Warriors’ Two-Timelines Bracket, Semifinal: Wiseman vs. Kuminga

SAN FRANCISCO, CA - OCT. 15 : Golden State Warriors center James Wiseman and Warriors forward Jonathan Kuminga on the bench react to the skill of Warriors guard Stephen Curry, who is playing in the first half of an NBA game against the Portland Trail Blazers at Chase Center, Friday, Oct. 15, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. (Santiago Mejia/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

The first round is done. Here’s the full accounting:

Jordan Poole ran through Alen Smailagic 85% to 15% in the first matchup, and James Wiseman crushed Ryan Rollins 80% to 20% in the second. Jonathan Kuminga cruised past Patrick Baldwin Jr. 74% to 26%, followed by an upset when Trayce Jackson-Davis knocked off Eric Paschall 66% to 34%.

The bracket’s down to four, and this is the one that’s been sitting underneath the whole thing the entire time. This is about what you thought the future looked like, and how long you held onto it after it started to slip. We’ve been calling this a vote about belief, but for most of the first round there was still a little distance to it. You could still lean on stats, moments, production, whatever version of the argument made you comfortable. This one doesn’t really give you that option.

Wiseman and Kuminga never really overlapped in that way. Not in how people talked about them, or what they were supposed to become. They sat on opposite ends of the same idea.

(2) James Wiseman — “The Fallen Giant”2nd overall pick, 2020 NBA Draft

With Wiseman, the belief didn’t take time. It was there the second the pick came in.

That whole season had felt like something ending. Steph’s hand, Klay rehabbing, empty arena, fifteen wins…it didn’t feel like a gap year, it felt like the floor had dropped out. And then the lottery hits, and suddenly you’re not looking at the wreckage anymore, you’re looking at what comes next.

What made Wiseman different wasn’t just the tools. It was how cleanly he fit into the one place the Warriors had never quite solved. For years they got away with not having a real center. They didn’t just survive it, they turned it into a philosophy. Spacing, movement, Steph pulling everything out of shape; if you did it well enough, you didn’t need size anchoring anything. And for a long time that was true.

But there was always that quiet question sitting there. What happens when it isn’t enough? What happens when the game slows down, when the margin gets thinner, when you actually need something at the rim that isn’t scheme?

Wiseman made it feel like you didn’t have to ask that anymore.

You could see it right away without having to convince yourself. Steph running a simple pick-and-roll and the possession ending before the defense even gets organized. A mistake on the perimeter not turning into a layup because there’s actually someone behind it. The same offense, the same principles, just with less strain on everything.

That’s what people were buying into. We were looking at confirmation, not reinvention. Everything you already believed about the Warriors still worked. It just worked more easily now. I mean, you remember the hype the team had around adding a limping Boogie Cousins. Imagine what a young #2 overall pick athletic, shooting, ballhandling big would do! Or so the logic went.

That’s why Joe Lacob said what he said barely a month after draft night, calling him a “once in a decade kind of player.” It wasn’t really about Wiseman as a prospect. It was about what he represented. The idea that the dynasty didn’t need to change shape to keep going. It just needed one missing piece.

And then it never really got off the ground.

By the time it’s clear what’s not clicking, the gap between what the team needs and what he does well is already too wide. It wasn’t subtle either. The things that made their centers work — the screening, the reads, the feel for the defense — those were the exact things Wiseman hadn’t had time to learn. The things he was naturally good at weren’t the things the system asked for.

Wiseman was the only Warriors center in recent history whose best skill was his shot and whose weakest skills were the ones the system needed most. What you’re left with isn’t just a player who didn’t pan out. It’s that version of the team you had in your head, the one where nothing had to change, never actually existing outside of a few flashes and a lot of projection.

(3) Jonathan Kuminga — “The Almost”7th overall pick, 2021 NBA Draft

Kuminga never worked like that. There wasn’t a moment where it all snapped into place. If anything it was the opposite: every time it felt like you were about to see the full picture, it would pull back again.

What made him different was that he never really felt like he belonged to the system in the same way everyone else did.

Most young players either figured out how to live inside Steph’s gravity or they didn’t last. You move, you cut, you make the extra pass. Kuminga didn’t quite operate on those terms. There were stretches where he did everything you were supposed to do, and then there were stretches where it felt like he was playing a different game entirely: attacking downhill, taking possessions into his own hands, forcing the defense to react to him and not just orbit Steph. And those moments didn’t feel like mistakes. They felt like something the team didn’t fully have access to otherwise.

