Brad Stevens talks Jaylen Brown comments, Joe’s future, 76ers loss, and more

BOSTON, MA - SEPTEMBER 29: Brad Stevens, president of basketball operations for the Boston Celtics, answers a question during a press conference at Boston Celtics media day at the Auerbach Center on September 29, 2025 in Boston, Massachusetts. 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 Winslow Townson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

BOSTON — Three days after the Celtics’ early playoff elimination, Brad Stevens sat down in front of the media for his longest press conference of the year, touching on a slew of questions ranging from the team’s offensive play style, reports that Jaylen Brown is unhappy with the organization, Jayson Tatum’s Game 7 sidelining, and much more.

Here’s the crux of what Brad Stevens had to say — and some of my instant reactions to his comments.

On Tracy McGrady’s recent comments about Jaylen Brown:

Tracy McGrady made headlines late Tuesday night when he shared on his podcast that Jaylen Brown is frustrated with the Boston Celtics.

“His frustration lies deeply in the organization that we don’t have the details to,” McGrady said. “There’s just been a lot of stuff that I’ve been hearing, just going on with the Boston organization with JB.”

McGrady, a former NBA superstar, is a prominent member of the media and an NBC analyst. But he’s also long been a mentor and close friend of Brown’s, so his words carry more weight than most.

While he didn’t offer specifics, his comments raised eyebrows, particularly in that they came on the heels of a Jaylen Brown saying this was his favorite-ever Celtic season on a Twitch stream on the day following the team’s elimination.

As such, the first question Stevens fielded was about T-Mac’s comments regarding Brown’s grievances.

“I talked to Jaylen Monday a little bit after —  real quickly, and it was nothing but positive,” Stevens said. “He has not expressed those frustrations to me. We’ve been here 10 years together. Obviously, I love JB, and everybody around here loves JB, and just like any of our other guys, as we get to the end of the season, I’ll be here, and my door is always open, and if anybody ever wants to come in and talk about it — and talk about their team, their place, whatever the case may be, I’m all ears. And that would be 1-16, not just Jaylen, not just Jayson, not just the guys that have been here. I think it’s really important to be available. So I certainly am, and none of that has been expressed to me.”

My reaction: Would Stevens air out private conversations of frustration from his star player? Probably not. So, while I was glad this question was asked, Stevens’ answer did not provide assurance that the organization and Brown are on good footing. I don’t have insight into Brown’s frustrations, but between the Twitch stream and T-Mac’s comments, there may be something there. I imagine we’ll learn more in the weeks to come.

On the Celtics’ first-round loss to the 76ers:

The Celtics blew a 3-1 lead for the first time in franchise history, but they were also just a few fourth-quarter shots away from advancing in Game 7.

How did Stevens reckon with that duality?

He took it upon himself to address the series loss before even taking any questions.

“I thought we really struggled to generate good looks against Philly,” he said. “I thought they deserved to win. I thought on the other end, they made it really hard on us, and really kind of felt in control in a lot of ways, especially as Embiid got his legs under him. I thought that probably one of the defining things that they did to us in games five through seven was they cleaned up the glass, which had been a real boost for us. Our first-shot offense wasn’t very good the whole series, but we really got a lot of good looks on second chances and off the glass, and I thought they did a really good job. So I think overall, obviously, we had chances to win, and I’m sure there’ll be specific questions about that, but I thought overall, Philly deserved to win, and played a great series and made it hard on us.”

My reaction: I was a little bit surprised at how candid Stevens was about the team’s first-round shortcomings — he clearly felt like Philadelphia was the better team, and that the Celtics didn’t just miss shots — they struggled to generate good looks. That’s a key difference from what Joe Mazzulla maintained after Game 7.

On the Celtics’ play-style and three-point-heavy offense:

Are the Celtics too reliant on three-point shooting? That’s been the million-dollar question for years now, and this year’s postseason performance re-surfaced those conversations. Stevens fielded at least four questions on the topic, and here’s what he had to say.

Do the Celtics shoot too many threes?

“I look at more of each shot individually, and my general feeling watching us play, in really each of the last two playoffs, in the second-round against New York, even against Orlando in the first round, was, we had a hard time generating really good looks on that first shot,” he said. “So, we got to figure out a way to do better in that. And I think that that’s again, one of the things that we’ve got to figure out is how to have more of an impact at the rim. And I think we do need to add to our team to do that. Everybody plays a role in that. But, at the end of that game, Embiid is standing at the rim on all those possessions, or a lot of those possessions, right? And so I thought the shots we took, with the exception of Jaylen’s top-of-the-key-three and the one where you get in the middle of the lane, and then Payton’s open shot, I thought they were really well defended. I thought we struggled to get to where we wanted to go on offense a lot of the series, but it was particularly in those last four games, when those four perimeter defenders who are all very good, had Embiid standing behind them.”

Asked about three-point shooting again, he double-downed:

“The biggest thing is: can we generate looks at the rim?” Stevens said. “Yeah, everybody wants to do that, and every one of us would prefer a dunk over that, over a three. Every single one of us. Those are hard to get, and we struggle to generate them, and so, yeah, we certainly shot some bad ones. I’m not telling you we didn’t. There’s no question about that. But I also thought we shot some really hard shots at the rim, really hard shots in the midrange too, and I don’t necessarily fault anyone for that, other than credit to Philly’s defense, and we’ve got to do a good job as we build out the roster to have more options.”

My reaction: In Brad Stevens’ eyes, this is not an issue of making or missing shots. He doesn’t believe the Celtics have been able to sufficiently generate good looks in their first-shot offense, and clearly said that’s been an issue in their last three playoff serieses. At the same time, it’s evident to me he feels like it’s a reflection of roster shortcomings: “We need to add to our team to do that.” This line of questioning, more than anything, made me feel like Stevens feels that the roster needs significant upgrades.

On Jayson Tatum coming back and then missing Game 7:

Jayson Tatum returned to the lineup 10 months after rupturing his Achilles tendon, was excellent to close the regular season, and was in the midst of a very good first-round series against the 76ers before he injured his knee and had to miss Game 7.

Stevens fielded multiple questions about the left knee stiffness that held him out of the biggest game of the year, providing context on what Tatum was dealing with.

“You probably could see it at the end of Game 6,” Stevens said. “We thought that it would dissipate and be okay the next day. He didn’t do very much on Friday, just rested, and then came in on Saturday morning and tried to do a workout. I watched it, and [he] clearly didn’t feel right.  I think it’s not like a long, long-term concern, but it certainly didn’t look right when he was working out, and didn’t feel right. So, it made sense to be smart about that. The obvious answer is, anytime you’re coming back from an injury like he was coming from, there’s a tendency to overcompensate, and there’s probably a little bit of that there.”

