New hitting coach Rachel Folden’s passion for baseball is already leaving a Mets impression

Rachel Folden, New York Mets AA Hitting Coach, talks on the field during Spring Training.
Mets AA Hitting Coach talks on the field during Spring Training at Clover Field, Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026, in Port St. Lucie, Fla.

PORT ST. LUCIE — There still has been only one female on-field coach in major league history.

Rachel Folden isn’t positive she’s looking to be next, but she knows she wants to make a difference in the game.

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And her next stop is with the Mets, as the 39-year-old was hired this offseason to be the organization’s Double-A hitting coach at Binghamton.

The move comes after Folden spent the previous six seasons in the Cubs organization.

Folden got her first job with Chicago in November 2019, the same month Rachel Balkovec was hired by the Yankees to be a roving minor league hitting coach

At the time, Folden was the lead hitting lab technician, as well as a coach for the Rookie-level Arizona League Cubs.

She worked her way up to become the hitting coach for Chicago’s Triple-A Iowa affiliate before her contract was up and she headed to the Mets.

“It was a good fit,’’ Folden said. “Six years with an organization is a long time and when my contract ended, I thought it was time to try a new organization. I’ve been told you don’t really learn in baseball until you’ve worked for another organization and I’m finding that out already.”

Mets Double A hitting coach Rachel Folden talks on the field during Spring Training at Clover Field, Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026, in Port St. Lucie, Fla. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

The Mets have had other female coaches in the minors — including Gretchen Aucoin and Bree Nasti, who were both in uniform — but Alyssa Nakken, a major league coach with the Giants from 2020-24, is still the only woman to have an on-field coaching job in the majors.

“I don’t know if getting to the majors is my ultimate goal,” Folden said. “If a big league job came calling, I don’t think I’d turn it down. But I just really love working in baseball and am very passionate about working in the minor leagues. I really do enjoy it. I just like making players better, whatever level that’s at.”

Folden was a star catcher in college at Marshall and played some professional softball before getting into coaching baseball.

“I wasn’t sure if I was gonna like it, to be honest,” Folden said. “I love coaching and once I got into the atmosphere of baseball, I just really enjoyed it. I love coaching full-time and there are very few positions [in college] where you can do that and not have to recruit at the same time.”

Mets hitting coach Troy Snitker (l.) looks on with minor league hitting coach Rachel Folden (r.) before a game against the Washington Nationals during Spring Training Clover Field, Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026, in Port St. Lucie, FL. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

She’s already made an impression on some of the younger Mets players.

“We see eye-to-eye on hitting,” top outfield prospect A.J. Ewing said. “We’ve talked about approach and she’s a good communicator.”

And since players like Ewing have already worked with female coaches in the Mets system, there’s not even an adjustment.

“She’s just a coach who’s trying to make us better,” Ewing said.

And that’s why Folden believes she’s been accepted wherever she’s gone.

“If a player thinks you can help them, it doesn’t matter who you are,” Folden said. “They just want to be helped. It just becomes about building relationships, building trust. All of those things are pretty genderless and then everything comes together quickly.”

The bigger adjustments can come from above.

“With staff members and the organization, there’s always a level of skepticism whenever a woman is hired into a male-dominated field — and for good reason, I think,’’ said Folden, who credits Balkovec — now the director of player development for the Marlins — for breaking down barriers in the sport. “Inherently, they want to make sure it’s a comfortable environment for us and also a comfortable environment for the players.”

David Stearns, Mets president of baseball operations, hired Folden not to make a statement, but because “I think she’s a good coach.”

Folden came recommended by Andy Green, the Mets senior vice president of player development, who worked with Folden in Chicago.

“I do think women throughout baseball at different positions are becoming more commonplace,” Stearns said. “I think we’re eager to get to the point where having an on-field woman coach is not a story. I recognize it is one right now. But she’s impacted hitters throughout her career and earned the position. Players respect knowledgeable coaches and that’s what she is.”

Mets’ Nolan McLean penciled in to start Team USA’s pool play finale vs. Italy

Team USA manager Mark DeRosa has set his rotation for the World Baseball Classic. 

It won’t be either of the reigning Cy Young award winners taking the ball in the pool play opener on Friday night in Houston against Team Brazil, rather Giants ace Logan Webb.  

Tarik Skubal and Paul Skenes will then go back-to-back in Games 2 and 3, respectively. 

Mets young right-hander Nolan McLean is currently penciled in to follow them as the starter in the pool play finale against the Italians, but it remains to be seen if he will be ready. 

McLean was expected to join the club in Arizona for Monday’s team workout session, but he instead remains with the Mets as he fights through an illness, per NY Post's Joel Sherman. 

DeRosa still doesn’t know if he’ll have to readjust things ahead of the March 10th meeting.

“We’ll reassess that day-to-day,” he told reporters including ESPN’s Jesse Rogers

If USA is able to advance past pool play, Skenes, Webb, and McLean have already said they'll make two appearances.

Skubal, on the other hand, is only expected to pitch once. 

It also remains to be seen exactly how Clay Holmes will be used as well, as the Mets stretched him out to four-ups and 60 pitches in his second start of the spring on Sunday. 

The Matt McLain Renaissance is upon us

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - SEPTEMBER 27: Matt McLain #9 of the Cincinnati Reds up to bat during the game against the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on September 27, 2025 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by John Fisher/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cincinnati Reds took on the Chicago Cubs for the first time this spring on Monday afternoon, and when the dust settled the back of just about every hitter’s baseball card looked as rosy as could be.

Chief among the batting culprits on the day was one Matt McLain, he of the .220/.300/.343 line in 577 PA during the 2025 season. Now another year removed from his 2024 shoulder/oblique surgery, McLain swatted two more homers during the Reds 17-9 drubbing of their NL Central rivals, and has begun to more and more look the part of the guy who broke out as Cincinnati’s best hitter in 2023 prior to his injury.

The question manager Terry Francona has been asking of his lineup since he came to Cincinnati was who would hit in the #2 spot in the order. McLain, based on his pre-injury work, was precisely the kind of hitter who profiled as Tito’s go-to hitter there, someone who could break up the lefty-heavy top of TJ Friedl and Elly De La Cruz (from his strong side). Last year, it just didn’t work, and McLain found himself dropped to the bottom of the order, his excellent glovework the lone real reason why he didn’t lose more chances later in the season.

From what we’ve seen early on this spring, though, his efforts to get back to the player he was before surgery have paid off in spades. As Charlie Goldsmith noted after the game today, McLain has not only picked up a longer bat with which to attack sliders away from him better, he’s been putting in countless hours of work to protect that part of the plate (and his swing) with both approach and positioning within the box. And if it keeps up at all akin to what we saw today (and within the last week), the Reds will be in a much, much better position to stomach Ke’Bryan Hayes in the lineup everyday as a glove-only guy.

One of those you can have. Two, you cannot.

Monday’s action against the Cubs also featured a Noelvi Marte dinger, another Sal Stewart blast, two-times on-base for Friedl (with a pair of runs scored), a Rece Hinds tater, and a 2-hit, 3-ribbie outing from Hayes that was good enough for me to probably shut up for at least a day or so about his struggles to hit. All that after starter Brady Singer became the latest Reds starter to get shelled in his first outing of the spring, something that’s not at all concerning…just yet.

