Boston Celtics Daily Links 3/27/26

BOSTON, MA - MARCH 25: The sneakers worn by Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics before the game against the Oklahoma City Thunder on March 25, 2026 at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

HeraldCeltics rule Jaylen Brown out vs. Hawks with Achilles issue

GlobeHawks at Celtics preview: How Boston can clinch a playoff berth tonight

Jayson Tatum explains what’s allowed Jaylen Brown to turn into an MVP contender

CelticsBlogThe Celtics are deciding how every defensive possession ends

Home stretch: a look at the Celtics’ final 10 games of the regular season

Three big questions as Celtics welcome Hawks to TD Garden

What could the 2026 offseason look like for the Celtics

CLNS MediaBaylor Scheierman Has Officially Arrived for the Boston Celtics | The Garden Report

NESNJaylen Brown Achilles Injury Sidelines MVP Candidate For Celtics-Hawks Game

Celtics Legend Highlights Impact Of Massive Win Vs. Thunder

Jaylen Brown Shoots Back Up Into Top Five Spot In MVP Race

Former NBA Champ Picks Celtics To Win Eastern Conference In NSFW Breakdown

Nick Wright Explains Why He’s Picking Celtics Over Thunder To Win NBA Finals

Bleacher Report Identifies Celtics’ ‘Biggest Fear Right Now’

Mass LiveJaylen Brown downgraded on Celtics injury report ahead of key Hawks game

Celtics Mailbag: What player has been biggest surprise this season?

Celtics WireKey Celtics player to miss game vs. Hawks to injury

Today in Boston Celtics history: Ed Pinckney, Danny Fortson born

Why Alex Caruso was key to Celtics’ huge win vs. Thunder

Did Jaylen Brown just shore up MVP case in potential NBA finals preview?

Celtics vs. Hawks: Stream, lineups, injury reports, broadcast (3/27)

Boston Sports Journal BSJ Live Coverage: Celtics vs. Hawks 7:30 p.m. – Red-hot hoops

Hardwood Houdini Hugo Gonzalez shares lessons from Real Madrid helping him thrive with Celtics

Latest Jaylen Brown injury update may be more than just load management

Celtics’ crunch time puzzle may not get solved this season and that’s okay

Celtics rookie gets candid about roller coaster ride of a first NBA season

Baylor Scheierman’s breakout is a bigger deal than Celtics fans even realize

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander delivers blunt truth about Thunder’s loss to Celtics

It’s both obvious and obnoxious why Kendrick Perkins wants to win back Celtics’ fans

Sweet 16 bragging rights at stake for multiple current Celtics players

Chowder and ChampionsCeltics Can’t Afford for Sam Hauser Concerns to Linger as Playoffs Loom

Celtics Must Keep Leaning on Luka Garza Down the Stretch

CLNS Media/YouTubeBob Ryan THRILLED wit Celtics, Tatum and Brown | Bob Ryan & Jeff Goodman NBA Podcast

Hugo Gonzalez Remembers Playing with Jayson Tatum for FIRST TIME | Celtics Pregame

HeavyJaylen Brown’s Victoria Monet Pattern Has Fans Floating Rumors Again

Celtics’ Jaylen Brown Calls Out Lu Dort After Thunder Showdown

Boston Celtics Announce Final Updated Injury Report For Hawks Game

Boston Celtics Star Reportedly Unfollows ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith On Social Media

Celtics Rookie Reveals Stunned Reaction to Jayson Tatum’s First Scrimmage

Clutch PointsJaylen Brown’s hilarious reason behind Jayson Tatum’s absence from stream

Celtics Get Concerning Injury News Before Hawks Game

Fadeaway WorldCeltics vs. Hawks Prediction: Preview, Injury Report, Advantages, X-Factors

Jaylen Brown Gets Sick Of Lu Dort Fouling: “Smacked Me Upside The Head Like I’m One Of His Grandkids”

Basketball Network“Tell me I am wrong” – Stephen A. Smith proclaims the Boston Celtics the best team in the Eastern Conference

WEEI/YouTubeBarely TOP 5? Still NOT Enough Respect for Jaylen Brown for NBA MVP? ||The Greg Hill Show

The Sporting NewsCeltics ‘going to lose a good player’ for ironic reason

Athlon SportsJayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown Draw Attention for What They Did After Celtics-Thunder

SI .com Atlanta Hawks vs Boston Celtics: Game Preview, Injury Report, Starting Lineups for Tonight’s Matchup

Thunderous IntentionsJaylen Brown quickly becoming main villain in Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s heroic story

The Sports HubJaylen Brown to miss Friday’s Hawks game with scary-sounding injury

ESPNNBA rookie rankings: 10 players to watch ahead of the playoffs

Barstool Sports The Way The Celtics Took Down The Fully Healthy Thunder Was Not Only Their Best Win Of The Season, It Was A Glimpse At What They’re Capable Of

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Hoops RumorsAtlantic Notes: Tatum, Quickley, Walter, Clarkson

Ozzie Albies hits third, Eli White and Jonah Heim draw Opening Day starts

BRISTOL, TN - AUGUST 03: Eli White #36 of the Atlanta Braves is greeted by teammates Ozzie Albies #1 and Michael Harris II #23 after hitting a three-run home run during the 2025 MLB Speedway Classic presented by BulidSubmarines.com between the Atlanta Braves and the Cincinnati Reds at Bristol Motor Speedway on Sunday, August 3, 2025 in Bristol, Tennessee. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Hello and welcome to the Atlanta Braves Lineup, Opening Day (Night) 2026 Edition.

For your perusal this fine March evening, we have entrees such as “Jonah Heim is on this team?” and “Eli White hitting sixth.” To be fair, the Braves are making the best of their situation, but both Heim and White will likely bedevil the future version of you that tries to do the whatever-the-2036-Sporcle-equivalent is and gets stumped by the missing spots in the 2026 Opening Day lineup you try to re-encounter in your mind palace.

In any case, this lineup is largely as expected, just… kind of jarring. Ozzie Albies is hitting third because Kansas City starter Cole Ragans throws baseballs with his left hand. Among players available to the team, Steamer’s split-specific, versus-southpaws projection is the fourth-best, so hitting him third makes sense. Given the uncertainty about whether Albies is firmly in the twilight of his career or not, there’s at least a chance this makes sense.

Both of these lineups are somewhat similar in that they are basically halved into “pretty scary” and “not so scary.” The Braves’ trio of White, Mauricio Dubon, and Jonah Heim — whether pressed into service due to injury or not — is more defensively-focused than anything else; if Michael Harris II has another struggle-laden year, that trio could be a quartet. The same goes for the 6-7-8 spots in the Kansas City lineup, including acquisitions Starling Marte and Isaac Collins. Carter Jensen absolutely destroyed the ball in 69 PAs last year and may not be hitting ninth for long. (Amusingly, both teams have two catchers in the lineup.)

If we’re talking head-to-head history, well, there’s not much. Six Braves in this lineup have a combined 20 PAs against Ragans, and 12 of those come from Dubon (who actually has a .376 xwOBA / .382 wOBA in those 12 PAs, though he hasn’t faced Ragans since 2024).

