn't matter. It is what it is. You can't change it now. We're trying to move on from that" pic.twitter.com/hRMBMWliWj
On dealing with outside criticism after his endless Game 4 errors:
“It’s not like people have my phone number and can call me. I don’t watch those shows. It doesn’t matter.”
On believing in a Finals comeback:
“We still have this belief because we’ve seen it. We’ve seen it be done, that teams have come back from 3-1. I think even with those series, the games that they lost, they were losing by double digits. The games that we’re losing have all been close games. We still have that belief that we have a chance to win. But we’re taking this one game at a time. We’re not looking at it as we need to win three games. We need to win tomorrow, and then we give ourselves a chance to play another game. Then you look at that next game.”
On Knicks fans buying tickets in San Antonio and what to expect:
“People are making money. It’s the economy we live in. It’s the world we live in. Am I upset about it? No. Do I understand it? Sure. I don’t think that changes what happens on the court.”
"You have to start off going 1-0."
Devin Vassell sounds off on the mentality of the Spurs as they look to extend the series.
“Just not executing [is what we saw on the film]. There were a lot of defensive mistakes that we made, just not communicating. Then, offensively, just staying in our game plan and not steering away from it. We got some good looks. But with our guards, with Fox and Steph [Castle] just putting pressure on the rim, we feel like when we put pressure on the rim it opens up everything. We’ll be all right.”
"All of the other antics, whatever they decide to do it's on them… We locked in."
On the Spurs’ confidence after the Game 4 collapse:
“It’s a tough one, a tough pill to swallow. I feel like we got comfortable, and things happen. But I think the main thing is that belief is there. We believe. Our belief is as high as ever.”
Stephon Castle on whether they can come back from 3-1:
"I feel like we've made history all year. We've proven that with our backs against the wall that we can step up. I don't really expect this to be any different" pic.twitter.com/Ta01QqtaEb
“I feel like we’ve made history all year, and we’ve proven that with our backs against the wall that we can step up. So, I don’t really expect this to be any different.”
On why the Spurs remain confident:
“I think just our confidence. We’ve had a 10-plus point lead in every single game. Just trying to stay poised throughout that and try to keep our foot on the gas really. I feel like once we get those leads, we start to play a little bit different, take our foot off the gas defensively. I just feel like we have to stay aggressive but be smart through it.”
— New York Post Sports (@nypostsports) June 13, 2026
Shaquille O’Neal
On the NBA’s next face of the league:
“You have to take it. If [Wembanyama] wins a championship, yes. If [Jalen] Brunson wins a championship, it’ll be Brunson. Face of the league ain’t something you pass on. You’ve got to go take it.”
On the fantasy scenario of facing Victor Wembanyama:
“Oh, stop it. Let’s talk desserts. He’s too light in the cakes for me. Stop it. But I’m not known for defense, so he probably would’ve scored a few points also. There’s no guarding me one-on-one, so you can’t ask me that question. He’s a great player. This is his time now. This is not about me.”
On enjoying Victor Wembanyama and Karl-Anthony Towns in the Finals:
“I love [Wembanyama] and I love KAT [Karl-Anthony Towns], so for me this is really good. Two big men battling it out. Let the best big man win. Usually in the Finals it’s all about guards. But these Finals are about two big men, so I have an affinity, a love, for both of them. So whoever wins, I’m happy for them both.”
Magic Johnson
On believing in the Spurs despite trailing 3-1:
“In NBA Finals history, one thing about the Spurs, they’re young, and I think they’re going to be okay. I think this series is going back to New York for Game 6. Listen, it wasn’t that they played bad. We have to understand that this team played great. They just gave the game away, and the Knicks took it.”
On why San Antonio should remain confident:
“So all you have to do is play like you did and not make the mistakes that you made, and you’re going to be okay. This team has played four great games. It’s just that the Knicks have a 3-1 lead because they executed in winning time. The Knicks have executed better than the Spurs. So if I’m the Spurs, I’m feeling good. Yeah, I lost, but I’m going home.”
On the Spurs’ mindset heading into Game 5:
“We correct some mistakes that we made, and we can win and make it a 3-2 series and come back to New York. They should be down about the fact that they didn’t execute in the fourth quarter.”
On Victor Wembanyama’s workload:
“And Coach Johnson made a huge mistake. When you’re up 20 at the end of the third quarter, he should have taken Victor out and said, ‘You get this timeout.’ Like Pat Riley used to tell me, ‘You’re going to get this timeout, and you’ll get another three or four minutes. Then I’ll put you back in to end the fourth quarter and the game.’ He should have taken Victor out because they had a big lead. You can rest him and bring him back in. Because he played so many minutes, he couldn’t take over the game.”
On Mike Brown and Jalen Brunson:
“And I think that’s why Mike Brown has been excellent for this team. He has not worn out Brunson. Brunson was able to finish the game, and it was just beautiful basketball. That shot will be remembered. But people better remember the block he made first. Because that block was a game-saving block as well. The point guard should have pulled it back out. De’Aaron Fox should have pulled it back.”
On the Knicks roster:
“I don’t want to hear no talk about Giannis [Antetokounmpo] or no other player coming to [the Knicks]. This is a great team. I’ve watched a lot of basketball — the way these guys love each other, they play for each other, pull for one another — you’re not going to see this anywhere else. They don’t out-talent you. Grit. Toughness. That’s how they beat you. And togetherness. That’s how they beat you.”
Melo wanted Jeremy Lin to stay … but the contract the Rockets offered would've hurt the Knicks 😳 @FDSportsbook
Melo: "Did he deserve the match, yes … what was ridiculous was the jump."
Lin: "My exit from the New York Knicks crushed me … I would've done anything to… pic.twitter.com/wM6yN6EqgZ
“Basically I asked every last question I had: ‘did that happen? What happened there? What happened here?’ But it was honest. It was direct, it was honest and we were able to definitely clear the air. Obviously perception is reality in certain situations… And that’s the thing about that whole stretch was there was a lot that I was unsure about. And so the narratives come, but to be able to talk it out, I appreciate that.”
On how he wants his story remembered:
“And so my biggest thing was when I think back on my career, because I recently retired, I’ve never wanted my story to be me versus anybody else, which we had talked about. And I think at the end of all of this, if my name comes up or my story comes up and it’s me versus Melo or if we’re ever at a point where someone has to choose sides, then I think we failed.”
On wanting to stay with the Knicks:
“I’ve actually never spoken publicly about my exit from New York until today. And the only reason why is because now we have had that conversation. And so for me, it’s like I’m sitting there like, ‘I got to go back to New York. We got to find any which way.’ And New York, they could have offered me three years, nine million, but I didn’t even get that.”
On Houston’s contract offer:
“So I go to Houston, Houston gives me this offer and I’m like, I swear to you, I get on the phone with my agent and I’m like, ‘I don’t want to take it.’ He’s like, ‘You don’t have a choice.’”
“Forget being jealous of what he’s doing, I want him to keep going.”
Melo gets real about the narrative that he envied Jeremy Lin's rise to fame 👀 pic.twitter.com/BVmTEpUImL
“I had to figure my s***. I was injured. I was hurt. I had to think about how fast I’m going to come back, what I’m going to do, how the f*** I’m going to go help this team, how I got to lead this team. I’m in a different position than Lin is. So I got to deal with a whole bunch of s***. Forget being jealous of what he’s doing. I want him to keep going. Game win in D.C. Yo, keep going. Toronto. Yo, keep going.”
On answering Jeremy Lin’s questions:
“These was questions that was built up for 14 years that other people probably was adding on to your pressures and your mindset and your perspective. It took me to go through what I went through to have the time to come back and be at peace with being able to answer all your questions with actual facts.”
Knicks team buses in San Antonio with heavy police escort today
On Victor Wembanyama dealing with more physicality than anyone on the court:
“Wemby has been the victim of some of the dirtiest s–t ever. I mean, people are grabbing and holding him. With Wemby, we’re allowing people to grab and hold him, knock him down. They literally have him locked up. With his demeanor, they’re lucky he hasn’t turned around and popped one of them in the face real quick. Big men, normally you don’t get to be this aggressive with them without them having the ability to retaliate, hold their temper and all of that.”