He was also asked about Tatum’s heavy minutes in the weeks leading up to Game 7, and about whether that could have contributed to his sidelining.

“We did try to ramp him up for more playoff load and playoff minutes towards the end of the regular season, including a couple of the games there late where we kept him in, even though the games weren’t necessarily close, just to get his minutes up,” he said. “And that’s a part of this kind of load management era that we have a lot of discussions about, because I think Phil Coles and his group do a great job. And a big part of that is they say you have to be ready to play those kinds of meaningful minutes in those kinds of meaningful moments. Do we think that that had an impact on his knee stiffness and the injury in Game 6? Hard to tell, but you can’t cross it off. So we have to look at that. I know that they will, but I feel really comfortable that they worked their butts off to try to get everybody on the court, and they did an amazing job with JT, and he did an amazing job all year, and to be able to play a lot if needed.”

My reaction: This was always a risk, and it’s unfortunate that Tatum had to miss the biggest game of the year. But, I don’t think he or the team has any regrets about the way his return-to-play was handled, and ultimately, there was no real harm done: Tatum did not get seriously hurt, proved to himself he’s still the guy he was before the injury, and should be good to go and fully rested to begin next season.

On Joe Mazzulla’s future with the Celtics:

Stevens was asked about the job that Joe Mazzulla has done over the past four years and what his future holds.

“First of all, I know how hard that job is, and I know all that goes into it,” he said. “And I know he and his staff are putting everything they can into it. And when I say that we struggle to get by — I think that’s, again, that’s — we need to add to our team. So, I think our coaching staff, like all of us, can continue to improve and get better. That said, I think they’re very good. And we need to continue to provide them the resources to grow, and to get better, and to continue to be the best that we can be. I don’t think we can ignore, and certainly, again, can’t ignore anything, the good and the bad. But there was a lot of growth this year, and I thought that there [were] a lot of things that we can build off of, even though that ending was disappointing.”

My reaction: I don’t think Joe Mazzulla is on the immediate hot seat, and Stevens said multiple times that the coaching staff did a good job. That being said, this was not a ringing, resounding endorsement (he could have gone further in discussing Joe’s coaching tenure positively), and it’s clear that Stevens expects Mazzulla — like everyone — will get better.

Jalen Brunson leads the odds for Eastern Conference Finals MVP

New York Knicks v Philadelphia 76ers - Game Six

The Eastern Conference was unpredictable during the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs thanks to three seven-games series and the upset loss of the No. 2 seed Boston Celtics.

The conference’s frenzied first round also changed FanDuel’s market for 2025-26 NBA Eastern Conference Finals MVP. Superstar Celtics like Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown were previously among the favorites for the media-voted award before their untimely first-round dismissal.

The wide-open race in the East, coupled with Boston’s elimination, means three players are ahead of the pack for the Larry Bird Award. New York Knicks point guard Jalen Brunson (+160) is the current favorite after averaging just over 26 points per game in the first round against Atlanta. Continuing a string of strong postseason runs, Brunson’s consistency and high usage gives him considerable traction with the Knicks as the conference’s new favorites.

Detroit Pistons guard Cade Cunningham slightly trails Brunson on the heels of a terrific first round against Orlando. With Detroit trailing 3-1 in the series, Cunningham took over and averaged 36.3 points per game in the final three games of the series — helping the Pistons recapture their confidence in the process. Cunningham now sits at +200, behind only Brunson in the Eastern Conference.

Donovan Mitchell (+600) from the Cleveland Cavaliers sits third in the market for Eastern Conference Finals MVP. Although Cleveland moved past Toronto in the first round, the Raptors made Mitchell work and held him to 23.1 points per game and 43 percent shooting after Mitchell put up 27.9 points on 48 percent shooting in the regular season. Cunningham and Mitchell will battle in the second round for a spot in the Eastern Conference Finals with the winner likely gaining a significant market boost in the process.

After a noticeable decline in the odds, the secondary list of contenders is still filled with All-Stars capable of taking over a playoff series. Karl-Anthony Towns (+1200) played improved defense for the Knicks while closing out the Hawks. But Towns was third in scoring for the Atlanta series behind Brunson and guard OG Anunoby — hurting Towns’ potential case for a series MVP award.

Philadelphia 76ers big man Joel Embiid (+1700) must stay healthy and eliminate the No. 2 seed Knicks in the second round to even make the Eastern Conference Finals. But a healthy Embiid is still a force after averaging 29 points per game in four games against Boston.

Similar to Embiid’s candidacy, 76ers guard Tyrese Maxey (+3000) needs to first get past New York in the second round to even garner serious ECF MVP consideration. But if Maxey’s stellar play against Boston is any indication, the high-scoring guard is capable of putting up points in bunches after averaging just under 27 points per game in the series.

A few other notable names to consider for Eastern Conference Finals MVP includes Knicks two-way threat OG Anunoby (+3300), Cavaliers veteran guard James Harden (+3500), and Cleveland big man Evan Mobley (+5500).

Who Can The Florida Panthers Target At Pick No. 9 In The 2026 NHL Draft?

The NHL draft lottery is complete, but unfortunately, luck was not on the Florida Panthers side. 

The Panthers entered the event with the eighth-best odds of landing the first overall pick, but when the balls were drawn, it was the Toronto Maple Leafs who moved up from fifth to first, and the San Jose Sharks who moved up from ninth to second, leapfrogging the Panthers. 

Because of this, when June 26 rolls around, the Panthers will make the ninth overall selection. 

Although moving up would have been great for the Panthers, there are still plenty of great options for them at No. 9 who play various positions.

To start, if the Panthers are hoping to improve their center depth in their prospect pool, they could look to add Swedish center Viggo Bjorck or Canadian center Tynan Lawrence.

Bjorck is an ultra-skilled, excellent skating center with two-way capabilities. At every level, Bjorck has posted phenomenal statistics. In 2024-25, Bjorck recorded the highest points per game in the U-20 Swedish league, posting a 1.76 ppg, with second-place William Nylander at 1.59. 

Furthermore, Bjorck was a dominant figure at the world juniors, winning gold with Sweden while scoring three goals and nine points in seven games. But maybe most importantly, the 18-year-old played 42 games in the SHL this season, scoring an impressive six goals and 15 points.

The only knock on Bjorck is his size. Listed at 5-foot-9, Bjorck is on the smaller side, but his skill and grit make up for those issues. Bjorck is vying for a spot on Sweden’s World Championship roster, and if he makes the team, it can be another event to prove that his size is no issue. 

Florida Panthers To Select Ninth At NHL Draft After Dropping At Draft LotteryFlorida Panthers To Select Ninth At NHL Draft After Dropping At Draft LotteryLuck favored the Maple Leafs and Sharks, pushing Florida down the board at Tuesday's NHL Draft Lottery.