There are also six Royals that have faced Chris Sale, and again, it’s overwhelmingly tilted towards one guy: Salvador Perez has faced Sale in 69 distinct PAs, and has an uremarkable .236 xwOBA / .273 wOBA. The other guys all have fewer than ten (or zero) PAs against Sale so far.

With this being Opening Day and all, both starters probably aren’t going to stick around too long. Expect to see Mike Yastrzemski come in when the Royals move to a righty reliever; the Royals will probably throw Jac Caglianone (and maybe Kyle Isbel for Lane Thomas?) in there when the Braves do the same.

New York Yankees @ San Francisco Giants: Cam Schlittler vs. Robbie Ray

TAMPA, FLORIDA - MARCH 11: Cam Schlittler #31 of the New York Yankees pitches during the fourth inning of a spring training game against the Toronto Blue Jays at George M. Steinbrenner Field on March 11, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Mark Taylor/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After a dominant Opening Day performance and early rest day, the Yankees are back at it again this afternoon for the second game of their series with the Giants in San Francisco. Cam Schlittler will get the ball for the Yankees against veteran left-hander Robbie Ray as the Bombers look to keep the momentum going from the Wednesday night victory.

With Gerrit Cole and Carlos Rodón still on the mend, Schlittler is the Yankees’ de facto second starter behind Max Fried—an incredible step up for the young man considering the fact that he was in Somerset this time last season. Cam looked good in three spring starts, allowing just one run in 9.2 combined innings, and now he’ll give a multifaceted Giants lineup their first taste of his high-octane repertoire.

Robbie Ray revived his career with the Giants last season, putting up vintage numbers across an All-Star campaign. The 2021 AL Cy Young winner pitched to a 3.65 ERA across 182.1 innings, with his trademark high-strikeout, high-walk profile. He’s always been vulnerable to letting a village get aboard against him—and we’ll see how his command is out of the gate. But when he attacks the zone he’s among the hardest pitchers to square up. Even with a multitude of left-handed bats, the Yankees typically hit southpaws well last season. Will that trend continue in 2026?

With that in mind, lefty smasher Paul Goldschmidt enters the lineup as the leadoff man ahead of Aaron Judge, who seeks to rebound from a rare four-strikeout night on Wednesday. Cody Bellinger, who was the best left-on-left hitter in the league last year, bats third with Giancarlo Stanton cleaning up. Another platoon man bats fifth: Amed Rosario makes his season debut at third. Jazz Chisholm Jr. will hit sixth followed by José Caballero and left fielder Randal Grichuk, making his first appearance in Yankee drapery. Austin Wells will do the catching and hit ninth.

How to watch

Location: Oracle Park — San Francisco, CA

First pitch: 4:35 pm ET

TV broadcast: YES Network, NBC Sports Bay Area

Radio broadcast: WFAN 660/101.9 FM, WADO 1280

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

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How much has the bullpen cost the Arizona Diamondbacks?

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - JULY 25: Merrill Kelly #29 of the Arizona Diamondbacks warms up in the bullpen prior to the MLB game against the San Francisco Giants at Chase Field on July 25, 2022 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Kelsey Grant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

This was provoked – triggered might be a better word – by paulnh’s feed post about the D-backs’ bullpen. The key conclusion was, “Since Mike Hazen has taken over, the Diamondbacks bullpen has been the second worst position in all of baseball, better only than the Pirates shortstop. That’s an even 300 positions (30 teams x 10 positions) and your D-backs bullpen ranks 299th.” As a kneejerk response, last night’s opening game of the 2026 season didn’t indicate any improvement. While Ryan Thompson and Juan Morillo looked good, and Andrew Hoffman wobbled into and out of trouble, Taylor Clarke served up batting practice. Overall bullpen ERA = 9.00. Not a great start.

This continues a trend which, frankly, we have banged on about for years. It has probably gone past dead horse levels, and is now circling dead parrot levels of obviousness. Mike Hazen has a bullpen problem. But how much has it hurt the Diamondbacks overall? To find out, I decided to look at each season from 2018-2025, and give the D-backs simply a league average bullpen. For this, I used fWAR, because Fangraphs allows easy splitting out of starting and relief pitching. I took the mid-point between the 15th- and 16th-ranked bullpens as the average, and saw how many more wins than the actual D-backs bullpen that would have given the team.

The chart above shows the math. But those averse to such things can focus on the final two columns, which show the actual wins for the Diamondbacks and the “ABP wins”. That is the wins Arizona would have had, with an Average BullPen. Now, there are some season it wouldn’t have made a difference. The biggest bump comes in 2021, when our bullpen was five wins below average. However, that would only have given the D-backs a record of 57-105. They would still have had the second pick in the draft the following season, so an average bullpen that year really would not have moved the needle at all.

The same goes for all the seasons through 2022. In 2018, the last wild-card went to the Colorado Rockies who won 91 games, so Arizona would still have been well short. Of course, back in those days, there were only two wild-card teams, so the bar was higher. But a third wild-card team would have been the Braves at 90 wins. No difference. In 2023, the D-backs would still have had a wild-card spot. Though the extra two wins would have made the last week or so considerably less nerve-wracking – or “exciting”, if you prefer. It would have bumped them above the Marlins to face the Phillies in the first round. Would we have beaten them in five? We didn’t in the first five games of the NLCS…

But it’s 2024 and 2025 where the bullpen really hurt the Diamondbacks, and that’s perhaps why we have focused on it so much over the past couple of years. In 2024, the Arizona bullpen was the closest to mediocrity it has been since 2019, just a win and a half below average. But considering the team ended up on the sticky end of a three-way tie for the last two spots… Those 1.5 wins would have propelled the D-backs from the outside of the dance to the second wild-card position, and a series against the Padres. Who knows what might have happened? Could hardly have done worse than Atlanta, who trailed at the end of 17 of the 18 innings played against San Diego.

Although the D-backs were worse in 2025, so was the post-season standard. The Mets got in with just 83 wins, three more than the Diamondbacks. With our bullpen 3.7 wins below average, we would have been rounded into the final wild-card spot based on ABP victories. [Three wins would have led to another three-way tie between New York, Arizona and Cincinnatti. I do not have time to go down the rabbit-hole of that hypothetical scenario, especially since we split the season series against the Mets!] We’d have replaced the Reds against the Dodgers. Again, we could hardly have done worse, as Cincinnati conceded eighteen runs over two games.

Based on the above, it’s fair to think that, with merely an average bullpen, the D-backs could have gone to the postseason in three consecutive seasons. That’s something the team has never managed to do. Let’s hope this is not another article about our relievers I need to start bringing out every winter.

Tiger Woods involved in rollover car crash in Florida, according to reports

JUPITER ISLAND, Fla. (AP) — Tiger Woods was involved in a rollover car crash on Friday, the Martin County Sheriff's Office told media outlets.

Authorities said the crash occurred just after 2 p.m. not far from where Woods lives in Jupiter Island. Martin County Fire Rescue said there were no serious injuries, CBS 12 reported.

Woods' manager at Excel Sports did not immediately respond to a text message seeking information.

It was the third time Woods has been involved in a car crash, most recently in February 2021 when his SUV ran off a coastal road in Los Angeles at a high rate of speed that led to multiple leg and ankle injuries. Woods said later doctors considered amputation.