"When you see the fans and how they get crazy like that, it always motivates you to be at the top. It's impressive, it's motivating… It was really cool to see"
Juan Soto talks about his reaction to seeing fans rally around the Knicks in the NBA Finals: pic.twitter.com/FtRJaeUGox
“We still have a shot. We’re still here, and all the guys that are hurt are really close to being back, so I think it’s not as far as people think. I think it’s closer than what everybody is thinking or expecting.”
On attending the Knicks Finals games:
“It was a great feeling from the fans — how crazy they went, how loud they can get. It was impressive. It’s just a different feeling to be in there, you know, I felt like part of them. Those fans were paying attention to every little detail of the game, the back-and-forth, and that’s one of the things that made it special.”
On chasing another championship with the Mets:
“For me, I’m all-in, trying to get back to those big moments. It’s definitely not easy when you’re going through times like these, but we got to keep our heads up and keep going.”
“Hey, OG Anunoby, happy for your success. Proud that you’re a Mets fan. The Mets and I would love to invite you to Citi Field to throw out a ceremonial first pitch. All the best, Jose Reyes.”
Here you have 9 hours and 50 minutes of New York bangers. Game 5 is 15 hours away. You know what to do. No skips and replay.https://t.co/X6rpXFU6Rm
ST PETERSBURG, FLORIDA - JUNE 9: Payton Tolle #70 of the Boston Red Sox pitches in the bottom of the first inning against the Tampa Bay Rays at Tropicana Field on June 9, 2026 in St Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Parker S. Freedman/Getty Images) | Getty Images
WARNING: This is going to be nerdy.
Baseball Savant published new public bat tracking statistics this week that cover the last three seasons. I have no idea where this rabbit hole is going to lead me, but I have a notebook full of initial ideas to explore, so that’s what we’re going to do here today.
Mike Petriello put out a primer on the new metrics here. You should read it. If you don’t want to do that, the gist is that the new metrics track the bat during a swing in relation to the ball. They measure how often hitters swing early or late, above or below the ball, and inside or outside the ball. Basically, are you swinging where you’re supposed to in order to make solid contact? We have this by count, pitch type, handedness, month, season (2023-present), venue, team, astrological sign, Hogwarts house, and more. Again, I don’t know what I’m going to find, but let’s dive in.
Four-seam fastballs are designed to get hitters to swing late and swing under the ball primarily. I’ve harped on how good Payton Tolle’s fastball is time and time again. Unsurprisingly, 62% of swings against his fastball have been underneath the ball, the 10th highest mark out of 289 qualifiers. That number is up from 45% last season. Why? Probably because of the addition of his sinker. That’s important because, despite his elite velocity, hitters are geared up for fastballs. They’re on time 72% of the time, 183rd of 289 qualifiers. Last season, without a second fastball, hitters knew both where and when to swing, which is a recipe for disaster. This season, there’s more pause about where to swing, and the contact quality has weakened.
Elsewhere, Brayan Bello has had a trainwreck of a season. Last year, he was incredibly effective at using his sinker to get out of jams. Hitters were “tied up” by 36% of the sinkers he threw last year. This season, that number is only 22%. What changed? Where he was throwing them.
In 2025, 55% of the sinkers he threw to righties were on the inner third of the plate and in. This season, only 46% of them were in that area. The hard hit rate against the pitch rose from 35% to 53% over that span. That hasn’t been Bello’s only issue this season, but it’s certainly been one of them.
What about great pitches? Garrett Whitlock’s slider returns “flawed swings” on 30% of swings. That means the hitter is not on time, lined up, or centered with his bat. If you think about the swing in three dimensions, timing, height, and width, it’s a swing that was 0-for-3. On whiffs, hitters miss by an average of 7.3 inches. That’s the 13th-largest average miss in baseball. Pretty good!
Let’s talk about cutters. The Red Sox love them, and they function in different ways. You can throw them back door to an opposite-handed hitter, trying to land for a called strike. They can also be used up and in to opposite-handed hitters, trying to jam them for weak contact. The former requires hitters not to swing, so these new stats don’t give us much information there. The latter requires one of two things to happen. Either the pitch moves more towards the glove side than the hitter expects, or they swing late and can’t get the barrel to the ball.
Brayan Bello’s cutter is a weird one. Against left-handed hitters, it has a huge swinging strike rate of 22.1%. The swing tracking numbers show us that lefties are regularly early (53% of swings, the second-highest rate among RHP to LHH), and never tied up (0%). Because they’re early so often, Bello needs the ball to really be in on their hands where they’ll have a hard time keeping it fair. Most of the swings, however, have been on pitches over the plate, allowing lefties to lift and pull the ball, leading to huge damage.
Payton Tolle’s cutter has been great — 31% of right-handed swings registered as “tied up”. Righties haven’t barreled the ball up at all, and the only extra-base hit against it was this double.
Note:I’m writing this during Tolle’s start against the Rays. Another hitter just bounced a cutter off the plate for a double. Baseball is so strange.
Ranger Suarez’s cutter also has a 21% tie up rate against righties, though the whiff rate is much lower. Hitters are late on 25% of their swings, allowing the ball to get in on their hands. For Tolle, they’re early 20% of the time as they look for something harder, leading to whiffs. There are at least two ways to skin a cat.
Speaking of Suarez, his sinker has been excellent at jamming lefties, with a tied-up rate of 24%. That’s lagging behind Garrett Crochet, whose 40% mark against lefties is among the best in baseball. Connelly Early isn’t far behind him at 36%, which contributes to his sinker’s 56.5% ground ball rate versus lefties.
In the bullpen, Tayron Guerrero is throwing his sinker by everyone — 38% of swings are late. Believe it or not, that isn’t how Aroldis Chapman is getting his whiffs. Hitters are on time 84% of the time against Chapman’s sinker and 79% of the time against his four-seam. It’s the movement that’s getting them — 52% of swings are underneath his sinker, 41% are under his four-seam.
Who haven’t I talked about yet? Sonny Gray? His four-seam is hit at times, but it also does a good job tying up lefties. It’s not a traditional high-vertical four-seam; it has some cut action to it, allowing it to get in on lefties. His cutter also gets in on lefties, because it has even more cut than the four-seam. His sweeper and curveball both induce incredibly ugly swings, like this one that Salvador Perez missed by literally over two feet.
On the hitting side, Masataka Yoshida leads the team in “Perfect Contact” with a 38% rate. Caleb Durbin is second at 33%. Neither guy is striking out; they clearly each have great control of the barrel. Neither guy has high-end bat speed, though, so despite being on time and lined up, they’re not doing a ton of damage. Wilyer Abreu has been late against fastballs, and the results reflect that. He has a 25% whiff rate and .219 batting average against them.
Alright, I think that’s enough meandering from me. This stuff isn’t the end-all be-all of analysis, but it helps to be able to confirm what you think you know, or give context to why someone might be slumping. Go check out the leaderboard yourself and let me know what you find in the comments. Maybe you’ll be able to fix the offense, or salvage a pitcher. I don’t have any pull in the organization, but once I wrote that Payton Tolle should add a sinker, and he did, so maybe someone is paying attention. Or maybe they aren’t, and they came to that conclusion on their own. I also wrote that Brayan Bello would be okay as a starter, and he gave up 75 runs in the first inning the very next day, so what do I know? Okay, I’m done meandering for real now. I hope you enjoyed reading this as much as I enjoyed writing it.
Dylan File was mauled in this one, and while the Hens fought back, it wasn’t quite enough on Friday.
File gave up six runs over the first four innings of work to put the Hens behind from the start.
Max Clark absolutely hammered a solo shot to right center field in the bottom of the first, and a leadoff single from Trei Cruz in the second led to a run on a Tyler Gentry double. In the third, Gage Workman doubled, Ben Malgeri walked, and Hao-Yu Lee smoked an RBI double to plate Workman. A passed ball brought Malgeri home, and it was a 4-4 game after three.
Max Clark with a monster blast to right center to get Toledo on the board. It’s his 5th home run of the year. pic.twitter.com/wOjTM0cEFv
File then allowed two more runs in the fourth, and a three-run inning against Matt Seelinger followed. It was a 9-4 game headed into the bottom of the fifth.
