Preview: Bruins visit Nashville for pre-deadline match-up

NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE - OCTOBER 22: Hampus Lindholm #27 of the Boston Bruins skates against Jonathan Marchessault #81 of the Nashville Predators during an NHL game at Bridgestone Arena on October 22, 2024 in Nashville, Tennessee. (Photo by John Russell/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Just the facts

  • When: Tonight, 8 PM
  • Where: Bridgestone Arena – Nashville, TN
  • How to follow: NESN, 98.5 The Sports Hub
  • Opposing perspective:On the Forecheck

Know your enemy

  • 27-26-8, 62PTS, 5th in the Central Division
  • Ryan O’Reilly: 22G-37A-59PTS; Filip Forsberg: 27G-23A-50PTS; Steven Stamkos: 30G-17A-47PTS
  • Juuse Saros: 21-18-6, 3.19 GAA, .892 save percentage

Game notes

  • The Bruins visit Nashville for a brief, one-game road trip prior to Friday’s trade deadline. I don’t know if you can even call it a road trip if it’s for one game. Day trip? Outing?
  • After a trying start to the season, the Predators are hanging around the wild card race in the Western Conference. Nashville is five points behind Seattle, who currently occupy the second spot. There are two teams (Los Angeles and San Jose) between Nashville and Seattle.
  • Having said that, they are fading a bit as of late. Nashville is 1-2-1 coming out of the Olympic break, with three losses in a row. They’re 3-3-4 in their last ten games.
  • These two teams played at TD Garden in late January, a 3-2 OT win for the Bruins. That was the OT game where David Pastrnak scored off of a set play just 15 seconds into the extra session.
  • It sounds crazy to say it for a guy who has been so consistent for so long, but that was actually the last goal Pastrnak scored for the B’s. He’s gone goalless in six games, though he does have three assists in that span.
  • Steven Stamkos is well on his way to eclipsing his production during his first year in Nashville. The longtime Lightning captain had 53 points in 82 games for Nashville last season; this year, he’s already up to 47, including 30 goals, in just 61 games.
  • The Predators are 3-0 in games that have gone to a shootout this season, one of six teams with an unblemished shootout record.
  • On the Bruins front, we’re mostly just waiting to see what happens at the trade deadline at this point. Big deal? Small deal? No deal? Time will tell, I guess.
  • If you’re interested in scoreboard watching tonight, there are a few games that will impact the Eastern Conference wild card/playoff race: Utah vs. Philadelphia, Buffalo vs. Pittsburgh, Florida vs. Columbus, and Ottawa vs. Calgary.

See ya tonight!

Zhang chips in twice to close out a 66 and share the lead at LPGA stop in China

HAINAN ISLAND, China (AP) — Zhang Weiwei chipped in on her last two holes, one for eagle and the other for birdie, giving her a 6-under 66 and a three-way tie for the lead in the Blue Bay LPGA on Thursday.

Zhang, one of 20 players in the field from the China Golf Association, was tied with Mary Liu of China and Youmin Hwang of South Korea. All three of them were solid on a day of strong wind at Jian Lake Blue Bay.

Auston Kim, the American who tied for third last week in the HSBC Women's World Championship in Singapore, shot a 67.

Zhang took advantage of a shorter tee box on the par-5 17th that allowed her to get close enough to the green in two to chip in for eagle. She finished with a chip just off the 18th green about 30 feet from the cup.

“I hit it a bit heavy,” she said of her chip on the 17th. “But the landing spot was perfect and it rolled straight into the hole. That really got me excited and energized.”

Liu birdied four of her last six holes for a 66, while Hwang did her best work around the turn with five birdies in a six-hole stretch in the middle of her round.

Kim had nine birdies, offset by four bogeys, that put her in a tie for third.

“I’m just hitting a couple shots here and there that are really costing me,” Kim said. “Couple three-putts today, and just a couple bad shots off the tee. Overall the rest of it was more solid than before.”

Blue Bay LPGA wraps up a three-tournament swing through Asia for the LPGA with the weakest field of the three. It follows a week in Singapore that had nine of the top 10 in the women's world ranking, missing only Nelly Korda, who again skipped the Asia swing.

Ruoning Yin of China (No. 10) is the only player from the top 10 at Hainan Island. Ruoning, a former Women's PGA champion, opened with a 68.

___

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

Columbus Blue Jackets (70 pts) vs. Florida Panthers (63 pts) Game Preview

The Columbus Blue Jackets are back at home to play the Florida Panthers tonight at 7 PM.

Florida Panthers - 30-28-3 - 63 Points - 2-8-0 in the last 10 - Lost 3 - 8th in the Atlantic

Columbus Blue Jackets - 31-21-8 - 68 Points - 8-1-1 in the last 10 - Won 2 - 4th in the Metro.

Blue Jackets Stats

  • Power Play - 19.6% - 20th in the NHL
  • Penalty Kill - 77.2% - 24th in the NHL
  • Goals For - 187 - 17th in the NHL
  • Goals Against - 190 - 22nd in the NHL 

Panthers Stats

  • Power Play - 19.3% - 21st in the NHL
  • Penalty Kill - 82.4% - 8th in the NHL
  • Goals For - 182 - 19th in the NHL
  • Goals Against - 204 - 25th in the NHL

Series History vs. ThePanthers    

  • Columbus is 26-25-3 all-time, and 16-9-2 at home vs. Florida.
  • Columbus has lost 7 straight games to the Panthers overall, and three straight at home.

Who To Watch For ThePanthers

  • Sam Reinhart leads the Panthers with 28 goals, 29 assists, and 57 points.
  • Brad Marchand 27 goals and 53 points.
  • Sergei Bobrovsky is 22-19-1 with a SV% of .873.
  • Daniil Tarasov is 8-9-2 with a SV% of .903.

CBJ Player Notes vs. Panthers

  • Charlie Coyle has 16 points in 31 games vs. the Panthers.
  • Zach Werenski has 16 career points against Florida.
  • Mason Marchment has 4 points in 6 games against Florida.

Injured Reserve

  • Brendan Smith - Lower Body - Missed 22 Games IR - Out for the rest of the regular season.

***Zach Werenski missed the last 2 games due to illness. 

TOTAL MAN GAMES LOST: 161 

How to Watch & Listen: Tonight's game will be on FANDUEL SPORTS NETWORK. The radio broadcast will be on 97.1 The Fan, with Bob McElligott behind the mic doing the play-by-play.  

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England fall just short against India in epic T20 World Cup semi-final – as it happened

Jacob Bethell’s excellence was still not enough to carry England over the line as India set up a final showdown with New Zealand

England’s first task is to stop Abhishek Sharma and Sanju Samson getting off to a flyer. As Finn Allen showed yesterday, an opener can win a semi-final all by himself.

Will Jacks belts out God Save The King like a peroxide version of a Chelsea pensioner. As soon as it finishes, Harry Brook pops a piece of chewing gum into his mouth. The young chaperones look on with mild curiosity from under their yellow bucket hats.