He also was arrested on a DUI charge in 2017 when south Florida police found him asleep behind the wheel of his car that was parked awkwardly with damage to the driver's side. Woods said later he had taken a bad mix of painkillers.

Woods had been working his way back to golf from a seventh back surgery last September. He had not decided whether he could play in the Masters on April 9-12.

His last official tournament was the British Open in 2024. Woods ruptured his Achilles tendon in March 2025 and that kept him off the course all season, and then he had another back surgery in September. He managed to play in his indoor TGL golf league on Tuesday night.

___

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

Florida Panthers At Center Of NHL's Hockey Day In Finland Celebrations

This weekend, the NHL is hosting its fourth annual Hockey Day in Finland celebration.

It should come as no surprise that the Florida Panthers will be at the center of those celebrations.

Florida, when healthy, boasts one of the more Finnish-heavy rosters in the NHL. It’s why the Panthers were featured by the NHL in last season’s Global Series games against the Dallas Stars in Tampere.

The Hockey Day in Finland festival takes place on Friday and Saturday in Kuopio.

As part of the festival, there is an NHL alumni game featuring several Finnish legends, including a pair of 5-time Stanley Cup winners in Jari Kurri and one-time Panther Esa Tikkanen, as well as Jere Lehtinen, Valtteri Filppula, Kimmo Timonen and Ossi Vaananen. 

All the fun will culminate with a watch party of the primetime national broadcast of Saturday’s game between the Panthers and New York Islanders.

You can bet there will be a ton of Sasha Barkov jerseys at the festival, but it wouldn’t be surprising at all to see Anton Lundell, Eetu Luostarinen, Niko Mikkola or even Tuomo Ruutu or Olli Jokinen represented by some of the hockey-crazed fans in Finland.

Fun fact: Only two NHL franchises have had more Finnish nationals play for them than the Panthers’ 24. They are Dallas/Minnesota (34) and Edmonton (29).

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Photo caption: Dec 21, 2022; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers center Eetu Luostarinen (27) celebrates his goal against the New Jersey Devils with center Anton Lundell (15) during the second period at FLA Live Arena. (Jasen Vinlove-Imagn Images)

There's a big difference between coaches, players free movement — large buyouts

So now we’re supposed to feel sorry for the players. The mean adults, everyone, are taking advantage of the poor, misunderstood kids. 

Or is it the other way around?

We’re so deep into this nonsensical college sports power struggle, it’s getting harder by the day to decipher who’s winning and who’s whining. 

The latest dust-up of the unsustainable that will lead to the unrecognizable (daily propaganda from coaches, not me): Will Wade left NC State for LSU after all of one season as coach in Raleigh.

And the college sports ecosystem lost its collective mind

It’s just another example of coaches living under the “do as I say, not as I do” umbrella of unreasonable protection and deflection. Rules for thee, not for me. 

And you know what? They’re right.

Because decades of coaches leaving after one season are distinctly different than the still wet paint of players and their annual free movement. No matter what a talking bobblehead screams on television, or your buddy posts on social media.

The day all players begin paying buyouts to contracts — or in their current financial setup, NIL deals — is the day this thing is equal. 

Before we go further, let’s not ignore the Hurricane in the room: Darian Mensah had to buy out his NIL deal at Duke this offseason to move, and Miami not only paid it, but gave Mensah a mega one-year mercenary deal before he leaves for the NFL.

Wade paid $4 million to leave NC State, which means LSU transferred those funds to NC State to bring a convicted NCAA cheater — at LSU! — back to Baton Rouge. And that, if you can believe it, isn’t the focus of this story.

If North Carolina wants to hire Todd Golden from Florida, the Tar Heels will have to cover his $16 million buyout. Or $11 million to poach Tommy Lloyd from Arizona.

If you’re bleeding cash in a second-tier Power conference, that’s a significant lift. Unless you’re desperate. 

It’s here where we reintroduce Mensah and the Miami marriage.

Miami paid Mensah’s buyout because Mensah played it perfectly. Waited until the last day possible to enter the transfer portal, knowing full well that one specific team was desperate for a quarterback. 

Knowing full well Miami had played the past two successful (but not championship) seasons with transfer quarterbacks — the most high-profile, high-priced transfer quarterbacks (Cam Ward, Carson Beck) — and the current quarterback room in Coral Gables was, shall we say, lacking. 

So Mensah’s representatives made it clear he was one year into a two-year NIL deal, and owed millions. Miami then sucked it up and paid the buyout, and then signed Mensah to a deal. 

Three different Power conference coaches, speaking on the condition of anonymity to protect the unique NIL process, told USA TODAY Sports that Miami paid in excess of $10 million total to complete the deal.

If Brendan Sorsby’s buyout from Cincinnati was $10 million instead of $1 million, maybe Texas Tech billionaire booster Cody Campbell would’ve double-clutched when pursuing him. If Sam Leavitt had any buyout in his Arizona State deal, maybe LSU and Tennessee would’ve thought twice about bidding against each other to see who could give Leavitt more foundational money. 

OK, maybe not those two deep-pocket programs. But you get the point.

Until all players have buyouts in their NIL deals, until all players have to see that buyout as at least a pregnant pause to leaving, it’s not the same thing as coaches and their free movement. 

If Golden didn’t have a $15 million buyout, how much easier would it be for North Carolina to throw a Belichickian deal at him? And not give Florida, already flush with cash as a big fish in the money-printing SEC machine, a $15 million gift?

Look, if a university or program wants a coach or player badly enough, no realistic buyout money is going to stop them. That’s the nature of the current college sports business model. 

Until the only guardrails that work are instituted, this is the deal. Until players are made employees (like coaches), and until players then collectively bargain for 48% of the media rights billions, the only answer to limiting player movement is fat buyouts. 

Then players must decide between more money up front with a large buyout, or less money in their pocket with no buyout. And if they’re at the elite of their profession (it’s a professional game now, everyone, don’t kid yourselves), they can name their price and deal. 

Like Kalen DeBoer did two years ago when he left Washington. He was happy with the Huskies, had just led the program to the national championship game. 

But Alabama came along and had no problem giving him an $87 million contract, and covering his $12 million buyout from Washington. It is believed to be the largest buyout in college football history. 

For a 20-8 record, and a 35-point loss in the Rose Bowl. To a basketball school. 

Now who’s winning and who’s whining?

Matt Hayes is the senior national college football writer for USA TODAY Sports Network. Follow him on X at @MattHayesCFB.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Will Wade leaving NC State is different than players leaving programs

2026 Minor Leagues Preview

El Paso Chihuahuas

The 2026 season for MLB minor league affiliates begins today with some Triple-A teams starting their schedules. The El Paso Chihuahuas, Triple-A affiliate for the San Diego Padres, plays their first game on the road versus the Sacramento River Cats. The roster features multiple players who played with the major league team during spring games with right-handed starter J.P. Sears, relievers Garrett Hawkins and Alek Jacob and infielder Mason McCoy all on the Padres’ 40-man roster.

Infielder Will Wagner is starting the season on the IL with an oblique strain.

The Double-A affiliate San Antonio Missions and Low-A affiliate Lake Elsinore Storm both begin their seasons on April 2. The High-A Fort Wayne TinCaps begin play on April 3. The rosters for these teams have not been released and likely won’t be available until next week.

