CLEVELAND, OHIO - FEBRUARY 13: Blake Wesley #14 and Malaki Branham #22 of the San Antonio Spurs talk with Darius Garland #10 of the Cleveland Cavaliers after the game at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse on February 13, 2023 in Cleveland, Ohio. The Cavaliers defeated the Spurs 117-109. 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 Jason Miller/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Cleveland Cavaliers traded away Darius Garland at the deadline this past season, but apparently, this move was in the works as far back as 2024. That season, Garland broke his jaw and had a tough time finding a rhythm next to Donovan Mitchell. That year ended in an anticlimactic five-game series loss to the eventual champion Boston Celtics.
After that series, The Athletic reported that Garland’s agent, Rich Paul, “would have conversations with Cavs officials on potentially finding a new home for the one-time All-Star.”
Garland ended up staying with the team and vehemently denied any reports that he was possibly unhappy in Cleveland by the time the next season rolled around.
He went on to say that he was happy that the Cavs committed to Mitchell that summer and that they have a great relationship off the court.
Earlier this week, Paul said on the Game Over podcast that Garland “wanted to get out” of Cleveland back in 2024 and the San Antonio Spurs were an option before they traded for De’Aaron Fox.
“[Garland] was flustered, he was frustrated and he wanted to get out,” Paul said. “We were having a conversation, and I said to him at the time, you got to get somewhere…I don’t want you to take a dip. And the Spurs, before they got the second pick, they needed a point guard. And I thought next to Wemby, with shooting and all that. And then things changed and he was fine.”
As a point of clarification, the Spurs had the second pick in the most recent draft, not the one before. Based on when the Fox trade happened in Feb. 2025, presumably Paul is talking about the 2024 draft when San Antonio took Stephon Castle number four overall. This also lines up with when Garland was disgruntled.
The Cavs were able to work things out in the 2024-25 season as Paul alluded to. Garland played the best basketball of his career, and the Cavs looked like a threat to win the Finals. Then, that all went away after Garland injured his toe that spring.
Last February, it seemed like the Garland trade for James Harden came out of nowhere. Looking back, it’s clear that this has been brewing for a while. It was just a matter of when, and not if.
Since he arrived two days ago, the Giants have looked nothing like a team that was floundering so badly it needed to bring in a new third-base coach just two months into the season.
They’ve strung together two complete, generally clean efforts in a row — an accomplishment for a team that hasn’t won more than three consecutive games all year.
And it has come against no slouch.
Casey Schmitt slugged his 13th home run of the season on the first pitch from Brewers starter Coleman Crow and the Giants kept on hitting enough to survive a subpar start from Adrian Houser against his former team, knocking off the NL Central leaders Thursday afternoon for the second straight game, 12-9, to claim a split of the four-game set.
Eric Haase’s grand slam capped a six-run seventh inning as the Giants took down the Brewers 12-9 on Thursday afternoon. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
Catcher Eric Haase, another former Brewer, added a cherry on top of the win with a grand slam to straightaway center before an out had been recorded in the seventh.
Drew Gilbert even got redemption for the catch he missed at the wall earlier in the series, leaping for a spectacular home run robbery of Andrew Vaughn for the final out of the eighth.
Perhaps the only knocks were a throw in the dirt from Willy Adames that Rafael Devers wasn’t able to scoop and the pitching staff’s ongoing affinity for issuing bases on balls — three in 4 ⅓ innings from Houser, whose day was over after serving up a two-run shot to Jackson Chourio, plus five more from the bullpen for 28 total over the course of the series.
Willy Adames went 2-for-6 in the Giants’ victory. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
“Not that the pitchers didn’t do some good things,” manager Tony Vitello said. “But you’re not going to win games when you have eight walks. You’re just not.”
Vitello was forced to turn to his closer, despite leading by five runs, after Wilkin Ramos failed to record an out and walked home a run in the ninth. Representing the tying run, David Hamilton sent a fastball from Caleb Killian to the warning track in center field but it just stayed in the park for a far more stressful final out than there should have been.
San Francisco led 3-0 after bringing nine men to the plate in the top of the first and added on with back-to-back doubles from Adames and Jung Hoo Lee that began another three-run rally in the third. That, it turned out, was merely an appetizer for a six-run seventh inning in which 11 batters came to the plate.
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It made for plenty of activity for Ron Wotus in his final game as the interim third-base coach.
When the Giants take the field Friday afternoon at Wrigley Field, Pettis will be standing in the box, hoping to get as many opportunities to wave runners home.
What it means
The Giants haven’t enjoyed many games like these, let alone strung them together.
Logan Webb was hopeful his seven shutout innings in Wednesday’s 1-0 win would set the tone for the Giants to begin to flip the script. It didn’t translate to the next man up in the rotation, but maybe it was the start of something positive nonetheless.
“The blueprint is there,” Vitello said.
Although he wasn’t particularly sharp against his previous team, Adrian Houser gave up two earned runs in 4.1 innings. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect
Who’s hot
Jung Hoo Lee singled three times, doubled and scored three runs, extending his hitting streak to a career-long 12 games. Over the course of the stretch — the longest active streak in the majors and the longest by a Giant since Dominic Smith’s 15-gamer last year — Lee is batting a remarkable 24-for-45, including five multi-hit efforts in seven games since returning from the IL.