The Reds will have the day off on Tuesday before taking on Team Cuba on Wednesday in an exhibition for the latter’s ramp up to the upcoming World Baseball Classic. We don’t yet know who will start that game for the Reds, or exactly how we’ll be able to follow it (aside from audio-only on 700 WLW), but we do know first pitch will take place at 3:05 PM ET at Goodyear Ballpark.

Aaron Judge has 'really hit home' moment putting on Team USA jersey

PHOENIX — New York Yankees slugger Aaron Judge walked into Team USA’s clubhouse Monday morning, stared at his uniform, and felt his heart race when he put it on over his massive shoulders.

So, this is what it means to represent the United States of America.

While players like Bryce Harper, Alex Bregman, Bobby Witt Jr. and Pete Crow-Armstrong have already played a handful of times in international tournaments for the USA, this is the first time Judge has ever played for his country.

“Several of us probably have people who serve in the military or people we know that served in the military,’’ said Judge, captain of Team USA. “That was the first thing I thought of was there's individuals out there that have sacrificed everything for this country to allow me to have my wife safe at home and my daughter safe at home. And I get a chance to come out here and play a kid’s game.

“So that was really just floating through my head, just the history of this country, what it's been through, and the people that have sacrificed the biggest sacrifice. So even now there's conflict going on, people are sacrificing. ... A lot of things are happening in the world right now, you know. So, I just count my blessings every day I get a chance to come out here and play the game that I love.’’

Really, just having the name on the back of his jersey, Judge laughed, got his attention considering the Yankee jerseys don’t have names on the back of their uniform.

“It's kind of weird seeing my name on the back of the jersey to start,’’ says Judge, “but I flipped that right over and looked at the front where it said, “USA.’ For me, it just really hit home.’’

This was Team USA’s workout day before playing two exhibition games against the San Francisco Giants and Colorado Rockies on Tuesday and Wednesday, respectively, before leaving for the WBC’s first round in Houston. Judge spoke to the team before they took the field, still in awe of the abundance of talent surrounding him in the room, and knowing what this means to everyone.

There is Tampa Bay Rays reliever Griffin Jax, who graduated from the United States Air Force Academy, and Pittsburgh Pirates Cy Young winner Paul Skenes, who attended the Air Force Academy for two years. There is Boston Red Sox ace Garrett Whitlock, whose father Larry, served in Vietnam. And plenty of others who have close family members or distant relatives who served in the military.

When USA manager Mark DeRosa called Skenes to invite him on the team, and even had a presentation prepared to help convince him to play, Skenes didn’t need to hear another word.

"He was like, 'I want to do this for every serviceman and woman that protects our freedom,'" DeRosa said. “That’s all that needs to be said. There’s something very special about representing your country.

“We take it seriously. We want to enjoy the game and have fun, but certainly understand the responsibility that comes with it.’’

And there’s Detroit Tigers two-time Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal, who is in line to earn in excess of $400 million as a free agent this winter. He hadn’t planned on participating in the WBC, but ignored the advice of his agent and others to pitch for Team USA, even if it’s just for about 50-55 pitches Saturday against Great Britain.

“It speaks volumes, definitely, because of what's ahead of him,’’ Judge said. “You know, he's got the two Cy Young awards, but this guy's about to make half-a-billion dollars here in the next offseason. So, for him to put it all on the line for his country, and come out here and show up for us ...

“You know, maybe it is just one game, but you know there's a risk with everything you do, and for him to take that risk and come out here and be with us, you know, the boys love it. They're hyped in the clubhouse.’’

Who knows, Team USA manager Mark DeRosa says, if Skubal enjoys the experience enough before he returns to the Tigers camp in Lakeland, Florida, could he change his mind and return to Team USA for the semifinal or championship game?

Certainly, there will be some heavy campaigning from his teammates.

“He’s in a different situation than anybody here,’’ DeRosa said. “And to be honest, I'm over the moon that he decided to join us. I didn't think he was going to, based on everything he has, trying to win three Cy Youngs and going into his free-agent year.’’

Judge can certainly relate. He was a free agent after the 2022 season, and couldn’t commit to playing in the World Baseball Classic. He wound up signing a nine-year, $360 million contract to return to the Yankees, but had already decided he would stay in spring training camp no matter where he signed.

Yet, after watching the exhilarating 2023 WBC, with Team Japan beating the USA in the finals with Shohei Ohtani striking out Mike Trout for the final out, and how much joy the players experienced, Judge wasn’t about to miss this opportunity. He took great pride speaking to his teammates Monday, telling them it was an honor to wear the same uniform.

“The room has a presence,’’ Judge said. “Not just the players, but the coaching staff, too. You got All-Stars, Silver Sluggers, World Series champs. And some of the best baseball players who ever played the game in one room. It was pretty cool to get a chance to address them ... To get a chance to be captain for your country, it’s pretty hard to describe.’’

Said DeRosa: “Aaron is a special cat, a special guy. He’s the best hitter in the game. His presence is undeniable when he walks in the room. So, for him to put his heart and soul behind this, it’s huge.’’

Certainly, with the WBC coming on the heels of the United States winning the Olympic gold in men's and women’s hockey, has Team USA hyped to continue the run, Judge says. Alex Bregman, who was on Team USA’s WBC championship team in 2017, says he has never been on an international team that didn’t win the title. Bryce Harper, who last played in an international tournament in 2009 when he was 16, says he’s more stoked than ever to represent the U.S. after watching the gold medal hockey games.

“I mean, everybody watched the Olympics and saw what the women’s and men’s teams did winning the gold,’’ Harper said. “I mean, I was glued to the TV for those two, three weeks. So, I definitely think it’s a stepping stone into what we’re doing right now. I think a lot of people are super excited to watch us play.’’

While Team USA has won the WBC just once in the five times it has been played since 2006, they are the favorites this time around, particularly with their prized pitching staff. It’s easily the best collection of talent they’ve assembled, with DeRosa convinced the team is almost flawless. The team is so loaded that Hall of Famer Ken Griffey Jr. is the team photographer.

Aaron Judge talks with Ken Griffey Jr. during a Team USA workout at Papago Park Sports Complex in Phoenix.

Team USA is scheduled to start San Francisco Giants ace Logan Webb in Game 1 on March 5 against Brazil, Skubal in Game 2 on March 6 against Great Britain, Skenes in Game 3 on March 9 against Mexico, and New York Mets starter Nolan McLean in the fourth and final pool game March 10 against Italy.

“This is a 'Field of Dreams,' to be honest with you,’’ DeRosa said. “I wanted to build a true team, a team that the other countries would look at and say, “There’s no weakness.’ The lineup is right-left-right all of the way down. Everyone knows their role. The bullpen is split neutral. Mason Miller is the best closer in the game. You got versatility off the bench. We got selfless guys. We got high character, speed, power.

“This is a team that kind of feeds off each other, not just throw an All-Star team in there.

“This is a true team.’’

A team that has one 6-foot-7 captain, with players who have won six MVP awards and six Cy Young Awards.

“There is,’’ Judge said, “a lot of greatness in that room. Pretty special.’’

Follow Bob Nightengale on Bluesky and X @Bnightengale.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Aaron Judge takes pride in Team USA at World Baseball Classic

The Clock Is Ticking on the Astros’ Outfield, So What’s Dana Brown’s Drop-Dead Date?