Malgeri and Lee led off the bottom of the fifth with walks, and Eduardo Valencia singled in one run. Gentry singled in Lee and Valencia after a wild pitch allowed them to advance 90 feet. That made it 9-7 Saints, and Max Anderson cracked his fifth home run to the opposite field in the sixth to pull the Hens within a run.
Unfortunately, Nick Sandlin leaked a run in the seventh with some help from a Valencia passed ball. That would prove the diffference in this one. Valencia singled in Malgeri in the bottom of the eighth, but with two on base, the rally died via a Jace Jung strikeout, and the Hens couldn’t mount another push in the ninth.
Clark: 2-5, R, RBI, HR, BB
Anderson: 3-6, R, RBI, 2B, HR
Lee: 2-4, R, RBI, 2B, BB, K
File: 3.2 IP, 6 ER, 7 H, 2 BB, 3 K
Coming Up Next: The Saints lead the series 3-1, with a 7:05 p.m. ET first pitch set for Saturday night.
The SeaWolves, err the Flagship City Kitties, pounded out 15 hits to survive a rough game from the bullpen and take down Akron again on Friday.
Akron jumped on Tanner Kohlhepp for two in the first, beat up on Eric Silva for four runs in the third and fourth innings, and then got to Ryan Harvey for two runs. However, the offense kept up, and Yosber Sanchez and Luke Taggart eventually locked down the RubberDucks over the final four innings as the offense poured it on.
The SeaWolves got going in the third as Izaac Pacheco reached on an error to lead off the inning, and Peyton Graham singled. Aaron Antonini stepped in and crushed a three-run shot. Seth Stephenson’s speed forced an error, and he went first to third on a Brett Callahan ground out. John Peck doubled him in to tie the game 4-4.
In the bottom of the fourth, they had to kickstart another comeback. Graham drilled a two-out double to center and scored on an Antonini single. A wild pitch moved Antonini to second, and Stephenson singled him to third. Callahan kept the line moving with a single to center off the trademark, scoring Antonini.
It was 8-6 Akron in the bottom of the sixth, when Stephenson again reached on an infield error. Callahan walked, and Peck singled in Stephenson. Thayron Liranzo ripped a double into the right field corner to plate Callahan and Peck, and finally they had the lead at 9-8. They wouldn’t look back.
Thayron Liranzo scorches a 2-run double into the right corner to put Erie up 9-8. pic.twitter.com/brBjyNyJWh
After the Ducks went back to the pen, Andrew Jenkins greeted new reliever Reid Johnston with an RBI single to make it 10-8. A Stephenson leadoff double in the eighth sparked another three-run rally as the SeaWolves pulled away for good.
Stephenson: 3-5, 3 R, 2B, K
Callahan: 2-4, 2 R, RBI, BB, SB
Peck: 3-4, R, 3 RBI, 2B
Liranzo: 1-4, 2 R, 2 RBI, 2B, BB, K
Graham: 2-5, 2 R, 2B, 2 K
Coming Up Next: The SeaWolves will look for their six straight victory on Saturday at 6:05 p.m. ET.
West Michigan Whitecaps 8, Lake County Captains 6 (box)
Carlos Marcano was rocked in his start, but the bats heated up and Bryce Rainer came through with a two-run homer in the ninth to win on Friday.
Marcano gave up two-run homers in both the first and the second innings. That was the end of his night, with the Whitecaps down 4-0 early. Luke Stofel and Carlos Lequerica allowed single runs in the fourth and fifth.
At that point it was 6-2 Captains after the ‘Caps scored two in the top of the third. Samuel Gil led off the inning with a single and Junior Tilien and Juan Hernandez both reached on errors. An Andrew Sojka sacrifice fly scored Gil, and a wild pitch plated Tilien.
Into the seventh it was still 6-2, but in the top of the inning, Tilien singled, and Hernandez and Jackson Strong each walked. A Sojka ground out scored Tilien. Garrett Pennington then singled in Hernandez and Strong. That prompted a call to the bullpen for the Captains, but Bryce Rainer greeted the new reliever with a laser beam the opposite way for a double, and a pair of walks forced in the tying run.
Bryce Rainer ropes a 105 MPH double to the wall in left. It’s his 10th double with West Michigan and his 13th overall this season. pic.twitter.com/FBb7wtLR8N
C.J. Weins and Thomas Bruss did a nice job locking down the Captains over the final three innings, and in the top of the ninth, Pennington reached on yet another Captains’ error, and Rainer smoked a two-run shot over the wall in left center field to take an 8-6 lead. Bruss collected his first Double-A save with a quick bottom of the ninth.
Bryce Rainer crushes a 2-run homer to center to put West Michigan up 8-6 in the 9th. pic.twitter.com/aNQy0yFqzN
A three-run shot allowed by Ali Tanner was the difference in this one as neither team swung the bats too well.
The Flying Tigers struck first, as Jordan Yost walked, stole second, and scored on a two-out Carson Rucker single. A Zach MacDonald single followed, and Anibal Salas walked to load the bases. Javier Osorio was hit by a pitch, scoring Rucker, but that was all they’d get. 2-0 Flying Tigers.
Meanwhile, Alistair Tanner was cruising for three innings, allowing just a hit batsman. That crumbled in the fourth, as a pair of walks was followed by a three-run homer from Jonathan Hogart. 3-2 Threshers.
Jatnk Diaz hit a batter and then allowed a double to make it 4-2 in the bottom of the eighth. The Flying Tigers didn’t generate many scoring opportunities, and both bullpens pitched well overall to wrap this one up.
Yost: 1-3, R, 2B, BB, SB
Rucker: 2-4, R, RBI, 2 K
Tanner (L, 3-4): 4.0 IP, 3 ER, H, 2 BB, 4 K
Coming Up Next: The series is tied up heading into a 6:30 p.m. ET matchup on Saturday.
Paul Wilson made his second appearance of the season, and while he didn’t have much control, it’s just good to see him back on the mound. He walked three and allowed a pair of runs to the Phillies in a short 1.1 IP outing. RHP Cale Wetwiska, who was fairly impressive early on this season, made a scoreless, two inning rehab appearance in this one as well. RHP Alemain Cruz took over and was great, spinning four innings of one-hit ball without a walk, while punching out seven.
Cris Rodriguez had a pair of RBI knocks in this one, while Steven Madero and especially Angel de los Santos had good days at the plate.
TORONTO, CANADA - JUNE 12: Max Schuemann #30 of the New York Yankees reacts to striking out in the eighth inning in an MLB game at the Rogers Centre against the Toronto Blue Jays on June 12, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Tara Walton/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Yankees’ house of horrors over the past year has been Rogers Centre — they dropped out of first place in the division last year after getting swept there and never got it back, and then got pummeled in the postseason when they advanced to the ALDS and had to face them again. Now, heading north of the border for the first time this season, they got down in a hurry as Ryan Weathers coughed up multiple homers and the offense couldn’t catch up. Putting insult to injury, Trent Grisham left the game with a hamstring strain that could sideline him for a bit and challenge the team’s suddenly-thin depth in the outfield.
We’ve got a frontloaded day with a mid-afternoon tilt on the schedule, so let’s set the stage. Matt opens and ends our day, first covering the results from our latest Reacts polling before coming back to riff on the concept of the 82-0 and 162-0 games that gained mass popularity recently. I’ll be back to go over the latest Rivalry Roundup results with the Rays threatening to retake sole possession of first with New York’s loss, Jeff recounts the tale of the phantom Yankee David Parrish on his birthday, Michael examines Camilo Doval’s perplexing results, and Andrés goes over what could and likely isn’t sustainable from Ryan McMahon’s recent stretch of play.
Today’s Matchup:
New York Yankees at Toronto Blue Jays
Time: 3:07 p.m. EST
TV: YES, Sportsnet, TVA Sports
Venue: Rogers Centre, Toronto, ON
Questions/Prompts:
1. What do the Yankees do in the outfield if Trent Grisham is sidelined for a decent length of time?
2. Is tonight the night, will the Knicks become NBA champions for the first time since 1973?
CLEVELAND, OH - MAY 3: NaeQwan Tomlin #35 of the Cleveland Cavaliers looks on before the game against the Toronto Raptors during Round One Game Seven of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 3, 2026 at Rocket Arena in Cleveland, Ohio. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Lauren Leigh Bacho/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
Nae’Qwan Tomlin’s emergence as a helpful fill-in rotation player was a pleasant surprise for the Cleveland Cavaliers. This led to his two-way deal being converted to a standard contract midway through the season.