That’s where the belief came from. Not that he had already arrived, but that there was another version of the Warriors sitting there if they ever decided to lean into it. One where you still had Steph doing what Steph does, but you weren’t dependent on it every single time down. One where there was another way to win a possession when everything got loaded up on the perimeter.

And the reason it held on for so long is because it never went away.

Every time it started to feel like it wasn’t going to happen, there’d be another stretch where it looked completely real again. Like the 11-for-11 game against Atlanta. Or the 30-point Game 3 against Minnesota in the 2025 playoffs with Coach Kerr gushing about the skillset, where the whole fanbase let itself believe again. But the structure never changed.

Over time it stopped feeling like a development curve and started feeling like a standoff. How much of himself was he supposed to give up to fit into this, and how much of that made him less of what made him interesting in the first place?

On New Year’s Eve 2025, I wrote the piece that named it directly: either that playoff run was the turning point that finally saved the relationship, or it was the last great thing Kuminga did as a Warrior. By February 5, 2026, the Warriors had traded him to Atlanta for Kristaps Porzingis, a mere four months after signing him to a two-year $48.5 million extension.

It just never got to happen here. Neither one really failed in the way we talk about failure. They just didn’t become the version we built for them.

The Matchup

This is the point in the bracket where the question stops being abstract.

The Wiseman belief was easy to hold onto because it made everything make sense right away. You didn’t have to project very far. You didn’t have to imagine the system changing. You just had to picture it continuing, with one gap filled in.

The Kuminga belief asked more from you. It asked you to sit with something that never fully resolved, to keep adjusting what you thought he might become, to keep believing through stretches where it didn’t quite line up. It wasn’t clean, but it stuck.

One of them disappeared while the other one never really let you go. And even now, it’s not completely gone.

That’s the difference you’re voting on.

New York Yankees @ Seattle Mariners: Ryan Weathers vs. Luis Castillo

TAMPA, FL - FEBRUARY 25: Ryan Weathers #40 of the New York Yankees prepares before a spring training game against the Washington Nationals at George M. Steinbrenner Field on February 25, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Yankees passed their first test of the regular season with flying colors, tranquilizing the Giants in a three-game sweep. Now, following an unconventional Sunday off, the Yankees will pay a visit to a popular preseason World Series pick: the Seattle Mariners.

The M’s, of course, came a game away from reaching the Fall Classic last season, but faltered late against the Blue Jays. Much like the Yankees, they’ve returned with a very similar roster from last year, and their pitching rotation is the same lethal crew we’ve gotten familiar with over the past few seasons. Luis Castillo will face the Yankee lineup, while Ryan Weathers faces a stout test in his Yankee debut.

Weathers had his share of struggles in spring training, but he also flashed the wipeout stuff which made the Yankees zero in on him as a sleeper pick for their rotation. Despite an ERA over 8 in Grapefruit League play, he ultimately made the starting rotation over Luis Gil, and tonight will be something of a referendum on whether that decision was a good one.

Castillo is somehow already entering his age-33 season. The affable righty and three-time All Star hasn’t quite been a top-flight arm in recent years, but given the Mariners’ embarrassment of riches in their staff, he doesn’t need to. All Seattle really needs out of him is another season like the ones he’s put out lately: an ERA around 3.50 and at least 30 starts. While he’s theoretically a poor matchup for the Yankees given his tendency to give up the long ball, he’s excelled against the Bombers in his career.

It’s the top-flight lineup tonight for Aaron Boone’s club. Many of the lefties have been stacked together against Castillo: Cody Bellinger and Ben Rice will hit consecutively, as will Jazz Chisholm Jr., Ryan McMahon, and Austin Wells. What’s more notable is an absence in Dan Wilson’s starting nine. The Mariners are giving star catcher Cal Raleigh the night off following his struggles in Seattle’s four-game opening series against Cleveland. Raleigh only went 2-for-15 with ten strikeouts against Guardians pitching. So instead Mitch Garver will catch, and lefty-smasher Rob Refsnyder will start at DH. Can the M’s recreate Raleigh’s production in the aggregate? There’s only one way to find out.