HOUSTON, TEXAS - AUGUST 30: Cam Smith #11 of the Houston Astros bats in the fourth inning against the Los Angeles Angels at Daikin Park on August 30, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Tim Warner/Getty Images) | Getty Images
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We’re about halfway through spring training, and if you’ve read anything I’ve written before, you know I’m not in the business of overreacting to one Grapefruit League box score. One game means nothing. Two games mean nothing. Even a week can be misleading.

But at some point, the sample size stops whispering and starts talking.

So here’s the question, Astros fans: What is your drop-dead date for Dana Brown to show you he’s willing to fix this outfield before Opening Day?

Because whether anyone wants to admit it or not, there’s a logjam of mediocrity forming and it’s getting harder to ignore.


The Outfield Problem No One Wants to Call a Crisis

I have been consistent on one point: I am not in favor of trading Isaac Paredes just to make a move. That’s not strategy, that’s panic.

The only way dealing Paredes makes sense is if you’re acquiring a legitimate, everyday corner outfielder, preferably one who hits from the left side and lengthens this lineup immediately. And that’s a tall order this late in the spring.

But here’s the uncomfortable reality:
The current outfield mix isn’t exactly forcing Brown’s hand in the opposite direction.

Between:

  • Zach Dezenzo
  • Joey Loperfido
  • Cam Smith
  • Shay Whitcomb
  • and an abbreviated spring from Jake Meyers

“Disappointing” might actually be too generous.

The bats have been quiet. Too quiet. And while spring numbers shouldn’t dictate roster decisions in a vacuum, trends matter, especially when they mirror what we’ve already seen.


Cam Smith and the Patience Question

The most glaring concern? Cam Smith.

After a rough second half to his rookie season, this spring was supposed to be about confidence, adjustments, growth. Instead, the same inconsistencies are resurfacing.

So now the real question becomes:
How long are the Astros willing to let him figure it out at the big-league level?

Development is important. Patience is necessary. But so is contending.

If this team still views itself as operating within the Golden Era window, then “learning on the fly” can’t come at the expense of wins in April and May.


The Jake Meyers Dilemma

Meyers is a fascinating case study.

He was reportedly on the trade block all offseason, and clearly, Brown didn’t find a deal he liked. So here we are, as long as he is healthy, he remains the incumbent in center field, although Smith has seen some time there as well.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: last season felt like a career year. The time to move him was when his value peaked.

If his bat regresses, and history suggests that’s possible, the window to extract meaningful value shrinks fast. Betting on internal improvement is one thing. Betting against regression is another.


Sugar Land Seems Imminent, At Least For Some

Loperfido. Whitcomb. Dezenzo.

All intriguing. All talented. All probably starting the year in Sugar Land.

There’s nothing wrong with that. Development matters. But let’s not confuse “interesting depth” with “reliable production.” If this team is counting on one of these young players to suddenly stabilize the outfield by Opening Day, that’s a gamble, not a plan.


The Jesús Sánchez Ripple Effect

Then there’s the undercurrent to all of this: the decision to move on from Jesús Sánchez.

Reports out of Toronto Blue Jays camp suggest coaches there believe Sánchez was misused in Houston, that adjustments to his plate approach limited his power in an effort to prioritize on-base production.

Those coaches are gone now. The dugout has changed. The philosophy may be shifting, but the dammage is done.

Here’s the risk: if Sánchez rediscovers his left-handed power stroke elsewhere, something he flashed with the Marlins, and the Astros are still searching for outfield stability in May, that trade will be scrutinized heavily.

Brown clearly believed last season’s sample size was enough to move on. Time will tell if that conviction was foresight or miscalculation.


So When Is the Deadline?

That’s the heart of it.

Is it:

  • The final week of spring training?
  • The last exhibition game?
  • Or are you willing to give it two weeks into the regular season?

Because the clock is ticking.

This isn’t about making a move just to win the back page. It’s about recognizing that instability in the outfield can snowball quickly, especially in a division that won’t wait around for you to figure it out.

Paredes’ name will surface in trade talks. Meyers could be included in the right deal. But the real evaluation won’t be who the Astros are willing to give up.

It will be who they are able to bring in and whether that player meaningfully upgrades this roster.

So I’ll leave you with the same question:

Astros fans, what’s your drop-dead date?

Because if this is still a championship-caliber organization, the answer shouldn’t be “whenever.”

NHL 26 Simulation Predicts Tonight’s Avalanche vs. Kings Showdown

This wasn’t real life — just a simulation — but if you’re a Colorado Avalanche fan, maybe don't watch this

In a virtual showdown against the Los Angeles Kings, Colorado hung around early thanks to stellar goaltending from Mackenzie Blackwood, but a third-period surge from L.A. proved too much as the Kings skated away with a 4-1 win on NHL 26.

First Period

The Kings dictated the pace for much of the opening frame, hemming Colorado in its own zone and firing pucks from all angles. Blackwood stood tall, turning aside quality chance after quality chance to keep things scoreless.

But with 2:41 remaining in the period, Los Angeles finally broke through. Trevor Moore capitalized on a rebound in the slot, batting the puck past Blackwood to give the Kings a 1-0 lead.

Things didn’t get much smoother for Colorado late in the period. Josh Manson was whistled for interference — a call that may or may not have been influenced by some classic EA Sports Frostbite chaos — sending the Avs into the intermission shorthanded.

Second Period

The shot clock told the story early. Nearly a minute into the second period, the Kings held an 18-6 advantage in shots on goal.

After successfully killing off the penalty, Colorado began to find its footing. Gabe Landeskog tried to generate momentum on the right wing but was forced to dish the puck off under pressure rather than absorb a heavy hit from the Kings’ defense.

Midway through the period, Ross Colton ripped a wrister labeled for the top corner, but Filip Forsberg came up with the save.

Colorado finally broke through with 9:08 remaining in the period. Cale Makar accepted a pass from Devon Toews, walked into space, and unleashed a 100.6 mph slap shot that beat Forsberg cleanly for his 18th goal of the season — and his third in the past two games. Just like that, it was 1-1 and a brand-new game.

The Avalanche kept pushing. Martin Nečas weaved through the neutral zone with a dazzling rush before stopping up and firing a slap shot, but Forsberg flashed the glove to keep the game tied heading into the third.

Third Period

Colorado’s momentum didn’t carry over.

The Avalanche opened the third looking disjointed, and the Kings took advantage. With Blackwood under siege yet again, Warren Foegele eventually broke through, giving Los Angeles a 2-1 lead.

The turning point came with 9:36 remaining. Makar rang a slap shot off the post, and the puck caromed all the way to center ice. Taylor Ward collected it in stride, raced in on a breakaway, and beat Blackwood to extend the Kings’ lead to 3-1.

Frustration began to mount for Colorado. Nathan MacKinnon was sent to the box for interference, and moments later Corey Perry was penalized for cross-checking Brent Burns, leading to a stretch of four-on-four play.

The Avalanche briefly had a five-second power play but couldn’t convert — yes, even in simulation form, the power play struggles followed them.

Artemi Panarin added an empty-net goal with seven seconds remaining to seal the 4-1 final in this digital edition of Avs vs. Kings.

Credit: Chris Pietsch
Credit: Chris Pietsch

Takeaways

Give us the reverse jinx on tap, please.