Continue reading...

Mavericks vs Magic Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

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The Orlando Magic wrap up a four-game homestand with a non-conference NBA matchup against the Dallas Mavericks.

Orlando lives in the half-court, and my Mavericks vs. Magic predictions expect Dallas to struggle to score consistently tonight at the Kia Center. 

Read on for my NBA picks for Thursday, March 5.

Mavericks vs Magic prediction

Mavericks vs Magic best bet: Mavericks team total Under 109.5 (-110)

The Orlando Magic defense can strand the Dallas Mavericks in the half-court for long stretches, and the visitors aren't explosive enough to score more than 110 points.  

Even if the Mavericks hang around, their scoring comes in spurts, and Orlando is good at taking away easy points, as evidenced by their 109 points-per-game allowed across their last five contests. 

Orlando’s defense is stout, and its snail-paced offense won’t allow Dallas to jack up the tempo or to have enough successful offensive possessions to clear its team total.

Mavericks vs Magic same-game parlay

Orlando lives in the half-court, and that’s a tough setup for both Naji Marshall and Cooper Flagg.

Marshall must score against a physical Magic perimeter and interior defense, and if Flagg plays, he’s likely on a minutes restriction, which makes it hard to reach 19+ points against Orlando.

Mavericks vs Magic SGP

  • Mavericks team total Under 110.5
  • Naji Marshall Under 16.5 points
  • Cooper Flagg Under 18.5 points

Our "from downtown" SGP: Suggs to be You

Jalen Suggs went 0-for-2 from three against Washington, but he’s hit at least two deep balls in three of his previous five games.

Mavericks vs Magic SGP

  • Mavericks team total Under 110.5
  • Naji Marshall Under 16.5 points
  • Cooper Flagg Under 18.5 points
  • Jalen Suggs Over 1.5 made threes

Mavericks vs Magic odds

  • Spread: Mavericks +8.5 (-110) | Magic -8.5 (-110)
  • Moneyline: Mavericks +280 | Magic -360
  • Over/Under: Over 228.5 (-110) | Under 228.5 (-110)

Mavericks vs Magic betting trend to know

The Dallas Mavericks have hit the 2H Game Total Under in 13 of their last 18 away games (+7.41 Units / 36% ROI). Find more NBA betting trends for Mavericks vs. Magic.

How to watch Mavericks vs Magic

LocationKia Center, Orlando, FL
DateThursday, March 5, 2026
Tip-off7:00 p.m. ET
TVKFAA, FDSN Florida

Mavericks vs Magic latest injuries

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Jaylen Brown shoulders the blame after ‘uncharacteristic’ Celtics loss to Hornets

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - MARCH 04: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics and LaMelo Ball #1 of the Charlotte Hornets reach for the ball during the second half at the TD Garden on March 04, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Brian Fluharty/Getty Images) | Getty Images

BOSTON — Jaylen Brown wasn’t at his sharpest Wednesday night against the Hornets. He missed four of his first six shots and four of his final six as the Celtics suffered a lopsided 118–89 defeat at TD Garden.

“I take accountability,” Brown said. “I gotta be better at the rim and play with more energy.”

Brown’s first three shots were all within 12 feet of the rim, and all three missed. He proceeded to miss six more from within six feet before finishing 7-for-19 with 20 points, 11 rebounds, and three turnovers. Both Brown’s scoring and playmaking proved unreliable, turning what began as a first-quarter 7-for-23 Celtics slump into a contagious burden that prevented anyone from finding a rhythm.

Charlotte’s defense smothered Boston so effectively that it held the Celtics to fewer than 23 points for three quarters.

“That wasn’t Celtics basketball,” Brown said. “They had more energy than us. Usually, that doesn’t happen a lot all season long. Today wasn’t the best example of Celtics basketball, and we all can be better. Being the leader, I take accountability.”

Brown tried to revive the Celtics. In the second quarter, he poster-dunked over 6-foot-10 center Moussa Diabaté in an attempt to motivate the rest of the team. The energy lift lasted only a few moments before Charlotte closed the frame with a 64-43 halftime lead. Brown’s latest dunk-of-the-year submission wasn’t enough to swing the pendulum in Boston’s favor. The shooting woes, turnovers, and unlikely brand of basketball that prompted halftime boos among the over 19,000 fans in attendance remained stuck to the Celtics.

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS – MARCH 04: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics passes the ball past Kon Knueppel #7 of the Charlotte Hornets during the first half at the TD Garden on March 04, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Brian Fluharty/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In the third quarter, Brown’s right-handed layup attempt was blocked by Ryan Kalkbrenner. Brown immediately looked toward the officials, shouting while holding his right arm. Seconds later, he was charged with a his career-high ninth technical foul of the season, allowing Colby White to visit the charity stripe and extend Charlotte’s lead to 20 points with 11.4 seconds remaining.

No matter where the Celtics looked, they couldn’t find an answer.

Hornets coach Charles Lee’s offense, on the other hand, never took its foot off the gas. Charlotte recorded 26 assists to Boston’s 18 and scored 22 fast-break points, while the Celtics finished with nine.

Part of Boston’s internal makeup that has made the Celtics one of the most dominant teams in the NBA this season is their ability to outwork opponents. Regardless of who’s healthy, they’ve been able to rely on their all-or-nothing commitment to make up for any star-power gap or unfavorable matchup. This time, that wasn’t the case, and Brown called it out.

“We weren’t the harder-playing team tonight on either side of the ball,” Brown said. “Uncharacteristic of us.”

In addition to getting outworked, key contributors to Boston’s offense became complete non-factors. Payton Pritchard went scoreless for the second time in three games, this time shooting 0-for-6, including 0-for-5 from three. Nikola Vučević scored only eight points, shooting 2-for-10 with only four rebounds. Everyone on Charlotte’s sideline whom Lee played registered a positive plus-minus, as the Hornets outscored the Celtics 44-26 in bench points.

“We just didn’t have it tonight,” Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla said.

Failing to convert at the rim wasn’t just Brown’s problem; it plagued Boston’s entire offense.

“We went 4-for-18 from layups, so I don’t really know what else to tell you,” Mazzulla said. “That was in the first half. We went 11-for-33 in the game, and brought it up to 33 percent.”

As Mazzulla saw it, Boston’s misses constantly turned into fast-break opportunities for Charlotte, who capitalized on easy baskets. The Celtics committed 15 turnovers, which the Hornets converted into 21 points. Poor ball protection and the inability to finish at the rim quickly caught up to Boston. Charlotte had little trouble maintaining its double-digit lead, as the Celtics were unintentionally blueprinting their own undoing.

Nobody in the locker room was overly concerned with the loss. They were more focused on learning from their mistakes. That’s the Mazzulla way.

“I think we had a lot of good looks,” Derrick White said. “There’s a lot of layups we missed, a lot of open looks that we missed, and honestly, we’re gonna look back and see some things that we should’ve done better. But I think overall it was pretty good. We just gotta execute better.”