All grades are based on our usual expectations for each player. A “B” represents that player meeting their standard.
Regular Season Stats
5.8 points
2.9 rebounds
0.8 assists
47.8% FG
23.5% 3PT FG
77% FT
64 games
Making the jump from a two-way deal to a standard contract doesn’t happen as often as you’d think.
There are 90 NBA two-way slots available, and far more than 90 players who occupy those positions throughout the season. Since these are non-guaranteed deals, teams are pretty quick to cut and sign players to these deals.
This year, only 31 players had their two-way contracts converted to a standard deal for at least the rest of the season. Tomlin was among that group.
Tomlin’s journey to this spot was unconventional to say the least. He didn’t play organized basketball until college, and then played for four teams in five years. Three of those years were spent at smaller juco schools.
He made the Cleveland Charge’s roster heading into the 2024-25 season, but wasn’t a regular rotation at the start of the year. He eventually worked his way into the rotation, then became a starter, and ended the year on a two-way deal.
That progression continued this season. Tomlin worked his way up after the Cavs were decimated with injuries. He made the most of those opportunities as he became a fixture in the rotation throughout the season, and was even a spot starter in three games.
Tomlin’s athleticism and hustle stood out on a team that needed both of those qualities. He was an impactful offensive rebounder and an explosive finisher in the paint when given a runway to do so.
The increased playing time also exposed some of the shortcomings in Tomlin’s game.
First of all, the outside shooting is an issue. Tomlin spent many of his half-court possessions stationed in the corner, but was mostly a non-threat as a shooter. He finished last among qualified forwards in corner three-point percentage as he knocked down just 24% of his corner triples.
This was an issue because Tomlin showed that he doesn’t have the handle or playmaking capabilities to be an on-ball creator. It’s difficult to find a consistent half-court role if you can’t either pass, dribble, shoot, or be a vertical threat at an average to high level.
This left Tomlin as mostly someone who could attack in transition or finish off cuts from the corner. Both are useful, but not ideal as the basis for an offensive package.
Defensively, Tomlin fouled far too much. He had the worst foul percentage among forwards in the league, translating to 4.5 fouls per 36 minutes.
Fouls for a forward usually come from being out of position or selling out for blocks. Tomlin’s issues came from both. He struggled to keep wings in front of him defensively. And even when he was in the right position, he was too susceptible to pump fakes.
Tomlin will need to figure out how to play defense without fouling as much as he did this year if he wants to be a rotation-caliber player. It’s difficult to justify playing someone who fouls this much, who also isn’t a rim deterrent in a meaningful way.
Despite the need for improvement, it’s undeniable that this was a successful year for Tomlin. Every player on a two-way deal in the league’s entire goal for the year is to earn a standard contract. Tomlin did that.
The next step is refining his game on both ends so that he can earn a second NBA deal.
ABU DHABI, UAE - OCTOBER 3: Head Coach Joe Mazzulla of the Boston Celtics speaks to the media during media availability as part of 2024 NBA Global Games Abu Dhabi at Etihad Arena on October 3, 2024 in Abu Dhabi, The United Arab Emirates. 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 2024 NBAE (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
Joe Mazzulla could have been anywhere.
He could have been back home in Rhode Island, decompressing after a Celtics season that started with everyone lowering expectations because of Jayson Tatum’s Achilles tear and ended with everyone furious because those lowered expectations had somehow turned into 56 wins and a blown 3-1 lead to Philadelphia.
He could have been holed up in the Red Auerbach Center, watching film of a missed weak-side rotation from February with the emotional urgency of a man solving a murder. He could have been in Costa Rica again, walking barefoot through the jungle with a chess prodigy, because apparently the rest of us have been going about vacation all wrong.
Instead, he was in Portugal with Neemias Queta.
☘️ Da NBA à Luz!
Neemias Queta e Joe Mazzulla visitaram hoje a nossa casa e receberam a camisola oficial do Benfica 26/27 🔴⚪ pic.twitter.com/AuS5DItq60
— SLBenfica Modalidades (@modalidadesslb) June 9, 2026
Chris Forsberg of NBC Sports Boston wrote a great piece this week on Mazzulla’s offseason travel, reporting that the Celtics head coach was spotted in both Omaha, Nebraska, and Lisbon, Portugal during the first week of June while spending time with Baylor Scheierman and Queta. Forsberg noted that the trip from Omaha to Lisbon is roughly 4,400 air miles, with no direct flights.
That is not a “swing by if you’re in the area” itinerary. That is multiple flights, time zones, airport coffee, stiff necks and at least one moment where you wake up in a hotel room with no idea what continent you’re in, let alone country.
And yet, there he was.
The more you look at these trips, the harder it becomes to treat them like irregular offseason moments. The point is not that Joe Mazzulla owns a passport or knows how to find Terminal B. The point is that connecting with his players on a human level seems to be an integral part of how he coaches.
The version of Joe we see is not the whole person
For most fans, Mazzulla is still understood through the strangest parts of his public personality.
The Brazilian jiu-jitsu practice with his sensei in the depths of the Celtics practice facility. The seemingly strong desire to one day execute a bank heist (either as the mastermind or safecracker). The refusal to answer simple questions in a simple way.
It’s funny, and a lot of the shtick is probably intentional. Mazzulla has never seemed especially interested in making himself easier to understand from the outside.
In some ways, the weirdness has become the package. You see the vacant stare, the deadpan expression, the quote that sounds like it was translated from English to Latin and back again, and you think, yep, that’s Joe.
But there is another version of him that keeps showing up in the way Celtics players talk about him.
That version seems to be much quieter and more grounded. He spends time, listens, and shows up in places he does not have to be.
Brad Stevens once told NBC Sports Boston that a player who had been around Mazzulla for individual and small group work said, “That guy can say anything to me because of the amount of time he spends with me.” That line gets at something coaches can sometimes pretend is more complicated than it is. Players usually know when someone is only showing up because the job requires it. They also know when someone is showing up because they care enough to understand the full person standing in front of them.
Mazzulla seems obsessed with that part.
Not in a soft, sentimental way. After all, this is still Joe Mazzulla we’re talking about. I’m not expecting him to start every practice with a group hug and a guided meditation unless the meditation somehow involves combat breathing and clips of the 2008 Celtics defending the strong-side corner.
But his approach seems rooted in a pretty human idea: you cannot demand everything from people if you are not willing to meet them where they actually are.
The miles are the message
Mazzulla’s approach off the court helps explain why the trips matter.
Going to Portugal with Queta is more than a coach supporting a player during the offseason. Mazzulla wanted to see the places that shaped his starting center before he became a rotation piece in Boston. The journey is about understanding what basketball looked like for Queta before TD Garden, before the NBA, before he became part of the Celtics’ nightly calculus.
The same goes for Scheierman at Creighton. Mazzulla is not just checking in on a player’s jumper or making sure Baylor didn’t trim that stunning mullet. He’s walking into the environment that helped make the player make sense.
Boston Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla flew to Omaha to spend time working out with Baylor Scheierman on Creighton’s campus. 💚⁰⁰Scheierman just finished year two with the Celtics. pic.twitter.com/gOEoLG1WTf
Those moments have the ability to change the texture of a relationship.
As fans, we spend a lot of time talking about schemes, rotations and late-game decisions because those are the things we can see. Fair enough. Mazzulla should be judged on those things too. The Celtics’ offense got stagnant at times. The playoff loss to Philadelphia deserves real scrutiny. There are fair questions about how Boston evolves next season, especially with Tatum working his way back and Brown coming off the heaviest leadership burden of his career (on top of the onslaught of trade rumors to start the offseason).
But the relationship piece is not some decorative side dish that sits next to the actual coaching. It is the coaching.
When Mazzulla challenges players, his words land differently down the road if they know he has invested in them beyond the box score. When he asks Queta to defend without fouling, Queta knows his coach cared enough to fly across an ocean and see where his basketball story started. When he asks Scheierman to sharpen the details of his game, Scheierman knows Mazzulla took the time to show up in the place where his confidence first became tangible.
