How Chicago White Sox went from 121 losses to AL Central penthouse

BALTIMORE – On the day Sam Antonacci played his first professional baseball game, going 2-for-4 for Class A Kannapolis in a Carolina League contest Aug. 8, 2024, the Chicago White Sox fired their manager with a 28-89 record, mired in a stretch of losing 48 of 54 games, on their way to a record-setting 121-loss season.

Sometimes, it’s advantageous to be young and oblivious.

From that moment in time, a gaggle of players like Antonacci methodically worked their way through the White Sox’s system, were culled from the waiver wire, imported en masse in a blockbuster trade or drafted, developed and tossed into the fire.

And in less than two years, baseball’s most depressing outpost has become its most surprising story.

“When I got drafted, when I first got to the Arizona complex,” Antonacci, a fifth-round pick out of Coastal Carolina in 2024, tells USA TODAY Sports, “it didn’t feel like a 121-loss team.

“I knew it was going to change quickly. It was a matter of when.”

How about… now?

Miguel Vargas and Sam Antonacci both joined the White Sox organization in 2024, Vargas via a trade from the Dodgers and Antonacci in the July draft.

These 2026 White Sox are 45-39, will begin the month of July atop the American League Central and, in a year of leaguewide mediocrity, have an 80% chance to reach the playoffs. It is a stunning climb for a club that saw the fading presence of Tony La Russa give way to three consecutive 100-loss seasons, the utter chaos of the Pedro Grifol managerial era and, finally, a place in the record books nobody wanted.

Yet for so many of the players assembled this year on the South Side, there’s a certain eternal sunshine of the rookie mind that joyfully prevails.

Antonacci did not debut until April 15, yet as the club’s leadoff hitter and left fielder, ranks sixth in the AL with a .391 on-base percentage, a 5-foot-11 doubles hitter residing among giants named Yordan and Trout and Kurtz. Tristan Peters, an erstwhile Savanna Banana rescued via cash considerations after the Tampa Bay Rays designated him for assignment, is playing Gold Glove-caliber defense in center field, rarely strikes out and reaches base at a .345 clip.

Munetaka Murakami, of course, was a member of Japan’s Yakult Swallows back in 2024, only to arrive this year and pound 20 homers in 57 games before a hamstring injury sidelined him. Still, he's a joyous presence around the club as he works his way back to a July return, secure in knowing the club has maintained a 15-12 clip without him.

And then there is Miguel Vargas, whose steady climb these past three seasons at both third base and the plate has him on the verge of a rare journey: Discarded Dodger mega-prospect to All-Star.

“It’s been really impressive,” says second-year White Sox manager Will Venable. “And it starts with players that, regardless of their opportunity in the past or where they are in their career, they’re really special guys. Guys who want to go out and compete and play hard, and make adjustments.

“That’s really what’s required to stay in this league and perform at a high level.”

Even if getting there can be a circuitous journey.

'A wild ride'

Winkler, Manitoba won’t be confused for a baseball outpost anytime soon, wedged as it is roughly halfway between Winnipeg and Grand Forks, North Dakota. And as Peters was growing up, juggling youth hockey (duh) and baseball, he realized his proclivity for the latter.

With that, his family agreed to ship him 12 hours west, to Calgary, where he’d stay with an aunt and attend a school with a baseball academy for his junior and senior years.

Peters would continue following the sun, to Arizona’s Chandler-Gilbert Community College, where fate would intercede in many ways.

Juco ball creates a melting pot of personalities and Peters wasn’t quite sure what to think when a teammate suggested they kill a night by going line dancing.

“And I was like ‘Oh boy, I don’t know,’” Peters remembers. “I said yes and almost got cold feet.”

Yet Peters and his buddy followed through, and good thing they ended up at Scootin’ Boots in Mesa. That evening, Peters would meet a young woman named Erin, commencing a four-year friendship that culminated in their 2023 marriage – held just a short drive from their initial meeting at Scootin’ Boots.

Peters also left an impression on Tyler Gillum, an opposing coach at South Mountain Community College, who’d remember Peters after the outfielder continued on to Southern Illinois University.

And in 2021, Gillum invited Peters to suit up for the Savannah Bananas.

Oh, it wasn’t full-fledged Banana Ball just yet. The Bananas were members of the summer collegiate Coastal Plain League. Yet their home games were spectacles – all the TikToks and stilts and dancing fans have come to expect.

Peters played in 17 games, a period that coincided with Milwaukee choosing him in the seventh round of the 2021 draft. It was good baseball – and an even better mental reset as his pro career began.

“Often, we focus on our performance on the field. There, we’re focused on the fans and how to give them a good time,” says Peters. “That’s who we’re playing for, essentially.

“When you’re hard on yourself and struggling, it can be pretty tough. It didn’t matter if you had a bad game or good game – you’d go out and dance with the fans after the game. You gotta have fun.”

Peters made his major league debut Aug. 8 with Tampa Bay – he’d been dealt from Milwaukee in 2022 for reliever Trevor Rosenthal – yet was hitless in 12 at-bats before returning to Class AAA.

The taste of the big leagues increased his cravings. As did sitting on an 0-for-12 all winter.

Yet as Peters redoubled his efforts, working out at Driveline Baseball’s Arizona facility to add strength and revamp his hitting approach, the Rays designated him for assignment. The White Sox soon worked out a deal for a lump of cash in exchange.

Why the White Sox, for a guy with four games of major league experience?

“They brought up my defense, first and foremost,” says Peters. “Saw some potential in my bat as well. I agreed and thought it was there.

“They were really awesome and excited to have me. That gave me motivation.”

Tristan Peters is providing elite defense and solid offense in center field, ranking fourth at his position in outs above average while posting a .782 OPS.

It set the stage for an unforgettable couple of weeks – Peters made the White Sox’s opening-day roster and shortly thereafter, his daughter Elaine was born.

With Erin and Elaine along for most road trips – “She’s having a blast, I think,” says Peters of nearly 4-month-old Elaine – Peters has established himself as a mainstay in center field, racking up 2.3 WAR and tied for fourth among major league center fielders with seven outs above average.

“It’s been a wild ride, to say the least,” he says. “There’s been a lot of steppingstones along the way and some you don’t expect. I’m just super grateful to be here and have this opportunity.”

South Side energy

Vargas can second that. He was a ballyhooed prospect with the Dodgers, rising to No. 30 in Baseball America’s top 100, yet predictably didn’t have a full developmental runway after batting .195 over 81 games in 2023.

So in August 2024, he was dropped into the White Sox’s 121-loss misery. A year later, with Venable stabilizing the managerial position, Vargas began to make strides.

This year, now 26, Vargas is about maintaining that over a full season, with excellent results so far.

The third baseman has racked up 3.3 WAR while hitting 19 homers in 82 games. He’s very much on track for a reunion next week with Cuban countryman and close friend Andy Pages, himself enjoying a big breakout with the Dodgers.

“I just try to be better every day, be consistent with my job,” says Vargas. “Understand that this is a long season. Get my body in the best position to go out there and compete every single day.

“Also, this group of guys, the energy they bring every single day (makes) it so easy to come here and match that energy. It’s been great for me to be part of this group.”

Says Venable: “He’s been so consistent. Last year we saw in flashes, in stretches that lasted a little longer. He just wasn’t able to really maintain it. That’s what’s been impressive – the work he’s put in in the offseason to give him that strength to be consistent throughout these stretches.”

That goes for the White Sox at large. They have received decent starting pitching from somewhat unexpected sources such as Davis Martin and Sean Burke. Noah Schultz, their 6-10 top prospect, will return from injury and start Wednesday, July 2 at Baltimore.

The bullpen is a bit unsettled, yet that’s the case for even the top contenders. Questions still remain about the sustainability of it all, as young players like Antonacci and Peters, recent outfield call-up Braden Montgomery and another rookie first-round pick, first baseman Jacob Gonzalez, complete their first trips around the 162-game sun.

It seems like a hodgepodge of youth. It also seems, trite as it sounds, like these guys are learning how to win. They are 17-10 in one-run games, a respectable 19-22 against teams with winning records.

"Early in the season, we were in a lot of these games that came down to one inning, situational baseball. We’ve had experience with all this stuff now. Everyone kind of knows their role," says shortstop Colson Montgomery, another former first-round pick who leads the club with 21 home runs. "We’re just getting more and more polished each day we play.

"We’re a young team and everything like that. But we like to act like we have that experience and confidence, because we do."

Braden Montgomery's June 9 debut was symbolic in another sense: All three pieces from the December 2024 trade of ace Garrett Crochet to the Boston Red Sox - Montgomery, second baseman Chase Meidroth and catcher Kyle Teel - are now everyday players in Chicago.