New rules for 2026

Minor League Baseball (MiLB) is the testing ground for the new rules that the MLB is discussing for the major league side. There are multiple new rules being implemented this year in order to evaluate if they should be installed in MLB.

  • Moving second base – The second base bag will be placed within the perimeter of the infield diamond. The bag will be closer to home plate and be approximately nine inches closer to first base and third base. The hope is this encourages more base stealing, which has diminished significantly and was also encouraged by enlarging the size of the bases. The bags will only be moved in the International League and during the second half of the season.
  • Swing rules – Starting May 5, the Pacific Coast League will have a Check Swing Challenge system with players allowed to appeal an umpire’s call on whether the player swung at a pitch. Bat-tracking technology will be used and a swing will be a strike when the angle between the bat head and the bat handle is greater than 45 degrees. Teams will start a game with two challenges and can be used for either ball/strike or swing/no-swing calls.
  • Hitter pitch clock regulations – Due to the increase in game time last season (2 hours and 38 minutes average) from the season before (2 hours 36 minutes), new rules are coming for the pitch clock. Batters will be limited in timeouts called during an at-bat. For Single-A: no timeouts except for special circumstances (equipment issues, brush back, dirt in the eye). In High-A time can be called with runners on base. In Double-A and Triple-A, time can be called but the umpires will not wait for the batter to be ready before restarting the clock. Hitters have to be ready before the clock hits eight seconds.
  • Pitcher clock regulations – In Triple-A, if a pitcher claims a Pitch-Com issue this will be called a mound visit. If the team is out of mound visits then a pitcher will have a violation charged. In Double-A, the disengagement limit will be decreased to one from two. All mound visits will be timed and everyone who is not the pitcher has to be off the mound by the end of the time or a violation will be charged to the pitcher. This will be at all levels of the minors.
  • Pitchers returning to game – The rule commonly seen in Spring Training, with the pitcher removed in one inning and then returning the next inning, will be implemented in the Arizona Fall League, Florida Complex League and the Dominican Summer League. The pitcher must throw at least 25 pitches in the original inning in order to be removed and returned the following inning.
Players to watch in Padres minor leagues

There are a handful of players that bear watching more closely this season as they are returning from injury or transitioning in their careers. Gaslamp Ball will again have weekly reports covering the Padres minor league teams and players.

Catcher Ethan Salas, returning to play after missing most of 2025, has added bulk and mental reps while out of commission. He will be the primary catcher for Double-A San Antonio and seems determined to show that he is still an upper-level prospect for MLB.

LHSP Kruz Schoolcraft, the high school pitcher drafted in the first round last year, will begin with the Low-A Lake Elsinore Storm in the rotation. His development could be quick and lead to a promotion mid-season. He is considered an advanced prospect at 18 years old.

RHSP Kannon Kemp, could have a breakout this season after being fully recovered from shoulder issues that plagued him early in his career. He gained some velocity last season as he worked back from his injury and will hopefully turn the corner this season.

RHSP Michael Salina, had Tommy John surgery before being drafted by the Padres in 2025. He should be with a team (probably Lake Elsinore) this May or June. He highlighted significant velocity before his injury.

RHP Lan-Hong Su, impressed in his one inning in the Spring Breakout game, throwing strikes with a 96-98 mph fastball and his curveball and changeup were also effective. He throws a slider to round out his pitch mix. Due to his lack of any previous work in the system he will likely be in extended Spring Training for evaluation before being assigned.

RHP Triston McKenzie, was seen in multiple spring games and featured increased velocity (up to 98 mph) but was unable to command any of his pitches consistently. He seems to be a project that could be an interesting investment should he be able to return to the pitcher he was prior to his multiple arm injuries.

Infielder Jorge Quintana, has also added bulk this offseason and is a switch-hitter. He should show more of what he is capable of this season and turns 19 on the first day of the Lake Elsinore season. He might be the star of that roster and should be watched as his skillset develops. He was the top International signing for the Brewers in 2024, earning a seven-figure bonus, before being traded to the Padres.

Outfielder Kale Fountain, has prodigious power to go with his size (6-5/225) and begins the season fully healthy after returning last year from Tommy John surgery. The Padres are moving him from the infield to the outfield now that he is rehabbed from the TJ and a knee injury last season. He should start with Lake Elsinore and might still get work in the infield despite playing outfield all through spring camp.

First baseman Romeo Sanabria, opened eyes in Spring Training while playing in some major league games. He led the team in RBI and hit three doubles and two home runs to go with his 11 RBI. He has had some ups and downs while playing last season and worked on conditioning during the offseason to maintain endurance. The potential is there and he needs to maintain consistency through a whole season. After playing last year with the Double-A Missions, he will likely return there to start 2026.

Outfielder Ryan Wideman, was drafted in 2025 and got a brief debut with Lake Elsinore last summer. He has a high-upside profile but significant swing-and-miss risk. If he can cut down his chase rate and improve on his contact skills, his defense and speed profile as a top centerfield prospect.

Iowa State vs Tennessee live updates: Prediction, time, how to watch Sweet 16 game

CHICAGO -- It's been more than a quarter century since Iowa State basketball last reached an Elite Eight.

Will that change tonight?

The No. 2 Cyclones face No. 6 Tennessee in Friday night's Sweet 16 at the United Center with a chance to reach its first Elite Eight since 2000.

Tennessee, on the other hand, is looking for its third straight trip to the Elite Eight — though the Volunteers have never reached a Final Four.

All eyes will be on whether or not Iowa State All-American Joshua Jefferson is able to play. He was injured early in the Cyclones' first round win over Tennessee State and didn't play against Kentucky in the second round.

Tennessee's freshman star Nate Ament was limited in the Volunteers' first round win as he recovers from his own injury, but played 29 minutes in the Vols' second round upset of Virginia.

But while those frontcourt stars may have the pregame spotlight, the matchup in the backcourt will likely decide tonight's game.

Iowa State's Tamin Lipsey and Tennessee's Ja'Kobi Gillespie are two of the top point guards in the country, and they're both coming off of standout performances. Lipsey had a career-high 26 points, with 10 assists to round out a double-double effort against Kentucky. Gillespie just had his third straight 20-point game of the postseason.

The winner of tonight's game advances to Sunday's Elite Eight, where it will play the winner of Michigan vs. Alabama.

Here's what you need to know for tonight's Tennessee vs. Iowa State Sweet 16 game, including predictions and how to watch.

HIT REFRESH FOR UPDATES.

Tennessee vs Iowa State live score

TEAMS1H2HF
Tennessee
Iowa State

What time is Iowa State vs Tennessee?

  • Time: 10:10 p.m. ET, Friday, March 27.

What channel is Iowa State vs Tennessee? How to watch, streaming info

  • The game is airing on TBS/truTV, streaming via Fubo.

Iowa State vs Tennessee prediction, odds

Eugene Rapay, Des Moines Register: Iowa State 74, Tennessee 68

With or without Joshua Jefferson, Iowa State still has the pieces and tools to win. Jefferson's absence may create for a more uphill battle in the paint or on the glass, but the Cyclones' level of defensive disruption has only risen since the postseason tipped off. Creating turnovers will be the key, and Iowa State has already shown that it can weather cold-shooting stretches or adverse situations when it doubles down on defense. The Cyclones will need to do the same here.