That doesn’t read like performative culture-building to me. It feels like someone taking the human part of the job seriously.
It’s also probably exhausting. I don’t know what Joe Mazzulla’s sleep schedule looks like, and I’m not sure I want to. There is a nonzero chance he views jet lag as a weakness leaving the body. But even if he is wired differently than most people, at the end of the day, the choice to keep showing up for his players is still a choice.
The caring part is easier to miss
Al Horford has talked about the caring side of Mazzulla before, saying players can see that he cares about them as people and that his genuineness is part of why they respect him.
Horford also shared the story of Mazzulla returning to a neighborhood in the Dominican Republic to run a clinic for kids, with no cameras and no desire for credit. That story is more revealing than a thousand press conference clips. That type of Joe is not one we ever really get to see when the cameras are rolling and the mics are hot. It’s simply a coach doing something decent because he wanted to be there.
Spreading the love & knowledge of the game 🇩🇴 🏆
Al Horford was joined by Joe Mazzulla at his basketball camp in La Romana, Dominican Republic! pic.twitter.com/rbLQVBJKXz
Maybe Mazzulla prefers for that side to stay quieter.
Perhaps it’s easier for everyone to focus on the odd quotes and the intensity and the killer whale metaphors. Maybe that lets him keep the more sincere parts of his coaching style protected. It would be very Joe to hide the softest part of himself behind the least normal possible packaging.
But the pattern is getting harder to miss.
He goes to the Dominican Republic for Horford. He asks to attend Chris Boucher’s baptism in Montreal. He spends time with Scheierman at Creighton. He travels with Queta to Portugal.
At a certain point, these stop feeling like isolated anecdotes and start looking like the foundation of how he leads.
Trust is built before anyone needs it
Mazzulla doesn’t have to earn trust with speeches in the huddle or locker room. He is earning it with presence at times when basketball isn’t the primary focus.
The Celtics need plenty from him next season. As Stevens noted in his end-of-season presser, tactical adjustments must be made. The roster needs better answers when playoff possessions get tight, especially with the New York Knicks establishing themselves as a legitimate threat heading into next season. Mazzulla must help Brown, White, Pritchard and the rest of the roster navigate a year that may once again require a different kind of identity while Tatum comes back for his first full season after the Achilles tear.
They also need the locker room to keep believing in him when he pushes, prods, challenges and occasionally says something that makes everyone in the room wonder if they accidentally walked into a philosophy seminar being held inside an MMA gym.
That is what the trips help explain.
The strange quotes get noticed. The care for his players tells the story.
Jun 9, 2026; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; New York Yankees left fielder Cody Bellinger (35) makes a running catch in the seventh inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field. Mandatory Credit: David Richard-Imagn Images | David Richard-Imagn Images
MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: An already beleagured Yankee outfield suffered another blow last night, as centerfielder Trent Grisham pulled up limp between first and second base in the sixth inning of the 8-5 loss to the Blue Jays. Grisham left the game with what the Yankees called right hamstring tightness. We’ve seen how hard soft-tissue injuries in the legs can be to deal with, and we may wake up to the news that Grish is headed to the IL. He’ll join Aaron Judge and Jasson Domínguez if so, and the position group thought to be the strongest of the team looks awful depleted all of a sudden.
New York Post | Greg Joyce ($): No team can withstand the loss of a player like Aaron Judge, but the Yankees have been doing their very best, led by a different corner outfielder. Cody Bellinger has been a top 10 player in the American League this season, and been critical on both sides of the ball. His sterling 175 wRC+ in the month of May bouyed the offense as Judge played hurt, and he has been the best defensive player in baseball if you believe DRS. If you prefer Statcast, well, he’s merely a top 10 most valuable defender in the sport. With no Captain on the field, Cody Bellinger might be borrowing from hockey and wearing an A so far this year.
NJ.com | Randy Miller: Meanwhile, after a couple hot games to start his season, Anthony Volpe has begun to fall on hard times both at the plate and in the field. The shortstop was not in the starting lineup on Friday night in Toronto, and seems destined to cede more playing time in the future. Meanwhile, Yankees top prospect George Lombard Jr. seems to have found his footing with Triple-A Scranton with a 120 wRC+ since Memorial Day, and a 114 overall which is quite good given how much he struggled in his initial promotion. Lombard isn’t MLB ready just yet, but you can imagine Volpe may be hearing footsteps behind him.
MLB.com | Jesse Borek: Speaking of prospects, meet Tony Rossi. The 26-year-old reliever has had as winding a career as you possibly can in the game, bouncing between three colleges, signing for $10,000 as an undrafted free agent with the Yankees, and now he has been just about the best pitcher in the entire Yankee system so far this year. Now throwing out of the Double-A Somerset bullpen since being promoted in early June, Rossi has gone 17 straight appearances (dating back to Hudson Valley) without allowing a run, and the legacy of the Yankees churning out high-end relievers out of seemingly nowhere may be stirring.
NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 10: Mikal Bridges #25 and OG Anunoby #8 of the New York Knicks celebrates after scoring a game winning shot during Game Four of the 2026 NBA Finals on June 10, 2026 at Madison Square Garden in New York, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE(Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
Through four games, the 2026 NBA Finals have been even in just about every way.
The Knicks may lead the series three games to one, but as many pundits and salty NBA fans will tell you, all of these games could’ve gone the opposite way with a few different possessions or calls going differently. Unfortunately for them, you don’t get extra points for almost winning, just ask Kenny Atkinson.
Both teams have made massive runs; they’ve had massive quarters. Even in the Spurs’ case, they’ve had a dominant half of basketball. But it’s all added up to the two teams being close enough that all four games have been decided at the death.
But, while much of the discourse surrounding Game 4 has been focused on the Spurs’ unbelievable 29-point choke, not enough has been about the Knicks playing perhaps the best half of basketball, context included, in franchise history. For some reason, people believe that winning the first quarter matters more than any other. Odd.
So what had to happen for the Knicks to suddenly flip the script and outscore the Spurs 58-30 in the final 24 minutes?
The first thing we have to acknowledge is shooting luck. After the greatest shooting half in NBA Finals history by a Spurs team that has just two above-average three-point shooters in their rotation, they cooled off significantly after halftime, going just 3-for-17. A lot of these looks weren’t totally different than the ones they chucked up in the first half in a persistent heat check, but the attention to detail was also better by the Knicks.
The Spurs went 9-for-13 on wide-open threes and 5-for-12 on open threes in that first half. In the second half, it dropped off to 3-for-10 and 0-for-7. While the drop off from 14-for-25 to 3-for-17 is truly immense, it still averages out at 40.5%, which is well above the postseason average for the Spurs.
So while their shooting drop-off in the second half was a big catalyst behind the comeback, think of it as more of a regression to the mean by a team that doesn’t have the shotmaking to do it for a full 48.
And this is where youthful arrogance sinks in. The heat check bled into the third quarter, where the Spurs repeatedly chucked up shots early in the shot clock, expecting them to go in. When you lead by such a large margin in the second half, you’re fighting the clock as much as the opponent. Refusing to use it on their side enabled the Knicks to get back into it:
Michael Wilbon says the Spurs played sustain stretch of the dumbest basketball he’s ever seen:
“I’m going to give you one stat, they go 14 for 26 on threes in the first half. They built this enormous lead on three point shooting but they have to know they can’t sustain that. And… pic.twitter.com/CCujQjKUba
Despite employing a 7’5” alien, the Spurs became the first team in this postseason to go an entire quarter without scoring in the paint in that third quarter, going 0-for-5 in the restricted area. Yes, none of the teams that got wiped off the face of the earth by the Thunder or Knicks in the early rounds even reached this futility.
SPURS 3RD QUARTER LAST NIGHT
0 points in the paint
First team this postseason to go an entire quarter without scoring in the paint
But that’s enough about the Spurs shooting themselves in the foot. What did the Knicks do to chip away and seize the game at the very end?
They generated better looks on offense, for one. The Knicks had just nine open/wide-open three-point attempts in the first half, making four of them.