How to watch

Location: T-Mobile Park — Seattle, WA

First pitch: 9:40 pm ET

TV broadcast: YES

Radio broadcast: WFAN 660/101.9 FM, WADO 1280, Seattle Sports (710 AM)

Online stream: Gotham Sports App, MLB.tv (out-of-market)

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Reds shut out Pirates behind brilliant Chase Burns, bullpen

CINCINNATI, OHIO - MARCH 30: Pitcher Chase Burns #26 of the Cincinnati Reds throws during the second inning of a baseball game against the Pittsburgh Pirates at Great American Ball Park on March 30, 2026 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Jeff Dean/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cincinnati Reds ran their win streak to three games on Monday with a hotly contested 2-0 shutout victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates in the series opener between the NL Central rivals in Great American Ball Park.

Of note was the manner in which the Reds won, as Chase Burns got his first start of the 2026 season and fired 5.0 IP of scoreless, one-hit ball. He struck out 7, walked 3, and generally looked like his completely dominant best self across 78 pitches, putting largely to bed the worries about the de-load outing he dealt with late in spring camp. On top of that, Jose Franco fired 1.2 IP of mostly impressive ball in his big league debut, Graham Ashcraft was electric in fanning a trio in 1.1 IP, and Connor Phillips flashed some pretty electric breaking stuff to lock down his first career save.

Not to be outdone by his fellow new Reds, Sal Stewart had another brilliant day by going 1 for 2 with a pair of walks and a run scored, and Will Benson chipped in with an RBI triple that plated a rumblin’, bumblin’, stumblin’ Eugenio Suarez all the way from 1B in the process.

Speaking of Sal…

What stood out in this one, I think, is just how much the Reds always felt firmly in command despite the game being close throughout. A quiet confidence, I’d say, which is an odd sight for a team who so obviously leaned on players who are very much still establishing themselves. Stewart entered play today as a 22 year old with 71 career big league PA, Phillips notched his first career save, Franco made his big league debut, and the win for Burns was his first as a big leaguer (and just his 8th at any level as a professional).

Other Notes

  • Elly De La Cruz drew a walk and singled on a sharp liner up the middle, but he also was thrown out trying to steal 2B for his first CS of the season.
  • Through four games, a Reds club that averaged dang near 200 steals a season across David Bell’s final two seasons has just 1 (one) steal as a team.
  • Tyler Stephenson and Ke’Bryan Hayes both went hitless again and neither has managed a base knock yet this year. No pressure!
  • Tuesday’s game between these two is also slated for a 6:40 PM ET start, and lefty Brandon Williamson will get the start for Cincinnati. Pittsburgh will send out top prospect Bubba Chandler for his first start of 2025 after he impressed in 7 G at the end of the 2025 season at age-22.

Wizards at Lakers discussion

WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 30: LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers looks to shoot the ball in front of Kyshawn George #18 and Jamir Watkins #5 of the Washington Wizards during the first half at Capital One Arena on January 30, 2026 in Washington, DC. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Scott Taetsch/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Washington Wizards play the Los Angeles Lakers tonight at 10 p.m. ET. Watch it on Monumental Sports Network in the team’s last late night game of the 2025-26 NBA season. Go Wizards!

Mariners Game #5 Preview and Discussion: NYY at SEA, 3/30

May 14, 2025; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Mariners center fielder Julio RodrÌguez (44) catches a fly ball for an out on New York Yankees center fielder Trent Grisham (not pictured) during the first inning at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: John Froschauer-Imagn Images | John Froschauer-Imagn Images

The Mariners draw a tough opponent in their quest for their first series win of 2026. The Yankees of New York, New York look every bit the force of nature they’ve been the past few years, with Aaron Judge already climbing the home run leaderboard.

In their attempt to win game one, Seattle will hand the ball to Luis Castillo for his first start of the season. It’s a compelling first opponent for Castillo, who’s pitched some gems against the Yanks, most notably his home debut after being traded to Seattle in 2022, when he pitched eight shutout innings.

His counterpart will be Ryan Weathers, who was picked directly after Jarred Kelenic in the 2018 Draft. He’s looked the part of a fifth/sixth starter when he’s been healthy, though his CSW% (called strikes plus whiffs divided by total pitches) has always run ahead of his strikeout rate, even though those stats are generally tightly correlated. Maybe there’s still more in there. FanGraphs has a write-up of his new pitch this week.