Wynton Jackson, Knoxville News Sentinel: Iowa State 68, Tennessee 64

Iowa State put together a complete performance against a team Tennessee crumbled against twice. The Cyclones showed their top-15 ranked defense with intense ball pressure on Kentucky, keeping the Wildcats out of the paint and draining the shot clock out on the perimeter.

Iowa State also forced 20 turnovers in the win, which has been a concern for Tennessee all season. The Vols committed 16 turnovers against Miami (Ohio), and another 10 against Virginia.

Kentucky kept pace with the Cyclones in the rebounding battle, which could lean more heavily in Tennessee's favor if Jefferson is out.

It is hard, though, to continue banking on elite shooting numbers from the Vols, especially against one of the top defenses in the country. Tennessee also made a number of errors down the stretch that Virginia couldn't capitalize on. Iowa State won't give them the same grace.

  • Blake Toppmeyer: Tennessee
  • Paul Myerberg: Iowa State
  • Jordan Mendoza: Iowa State
  • John Brice: Iowa State
  • Matt Glenesk: Tennessee
  • Craig Meyer: Tennessee
  • John Leuzzi: Iowa State
  • Austin Curtright: Iowa State
  • Ehsan Kassim: Tennessee
  • Moneyline: Iowa State (-190); Tennessee (+154)
  • Spread: Iowa State (-3.5)
  • Over/under total: 139.5

Joshua Jefferson injury update: Will Iowa State star play tonight vs Tennessee

Cyclones coach T.J. Otzelberger told reporters in Chicago on Wednesday, March 25 that Iowa State forward Joshua Jefferson has seen "pretty significant progress" with his recovery from an ankle injury and that he is a game-time decision for Friday's Sweet 16 game against 2-seed Tennessee.

Jefferson sustained an ankle injury in the opening minutes of the first round of March Madness, and has been sidelined since, including being ruled out in the second round against Kentucky.

Jefferson was present at practice and had shed the boot on his ankle on Thursday at the United Center in Chicago.

In the 15 minutes the Cyclones practice was open to the media, Jefferson was observed taking practice shots in the first few minutes before spending the majority of the session dribbling near halfcourt and talking to coaches.

What did TJ Otzelberger say about UNC basketball coach opening?

Ahead of his team's Sweet 16 game against No. 6 seed Tennessee on Friday, March 27, Iowa State coach T.J. Otzelberger started his media availability in Chicago by addressing his name being tied to other job openings.

He did not directly mention North Carolina. Here's what he said:

"Any speculation with me and any other jobs or opportunities is not true," Otzelberger said on March 25.

Nate Ament injury update: How much will Vols star play vs Iowa State?

The All-SEC freshman is still dealing with soreness. He played 29 minutes in the Vols' second round win over Virginia, scoring 16 points.

"There's no chance I'd sit out a March Madness game," he said prior to the UVA game. "It's about what can we do to get back to 100%, or as close to it as we can."

Tennessee coach Rick Barnes called the injury a "problem," and Ament won't be fully healthy until he gets time off at the end of the season.

"We need Nate. He knows it, but he will give us everything that he can, and that's really all I can say about it. If it's up to him, he would play every minute if he could," Barnes said.

Rick Barnes March Madness record

Barnes is 37-25 in his career in the NCAA Tournament and led Texas to the 2003 Final Four.

Nate Ament 2026 NBA Draft, mock draft prediction

No. 11 overall to Portland Trail Blazers.

Kalbrosky's Analysis:

After a relatively slow and inefficient start to the season, Tennessee freshman Nate Ament is starting to realize some of his lofty expectations. The freshman averaged 21.6 points per game while shooting 38.9 percent on 3-pointers during a 13-game stretch before an injury against Alabama on Feb. 28. The All-SEC forward then had 27 points (4-of-6 on 3-pointers) with eight rebounds, four assists, three blocks and a steal against Auburn on March 12. It will only take one team to fall in love with Ament and given so much of what he brings to the table cannot be taught, that team is probably picking fairly early in the lottery.

See USA TODAY's full mock draft here

Nate Ament stats

(all stats as of March 15)

  • 17.5 points per game
  • 6.6 rebounds per game
  • 2.5 assists per game
  • 40.5% field goal percentage
  • 33.1% three-point field goal percentage

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Iowa State vs Tennessee live updates, news, prediction, how to watch Sweet 16

Fantasy baseball two-start pitchers: Cody Ponce headlines intriguing options for Week 1 of 2026 MLB season

Hello and welcome to the first installment of our weekly two-start pitcher article for the 2026 MLB season.

I will be here every Friday to highlight some of the best two-start pitcher options in fantasy baseball leagues for the upcoming week providing my insights and recommendations on which options should be started or benched.

While it’s only the first week of the season, it doesn’t make it any less important than any other week along the way, they all count equally. Historically though, we have done a bit better streaming somewhat sketchier options at the beginning of the season, as bats are usually slightly behind pitchers to start the season, leading to more low scoring games. The cold weather in many cities around the league doesn’t hurt either. I’d much rather take my chances rolling out an extra start or two now than in the dog days of summer.

This is a living document, so we'll update the options below as the weekend moves along.

⚾️ Baseball is back! MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.

Before we get into it, we'll start with a couple of notes on situations that may be unresolved or teams that may not have a two-start pitcher lined up for the upcoming week:

We know that Edward Cabrera and Jameson Taillon will be the final two members of the Cubs’ rotation, but the team has yet to officially announce the order in which they’ll pitch. One of them will pitch on Monday and be lined up for two starts next week (vs. Angels, at Guardians). If it’s Cabrera, I’d definitely be rolling him out there in both 12- and 15-team formats. If it’s Taillon however, I’d probably take a wait-and-see approach given how brutal he was during Cactus League play. We’ll update as more information becomes available.

For the Padres, we know that Walker Buehler and German Marquez will occupy the final two spots in their rotation, but new skipper Craig Stammen has yet to announce which one will get the ball on Monday. One of them will make two starts next week (vs. Giants, at Red Sox). To be honest though, I’m not likely to have interest in either one. I believe that Marquez has a shot at having some season-long value now that he’s away from Coors Field, but I’m not going to trust him in his first couple of starts, especially since one of them is against the Red Sox at Fenway. I’m also not convinced that Buehler is going to hold up in the Padres’ rotation and I think trying to stream him for two starts would be asking for ratio damage. We’ll update as we know more, but I’m avoiding both of them.

Without further ado, let's dig into the options for the week of March 30.

Going Twice…

Note: Probable pitchers as of March 27 and are subject to change.

American League

▶ Strong Plays

Cody Ponce, RHP Blue Jays (vs. Rockies, at White Sox)

Now you want to talk about the dream setup for your return to the big leagues for the first time since the 2021 season, Ponce has everything working in his favor this week. He’s locked into the Blue Jays’ rotation, he had a dominant showing in Grapefruit League action where he posted a 0.66 ERA, 0.81 WHIP and a 12/4 K/BB ratio over 13 2/3 innings in his five starts and he gets the best possible draw of any pitcher on the entire slate – taking on the Rockies at home and then the White Sox in Chicago. If you’re into that sort of thing, the pitchers that he’ll be battling against are Tomoyuki Sugano and Davis Martin. If he’s somehow still floating on the waiver wire in shallow leagues, now would be the time to pounce. He’s going to have a monster week.