As for Lawrence, he started the season in the USHL while dealing with an injury. After looking too talented for the USHL in 13 games, he moved to the NCAA at Boston University, where it wasn’t smooth sailing. 

Lawrence’s strong U-18s campaign has put some worries about his game to rest, but he still has lots to prove, as he was once projected to be a top-five pick.

A quiet contender, thanks to the Panthers’ success drafting Finnish centermen, is Oliver Suvanto, a 6-foot-3 two-way force. 

The Panthers could also look to draft a defenseman, as this draft boasts plenty of possible No. 1 defenders.

The names expected to go in the top 10 are Keaton Verhoeff, Chase Reid, Carson Carels, Alberts Smits, and Daxon Rudolph, but at the moment, many scouts and draft experts are unsure of what order to place them in. 

Some like the high-end offensive game Reid brings, while others favor Verhoeff’s size and two-way versatility.  Some believe Smits is the most NHL-ready with high physical upside, and some see the skating and comparables to Carels’ game and are very intrigued.

2026 NHL Lottery Mock Draft: Who The Maple Leafs Should Pair With Auston Matthews2026 NHL Lottery Mock Draft: Who The Maple Leafs Should Pair With Auston MatthewsWho should the Toronto Maple Leafs draft first overall? Could the Vancouver Canucks get a first-overall-caliber winger at third overall? Ryan Kennedy shares his instant post-lottery mock draft.

But Rudolph seems like the wild card. Rudolph was the first overall pick in the 2023 WHL draft and has posted eye-catching numbers since. He finished his second WHL season with 28 goals and 78 points in 68 games, and has followed that up with a playoff campaign of nine goals and 23 points in 15 games, leading the league in playoff points. 

Because of the uncertainty around Rudolph, he could be the defender who drops to the Panthers. In addition to the aforementioned names, Ryan Lin and Malte Gustafsson are defenders who could receive some consideration at pick No. 9. 

Finally, there is an abundance of wingers for the Panthers to choose from if they opt for the best available. Oscar Hemming, J.P. Hurlbert, Ethan Belchetz, Adam Novotny, and Elton Hermansson could all be available when the Panthers make their selection. 

With just under two months until the draft, the Panthers will devote significant time and research to finding the best fit for their organization. 


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MLB Home Run Predictions Today: Best HR Prop Bets, Picks, Parlay & Odds for Wednesday, May 6

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The Okomoto Train got us on the board yesterday for a good one, and Wednesday's slate has a plethora of +EV home run picks and other great MLB player props.

After double-dipping with the Dodgers in the early afternoon, I'm grabbing Miami Marlins infielder Otto Lopez in a cushy matchup against Baltimore Orioles starter Brandon Young and the suspect bullpen behind him.

These are my favorite home run predictions for Wednesday, May 6.

  • UPDATE: Added another HR pick + parlay.

Best MLB home run props today

Player to hit a HROdds
Dodgers Kyle Tucker +542
Marlins Otto Lopez+800
Dodgers Shohei Ohtani+280
💲Today's HR parlay+14180

Home run pick: Kyle Tucker (+542)

This one checks a lot of boxes, starting with the price. A fair number for a Kyle Tucker HR today is around +440/+450, so there’s plenty of meat on the bone.

Next is the matchup. Lance McCullers Jr. is one of the pitchers to fade today. His BlastContact% and HR/FB rates are among the worst in baseball, and he’s coming off a season-high 99 pitches. For a pitcher who has struggled to stay on the field, that kind of workload could show today.

Additionally, the Houston Astros' bullpen is always one to target and may need to cover innings. Houston relievers are also allowing the second-most HR/9 in baseball.

Finally, there’s a former-team revenge angle in an afternoon game, and Tucker has already taken him deep in just three at-bats.

  • Time: 2:10 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Space City Home Network, SportsNet LA

Home run pick: Otto Lopez (+800)

I need a piece of the bats vs. the Baltimore pitching today, and I'm landing at Otto Lopez at a giant +800 price. 

Brandon Young is my lowest-rated starting pitcher on the slate. He gives up squared-up contact at a high rate, and hitters generate some of their fastest swings against him. Only two other starters have a worse BlastContact% than the Baltimore arm, and his xFIP suggests the damage is sustainable.

Young also won’t go deep, handing things off to a bullpen that gives up home runs and owns the second-worst ERA in baseball over the last two weeks. The Baltimore pen could also be down three or four key arms.

It’s a controlled setting indoors, and Lopez is already 1-for-2 off Young with a home run.

  • Time: 6:40 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Marlins.TV, MASN

Home run pick: Shohei Ohtani (+280)

Let’s double up in Houston vs. McCullers and a struggling bullpen that will be without its closer, Bryan King, who threw 37 pitches yesterday.

Ohtani gets one of the best BlastContact% matchups on the board today and has seen McCullers 23 times. He hasn’t crushed him, but there’s still a lot of information he’s taking into this matchup.

The fair price on this HR is around +250, and it’s tough to pass up the expected value on arguably the best left-handed power hitter in baseball.

McCullers has allowed three home runs over his last 10 innings at home. Historically, he’s been tougher on left-handed hitters, but LHHs are getting the better of him this year, and multiple seasons of injury may be catching up to the right-hander.

  • Time: 2:10 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Space City Home Network, SportsNet LA
Josh Inglis' 2026 Transparency Record
  • HR picks: 10-59, -7.41 units

Today’s HR parlay

Dodgers Kyle TuckerBet Now
+14180
Marlins Otto Lopez
Dodgers Shohei Ohtani

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

JR Smith explains ‘worst part’ about being knocked down by Knicks fans in raucous celebration

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows JR Smith among a crowd of people, Image 2 shows JR Smith being held down by multiple people, Image 3 shows Screenshot of J.R. Smith speaking
JR Smith Knicks

Knicks fans got a little too wild outside of Madison Square Garden after Game 1, but J.R. Smith is surviving.

The former Knick talked about how social media is the real culprit for why it took so long for him to get up as a pack of wild fans nearly trampled him Monday night after the Knicks beat the 76ers.

“The Knicks fans saw JR walking and they couldn’t believe it, man,” former Knicks teammate Iman Shumpert said to Smith on an episode of “Run it Back.” “They gave him love. They gave him too much love and knocked him down in front of Madison Square [Garden]. Legendary performance.”

J.R. Smith was crowded by fans in the streets outside of Madison Square Garden Arena. Instagram @NYPostSports

Smith responded: “The worst part about it is in this society, man, they’re so bad. Everybody just has their phone out, and I’m like, ‘Yo, bro, pull me up. Come on, dog.'”