Phillies News: Jhoan Duran, Bryce Harper, Johan Rojas

Mar 4, 2026; Clearwater, FL, USA; Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Jhoan Duran (59) throws a pitch during the fourth inning against Team Canada at BayCare Ballpark. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images | Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

The World Baseball Classic officially got underway last night with the first game in the Tokyo Dome that featured Chinese Taipei and Australia. There are a couple of lower-level Phillies prospects on Team Australia, but most of the names you would recognize won’t start official WBC play until tomorrow. Meanwhile, we still have plenty of meaningless spring training games to satiate your appetite!

On to the links.

Phillies news:

MLB news:

Swanson: The Lakers are the wrong kind of interesting amid relentless fan scrutiny

Lakers guard Luka Doncic complains about a call while guard Marcus Smart celebrates hitting a three-pointer.
Lakers guard Luka Doncic complains to the officials while guard Marcus Smart celebrates after making a three-pointer against the Pelicans at Crypto.com Arena on Tuesday night. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

Gap year, huh? Who cares! No one is turning down the volume on the Lakers. No one is turning down the heat.

The scrutinizing and psychoanalyzing continues like Luka Doncic screaming at the refs — incessantly, and with impressive stamina. About as loudly too. “Our losses,” Lakers coach JJ Redick recently said, “are louder than other teams' because we’re the Lakers.”

Every other team in the NBA gets graded on a curve; bad breaks and reasonable expectations are accounted for in the score at season’s end.

The Lakers are a pass-fail upper-level course; they either win a championship or they fail.

They’re 37-24 but still would consider dropping the class if they could — but they can’t. So they’re forging on, trying to figure it out, their window closing and their fans’ frustration growing.

“I think it's awesome,” guard Austin Reaves said of the bright — no, blinding — lights trained constantly on the team.

Lakers coach JJ Redick directs his team during a win over the Pelicans at Crypto.com Arena on Tuesday.
Lakers coach JJ Redick directs his team during a win over the Pelicans at Crypto.com Arena on Tuesday. (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

“I think it's one of the best — if not the best organization — in all of sports. With that comes …”

Great responsibility? Golden opportunity?

“… honestly, chaos.”

By which Reaves meant: “If it’s good, it’s great. And if it’s bad, it’s miserable. They expect to win games, the fans do. And that’s what we’re here to do, we’re here to win and win at a high level. We know that.”

That’s why Redick signed up to come coach them, he said. “My own personal psychosis,” he called it. He swears he wants the smoke.

Read more:All five starters score in double figures as Lakers defeat the Pelicans

“The reality is everybody is going to always have an opinion,” Redick said Tuesday before his team toughed out a 110-101 victory against the New Orleans Pelicans, who are healthier than they have been but still are 19-44. “Since pro sports have existed, everybody has always had an opinion. There’s been sports talk, there’s been barber shops, chat rooms. Everybody’s had an opinion. Now, everybody’s opinion is more easily accessible. It’s just more amplified now, but it’s normal.”

And then he interrupted a question to return to a previous query about his play calling, needing to rebut the strangers on the internet picking apart his work. “I’m always fascinated by that, by the way,” Redick said. “How do you know we’re calling plays or not calling plays? … That’s fascinating. That’s really interesting.”

That’s the Lakers. Interesting, even when they aren’t necessarily, basketball-wise. The front office chose to protect future cap space and draft capital rather than substantively improve the team now around Doncic and LeBron James. And the players play like they realize most of them likely are not part of long-term plans.

And who else but the Lakers to provide some spice during the drab stretch of the season between the trade deadline and the playoffs?

There’s no team with a greater ratio of molehills turned into mountains, so of course it was national news when Redick and Doncic had a disagreement on the bench during Saturday’s win at the Golden State Warriors. It was no big deal, and they laughed about it later, Redick insisted Tuesday.

“I didn’t feel any tension. He was like, ‘Nah, I didn’t care about it,’" Redick said of Doncic. "You do it and you move on.”

Lakers guard Austin Reaves dribbles around Pelicans forward Herbert Jones on Tuesday at Crypto.com Arena.
Lakers guard Austin Reaves dribbles around Pelicans forward Herbert Jones on Tuesday at Crypto.com Arena. (Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times)

Move on, knowing every interaction and play call and result will be dissected and debated.

So Doncic can lead the league in scoring (32.4 points per game) and average the third-most assists (8.6) but have his defensive limitations and incessant and unproductive banter with officials get the most attention from some critics.

And so the Lakers, 1½ games out of third place, are impressing no one. Not when they’re 14-18 against teams that are .500 or better. Not when they’re 1-8 against the league’s top four teams, those losses against the Oklahoma City Thunder, San Antonio Spurs, Detroit Pistons and Boston Celtics coming by an average of 20 points.

A bummer for the Lakers that they’ll have to face good teams in the playoffs.

Competent teams with heart and want-to, like the Denver Nuggets, who are next on the docket Thursday.

Read more:Lakers hope comeback win over Pelicans gives the team a timely boost

At 38-24 and a half-game ahead of the Lakers, star center Nikola Jokic’s squad is always formidable — and looking to avenge a loss to Redick’s team in their first matchup, 115-107 in a game Jokic didn’t play.

An ‘A’ game from the Lakers in Denver? Now, that would be worth talking about. That would be pretty interesting — though we’ll be digging in and discussing it, either way. With the volume cranked all the way up.

Sign up for our weekly newsletter on all things Lakers.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Open Thread: Victor Wembanyama only took five shots in drubbing of 76ers

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MARCH 01: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs looks on during the third quarter of the game against the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden on March 01, 2026 in New York City. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Dustin Satloff/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Oh, man, am I ready for the Spurs to be home. Probably not as ready as they are after all the time on the road, but excited all the same.

The Rodeo Road Trip was a huge success and nearly perfect, sans the loss in Madison Square Garden.

That said, following up the loss with a throttling two nights later put some icing on the cake. Sure, the 76ers were on a limited roster, but it was how the Spurs played that transcended the rival or location of the opponent.

One interesting fact- Victor Wembanyama took only five shots.

When your top player can have a lower scoring game and your team is up by over 30, you’ve got the gears turning nicely. It’s not that Wemby had a bad game — he was hinting at a 5×5 pretty early on — but he certainly didn’t have to be the scoring focal point to make his presence known.

In fact, at the end of it all, Devin Vassell walked off the court with the second highest plus/minus in franchise history. His +43 was only two points below Tim Duncan’s +45. You’re always in good company when being roped into a conversation with The Bog Fundamental.

In addition, eight Spurs scored in double digits, which is closer to par for the course considering that eight Spurs players currently maintain scoring averaging in double digits. If this trend stands, it will be the first time in NBA history for that accomplishment.