Lineups!

Facing the lefty Weathers, the Mariners will turn back to their righty platoon bats, with Rob Refsnyder and Víctor Robles getting starts at DH and right field. Cal will get his first off day, which makes sense to do today, since it means Garver will face a lefty and Cal will face the top of the Yankees’ rotation over the next couple days. Cal’s absence means we will not see the Refsnyder-Cal-Julio top three that we saw Saturday night against a lefty starter, but I’ll still plug my proposal to shuffle the top three against lefties to be Julio-Refsnyder-Cal.

Aaron Judge is having the worst season of his career with a 53.8% strikeout rate. Pathetic. The Yankees seem to feel this is just the result of only having played three games so far, so it hasn’t cost him his spot in the lineup yet. He’ll bat second tonight.

Pre-Game Reading

  • More on the Yanks in the series preview from Jake
  • Max’s Minor League Roundups are back baby! We do a lot here at LL, but I think this is something you truly can’t get anywhere else.
  • KING 5 (KGW in Portland, KREM in Spokane, and KTVB in Boise) will broadcast ten games this season for free on basic cable. They will still be simulcast on Mariners TV
  • Kate’s recap of yesterday’s coming out party for Emerson Hancock
  • The story on the Mariners new Sunday Steelhead uniforms

Game Info

First pitch: 6:40 PDT
TV: Mariners TV, which you can a subscription to online or watch on several cable networks. Kate’s got the details.
Radio: 710 KIRO, in Rick Rizzs’s final season

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Game 4: San Francisco Giants at San Diego Padres

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 28: Freddy Fermin #54 of the San Diego Padres waits to tag Gleyber Torres #25 of the Detroit Tigers at home during the first inning at Petco Park on March 28, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

San Francisco Giants (0-3) at San Diego Padres (1-2), March 30, 2026, 6:40 p.m. PST

Watch: Padres.TV

Location: Petco Park – San Diego, Calif.

Listen: 97.3 The Fan



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Pistons vs Thunder Discussion: Game Time, TV, Odds, and More

DETROIT, MI - FEBRUARY 25: Jared McCain #3 of the Oklahoma City Thunder handles the ball during the game against the Detroit Pistons on February 25, 2026 at Little Caesars Arena 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Brian Sevald/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Detroit Pistons seem to be taking a proactive schedule loss tonight against the NBA’s top team and reigning champions, the Oklahoma City Thunder. With Cade Cunningham and Isaiah Stewart already sidelined, the Pistons appear to be letting their crop of banged-up players get a night off. Jalen Duren, Tobias Harris, and Duncan Robinson are all out tonight. The last starter left standing is Ausar Thompson, who will suit up as he attempts to reach the minimum-game threshold to qualify for an All-NBA defense nod.

The Pistons won’t be the only team with absent players, to be clear. The Thunder will be without Isaiah Hartenstein and Jalen Williams. The last time these two teams faced off, the Thunder were even more banged up, and Detroit stole a 124-116 win. I’m not sure that’ll be in the cards tonight. Hopefully, the Pistons can keep it as close tonight as the Thunder kept it in February.

Game Vitals

When: 9:30 p.m.
Where: Paycom Center, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Watch: Peacock, NBC Sports Network
Odds: Pistons +12

Projected Lineups

Detroit Pistons (54-20):

Daniss Jenkins, Kevin Huerter, Ausar Thompson, Ron Holland, Paul Reed

Oklahoma City Thunder (59-16):

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Lu Dort, Cason Wallace, Chet Holmgren, Jaylin Williams

Cavs at Jazz open gamethread

SALT LAKE CITY, UT - MARCH 23: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers shoots a three point basket during the game against the Utah Jazz on March 23, 2025 at Delta Center in Salt Lake City, Utah. 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 Jamie Sabau/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers will try to start their three-game road trip out with a win against the Utah Jazz.

Share your thoughts as the game unfolds. If you aren’t a member of the community, sign up so you can talk to your fellow Cavalier fans and make your voice heard!

Dealing with a busted bracket?