That deal perhaps the franchise nadir - 121 losses followed by the trade of a future Cy Young runner-up. They'd go on to lose 101 more games in 2025, the product more respectable but not yet totally watchable.

Yet look at them now.

The White Sox have drawn 15 crowds of at least 28,000, and now rank 10th in the AL in attendance - this after ranking 13th the past two seasons, finishing ahead of only the minor league Athletics and uncertain Rays.

“That’s why I feel it’s more enjoyable,” says Vargas, “and you kind of come from that and where we are now. You look back and the way we’ve been doing it step by step and it’s amazing.

“It’s a great journey for me and the whole organization, and we want to take this opportunity the best we can.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: How Chicago White Sox went from 121 losses to AL Central penthouse

MLB trade rumors: Tarik Skubal among 7 potential All-Stars who could soon switch teams

PHOENIX — They will be proudly representing their teams at the 96th All-Star Game in two weeks in Philadelphia, but once the festivities are over, and they travel back home for the second half of the MLB season, they soon may be wearing different uniforms.

The Major League Baseball trade deadline is Aug. 3, less than three weeks after the All-Star Game, and there are seven potential All-Star players who could be on the trade block and switching uniforms.

The biggest question is not whether two-time Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal of the Detroit Tigers will be traded, but whether he will be one of the 12 American League pitchers selected to the All-Star Game by the players, managers and coaches. He’s just 4-4 with a 3.15 ERA after missing five weeks after undergoing arthroscopic elbow surgery. Still, he’s one of the finest pitchers on the planet who could be the highest-paid pitcher in baseball history this winter.

Here are this year’s potential All-Star candidates, led by Skubal, who will find themselves subjected to intense trade rumors at the All-Star festivities:

Tarik Skubal, Detroit Tigers

The Tigers, 37-49, have been one of baseball’s biggest disappointments, but as badly as they’ve performed, the American League stinks to the high heavens, and they are just 6.5 games out of a wild-card berth. Do they ride it out and hope that Skubal’s return gets them back into contention, or do they sell him to the highest-bidder and stock their farm system, knowing they’re not going to re-sign him as a free agent, anyway? If nothing else, Skubal has quieted any doubts that he’s fully recovered from his elbow surgery, striking out nine while yielding just one hit and one earned run in six innings in his last start Tuesday against the New York Yankees, hitting 99 mph on the radar gun.

Prediction: Skubal will go, with Atlanta being the favorite according to rival executives, but this decision likely will go down to the final days, if not hours, before the deadline.

Aroldis Chapman, Boston Red Sox

Chapman is 16-for-18 in save opportunities with a 2.19 ERA, but has scuffled at a time the Red Sox are playing their best baseball. Chapman, 38, has blown two saves and given up at least one run in three of his last six appearances. The Red Sox, 37-47, have also been one of baseball’s biggest disappointments, but let’s repeat: the American League stinks. They are only 5.5 games out of a wild-card berth.

Prediction: Chapman, who has pitched for seven different teams in his 17-year career, will still be the marquee reliever traded at the deadline.

Sonny Gray, Boston Red Sox

Gray is 9-1 with a 2.69 ERA and may be the best pitcher traded not named Tarik Skubal. He has been everything the Red Sox could possibly have envisioned when they acquired him from the St. Louis Cardinals. The Cardinals even chipped in $20 million to cover the remaining $41 million on his contract.

The biggest obstacles in a potential Gray trade is that he has a complete no-trade clause, and will be owed about $11 million in his remaining salary plus a $10 million buyout on his mutual option.

Prediction: The Red Sox will pay his $10 million mutual option, and trade Gray to a team of his choosing, perhaps Atlanta or the Chicago White Sox, unless they somehow claw back into this weak wild-card race.

Luis Arraez, San Francisco Giants

Buster Posey, Giants president of baseball operations, has already let the baseball world know the Giants are open for business, with all of their high-priced players − except ace Logan Webb − available for trades. While infielders Rafael Devers, Willy Adames and Matt Chapman are making too much money for anyone’s liking, Arraez is easily their best trade chip among position players. Arraez, the three-time batting champion, is once again working his magic at the plate, hitting .331 with only 13 strikeouts in 353 plate appearances this year, with his 3.7% strikeout rate easily the lowest in MLB. He also is hitting with more power with a career-high seven triples and four homers. The biggest bonus is that with the help of infield guru Ron Washington, he has morphed into a Gold Glove candidate at second base.

Prediction: The Giants absolutely love Arraez, who has become a clubhouse favorite, but have no plans to keep him. They will thank him for his services, trade him, and wish him well in free agency, knowing they certainly helped increase his value.

Jose Soriano, Los Angeles Angels

OK, so he’s not the same pitcher who dominated everyone in his wake in April, yielding a 0.24 ERA in his first six starts. Still, he’s 8-5 with a 3.42 ERA, and best of all, comes with 2½ more years of team control. He is earning $2.9 million this year, so he won’t stretch out anyone’s budget, either.

Prediction: The biggest question will be whether Angels owner Arte Moreno will allow interim GM John Mozeliak to trade him. Moreno hates to trade players who are under team control, and Soriano has shown this year that he could be one of the game’s premier starters. Yet, if Moreno really is handing the reins over to Mozeliak and wants to rebuild, the return for Soriano could be quite the kick-start.

Eduardo Rodriguez, Arizona Diamondbacks

Rodriguez, who was a bitter disappointment the first two years of his four-year, $80 million contract, is having the finest season of his career and should be headed to his first All-Star Game. He’s 7-2 with a 2.21 ERA, and has six starts in which he has gone at least seven innings and permitted one or no runs, tied for the major-league lead.

Prediction: The Diamondbacks are on the playoff bubble, sitting 2½ games back of a playoff berth. They are 13-2 against the San Francisco Giants and Colorado Rockies, but 30-40 against everyone else. If they fall out of the race, they must decide whether to simply trade starter Michael Soroka, who’s on a one-year contract, or dump Rodriguez, who is owed $21 million in 2027 before he’s a free agent again. They may have no choice but to listen to any and all offers.

CJ Abrams, Washington Nationals

The Nationals put Abrams on the trade block last winter, but never received an offer that ever tempted them to trade him. His trade value has since soared, with him hitting .273 with 18 homers and 60 RBI with an .866 OPS, leading all National League shortstops in virtually every offensive category.

Prediction: The Nationals, one of baseball’s biggest surprises at 44-43, can’t trade Abrams without a huge public relations fallout. At least not now. They still are in the race, just 2½ games out, and Abrams still is under control through 2028. They have plenty of time to listen to trade offers in the future if they don’t sign him to an extension.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: MLB trade rumors: Tarik Skubal among 7 potential All-Stars who could soon switch teams

Mark Pope says multiple players could be “the surprise” on this year’s roster

Jan 21, 2026; Lexington, Kentucky, USA; Kentucky Wildcats forward Trent Noah (9) fives guard Denzel Aberdeen during the second half against the Texas Longhorns at Rupp Arena at Central Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Jordan Prather-Imagn Images | Jordan Prather-Imagn Images

Looking at the roster for this Kentucky Basketball team, there are a lot of new faces in Lexington as well as some returning players. A lot of players are hyped up in the offseason, but oftentimes, a player will surprise fans and media members with the impact they make on the court.

Who could be that surprise for Kentucky this season? Well, Jon Rothstein recently asked Mark Pope about that on an episode of Inside College Basketball Now, and Pope indicated there are multiple players who could be a surprise this season.

Pope first pointed to Ousmane N’Diaye, the 6’11 Senegalese forward who most recently played in Italy. Pope pointed to N’Diaye’s length and shot-making ability as attributes that stood out and could really surprise people this season.

Pope also pointed to Justin McBride, a name we’ve heard mentioned quite a bit in practices. Pope pointed to McBride’s versatility and physicality, as well as his college experience, as attributes that could lead him to have a breakout season.

Franck Kepnang is another guy Pope mentioned, but noted that Kepnang’s health will be a key factor in how much impact he has.

However, Pope really keyed in on Trent Noah.

“Trent Noah is physical,” Pope told Rothstein. “And he can really shoot it. Part of the issue last year was when we lost our point guard, we lost a real creator vibe on our roster. You know, it hurt also guys like Trent who might not manufacture a lot of shots, but if shots can be manufactured for him, he’s going to make them all, it feels like.”

Pope also mentioned Braydon Hawthorne as a guy who has a high ceiling and a ton of potential.

You can check out this clip where Pope talks about the different players who could be surprises.

And you can watch the full interview below.