In the second half? They went 10-for-18. They never had a problem making their open threes, they just weren’t able to get to that easy offense in the first half.
A large part of that was being able to space the floor with Karl-Anthony Towns being freed from Zach Zarba’s foul trouble prison cell. After playing just nine minutes in a first half that featured brief cameos by Ariel Hukporti and Jeremy Sochan, Towns played 17 minutes in the second half. As such, he was able to finish a game-high +17 in 26 minutes.
While he himself didn’t do too much, he continued a trend that has existed all throughout this series. When he shares the floor with Victor Wembanyama, the Knicks steadily outplay them. When he’s forced to sit while Wemby’s out there, the Spurs dominate.
Wemby + KAT on: Knicks +30 (116:27) Wemby on, KAT off: Spurs +41 (44:19) Wemby off: Knicks +19 (31:14)
Plus/minus per minute: Wemby + KAT on: Knicks +0.26 Wemby on, KAT off: Spurs +0.925 Wemby off: Knicks +0.61
It also doesn’t help ol’ Vic that the Knicks were taking advantage of his wind slowly catching up to him. He’s played a staggering 203 minutes over his last five games, the most by a country mile that he ever has. He’s exceeded his career high in total minutes by over 450 minutes, with, in a total best-case scenario for him, three games to go. That’s 10 additional full games of basketball.
It’s not surprising, then, when the Knicks hunted him on the perimeter in multiple types of action in the second half.
The Knicks had a second half offensive rating of 180 (1.80 ppp) on possessions with Wemby defending in isolation, pick n roll, or close outs
Knicks’ built their historic comeback on Wemby’s defensive weaknesses in drop coverage, over-help and late close outs… pic.twitter.com/QPIY7A2RVg
The big worry I had watching the first half was allowing the Spurs to coast to a victory and allow their stars to rest, not accruing the extra mileage that has slowly worn them down as games progressed. Fortunately, the Knicks never fully let go of the rope in this tug-of-war battle, dragging their tired bodies over the line for a win.
There were also some bold moves made by Mike Brown with his rotations. Jordan Clarkson didn’t have it. Deuce McBride continued not to have it. Landry Shamet struggled for the second straight game. Needing someone to plug in during the fourth quarter, he elected to play Jose Alvarado with Brunson for the first time in several weeks. It worked like a charm.
NYK scored 1.727 points per possession with these two on the court in G4.
The Knicks’ best offense has been when they use off-ball movement, spacing, and real ball movement to put the Spurs into the blender. This disrupts their strategy of playing Wemby as a free safety in the paint and allows them to create quality looks on possession after possession.
What you saw in the second half wasn’t just a young team fundamentally failing in terms of execution for an entire half, but it was a perfect 24 minutes for the team that had to climb out of an impossible deficit.
The inexperience showed one more time in a big way on the final possessions. The Spurs had no idea how to defend the Knicks’ final possession, and you could see it happening in real time.
Unreleased footage that shows the Spurs in utter confusion coming out of the timeout before the OG tip in. MUST watch, sound up. Link to full breakdown below 👇🏀 pic.twitter.com/E7tz0st2LO
Through four games, the Spurs have not been the better team, because this kind of stuff is what goes into what decides which team is better or not. Just because one team has the flashier stars, the better personalities, the generational talents gifted to them by Adam Silver and the lottery gods, doesn’t mean they should be ordained without having to play the games.
With Game 5 coming later today, David will have a chance to take Goliath off life support.
Carolina Hurricanes (53-22-7, in the Metropolitan Division) vs. Vegas Golden Knights (39-26-17, in the Pacific Division)
Paradise, Nevada; Sunday, 8 p.m. EDT
LINE: Hurricanes -115, Golden Knights -105; over/under is 6
STANLEY CUP FINAL: Hurricanes lead series 3-2
BOTTOM LINE: The Carolina Hurricanes visit the Vegas Golden Knights in the Stanley Cup Final with a 3-2 lead in the series. The teams meet Thursday for the eighth time this season. The Hurricanes won 4-2 in the last meeting. Andrei Svechnikov led the Hurricanes with two goals.
Vegas has gone 27-15-9 in home games and 39-26-17 overall. The Golden Knights have gone 50-8-12 in games they score at least three goals.
Carolina has gone 31-12-6 on the road and 53-22-7 overall. The Hurricanes have conceded 236 goals while scoring 291 for a +55 scoring differential.
TOP PERFORMERS: Pavel Dorofeyev has 37 goals and 27 assists for the Golden Knights. Brett Howden has seven goals and two assists over the past 10 games.
Seth Jarvis has 32 goals and 34 assists for the Hurricanes. Jordan Staal has scored seven goals and added one assist over the past 10 games.
LAST 10 GAMES: Golden Knights: 7-2-1, averaging 3.7 goals, 6.5 assists, 3.4 penalties and seven penalty minutes while giving up 2.8 goals per game.
Hurricanes: 7-2-1, averaging 3.9 goals, 6.5 assists, 3.4 penalties and 8.4 penalty minutes while giving up 2.8 goals per game.
INJURIES: Golden Knights: William Karlsson: day to day (arm).
Hurricanes: None listed.
___
The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
Tobias Myers is close to rejoining the Mets, but it won’t be as a fully stretched out starting pitcher.
The right-hander was optioned to Triple-A Syracuse two weeks ago, at which time team officials indicated Myers could be lengthened into a starter.
In his most recent outing on Thursday, he pitched 2 ²/₃ scoreless innings.
Right-hander Tobias Myers likely will be used in a utility role when he returns to the Mets. Robert Sabo for New York Post
“I think his role is going to be whatever we actually need at that point,” president of baseball operations David Stearns said Friday before a 7-5 win over the Braves at Citi Field, noting that Myers will likely be recalled within the next few days. “He could pitch at the front of games, it could be more in the swing capacity that we saw at points this year.
“But that is what makes him special, he has the ability to help us in a variety of different ways and we probably aren’t going to lock him into one specific role when he comes back.”
Myers was sent to Syracuse, according to Stearns, because the Mets needed a fresh arm and Myers had received much work at that point.
Myers has pitched to a 4.05 ERA in 20 appearances for the Mets this season.
Francisco Lindor began taking live batting practice, with two innings simulated on defense, but he wasn’t allowed to run the bases.
Lindor, who is returning from a left calf strain, will continue the simulated workouts over the next week, according to manager Carlos Mendoza. It’s unclear of the shortstop will receive a minor league rehab stint before rejoining the Mets.
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The Braves began the day with a MLB-leading 3.20 ERA under new pitching coach Jeremy Hefner, who was fired by the Mets last October.
Stearns was asked if the Braves’ pitching success had led him to reassess the decision to fire Hefner.
“We’re happy with our coaching staff right now,” Stearns said. “Hef is a really good person and a good coach, and it doesn’t surprise me he’s having success.”
Kodai Senga likely will start at least one additional minor league game following his strong outing Thursday for Double-A Binghamton in a rehab appearance.
The right-hander allowed one earned run on one hit over six innings with five strikeouts over 75 pitches.
“He threw strikes, competing in the strike zone it was good to see,” Mendoza said.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 10: Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks attempts a shot while being fouled by Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs during the first quarter in Game Four of the 2026 NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden on June 10, 2026 in New York City. 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 Al Bello/Getty Images) | Getty Images
How do you recover after one of the worst losses in NBA history? The San Antonio Spurs are going to have to figure out the answer to that question quickly in Game Five of the NBA Finals, or their season will be over.
After blowing a 29-point lead in Game Four, the Spurs are back in San Antonio down 3-1. The Spurs are 4-0 in elimination/series-clinching games this postseason, but are 0-2 on their home court in the Finals. With rumors of New York Knicks’ fans flooding the Frost Bank Center, the Spurs may not be facing such a friendly home crowd. It’s just another hurdle for this young team that has struggled to rise to the moment in this series.
Game Five will be a real test of who the Spurs are. Will they fold after the embarrassment of Game Four? Will Victor Wembanyama and De’Aaron Fox come out swinging, looking to make up for crucial mistakes in the game prior? So far this postseason, when San Antonio found itself with its back against the wall, the team has typically responded.