Lee’s 19 hits in seven games since returning from the IL are the most any Giants hitter has had in a seven-game span since Bill Terry in 1932.
Bryce Eldridge also extended his on-base streak to 11 games with an RBI single to drive in Luis Arraez in the first, then worked a walk and scored in the third and lined another single to right field on the sixth pitch of his third trip to the plate.
Schmitt, meanwhile, set a career high for home runs in the 63rd game of the season and is making a strong case to represent the Giants at the All-Star Game next month.
Jung Hoo Lee upped his batting average to .322 following his 4-for-5 performance against the Brewers. Getty Images
Who’s not
Just about everyone has gotten in on the good times the past two games.
Except for Rafael Devers.
The first baseman is back in the slump that he appeared to have broken out of in May, when he slashed .306/.356/.593 with 14 doubles, tying a franchise record for the most in one month.
Since the calendar flipped to June, Devers had been 0-for-16 with eight strikeouts until he lifted a double off the right-field wall in the top of the ninth.
Still, Devers was already responsible for one of the Giants’ hardest-hit balls of the game — a 107 mph line drive that went straight into the back of third baseman Luis Rengifo’s glove.
Matt Chapman went 3-for-5 with two RBIs in Thursday’s victory. AP Photo/Kayla Wolf
Up next
The Giants will play their second and third matinees in a row to begin a three-game series against the Cubs at Wrigley Field, then face a quick turnaround following a 5:30 p.m. start on “Sunday Night Baseball” before beginning a homestand the next evening.
Robbie Ray will seek to complete at least five innings for the first time since May 8 when he takes the mound in the series opener Friday with first pitch set for 11:20 a.m. PT.
Jun 4, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Brewers left fielder Jackson Chourio (11) celebrates in the dugout after hitting a two run home run in the fifth inning against the San Francisco Giants at American Family Field. Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-Imagn Images | Benny Sieu-Imagn Images
Today’s first pitch was fairly representative of how most of today’s game ended up going. Brewers starter Coleman Crow threw a 90.7 mph sinker up and in to Casey Schmitt, who leads the Giants in home runs. Schmitt tagged it for his thirteenth of the year, and all of a sudden the Brewers were already behind just one pitch into the game.
Crow quickly got two outs, but also allowed singles to Luis Arraez and Jung Hoo Lee. Bryce Eldridge came up with two on and two out and singled into center field for the Giants’ second run of the inning. Matt Chapman then took a strike, fouled off three pitches, and ripped a line drive into left field. Lee scored, Eldridge made it around to third, and Chapman ended up on second with a double.
For a moment, it looked like the Giants were going to add to their lead again after Crow walked the next batter, Eric Haase, on four pitches that were all low and away. Luckily, nine-hitter Drew Gilbert grounded out to end the inning.
Crow would make it through the second inning unscathed, but allowed two runs on four hits and a walk in the third. He was eventually pulled with only one out in the frame and the bases loaded. DL Hall came in to try to get out of the jam and limited the Giants to a sacrifice fly.
Crow’s final line reflects how rough of an outing this was for him: 2 1/3 innings pitched, 9 hits, 6 earned runs, two walks. He had looked good through his first three appearances, but the Giants jumped on him early and often. Even during a 1-2-3 second inning, Rafael Devers hit a 107 mph liner that Luis Rengifo made a ridiculous diving play on to take away a base hit.
I still believe Crow can eventually become an effective part of Milwaukee’s pitching staff, but he’s a rookie who doesn’t throw particularly hard. Eldridge’s RBI single, an Adames double that almost cleared the outfield fence, and a Jung Hoo Lee RBI double were all on 87-88 mph cutters. His fastball, which he also gave up a couple big hits on, was sitting at 91-92 mph. As he learns how to navigate major-league hitters, outings like this are bound to happen. With that being said, one rough start isn’t an immediate red flag, especially if he follows it up with a few more strong performances.
On the offensive end, the Brewers got a run back in the first thanks to a Chourio walk, a Turang single (initially ruled an error on Adames), and a Contreras sacrifice fly. In the bottom of the fifth, Chourio followed a Christian Yelich double with a two-run home run that cut the deficit to three.
Since Crow exited so early, the Brewers were forced to lean heavily on their bullpen. Unfortunately, the story of the game quickly shifted from Crow’s struggles to a series of injuries among Milwaukee’s relievers.
Hall pitched 2 1/3 one-hit innings, but ended up leaving the game with a trainer. After throwing an 0-1 sweeper to Gilbert, Contreras — the catcher — saw something he didn’t like. He immediately called time out and went out to check on his pitcher. Brewers manager Pat Murphy, a couple pitching coaches, and the trainer all came out and, after conferring with Hall, took the ball from him.
Grant Anderson came on in relief, getting out of the fifth and pitching a scoreless sixth inning. In the top of the seventh, he allowed two straight singles, and the second was a comebacker off the bat of Eldridge that got Anderson on his right forearm. He looked to be in serious pain, doubling over immediately and remaining on the ground while talking to the training staff. Eventually, he got up — still clearly shaken up — and walked off the field with a trainer.