Image

Matthew Schaefer-led Islanders aren’t OK being just a ‘challenger brand’ anymore

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Matthew Schaefer celebrates with the crowd after being named the first star of the game against the Florida Panthers, Image 2 shows Kelly Cheeseman is pictured while with the Kings in 2018
The Islanders have taken a more proactive marketing approach this season.

LOS ANGELES — The change in the Islanders’ approach off the ice this season might be more dramatic than their shift on it.

Not only has Matthew Schaefer, who was named the NHL’s first star of the week Monday after a two-goal performance to help the Islanders come back to beat the Panthers on Sunday night, helped turbocharge business, but the Isles have also taken a more proactive approach to their marketing, throwing out Lou Lamoriello’s rulebook that put tight strictures on social media content and prohibited promoting individual players over the team.

In short, they’re approaching things like it’s 2026.

Schaefer, specifically, has been heavily promoted all year.

The Isles have been much more creative, and have included players much more often, in their social media content.

And they’ve launched an in-house docuseries.

Exactly how much responsibility all that has on ticket sales versus the simple fact that the team is much better is impossible to say.

But the Islanders are more than happy with where things are.

Sunday was their 12th straight sellout, and the energy in the fan base couldn’t be more different than it was a year ago.

“We’re a challenger brand, right?” president of business operations Kelly Cheeseman told reporters Sunday. “We’re maybe the sixth, seventh brand in the market, in some people’s eyes. We don’t want to be that. We want to punch the big guys in the mouth a little bit here and there by doing things they’re not willing to do and make our brand a little more interesting.”

That is, clearly, the open space for the Islanders to walk into.

Matthew Schaefer celebrates with the crowd after the Islanders’ March 1 win. NHLI via Getty Images

They’ll never have the innate gravitas of the Yankees, Knicks or Rangers, but those teams take a much more buttoned-up approach to their brands.

Mathieu Darche has allowed the Islanders to embrace modernity with open arms.

Cheeseman, who was previously COO for both the Kings and AEG Sports, was hired with those changes in mind at the start of the year.

Kelly Cheeseman is pictured while with the Kings in 2018. NHLI via Getty Images

“It kind of allows fans, young kids who maybe their grandfathers and grandmothers were Rangers fans — they want to walk in the door with their Islanders shirts. We love that,” Cheeseman said. “They’re younger, cooler, more diverse and a little bit more interesting and intriguing than some of the older brands in the market. Maybe that pushes it our way.”

Schaefer’s presence has made life immeasurably easier for the Islanders’ marketing department.

Cheeseman said the club started to see a turn in attendance around Thanksgiving, which has stuck.



“We’re leading the league in social media content and engagement, and a lot of it is because of what [Schaefer’s] doing,” Cheeseman said. “Then you look at something like this week. He breaks Phil Housley’s [rookie scoring for a defenseman] record, he’s the story across the National Hockey League and our sport. [PR chief] Kimber [Auerbach] and our media team have done a really good job of getting him out and he’s had a really good willingness to get out there.”

Cheeseman also said there is a focus on “relaunching” UBS Arena next year, when construction will finish on the Belmont Park racetrack next door and when the Islanders will host the All-Star Game.

“The campus is finally ready,” Cheeseman said. “We got the retail village coming online, we got the racetrack, we got the arena coming into the maturity level. We want to think of it as, we haven’t really had a grand opening. We want to take the moment and really build on it.

“The train station wasn’t quite ready [in 2021]. The parking wasn’t quite ready or really open.”

Another key factor, left unsaid: The team was nowhere near as good as expected, and attendance dropped off as a result.

That’s not a problem anymore.

And the Islanders are trying to take as much advantage as possible.

NBA player Luke Kornet calls on Hawks to cancel promotion with Magic City adult entertainment club

By The Associated Press (AP) — Luke Kornet called on the Atlanta Hawks to cancel their upcoming collaboration with Magic City, saying he and other NBA players were surprised by the team's decision to promote the adult entertainment club.

The San Antonio Spurs center wrote Monday that allowing the March 16 event during the Hawks' game against the Orlando Magic “would reflect poorly on us as an NBA community, specifically in being complicit in the potential objectification and mistreatment of women in our society.”

“Regardless of how a woman finds her way into the adult entertainment industry, many in this space experience abuse, harassment, and violence to which they should never be subjected,” Kornet added in a blog post.

The Hawks announced the promotion last week, saying it would include a live performance by Atlanta native T.I., and have two versions of Magic City's famed chicken wings and a special hoodie available for purchase.

But Kornet noted that the press release “failed to acknowledge that this place is, as the business itself boasts, ‘Atlanta’s premier strip club.’” Therefore, he asked the Hawks to cancel the promotion.

“We desire to provide an environment where fans of all ages can safely come and enjoy the game of basketball and where we can celebrate the history and culture of communities in good conscience,” Kornet wrote. “The celebration of a strip club is not conduct aligned with that vision.”

___

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

Lakers vs. Pelicans Preview: Can L.A. make it three in a row?

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - FEBRUARY 22: Luke Kennard #10 and Luka Doncic #77 of the Los Angeles Lakers celebrate during the first half of their game against the Boston Celtics at Crypto.com Arena on February 22, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. 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 Luiza Moraes/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Lakers (36-24) will remain at home as they host the New Orleans Pelicans (19-43) on Tuesday. L.A. looks to sweep the season series against New Orleans for the second season in a row.

Start time and TV schedule

Who: Los Angeles Lakers vs. New Orleans Pelicans

When: 7:30 p.m. PT, Mar 3

Where: Crypto.com Arena

Watch: Spectrum Sportsnet


The Lakers commendably took care of business over the weekend by stringing together back-to-back blowout victories against Pacific Division counterparts. It doesn’t fully make up for the losing skid they recently endured, but it’s certainly a good sign that this team is back on track.

The best part of the last two victories was that several developments stood out, all of which could be considered integral for the Lakers’ success in this last stretch of the season and playoff time.

Here’s what we saw in the last two games:

Luka Kennard stepping up

Kennard put up 27 points off the bench in the two games, making him the highest scorer among the non-starters. This is a huge development for the purple and gold because not only does Luke improve their bench scoring, but he also provides another threat in their above-average offense with his ability to space the floor, cut to the basket, screen for his teammates and operate off the ball at all times.

The last two games showed how huge an X-factor the newest Laker can be every single game and that’s a huge advantage for them.

Lakers got their shooting rhythm back

The common denominator in the Lakers’ three-game losing streak was their shooting struggles. It happens to most teams and it’s a matter of how quickly they can snap out of it. The Lakers were able to do that over the weekend thanks to a number of things.

Austin Reaves and LeBron James shot better, there was more ball movement on offense and there was an improved mix of lineup and rotations. These all played a role in their victories over the last two games and the hope is for the team to carry them over moving forward.

The team winning means good vibes are back

For as inconsistent as this team has been all season, what has never been a problem is their chemistry. They seem to know how to have fun around each other and that becomes more prominent when they win games. Just look at how Rui Hachimura was the target of laughs prior to the game against the Sacramento Kings last Sunday.

Or when the team was cheering on Maxi Kleber, who had himself a night against the Kings as well:

All these prove that the team is not entirely in disarray and there are a couple of things worth being hopeful about moving forward. Only time will tell if it’s enough to make a huge impact for the Lakers’ success down the line.

But in the meantime, they’re worth taking note of as each game passes. Let’s see if the Lakers can continue to build on their recent success and make it three wins in a row against the Pelicans on Tuesday.