Smith joked that he “needed some help” and was looking for Shumpert to come to his rescue.

Knicks fans were going wild after a 137-98 victory, and when they saw Smith outside the arena, they crowded him and nearly trampled the former NBA star.

Smith repeatedly told the fans to “relax” as they piled on top of him, but that did not stop them from crowding him.

J.R. Smith was nearly trampled by fans outside the arena after a Game 1 victory over the 76ers. Instagram @NYPostSports

The former Knicks guard, who played for the team from 2011-15 when the Knicks were a strong Eastern Conference contender with Mike Woodson as coach and Carmelo Anthony leading the charge, did not specify whether he would attend Game 2 following the dangerous encounter.

Shumpert and Smith were also teammates on the Cavaliers’ championship team in 2016 after a trade from the Knicks at the trade deadline.

The Knicks will look to keep their torrid pace going with Game 2 on Wednesday night at home.

Framber Valdez insists hit-by-pitch wasn't intentional. Trevor Story counters, 'We all know what's what'

A baseball player walks across the diamond
Detroit Tigers pitcher Framber Valdez walks to the dugout after being ejected from Tuesday's game against the Boston Red Sox. (Mike Mulholland / Getty Images)

Framber Valdez was having a rough night, but the Detroit Tigers pitcher insists he didn't take his frustrations out on Boston Red Sox batter Trevor Story.

Valdez had given up 10 runs, including back-to-back solo home runs in the previous two at bats, when Story took the plate in the top of the fourth inning on Tuesday at Comerica Park.

What happened next wasn't intentional — at least that's what Valdez said after the Tigers' 10-3 loss.

Read more:A star pitcher at USC, he was cut after six years in the minors. Then Banana Ball came calling

Not everybody believes him.

With his first pitch of the at-bat, Valdez hit Story with a 94-mph fastball in the numbers on the back of the Red Sox shortstop's jersey. Story wasn't happy as plate umpire Adam Beck stepped between him and the mound.

The benches cleared and the bullpens emptied, but no punches were thrown and order was quickly restored. Valdez was ejected from the game but later said the situation wasn't as it may have appeared.

“It was not intentional,” Valdez said through an interpreter. “It might look like it, but it wasn’t. I was trying to throw strikes after the two consecutive home runs. I was trying to go back in the zone and that pitch came out of my hand.”

Story wasn't buying it, telling reporters "it's pretty undisputable” that Valdez had meant to hit him.

“I was in there ready to hit and it showed up way behind me and off the numbers,” Story said. “We all know what’s what.”

Interim Red Sox manager Chad Tracy agreed that the hit-by-pitch seemed intentional.

"I thought it was weak, and I thought everybody saw it," Tracy said. "Their side, our side, I think everybody saw it. And yeah, it was weak."

Read more:Shohei Ohtani pitches well, but Dodgers offense goes back to sleep in loss to Astros

While Detroit manager A.J. Hinch said he couldn't judge his pitcher's intent, he called the incident "a low moment of a frustrating night."

"We play a really good brand of baseball here. That didn't feel like it," Hinch said. "It's not judging intent; I have no idea. But I know when you go out on the field and you end up sort of in those confrontations, you usually feel like you're in your right. And it didn't feel good being out there."

Valdez now faces a possible suspension from MLB, with the Tigers already missing several starting pitchers because of injury.

A two-time All Star, Valdez spent his first eight MLB seasons with the Houston Astros. In his first year with Detroit, Valdez is 2-2 with a 4.57 ERA in eight starts.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Get the best, most interesting and strangest stories of the day from the L.A. sports scene and beyond from our newsletter The Sports Report.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Utah Mammoth ready to take next big step after franchise’s first playoff run

When general manager Bill Armstrong realized adding pieces here and there wasn’t working for the Arizona Coyotes, he blew up most of the roster.

Armstrong kept the core young players to serve as the foundation for the future and amassed a stockpile of draft picks, hoping to rebuild a franchise that had been mired in mediocrity.

The incremental climb continued after the franchise moved to Utah, landing a big step with the Mammoth’s playoff berth this season.

A six-game loss to Vegas in the first round was not the ending the Mammoth wanted. They hope it’s just the beginning of something bigger.

“There’s a fine line in our sport between winning and losing,” Armstrong said. “For the growth of our team, we have to suffer a little bit of pain, learn to walk that line a little bit better. If we can do that in the big moments moving forward with this group, we’re going to have a chance of making a run as far as we can to the Stanley Cup. That’s the goal of this organization.”

The goal had been to reach the postseason. The Coyotes did it once since 2012, in the 2020 NHL bubble.

The Mammoth reached that goal in their first season since moving to Utah, using a five-game winning streak to clinch in early April.

Utah took away Vegas’ home-ice advantage with a win in Game 2 and took the next one in their first home playoff game to take a 2-1 series lead. The Mammoth couldn’t sustain it, losing in overtime and double overtime before the Golden Knights clinched the series with a 5-1 win.

The disappointment lingered over the weekend as they lamented what could have been, but turned to pride as they reflected on what they had done. It also hardened their resolve to not only do it again, but go on deeper runs in the future.

“We had objectives and hit all of them — sometimes a little tighter than we would have wished — but we hit them all,” Mammoth coach André Tourigny said. “We were able to have the consistency we have been looking for a few years, in a sense. That was important for us.”

The Mammoth have the pieces to keep it going.

Clayton Keller is part of the core from Arizona and has scored at least 76 points in four straight seasons. Logan Cooley and Dylan Guenther have transformed from up-and-comers to dynamic players. Crafty Nick Schmaltz is coming off his career-best season, as is goalie Karel Vejmelka. Forward Lawson Crouse has been a veteran presence on and off the ice since the Arizona days.

The franchise also has made key additions in recent years: forward JJ Peterka, defensemen Mikhail Sergachev, John Marino, Nate Schmidt and MacKenzie Weegar. Veteran forward Kailer Yamamoto also finished the season strong after dealing with injuries.

“Looking at the guys we can add and some of the tweaks we can possibly make — maybe it’s a guy from the minor leagues, maybe it’s a prospect — it’s a good spot to be in,” Armstrong said. “You’re not reinventing the board — the board’s there.”

And more pieces could be on the way.

The store of draft picks Armstrong collected have turned into a loaded prospect pipeline.

The Mammoth used their first draft pick — sixth overall — on forward Tij Iginla, the son of NHL hockey Hall of Famer Jarome Iginla who had 41 goals and 49 assists in the WHL this season. Center Caleb Desnoyers was Utah’s top pick last year — fourth overall — and also thrived in the minors with 33 goals and 55 assists in the OHL.

It doesn’t stop there; Utah has seven first-round draft picks in their system and Armstrong is willing to give them a shot to prove they can play in the NHL.