The Sweet 16 is almost here – who’s still alive? We’re reviewing the week that was in the first week of the NCAA tournament and turning our focus to remaining teams. How bad (or good!) is your bracket? Join us in the SB Nation March Madness Feed and let’s talk about who’s most likely to make a run to glory.

Go Cavs!

Brewers reportedly giving shortstop prospect Cooper Pratt an 8-year, $50.75 million deal

MILWAUKEE — Milwaukee Brewers shortstop prospect Cooper Pratt has agreed to terms on an eight-year, $50.75 million contract, according to a person familiar with the situation.

The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because the deal hasn’t been announced. USA Today first reported that the two sides were on the verge of agreeing to terms.

Pratt, 21, is regarded as one of the more promising players in a Brewers farm system that ranks among the best in the majors. He was rated by MLB Pipeline as the No. 62 prospect in all of baseball.

Pratt already has a reputation as an outstanding fielder.

He’s not as polished a hitter at this point in his development, though he does have a good eye. Pratt batted .238 with a .343 on-base percentage, eight homers, 62 RBIs, 31 steals and 67 walks in 120 games with Double-A Biloxi in the pitcher-friendly Southern League last season.

Pratt also played three games at Triple-A Nashville and went 4 of 15 with an RBI and a steal. He batted .294 with a .405 on-base percentage and four RBIs in 18 spring training games this year.

Although the Brewers haven’t confirmed the signing, Milwaukee manager Pat Murphy was asked Monday what he likes about Pratt after watching the 21-year-old in spring training camp.

“What’s not to like?” Murphy said. “Aptitude. He’s a baseball player. He’s a good baseball player. He’s got a ways to go. He’s got to develop. Great human, a worker.”

The Brewers selected Pratt in the sixth round of the 2023 draft.

This isn’t the first time the Brewers have given a lucrative extension to a prospect without major league experience. They signed outfielder Jackson Chourio in December 2023 to an eight-year, $82 million deal when he was 19 years old and had played only six games above Double-A.

Chourio reached the majors in 2024 and has collected at least 20 homers and 20 steals in each of his first two seasons.

Tortorella Excited to Move Forward and Tackle Unique Challenge With Golden Knights

A coaching change this late in the year is extremely rare for an almost certainly playoff-bound team. Thus, John Tortorella isn’t looking to make drastic changes to the Vegas Golden Knights’ system with just eight games remaining in the regular season.

This is something Tortorella said repeatedly when he met with the media for the first time following the coaching change.

“We’re not going to make many changes,” said Tortorella. “I’m not going to upset and fill the players with information. I have a few points of emphasis that we’ll go over as a team— just did this morning in our first meeting, just about mindset and odds and ends that I’ll just keep with the team for now.”

Before the start of the season, analysts and pundits viewed the Golden Knights as favorites to contend for the Stanley Cup. At the Olympic break, they led the Pacific Division. Now, with just eight games left in the regular season, they’re at risk of dropping into the wild card race.

So, on Sunday, the Golden Knights announced that they’d relieved Bruce Cassidy of his duties as head coach. In the same statement, they named Tortorella as the fourth coach in franchise history.

Tortorella began his coaching career with the Tampa Bay Lightning in 2001. Since then, the 67-year-old, two-time Jack Adams winner has been an NHL mainstay, spending time with the New York Rangers, Vancouver Canucks, and the Columbus Blue Jackets. He won the Stanley Cup with the Lightning in 2004, and most recently served as the bench boss for the Philadelphia Flyers during the 2024-25 season. Tortorella also had two separate stints as a studio analyst for ESPN and one brief stint with the NHL on TSN. 

Tortorella said that because of the situation, he’s going to lean on the rest of the coaching staff. However, he also brings his own ideas to the Golden Knights for this final stretch of the season.

“I’d just like to see us play faster,” said Tortorella. “Everybody wants to play fast, right? It’s an easy word to say, but I think that comes down to mindset, also. So yeah, we’ll pick away at it. But I am not going to overthink this. I am not going to overload them and paralyze them. We’ve got some quality people here. I want to come in here and try to help.”

After 74 games, the Golden Knights are second in the league in time spent trailing in games with 1901:44. Tortorella isn’t ready to diagnose the problem, but he emphasized the importance of being mentally ready to play.“

​​I’ll tell you what, the biggest part of hockey now, I don’t think it’s the X’s and O’s. I do think it’s your mind, that’s a readiness. I think they’ve been told a few times about their starts… We’ll remind them, but also respect them. They know where they’re at here now in the standings.”