Notes and Updates

  • The Pelicans team that the Lakers will face are also one of the worst defensive teams in the league because they struggle to guard the perimeter and allow too many easy transition points. They also don’t rebound the ball very well and don’t really have the depth on offense to make up for their flaws. The Lakers should be able to take advantage.
  • Moreover, the Lakers have owned the Pelicans over the last two seasons as they’ve won nine out of their last 10 games against them.
  • There are no injuries stated on the Lakers’ injury report for this one.
  • Zion Williams (right ankle sprain) is officially listed as questionable. However, he confirmed he’s expecting to suit up for this one.

You can follow Nicole on Twitter at @nicoleganglani.

A tale of two pitchers

Landen Roupp next to Carson Whisenhunt on the railing.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - SEPTEMBER 22: Landen Roupp #65 and Carson Whisenhunt #88 of the San Francisco Giants prepare for the game at Oracle Park on September 22, 2025 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Andy Kuno/San Francisco Giants/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Francisco Giants entered the offseason with a lot of young starting pitchers who were equal parts exciting and unproven. Pitchers who could break camp with the team and prove to be a vital asset in the bullpen and critical rotational depth, like Hayden Birdsong was in the first half of last year. But also, pitchers who could show that they’re just not ready to contribute at the Major League level yet, like Hayden Birdsong in the second half of last year.

As the Giants poked around the trade market, it seemed that some of those pitchers could end up being on the way out. But ultimately, it was just the one at the back of the pecking order — Kai-Wei Teng — who didn’t make it to Scottsdale. The rest of the crew is there, fighting for bullpen jobs, backup starting jobs, and spots on the AAA Sacramento rotational totem pole.

Perhaps the biggest story of the Giants spring has been the divergent paths we’ve seen those pitchers take. Trevor McDonald, for instance, has been nothing short of brilliant: in three innings he’s yet to allow a hit or a walk, while striking out five. Birdsong, on the other hand, has been a disaster: in his two outings, he’s allowed 10 baserunners and eight earned runs, while recording just four outs. And Blade Tidwell? He’s thrown gas, and looked emphatically like one of the team’s 13 best pitchers.

Two other young pitchers had only made one appearance going into Monday’s game, a 6-5 win over the Chicago White Sox that pushed the Giants to 8-2 in Cactus League play. And, yet again, we saw them take very different paths.

Incumbent starter Landen Roupp took the bump to start the game. Roupp had been strong in his first outing of the year, and he was even stronger in this one. He struck out Chase Miedroth to open the first, then struck out Luisangel Acuña immediately afterwards, en route to a 1-2-3 first inning. His second inning was just as strong: while he didn’t have any strikeouts, he needed just 12 pitches to set down the side in order, inducing two ground balls and a soft liner.

That was it for Roupp, and it provided reason to think that his spot in the rotation is secure, as it should be. He needed just 25 pitches to cruise through two perfect innings, and was completely control.

Unfortunately, you can probably tell that this is a setup for something less happy — the proverbial other hand of the young pitching performances. Which brings us to the third inning, when Carson Whisenhunt took the mound. Whisenhunt had a hot-and-cold act in his first game of the spring, pitching one dominant inning and then falling apart in the next. In this game, unfortunately, he skipped past the first act.

Whisenhunt allowed a single to Jarred Kelenic on the first pitch he threw, and it was a moment that would, unfortunately, set the tone. He was able to get a fairly soft ground ball from Kelenic, hit right to the shortstop position. But with the Giants shifting, the ball found a hole for a tough-luck, seeing-eye single.

That was bad luck, but the rest of the outing was self-inflicted. After striking out the next batter, Whisenhunt allowed a 106.3-mph double to Korey Lee to score the first run. With two outs, Acuña scorched a 106.6-mph single for a second run.

Still, Whisenhunt got through the inning, and was awarded a second one. He started it by walking old friend LaMonte Wade Jr., then allowed a double to Lenyn Sosa. Immediate trouble. A sacrifice fly scored a third run, and then Kelenic again struck, this time not needing the shift to help him out: he smoked a 110.6-mph double — the hardest-hit ball of the day — to score the fourth and final run that Whisenhunt would allow. He would strike out the next batter, then get pulled from the game.

As in his first outing, Whisenhunt showed both greatly improved velocity, and velocity that couldn’t hold. Early in his outing, he threw five straight fastballs and averaged 96.7 mph with them. His final five fastballs, on the other hand, averaged just 94.9.

Ultimately, it was a case of nothing quite working for Whisenhunt, other than that early increase in velo. He only threw 28 of 46 pitches for strikes, and his signature changeup wasn’t able to be a weapon. He threw it just nine times, and it resulted in four balls, three swinging strikes, a foul ball, and a double.

It’s early. Not just for Whisenhunt and Birdsong, but also for the pitchers who are performing well. But we’re certainly seeing a divergence in the early goings.

On offense, the Giants — who sent a B-squad to Camelback Ranch — did the bulk of their damage with a White Sox-assisted rally in the third inning. It started when Buddy Kennedy and Jesús Rodríguez drew back-to-back one-out walks. That led to Parks Harber coming through with a big hit: an RBI double. Admittedly, it was a double that was hit right at the center fielder Acuña but, as we’ve seen so many times this spring, it simply wasn’t caught. On the other hand, Harber scorched it at 105 mph, so he deserved some good things out of it.

That only scored one run, but Christian Koss would follow with a two-run single to cap a three-run inning.

After falling behind 5-3, the Giants would get close in the sixth inning with a small ball rally, when Bo Davidson, Grant McCray, and Jake Holton hit back-to-back-to-back singles. Excitingly, Davidson and McCray absolutely smoked their hits, which registered 110 and 106.5 mph, respectively.

San Francisco would tie it in the eighth in the most unexpected way: a solo home run from Nate Furman. The second baseman brings a lot of skills to the Giants, but power certainly is not one of them. In 194 Minor League games, he’s hit just 12 home runs.

But he figured out the way to do it in the desert though, with metrics you won’t see on many home runs in Major League games: a 95.9-mph exit velocity, a distance of 365 feet, and an expected batting average of .210.

They would take the lead in the ninth inning on another solo home run, this time from a slightly more expected source: Kennedy, who had his first big hit since coming to camp as a Minor League free agent. And that was enough for a 6-5 win, helping the Giants avoid their first tie of spring.