After a few warmup pitches, Jake Woodford quickly allowed a single to Chapman, loading the bases for former Brewer Eric Haase. Haase took the first pitch for a ball, then launched a grand slam 406 feet to pad the Giants’ lead even further. Before escaping the inning, Woodford gave up four more singles and two runs to bring the score to Giants 12, Brewers 3.
Milwaukee quickly got a couple runs back in the bottom of the seventh after Yelich led off with a single and Chourio again brought him home with his second two-run homer of the day. Andrew Vaughn almost added two more runs, but Gilbert robbed him of a home run.
Jackson Chourio with his third career multi-HR game
San Francisco brought in reliever Wilkin Ramos for the ninth to try and close it out. Ramos, pitching in his second career game after making his major league debut in the series opener, started the inning by allowing singles to Chourio and Gary Sánchez. Both Joey Ortiz and Blake Perkins worked the count full before walking, and the walk to Perkins brought home Chourio from third.
With the bases loaded and the tying run in the on-deck circle, Giants manager Tony Vitello didn’t want Ramos facing Vaughn. He turned to Caleb Kilian, who struck Vaughn out on a foul tip before getting Frelick to ground into an RBI force out at second.
Even down to their last out, the Brewers still weren’t done. With the score now 12-8 and runners on the corners, Rengifo floated a soft liner into left field to score Ortiz from third and keep the inning alive.
That brought the tying run to the plate in the form of Hamilton, who had already homered in the previous inning. After taking ball one, he got a sinker he could handle and drove it deep to right-center field. For a moment, it looked like it might have had the legs to get over the center field fence. Instead, the ball died on the warning track, just a few feet short of a game-tying three-run homer.
After today’s loss, the Brewers settled for a split in their four-game series with the Giants and have now dropped two straight games. They’ll head out west tonight for a six-game road trip against the Rockies and Athletics before their next scheduled off day. First pitch for tomorrow’s series opener in Colorado is set for 7:40 p.m.
Luguentz Dort warming up before Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals
The Oklahoma City Thunder finally have some hard decisions to make during the 2026 offseason.
With a very young roster, several of their talented players are due for paydays soon, and that time is coming for Chet Holmgren and Jalen Williams, whose max contract extensions kick in next year.
The Thunder have only two major contract questions this offseason: Isaiah Hartenstein and Luguentz Dort, both of whom have team options.
While it is possible Oklahoma City could restructure Hartenstein’s deal, given that he was an integral part of its Western Conference Finals run, that could leave Dort as the potential odd man out.
Luguentz Dort warming up before Game 7 of the Western Conference Finals AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez
Dort is the longest tenured Thunder player, tied with Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. Dort is known for his elite perimeter defense and high motor. His team option for next year is $ 17.7 million.
While the price is not too steep for the modern NBA, Dort’s issue is with the roster construction. Right now, the Thunder have three outstanding defensive-minded wings — Dort, Cason Wallace and Alex Curoso make up the trio.
Caruso is already locked in long-term with a contract and Wallace is still on his rookie deal, making him a cheaper option for the Thunder.
With all that in mind, it seems that the Thunder might be forced to move on from Dort. The two options the team has are to either trade or release Dort.
Luguentz Dort on the court in Game 7 NBAE via Getty Images
But one player on the team is backing Dort to stay.
Superstar Gilgeous-Alexander wants Dort, who is the NBA MVP’s teammate on Team Canada, to remain in OKC.
Tim MacMahon of the “NBA Today Show” reported that Gilgeous-Alexander has spoken with General Manager Sam Presti about keeping Dort on the roster.
“He will at least remind Sam Presti and the Thunder management just how much he values having Lu Dort as his teammate,” MacMahon said earlier this week.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander #2 of the Oklahoma City Thunder shoots a free throw during the game against the San Antonio Spurs during Game Seven of the NBA Western Conference Finals on May 30, 2026 at Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. NBAE via Getty Images
AI is trying to figure out what's what just like the humans that feed its information capabilities, based on the latest mock draft curated by USA TODAY Sports using Microsoft Copilot's artificial intelligence chatbot. Though its top-four stayed the same, the rest of the first round is almost completely different from its analysis last month after the conclusion of the NBA draft scouting combine. It's a reflection of the changing perception of draft experts as workouts continue and new intel emerges.
Here's a breakdown of Microsoft Copilot AI's latest 2026 NBA mock draft, including the chatbot's reasoning for making each first-round pick:
2026 NBA mock draft: AI picks first round after scouting combine
USA TODAY Sports asked Microsoft Copilot AI to generate a mock draft for the first round of the 2026 NBA Draft featuring only players eligible this year now that the NBA draft withdrawl deadline passed for college players. The chatbot was asked to base its selections on current mock drafts from reputable websites, as well as the latest intel on team needs, prospect analysis and potential draft withdrawals.
Note:AI models still have issues with accuracy as seen in the mock draft below. Of particular note, Microsoft Copilot needed additional prompts after several picks were inaccurately assigned to teams.The average mock draft pick referenced for each player was compiled by USA TODAY Sports using 12 of the latest mock drafts from national websites around the country, including USA TODAY.