“We want to encourage our prospects to try to come in and make our club,” he said. “You don’t ever want to take a dream away from a prospect and you don’t know. Sometimes they can show up and earn their way in. We want our prospects who are probably watching this press conference to know: Come up, come be fighting for a job. There’s opportunity there.”

The Mammoth rebuild hit one big goal. Now they want to reach higher.

Lakers' Jarred Vanderbilt suffers gruesome pinky dislocation, expected to miss time

Jarred Vanderbilt's dislocation of his right pinky finger is so gruesome we're not going to show any video of the injury here, we'll let the reaction of the Thunder bench sum it up.

After the game, Lakers coach JJ Redick confirmed it is a full dislocation and called it a "freak injury." As noted by Jeff Stotts of In Street Clothes, a standard dislocation of the pinky doesn't result in lost time, but if this is also a fracture (or the bone broke through the skin), then he is likely out for most or all of this series.

The injury occurred in the first half when he leapt to attempt to block an alley-oop for Chet Holmgren, and his right pinky hit the backboard as swung to block the ball. He instantly went to the ground in great pain.

Vanderbilt is one of the Lakers' best perimeter defenders, a 6'8" wing who can guard multiple positions, and he will be missed in a series against the deep Thunder. Against Houston in the first round, Vanderbilt averaged 13.4 minutes a game, giving the team 3.6 points and 4.4 rebounds, but he was benched for much of Game 6. Because he is not much of an offensive threat, it becomes hard for Redick to keep him on the court in some situations.

The Thunder took Game 1 on their home court, 108-90.

Ric Flair rips Luka Doncic, calls for Lakers to trade injured star

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Luka Doncic, wearing a black shirt, watches Game 1 of the NBA playoffs, Image 2 shows Ric Flair speaks onstage at The Roast of Ric Flair

The Nature Boy is very upset with the Lakers’ wonder boy.

After Luka Doncic missed Game 1 of Los Angeles’ conference semifinals matchup with the Thunder on Tuesday night due to a hamstring strain, Ric Flair laid into the point guard for not playing injured.

Luka Doncic missed Game 1 of the Lakers’ conference semifinals matchup with the Thunder on Tuesday night. AP

“@lukadoncic,” the wrestling legend wrote on his X page as Oklahoma City dismantled the Lakers, 108-90, “Please Get In The Game! Take A Shot Of Cortisone And Deal With The Pain! They Are Paying You 50 Million A Year, And You’re Not There! WTF!”

Flair then went on to say he was so ticked over the matter, he hopes LA trades the 27-year-old this offseason.

“Nobody Wants A Lame Duck On Their Team!” he said.

Following backlash, Flair fired off another message about the situation early Wednesday morning, and while he softened a bit, he nonetheless remained critical of Doncic.

Ric Flair laid into the point guard for not playing injured. Getty Images

“FYI-,” Flair wrote, “Obviously They Are Not Going To Trade Luka. He’s Their Future. He’s Their Franchise. But Do The Math- He Averages 33 Points A Game. If He Has 20, LeBron @KingJames Has 27, And The Rest Of The Team- They Win!

“I Would Have Said The Same Thing About @jaytatum0 On The @celtics, But I’m Not A Boston Fan. For 46 Million Dollars A Year, I Think You Can Play! Everyone Is Allowed To Have Their Own Opinion. And This Is Mine!”

Doncic sustained a Grade 2 hamstring strain during a regular-season game against the Thunder on April 2. He has not suited up since, though he’s taken measures — including traveling overseas for treatment — to get back on the court as soon as possible.

LA head coach JJ Redick said earlier this week he didn’t have “any updates on Luka,” but the six-time All-Star is expected to miss at least one more game of the postseason series with the Thunder.


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Dodgers on Deck: Friday, May 8 vs. Braves

LOS ANGELES, CA - MAY 03: Los Angeles Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman (5) checks on Atlanta Braves outfielder Ronald Acuna Jr. (13) after he injured his leg being picked off at second base during the MLB game between the Atlanta Braves and the Los Angeles Dodgers on May 3, 2024 at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, CA. (Photo by Brian Rothmuller/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The Dodgers haven’t had a good road trip since the first week of April. But after their malaise through St. Louis and Houston, the Dodgers will return home to Los Angeles with a tall task at hand — facing the Atlanta Braves, owners of the best record in baseball, at 26-11 through Tuesday.

Emmet Sheehan starts on the mound for the Dodgers on Friday night, coming off a loss last Friday in St. Louis, when he struck out eight and walked none, but also allowed four runs on two home runs.

Chris Sale starts Friday for Atlanta, taking a personal four-game win streak into his outing. The veteran left-hander has a 2.14 ERA and 2.84 xERA in seven starts this season, with 49 strikeouts (29.9-percent rate) and 12 wlaks in 42 innings.

Friday game info
  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Braves
  • Ballpark: Dodger Stadium
  • Time: 7:10 p.m.
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

Daniel Lynch looks like an elite reliever

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MAY 01: Daniel Lynch IV #41 of the Kansas City Royals looks on against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park on May 01, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Olivia Vanni/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Coming into the season, I didn’t have very high expectations for Kansas City Royals reliever Daniel Lynch IV. Last year, he posted a perfectly acceptable 3.06 ERA over 67.1 innings, but the underlying statistics (4.53 xERA, 4.76 FIP) suggested that he had good fortune and was due for a rude awakening this year. The southpaw always impressed talent evaluators with his stuff and potential, but he had yet to produce results commensurate with his talent. In 363 innings before this year, Lynch logged a 4.56 ERA (5.00 xERA, 4.74 FIP) over five seasons. Lynch has one more minor league option remaining, and I figured he was more likely to be on the I-29 Shuttle to Omaha than helping the Royals in the bullpen.

It’s still early, but Lynch has been the most effective reliever in Matt Quatraro’s bullpen. The lefty tossed a scoreless eighth inning in the Royals’ 5-3 victory over the Cleveland Guardians on Tuesday night, lowering his ERA to 1.84 this season. His 0.61 WHIP, 2.22 xERA, and 2.34 FIP are all major improvements over his previous numbers, suggesting that he has earned his sparkling ERA with quality pitching. It’s been a truly impressive start for Lynch and one that the Royals really needed. Carlos Estévez had a disaster outing to start the year and is now out with injury, while Lucas Erceg and Matt Strahm have both had shaky moments to start the season. Lynch has provided much-needed stability and has started receiving higher leverage assignments as a result.

What changes have led to his new success? I looked through Lynch’s Baseball Savant and Fangraphs pages to try to see what is different this season. While we are still in the land of small sample sizes (Lynch has pitched 14.2 innings this year), there are three changes that stand out this year.