What’s next for LeBron James: a Curry alliance, return to Cleveland or a Wembanyama mentor?

Stephen Curry and LeBron James have grown closer over the years. Photograph: Noah Graham/NBAE/Getty Images

It’s official: LeBron Jameswill not finish his career as a Los Angeles Laker. The talking heads are in a gnashing froth. ESPN’s Shams Charania has become the first human being in recorded history to somehow get less than zero sleep over a 24-hour period. Steph Curry is widening his eyes. Bronny James is secretly relishing the chance to forge his own identity as he says “I’ll miss you, Dad.” James hasn’t been the best player in the league for more than half a decade, but at 41 he remains the most decorated and the one who commands the most coverage. So let’s indulge in a time-honored tradition one last time: wild speculation over where the King will play next season.

Golden State Warriors

The Warriors seem to be the odds-on favorite to land James, but it still feels silly typing this out. Picture Thanos joining the Avengers. Lionel Messi defecting to Portugal. Andy Murray coaching Novak Djokovic … well, that one did actually happen.

James waged an uphill war against Golden State for four straight years in the 2010s, trying to will his usually undermanned Cavaliers squad to an unlikely win over one of the finest teams ever assembled. His lone success on that mission came in 2016, and remains the crown jewel of his career. But there were more bad times than good: JR Smith’s tragicomic gaffe in the 2018 finals; what would have been an all-time carry job sputtering out of gas after taking a 2-1 lead in 2015; going up against Warriors teams in 2017 and 2018 who were essentially impossible for him to beat with the teammates he had. Clips of James blocking Curry’s layups and then jawing at him, or Draymond Green trying to swat the King out of the air, still inspire vivid emotions in plenty of fans. And now James would join ranks with his old enemy?

Well, yes. James and Curry (and even Green) have grown close over the years. They played together on Olympic squads and the synergy was beautiful. Alongside Curry, Green and potentially LeBron’s ex-Laker teammate Anthony Davis, the New Warriors would be the most feelgood team in recent memory. Besides, this move would be entirely in line with James’s history. He’s never been afraid of angering fans, maybe to a fault. (Recall those burned jerseys after The Decision.) He’s always zigged when fans wanted him to zag. While other players shamelessly imitated Michael Jordan, James charted his own path in his own style until fans accepted him as at least equally great. Why not join the team that tormented him for years?

This Unc-tastic crew would brew nostalgia by the gallon. The modern NBA is powered by youth and durability, and nobody should be under any illusions that this team would be headed towards a pasture remotely greener than “every crucial player gets injured within five games of the season starting”. Still, the vibes before that inevitable train wreck would be fabulous.

Likelihood: 55%

Cleveland Cavaliers

The lone option that could beat the Warriors for good feels. In his Sports Illustrated essay announcing his return to Cleveland in 2014, James wrote “I always believed that I’d return to Cleveland and finish my career there. I just didn’t know when.” Did that belief change when he left Cleveland for LA in 2018, or has a final stint with the Cavs been the plan all along? Dumped out of the Eastern Conference finals in four games by the Knicks, including an epic Game 1 collapse, the Cavaliers need all the help they can get. On the court, James may not get all that many touches – he’ll have to sneak them in between the twin suns of Donovan Mitchell and James Harden – but it’ll be worth it for the sheer energy of his first game back.

Cleveland is where LeBron began his career in 2003. It’s where he made his first finals. It’s the city that loathed him when he left and loved him when he returned. It’s the site of his greatest triumph and his greatest basketball (2018, as the man himself told it on the Mind the Gamepodcast.) So the team lacks a certain reliability and verve. But it’s the best story.

Likelihood: 25%

Miami Heat

The Heat have Bam Adebayo to pair with Giannis Antetokounmpo, but they traded away most of their other assets to get the Greek star. LeBron and Giannis would be an intriguing combination – there may not be enough three-point shooting there to power a fearsome offense, but they’d be a force in the paint, and Antetokounmpo’s dunks and drives could help James get some valuable rest. James spent just four seasons in Miami, but packed enough memories into that time to compete with his body of work anywhere else: four straight trips to the finals, two MVPs, two finals MVPs, his villain era and one oft-cited, poorly aged quote. Hey, going back to Miami is the only way to belatedly fulfill “not one, not two … not seven”.

Likelihood: 15%

Minnesota Timberwolves/San Antonio Spurs/Oklahoma City Thunder

If what James covets most isn’t money or fun but a ring, he won’t get what he wants on any of the above teams. These teams are genuine contenders, and James’s time on the Lakers – as well as his, oh, 23 years in the league – tell him exactly what that looks like: youth, generational stars, exceptional defense. James would be an instant upgrade on Julius Randle in Minnesota, further bolstering the offense alongside Anthony Edwards (imagine those alley-oops, in either configuration) and LaMelo Ball. He would be a sorely needed veteran on the Spurs, giving them an out in crunch time with touch shots off the glass or foul-drawing drives. Jordan and James never played each other in the NBA; imagine if James not only played alongside the next player with GOAT potential in Wemby but helped sharpen him.

And the Thunder? They probably have the least need for James out of any team in the league, but that’s exactly why he may feast there. With their endless bench of serviceable-to-very-good three-and-D players, James could play limited minutes with manageable intensity as the other starters carry the defensive burden. While James on the Cavs or Warriors is a lovely image, if anyone’s earned the right to chase a final ring on one of the best teams in the league, it’s him.

Likelihood: 5%

Memphis Grizzlies

What James said about Memphis in March was a masterstroke of misdirection disguising a secret and long-held love for the city. Also, he feels bad about how badly things went with Ja Morant.

Likelihood: LOL

Only the man himself knows what’s to come in the future. But if his choice is consistent with his on-court philosophy, though the team he picks may not be the most obvious or the most conducive to glory, it will be the correct one.

News Analysis: LeBron James won't return to the Lakers. Now what?

Lakers guard Luka Doncic, left, and forward LeBron James celebrate after Doncic sank a three-pointer during a 51-point effort
It's offiically the Luka Doncic (77) era for the Lakers, who learned LeBron James will be looking to play elsewhere next season. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

The LeBron Era is over. The Lakers can start their Luka Era.

LeBron James informed the Lakers on Tuesday he will sign with another team this offseason, extending his career to an unprecedented 24th season, but taking his talents elsewhere. James is an unrestricted free agent and the early timing of his decision allows the Lakers to approach free agency, which officially began Tuesday afternoon, with an almost clean slate.

The Lakers have up to $51 million in salary cap space, among the most of any team in the league, depending on how they spend it. And they need every dollar to fill out a bare cupboard.

The Lakers have nine players under contract and only four who were in the regular rotation last year. Behind Luka Doncic, the Lakers took care of Austin Reaves by agreeing to a four-year, $185-million contract that will be officially signed toward the end of the offseason to help the Lakers preserve maximum cap flexibility.

Center Deandre Ayton opted into a $8.1 million player option. Forward Jake LaRavia, who played in all 82 regular-season games before struggling during the postseason, is back for the second season of a two-year deal.

Jarred Vanderbilt, Dalton Knecht, Bronny James, Adou Thiero are the only other players officially under contract with the Lakers and newly drafted first-round pick Cameron Carr soon will join.

Read more:Plaschke: LeBron James got out before Lakers could throw him out

Here’s a look at how the Lakers can approach this offseason without James:

What kind of team do the Lakers want to build?

When Doncic played for the Dallas Mavericks and led them to the 2024 NBA Finals, his two centers — Derek Lively and Daniel Gafford — were exceptional in their roles as lob threats, blocking shots and rolling to the rim. Those are the sort of players with whom Doncic has thrived. He also had wing players such as Derrick Jones Jr., P.J. Washington and Tim Hardaway Jr., all of whom were athletic, three-point shooters and good defenders. Again, the sort of players with whom Doncic has thrived.

So, according to NBA executives not authorized to speak on the matter, the Lakers have to build that sort of team around Doncic and Reaves, a backcourt many see as one of the most dynamic in the league — at least offensively.

“You know with Bron, you know Bron can get you 50 wins,” a West Coast executive said. “Luka can still get you 50 wins, but you just know when Luka misses games, I got Bron and Reaves. It’s a little bit different now. If Luka misses a game, it’s just Austin Reaves now. It’s a little bit different.

“But they just lost an All-Star. So, you are not going to be able to replace him with an All-Star. You got to replace him with two good role players.”

Which players could be back?