1. Washington Wizards: AJ Dybantsa
Average mock draft pick: 1
AI analysis: "A franchise devoid of elite wing creation takes the class’s best scoring forward archetype to anchor its rebuild."
2. Utah Jazz: Darryn Peterson, Kansas
Average mock draft pick: 2
AI analysis: "Utah secures a jumbo lead guard who can scale alongside or beyond its current young backcourt."
3. Memphis Grizzlies: Cameron Boozer, Duke
Average mock draft pick: 3
AI analysis: "Memphis bets on elite production and feel to stabilize its frontcourt with a high-floor offensive hub."
AI analysis: "Dallas pairs Cooper Flagg with a versatile scoring guard who can handle, create, and space the floor, giving its new franchise centerpiece a dynamic perimeter partner to grow alongside."
10. Milwaukee Bucks: Nate Ament, Tennessee
Average mock draft pick: 11
AI analysis: "Milwaukee injects youth and athleticism into its wing rotation with a high-upside developmental forward."
11. Golden State Warriors: Yaxel Lendeborg, Michigan
Average mock draft pick: 12
AI analysis: "Golden State opts for a polished, high-IQ forward who can contribute immediately in a win-now ecosystem."
12. Oklahoma City Thunder: Aday Mara, Michigan
Average mock draft pick: 10
AI analysis: "OKC swings on size and skill, adding a 7-footer with defensive and playmaking upside to its long-term core."
13. Miami Heat: Labaron Philon, Alabama
Average mock draft pick: 14
AI analysis: "Miami selects a tough, downhill guard whose physicality and mindset align with its developmental model."
14. Charlotte Hornets: Karim Lopez, New Zealand Breakers (NBL)
Average mock draft pick: 16
AI analysis: "Charlotte gambles on international upside with a versatile wing who fits LaMelo Ball’s pace-and-space style."
15. Chicago Bulls: Isaiah Evans, Duke
Average mock draft pick: 26 (appeared in 11/12 mock drafts)
AI analysis: "Chicago doubles down on perimeter scoring with a shooter who can stretch defenses and create off movement."
AI analysis: "Memphis reinforces its defense with a disruptive, switchable big who thrives in modern schemes."
17. Oklahoma City Thunder: Chris Cenac, Jr., Houston
Average mock draft pick: 22
AI analysis: "Oklahoma City continues stockpiling length and athleticism with a rim-running, defensive-minded big."
18. Charlotte Hornets: Koa Peat, Arizona
Average mock draft pick: 25 (appeared in 11/12 mock drafts)
AI analysis: "Charlotte adds physicality and toughness with a power forward capable of balancing its finesse-heavy lineup."
19. Toronto Raptors: Bennett Stirtz, Iowa
Average mock draft pick: 21
AI analysis: "Toronto secures a steady, efficient lead guard to bring structure to its evolving offensive identity."
20. San Antonio Spurs: Hannes Steinbach, Washington
Average mock draft pick: 17
AI analysis: "San Antonio adds another mobile, high-feel big to complement Victor Wembanyama, leaning into jumbo, position-less frontcourt versatility."
21. Detroit Pistons: Cameron Carr, Baylor
Average mock draft pick: 15
AI analysis: "Detroit adds a versatile wing defender who fits its identity shift toward length and two-way play."
22. Philadelphia 76ers: Meleek Thomas, Arkansas
Average mock draft pick: 27 (appeared in 11/12 mock drafts)
AI analysis: "Philadelphia grabs instant offense off the bench in a high-volume shooter to support its star guards."
23. Atlanta Hawks: Allen Graves, Santa Clara
Average mock draft pick: 23
AI analysis: "Atlanta targets a high-feel forward who can connect lineups and contribute without needing heavy usage."
24. New York Knicks: Dailyn Swain, Texas
Average mock draft pick: 20
AI analysis: "New York adds a switchable two-way wing with size and defensive versatility, aligning with a roster built around length, physicality, and lineup flexibility."
25. Los Angeles Lakers: Henri Veesaar, North Carolina
Average mock draft pick: 26 (appeared in 11/12 mock drafts)
AI analysis: "Los Angeles prioritizes frontcourt versatility with a big who can stretch the floor and fit modern spacing needs."
26. Denver Nuggets: Sergio de Larrea, Valencia (Spain)
Average mock draft pick: 34 (appeared in 6/12 mock drafts)
AI analysis: "Denver adds another high-IQ playmaker to sustain its ball-movement-heavy offensive ecosystem."
27. Boston Celtics: Alex Karaban, UConn
Average mock draft pick: 32 (only appeared in 4/12 mock drafts)
AI analysis: "Boston selects a proven connector whose shooting and decision-making fit seamlessly into its contender core."
The New York Yankees still do not have a firm diagnosis regarding franchise player Aaron Judge. But the circle of medical specialists aiming to get him right continues to grow.
The Yankees confirmed to news media after their Thursday, June 4 game that tests on Judge's rib and shoulder will be reviewed by Dallas-based vascular specialist Gregory Pearl, who specializes in "thoracic outlet syndrome management in high-performance athletes," according to his website.