A few more notes:

  • Rodríguez had quite a utility player game. He started at second base, and later moved to left field for a few innings. The Giants only used him as a catcher following July’s trade with the Yankees, but have been using him all over the field this spring.
  • Victor Bericoto continued his tremendous spring, hitting 1-2 with a loud double while starting in right field.
  • Speaking of starting in the outfield, with Harrison Bader dinged up and Jung Hoo Lee in Korea, Luis Matos got the start in center field. It will be interesting to see if the Giants trust him there, which definitely opens up pathways to make the Opening Day roster, which is a necessity if the Giants want to keep him around, since he’s out of options. Matos has been swinging a hot bat this spring, though he went 0-2 in this game, though his first out required a very nice defensive play.
  • Jerar Encarnación, who started in left field, and Tyler Fitzgerald, who came off the bench to play third base, continued their tough springs. Both batters hit 0-2, with Encarnación striking out in both at-bats, and Fitzgerald having a strikeout and a pop out. Encarnación is 3-19 with seven strikeouts, no walks, and no extra-base hits this preseason; Fitzgerald is 2-17 with five strikeouts, no walks, and two doubles, though one of his hits was a pop up that the defense neglected to catch.
  • Spencer Bivens had a bit of a hiccup. He gave up three hits, two walks, and a solo home run in 1.2 innings, with one strikeout, and threw 20 of 35 pitches for strikes.
  • Nick Margevicius, on the other hand, had a nice day. He tossed 2.1 scoreless innings, with three hits, no walks, and no strikeouts.
  • Darien Smith came over from Minor League camp to record the save with a perfect ninth inning, with one strikeout. That’s always fun to see!
  • The Giants didn’t use any hard throwers in this game: Whisenhunt had the nine hardest-thrown balls of the game for San Francisco. The hardest throw by a non-Whisenhunt Giants pitcher was a 95.7-mph sinker from Bivens.
  • The five hardest-hit balls of the day for the Giants: Davidson’s single (110 mph), an Osleivis Basabe line out (107.9), McCray’s single (106.5), a Casey Schmitt single (105), and Harber’s double (105). Rodríguez’s single, Kennedy’s home run, Bericoto’s double, and a Harber ground out also cleared the 100-mph mark.
  • The Giants now get a break from Cactus League play to host Team USA as they prep for the World Baseball Classic. That game is Tuesday at 12:05 p.m. PT, and you can watch it on ESPN. Tidwell is expected to start.

World Baseball Classic is here!

TUCSON, ARIZONA - MARCH 03: The World Baseball Classic logo is seen during the game three of the World Baseball Classic Qualifiers between Brazil and Germany at Kino Veterans Memorial Stadium on March 03, 2025 in Tucson, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Wednesday is the first game of the 2026 World Baseball Classic. All seven of the Padres involved left the team over the weekend. Manny Machado, Fernando Tatis Jr. and Wandy Peralta joined the Dominican Republic team for an exhibition in the DR. Xander Bogaerts joined the Netherlands team in Florida for their exhibition against Tampa Bay on Wednesday.

Mason Miller joined the USA team in Arizona for their exhibition against the Rockies on Wednesday. Pitchers Ron Marinaccio and Alek Jacob joined the Italy team in Arizona for their exhibition against the Angels on Wednesday.

Minor league players for the Padres are also involved in the WBC. RHP Michael Cienfuegos will be with Panama, LHP Omar Cruz and RHP Victor Lizarraga will join Mexico, Carter Loewen joins Canada and RHP Josh Mallitz will be on the Israel team.

The official first game of the Classic will be on Wednesday between Chinese Taipei and Australia in Tokyo. That game will be broadcast on FS1 at 7 p.m. PT. All the other games that day will be the exhibition games between WBC teams and spring teams for their MLB organizations.

Schedule and locations

Here is the link for the full WBC schedule: https://www.mlb.com/world-baseball-classic/schedule/2026-03-03/www.mlb.com

The WBC has four locations with five teams in each location. The tournament is a four-pool round robin with a single-elimination quarterfinal and a semi-final and championship round that will take place in Miami. Pool play will take place March 5-11 with quarterfinals March 13-14. The semi-finals will be March 15-16 and the championship game on March 17.

Team rosters

The information on each team and their rosters can be found here: https://www.mlb.com/world-baseball-classic/teams

The Padres will play Team Great Britain for their exhibition in Peoria on Wednesday and it will be televised on Padres.TV/MLB.TV at 12:10 p.m. PT.

Team USA features a loaded roster that includes Pittsburgh Pirates ace Paul Skenes and Detroit Tigers ace Tarik Skubal as well as Padres closer Mason Miller as their closer.

Padres third baseman Manny Machado is the captain of the Dominican team, an official designation that will be displayed on his uniform for the DR.

Power rankings

MLB.com polled 20 members of their staff to power rank the WBC teams. Over the previous five tournaments, there have only been three countries to win the championship. The Dominican Republic has won once, the USA have won once and Japan has taken the title three times.

Those three teams continue to rank in the top three for the current tournament, with Japan ranked first, the USA second and the DR third.

All games will be carried on Fox channels, including Spanish language game broadcasts. Fox Sports, Fox, FS1, FS2 and Tubi are all carrying games during the tournament. Refer to the schedule for specific games and times. The USA has their first game Friday versus Brazil and that will be on Fox at 5 p.m. PT.

Shaikin: Clayton Kershaw's 'perfect' ending has one final chapter in WBC

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MARCH 02: Pitcher Clayton Kershaw #22 of Team USA answers.
U.S. pitcher Clayton Kershaw answers questions from reporters during a workout at Papago Park Sports Complex in Phoenix on Monday. (Chris Coduto / Getty Images)

How do you improve on the perfect ending?

Clayton Kershaw stood in the desert heat Monday, wearing a far darker shade of blue than the Dodgers do. He does not need a medal, or a chance to fail. His election to the Hall of Fame will be a formality.

In his farewell year, the Dodgers won the World Series, becoming baseball’s first back-to-back champions in 25 years. He secured a critical out. He bathed in adoration at the championship rally, and he told the fans he would be one of them this year.

“I’m going to watch,” he hollered that day, “just like all of you.”

Four months later, he was back in uniform.

Read more:'That's what I expect.' Dodgers' Mookie Betts seeks to regain his All-Star form

He wore a dark blue jersey with red and white piping. As Team USA ran through its first World Baseball Classic workout, Kershaw participated in pitchers’ fielding practice and shagged fly balls during batting practice. He could have been home with his five kids, and instead he was rushing off the mound to take a throw at first base.

That November night in Toronto, as it turned out, was not the last time we would see him in uniform.

“Feels good,” he said Monday. “I wouldn’t put on a uniform for anything else. This is a special thing.”

He put the World Baseball Classic into red, white and blue perspective.

“It’s a bucket list thing for me,” he said.

He is either self-deprecating or painfully honest about his capabilities right now, or perhaps a little of both.

The last World Baseball Classic came down to Shohei Ohtani pitching to Mike Trout. This one could come down to Kershaw pitching to Ohtani.

“I think, for our country’s sake, it’s probably better if I don’t,” Kershaw said.

Former Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw fields a ground ball during a workout at Papago Park Sports Complex on Monday.
Former Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw fields a ground ball during a workout at Papago Park Sports Complex on Monday. (Chris Coduto / Getty Images)

Never say never. Team USA planned to run a tremendous rotation of Tarik Skubal, Paul Skenes, Joe Ryan and Logan Webb, but now Skubal says he will pitch just once in the tournament. Skenes says he’ll pitch twice. Ryan says he won’t pitch in the first round, at least.

Kershaw might be needed beyond the role he was promised: save the team from using the current major league pitchers in blowouts or extra innings.

In 11 career at-bats against Kershaw, Ohtani has no hits. Kershaw won’t duck the assignment if gets it, but he considers it so unlikely he is happy to share his game plan publicly.

“It’s throw it, pitch away, play away, hope he flies out to left,” Kershaw said. “Don’t throw it in his barrel.

“I can’t imagine, if it comes down to USA vs. Japan, with the arms that we have, that I’ll be needed. But I’ll be ready.”

Kershaw’s average fastball velocity dropped to 89 mph last season, but he led the majors in winning percentage. He could eat innings for some team — maybe even the Dodgers, with Blake Snell and Gavin Stone all but certain to be unavailable on Opening Day.

Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw, right, celebrates with teammates after the Dodgers defeated the Toronto Blue Jays.
Dodgers pitcher Clayton Kershaw, right, celebrates with teammates after the Dodgers defeated the Toronto Blue Jays for the 2025 World Series title. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

But, even with his success last year and even with the joy of wearing a uniform once again, he insists he isn’t interested in pitching beyond the WBC.

“I don’t want to,” he said. “You can’t end it better than I did last year. I had a great time last year. It was an absolute blast and honor to be on that team. I think that was the perfect way to end it. Honestly, I don’t know if I would have enough in the tank to pitch for a full season again. I’m really at peace with that decision.

“This is kind of a weird one-off thing, but you can’t really turn down this opportunity. It wasn’t easy to get ready for this, with no motivation for a season, but I actually am in a pretty good spot with my arm. I’ll be fine. If they need me, I’ll be ready.”

Kershaw said he has kept in touch with his old Dodgers teammates, with some connecting on video calls from the weight room or clubhouse at Camelback Ranch. He arrived in the Phoenix area two days before the workout, but he skipped a trip to Camelback Ranch.

“I’ve thought about it,” he said. “I miss the guys. I think it’s probably just better, at least for this first year, for me mentally to just stay away, just for spring training.”

Kershaw said he would be at Dodger Stadium for the championship ring ceremony March 27.

He is content with what he calls “Dad life.” He and his wife, Ellen, just welcomed their fifth child, and Dad life includes lots of shuttles to baseball and basketball practice.

Read more:Shaikin: In L.A. and in Cooperstown, Freddie Freeman will forever be a Dodger, not a Brave

“I run an Uber service,” Kershaw said.

This wouldn’t be a Dodgers story these days without some reference to the team’s big spending so, for what it’s worth, Kershaw spent some time Tuesday chatting with Skubal, who will be the grand prize on the free-agent market next winter, or whenever the likely lockout might end.

That’s a rational explanation, Kershaw says, for Skubal pitching just once in the WBC.

“Everybody knows the situation he is in, contract-wise,” Kershaw said. "Any innings we can get out of him is a huge bonus to this team. He’s great. Super competitive. We’re honored to have him.”

Should we assume Skubal will be pitching for the Dodgers next season? Kershaw laughed.

“No comment,” he said, then walked away to get ready for the first game of his post-retirement life.

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

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

SOS Suns: How a short-handed masterclass against the Lakers might have saved the season

PHOENIX, AZ - FEBRUARY 26: Royce O'Neale #00 and Collin Gillespie #12 of the Phoenix Suns celebrate after the game against the Los Angeles Lakers on February 26, 2026 at Mortgage Matchup Center in Phoenix, Arizona. 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 Barry Gossage/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Alright, this won’t be as dramatic as the title, but man… what an important win that was. It’s been 84 years since the last Suns game with this random massive gap in the schedule, so let’s rewind a bit.

With 0.9 seconds on the clock, Royce O’Neale buried a corner three, assisted by Collin Gillespie, but originally created by a sweeping Grayson Allen drive and kick to CG in the corner, who found Royce. That clutch three secured a 113-110 win. It wasn’t just a win. It was a firm reminder that the Suns have no intention of sinking into the Play-In abyss.

If you’ve been watching the Phoenix Suns over the last two weeks, you’ve probably been pulling your hair out. I know I have. Before Thursday night, the vibes were, frankly, in the dumps. We were looking at a team that had dropped six of its last eight, an offense that looked like it was stuck in a mud pit, and a rotation decimated by injuries to Devin Booker, Dillon Brooks, and Jordan Goodwin.

Fast forward to the closing seconds against the Los Angeles Lakers at the Footprint Center. The Suns had blown a 12-point fourth-quarter lead. LeBron James had just tipped in a game-tying bucket with 22 seconds left. The ghosts of “disappointing stretches” were starting to rattle again.

Then, Royce O’Neale happened.

The Tiebreaker + “Win of the Season”

Make no mistake, this was the biggest win of the year. Not because of our hatred for LA (that helps), but because of the math. By taking down the Lakers, the Suns officially secured the season tiebreaker. We are now just one game back from L.A. in the loss column for that coveted No. 6 seed. Despite their recent spiral, the fact that the top-6 is still in play is remarkable, especially with Devin Booker’s return soon.

We saw the Suns return to the basics: scrappy defense, transition buckets, and a “death by Royce O’Neale” finish that Lakers fans will be seeing in their nightmares. It was a rollercoaster of a game, but you’d expect nothing less from these relentless Suns.

Related Read:Was Thursday night the Suns’ best win of the season?

Now, let’s talk about the elephant in the room. Jalen Green.

It is okay to hold players accountable, and right now, the accountability is loud. Green finished with 9 points on 4-of-15 shooting. The iso-ball is getting stagnant, and the 10 assists over his last five games are concerning as well. There are red flags there that are tough to ignore.

I will give him a break for now because he’s currently set up to fail in a system missing its top two scorers while he is trying to trust his body again.

This is a guy who has only played 11 games this season and is clearly still trying to get his legs under him after the recurring hamstring injury. He’s being asked to be Batman when he was brought here to be a high-level Robin. The “perfect storm for failure” is currently swirling around him, but if this inefficiency continues once Book returns, the conversation changes from “he needs time” to “he’s messing with the flow of the offense.”

I truly believe this is the worst he’ll ever look as a Sun, and it’s only uphill from here.

Bright Spots

The brightest spotof last Thursday’s win wasn’t just the final score; it was the continued evolution of Oso Ighodaro. Oso played 34 minutes to Mark Williams’ 13. This season, he has transformed from a tentative rookie we saw a year ago into a decisive attacker who isn’t afraid to mix it up. Jordan Ott is not afraid to close games out with him, and in certain matchups, he prefers it.

This vicious poster on LaRavia was a testament to the player he has slowly become right before our eyes.

Pair him with Rasheer Fleming — who gave us some serious “young Kawhi” defensive vibes while checking LeBron and Luka — and you start to see a viable future for the Suns’ frontcourt. Fleming is a disruptor who can switch everything, and if his three-ball becomes consistent, he is the bridge player this team has been begging for since the Brooks injury.

The Suns shot 50 threes last game. They lived by the long ball and nearly died by it, but that is the modern NBA.

With Devin Booker expected to return soon, the goal is simple: survive and advance. Yes, my basketball brain is ready for March Madness, if you couldn’t tell.

Aaron Judge delivers speech about sacrifice to Team USA ahead of World Baseball Classic

Aaron Judge attempted to fire up Team USA on Monday as it gets ready for the start of the World Baseball Classic this week.

The Yankees outfielder — donning a red, white and blue uniform — got up in front of America’s roster full of All-Stars and delivered a speech that was all about sacrifice and being there for one another.

“We’re going to lay it all on the line,” he said. “If we do that, we’re bringing the gold home, man. I’m telling you.”

Aaron Judge #99 of Team USA talks with Ken Griffey Jr. (L) during a workout at Papago Park Sports Complex on March 02, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) Getty Images

Team USA will kick off its quest to win the WBC on Tuesday, when it plays in an exhibition matchup against the Giants in Scottsdale, Ariz. It will have one more tuneup in the desert on Wednesday against the Rockies.