On the flip side, the Knicks are hungrier than ever. A championship is within their grasp, and they have to feel like anything is possible after their miraculous comeback at Madison Square Garden. Despite the 3-1 lead, these Finals have been extremely close. The Spurs need to bring the same level of desperation to survive as the Knicks have to crown themselves the champions. If they don’t, they’ll likely see an opposing team lift the Larry O’Brien trophy on their home court for the first time in franchise history.
Spurs Injuries: Luke Kornet – Questionable (illness)
Knicks Injuries: No injuries to report.
What to watch for:
Wembanyama’s response
These Finals will forever be etched into Wembanyama’s legacy. He’s had moments of brilliance followed by devastating mistakes. The pass off of Stephon Castle’s back in Game Two and the crucial missed free throws in Game Four may haunt him for a while. He will catch a lot of flak for his “arrogant” demeanor on and off the floor, especially if San Antonio loses dramatically in Game Five. Wembanyama has to lead the way for the Spurs at home. It starts by setting the tone at the basket. He’s thrived when San Antonio has gotten him the ball around the rim. He has to live in the paint against New York for the rest of the offense to shine.
These are the moments where the true greats step up. If Wembanyama wants to be considered one of them, he has to play great and lead the team to victory.
Attacking the basket
The Spurs got away from what made them great in the second half of Game Four. They started playing around the perimeter and didn’t attack the basket with the same force they did in the first half. It gave the Knicks an opening, and they seized it. San Antonio’s aggression getting downhill could very well decide this series. When they play fast and put pressure on the rim, New York has a hard time stopping them. It’s the settling on offense that has gotten them in trouble.
Backup center
Luke Kornet is questionable in Game Five due to illness. If he can’t suit up, the Spurs are in a tough position at backup center. Wembanyama has already looked exhausted playing over 40 minutes a night. Without Kornet, he will likely have to take on a similar minute load. San Antonio’s best option may be to play Carter Bryant as a small-ball center, but he has also looked outmatched in this series. Mitch Johnson may need to get creative to find a solution that gives Wembanyama a breather without leading to massive Knicks runs.
It seemed like Andrew Painter had made the pitch-mix rearrangement that could generate consistency.
That has not come.
After three starts against Boston, Cincinnati and Cleveland where he posted a 2.60 ERA and went at least five innings each time, the Phillies’ right-handed rookie has allowed 15 earned runs over his last three outings.
Thirteen innings. A 10.38 ERA.
Ouch.
Those starts came against three division leaders: the Dodgers, White Sox and Brewers. Painter allowed four earned runs in Los Angeles, six against Chicago and five Friday in Milwaukee.
Opponents have tagged him for a .339 average and a 1.070 OPS in those outings.
Philadelphia simply has not had a great chance to win when he has taken the ball lately. Don Mattingly and the organization did not flinch after Painter’s last start a week ago. He was getting the start against the Brewers.
It did not work, even with the opener strategy they tried.
The Phillies need to make a change, and consider sending Painter to Triple-A.
The organization does not have much starting pitching depth. It was an issue they acknowledged at the beginning of spring camp. With a slew of veteran pitchers still on the free-agent market, the Phillies stayed put.
Just this year, they have released Taijuan Walker, who had a 9.13 ERA in five outings in the rotation. Aaron Nola has not bounced back, registering a 5.68 ERA. And Painter, their top pitching prospect entering the season, has a 6.21 ERA.
If the answer comes from within, Alan Rangel could be an option. He has seen some big-league innings over the last two seasons and has posted a 3.74 ERA in 65 innings for Lehigh Valley, working both as a starter and reliever. His most recent start came Friday.
Braydon Tucker, at Double-A, has made 10 starts and has the second-lowest ERA across all affiliated ball, including the majors, minimum 55 innings pitched.
The 26-year-old sinker-balling righty has found success at each level up to Reading and certainly deserves a promotion to Triple-A. His pitch-to-contact profile could even warrant a big-league start soon.
But if the Phillies want a legitimate big-league starter, there are a number of names on teams falling out of playoff contention or with enough pitching depth to move an arm.
Dave Dombrowski has already been proactive, acquiring outfield depth in Derek Hill when the club’s right-handed bats had struggled against lefties and Adolis García was later placed on the 60-day injured list.
So what hurlers are out there?
DET — RHP Casey Mize
The 29-year-old right-hander is one of the most interesting and least talked about deadline candidates.
He is a rental who has been on the IL over the last few weeks with right groin tightness, but is scheduled to return to the Tigers’ rotation Sunday.
In nine starts this year, the former first overall pick has posted a 2.27 ERA, a 0.97 WHIP and a 2.41 FIP.
His underlying metrics are very promising. He ranks in at least the top 15 percent of pitchers in expected ERA (2.64, top eight), expected batting average (.202, top 13) and average exit velocity (86.8 mph, top 14).
Mize, who was named to his first All-Star team a year ago, features a five-pitch mix. His best two pitches this year have been his four-seam fastball and slider.
The four-seamer is a pitch that Nola and Painter have been hit hard on this year. Opposing hitters are batting just .180 against Mize’s four-seamer, which he has thrown a third of the time, with just one homer.
His slider, used 25 percent of the time, has held hitters to a .114 average. That is the lowest average among starting pitchers who have thrown it at least 100 times.
Considering the Phillies have not gotten anywhere close to the production they wanted from Nola and Painter, it would make sense if they looked outside the organization for a strong rental who could reinforce the biggest strength of this team.
Starting pitching.
A postseason rotation of Cristopher Sánchez, Zack Wheeler, Jesús Luzardo and Mize, who was solid in two playoff starts a year ago, could win games on its own.
And it is possible.
Detroit has been one of baseball’s most underwhelming teams at 29-41, nine games back in the AL Central and 5 1/2 games out of the final Wild Card spot.
There is a good chance the Tigers move back-to-back Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal, another rental and one the Phillies likely could not afford in prospect capital.
If Detroit is willing to go that route, trading Mize would make sense, too.
NYY — LHP Ryan Yarbrough / RHP Paul Blackburn
The Yankees are firmly in a playoff spot, battling Tampa Bay for the top spot in the AL East.
They lead the American League in run differential by nearly 80 runs, thanks in part to some high-scoring games, but more importantly their pitching.
They have a lot of it.
Neither Yarbrough nor Blackburn, both on one-year deals, have started games this year. That is because the Yankees have not needed them to.
They have been used in shorter roles than usual, and pitched well, mostly because New York has not needed a long reliever often with its strong starting staff.
But both can be stretched out to make starts.
Yarbrough, 34, is a crafty arm who is excellent at missing barrels. He has been an advanced-metric darling, like Mize.
His expected ERA is 2.77. He is in the 96th percentile in barrel rate, 99th percentile in average exit velocity and 100th percentile in hard-hit rate at 19.1 percent. That hard-hit rate is the second best in the sport behind Padres closer Mason Miller.
This year, Yarbrough has registered a 3.47 ERA in 23 1/3 innings over 14 outings.
He would be a strong innings eater and trustworthy contributor in the back end of the Phillies’ rotation the rest of the way. He also has postseason experience, with a 3.06 ERA in 17 2/3 innings in parts of the 2019 and 2020 postseasons for the Rays, helping during Tampa Bay’s World Series run in the COVID-shortened season.
There is no guarantee New York would deal its cost-efficient lefty, especially with Max Fried on the shelf. But for the right offer, the Yankees would budge.
Blackburn, 32, throws a wide array of pitches, with seven different offerings.
His changeup, curveball and sweeper have been strong in his 10th big-league season. He has also been excellent at generating groundballs, with a 55.3 percent rate that ranks in the top 6 percent of pitchers.
He gets similar quality of contact to Mize. The former All-Star does not jump off the page, but could at the very least be a solid depth piece for the Phils.
Neither Yarbrough nor Blackburn would call for the pretty-penny package Mize would.
BOS — RHP Sonny Gray
This feels like the least likely fit, but there is some draw because of Gray’s experience.
The 36-year-old does not make the Phillies any younger, but if the front office believes its clearest path to a championship is shutting teams down, this is the kind of move it could consider.
Gray has been sharp in his first year in Boston after being traded there from St. Louis in the offseason. He has a 3.03 ERA in 12 starts.