But shared scoring and even keeled playing has become more the norm for the Silver & Black. The Spurs are winning over 70% of their games whether Wemby suits up or not. The team went 10-4 when he was sidelined in from mid-November to mid-December. By comparison, they are 34-13 when he has been available.

No matter who starts, who plays, or who serves as the team’s high scorer, it will be great to be back in the Frost Bank Center, celebrating the team’s return, and cheering them on with 18,418 fans.

Go Spurs Go!


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The future of the Phoenix Suns center rotation may be complicated

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 03: Oso Ighodaro #11 of the Phoenix Suns slam dunks against the Sacramento Kings in the second half of an NBA basketball game at Golden 1 Center on March 03, 2026 in Sacramento, 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 Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Phoenix Suns have a very good big-picture “problem” right now.

The status of Mark Williams’ injury does not change the point of this piece. He has, to this point, been the healthiest he has of his career. This article was in progress before this announcement came out, for what it’s worth. This is more about this trio of centers coexisting in the short-term, but also discussing a tough decision this summer.

Oso Ighodaro is routinely looking like the best center on the Suns roster of late, and Jordan Ott is rewarding him. That reward comes to the detriment of Mark Williams’ time on the floor. With Williams out tonight and Nick Richards now out of the picture, that leaves Khaman Maluach as their backup center to Oso Ighodaro, who will shift into the starting lineup.

In Tuesday’s win over the Sacramento Kings, Ighodaro delivered one of his strongest games of the season, finishing with 14 points and 14 rebounds in a performance that helped Phoenix complete a season series sweep and fortify a balanced attack on both ends.

Last night’s performance wasn’t a fluke or one-off. It’s who he has morphed into after a slow start to the season.

This season has seen Ighodaro evolve from a role player into something closer to a defensive anchor and offensive facilitator, the kind of glue guy that isn’t always obvious in highlight reels but impacts the flow of a game. He is one of the few Suns players to see consistent minutes across most of the schedule, and his ability to set screens, read cuts, make plays out of short rolls, and contest at the rim has made the Suns tougher to dissect for opposing defenses. He’s an easy player to take for granted.

At just 23 years old, Ighodaro has the length, motor, and IQ to be a disruptive presence on both ends of the floor. His season averages (around 5.8 points, 4.7 rebounds, and 2.0 assists on about 63.5 percent shooting) may not jump off the stat sheet, but they hide the nuance of his role, especially how he makes life easier for Phoenix’s primary creators and how his activity on defense frequently leads to transition opportunities.

Ighodaro’s rise, however, complicates things when you look at the other pieces at the Suns’ disposal.

Mark Williams entered this season as Phoenix’s presumptive starting center and center of the future after they dealt two first-round picks to acquire him. As we all know, he will be a restricted free agent this offseason, which means the team will have to weigh his performance, fit, and injury history when negotiations come. At full strength, Williams offers size, finishing ability, and rebounding that a contending team needs, but that same size and impact are now being challenged by Ighodaro’s ascendance. Williams has been solid, but he has his moments where he can fade. I’m not sure a heavy investment at the center position makes sense with Oso Ighodaro and lottery pick, Khaman Maluach patiently waiting.

Maluach has not been rushed. His development has been methodical, with much of his early seasoning coming through the G League and spot minutes in Phoenix. That approach was intentional, and Maluach was seen as raw when he arrived, and the team has tried to ease him into physical NBA action rather than bury him under early expectations. With Richards shipped out and Williams out, this will serve as an opportunity for him to show he can make an impact in meaningful minutes.

For now, Ighodaro sits at the tip of the spear in Phoenix’s frontcourt. His performances have changed how Ott deploys personnel, how opponents match up, and how the Suns think about the position going forward. Williams’ contributions give the team stability, and Maluach’s development provides optimism for years beyond this one.

Balancing all three is not simple. But it is a sign of organizational depth, and the kind of complexity a team on the rise usually welcomes, even if it keeps fans talking. In the meantime, all the focus is on optimizing this current version of the Suns’ center rotation, which looks as strong and promising as ever.

Game Preview: Buffalo Sabres @ Pittsburgh Penguins 3/5/2026

PITTSBURGH, PA - NOVEMBER 26: Tage Thompson #72 of the Buffalo Sabres handles the puck against the Pittsburgh Penguins at PPG PAINTS Arena on November 26, 2025 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Who:Buffalo Sabres (36-19-6, 78 points, 2nd place Atlantic Division) @ Pittsburgh Penguins (31-16-13, 75 points, 2nd place Metropolitan Division)

When: 7:00 p.m. eastern

How to Watch: National game on ESPN, streaming on ESPN+

Pens’ Path Ahead: Another weekend back-to-back awaits, this time with home games against the Flyers on Saturday (5:30pm start) and then the clocks jump forward for a body 22-hour-later 4:30pm Sunday start against the Bruins. After that, the Pens start a five-game road trip from March 10-18 that begins and ends in Carolina with a lot of miles in between (Vegas next Thursday, Utah next Saturday and Colorado the following Monday) stops in the Tarheel state.

Opponent Track: In a sea of surprising teams this season, no team is more shockingly over-performing original expectations than the once-lowly Sabres. It’s looking like Western NY will see the playoffs for the first time since 2011, their Sabres have won all four games coming out of the Olympic break and showing no signs of slowing down. Most recently Buffalo beat Vegas 3-2 on Tuesday, they also took down both Florida teams on the road last week.

Season Series: The Penguins are 2-0 against Buffalo, looking for a season sweep tonight after beating Buffalo 4-2 back on November 26th and taking a 5-2 win on February 5th. Lately beating up on the Sabres would garner a shrug, it stands out a lot more this year.

Silly Stat: The Pens are 7-2-1 with their yellow third jerseys this season. For an even deeper dive, the Pens happen to be 6-0-0 on Thursday’s on the same day ‘The Pitt’, an HBOMax hospital drama set in Pittsburgh, has been released. That streak will be on the line with another episode of the show coming out today.

Getting to know the Sabres

Projected lines

FORWARDS

Peyton Krebs – Tage Thompson – Alex Tuch

Jason Zucker – Ryan McLeod – Jack Quinn

Noah Ostlund – Josh Norris – Josh Doan

Zach Benson – Tyson Kozak – Brock Malenstyn

DEFENSEMEN

Matthias Samuelsson / Rasmus Dahlin

Bowen Byram / Owen Power

Zach Metsa / Michael Kesselring

Goalies: Alex Lyon, Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen and Colten Ellis

Potential scratches: Josh Dunne, Jacob Bryson

Injured Reserve: Conor Timmins, Jordan Greenway, Justin Danforth, Jiri Kulich

  • The Sabres are uniquely constructed in that all four of their best defensemen happen to be left handed. That might be about to change — as of 9:00pm last night St. Louis and Buffalo reportedly have a trade made, pending Colton Parayko’s no trade clause approval, to send the Team Canada member east. Seems doubtful Parayko would make it to Pittsburgh and play tonight if the transaction gets hammered out in time but if he decides to come it will finally add a marquee right shot defender to the club.
  • Assuming he’s not a part of the incomplete-at-press-time trade, this will be Josh Norris’s fifth game back from his latest injury (2G+1A in the first four back, including a two-goal effort against Tampa last week) and his first time playing against the Pens since the preseason. Can’t get over how dominant he was in those games, if Norris can stay in the lineup (he’s only played 23 games this season) he could add a whole new dimension to Buffalo’s attack. Unfortunately, staying in the lineup for prolonged periods of time has been a weakness to this point.
  • Speaking of injuries, an underrated part of the Penguins flipping Timmins for the 39th pick in last year’s draft is in the timing. Timmins’ career has been checkered by injuries. Other than last year’s 68 total games between PIT/TOR, his previous seasons of games played (combining NHL and AHL) are: 42, 37, 6, 33, 25 and now 33, not counting a full season missed at what should have been the start of his career in 2018-19. To get a good draft piece from a guy who has missed more time than he played was a nice outcome for Pittsburgh, though sad to see Timmins land back on the IR again.