The Stars and Stripes squad will then fly to Houston for its tournament-opening game against Brazil. Tilts with Great Britain, Mexico and Italy will then follow in the ensuing days.

America is loaded with talent — in addition to Judge, Cal Raleigh, Will Smith, Bryce Harper, Bobby Witt Jr., Kyle Schwarber and more will be available for manager Mark DeRosa.

On the mound, Paul Skenes, Tarik Skubal, Logan Webb, Clayton Kershaw and a host of others have each signed up to pitch for America.

The last time USA participated in the WBC was in 2023, when it fell to Shohei Ohtani and Team Japan in the championship.

Game Preview #62 – Timberwolves vs. Grizzlies

MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE - JANUARY 31: Ty Jerome #2 of the Memphis Grizzlies handles the ball against Jaden McDaniels #3 of the Minnesota Timberwolves during the second half at FedExForum on January 31, 2026 in Memphis, Tennessee. 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 Justin Ford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Minnesota Timberwolves at Memphis Grizzlies
Date: March 3rd, 2026
Time: 7:00 PM CST
Location: Target Center
Television Coverage: FanDuel Sports Network – North
Radio Coverage: Wolves App, iHeart Radio

There’s a very specific kind of confidence that creeps in when you beat the Denver Nuggets on national television. It’s the “we’re back” confidence. And right now, the Minnesota Timberwolves are flirting with that version of themselves.

Six wins in their last seven. A convincing Sunday afternoon win over Jokic and the Nuggets. A leapfrog in the standings. Suddenly they’re sitting tied for the third best record in the West, staring at the Houston Rockets, and licking their chops.

It feels good. It should feel good.

But before we start fantasizing home court in Round 1, let’s take a healthy dose of reality. The margin for error in the West is still razor thin. The Wolves have momentum, but they haven’t exactly looked like world-beaters during this stretch. They’ve won games that should’ve been comfortable by making them unnecessarily dramatic. They’ve flirted with disaster against inferior opponents and needed fourth-quarter gear shifts to survive.

Which brings us to this week’s three-game homestand: Memphis. Toronto. Orlando.

On paper? Bankable wins. In reality? Potential landmines.

Because the Wolves don’t have a “talent” problem. They have a “professional urgency on random Tuesday nights” problem. Which makes this Memphis Grizzlies team one of the most dangerous opponents they could face…


The Setup: The Games You Have to Bank

March is a gauntlet. After this homestand, Minnesota heads west to face both L.A. teams, Golden State, and then south for the fourth and final showdown with OKC. That’s not a sightseeing tour. That’s a standings reshuffle waiting to happen.

So if the Wolves want that three-seed, if they want home court in Round 1, if they want to avoid staring down OKC in the second round like it’s a dentist appointment, they have to stack the games that are sitting right in front of them.

Memphis is one of those. And before you (or the Wolves) begin to mentally add a digit to the win column, stop and remember that these Grizzlies have already beaten Minnesota twice this season. The most recent upset was at the start of February in one of those games where the Wolves assumed they could flip the switch late, only to realize the power had been disconnected.

When we get to April and we’re recapping the “what could have been” portion of the season, those Memphis losses are going to glow in neon. This is a team Minnesota has a clear talent advantage over. And yet, lack of intensity and professionalism already put two notches in the loss column.

They cannot afford a third.


#1: Take This Personally (And Take It Seriously)

The Grizzlies punched Minnesota in the mouth twice. Both times, the Wolves walked in thinking it was a formality. That can’t happen again.

This needs to be one of those games where the Wolves remember the taste of blood. Where they come out like they’ve had this date circled since February 2nd. Where they don’t “feel it out” for a quarter and a half.

Jump on them early. Crank the defensive aggression up immediately. Dive for loose balls. Sprint in transition. End defensive possessions with rebounds. Make Memphis feel like they wandered into the wrong building.

Because if you let them hang around, if you let this become a fourth-quarter coin flip, you’re inviting déjà vu.

And Wolves fans have had enough déjà vu this season to last a lifetime.


#2: Blanket Ty Jerome

Memphis has pivoted away from the core that knocked the Wolves out of the playoffs in 2022. Jaren Jackson Jr. is gone, shipped to Utah at the deadline. Desmond Bane was jettisoned before the season. The identity that once made Memphis dangerous has been dismantled piece by piece. Ja Morant is still there, only because nobody else was eager to take on that particular roller coaster. This is not the same Grizzlies team that one appeared to be the next great Western Conference contender.

But Ty Jerome? He’s real. He already proved a month ago that he can hang with Minnesota and put enough points on the board to steal the game. And if you let him get comfortable, he’ll start doing that annoying thing where role players turn into All-NBA guys for a night.

Anthony Edwards. Ayo Dosunmu. Jalen Clark. Donte DiVincenzo. They all need to take turns sitting in Jerome’s jersey.


#3: Keep Jaden McDaniels Unlocked

Jaden McDaniels is the Wolves’ secret ingredient. When he’s passive, the Wolves are good. When he’s aggressive, they’re terrifying. We saw it against Denver. McDaniels attacking downhill, finishing at the rim, getting high-percentage looks. He tilted the floor.

The Wolves need to treat the next six weeks as a referendum on fully integrating McDaniels as a third pillar of this offense. Not an afterthought. Not a “stand in the corner and wait” guy.

If this team heads into the postseason as a legitimate three-headed monster of Ant, Randle, and McDaniels, that’s a completely different ceiling. Minnesota needs to be done with six-point Jaden games. Finch and the staff need to scheme him into action early. Get him touches. Get him downhill. Let him feel the game.


#4: Keep the Ball Moving

One of the more encouraging trends from Sunday? Edwards passing out of doubles. He didn’t force it against Denver. He trusted the read. He let teammates cook. That’s when Minnesota’s offense feels like a five-lane highway instead of a one-man street.

Memphis probably won’t double Ant the way Denver did. But the philosophy has to stay the same: Share it. Swing it. Keep the defense honest.

There is zero reason for this to devolve into iso-heavy, dribble-the-air-out-of-the-ball basketball. The Wolves are far more dangerous when the ball is whipping around the perimeter and the defense is chasing shadows. This is not a “prove you’re the best player in the building” game. It’s a “prove you’re the most professional team in the building” game.


#5: Defend the Perimeter Like It’s a Playoff Game

The only way Memphis stays alive here is if Minnesota gifts them space with lazy rotations, turnstile perimeter defense., and wide-open threes because someone didn’t feel like tagging the shooter.

Don’t give them that.

If Memphis earns tough buckets, fine, but don’t be the reason they get easy ones. Close out hard. Contain at the point of attack. Rotate with purpose. Make it feel suffocating.

This should be a blowout win. Honestly? Anything less is unacceptable.


The Big Picture: Climb the Ladder, One Rung at a Time

The Wolves did the hard part Sunday.

They beat Denver. They flipped the script. They vaulted in the standings. It was a statement win.

But statement wins only matter if you don’t step on a rake 48 hours later.

The dog days of January and February are behind us. The postseason is visible on the horizon. Now it’s about stacking wins. Banking games you’re supposed to win. Turning momentum into separation.

You want the three-seed? You want home court? You want the opposite side of OKC? Then treat Memphis like what they are right now: a stepping stone.

No coasting. No “we’ll turn it on later.” No letting inferior teams dictate terms.

Keep climbing, one rung at a time.

Memphis is the next grip.