Judge was initially diagnosed with a bone bruise near his right rib cage, which multiple tests have confirmed. Yet he was sent for more testing Wednesday evening and Thursday morning, and after the Yankees defeated the Cleveland Guardians 2-1, the club confirmed to reporters that test results will be viewed by Pearl, the thoracic outlet syndrome specialist.
It's an unsettling development for Judge, as TOS has significantly impacted or ended careers, such as former World Series MVP Stephen Strasburg. It also ended the 2025 season of Cy Young Award hopeful Zack Wheeler, who underwent surgery to remove a rib in September.
What is thoracic outlet syndrome recovery time?
Wheeler recovered in time to make his 2026 debut April 25, and improved to 5-1 with a 2.31 ERA by beating San Diego on Thursday. Yet there's very little track record for hitters impacted by TOS.
The thoracic outlet is an area between a person's neck and shoulder, and TOS can result when its nerves or blood vessels are compressed. Wheeler suffered from venous TOS and had a blood clot near his shoulder surgically removed weeks before his rib surgery.
Longtime catcher Mike Zunino is perhaps the most notable position player to undergo TOS surgery, in 2022.
Judge, the three-time American League MVP, has hit 385 career home runs and already smacked 17 this season, with a .907 OPS, before he was sidelined after playing in their Sunday, May 31 game at Sacramento.
“I don’t wanna take shots at anybody, but I will say this. There are a lot of front office guys who can go out and get the stars,” he began. “There’s very few of them that can then build a team into a championship team. That’s what you have to do.”
He continued: “You can go out and get these names. But can you make the other moves? You look at Danny Ainge, he’s done it a ton. Brad Stevens has done it, Sam Presti, it took him a while… and he finally kind of figured it out.”
Doc Rivers and the Bucks parted ways at the end of this season. Kyle Ross-Imagn Images
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Notably, Rivers — who spent parts of the last three seasons with the Bucks — did not mention Milwaukee general manager Jon Horst or his previous bosses: ex-Sixers president Daryl Morey and Clippers exec Lawrence Frank.
The 2008 champion, who earned his lone ring as a coach with the Celtics, praised the Knicks for filling out their roster with “role players” such as Josh Hart and Mikal Bridges.
He claimed not to know who the role players are on the Spurs’ youthful roster.
While Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns combined for 48 points on Monday, the Knicks got plenty of contributions elsewhere.
OG Anunoby hit some extremely timely shots in the fourth quarter and scored 17 points. Bridges was a plus-11 with nine points, and Hart grabbed 15 rebounds and dished out six assists.
Rivers praised the Knicks for having effective “role players” like Josh Hart on the team Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
PHOENIX, ARIZONA - JUNE 01: Roki Sasaki #11 of the Los Angeles Dodgers prepares for a game against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field on June 01, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Norm Hall/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Dodgers are back home ever so briefly, with a single-series homestand this weekend against the Angels at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles.
Back in Anaheim from May 15-17, the Dodgers had their way with the Angels in a three-game sweep, outscoring the Halos 31-3. The Angels come to Los Angeles having lost 29 of their last 43 games, and are 11-21 on the road this season.
Roki Sasaki starts the series opener for the Dodgers.
WASHINGTON, DC - MAY 17: Baltimore Orioles third baseman Coby Mayo (16) reacts after his home run during the game between the Baltimore Orioles and the Washington Nationals on May 17, 2026 at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Mark Goldman/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images
Sometimes you eat the road, and sometimes the road eats you. I’m not totally sure how relevant that is to today’s Orioles-Red Sox game, but what I mean is, this was a total inversion of Wednesday’s lopsided, 8-1 loss. As the O’s unsuccessful starter that night, Chris Bassitt, said after the game, “When your starter goes three innings and gives up three runs, that’s pretty much a recipe for disaster, so this one’s on me.” Today, however, Orioles starter Trevor Rogers looked just fine, thanks, and it was a recipe for a win.
An easy win, at that. Boston starter Brayan Bello has had a curiously bimodal 2026 season: when he starts games, he has a 9.68 ERA, but he’s under 1.00 when he comes in after an opener. Well, the Sox played with fate, and Bello got rocked in the first inning, to the tune of six runs. It wasn’t much of a nailbiter after that.
It started with the leadoff pitch, which leadoff hitter Taylor Ward did something predictable to—he doubled—and a Bello cutter hit Gunnar Henderson on the foot. Adley Rutschman singled to the gap, and Ward made it 1-0. Then, oh no!, Pete Alonso hit into a double play. I confess I thought the rally was over.
I was very wrong. Samuel Basallo took a very grown-up walk. Leody Taveras singled through the infield and Gunnar scored. 2-0, Birds. Still not done: Colton Cowser walked to load the bases for Coby Mayo. Bello threw him a bunch of sweepers—one too many: Cowser skied a ball three-fourths of the way off The Monster, and all the little Orioles came home.
Baltimore had one more trick up their sleeve, still with two outs: Jackson Holliday walked, and leadoff man Taylor Ward came back to the plate, and singled up the middle, his second hit of the inning. 6-0, Orioles, after one.