Kevin Durant, left, is forced to pass the ball while defended by the Lakers' Rui Hachimura, center, and Jaxson Hayes.
Forward Rui Hachimura (28) and center Jaxson Hayes (11) force Houston's Kevin Durant to pass instead of shoot during a game last season. Hachimura and Hayes are both unrestricted free agents. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

A midseason move to the bench appeared to threaten Rui Hachimura’s free agency this summer, but the forward’s hot postseason shooting could turn him into a hot free-agent option. Hachimura’s 51.6% (81 for 157) career three-point shooting in the postseason is the best in league history, and he made 33 of 58 shots from beyond the arc during the playoffs for the Lakers last season while averaging 17.5 points per postseason game. Now an unrestricted free agent, Hachimura could draw interest from teams including the San Antonio Spurs and Brooklyn Nets, according to league executives not allowed to discuss personnel matters publicly.

Luke Kennard’s potential return has already been dashed. The NBA’s leading three-point shooter who was traded midseason to the Lakers agreed to a two-year, $13-million deal with the Phoenix Suns on Tuesday.

Guard Marcus Smart opted out of his contract, turning down $5.4 million to pursue a long-term deal after he reinvigorated his career with the Lakers. He turned into a trusted defensive stopper, timely three-point shooter and steady leader for the team.

Centers Maxi Kleber and Jaxson Hayes are also unrestricted free agents. Playing mostly in a backup role, Hayes averaged 7.5 points and 4.1 rebounds on career-high 75.6% shooting last season and developed such a strong relationship with Doncic that the Cincinnati native became a naturalized Slovenian citizen to hopefully play with Doncic on the national team.

Which new players could the Lakers target?

The Lakers are shopping for a center, but the store isn’t stocked with options.

In a weak free-agency class, centers Robert Williams III (Portland) and Mark Williams (Phoenix) are already off the market, each reportedly agreeing to return to their current teams.

The Lakers also have been linked to Mitchell Robinson, who is coming off an NBA championship with the New York Knicks, and Toronto’s Sandro Mamukelashvili. The Georgian center declined a $2.8-million player option to become an unrestricted free agent. Mamukelashvili is coming off career highs in points (11.2), rebounds (4.9) and shooting (52.3%) while starting 13 games out of 80 appearances. The 26-year-old also shot 38.9% (115 for 296) from three-point range.

Raptors forward Sandro Mamukelashvili looks to pass while being defended by Cavaliers guard Sam Merrill during a playoff game
Raptors forward Sandro Mamukelashvili looks to pass while being defended by Cavaliers guard Sam Merrill during a playoff game in April. Mamukelashvili is an unrestricted free agent. (David Dermer / Associated Press)

On the perimeter, the Lakers have been connected with Quentin Grimes and Ziaire Williams. Grimes scored 13.4 points with 3.6 rebounds and 3.3 assists for the Philadelphia 76ers last season. Brooklyn declined a $6.25-million option on Williams, a 6-foot-9 Sierra Canyon alumnus who averaged 10.2 points, 2.4 rebounds and 1.4 steals per game last season.

What’s the difference between unrestricted and restricted free agents?

The Lakers have been linked to Utah center Walker Kessler and Detroit’s Jalen Duren, but both are restricted free agents, meaning any offer the Lakers present could be matched by each player’s current team. If a restricted free agent gets an offer sheet from a new team during the negotiating period from June 30 to July 6 during which players can discuss but not sign new deals, their original team has until 8:59 p.m. PDT on July 7 to match. During that moratorium period, the new team must maintain enough salary cap room for the offer sheet, presenting a potential risk for the Lakers if they flirt with restricted free agents because they could lose out on other potential free agents during that multi-day waiting period.

Duren, 22, is coming off the best regular season of his career, averaging 19.5 points and 10.5 rebounds and earning All-NBA third-team honors. But he did not live up to the billing during the postseason, averaging only 10.2 points and 8.5 rebounds while the top-seeded Pistons were eliminated in the conference semifinals.

The 7-2 Kessler missed most of last season because of a shoulder injury. Two seasons ago, Kessler averaged 11.1 points, 12.2 rebounds and 2.4 blocks while leading the NBA with 4.6 offensive rebounds per game.

Denver guard Peyton Watson is another restricted free agent who was connected to the Lakers. The UCLA alumnus could be an ideal fit on the perimeter for a team desperate for defense, athleticism and shooting, but he struggled with injuries last season and could return to the Nuggets, where he won a championship in 2023.

What about Bronny?

Lakers guard Bronny James, right, dribbles past Warriors guard Pat Spencer during a game in April.
Bronny James, driving against Warriors guard Pat Spencer, is playing under a guaranteed contract worth $2.2 million this season. It's his third season with the Lakers. (David M. Barreda / Los Angeles Times)

One day before his father ended his time in L.A., Bronny James’ contract became fully guaranteed, locking the third-year guard in for $2.2 million.

The younger James, who was drafted in the second round in 2024 to form the first father-son duo in NBA history, showed steady improvement during his second season. He even played important playoff minutes, helping fill in for the depleted backcourt during Doncic’s and Reaves’ injuries. James scored his first career playoff points, totaling 12 during eight postseason appearances last season, with seven assists. He was two-for-six shooting from three-point range.

While bouncing between the G League and the NBA, James worked with coaches on developing his shooting confidence, quick decision-making and defensive ability. He played in 42 regular-season games last season compared to just 27 during his rookie season. Coaches were impressed with his growth while playing under an intense spotlight.

“When we drafted Bronny, Bron and I had one conversation very early on that I was going to coach Bronny,” Lakers coach JJ Redick said during the postseason. “I was not going to coach LeBron’s son. … Bron was great, that’s what he wanted.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Yankees prospects: Josh Moylan homers twice, continuing hot start at Double-A

Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre RailRiders:W, 3-2 vs. Norfolk Tides

SS Jonathan Ornelas 1-3, 2B, BB, RBI
C J.C. Escarra 0-2, BB, RBI, HBP — finally playing in Triple-A after those very brief demotions earlier in June
2B Marco Luciano 1-3, RBI, SF
RF Yanquiel Fernández 1-4
3B Tyler Hardman 0-4, 2 K
1B Ernesto Martinez Jr. 0-4, K
DH Payton Henry 1-3, K, HBP
CF Duke Ellis 0-1, BB, K, outfield assist
LF Kenedy Corona 0-2, sacrifice

Adam Kloffenstein 5 IP, 2 H, 1 R (1 ER), 3 BB, 5 K
Zach Messinger 2 IP, 2 H, 1 R (1 ER), 0 BB, 2 K (win)
Carson Coleman 2 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 2 K (save)

Double-A Somerset Patriots:W, 5-2 vs. Hartford Yard Goats

RF Jackson Castillo 3-4, HR, RBI, SB
CF Jace Avina 0-3, BB, K, outfield assist
3B Coby Morales 3-4, 2 2B
LF DJ Gladney 1-3, BB, RBI, K
C Tomas Frick 0-3, BB, K, GIDP
1B Josh Moylan 3-4, 2B, 2 HR, 3 RBI — helluva day in the 23-year-old’s seventh game at Double-A; two-run shot put Patriots ahead in the fourth, 3-1, and then hit another in the sixth
DH Miguel Palma 0-4, 3 K
SS Kevin Verde 0-4, 2 K
2B Connor McGinnis 0-4, 2 K

Cade Smith 6 IP, 4 H, 1 R (1 ER), 2 BB, 4 K, HR (win)
Kelly Austin 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K
Matt Keating 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 3 K — struck out all three hitters he faced
Harrison Cohen 1 IP, 1 H, 1 R (1 ER), 0 BB, 0 K, HR — gave up a dinger to old friend Roc Riggio

High-A Hudson Valley Renegades:L, 0-5 vs. Wilmington Blue Rocks — shut out on two hits

2B Kaeden Kent 0-4, BB, 2 K
SS Core Jackson 0-4, BB, K, SB
RF Wilson Rodriguez 0-1, 3 BB, K, 2 SB — no-contact day but hey he got on base
DH Eric Genther 0-2, 2 BB
1B Kyle West 0-4, 3 K
3B Roderick Arias 0-3, BB, K, fielding error
C Josue Gonzalez 1-4, K — singled in the fourth
CF Camden Troyer 0-3, BB, K
LF Luis Durango 1-4, 2 K — single in the ninth was just the Renegades’ second hit

Bryce Cunningham 5.2 IP, 4 H, 5 R (2 ER), 4 BB, 1 K, HR, WP (loss) — the Arias error hurt but he didn’t pitch well anyway
Aaron Nixon 1.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K
Tanner Bauman 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 2 K, WP
Bryce Warrecker 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 3 K — struck out the side

Low-A Tampa Tarpons:W, 6-0 at St. Lucie Mets — pitchers combined on a three-hit shutout