Season stats
via hockeydb

  • Lyon and Luukkonen have split the last four games since the Olympic break, with each playing twice and each playing rather well (Lyon has allowed four goals in his two games, Luukkonen gave up only three, both with save percentages north of .948% in the small sample). That means the Pens figure to see a goalie in good form tonight, no matter which one Buffalo decides to play.
  • Jack Hughes obviously had the ultimate star turn for the Olympics with his golden goal, a level down from there Tage Thompson was really good too. Thompson has kept it in gear, scoring 3G+2A in four games since returning. He also found the back of the net in the last PIT/BUF game in early February.
  • Rasmus Dahlin is always a visible player, he’s out there over 24 minutes per game for starters. Dahlin has put up 1G+4A in the last two games. When listing the reasons of ‘why is Buffalo good now’, pretty high up on the list is Dahlin who has put up 33 points (10G+23A) in the last 31 games of this growing sample of the Sabres’ becoming a wagon.

Key to the game: Sabres shooting vs. Pittsburgh defense/goalie

Since Buffalo’s turnaround on December 9th (they’re 25-5-2 since then, easily the best record in the league since that point), they’re shooting an NHL-high 13.9%. They don’t tend to dominate the puck and crush teams in that regard — their average shots per game are 27.0 – 30.2 in this stretch — but when they do create chances, they have been finishing them with impressive frequency.

That could be an issue for Pittsburgh, or certainly an area to watch- we saw them get disconnected and overreact in a five-man tandem all chasing the puck like peewees after they overcommitted to a corner in the first place against Boston on Casey Mittlestadt’s goal. That caused Dan Muse to use his timeout to somewhat uncharacteristically shout and chastise his team over the lapse. The Pens didn’t give up a goal or play a sequence that bad again against the Bruins, but by that point the damage was done. Any slips like that tonight are more than likely going to wind up in the net with the way the Sabres have been playing in the offensive zone this season. It’s tough to play a completely perfect and clean game against NHL-caliber competition, especially for a team like the Sabres that has grown immensely with their confidence and ability to strike. The Pens and their attention to detail will have their work cut out for them tonight, how they’re able to handle that could tip the balance in this tilt.

And now for the Pens

Projected lines 

FORWARDS

Egor Chinakhov  – Tommy Novak – Evgeni Malkin

Rickard Rakell – Ben Kindel – Bryan Rust

Anthony Mantha – Kevin Hayes – Justin Brazeau

Avery Hayes – Connor Dewar – Noel Acciari

DEFENSEMEN

Parker Wotherspoon / Erik Karlsson

Sam Girard / Kris Letang

Ryan Shea / Connor Clifton

Goalies: Arturs Silovs (Stuart Skinner played last game)

Potential Scratches: Blake Lizotte (day-to-day injury), Ryan Graves, Ilya Solovyov

IR: Sidney Crosby, Filip Hallander, Jack St. Ivany

  • The Penguins had an off day yesterday after returning from Boston. They now gear up for another stretch of three-games-in-four days starting today after just ending a three-in-four stretch on Tuesday. And the beat goes on..
  • Is it too early to hope Lizotte’s day-to-day injury is on the shorter end for a return tonight? Possibly, though more information could be revealed by potential participation at the morning skate coming up. The team could surely use Lizotte coming back ASAP given the state of their center depth chart these days that contains possibly only two actual NHL-quality centers (Dewar has certainly been an NHL-quality winger, filling in on a pinch, to his credit, and Kevin Hayes, well, he is a great guy!)..A three day recovery for Lizotte to make it back in time for tonight feels a little more on the hopeful end of the spectrum than anything else, but it doesn’t cost anything to hope.

Geno with the home cookin’

No one has felt more at home on their own ice these days than Evgeni Malkin, currently on a 10-game point streak at PPG Paints. From Pens PR:

Evgeni Malkin has been hot at home as of late with 12 points (2G-10A) in his last 10 games. He currently has the longest active home point streak in the NHL:

Longest Active Home Point Streaks, NHL

Name                   Streak    Dates                                  G            A            PTS

Evgeni Malkin      10          Jan. 8 – Present                 2            10          12
Rasmus Dahlin    8            Jan. 12 – Present               2            8            10
Tim Stutzle           7            Jan. 13 – Present               4            6            10
Matt Boldy            7            Jan. 15 – Present               2            9            11
Quinn Hughes      7            Jan. 22 – Present               1            11          12

With a point tonight, Malkin would have his first home point streak of at least 11 games since January 20 – February 26, 2022 (11 GP; 5G-8A). He has the longest home point streak this season by a Penguin.     

Playoff implications

It’s that time of year to white-knuckle it over every out of town score and point gained or lost. Here’s what hockeystats.com has with their model for the Pens’ outlook based on tonight, entering the day with an 85% chance of the playoffs

Based on this game alone the percentages go up by five points with a win, down four with a regulation loss and hold serve with an OT/SO loss. The next game against Philadelphia (still a mathematical challenge to the Pens’ spot in the Metropolitan Division) will figure to be a more statistically important game, but the biggest one is always the next one on deck.

Orioles news: Kittredge out for Opening Day, Wells stepping up

SARASOTA, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 12: Andrew Kittredge #39 of the Baltimore Orioles pitches during practice at Ed Smith Stadium on February 12, 2026 in Sarasota, Florida. (Photo by Todd Olszewski/Baltimore Orioles/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Hello, friends.

There are now three weeks remaining until Orioles Opening Day. Between now and March 23 are more exhibition games that will hopefully help the team set a successful roster. They travel to play the Rays today, a game that will not be televised by either team and will only have a radio broadcast from the Rays side. Those are not my favorite spring training games.

Yesterday’s contest saw the Orioles lose to the Astros, 4-2. There was some sloppiness, including two runs that scored on the same strikeout – yeah, really – Pete Alonso getting thrown out by a mile trying to score, and Colton Cowser getting picked off first base. Reliever Keegan Akin gave up another run. The results aren’t there for him so far this spring. There is time to turn it around, but it seems like there’s some reliever every year who stinks in spring training and that’s just who he is this year. Akin would only be following in Cionel Pérez’s footsteps if he ended up that way.