Max Fried, LHP Yankees (at Mariners, vs. Marlins)

The biggest beneficiary of the early-season schedule looks to be Max Fried. He delivered an absolute gem against the Giants on opening night and with all of the off days that are baked into the first two weeks, the Yankees have decided to roll with a four-man rotation the first couple of times through the order. That means that he now gets to make two starts in the second week of the season (provided they don’t insert Luis Gil into the mix on Sunday). We aren’t worried about matchups with Fried anyways, but they grade out as positive. Fantasy managers who called his name on draft day and got the benefits of his first start should continue to enjoy themselves during the upcoming week.

Kris Bubic, LHP Royals (vs. Twins, vs. Brewers)

Bubic faltered a bit down the stretch in 2026, but he still registered a pristine 2.55 ERA and 1.18 WHIP across 116 1/3 innings while striking out a batter per inning. He has earned the right to be an every week start for fantasy managers, plus he draws an outstanding matchup against the Twins at home to open the week. Look for him to pile up strikeouts this week with strong ratios and a good shot at earning at least one victory. He should be an automatic start in all leagues.

Justin Verlander, RHP Tigers (at Diamondbacks, vs. Cardinals)

Call me crazy, but I’m still a believer in the 43-year-old future Hall of Famer. Verlander was terrific for the Giants during the second half of the 2025 season and seems to be reinvigorated by his return to the Tigers with a chance to compete for a World Series title. Both of the matchups look strong on paper and he’s likely to be a favorite to earn a victory in each of those starts. Combine that with likely double digit strikeouts and you have all the markings of a strong streaming option. I’d go as far as to recommend him in all formats.

Ranger Suarez, LHP Red Sox (@ Astros, vs. Padres)

Fantasy managers didn’t draft Suarez with the intention of having to play the matchups with him, they drafted him to be an every week fixture in fantasy lineups. That shouldn’t change with his first two-start week of the season. The matchup against the Astros in Houston isn’t the best, but it’s not enough to keep us from using him. He should be started in all formats.

Mick Abel, RHP Twins (at Royals, vs. Rays)

While the Twins have yet to confirm it, the expectation is that Mick Abel will start on Monday while Simeon Woods-Richardson gets the ball on Wednesday. That would set up the rookie right-hander to make two starts during the upcoming week – something fantasy managers should be quite interested in. Abel was a dominant force during Grapefruit League play, registering a 2.05 ERA, 0.86 WHIP and a 27/4 K/BB ratio across 22 innings. He has the pedigree and all of the tools necessary to succeed in a big league rotation, he just needs to find the consistency that he showed during the spring. I’m not particularly worried about a blowup facing the Royals and Rays, so this will be a great week to stream him and see how he performs. If he’s available in shallower leagues, you may just wind up with an impact contributor for the remainder of the season.

Ryan Weathers, LHP Yankees (at Mariners, vs. Marlins)

Every time that we have seen Weathers healthy and on a major league mound, he has performed well. There’s no reason to expect anything less this week with solid matchups against the Mariners and Marlins. Fantasy managers should have full trust in him and should pile up stats while they can before he inevitably lands on the injured list once again.

Luis Castillo, RHP Mariners (vs. Yankees, at Angels)

If you drafted Castillo, you likely did so as an SP3 or SP4 and to be a fixture in your team’s rotation. That means that you’re starting him for all two-start weeks and most single start weeks unless it’s a terrible matchup and you have better alternatives. While a matchup against the Yankees is tough to start the week, it’s not nearly enough to dissuade me from using Castillo if I rostered him. He should be started in all leagues.

▶ Decent Plays

Jack Leiter, RHP Rangers (at Orioles, vs. Reds)

Leiter is coming off of a strong rookie campaign in 2025 and looking to take the next step forward as he blossoms into an upper-echelon starting pitcher. Until he can limit the walks though, he’s going to be at least a tier below those every week starts in my estimation. The matchups aren’t terrible, and he should be able to deliver the strikeouts, which probably makes him worth using in most formats. Just won’t expect a pristine WHIP.

Chris Bassitt, RHP Orioles (vs. Rangers, at Pirates)

Bassitt has always been a reliable streaming option, one that isn’t likely to crush your ratios while always giving you a decent shot at a victory and some strikeouts. The matchups here are better than average and he should be a favorite to earn a victory against Braxton Ashcraft and the Pirates. If he’s available in any 12 team leagues I’d absolutely be comfortable streaming him.

Parker Messick, LHP Guardians (at Dodgers, vs. Cubs)

Fantasy managers who were clamoring for Messick to get a shot in the Guardians’ rotation got their wish as Logan Allen was obliterated in his final Cactus League outing. Unfortunately, he draws the worst possible matchup that you can get to start the season, having to battle the Dodgers in Los Angeles. The strikeout upside is there and he’ll battle Roki Sasaki in that matchup, which isn’t the worst draw for the potential to earn a victory. Just be aware that the blowup risk is always present when facing the Dodgers.

Ryan Johnson, RHP Angels (at Cubs, vs. Mariners)

Of everyone on the list of two start pitchers this week, Johnson has perhaps the widest possible range of outcomes. After being taken in the second round of the 2024 draft, Johnson climbed all the way to the big leagues in 2025, only to struggle mightily over 14 2/3 innings out of the Angels’ bullpen. There’s no denying the talent though and he looked sharp enough during Cactus League play to win a spot in the Halos’ rotation. I’m intrigued by the strikeout potential and may be willing to gamble on his two-start week in deeper leagues.

▶ At Your Own Risk

Davis Martin, RHP White Sox (at Marlins, vs. Blue Jays)

He’s not the worst option on the board, but given his overall skillset and the fact that he pitches for the White Sox, the overall upside here is pretty limited. In 15-team leagues if you need a live streaming option to help keep pace in wins and strikeouts, he could be worth a look. In shallower leagues, there has to be better options available.

Lance McCullers Jr., RHP Astros (vs. Red Sox, at Athletics)

I’d have a difficult time trusting McCullers if he had a couple of good matchups on the board, but these are far from that. He has to tangle with a tough Red Sox’ team opposite Ranger Suarez before going to Sutter Health Park in Sacramento where he’s likely to serve up a couple of home runs and inflict damage on your ratios. It’s simply not worth the risk.

Aaron Civale, RHP Athletics (at Braves, vs. Astros)

If you play this game long enough, you start to develop certain rules or mantras that you follow no matter what. One of those, for me at least, is never Aaron Civale. It’s never a good idea. Even if it looks like he has been pitching well recently, he’s doing it on smoke and mirrors and a correction is coming. It’s just not a situation that you’ll ever feel good about. Just say no.

Nick Martinez, RHP Rays (at Brewers, vs. Twins)

I don’t doubt that Martinez may wind up having some mixed league viability at some point during the 2026 season, but the way that he pitched during the spring I definitely have reservations about starting him for a two-start week right now – especially after he had his start pushed back a couple of days due to a hamstring issue. If I’m going to gamble, I’ll do it elsewhere this week.