SS Jackson Lovich 1-5, 2 K
2B Hans Montero 0-5, K
C Luis Puello 1-3, 2B, 2 RBI — two-bagger doubled the Tarpons’ lead to 4-0 in the fifth, later got ejected for arguing a call at third
C Ediel Rivera 0-2, 2 K
LF Logan Maxwell 1-3, BB
3B Bryce Martin-Grudzielanek 0-3, BB, K, SB
CF Brando Mayea 1-3, BB, RBI
RF JoJo Jackson 1-4, 2 RBI, 2 K
1B David McCann 2-2, HR, BB, RBI, HBP — clubbed his first homer above Rookie ball, perfect day at the dish
DH Engelth Urena 0-4, GIDP

Justin West 5.2 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 6 K, HBP (win) — 2025 18th-rounder set the tone nicely
Jose M. Rodriguez 1.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K, HBP
Parker Seay 1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K, WP
Pedro Rodriguez 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 K

Florida Complex League Yankees: Postponed vs. FCL Tigers due to lightning and inclement weather; will make up in doubleheader today

Dominican Summer League Yankees:W, 10-4 (7) vs. DSL Tigers 2

CF Isaias Castillo 2-4, 3B, HR, RBI, 2 K — very good game!
SS Stiven Marinez 1-4, 2B, fielding error
RF Yostin Pena 3-4, 3 RBI — single drove in one during the four-run first
2B Juan Torres 2-4, HR, 2 RBI, SB — went yard in the four-run sixth
1B Juan Martinez 1-3, 2B, BB, K, SB, throwing and fielding errors — did swipe home on double-steal in the fifth
C Cesar Lopez 1-3, BB, RBI, 2 SB, CS
DH Kenneth Melendez 1-2, RBI, K, SF — pro debut for May 29th signee
LF Manuel Aguilar 0-2, BB, 2 K, SB
3B Abrahan Pichardo 1-3, 2 K

Dalvin Taveras 3.2 IP, 3 H, 2 R (0 ER), 3 BB, 3 K, HBP
Angel Salazar 2.1 IP, 2 H, 2 R (1 ER), 1 BB, 2 K, HBP, throwing error (win)
Varis Villarreal 1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 K

Dominican Summer League Bombers:L, 5-10 at DSL Rangers Blue

SS Mani Cedeno 2-5, RBI, 2 K, SB
2B Carlos Bello 1-3, RBI, SB, HBP
DH Alessandro Rodriguez 2-4, 2 RBI
RF David Carrera 0-4, 2 K, outfield assist
3B Germayhoni Beltre 0-4, 3 K
C Poly Ojeda 1-2, 2B, 2 BB, CS
C Jesus Guerrero 0-0
CF Alfiery Matos 2-3, 3B, BB, K
1B Stalen Ramirez 0-3, RBI, SF
LF Sebastian Pinto 1-4, 2B

Junior Tavera 2.2 IP, 4 H, 3 R (3 ER), 6 BB, 4 K, WP
Oscar Vasquez 2.1 IP, 0 H, 2 R (2 ER), 2 BB, 3 K, WP
Ronald Tejada 2 IP, 2 H, 1 R (1 ER), 2 BB, 0 K (loss)
Chaury Gomez 0.1 IP, 2 H, 4 R (3 ER), 2 BB, 0 K, WP, HBP — ouch
Lenin Caceres 0.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 1 K, balk

Josue Briceño homers in rehab assignment, Peyton Graham sparks Erie

Iowa Cubs 3, Toledo Mud Hens 1 (box)

Hens pitching was pretty good on Tuesday, but the bats faltered in the 90 degree heat of this cruel, noon start time.

The Mud Hens did get on the board first. Brett Callahan singled with one out in the top of the second inning. He stole second as Trei Cruz struck out, and the throw from Moises Ballesteros was wild to second, and Callahan took third. A bloop single from Jace Jung brought him home as the Hens only run on the day.

Dylan File put together a pretty mediocre outing, giving up three runs in 4.1 innings of work. He did strike out five against two walks.

Brenan Hanifee, Tyler Mattison, Tanner Rainer, and Nick Sandlin were all effective in relief, but the Hens only managed four hits on the day. Cubs right-hander Will Sanders put together a strong outing against them.

Callahan: 1-4, R, K, SB

File (L, 4-5): 4.1 IP, 3 ER, 4 H, 2 BB, 5 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 7:05 p.m. ET start at Fifth Third on Wednesday.

Erie SeaWolves 6, Akron RubberDucks 4 (box)

Hayden Minton and Carlos Peña split this start, with each going four innings and allowing two runs. That was plenty as Peyton Graham and the SeaWolves pounded out the hits in this one.

Minton gave up two runs in the first before settling in for three scoreless frames.

In the top of the third, Seth Stephenson and Graham lined back-to-back doubles and Garrett Pennington singled in Graham to make it a 2-2 tie.

In the fourth, E.J. Exposito singled with one out. With two outs, Stephenson singled, and Graham doubled in both runs with his second double on the day. 4-2 SeaWolves.

Exposito added his 12th home run of the season to open the sixth. That made it 5-2, and a nice relay from Stephenson to Graham to third ended the bottom half of the inning, avoiding a jam for Peña.

Chris Meyers is on a multi-week heater and he continued it with a solo shot to center field in the seventh to make it 6-2.

Peña leaked a pair of runs in the eighth, but Trevin Michael locked down the save.

Graham: 3-5, R, 3 RBI, 3 2B

Stephenson: 2-5, 2 R, 2B

Exposito: 2-4, 2 R, RBI, HR, K

Minton: 4.0 IP, 2 ER, 3 H, BB, 2 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 6:35 p.m. ET start on Wednesday.

Lake County Captains 20, West Michigan Whitecaps 11 (box)

Neither team’s pitching staff could find the strike zone on a scorching, humid night in West Michigan. Typically under those conditions, home plate umpires call a loose strike zone and force hitters to swing the bats. Not in this one. A tight zone, sweaty hands, and position players pitching by the end of this led to a high scoring game, but it wasn’t entertaining as 24 walks combined were issued in this one.

On a bullpen day, Logan Berrier gave up five runs, and Ryan Harvey and Thomas Bruss each gave up four.

The two clubs started exchanging blows in the third, as the Captains scored five runs. In the bottom half, Patrick Lee was hit by a pitch with one out and Woody Hadeen walked. Bryce Rainer smoked a 114 mph single to center to plate Lee.

Ricardo Hurtado then doubled in Hadeen and Rainer and took third on throwing error on the play. A Jackson Strong sacrfice fly made it a 5-4 game.

Unfortunately, the Captains scored single runs in the fourth and fifth to take a 7-4 lead.

In the bottom of the sixth, the ‘Caps came roaring back. Samuel Gil led off with a single, and after Luke Shliger struck out, Patrick Lee singled, and both scored on a Woody Hadeen double. Rainer walked on four pitches, as the strike zone contined to look extremely tight for the home plate umpire. Hurtado singled in Hadeen and Rainer, and it was 8-7 Whitecaps.

That’s where Harvey and Bruss melted down. The Captains scored eight runs in an unending inning of pain in the top of the seventh.

In the bottom half, Lee walked and then scored on another Hadeen double. Beyond that, this game just got stupid as the Whitecaps turned to position players, and the Captains relievers couldn’t throw strikes. The walks and homers piled up on the Captains side.

Hurtado: 3-5, 2 R, 4 RBI, 2B

Rainer: 2-4, 2 R, RBI, BB, 2 K

Hadeen: 2-4, 2 R, 3 RBI, 2 2B, 2 BB

Lee: 1-2, 3 R, RBI, 2 BB

Zack Lee: 2.0 IP, 0 R, 3 H, 0 BB, 2 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 6:35 p.m. ET on Wednesday night.

Lakeland Flying Tigers 7, Palm Beach Cardinals 1 (box)

The Flying Tigers got a little help from a rehabbing slugger, and the pitching staff did a nice job as they returned home with a comfortable victory on Tuesday night.

The one thing that didn’t go right was Grayson Grinsell’s start. The lefty allowed three singles and a walk in the first, but managed to manuever through the inning without allowing a run. He did throw 33 pitches, so the Tigers pulled him.

Pedro Garcia took over for the second inning and he gave the Flying Tigers three scoreless frames to save the rest of the pen.

In the third, Jude Warwick and Nick Dumesnil led off the bottom half with singles. They’d only get one run, as Zach MacDonald and then Jordan Yost walked to force in a run. Beau Ankeney struck out and Josue Briceño popped out to end the inning.

In the third, Carson Rucker led off with a single and Edian Espinal walked. There was a delay for an injury as the Cardinals had to go to the bullpen. The new reliever walked Dumesnil, and Rucker scored on a Jesus Pinto ground out. MacDonald hit one 400 feet to center field, but it was run down to end the inning.