One guy who IS getting the results is Vance Honeycutt. Oh yeah, he did it again. The outfield prospect whose 2025 season made him look like a complete bust hit another homer yesterday, which makes it four home runs in four at-bats. If you haven’t seen the video yet, trust me and watch this:

Holy mackerel. This latest blast from Honeycutt came off of a Triple-A pitcher for the Astros named Miguel Ullola. That’s not quite as impressive as hitting a homer off an MLB-experienced pitcher – which Honeycutt has done before, just to be clear – but it’s still a tougher pitcher than he was facing last year in High-A. It’s early yet to proclaim there’s something real going on here. He’s going to have to do this in real games, at multiple levels, before he can overcome last year’s track record. But, you know, maybe?

Not all news was good in Orioles camp yesterday. Manager Craig Albernaz revealed before Wednesday’s game that reliever Andrew Kittredge, who the Orioles went out of their way to re-acquire back in November, is suffering from shoulder inflammation. Kittredge is “a low probability for Opening Day,” and Albernaz also said “we don’t want to put any timetable on him,” which probably means a while. A bullpen that is light on proven names gets even thinner. Time will tell us if “sign only Ryan Helsley to improve the relief corps” was a good offseason strategy.

Helsley pitched a scoreless inning yesterday. So did Dietrich Enns, another expected Opening Day reliever. Tyler Wells struck out three batters over two scoreless innings. He’s yet to allow a run this spring. People have wanted Wells in the Orioles bullpen for a few years now and it might be happening this year at last, out of necessity but hopefully also because of performance.

Orioles stuff you might have missed

Vance Honeycutt’s stunning home run streak gives hope for a slow-starting career (The Baltimore Banner)
The general sports columnists, too, have taken note of Honeycutt’s fascinating little spring accomplishment. He’s the only guy in all of spring training with four homers!

Kittredge’s shoulder injury, Wells’s role out of bullpen, Bautista’s progress after surgery (School of Roch)
It would be pretty funny, in a morbid way, if the Orioles traded Kittredge away at the right time only to trade for him again at the wrong time. At least they’ve still got prospect Wilfri De La Cruz out of the deal.

Do the Orioles have enough in the back end of their bullpen? (Steve on Baseball)
Steve Melewski observes there isn’t much of a backup plan if Helsley comes out of the gate looking as bad as he did with the Mets to close out last season.

Jackson Holliday to begin hitting with surgically repaired hand (The Baltimore Sun)
A solid incremental update, although not one that’s going to change the picture that he’s going to miss some time in the regular season.

Guest coaches Ben McDonald and Scott McGregor share their wisdom (Baltimore Baseball)
Albernaz said of these two and other guest coaches, “They’re great mental skills coaches.” McDonald is apparently a lot more excited about Orioles minor league pitchers than he was four or five years ago.

Birthdays and Orioles anniversaries

Today in 1996, the Veterans Committee selected Earl Weaver for the Baseball Hall of Fame. His legend needs no elaboration in Birdland.

There are a few former Orioles who were born on this day. They are: 2012-13 three-gamer L.J. Hoes, 2002-07 pitcher Érik Bédard, 1993-98 outfielder Jeffrey Hammonds, and 2000-01 pitcher José Mercedes. Today is Mercedes’s 55th birthday, so an extra happy birthday to him.

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday to you! Your birthday buddies for today include: cartographer Gerardus Mercator (1512), magician Penn Jillette (1955), voice actor Yuri Lowenthal (1971), and singer-songwriter Madison Beer (1999).

On this day in history…

In 1770, British soldiers opened fire on a crowd of colonists in Boston, Massachusetts, killing five people. Though several years passed before ongoing open hostilities, this event proved a key rallying cry in the drive for independence for the North American colonies.

In 1872, engineer George Westinghouse received a patent for his air brake, the principle of which still forms the core of brakes on trains to this day.

In 1946, once and future British prime minister Winston Churchill gave a speech at Westminster College in Missouri where he coined the now-famous phrase “Iron Curtain” regarding the wall separating Soviet-controlled countries from the rest of the world.

In 1953, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, who had been in power for more than 30 years, died days after suffering a cerebral hemorrhage.

A random Orioles trivia question

I received a little book of Orioles trivia questions for Christmas. I’ll ask a question in this space each time it’s my turn until I run out of questions or forget. I’ve been skipping stupid or incredibly easy questions, so we’re already on #56. In the book, they’re multiple choice answers, but that would be too easy here, wouldn’t it? Here’s today’s question:

How many members of the 500 home run club played for the Orioles during their careers?

Manny Machado, sitting on 369 home runs heading into his age 33 season, might well add one more to the tally before he’s done. He sure doesn’t count yet, though. If you were wondering, our recently signed Polar Bear Pete Alonso has 264 home runs. If he averages at least 35 home runs per year with the Orioles, he might get on the list before his career is done too.

**

And that’s the way it is in Birdland on March 5. Have a safe Thursday.

10 Takeaways from Celtics’ stinging loss to Hornets

Boston, MA - March 4 - Celtics bench can't bear to watch as the Charlotte Hornets build a lead over the Boston Celtics during the second half of an NBA game at TD Garden. (Photo By Matt Stone/MediaNews Group/Boston Herald via Getty Images) | MediaNews Group via Getty Images

1. Lack of Effort

Coming off a blowout win against the Milwaukee Bucks on Monday, the Celtics got a taste of their own medicine against the Charlotte Hornets, getting crushed 118-89. This game was a rough watch all the way around. It felt like the Hornets had a 20+ point lead in this game from the start and the Celtics just didn’t match the intensity.

In the postgame press conference, Joe Mazzulla stressed the fact that Boston was 4-18 on layups in the first half and went 11-33 for the game. Charlotte also finished with 22 fast break points, showcasing Boston’s lack of transition defense.

2. Awful Shooting Night

The missed layups were a small part of the overall issue with the Celtics offense. Boston shot 30-79 (38%) from the field and 10-36 (28%) from three. Boston’s offense was so bad at the half that Brown and White had 30 of Celtics 43 points.

I credit the Hornets defense for really stepping up big and locking down the Celtics in this game. They were able to get great contests on Boston’s shot attempts from beyond the arc, but it also just felt like one of those games where the Celtics couldn’t buy a bucket. In addition to the Celtics struggles, Charlotte also outshot Boston in this game, shooting 41-89 (46%) from the field and 19-49 (39%) from three.

Celtics Shooting Zone Chart (Via NBA.com)

3. Lost the Turnover Battle

One of the best parts of Boston’s game this season has been their ability to both force turnovers while also not giving them up. The Celtics lead the NBA in giving up the least amount of turnovers with 12.2 a game this season and rank 2nd in turnover ratio at 12.8%. In this game against the Hornets however, the Celtics lost the turnover battle, giving up 15 and only forcing 4.