Then, an improbable lull—or, a streak, I guess, if you’re in the Brayan Bello fan club. I can’t say many of us on this blog are. The 27-year-old recovered after that disastrous first inning to retire ten Orioles in a row. It was a gutsy effort to get some length for his team, give him that. At one point in the fifth, Brian Roberts, from the booth, said, “You might think this was a 0-0 game considering how these guys have been pitching since [the first inning].” Ohhh, Classic Roberts. (I have no idea if Brian Roberts is a jinx.) Right then, Pete Alonso singled to left, after which Sam Basallo torched a ball, 112.4 mph to right field. Surprising to me, this was the hardest-hit ball of Basallo’s young career. The Polar Bear chugged home to make it 7-0. Basallo, on third base after a groundout, came home and scored when Cowser hit a deep sac fly. 8-0, Orioles.
An 8-0 score tells you that things were going pretty well for Trevor Rogers. The Orioles lefty, who’d struggled in his first ten outings this season but may be turning a corner, had himself an easy shutout through five innings, in fact a no-hitter until into the fifth. His control was pinpoint, and his fastball had movement!
The only sour note was it looked, if we’re being honest, that he seemed to lose gas after that. He allowed three straight singles in the sixth inning, plus his first run of the game, and he couldn’t close out that frame against the Red Sox. Instead, manager Craig Albernaz lifted Rogers for Yennier Cano, who got one out and called it a day. Still, overall, progress for Trevor Rogers, who’d had an era of nearly eight on the season: one run in 5 2/3 innings will do. As MASN pointed out, Rogers now has five-inning-shutout starts in back-to-back appearances.
Not much suspense after that. Andrew Kittredge had a five-outing scoreless streak entering this one, but he served up a home run to Willson Contreras. There are worse things one can do. The veteran righty kept it suspense-free after that.
Any team can look great or terrible on any given day. Yesterday was the Orioles’ turn to be cannon fodder; today they were … the cannon? Either way, this team been stacking more of the good days instead of the bad days. Let’s see if it continues north of the border against Toronto.
Who is your Most Birdland Player of the game? Trevor Rogers, with a stabilizing outing of 5 2/3 and one run? Coby Mayo, with a three-run double? Taylor Ward with a casual 3-for-5 day, including a double?
06326 – New York Knicks Vs. San Antonio Spurs at Frost Bank Center for game 1 of the 2026 NBA Finals: New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson gives a reacts...
There’s only one event Jalen Brunson would go off the wall for.
Fresh off leading the Knicks to a Game 1 win over the Spurs in the NBA Finals, Brunson was asked by a reporter during a Thursday press conference if there’s a show he’d spend Finals at Madison Square Garden-level money on.
As of Thursday afternoon, the get-in price for Monday’s Game 3 in New York was $7,520, per TickPick.
“That’s a good question,” Brunson replied before taking about 15 seconds to consider his answer.
“A live Michael Jackson performance,” he said.
Jalen Brunson met with reporters on Thursday afternoon. NBAE via Getty Images
While a posthumous performance would be an expensive thriller, the “King of Pop” did not charge nearly such an exorbitant amount for his concerts.
One
The Knicks’ first NBA Finals appearance in 27 years has generated significant buzz, and ticket prices have matched the rising excitement.
Jalen Brunson said that “a live Michael Jackson performance” would be the only show he’d spend $7,500 on. AP
After the Knicks clinched a Finals berth with a sweep of the Cavaliers, a pair of courtside tickets sold for nearly $280,000.
Despite an injury scare and arguments with referee Scott Foster and some fans, Brunson finished with a game-high 30 points on Thursday. Jason Szenes for The New York Post
With a 1-0 series lead after Thursday’s gritty comeback against the Victor Wembanyama-led Spurs, those prices have nearly doubled.
After trailing at halftime, the Knicks rallied from down 14 to seal a 105-95 win in San Antonio — New York’s 12th consecutive postseason win.
“Y’all better win [Friday] night or we ain’t coming back,” Smith told Spurs fans who gathered outside the set of ESPN’s “First Take” in San Antonio.
NBA analyst for ESPN,Stephen A. Smith before game one of the 2026 NBA Finals at Frost Bank Center. Scott Wachter-Imagn Images
“I’m telling you, you better win tomorrow night,” he added.
Smith, a lifelong Knicks fan, is implying that the series won’t return to San Antonio if the Knicks take the second game at Frost Bank Center. Games 3 and 4 will be at Madison Square Garden, meaning the Knicks could win their first championship since 1973 on their home floor if they go up 2-0 Friday night.
Should the Knicks arrive back home with a 2-0 series lead, the Garden will be even more alive than anticipated.
“I know that what I’m going to experience on Monday at Madison Square Garden is unlike anything I have ever seen in my lifetime. I’ve been covering sports for 30 years, I will never experience what I know I’m going to experience Monday in New York City,” Smith said.
Karl-Anthony Towns #32 drives down court as San Antonio Spurs forward Victor Wembanyama #1 gives chase during the second quarter. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
“And I’m telling you right now…If you [the Spurs] lose Game 2, you have let the New York Knicks know, ‘Wait a minute. We can go to the Garden and we don’t have to come back to the Alamo?’”