In the bottom of the fourth, Briceño, rehabbing his preseason wrist surgery, smoked an opposite field shot for his first homer of the year. 3-0 Lakeland.

Right-hander Colin Fields, also on a rehab assignment, gave up a solo shot in the fifth to make it 3-1, but it was all Lakeland the rest of the way. Pinto mashed a three-run homer in the seventh to make it 6-1. Dumesnil singled in Rucker in the bottom of the eighth for the final run of the game.

Yost: 2-3, RBI, 2B, 2 BB, SB

Rucker: 2-3, 2 R, BB, K, SB

Dumesnil: 3-3, R, RBI, 2 BB

Garcia (W, 2-4): 3.0 IP, 0 R, 0 H, 2 BB, 4 K

Coming Up Next: It’s a 6:30 p.m. ET start on Wednesday.

Islanders Free Agency Day News: Farewell to arms

For what it’s worth, it was worth all the while. | NHLI via Getty Images

Today could be the day the Islanders and captain Anders Lee say goodbye after 14 seasons and 923 games together.

Lee will turn 36 in a couple of days, so while both parties would like to continue their relationship under the right conditions, there is apparent disagreement over term or rate and what not.

Such is reality in the NHL when you gotta make room for 15-points-at-age-35 Ondrej Palat.

As NHL free agency officially kicked off, word was that Lee was headed to market. Maybe, if whatever his definitely-not-tampering agent tells him is out there fails to emerge, he’ll come back to the Isles after all.

Or maybe he’ll sign with the Wild.

  • Isles development camp, day 2: There are blues and there are whites. [Isles]
  • Three Lawn Guy-landers are enjoying their time at camp. [Isles | Newsday]
  • Single Malte will not rush his timeline. [Newsday]
  • Kashawn Aitcheson is ready for the next step after a dominant OHL season. [Isles]

Around the NHL

  • Some serious drama around Zach Werensky as his camp is apparently pissed off and has vetoed a trade to Dallas. [Sportsnet]
  • Friedman with the midnight blog about that and more. [Sportsnet]
  • Ranking the tiers of available free agents. [ESPN]
  • Follow some free agency live blogging here. Who will be the first tamper signing?[NHL]
  • The Panthers, unable to agree to aging Sergei Bobrovsky’s astronomical demands, instead traded for aging Jacob Markstrom. [ESPN]
  • Wow, the Rangers gave ex-Knight Pavel Dorofeyev…7 years and $77 million? [NHL]
  • Vegas acquired old friend Parker Wotherspoon from Pittsburgh for some cap space. [ESPN]

Looking back at the last 10 free agent frenzies for the Penguins

DALLAS, TEXAS - NOVEMBER 28: A detail view of a puck during warmups prior to the game between the Dallas Stars and the Utah Mammoth at American Airlines Center on November 28, 2025 in Dallas, Texas. (Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Wednesday marks the first day of July, which is historically one of the busiest days on the NHL calendar as free agency begins and general managers hand out money by the Brink’s truck to lure shiny new toys to their respective franchises.

Pittsburgh Penguins general manager Kyle Dubas has gone on record saying he doesn’t anticipate being super active in the early hours of the 2026 free-agent frenzy, preferring to make his moves, if he can, via trade.

With that, let’s hop in the time machine and take a trip back to look at the start of the last 10 free agency periods to see how the Penguins constructed their roster while reminiscing or recoiling at some of those signings.

Note that this list is not meant to be exhaustive. Apologies to all the Mark Donk and Buzz Flibbet fans out there.

2016

Just days removed from winning the franchise’s first Stanley Cup championship since 2009, the architect of the Penguins’ championship team, general manager Jim Rutherford, was signed to a three-year contract through the 2018-19 season.

Former blue liner Chad Ruhwedel signed a one-year deal with Pittsburgh on July 1, 2016, where he would remain for the better part of the next eight seasons.

The team also made several depth signings, inking forwards Tom Sestito, Garrett Wilson and defensemen Steve Olesky, David Warsofsky, Cameron Gaunce and Stuart Percy. All of whom (except for Percy) made at least one appearance for the NHL club.

2017

One year later, the Penguins are once again Stanley Cup champions. General manager Jim Rutherford had already begun tinkering with the makeup of the team a few days prior, clearly wanting to become a heavier, tougher team to play against. He wound up trading forward Oskar Sundqvist and the Penguins’ 2017 first-round pick (No. 31 overall) to St. Louis for winger Ryan Reaves and a 2017 second-round draft pick (No. 51 overall).

On July 1, Rutherford brought in two more new faces, signing defenseman Matt Hunwick to a three-year contract and goalie Antti Niemi to a one-year deal.

Pittsburgh also signed forward Greg McKegg (there’s a guy) to a one-year deal.

Zach Trotman and Kevin Czuczman were signed as organizational defensive depth on July 1 and July 3, respectively.

2018

Not even one year later, on June 27, 2018, the Penguins had shipped off Hunwick and forward Conor Sheary to the Buffalo Sabres for a conditional 2019 fourth-round draft pick.

On July 1, the Penguins re-signed forward Matt Cullen to a one-year deal after he had spent the 2017-18 season with the Minnesota Wild.

The Penguins also handed out one of the more controversial contracts in franchise history–signing free agent defenseman Jack Johnson to a five-year, $16.25 million contract.

Johnson would only spend two seasons in the black and gold. The Penguins bought out the remainder of his contract in October 2020. Johnson’s contract accounted for dead cap space through the 2025-26 season and is officially off the books as of today with the start of the NHL’s 2026-27 calendar.

2019

The Penguins were active on (and near) the free agency start date in 2o19. The team signed forward Brandon Tanev to a six-year contract on July 1, 2019.

Forward Andrew Agozzino and defenseman David Warsofsky were both signed to two-year deals on July 1.

The franchise also handed head coach Mike Sullivan a four-year contract extension through the 2023-24 season on July 5, 2019.

2020

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic disrupting the 2019-20 season, the league’s standard July 1 opening date was delayed to Oct. 9, 2o2o. The NHL draft, usually held right before free agency, was also moved to Oct. 6-7, 2020.

On Oct. 8, the team signed forward Sam Lafferty to a two-year contract running through the 2021-22 season.

On Oct. 9, the “official” start of free agency, the Penguins signed forwards Evan Rodrigues, Mark Jankowski, and Frederick Gaudreau to one-year contracts.

Pittsburgh also reinforced its blue line, giving Cody Ceci a one-year deal on Oct. 16.

Goalie Maxime Lagacé was also brought in on a one-year contract.

2021

The effects of the pandemic were still being felt into the 2021 season, with free agency returning to July, albeit a bit later than the traditional July 1 date, this time coming on July 28.

New general manager Ron Hextall made his biggest splash, signing forward Brock McGinn on July 28 to a four-year, $11 million contract.

Other, smaller moves included signing forward Danton Heinen to a one-year deal on July 29, bringing back forward Dominik Simon for a second tour of duty, and signing defenseman Taylor Fedun to a one-year deal, providing the Wilkes-Barre Penguins with a quality veteran presence on the backend.

Forward Radim Zohorna signed a two-year contract with Pittsburgh on Aug. 3, 2021, and forward Zach Aston-Reese signed a one-year contract on Aug 5, 2021.

2022

The biggest transactions around this time were contract signings for some of Pittsburgh’s core players. Franchise defenseman Kris Letang was signed to a six-year contract extension.

After a bit of drama into the 11th hour, Evgeni Malkin eventually re-upped with the Penguins on a four-year, $24,000,000 contract. Winger Rickard Rakell was also given a six-year, $30,000,000 contract.

On the external transaction front, defenseman Jan Rutta was poached from the Stanley Cup-winning Tampa Bay Lightning and signed to a three-year, $8,250,000 contract.

Defenseman Xavier Ouellet agreed to terms with the organization on a two-year deal, primarily serving as a veteran AHL defender.

The Penguins also signed goalie Dustin Tokarski and forwards Josh Archibald and Drake Caggiula to one-year deals. Danton Heinen also returned to Pittsburgh on a one-year contract.

2023

Kyle Dubas was hired as president of hockey operations on June 1, 2023. And while he was hired to guide the Penguins into a post-Sidney Crosby era, he came out of the gates firing on all cylinders, giving Crosby and co. another chance at a Stanley Cup.

July 1 saw a flurry of action.

Forward Noel Acciari was signed to help Pittsburgh’s bottom six, agreeing to a three-year contract. Veteran Lars Eller was given a two-year deal, again primarily deployed as a lower-line forward. Winger Matt Nieto was brought on with a two-year contract, but injuries largely derailed his tenure.