More sinker, less fastball

Lynch has changed his pitch mix up each of the last two seasons. In 2025, Lynch threw more sliders than four-seam fastballs for the first time in his career (29% slider, 23% four-seam fastball). He increased his sinker usage (19%) in 2025, but he still threw his four-seamer second-most out of any pitch in his arsenal.

This season, Lynch is still throwing 29% sliders, which is his most-used pitch so far, but has increased his sinker usage to 28%. Against lefties in particular, Lynch has essentially become a two-pitch pitcher; 93% of his pitches against lefties have been either the sinker or the slider. Royals fans know how effective a good sinker and slider combination can be; Brady Singer was an effective major-league starter, particularly against same-handed hitters, with mastery of just those two pitches. Lynch has been death against lefties this year, striking out 9 of the 24 batters he has faced, with an opponent’s average of just .087.

Even against right-handed hitters Lynch is still throwing his sinker more often. His four-seam fastball is down to just 15% of his offerings, which is less often than he throws a changeup and is below his 2025 sinker numbers. I assume the thinking is that the slider is Lynch’s best pitch, and his sinker pairs better with the slider than the four-seam fastball does, therefore more slider and less four-seam will help Lynch get better results. So far, so good.

Higher arm slot, less extension

Lynch has not settled on a consistent arm slot during his career, which presumably has not helped him find consistent results. Last year, the southpaw had the lowest average arm slot of his career at 36 degrees. This season, he has raised his arm slot to 42 degrees.

He also has a lower extension this year than he has had in previous years, which means he is releasing the ball farther away from the plate. The 6’6” pitcher has generally had an above-average extension; last season he was in the 70th percentile for extension. This season, Lynch has released the ball a few inches earlier and farther away from the plate than he has in previous seasons, which places him in the 48th percentile among pitchers.

Generally, pitchers like to get more extension on the ball. The closer you release the ball to the mound, the higher the perceived velocity by the hitters is, because they have less time to react. Bailey Falter essentially has a career because he has such elite extension. Extension is particularly important when you are throwing four-seam fastballs, but can be counter-productive when throwing sinkers. Sometimes heavy sinker pitchers want less extension because they want the ball to have more time to break.

This could be small-sample noise, but if Lynch has made an intentional change with his arm slot and his extension to accentuate the horizontal movement of his pitches, particularly his sinker, then it makes you feel better about his ability to replicate the results he has had so far this season. His sinker has had great horizontal movement both in 2025 and 2026, and his changeup and slider have more average horizontal movement so far in 2026 than they did last year. My suspicion is that Lynch, Brian Sweeney and the rest of the Royals pitching staff (along with any private team that Lynch uses) tinkered with his mechanics in the offseason to emphasize horizontal movement of his pitches. So far everyone should be pleased with the results

Increased sharpness

If I’m right and Lynch tweaked his pitching mechanics in the offseason to help him get the most out of his slider/sinker combination, it has increased his overall effectiveness and sharpness. So far, Lynch has thrown better pitches while retaining the ability to locate the ball. Lynch has struck out 18 batters in 14.2 innings. He’s in the 89th percentile in chase percentage, 98th percentile in whiff percentage while remaining in the 86th percentile in walk percentage. If you can strike guys out and not walk guys as a major-league pitcher, then you are going to find a lot of success.

Stuff+ is a metric developed by Eno Sarris at Fangraphs that looks at the physical characteristics of a pitch (release point, velocity, vertical and horizontal movement, spin rate, etc.) to determine how effective of a pitch it is regardless of results. Lynch has had a below average Stuff+ (92, 100 is average) for his entire career until this season. All of his pitches grade better this season, and his overall Stuff+ number has jumped to 107 this year.

The southpaw has generally been above-average when it comes to locating the ball coming into this season. Even throwing nastier stuff in 2026, he still has above-average command of his pitches, according to Location+. If your pitches get nastier while you keep your ability to locate pitches, which is what Lynch has done this year in a small sample, then you are set up for success as a pitcher.

Relievers are fickle and things can change quickly, but studying the information we have on Lynch makes me think that he has made multiple intentional changes to his repertoire and mechanics, which are leading better results this year. Hopefully, these changes stick throughout the year and give Quatraro another high-leverage option.

The Sixers will need more than fresh legs to bounce back vs. Knicks

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 4: Jalen Brunson #11 of the New York Knicks dribbles the ball during the game against the Philadelphia 76ers during Round Two Game One on May 4, 2026 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, 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

The 39-point defeat the Sixers suffered in Game 1 of the second round at the hands of the New York Knicks was disappointing, but not that surprising. Not just because the Sixers weren’t wearing what’s become their lucky white jerseys, but it was a very quick turnaround from their Round 1 triumph in Boston to starting the next series.

Having less than 48 hours to come down from the emotional high, the Sixers looked pretty tired in Game 1. On top of that, the Knicks hit everything. They finished the game shooting 63% from the field. The silver lining in this was that the Sixers were able give all their key guys the night off early. Tyrese Maxey, Joel Embiid, Paul George and VJ Edgecombe all had their nights end before the third quarter.

That’s about as much recharging as the Sixers will be able to get as one day off in between games becomes the norm as the playoffs progress. After the game, the Sixers didn’t want to use exhaustion as an excuse for their performance, but the Knicks shooting unsustainably well was something pointed to as a reason they can bounce back.

“Yeah, they just had a good game plan. We had a couple breakdowns and we’ll be better next game,” Maxey said.

George acknowledged the miscues, but also thought the Knicks couldn’t miss a shot.

“Yeah, we had breakdowns tonight but they also shot the shit out of the ball,” he said. “They came out hot, they came out on fire. But you know, it’s a game of adjustments. We’ll make adjustments; see what we need to get better at.”

It would be quite the feat if the Knicks shoot over 60% from the field for the series, one that would definitely sink the Sixers’ chances of being competitive in this series. Nick Nurse’s answers after the game explained a little bit more why the Knicks shot so well, and why it might be more than shooting variance.

“I think [on] five or six mid pick-and-rolls in a row that they scored on in every way they could,” Nurse said. “I think they hit six straight times off that and that kind of extended a little bit.”

Nurse is talking about a five-minute stretch in the first quarter, one that got the Knicks running away with the game. The Knicks, primarily through Jalen Brunson, were able to generate a really good shot nearly every time down the floor against the Sixers’ drop coverage.

When Embiid came up high to flash against Brunson, Mitchell Robinson was able to slip behind him for a lob. If Embiid stayed lower, Brunson was able to get over a screen easily and walk into an open jumper. All of these baskets are in this clip below by Adam Aaronson of PhillyVoice.com

This had the Sixers’ defense so flummoxed that they resorted to Hack-A-Mitch as soon as the Knicks were in the bonus in the first quarter. Nurse brought Justin Edwards in the game for the single purpose of using his fouls to get Robinson on the free throw line.