MLB: Texas Rangers at Philadelphia Phillies
Eric Samulski and James Schiano discuss their favorite fantasy baseball waiver wire adds for the weekend.

National League

▶ Strong Plays

Chase Burns, RHP Reds (vs. Pirates, at Rangers)

The only real concern that we have for the Reds’ top pitching prospect this season is ultimately his workload and how many innings they’ll let him handle. That’s not an issue at all to start the season though, so fantasy managers should be locking him into lineups whenever he’s pitching. The fact that he starts the year off with a two-start week – and it includes a juicy matchup against the Pirates – is just an added bonus. He represents one of the better overall plays on the board this week.

Kodai Senga, RHP Mets (at Cardinals, at Giants)

One of the most intriguing options on the entire week is Kodai Senga. After getting booted from the Mets rotation near the end of the 2025 season, the 33-year-old right-hander has stormed back with vengeance this spring, riding increased velocity to a stellar 1.86 ERA, 0.72 WHIP and an 11/1 K/BB ratio over 9 2/3 innings in his three starts. I’m optimistic that he’s going to make a return to fantasy relevance in 2026 and a couple of premium matchups against the Cardinals and Giants is just what the doctor ordered to get his season started on the right foot. He should be started with complete confidence in leagues of all sizes.

Clay Holmes, RHP Mets (at Cardinals, at Giants)

Given the alternatives, Holmes checks in as a very strong play for his upcoming two-start week. We saw him dominate during the first half of the 2025 season in his return to the rotation before predictably falling off a bit as the season wore on. He has a fresh arm at the moment and gets a pair of strong matchups where he should be able to provide ample fantasy goodness. He’s an easy start in all leagues.

▶ Decent Plays

Braxton Ashcraft, RHP Pirates (at Reds, vs. Orioles)

Ashcraft made a strong impression out of the bullpen for the Pirates at the end of the 2025 season, then parlayed that success with a strong showing in Grapefruit League play to secure a spot in the Bucs’ Opening Day rotation. He generates enough strikeouts and ground balls to make him an interesting option from a fantasy perspective when the matchups line up. If it weren’t for the difficult battle against the Reds in Cincinnati to start the week, I may have considered him as a strong option. As it stands, I’d be considering him in 15-team formats for sure and could look his way in 12’s as well if I wanted to add volume.

Chris Paddack, RHP Marlins (vs. White Sox, at Yankees)

One name that’s surprisingly intriguing to me this week is Chris Paddack. Before getting shelled for most of the second half of the 2025 season, Paddack had actually been a viable mixed league starter for the Twins during the first few months of the season. He then looked like that same version of himself during Grapefruit League action, registering a 0.69 ERA, 0.77 WHIP and a 12/3 K/BB ratio across 13 frames. The matchup against the Yankees in New York to finish the week is scary enough to take him from a strong option to merely a decent play, but he’ll have a good shot at picking up a victory in that opening start against the White Sox. There’s probably not enough meat on the bone here to stream him in 12-team formats, but he’s definitely on my radar in 15’s.

Kyle Harrison, LHP Brewers (vs. Rays, at Royals)

After the Giants and Red Sox seemingly did everything in their power to keep Harrison out of receiving a real shot to stick in their starting rotations, the Brewers have been forced into doing so due to the injuries they have had at the position. I expect the 24-year-old southpaw to have a bit of extra motivation to prove himself this time around. The matchups are solid, especially the first one against Nick Martinez and the Rays at home. I’m not worried about him damaging my ratios and would be happy with 10 strikeouts over the course of the week and a shot at a victory. That’s enough for me to take a shot any place where he may be available.

Kyle Leahy, RHP Cardinals (vs. Mets, at Tigers)

Leahy did enough this spring to secure a spot in the Cardinals’ Opening Day rotation, but in order to keep that spot once Hunter Dobbins is healthy, he’s going to have to at least outperform Andre Pallante. The matchups aren’t the best, as he’ll be taking on a pair of strong offenses on teams that are projected to make it to the postseason, and his chances of earning a victory in either of these starts aren’t the best. I’m not worried about him doing much damage to my ratios though and will take the strikeouts that he’ll undoubtedly provide. He probably isn’t worth it in 12 teamers, but I’d be willing to roll the dice in 15’s for sure.

Foster Griffin, RHP Nationals (at Phillies, vs. Dodgers)

I’m actually pretty high on Foster Griffin heading into the 2026 season and would probably recommend using him in most neutral weeks, but he draws one of the worst sets on the board having to battle the Phillies in Philadelphia before welcoming in the Dodgers. That mutes his chances of earning a victory and increases the ratio risk. It’s nice that we’ll get a peek into how he performs in those matchups and will be better able to gauge his status going forward, but I’d have a hard time trusting him for that double outside of the deepest of mixed leagues.

▶ At Your Own Risk

Jose Suarez, LHP Braves (vs. Athletics, at Diamondbacks)

There was a brief moment in time during the 2021 and 2022 seasons where you could squint and see a hint of mixed league upside in Suarez when he was starting for the Angels. He also pitched well in his limited action out of the Braves’ bullpen in 2025. As fas as skills go, I like him better than some of the other available options, I just don’t think that I can stomach the risk this early in the season. He’s not the worst option on the board, and I’d only have him at the bottom of bid lists in an emergency type of situation.

Taijuan Walker, RHP Phillies (vs. Nationals, at Rockies)

When you think of prototypical middling arms that are readily available to stream on the waiver wire, one of the names that always comes to mind is Taijuan Walker. He’s simply not good enough to be started in single start weeks, but he’s just fringy enough to warrant consideration when he has two starts and the matchups fall in his favor. It’s possible that he’s worth a look this week. The Nationals project as one of the weaker offenses in the National League and while the matchup against the Rockies is at Coors Field, there’s a big difference between Coors Field in April and Coors Field in July. You could wind up with a three-inning dud where he’s knocked around for four or five runs, but you could also wind up with a couple of decent starts and a pair of wins. This one depends on your risk tolerance, but I wouldn’t rule it out completely.

Adrian Houser, RHP Giants (at Padres, vs. Mets)

Houser secured a spot in the Giants’ Opening Day rotation thanks to three decent starts during Cactus League play. Call me crazy, but that’s not enough for me to trust him against a couple of playoff teams in the National League. We have seen the right-hander have some modicum of success at the big league level in the past, so it wouldn’t completely shock me if he performed well over these two starts, it’s just not a risk that I feel like there’s a need to be taking at this stage of the season.

Landen Roupp, RHP Giants (at Padres, vs. Mets)

Roupp has plenty of talent, the knock on him has always been his command and the poor WHIP that it leads to (1.45 in his career). It was more of the same this spring, with a 1.39 WHIP and a 15/7 K/BB ratio over 13 innings. If he was facing a pair of bottom-third offenses in the National League, I may be willing to roll the dice. Not against two disciplined playoff squads though. That’s just asking for trouble. Hard pass.