Dubas’ focus was also on reloading the AHL team, ensuring they remained competitive as well. Forwards Vinne Hinostroza, Joona Koppanen, and Marc Johnstone were brought in to round out the WB/S forward group. Radim Zohorna also returned to the organization on a one-year deal.

Defensemen Ryan Shea and Will Butcher were both signed as organizational depth, and in Shea’s case, he eventually blossomed into an NHL regular who is now primed for a payday on the open market in 2026.

For Pittsburgh’s defense, Dubas’ largest free agent acquisition to date was signing Ryan Graves to a six-year, $27 million deal. That one… hasn’t worked out.

Goaltender Alex Nedeljkovic came over from the Detroit Red Wings to give Tristan Jarry a running mate. And netminder Magnus Hellberg was brought in as an AHL backstop.

Dubas’ biggest swing would come later in the summer in a massive, three-team blockbuster when he now famously acquired defenseman Erik Karlsson from the San Jose Sharks.

2024

Dubas was firmly on a mission to rebuild the aging Penguins while also acquiring future draft capital to restock a barren prospect cupboard.

Defenseman Matt Grzelcyk left the Boston Bruins as a free agent and was signed to a one-year, $2.75 million contract for the 2024-25 season.

Blake Lizotte agreed to terms on a two-year deal, coming over from the Los Angeles Kings, reinforcing Pittsburgh’s bottom six and penalty kill unit. Anthony Beauvillier was the classic buy-low, sell-high candidate who would eventually be flipped at the following trade deadline.

At the AHL level, forwards Boko Imama, Corey Andonovski, and Jimmy Huntington were signed. Defensemen Mac Hollowell and Nate Clurman signed one-year deals. Fellow defender Sebastian Aho also signed a two-year contract.

2025

Anthony Mantha, signed last summer, enjoyed a career year this past season and looks primed to cash in on the open market after one year. Justin Brazeau can also be lumped into the same category after an impressive 2025-26 campaign from him, but the good thing for the Penguins is they have Brazeau under contract for another year.

Defenseman Caleb Jones, brother to Seth, signed a two-year deal with the team, and after an injury-plagued first season with Pittsburgh, could be looked at as the seventh defenseman or one of the first AHL callups in the event of injury on the blue line.

Defenseman Parker Wotherspoon signed a two-year deal and enjoyed one of the best seasons of his professional career last year, being partnered with Erik Karlsson. Still, Wotherspoon was traded to the Vegas Golden Knights not even 24 hours ago for Kaedan Korczak.

The Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Penguins also welcomed some new faces with the arrivals of Rafael Harvey-Pinard, Philip Kemp, and Alexander Alexeyev.

There have been a few pretty positive free agent signings, especially more recently, with the likes of the aforementioned Wotherspoon, Brazeau, Lizotte, and Mantha contributing to an unexpected playoff run last season.

Penguins management has also been prone to whiffing, sometimes big, when looking back at how they dished out money for players like Jack Johnson, Ryan Graves, and Brock McGinn.

And as mentioned above, Kyle Dubas seems set on going big-game hunting via the trade market over the next few weeks with a weaker free agent class this year, so any new faces that arrive via free agency may be more in line with organizational depth or the low-risk, high-reward type rather than an impact player receiving a five-year deal.

NBA Free Agency 2026 Day 2 Discussion

INGLEWOOD, CA - JANUARY 19: LeBron James #23, Anthony Davis #3 of the Los Angeles Lakers during the game on January 19, 2025 at Intuit Dome in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Juan Ocampo/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Welcome to July 1, the second day of free agency. We know two major things that may be of interest to us as Washington Wizards fans:

  1. The Wizards do NOT want to trade Anthony Davis.
  2. LeBron James told the Los Angeles Lakers that he will play somewhere else in the 2026-27 NBA season.

I don’t want to go down a rabbit hole here, but what I didn’t write will probably play out in the comments.

Enjoy your Wednesdays!

REPORT: Knicks planning cost-cutting move involving rookie Jack Kayil

06 June 2026, Bavaria, Bamberg: Basketball, Men: Bundesliga, Bamberg Baskets - Alba Berlin, Championship round, Semi-finals, Matchday 4, Brose Arena. Jack Kayil (Alba Berlin) during the warm-up. Photo: Daniel Löb/dpa (Photo by Daniel Löb/picture alliance via Getty Images)

The free-agent market opened on Tuesday, and nobody outside Rich Paul and LeBron James made us bat an eye. It’s the new NBA economy, in which trades are the coolest kids in town.

In any case, the New York Knicks have reportedly been doing business for a few days now, re-signing three players to team-friendly deals in Jose Alvarado, Mo Diawara, and Landry Shamet. Not bad for a start! The elephant in the room isn’t going anywhere, or actually, I should say he’s definitely going somewhere, but that’s a sad story for another day.

Meanwhile, the Knicks, in staying below the second apron as James Dolan wishes, are expected to take a cost-cutting approach to second-round pick Jack Kayil.

According to SNY’s Ian Begley, New York intends to stash Kayil in Germany for the 2026-27 season rather than bring him onto the NBA roster immediately.

“The plan entering free agency for second-round pick Jack Kayil is that he play next season overseas with his current club in Germany,” — SNY’s Ian Begley

If Begley’s information is correct, then Kayil will remain with ALBA Berlin playing Bundesliga hoops for one more year while honing his skills, but most importantly, the move will allow the Knicks to avoid using a roster spot and committing any more guaranteed salary to an end-of-bench player who, realistically, wasn’t probably going to sniff the court that much as a true freshman.

Kayil, selected with the No. 39 overall pick, is coming off a strong season in Germany, averaging 12.2 points, 3.5 assists, and 2.8 rebounds while earning the Bundesliga Best Young Player award. From that to leading an NBA team, however, there’s a stretch. And Kiyal will have to wait, even against his preferred outcome.

After the wave of re-signings heading into free agency, the Knicks are operating with limited flexibility and with an estimate of around $9 million in space to fill three of the four remaining roster spots. With no rookie-scale salaries pre-assigned to second-round picks, the Knicks could have signed Kayil to either a two-way deal or a standard contract, but for no less than an absolute minimum of around $1.4 million. Marginal savings, but huge against the background the Knicks are navigating.

You can follow Antonio on Twitter at @chapulana.

Which Yankee is facing the most pressure to turn it around?

NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 21: Ali Sánchez #39 of the New York Yankees looks on from the dugout before the game against the Cincinnati Reds at Yankee Stadium on June 21, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Welp. Last night was more of the same for the suddenly-helpless Yankees, who closed out June with their sixth loss in a row — appropriately their longest skid since … last June. The Aaron Boone Era Yankees are nothing if not consistent in their frustrating patterns.

For last night in particular, nothing went right. Their ace got bombed, they weren’t crisp in the field, and their offense was held to two hits until the ninth. It ain’t swell around these parts.

There’s plenty of pressure to go around, but who do you think bears the most right now? Ben Rice is a candidate, as until a solo shot yesterday, the likely All-Star had been very quiet with the bat in the past week and change. Could he be feeling the heat to keep up his torrid production from the first few months, given the wider struggles of the offense of late? Might it be Cody Bellinger, a likely fellow All-Star who has cooled off as well and carries a big contract that comes with responsibilities, particularly with Aaron Judge out? Or maybe it’s someone else, like impending free agent Jazz Chisholm Jr., one of the starting pitchers trying to keep the opponent at bay, or the bleakly anemic Austin Wells. There’s no shortage of options, unfortunately.

Today on the site, it’s a rapid-fire schedule before the matinee this afternoon. Peter will run our monthly GM poll, Madison will tackle the Rivalry Roundup, John remember the extremely mysterious Jack Quinn for our Yankees Birthday series, and then he and Kento will do the monthly check-ins on the AL Central and AL West, respectively.

Today’s Matchup*

New York Yankees vs. Detroit Tigers

Time: 1:35 p.m. EST

TV: YES, Detroit SportsNet

Venue: Yankee Stadium, Bronx, NY

*This is not the matchup, and feel free to ignore me if you don’t care about the World Cup. But the soccer fan in me is compelled to mention that Team USA faces Bosnia and Herzegovina in Santa Clara, CA tonight on Fox. Check it out and see if the USMNT win a game in the knockout round for the first time in 24 years!