Boston just had too many careless possessions that the Hornets turned into 10 steals and 21 points off turnovers. Some of them were great defensive plays from Charlotte, but a lot of them were just them kicking the ball out of bounds, bad passes, and sloppy play that looked like the Celtics were not prepared to play.

4. Nothing From the Bench

The Hornets bench absolutely dominated the Celtics bench, outscoring them 44-26. Coby White was the main contributor for Charlotte, scoring 17 points on 6-9 shooting while Luka Garza led Boston with 9 points. The biggest problem for the C’s bench was the lack of production from Payton Pritchard and Nikola Vucevic.

Vucevic had a tough night in 17 minutes where he finished with 7 points on 2-10 shooting. Pritchard on the other hand finished with zero points for the second time in three games on 0-6 shooting. I feel like there has to be an injury that Pritchard sustained at some point since coming off the west coast road trip where he dominated to goose eggs twice in a week just feels off.

It wasn’t out of the ordinary to see them struggle, but Boston will need more than 7 combined points out of this pair if they want to make any serious noise against contenders.

5. Derrick White Scoring

In all the negative to take away from this game, Derrick White’s scoring was a real positive. He finished with 29 points on 9-17 shooting. In his last 6 games, White’s shooting has really started to turn around, shooting 42% from the field and 40% from three.

White had 17 of his 25 points in the first half and looked really confident when it came to his floater game. The three point shoot also looked really good despite finishing 3-9 overall. With the playoffs looming, it’s good to see White look like his shot is coming back.

6. Jaylen Brown Weird Night

On the surface it looked like a solid night: 20 points, 11 rebounds, and 7 assists. However, he shot 7-19 from the field, had 3 turnovers and finished as a -20. It was an uncharacteristic night to say the least for Brown, but he did make some incredible plays, including a poster dunk on Moussa Diabaté, but he also had some baffling shot selection and bad turnovers.

Brown said postgame this is a “flush it” type of game and “today was not the best example of Celtic basketball, and we all can be better. And being a leader, I take accountability.”

7. Neemias Queta Injury?

Neemias Queta only played 16 minutes in this game and finished with 2 points and 2 rebounds coming off his career night against Philadelphia on Sunday where he had 27 points and 17 rebounds. The reason for his low minute total came in the first two minutes of the game when he was subbed out by Joe Mazzulla and the athletic trainer came over to check on his knee.

Queta would come back in and play 6 minutes in both the second and third quarters so it didn’t feel like anything serious. He didn’t look his best tonight but when asked about it postgame, Mazzulla said that “he’s good” in regards to the potential injury. There doesn’t seem to be a concern about Queta for right now, but it will be something monitor moving forward.

8. Luka Garza Looked Solid

In the absence of Queta, Luka Garza played some spot minutes in the first quarter and the entirety of the fourth quarter. In this time, he played pretty well, finishing with 9 points on 3-5 shooting. If Queta does have to miss time with this knee injury, it will give Garza a chance to come back in the rotation as the first big off the bench.

His full offensive bag was on display in the fourth quarter where he showed off a deceleration step, a tough shot underneath the basket, and a three pointer. I have faith that Garza will be able to hold up if there is an injury to Queta and the addition of Jayson Tatum at some point will bring more possibilities as a small ball center option.

9. Hugo Gonzalez, Fan Favorite

Coming into this game, Hugo Gonzalez had a career night against the Milwaukee Bucks on Monday where he finished with career highs across the board with 18 points, 16 rebounds, and 3 steals. In this matchup, he had another solid game with 8 points and 6 rebounds, but what was really interesting about his performance was the crowd’s reaction.

Being in the building covering this game, there was a different energy when Hugo entered the game. He got a loud ovation from the crowd every time he touched the ball and it felt like the TD Garden crowd was going crazy. When he knocked down two three pointers in the first quarter, it felt like the crowd was cheering just a little bit louder. When he made a big defensive stop on Coby White, the crowd went berserk.

It might not pickup on the broadcast but you could feel it in the building. Hugo Gonzalez is quickly climbing up the ranks in Celtics fans love and could reach “fan favorite” status if he has any notable playoff performances.

10. Hornets are legit

Don’t look now, but the Charlotte Hornets are becoming a legitimate threat in the Eastern Conference. With their win over the Celtics, they are now 12-3 in their last 15 games and have slayed some of the best teams in the NBA including the Spurs and Rockets. This game was their 6th win in a row and a common theme in all of them is that they have come by a margin of 15+ points. It is tied for the longest streak in NBA history and no team had reached this milestone since the 2017-18 Golden State Warriors.

Charlotte got 56 points out of their three core young players in Kon Knueppel (20), LaMelo Ball (18), and Brandon Miller (18). They also got big contributions out of their depth guys in Coby White and Moussa Diabaté. The Hornets currently sit in 9th place in the Eastern Conference so they would have to escape the Play-In Tournament but if they make the playoffs, they will be a dangerous first round opponent. It would be cool to see a potential matchup between Charlotte and Boston in Round 1, but I would be nervous to face them.

Over the years, the Hornets just seem to have the Celtics number in random points of the season. Former Celtics assistant coach and current Hornets head coach Charles Lee has done an incredible job defending Mazzulla Ball at times and in a playoff setting with nothing to lose for Charlotte, it could be a dog fight.

MLB rookies to watch: Konnor Griffin, Kevin McGonigle look like real deal

It’s perhaps the ultimate rite of spring – poring over prospect ratings, getting too excited over a rookie’s chance to impact their Major League Baseball squad, going nuts over absurdly small samples of fake baseball in Grapefruit and Cactus league exhibitions.

Well, maybe this is the year to revel in it a bit.

Four top prospects have done little to dispel that they may not only be big league-ready, but poised to break through even before the most starry-eyed prospect-head could’ve imagined.

Yes, three weeks remain before Opening Day, plenty of time for twentysomethings to get schooled by superior pitching and steady veterans look more alluring to a manager. Noted.

Let’s take a minute to hone in on four uber prospects who have made the industry take notice with their early performances in camp:

Konnor Griffin, SS, Pirates

Might as well start with the aircraft carrier. Griffin is a teenager, at least until April 24, the game’s top prospect and a dude who has no idea how to tamp down the hype surrounding his name.

Thankfully, the dude finally mixed in a single in an exhibition against Colombia, ending his spring streak of every hit being a gargantuan home run. Alas, those tape-measure shots did little to dull the roar that emerged from a .333/.415/.527 first professional season that started at low A and concluded at Class AA.

At 6-foot-3, 222 pounds, Griffin looks the part and, in his comportment and style of play, acts it as well. Ace Paul Skenes has voiced his support that the kid start in Pittsburgh sooner rather than later.

And for whatever it’s worth, he’s still at shortstop while presumed incumbent Jared Triolo is getting reps at third.