Roki Sasaki, RHP Dodgers (vs. Guardians, at Nationals)

Taking the name recognition out of it, there’s nothing of substance that Sasaki has done on the field since joining the Dodgers to justify starting him with any level of confidence for a two-start week. He was clobbered in Cactus League play to the tune of a 15.58 ERA and 2.77 WHIP over 8 2/3 innings and the expectation is that he’s still going to ultimately require Tommy John surgery at some point. The matchups are solid, but that’s not enough to get me over the ledge here. He’s a pass for me.

Michael Soroka, RHP Diamondbacks (vs. Tigers, vs. Braves)

As much as I’d like to recommend Soroka for his first start with the Diamondbacks, he’s coming off of a brutal outing to end his spring in which he allowed six runs on 10 hits over 3 1/3 innings against the Guardians. He’s also facing two of the better offenses in all of baseball and while he’s at home, he pitches in a hitter’s park. I don’t think he’ll be a favorite to win in either outing and just don’t see the ratio risk as being worth the upside of a few potential strikeouts.

Brandon Pfaadt, RHP Diamondbacks (vs. Tigers, vs. Braves)

I’ve been a believer of Pfaadt in the past, but if I can’t recommend Soroka here, I certainly can’t get behind Pfaadt. He has been far too inconsistent to trust at this point, especially against two strong offenses. One of these starts could turn into a complete disaster and leave you with a ratio hole that could take weeks to dig out from. Simply pass and let him be someone else’s problem.

Bryce Elder, RHP Braves (vs. Athletics, at Diamondbacks)

If you’re a fan of pitchers with a career 4.58 ERA and 1.36 WHIP with minimal upside in the strikeout department, then by all means take a shot at streaming Elder. I simply think there are better options out there than playing with this fire. I’ll pass.

Tomoyuki Sugano, RHP Rockies (at Blue Jays, vs. Phillies)

Like the “Never Aaron Civale” rule that we noted above, fantasy managers would be best served by adhering to the “Never Rockies” rule as well. That’s certainly the case this week, as Sugano draws two tough matchups with one of them being at Coors Field against the Phillies. There’s no upside in wins or strikeouts and a strong likelihood that he inflicts serious damage on your ratios. Don’t do it.

Thanks as always for reading. Let's start the season off right and see if we can pick up a couple of extra wins and strikeouts by streaming the right two-start pitchers instead of inflicting unnecessary ratio damage that's going to punish us for those decisions. To the top of the leaderboards!

BravesVision is officially on DIRECTV

BERLIN, GERMANY - OCTOBER 07: In this photo illustration the logo of American direct broadcast satellite service provider DirecTV is displayed on a smartphone on October 07, 2019 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo Illustration by Thomas Trutschel/Photothek via Getty Images) | Photothek via Getty Images

Hours before Opening Day 2026, the Atlanta Braves announced a multi-year agreement with DIRECTV to carry their new network, BravesVision, making Atlanta Braves games available through the satellite provider within the Braves’ home markets. That region includes Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Tennessee, South Carolina and western North Carolina.

BravesVision can be found on channel 645 and will be available for Opening Day. On U-verse, it is on 1730.

DIRECTV was one of the last major traditional satellite or cable providers with whom the Braves had not announced and agreement for BravesVision. An agreement with Fubu was announced earlier today.

For more information on how to watch Braves games this season, read this post.

Mariners place RHP Carlos Vargas on IL; recall RHP Cole Wilcox from Tacoma

PEORIA, ARIZONA - MARCH 11: Carlos Vargas #54 of the Seattle Mariners throws a pitch during a Spring Training game against the Colorado Rockies at Peoria Stadium on March 11, 2026 in Peoria, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Mariners announced today that RHP Carlos Vargas is going on the 15-day IL, retroactive to March 24, with a right lat strain.

The lat issue must have cropped up suddenly, because Vargas was on a relatively regular schedule this spring, appearing every 3-4 days. His last appearance was in the spring training finale against San Diego, when he hurled a clean 1-2-3 inning with a strikeout. However, Vargas apparently wasn’t available for the season opener, leading to manager Dan Wilson having to use the two other lower-leverage relievers – Casey Legumina and Cooper Criswell – in the eighth and ninth innings of a 6-4 loss to Cleveland.

To replace Vargas, the team is calling up RHP Cole Wilcox, who was rotation-mates with Mariners pitcher Emerson Hancock while the two were at Georgia. The Mariners acquired Wilcox, the last remaining piece of the Blake Snell trade, from the Rays for cash in early November. Wilcox was a standout this spring, featuring eye-popping velocity on his fastball and sinker, easily touching 97 and pairing that with a slider/sweeper combo.

It’s easy to see why Wilcox is the Mariners’ first option out of a group of pitchers in Tacoma that has multiple intriguing options. Wilcox has big stuff and the potential for both swing-and-miss with an elevated fastball and the ability to generate weak contact on the ground when he’s locating well with his heavy sinker. It’s that second bit that’s the tricky part, though. Wilcox’s velocity has finally rebounded from where it was before his TJ surgery and recovery (2021-22), but his command remains a work in progress. He’ll now have an opportunity to keep working with the big-league pitching coaches while Vargas is recovering. For now, expect Wilcox to slot into Vargas’s spot in the ‘pen alongside the other lower-leverage arms Criswell and Legumina, although perhaps as the one with the highest upside.

Tiger Woods released on bail hours after arrest at crash scene on suspicion of DUI

  • Tiger Woods arrested after Florida rollover crash

  • Golfer charged with DUI after Jupiter Island incident

  • Woods to be held eight hours under Florida DUI law

  • Trump laments arrest of ‘close friend’ in remarks

Tiger Woods was released on bail on Friday, hours after the golf star’s Land Rover clipped a truck, rolled onto its side and he was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence, according to officials.

Martin County sheriff John Budensiek said Woods was driving a Land Rover that overturned after attempting to overtake a truck on a narrow two-lane road shortly before 2pm near Woods’s residence on Jupiter Island. The vehicle clipped a trailer, veered off and came to rest on its driver’s side after sliding along the roadway.

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Five-time Gold Glove winner Jason Heyward announces retirement after 16-year MLB career

CHICAGO — Jason Heyward, who launched his 16-year major league career with the Atlanta Braves in 2010 and won a World Series title with the Chicago Cubs in 2016, announced his retirement on Friday.

Heyward played in 34 games with San Diego in 2025, hitting .176.

For his career, Heyward hit .255 with 186 home runs with six teams. He also played for St. Louis, Houston and the Los Angeles Dodgers. The outfielder won five Gold Gloves, including four straight seasons from 2014 through 2017.

Heyward, whose nickname is “J Hey,” played his first five seasons with the Braves and set career highs with 27 homers and 82 RBIs for Atlanta in 2012. He was drafted by the Braves in 2007 from Henry County High School in suburban Atlanta.

Heyward played for the Cubs for seven seasons, from 2016 through 2022. He said he plans to focus on his Jason Heyward Baseball Academy, a youth development program based in Chicago.

“I wanted to reach this moment and know without a doubt that it was time to walk away, and I do,” Heyward said in a statement. “No second-guessing, no looking back, just gratitude.”

Heyward said playing 16 years in the major leagues “gave me everything, and now I get to give some of that back. Through the Jason Heyward Baseball Academy, I get to mentor the next generation, keep my hands in the game, and make sure kids in my community have the opportunities and the space to dream the same way I did.”