He is a different pitcher than the three-time All-Star most are used to seeing. He long leaned on his four-seam fastball, but this year, he has used his cutter about the same amount, even a little more.
Gray is producing more groundballs than he has in years and still commands the strike zone well, even while navigating the ABS system with lower velocity.
Boston has been a paltry 28-39 club and had to send out three prospects in the winter to acquire Gray, so he would still cost a fair amount.
The longtime hurler also has a mutual option for next season at $30 million, which essentially makes him a rental. It would be hard to picture any suitor being satisfied with a 37-year-old making that kind of money, but teams would be happy if Gray became the missing piece in their rotation.
A move of this nature would speak to how aggressive the Phils want to be, not only in getting to the postseason, but in building a staff that can win there.
NYM — LHP David Peterson
How about an in-division trade for yet another rental?
Peterson’s surface-level numbers do not make him a grand finale.
A 5.75 ERA across seven starts and seven relief appearances. His 3.51 FIP, though, signals some misfortune.
The southpaw broke out for the Mets in 2024 and carried that into his first All-Star appearance in 2025. Between the two seasons, he posted a 19-9 record with a 3.67 ERA across 289 2/3 innings over 51 starts.
The Phillies have had success against Peterson in his six seasons in New York, pushing him to a 5.28 ERA. But the lefty was strong against Philadelphia in two relief appearances in the 2024 NLDS, when the Mets took the series. He allowed no runs over 5 1/3 innings.
What makes Peterson interesting, even with his struggles this year, is his groundball rate.
Over the last five seasons, he has produced a groundball rate of 49.8 percent or higher, ranking in at least the top 23 percent of pitchers in the category each year. Last season, he posted a career-high 55.4 percent rate. He is not far behind this year at 53 percent.
Despite not being overpowering, Peterson gets great extension (7.1 feet) to the plate, maximizing his 6-foot-6, 240-pound frame.
A Mets-Phillies swap would be entertaining regardless of the variety, and this would be the perfect year for it with New York sitting at the bottom of the East at 31-38.
Mets pitcher Nolan McLean (26) throws a pitch in the first inning against the Atlanta Braves.
After a three-up, three-down first inning, Nolan McLean’s recent control struggles continued in the Mets’ 7-5 win over the Braves on Friday night at Citi Field.
The right-handed pitcher lasted just four innings, allowing three hits, two earned runs, and four walks. He threw 93 pitches.
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The 24-year-old once again struggled “to land off-speed pitches.”
Of the 33 times McLean threw to the strike zone against Atlanta, only seven were off-speed pitches.
“I think the biggest thing is getting different pitches in the zone,” McLean said after his last outing against the Padres. “It’s much easier to hit when you know one pitch is going to be a strike and the other one isn’t. That’s been the main focus.”
The worst display of McLean’s struggles was the second inning, when three walks led to a 42-pitch inning and almost an early night for the starter.
Both the pitcher and Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said no one prepares for 40-50 pitches in an inning, and one more batter likely would have meant pulling McLean.
Nolan McLean throws a pitch in the first inning of the Mets’ 7-5 win over the Braves on June 12, 2026 at Citi Field. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST
“Talking to Nolan after the second inning, he had a break, we had a long one offensively,” Mendoza said. “If we had a quick three outs there, I don’t think Nolan goes back in.”
All things considered, McLean got out of the inning with minimal damage, allowing just two earned runs despite the bases being loaded with one out.
He said it was just a matter of competitiveness and throwing whatever was working to get past the fatigue.
Nolan McLean walks to the dugout after the end of the fourth inning in the Mets’ win over the Braves. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST
Entering Friday, he had 10.2 strikeouts per nine innings, a .202 batting average against, 1.11 WHIP and a 3.98 ERA.
His strikeouts and batting average against ranked first among all qualified rookies and top 10 in the National League.
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Nevertheless, the last four outings for McLean have been his highest in WHIP, ERA and batting average against since his first start of the season.
A grinding team win, thanks to a grinding inning from McLean could be a slight confidence booster he needs to get back to competing for Rookie of the Year honors.
In his final two innings he settled down a bit, allowing one hit, one walk, and one strikeout.
SAN FRANCISCO — With a full week, instead of just a few minutes, to prepare this time around, the Giants didn’t find any more success against Javier Assad.
Assad, who blanked San Francisco when called into emergency duty last week at Wrigley Field, was just as effective as the Cubs’ scheduled starter in a rematch Friday night.
Well, that’s not entirely accurate.
The Giants mustered just one hit in 6 ⅓ innings against Assad last week. They got to him for three singles this time but nothing else in a 5-1 loss.
Javier Assad, who improved to 4-1 on the season, celebrates after holding the Giants scoreless through six innings in the their 5-1 win over the Giants on June 12, 2026 in San Francisco. AP
They needed more than that behind an erratic Landen Roupp, who struck out the first four batters of the game but exhausted 105 pitches and failed to complete five innings.
Roupp issued both his walks to begin the fourth and the fifth innings, and both came around to score. Seiya Suzuki’s double helped open a 2-0 lead in the fourth, and a two-bagger for Alex Bregman in the fifth gave the Cubs runners at second and third when Roupp’s day came to an end.
Manager Tony Vitello called on Erik Miller to get the platoon advantage against Michael Busch, who promptly swatted a hanging slider into McCovey Cove to make it 5-0.
The Giants’ lone run came off the bat of Bryce Eldridge, who was also responsible for two of their three hits against Assad. Moved up into the two-hole in a new-look lineup, Eldridge got the GIants on the board in the ninth with a one-out solo shot to right off Trent Thornton — his fourth of the season.
It amounted to a banner night for Eldridge but nobody else in the Giants’ lineup. The rookie finished 3-for-4 to raise his average to .316 and OPS to .959; his eight companions combined for one hit in 26 at-bats.
A walk to Matt Chapman was all else that interrupted 18 in a row retired by Assad after a leadoff single from Luis Arraez that extended his hitting streak to 12 games.
Assad had a 5.88 ERA when he was sent to Triple-A in May. In two outings against the Giants since being called back up, he has tossed 12 ⅓ scoreless innings, lowering his ERA to 4.21.
Javier Assad throws a pitch during the first inning of the Cubs’ win over the Giants. Getty Images
What it means
The Giants’ difficulties against Assad extended to Jung Hoo Lee, whose hitting streak came to an end after 18 games.
With an 0-for-3 performance, Lee will have to settle for the second-longest hitting streak in the majors so far this season and the longest by a Giant since Angel Pagan went 19 games in 2016.
Who’s hot
Daniel Susac was on fire early with three successful, high-impact ABS challenges.
The simple act of knowing when to tap his catcher’s helmet resulted in an additional three strikeouts for Roupp, including two 3-2 pitches that also erased walks.
He turned a 2-2 curveball into strike three against Michael Busch to end the first, got a full-count cutter in the same low-and-away location against Ian Happ to begin the second and stole a strikeout of Carson Kelly in the third on a sinker that clipped the upper-outside corner of the strike zone.
It was a notable showing from the Giants, who have been among the majors’ least effective team in deploying their ABS challenges with the sixth-lowest success rate (49%).
Susac’s hot streak behind the dish only lasted so long, however. He overturned a fourth call into a strike against Seiya Suzuki in the fourth, only to be unable to corral a relay throw that beat the runner to the plate when Suzuki lined an RBI double later in the at-bat.
Who’s not
Willy Adames was back in the lineup after missing only his second game of the season with what manager Tony Vitello termed “hip-to-knee” discomfort.
The rare day off, however, wasn’t the solution to his woes at the plate.
Willy Adames catches a fly ball during the Giants’ loss tot he Cubs. The veteran shortstop, who went 0-for-3, is now in an 0-for-20 slump. John Hefti-Imagn Images
Adames popped out to short, swung and missed at a slider low and outside the zone for strike three and grounded out to third to extend his hitless streak to 20 at-bats.
Up next
Another rematch — this time against Ben Brown (2-2, 1.74), the right-hander who limited them to one hit over 5 ⅓ shutout frames last week in Chicago before the Giants lost in extra innings.
San Francisco will counter with Trevor McDonald (2-3, 4.15), who threw five strong innings in the Giants’ 2-1 extra-inning win to close their series in Chicago.