In Game 1, the Knicks pulled off a 105-95 victory after coming back from a 14-point third-quarter deficit.
Jalen Brunson put up 30 points, and his Knicks are now considered the favorites to win the title, flipping the odds prior to the series start.
Game 2 of the NBA Finals will tip off Friday at 8:30 p.m. ET.
In the second round of the 2026 NCAA Tournament, Milan Momcilovic finished off Mark Pope’s second season as Kentucky’s men’s basketball coach, scoring 20 points in Iowa State’s 82-63 rout of a once-ballyhooed Wildcats team.
Two months later, he may have just saved Pope’s job.
One of the final moves of the 2026 transfer portal cycle was arguably the most seismic, with Momcilovic, the No. 1 player in USA TODAY Sports’ portal rankings, committing to Kentucky five days after he pulled out of the 2026 NBA Draft.
Last season, on his way to earning second-team All-Big 12 honors for a 29-win Iowa State team that made the Sweet 16, the 6-foot-8 forward was perhaps the best shooter in the country. He led the country in made 3-pointers (136) and averaged 7.5 attempts from beyond the arc per game. Despite that high volume, he was still incredibly efficient, making 48.7% of his 3s. As Kyle Tucker of 247Sports pointed out, Momcilovic is the only Division I player since the 3-point line was introduced in 1986 to make at least 130 3s in a season while shooting at a 48% clip or better.
Given what Pope had endured in the preceding weeks and months, the addition of Momcilovic meant that much more.
After a laudable debut season in 2024-25, Pope’s second Kentucky team fell drastically short of immense expectations. An ill-conceived roster reportedly worth more than $20 million finished ninth in the SEC, lost 14 games, needed a miracle, last-second heave to avoid a first-round NCAA tournament loss to Santa Clara and was punked in the second round by an Iowa State team down its best player, with one Cyclones player saying after the game that they knew the Wildcats would quit if they got down by enough at any point.
An offseason that initially carried the promise of a fresh start quickly turned into a recurring nightmare.
Kentucky brought several of the biggest names available in the portal to campus and was well-positioned to land them only to ultimately be rebuffed. There was Rob Wright III, who announced he was going back to BYU the day after wrapping up a visit to Lexington. Syracuse transfer Donnie Freeman had long been viewed as a virtual lock for Pope until he reversed course and committed to St. John’s and Rick Pitino. The portal whiffs hardly ended there, with players like Jeremiah Wilkinson, Dink Pate, Dedan Thomas Jr. and Cruz Davis either visiting the Wildcats or being in close contact with them only to end up elsewhere. On the high-school front, Tyran Stokes, a Kentucky native who is the No. 1 recruit in the 2026 class, received a full-court press from the Wildcats before going before millions of viewers on “Inside the NBA” to announce he was headed to Kansas.
A coach who had been greeted back at his alma mater two years earlier by thousands of fans who packed into Rupp Arena for something as banal as an introductory news conference was suddenly staring at the very real possibility that if an underwhelming roster didn’t overachieve in 2026-27, he could soon be out of a job.
Then, much like the Otega Oweh 32-foot 3 that tied Santa Clara at the buzzer back in March, a prayer was answered. And with it, the outlook for Pope and his team next season changes considerably.
From a transactional sense, the slew of recruiting misses earlier in the cycle put Kentucky in an excellent position to land Momcilovic, with one of the most well-resourced programs in the sport having that more money to shell out for a player several other marquee brands were also pursuing. The fact that one of those other suitors was archrival Louisville, which had won a handful of recruiting battles against Pope this offseason and would have become a bona fide national title threat with Momcilovic in the fold, only makes it sweeter for the Wildcats.
With Momcilovic on board, what looked like an impotent Kentucky roster a week ago is suddenly much more intriguing. Center Malachi Moreno, a five-star recruit in the 2025 class, is poised for a breakout sophomore season after forestalling the NBA himself. As only a freshman, Alex Wilkins was one of the best mid-major guards in the country last season and should only continue to blossom. Zoom Diallo’s an ostensibly odd fit for Pope’s 3-point-centric offense, but he’s a dynamic lead guard who should be able to make plays. Forward Justin McBride and guard Jerone Morton are nice depth pieces.
What that group was desperately missing was a star, a reliable bucket-getter who the rest of the roster could be built around. In Momcilovic, it got just that.
Despite the hefty price tag he came with — he reportedly earned a deal worth more than $6 million — Momcilovic doesn’t instantly transform Kentucky from an also-ran into a national title contender, at least on paper. The Wisconsin native, who didn’t make the 10-player All-Big 12 first team in 2026, likely takes his new team from outside of various preseason top 25s to somewhere near the bottom end of the top 20.
If nothing else, though, he gives his new coach some sorely needed breathing room with a rabid fan base with justifiably lofty expectations for their beloved program. The team Pope had constructed before the NBA draft decision deadline had a relatively low ceiling, both in its conference and in the broader national landscape. With him, the Wildcats have a chance, whether it’s to compete with the best teams in the SEC, advance to the second weekend of the tournament or maybe even dream of a run to Detroit for the Final Four come next April.