This is the second time in as many years that Tortorella’s world has shifted with less than ten games remaining in the regular season. Last year, the Philadelphia Flyers relieved him of his duties as head coach with nine games left; now, he finds himself in the exact opposite position.

“In this business here, whether you’re a player or a coach, I think you need to have the ability to accept the challenge, right? You know, I got bombed out of Philly with nine games left last year. Now, I come here with eight games left in a new job. It’s a couple of crazy situations I’ve never been involved in,” Tortorella said. “But that’s the league, that’s pro sports. I think as coaches and players, when you get to this level, the highest level of the game, you need to be prepared to handle that stuff.

“I’m very fortunate to get the opportunity to work with this management group, because the organization is so well respected. I don’t want to let them down,” continued Tortorella. “I am going to prepare myself each and every day to be the best I can be, the best version of me, to help the team. But I think the important thing is that we need to do it together, and I’m looking forward to the challenge.”

Tortorella said that he reached out to Cassidy on Sunday night.

“I was texting with Butchy last night when I was flying in here, and thanked him for having the team the way it is right now,” said Tortorella. “Just remember, the guy that left here? Pretty [expletive] good coach. So, I feel very fortunate coming into this situation.”

Neither Tortorella nor Kelly McCrimmon discussed the timeline of the conversations leading up to the coaching change.

“We’re going to move forward,” Tortorella said. “As I said, I felt I needed to reach out to [Bruce Cassidy] last night. We had a good conversation, and that’s where it stops for me. I wanted to thank him, and now my sight is set on this game here. I talked to the players about that, also.

“It’s a big change for them too, right? We just want to move forward here with kind of a really crazy situation with only eight games left. So, we need to start thinking ahead and just take this day here against Vancouver and move to the next one.”

Bulls waive guard Jaden Ivey after anti-LGBTQ comments, remarks about religion on Instagram

SAN ANTONIO (AP) — The Chicago Bulls waived guard Jaden Ivey on Monday in the wake of anti-LGBTQ comments and remarks about religion he made in videos on his Instagram account.

“They proclaim Pride Month in the NBA,” he said. “They proclaim it. They show it to the world. They say come join us for Pride, for Pride Month to celebrate unrighteousness. They proclaim it. They proclaim it on the billboards. They proclaim it in the streets. Unrighteousness. So how is it that one can't speak righteousness? How are they to say that this man is crazy?”

Coach Billy Donovan said the Bulls have employees from “all different walks of life" and Ivey's comments don't reflect the values of the organization.

“Everybody comes with their own personal experiences, but one is we’ve got to all be professional,” Donovan said prior to Chicago's game at San Antonio. "I think there’s got to be a high level of respect for one another, and we’ve got to help each other and then be accountable to those standards.”

In an Instagram live conducted on an airplane hours after the Bulls let him go, Ivey again spoke at length about religion. He said the championship rings LeBron James and Michael Jordan earned are “not gonna matter on judgment day.”

He also insisted he “didn't get myself waived” and that other teams won't sign him because they think “he's too religious.” He said he was in the gym, rehabbing and “doing what was required of me in my job” on Monday.

At one point, a flight attendant asked him to end the session because the plane was about ready to depart and the cellphone could interfere with the communication systems. He continued to discuss religion for about another minute before wrapping it up.

Ivey has spoken this season about dealing with depression. He recently started posting lengthy videos expressing his thoughts about religion on Instagram.

“How is it when the gospel is preached that people hate it?” Ivey said. “That people don't want to hear it? And they think it's strange when someone preaches the gospel, the true gospel?”

Chicago acquired Ivey from Detroit in a three-team trade on Feb. 3. He had an expiring contract.

The Bulls shut him down for the remainder of the season last week after being sidelined since Feb. 11 with a sore left knee. He averaged 8.5 points in 37 games this season, including four for Chicago.

“I don't want to get into what he put out there, but certainly, I hope for him he's okay,” Donovan said. “I've had conversations with Jaden and he's always been about rehabbing his knee and trying to get on the court and wanting to play. But I think organizationally, there are certain standards we want to have as an organization and try to live up to those each and every day.”