“I think it was right on the end of that famous pick-and-roll series I’m talking about,” Nurse said, “so I think it was a chance to try to stop their momentum a little bit.”

Robinson did miss all four of his free throw attempts, but with the Sixers’ offense unable to make them pay on the other end, the Knicks were able to get back to their pulverization of Philly.

The Sixers pulled off their comeback against the Celtics thanks in large part to the defensive adjustments they made. They were able to limit Boston’s three-point shooting as much as they could. They’ll similarly have to reduce the Knicks’ shot quality if they want to have a chance in this series. With an offensive threat at center in Karl-Anthony Towns and an offensive strategy that is more than getting up as many threes as possible, the Knicks pose more complicated challenges, and it’s on the Sixers to figure them out.

Kenny Atkinson’s questionable decisions cost Cavs in Game 1

DETROIT, MICHIGAN - MAY 05: Kenny Atkinson of the Cleveland Cavaliers looks on during the second half of a game against the Detroit Pistons in Game One of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at Little Caesars Arena on May 05, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) | Getty Images

With 5:28 seconds left in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Semifinals, the Cleveland Cavaliers tied things up at 93 points apiece. They mounted an 18-point comeback against the Detroit Pistons, the top seed, capped off by three James Harden free throws. A whole new ballgame.

But Cavs head coach Kenny Atkinson made one of his many questionable coaching decisions at this moment.

In between free throws two and three, the Pistons brought back in their best player, Cade Cunningham. The Cavs, however, stuck with their lineup at the time — which did not include Donovan Mitchell or Evan Mobley. It would be over a minute later before those two would enter the game, a period in which Cunningham and starting center Jalen Duren took back momentum with a block and two pick-and-roll dunks. By the time Atkinson brought in his closing lineup, the winds had shifted. Duren had another dunk a few seconds later, and the Cavs would remain at arm’s length.

The playoffs have a way of exposing every flaw a team has and then magnifying them to the national audience. Harden and Mitchell’s turnovers are one of them, but Atkinson’s puzzling decision-making is another. He waited too long to use his timeouts, and not getting Mitchell and Mobley back into the game when the Cavs seemingly had the Pistons on the ropes is another. Does Duren get those easy dunk opportunities with Mobley in the game? Hard to say for sure, but not having your best defender out there in crunch time would have made things harder.

Opposing head coach, and former Cavs scapegoat, J.B. Bickerstaff, sensed the Pistons losing control of the game and brought his best player back in to disrupt Cleveland’s rhythm. It worked.

Atkinson has talked a lot about rhythm this season, largely as it relates to the many different lineups the Cavs had to trot out during the regular season due to injury. Whether it was Darius Garland’s nagging toe ailment or the revolving door of small forward, finding rhythm has been a key emphasis for last year’s NBA Coach of the Year. But last night his decision-making was not sound.

When answering a question post-game about Jarrett Allen’s foul trouble, which limited him to 18 minutes last night, Atkinson said it disrupted the rhythm and his rotations. That is understandable, but not putting Allen back in the game with just a few minutes left is not.

The only Cavalier starter with a positive +/- rating was Allen, and he did so playing bench-level minutes. Atkinson subbed him out during that “too little, too late” timeout, and Allen never saw the floor again. The puzzling part is that Allen had four fouls, not five, and — most importantly — it was crunch time with the opportunity to steal a game on the road. Why not put Allen in? Bickerstaff was still playing Ausar Thompson and Duncan Robinson with four fouls, and both of those players impacted the game late.

There is an argument to be made as well that Mitchell, Mobley, and Harden should have played more minutes. Coincidentally, they all finished with 35, which is less than what Tobias Harris logged for the Pistons. Atkinson noted post-game that he wanted to conserve some energy with certain guys and try to find new energy off the bench, likely due to the grueling seven-game series they played against Toronto. But Detroit also played an equally demanding series against the Orlando Magic and still had its best players playing the most minutes.

It will be very difficult for the Cavs to win this series, whether on the road or not, if Atkinson is routinely getting out-coached by Bickerstaff. Game 1 can be a feel-it-out effort to try and see what works and what doesn’t, but the Cavs had a real chance to win – despite playing exceptionally poorly for most of it. Like the Cavs’ backcourt, Atkinson has to be better. And, like his team, Atkinson needs to be moving with a sense of urgency.

Ted Turner stoked America's sports appetite. The Atlanta Braves were the main dish.

It was once the simplest – or, as the robber barons of today say, “frictionless” – broadcast experience: Turn on TBS. Watch the Atlanta Braves.

For baseball fans in the Atlanta area, it was even more basic: Flip the dial to Channel 17. Watch baseball. Become a fan.

Or, eventually, a superfan, thanks to a superstation.

The sports and broadcast world Ted Turner left when he died Wednesday, May 6 at 87 was nothing like the universe he had a large part in constructing as owner of Atlanta’s Braves and Hawks. In the days before his passing, scores of NBA fans were enraged that playoff games – the only ones that really count of the thousands contested a year – were snatched from their standard carriers and placed behind Jeff Bezos’s Prime Video wall.

Wanna watch the Braves nowadays?

Ted Turner throws out the first pitch at the Braves' new stadium, Turner Field, in 1997.

That will require a subscription to their broadcast and streaming arm, yet you may need Apple TV on occasion, and oh, perhaps Peacock, and with any luck they won’t be plucked for a Netflix game and yes, old-school basic cable might be mandatory should they land on an FS1 national broadcast.

Old man yells at cloud warning: Back in my day, we never needed any of that to see Zane Smith or Rick Mahler get their teeth kicked in by the Mets or Cardinals.

As we gaze upon this atomized and extremely stratified media and entertainment landscape, it is stunning to think that the Braves – the Atlanta Braves! – became a reliable segment of the sports monoculture.

It’s hard to remember in the wake of the 14 consecutive division titles that would come in the 1990s and 2000s, the lone World Series championship in that run landing in 1995, but the Braves were an awful, awful team for a long while.

Between 1975 and 1990, they had just three winning seasons and one playoff berth, losing 89 to 106 games between 1985 and 1990. In that span, Turner went from media rightsholder to owner of the team.

Not that it was easy. The low point likely came in Turner’s second season as owner, when he made an ill-fated attempt to manage the team whle it was mired in a 16-game losing streak. Commissioner Bowie Kuhn put a kibosh on that after one day, claiming individuals with ownership stakes in the club couldn’t manage it.

“They must have put that rule in yesterday,” Turner, then 38, groused.