For their coach, who had just suffered through the most tumultuous stretch of his brief tenure, that’s more than enough for now.
Larkin has been captain of the Red Wings since 2021. He's a six-time 30-goal scorer, including the last five seasons.
He also was a standout for the USA at the Olympics and the 4 Nations Face-Off.
The Red Wings' 10-season playoff drought is now the longest in the NHL after the Buffalo Sabres clinched a postseason spot. Larkin hasn't been in the postseason since his rookie year in 2015-16.
The Red Wings were quiet at the 2025 trade deadline, which Larkin had noted, and were more aggressive in 2026, bringing in Justin Faulk and David Perron. But they faded down the stretch again to miss the playoffs.
Dylan Larkin contract status
Larkin, 29, has five years left on his contract (through 2031) at a $8.7 million cap hit. He has a full no-trade clause the next two seasons and a modified no-trade clause afterward.
It might be difficult for Larkin to be moved quickly because general manager Steve Yzerman won't trade him without getting top value. And Larkin can dictate where he goes.
England’s Ollie Robinson marked his first Test for more than two years with four wickets, including three in a sensational opening over, as New Zealand collapsed to 61-6 at stumps at Lord’s on Thursday.
The 2026 Stanley Cup Final is underway, with the Western Conference champion Vegas Golden Knights challenging the Eastern Conference champion Carolina Hurricanes.
On top of the plethora of homegrown and drafted talent in their respective lineups, neither team would be where it is today without acquiring veterans from other clubs, such as the Calgary Flames.
This season's Final features three prominent former Flames players, including Golden Knights defensemen Rasmus Andersson and Noah Hanifin, and Hurricanes center Mark Jankowski.
Rasmus Andersson
Out of the three former Calgary players in this year's Final, Andersson had arguably the best career in Southern Alberta. He skated with the Flames for 10 seasons and 617 games, scoring 64 goals and 278 points, while serving as an alternate captain before a January 2026 trade to Vegas.
Credit: James Guillory-Imagn Images
Originally drafted in the second round (53rd overall) of the 2015 Entry Draft, Andersson was one of only three players, with captain Mikael Backlund and Blake Coleman, left from the franchise's last playoff game, a Game 5 overtime loss to the Edmonton Oilers on May 26, 2022.
When the Flames began to retool their roster over the past year, Andersson's name was among the top trade chips General Manager Craig Conroy held. After months of speculation, Conroy used his veteran defenseman's experience to acquire two draft picks (First and Second Round in 2027), plus Zach Whitecloud and Abram Wiebe from the Golden Knights on Jan. 18, 2026.
As Andersson chases his first Stanley Cup ring, his career with the Flames ranks in the top seven all-time amongst defensemen in team history, with the seventh most games played and goals, and the sixth most assists and points.
2026 Playoff Stats (Ahead of the Final) 16 GP - 0 G - 5 A - 6 Pts - 14 PIM - Plus-4
Noah Hanifin
Hanifin came to Calgary via a trade from the Hurricanes on June 23, 2018, the team that selected him as the fifth overall pick in the 2015 Entry Draft. In one of the more famous trades in team history, the Flames dealt away future Norris Trophy winner Adam Fox, a prospect at the time, with Dougie Hamilton in exchange for Elias Lindholm and Hanifin.
Credit: James Guillory-Imagn Images
Lindholm became a 40-goal scorer with the Flames, while Hanifin became a leader on the blueline, averaging 21:39 a game throughout his five and a half seasons with the team. Although Hanifin has averaged 35 points per season throughout his career, his best campaign came in Calgary during the 2021-22 season, when he tallied 10 goals and 38 assists for 48 points in 81 games, with a plus-27 rating.
Viewed as another intriguing trade option during the 2023-24 season, Conroy dealt Hanifin to Vegas as part of a three-way deal that also included the Philadelphia Flyers. Although there were many moving parts in the transition, the Flames ended up with a conditional first-round pick in 2026, which turned into Daniil Miromanov, and a third-round pick in 2024, which they used to select Kirill Zarubin.
2026 Playoff Stats (Ahead of the Final) 16 GP - 0 G - 6 A - 6 Pts - 2 PIM - Plus-3
Mark Jankowski
Jankowski was a Flames first-round selection, 21st overall, at the 2012 Entry Draft, who eventually made his NHL debut during the 2016-17 season. During the following campaign, 2017-18, he became a regular in the lineup, scoring a career-high 17 goals in 72 games.
Credit: Eric Bolte-Imagn Images
He would skate in 208 games with the Flames, tallying a total of 36 goals and 64 points with 59 penalty minutes before signing as a free agent with the Pittsburgh Penguins on Oct. 9, 2020.
Despite the shortest tenure of the three former Flames in this year's Final, Jankowski is the only one who can claim that the legendary Jaromir Jagr set up his first NHL goal.
2026 Playoff Stats (Ahead of the Final) 14 GP - 0 G - 4 A - 4 Pts - 12 PIM - Plus-3
Which former Flames player are you cheering for to win their first Stanley Cup? Let us know in the comments.