Around the Empire: Aaron Judge targeting August return

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 17: Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees celebrates with teammates after defeating the Chicago White Sox at Yankee Stadium on June 17, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Jim McIsaac/Getty Images) | Getty Images

MLB.com | Bryan Hoch: After almost a month of uncertainty, the Yankees have finally provided a return timetable. Judge indicated that he is targeting an August return, but first has to undergo follow-up imaging in a couple weeks. Judge last played on May 31st and was diagnosed with a fractured first right rib on June 4th, the team then only setting a four-to-six week timetable for re-imaging, but no indication of a return to play. The captain has not been doing any baseball activities but has gotten in lower body weight training. Hopefully the upcoming imaging reveals healing and a potential ramp-up in rehab given the way the Yankees offense has slumped in the second half of his absence.

AP News | Larry Fleisher: Max Fried faced live hitters for the first time since suffering a bone bruise in his pitching elbow. He threw 30 pitches in a 20-minute, two-inning simulated game at Yankee Stadium on Tuesday. Fried faced fellow IL inhabitants Trent Grisham and Ryan McMahon and tallied a pair of strikeouts while throwing all the pitches in his arsenal. Fried was among the AL’s best starters at the time of his injury on May 13th against the Orioles (departing that game after three innings with his velocity noticeably down), pitching to a 3.21 ERA in his first 10 starts. The 32-year-old lefty’s return will be a huge boon to a rotation that regressed significantly in June.

Also contained within are injury updates on a trio of Yankees position players. Grisham and McMahon are both expected to be activated from the IL on Friday, Grisham out since June 12th with a strained right hamstring and McMahon absent since June 21st with a throat infection. Grisham would be a significant reinforcement to their struggling offense while McMahon would shore up what has been a defensive train wreck at third in his absence. Finally, we received confirmation that Jazz Chisholm Jr. has cleared concussion protocol and was available off the bench in their loss to the Tigers on Tuesday, Jazz departing Monday’s game in the fourth after colliding with Jasson Domínguez’s elbow on a shallow fly ball.

New York Post | Jake Nisse ($): Yovanny Cruz was called up on Tuesday to reinforce the bullpen as the corresponding move for Yerry De los Santos’ optioning to Triple-A. Cruz flashed tantalizing stuff in his two game cup of coffee in May, striking out three in 2.1 scoreless innings with a fastball that touches triple digits and a wipeout slider. However, the Yankees have opted to keep him in Triple-A to work on his strike throwing, and indeed his walk rate improved from 12.2-percent to 7.1-percent with Scranton/Wilkes-Barre since getting sent back down at the end of last month.

Cruz got into last night’s blowout at the hands of the Tigers and threw two scoreless innings, striking out three.

Aaron Judge ‘starting to feel better’ but is weeks away from scan on rib

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows A dejected Aaron Judge looks on during the Yankees' ugly 9-3 loss to the Tigers on June 30, 2026 at the Stadium

Aaron Judge is “starting to feel better,” Aaron Boone said, though that feeling has not yet translated into concrete progress toward a return.

Thursday will mark four weeks since the Yankees announced their captain had suffered a stress fracture of a rib and would undergo additional medical imaging in “approximately four to six weeks.”

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He will not be reexamined on the shortest end of the given spectrum, Boone saying Tuesday that Judge is weeks away from a scan that would check for healing.

But in his dealings with Judge, Boone said the feedback has improved.

“He was uncomfortable there for a while,” the Yankees manager said before his team’s 9-3 blowout loss to the Tigers on Tuesday at the Stadium, their sixth consecutive defeat. “It seems like the normal stuff is starting to feel better, so hopefully that’s a good sign of hopefully some healing.”

Judge believed he suffered the stress fracture during a dive in Houston on April 26, and he struggled for weeks trying to play through it before opting for tests in early June.

Since then, the best hitter in baseball has not been “able to do much,” Boone said, “and certainly not able to do any baseball activities.” Judge has been able to work out in the weight room and strengthen his lower body.

A dejected Aaron Judge looks on during the Yankees’ ugly 9-3 loss to the Tigers on June 30, 2026 at the Stadium. Robert Sabo for New York Post

Any return timetable remains elusive.

“It does seem like this week he is starting to feel better, which is encouraging,” Boone said.


After crashing into Jasson Domínguez a day prior, Jazz Chisholm Jr. said he felt better and believed he would be available off the bench, though Boone said the second baseman only would be used in an emergency.

Chisholm believed he would be cleared from the concussion protocol. Boone said he didn’t know whether Chisholm would play Wednesday, and José Caballero started at second base Tuesday.

Chisholm left Monday’s loss in the fourth inning after he chased a shallow fly ball and was clotheslined by Domínguez, who made the catch.

“Felt like I got punched in the face,” Chisholm said.


Cody Bellinger, who had played in 83 of the first 84 games this season, sat for a second time amid a deep slump.

In his previous 12 games, Bellinger had gone 5-for-41 (.122) with a .396 OPS.

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“He’ll get corrected and get it going here,” Boone said. “Hopefully giving him at least the start off tonight kind of lets him take a step back for a second and hopefully get it going.”


Call-up Yovanny Cruz pitched two perfect innings with three strikeouts.

He threw five pitches above 100 mph and maxed out at 101.5 mph.


Against lefty Tarik Skubal, Max Schuemann started in left field, Spencer Jones in center and Domínguez in right.

Why free agent LeBron James could opt to chase new NBA history with Warriors

Why free agent LeBron James could opt to chase new NBA history with Warriors originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

When LeBron James decides where he will play next season, he will not repeat the lie frequently told at introductory news conferences.

He can say, with all sincerity, that “it’s not about the money.”

Because it’s not.

That’s why the Golden State Warriors know they have a legitimate chance to sign James in free agency.

James’ announcement Monday that he was ready to leave the Los Angeles Lakers, who could have paid him more than any other NBA team, is a commentary on his state of mind. A 41-year-old billionaire is exercising his power and privilege to choose his next destination. With the sun setting on his legendary career, he is granting himself the freedom to pursue his personal joy.

If LeBron decides to join the Warriors, bitter rivals a few years ago, it will satisfy his abiding curiosity about playing with Stephen Curry, Draymond Green, Jimmy Butler III — three men he respects on and off the court. This would be an opportunity for James to nourish his basketball soul in ways he no longer could alongside Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves in LA.

At this point in his career, James needs something new to chase. Something he has not already captured. Though he was professional enough in the 2025-26 NBA season with the Lakers, a new chapter with Golden State’s alluring circumstances could be invigorating.

LeBron to the Warriors would meet all the conditions for tremendous theater. They would be, depending on one’s point of view, lovable protagonists or a show limping past its expiration date. LeBron would be positioned to inject fresh energy into a franchise that, over the years, has devolved from contender, if not favorites, to a play-in tournament perennial. He could stand alongside Curry, Green and eventually Butler to face the howling crowd of doubters with a unique goal of doing something unheard of, much less realized.

No NBA team with its core four players all past their 35th birthday has won a championship. Or even reached the NBA Finals. 

History tells us that very good young teams traditionally run very good mature teams off the floor and toward their epilogue.

But it is instructive to know that James, Curry and Green have built fabulous careers on their desire to silence skeptics. To prove they can do what others say they can’t. Their careers are so richly decorated that they firmly believe no feat is impossible.

The Lakers could have paid James exponentially more than what he could get from the Warriors. James could have stayed in Los Angeles, close to his family, in the nest of his various business ventures. He could have remained teammates with his son, Bronny, whose contract for the 2026-27 NBA season was guaranteed on Monday.

James can now chase everything that moves his spirit, because there is nothing left to prove. The NBA record book is an ode to his individual greatness. All-time leading scorer. Most games played. Most minutes. Most All-NBA selections. Most All-Star Games. Four MVP awards, with 10 other top-five finishes. And four NBA Finals MVP awards.

The Warriors surely realize adding James alone would not automatically vault them toward the top of the Western Conference. To even have a chance at threatening the likes of the Oklahoma City Thunder and San Antonio Spurs, they would need to support the veteran core with impact talent.

Which would further entice LeBron.

The Warriors have long admired James’ skill and, moreover, his savant-like processing of the game. Coach Steve Kerr, a longtime admirer, raves about LeBron’s basketball IQ and coachability, getting a first-hand feel during their time with Team USA. The relationship between Curry and James has evolved from testy to one of mutual appreciation. Golden State CEO Joe Lacob, an inveterate chaser of superstars, is an unabashed fan.

Then, too, no one has a better nose than Lacob for the potential financial and promotional impact of 1) adding James and 2) pairing him with Curry.

Ultimately, though, LeBron’s decision will be the one that best suits his innate desire.

What might a man who has everything want for himself? A chance to do what no one has done before — and the possibility of sharing such an astonishing achievement with people who are brothers from the same hoop generation.

A moment like that might well be priceless.

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