___

AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA

Arkansas Travelers announce 2026 roster, headlined by Mariners top two pitching prospects

SURPRISE, ARIZONA - MARCH 6: Kade Anderson #13 of the Seattle Mariners throws a pitch during a Spring Training game against the Texas Rangers at Surprise Stadium on March 6, 2026 in Surprise, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Mariners’ Triple-A affiliate, the Tacoma Rainiers, is already underway (Max has the recap for you on Triple-A Opening Weekend here.) The Mariners’ Double-A affiliate, the Arkansas Travelers, open up their season at home in Dickey-Stephens Park on April 7. Today the Travs announced their 2026 roster, and the big news is that the Mariners’ two top pitching prospects, LHP Kade Anderson and RHP Ryan Sloan, will skip past High-A Everett and start the season directly in Double-A, often used as a launching pad for the big leagues.

Anderson, a College World Series champion with LSU, was the Mariners’ first-round choice this past draft. A polished pitcher with advanced command over a sophisticated arsenal, it’s not surprising to see Anderson assigned directly to Double-A, as that’s common practice with these kinds of experienced college pitchers. Anderson often draws comparisons to Blue Jays lefty Trey Yesavage, another college arm drafted in the first round, who jumped from A-ball to pitching in MLB by the end of the season. The Mariners are opting to skip Anderson directly to Double-A rather than jump him all over the country, but don’t be surprised to see him up with the big-league team by the end of the year, just like Yesavage.

Sloan is a bigger surprise. Sloan, who just turned 20 at the end of January, was drafted by the Mariners 55th overall out of his Chicago-area high school in 2024, with the Mariners buying him out of his college commitment to Wake Forest for $3M. After taking his draft year to learn the Mariners system and processes, Sloan started 2025 in Modesto, earning a promotion to High-A Everett by the end of the season. The Mariners invited Sloan to big-league camp this spring and he was impressive at every turn, capping off his spring with a dominant performance against the top-ranked Brewers farm in the Spring Breakout game. Sloan impressed the Mariners so much they’re being aggressive with him and sending him directly to Double-A to compete against much older and more seasoned competition. The move also keeps Sloan and Anderson, roommates and friends, together as they continue their big-league journeys.

Two other Top-1oo prospects will join Sloan and Anderson, as Michael Arroyo and Lazaro Montes will return to Arkansas after being promoted from Everett midseason last year. Both righty hitters suffered the “Dickey-Stephens Park” penalty last year, although Arroyo’s bat-to-ball skills helped prop him up even as his power decreased. Montes didn’t suffer quite the power penalty, still knocking 14 bombs, but he did regress as far as contact/strikeouts go, so that’s something for him to work on in a repeat tour of the level.

Here’s the complete roster:

There are a few other Top-30 prospects on this roster: Jared Sundstrom is one, returning to Arkansas after spending all of last year there. Another righty power-hitter, Sundstrom is another one suffering at the hands of the righty-power-suppressing park in Arkansas. Sundstrom got a lot of reps with the big-league club this spring, so expect his tenure to be shorter than last year.

Reliever to watch: RHP Charlie Beilenson

Beilenson was a 2024 fifth-rounder who has an interesting backstory: he grew up in SoCal (Chris Rose was his eighth grade basketball coach at Chaminade Prep, apparently) and went to Brown for his undergraduate, serving as a reliever on their baseball team, before transferring to Duke, where he picked up another pair of graduate degrees while also serving as the Blue Devils’ closer. Beilenson was a money-saver pick after the Mariners spent heavily on their first two picks in Jurrangelo Cijntje and Ryan Sloan, but he’s in a position where he could contribute to the big-league bullpen as soon as this year; he has excellent command and throws strikes, and profiles as a middle-innings reliever. Beilenson – who has eligibility to pitch for three different WBC teams – spent part of this spring with Team Israel, gaining high-level experience.

Sleeper prospect to watch: INF Charlie Pagliarini

Everett AquaSox fans know “Pags” well, but he got a fair amount of screentime with the big-league club this spring, too. Pagliarini isn’t a huge guy (6’0”) but he’s been a three true outcomes kind of prospect so far, albeit with less in the power department; he takes a ton of walks, but he also strikes out a ton. If the power pops at DSP like it did in lefty-friendly Funko Field and he could strike out just a little tiny itsty-bitsy less, there’s a really intriguing profile here.