Tea leaves will soon turn to brass tacks. And the most anticipated debut in several years may very well stay on the fast track.

Kevin McGonigle, SS, Tigers

Here’s the deal: The Tigers were a really good team last year, falling short of the ALCS only because the Seattle Mariners outlasted them in a 15-inning elimination game. And the really good team returned virtually intact on the position-player side.

Run it back? Not so fast, perhaps.

McGonigle is the consensus No. 2 prospect in the industry behind Griffin and we just have to say, this simply doesn’t happen. Nos. 1-2 never bust down the door in tandem, in spring training. Perhaps 1 is major league-ready and 2 is an uber talented kid ticketed for Class A.

But no. While Griffin’s loud noises in Bradenton have generated attention, McGonigle is doing even more to win a job up in Lakeland.

The Tigers keep putting him in high-profile positions – imagine never playing above Class AAA and suddenly playing behind Tarik Skubal – and he keeps answering. They batted him leadoff against the Dominican Republic’s World Baseball Classic team in front of a crowd in the D.R. ready to tear the roof off in support of their heroes.

And McGonigle hit a leadoff home run and produced a 3-for-3 night.

Never mind the stats, which are great – six hits in 15 Grapefruit League at-bats, a 1.137 OPS. The 21-year-old simply seems unbothered, and steady.

“The confidence that he's showing in his at-bats against these particular pitchers,” manager A.J. Hinch said after McGonigle lit up the Dominicans, “is impressive.”

There was little doubt McGonigle would impact the Tigers this season, especially as it got closer to the playoffs. The next three weeks will reveal just how much that timeline has sped up.

Justin Crawford, OF, Phillies

Don’t be alarmed, but the Phillies very much look poised to plug a young player into the lineup.

Nope, John Middleton’s store-bought NL East champions all won’t carry nine-figure contracts this season. In fact, one of the most important positions figures to be manned by a guy making his major league debut when he jogs out to center field March 26 at Citizens Bank Park, when the Phillies open against the Texas Rangers.

He’s had a very nice spring thus far, with six hits in 19 at-bats, including three doubles, a nice catch in center field and, like McGonigle, a feeling that he’s ready.

Probably more than ready.

Crawford is 22 and has 112 Class AAA games already under his belt. And it’s true ... legacy players are typically less fazed by the big league environment and Crawford bears many uncanny resemblances – looks and game-wise – to his father Carl, a four-time All-Star.

Unlike Griffin or McGonigle, Crawford carries neither the top two prospect hype nor the weight of franchise expectations. Batting ninth in a lineup of All-Stars is actually a pretty great way to break in.

Right now, it feels only a matter of time.

Andrew Painter, RHP, Phillies

OK, it was just two innings in a fake baseball game in Clearwater.

Yet 20 pitches, two perfect frames against the New York Yankees and a sense of command – figuratively and literally – went an awful long way toward cementing Painter’s spot in Philadelphia’s rotation to begin the season.

“I was very encouraged,” manager Rob Thomson told reporters after the March 1 outing. “I thought it was great.”

It is no small thing. It’d been three years since Painter’s first exhibition start. Then came Tommy John surgery, sidelining what was then the game’s top pitching prospect, and two years spent largely on the mend. He fought himself and his new arm a bit last summer, costing him a chance at a late-season recall once Zack Wheeler succumbed to a blood clot and thoracic outlet surgery.

Wheeler won’t be ready until perhaps a month into this season. That created the opening Painter is vying for and, most likely, has already nailed down.

His next start is March 7 against the defending American League champion Toronto Blue Jays. They will see a guy with enhanced confidence and a five-pitch mix building himself up for his big league debut.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Konnor Griffin, Kevin McGonigle lead MLB rookies to watch in spring

NHL's 5 longest regular-season winning streaks

The Dallas Stars won their ninth and 10th straight games when they beat the Vancouver Canucks and Calgary Flames 6-1 this week, setting a franchise record for most consecutive regular-season wins.

While it's a streak coach Glen Gulutzan and his team will wear as a badge of honor, only four franchises have not won 10 straight: the 2-year-old Utah Mammoth, 5-year-old Seattle Kraken, Detroit Red Wings and Los Angeles Kings.

The Stars are reaching new heights, and they're getting closer to the Colorado Avalanche for the top spot in the NHL standings as we approach Friday's trade deadline. But they'll need to keep winning through mid-March to get on this list of the longest winning streaks in NHL history:

Top 5 longest regular-season winning streaks in NHL history

5. Pittsburgh Penguins (15 games, 2012-13)

In 2013, the Pittsburgh Penguins enjoyed a perfect March, winning all 15 games. They had a somewhat favorable schedule, playing 10 of 15 at home, including a four-game stint to end the month. 

They allowed just 26 goals, an average of 1.73 per game, and had four team shutouts.

Sidney Crosby had 25 points (six goals, 19 assists), leading the league during the streak, and teammate Chris Kunitz was second, notching 20 points (11 goals, nine assists). 

4. New York Islanders (15 games, 1981-82)

The New York Islanders enjoyed a 15-game winning streak in 1981-82, culminating in their third successive Stanley Cup.

The Islanders went on to win a fourth straight Stanley Cup the next season, marking the last time any franchise won more than two in a row.

They scored 97 goals in 15 games, 24 more than a Montreal Canadiens team that had the second-most during the famous stretch. New York was also the best defensively, conceding 35 goals. 

3. Columbus Blue Jackets (16 games, 2016-17)

The Columbus Blue Jackets won eight straight at home and on the road from Nov. 29, 2016, to Jan. 3, 2017.

Sergei Bobrovsky started in 14 of those 16 games and had a sterling .941 save percentage and 1.64 goals-against average during the streak. Both were league bests, and the Blue Jackets allowed two goals or fewer 13 times.

Unfortunately, all was for nought as the Blue Jackets lost in the first round of the playoffs to the Pittsburgh Penguins. 

2. Edmonton Oilers (16 games, 2023-24)

After a woeful 5-12-1 start that cost Jay Woodcroft his job, the Oilers went on arguably the greatest run in NHL history, winning 24 of the following 27 games. 

That included an eight-game and a 16-game winning streak, the latter of which was bettered only by the 1992-93 Pittsburgh Penguins. 

The Oilers were almost impenetrable for large portions of the streak, allowing two goals or fewer in 14 straight. 

They eventually advanced to the Stanley Cup Final, losing in seven games to the Florida Panthers.

1. Pittsburgh Penguins (17 games, 1992-93)

The Penguins' astonishing run set a record that has stood for 33 years.

We all know who spearheaded the unprecedented streak, with Mario Lemieux scoring an outrageous 27 goals and 51 points, an average of three per game.  

He finished the season with 69 goals and the Hart Trophy to boot. Tom Barrasso was between the pipes for 14 of those wins, and backup Ken Wregget took the helm for the other three.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dallas Stars' 10-game win streak doesn't make this NHL top 5