Eventually, they got it right, even if in real time, the construction job laid out by Bobby Cox and John Schuerholz, and eventually overseen from the dugout by Cox, seemed like a miracle.

Yeah, the Braves got so good you became sick of them. That’s success.

But before then, they were the epitome of baseball comfort food. Nothing on TV in the afternoon? Flip it to TBS and somehow, you’d stick around, even as Skip Caray might have said, “And so that brings on Paul Assenmacher, Atlanta trailing 11-1.”

It forged a concept they now call "Braves Country," the franchise dominating what’s now a booming part of the nation, from the Carolinas down into SEC territory, uncontested at least until they throw a team in Nashville or Charlotte. Yet you could be on the West Coast and know of this erratic but promising lefty named Tom Glavine. Or in the Upper Midwest, pondering whether that trade for Terry Pendleton really was having an outsize effect on the 1991 squad.

It’s interesting to hear the modern fan bemoan the fact their team’s game – just one game – got snatched up by Apple TV or FS1. Kids, back in the day we’d be lucky to get 50 or 60 of our team’s games on TV, maybe more if your parents or your friends’ parents paid big bucks for a subscription to “SportsChannel” or whatever the very premium all-sports offering was in your area.

Yet there were always the Braves. The Cubs, too, as WGN followed in the superstation model, though their games were typically over or almost over by the time a kid got home from school, thanks to the Wrigley Field factor.

But TBS was everywhere and always had an absolute banger of an afternoon lineup – shows, movies, game shows – as Turner acquired the rights to them all. A glorious library, one best shared with the people.

Less glorious? The Atlanta Hawks, Turner’s NBA entry that still has yet to reach an NBA Finals. Counterpoint: If you’re going to be a television product, never a bad idea to employ a player known as the Human Highlight Film.

As baseball lurches toward a lockout, you wonder what effect Turner might have in the room. As the game stood on the verge of its nuclear winter of 1994-95, Turner gazed upon a landscape still reeling from ownership collusion a few years earlier, and about to take a massive step back by canceling the 1994 World Series.

“Gentlemen,” he famously told his colleagues who enjoyed the antitrust exemption granted by Congress, “we have the only legal monopoly in the country and we are (expletive) it up.”

Those same owners would follow Turner’s lead, establishing regional sports networks, many of them team-owned, as baseball revenues zoomed to stratospheric levels, to the point that the San Diego Padres are now a $4 billion property.

Yet Turner was the first one in, enjoying a national imprint for a ballclub he bought for $500,000 in 1976. Along the way, he changed the way we view sports, his eponymous networks still a presence in our daily diet.

The landscape is a lot more cluttered now – much of it Turner’s doing, unwittingly or not. He essentially invented the  24-hour news cycle with CNN, which spawned Fox News, a 30-year spiral of disinformation that’s only deepened in time.

Basic cable once was a highly affordable utility, yet became so prohibitive in cost – thanks in large part to lobbying efforts that killed any chance at an a la carte option viewers would have appreciated – that it eventually opened the door for streaming.

And now, here we are, needing an abacus to see who’s broadcasting what while sports leagues sign up any desperate media entity willing to pay a billion dollars for live sports inventory.

Alas. Turner’s vision might have tipped this snowball down the mountain, and no entity is powerful enough to stop it.

But for generations of fans who leaned on Maddux, Glavine and Smoltz as their Larry, Moe and Curly, his vision was perfect.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Ted Turner made Atlanta Braves America's sports team on TBS as owner

Blue Jays vs Rays Prediction, Odds & Home Run Pick for Today's MLB Game

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Kazuma Okamoto is red-hot at the plate, and with another fastball pitcher on the mound, I expect him to continue that trend at the Trop today. 

Read on to see why with my Blue Jays vs. Rays predictions and MLB picks for Wednesday, May 6. 

Blue Jays vs Rays predictions

Blue Jays vs Rays best bet: Kazuma Okamoto Over 1.5 total bases (+140)

Kazuma Okamoto has been the hottest hitter in the Toronto Blue Jays lineup. 

He’s recorded a hit in five straight games, going Over his posted base total four times. Over this stretch, he’s posted a 1.554 OPS, averaging 2.8 bases per game. 

It’s a good matchup for Okamoto, too, with Shane McClanahan on the hill. 

McClanahan has been solid this season, but his bread-and-butter pitch is his fastball, which Okamoto has been pounding this year. 

The Jays slugger owns a .327 batting average and .654 SLG against the pitch

Covers COVERS INTEL: Okamoto owns a 53% hard-hit rate this season.

Blue Jays vs Rays same-game parlay (SGP)

Myles Straw has been very consistent this year, hitting .291 on the season, grabbing hits in each of his last three starts. He’s also 2-for-5 with a pair of RBI against McClanahan in his career. 
 
For the final leg of the SGP, I’ll take George Springer to record a hit. He’s gone Over this number in three of his last four starts and owns a .278 average against McClanahan with three homers throughout his career.

Blue Jays vs Rays SGP

  • Kazuma Okamoto Over 1.5 total bases
  • George Springer Over 0.5 hits
  • Myles Straw Over 0.5 hits
img loading="lazy" width="100%" height="null" src="https://img.covers.com/editorial/2026/jaysmlcbp.jpg" alt="Canada’s best price for Jays"
Get the best Jays ML odds at BET99 — every game.

Blue Jays vs Rays home run pick: Kazuma Okamoto (+450)

I’m only betting a half unit on this one, as McClanahan has only given up one home run this season. 

However, Okamoto can’t stop hitting dingers, and I can’t stop backing him. 

He has homered in four of his last five games with five total long balls in that stretch. 

Okamoto has six home runs against the fastball, which is McClanahan's most utilized pitch. 

2026 Transparency record
  • Best bets: 14-21, -3.50 units
  • SGPs: 7-28, -0.20 units
  • HR picks: 8-27, +10.15 units

Blue Jays vs Rays odds

  • Moneyline: Blue Jays +118 | Rays -138 
  • Run line: Blue Jays +1.5 | Rays -1.5
  • Over/Under: Over 7.5 | Under 7.5

Blue Jays vs Rays trend

The Blue Jays have hit the F5 team total Under in 24 of their last 35 games (+12.65 Units / 30% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Blue Jays vs. Rays.

How to watch Blue Jays vs Rays and game info

LocationTropicana Field, St. Petersburg, FL
DateWednesday, May 6, 2026
First pitch1:10 p.m. ET
TVSportsnet, Rays.TV
Blue Jays starting pitcherPatrick Corbin
(1-0, 3.65 ERA)
Rays starting pitcherShane McClanahan
(3-2, 3.10 ERA)

Blue Jays vs Rays latest injuries

Blue Jays vs Rays weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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