Post-hype prospect to watch: OF Sammy Siani

I really liked contact-oriented Sammy Siani, who Pittsburgh took 37th overall in the 2019 Draft, but his bat-to-ball skills didn’t play out in Pittsburgh. Maybe Seattle can help unlock some of those tools.

If you have Mariners TV, you should also have access to the Mariners’ affiliates on MiLB TV and you can watch the Travs games for free. You can find the Travs schedule here.

Bulls waive guard Jaden Ivey hours after homophobic social media rants

The Chicago Bulls are waiving guard Jaden Ivey for conduct detrimental to the team, the organization announced Monday, March 30.

Since being shut down for the season Thursday, March 26 because of lingering knee issues, Ivey, 24, has gone live on his Instagram on three separate occasions to rant about his religious beliefs and other issues. Several comments he made in reply to fans have since gone viral, including referring to Catholicism as a "false religion" and telling a fan that "God does not hear your prayer if you are a sinner."

But the final straw for the Bulls appears to have come on Monday morning, when Ivey again took to social media – this time targeting the LGBTQ community, Pride Month and the NBA's advocacy efforts in a 45-minute-long rant.

"... the NBA, they proclaim it. They show it to the world. They say, 'Come join us for Pride Month,' to celebrate unrighteousness," Ivey said on his livestream.

Feb 5, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Chicago Bulls guard Jaden Ivey (31) passes against the Toronto Raptors in the second half at Scotiabank Arena.

Ivey has spoken in the past about dealing with depression.

A former fifth overall pick in the 2022 NBA Draft, the Bulls acquired Ivey from the Detroit Pistons at the trade deadline on Feb. 3 in exchange for Kevin Huerter. He appeared in four games for Chicago and has been sidelined since Feb. 11 with left patellofemoral pain syndrome, a common and sometimes chronic pain behind or around the kneecap more widely known as runner's knee.

Ivey averaged career-lows in points (8.5), rebounds (2.5) and assists (1.8) across 37 games played this year and played just 30 games in 2024-25 due to a broken left fibula. He underwent arthroscopic surgery on his right knee in October that forced him to miss the Pistons' first 15 games of the season.

Ivey, in his fourth NBA season, was set to be a restricted free agent this summer after he and Detroit could not finalize an agreement on a contract extension last offseason.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Jaden Ivey waived by Bulls after religious, anti gay Instagram stream

Steve Kerr reassures Toronto Blue Jays manager John Schneider

BOSTON, MA - MARCH 18: Head Coach Steve Kerr of the Golden State Warriors smiles after the game against the Boston Celtics on March 18, 2026 at TD Garden 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Steve Kerr is no stranger to catastrophic losses. As much as he’s won both as an NBA coach and as a player, he’s also lost in both scenarios. Most notably, in 2016, the Warriors lost in 7 to the Cleveland Cavaliers, despite starting the series 3-1 — which is an oddly similar scenario to what happened to the Toronto Blue Jays last season versus the Dodgers in the World Series.

Per The Athletic, Kerr reached out to John Schneider, the manager of the Blue Jays, shortly after their loss last year, writing a handwritten letter which Schneider recently discussed with The Athletic.

“I don’t know you,” Kerr wrote, “but I felt compelled to reach out after watching your incredible leadership on display during the World Series.”

“The pain [in 2016] was real,” Kerr wrote. “But what always survives through the tough losses is the character and connection of the group. The loss won’t define you, but the way you and your guys carried themselves afterwards will.”

As the MLB season begins and as the Warriors approach the play-in tournament, this sentiment rings true, and also speaks to Kerr’s expertise and experience as a coach — no matter how the season goes, how you and your players react is what matters most. It’s pretty sound life advice for us non-athletes too.

“It was the message we’ve been preaching all offseason and in spring,” Schneider told The Athletic. “The run was great, and the heartbreak was real, but it’s not going to define who we are. We all went through it together. What we’re going to be defined by is how we persevere through it… If he can see the good in what we did, it kind of gives you a little bit of reassurance that you’re preaching the right things.”

After that 2016 loss, Kerr won three more championships with the Warriors. Schneider hasn’t won anything yet with the Blue Jays, but this past World Series proves that he’ll be able to — and he recently signed a two-year extension, so he’ll definitely have a chance.