Luis Gil rocked again amid rough spring as Yankees rotation question lingers

New York Yankees pitcher Luis Gil throwing a pitch against the Detroit Tigers.
Luis Gil pitches during the Yankees-Tigers spring training game on March 15, 2026.

TAMPA — The search for the 2024 Luis Gil continues. 

There is still time to find it, but the Yankees right-hander will not have forever. 

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In his penultimate start of the spring, Gil had a game to forget Sunday, getting tagged for three home runs, nine hits and seven runs across three innings against the Tigers.

The former AL Rookie of the Year needed 68 pitches to get nine outs, and while his velocity took another slight tick up, he lacked command and overall crispness, making for a rough afternoon. 

“I feel like we’re closer right now [to Gil’s 2024 version] than we were last year, but ultimately these next steps are the big ones — really capturing the life on the fastball and then creating some space for the secondary,” pitching coach Matt Blake said after a 12-1 loss to the Tigers at Steinbrenner Field. 

Asked if Gil is a lock for the rotation, Aaron Boone described him as “one of the five guys.”

Luis Gil pitches during the Yankees-Tigers spring training game on March 15, 2026. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

But the Yankees have four off-days before their 10th game of the season, so they are still trying to figure out how to best manage the rotation in the first two weeks to keep everyone sharp.

Gil has a minor league option remaining, but the Yankees could also piggyback one starter with another if they decide to carry all five on the Opening Day roster (and that is before they eventually have to make space in the rotation once Carlos Rodón and Gerrit Cole return from the IL). 

That places some extra significance on Gil’s final start of the spring later this week, when he will have another chance to prove he is still capable of getting back to his 2024 form, when he was one of the more dominant pitchers in the first half of the season. 

Luis Gil is still trying to cement his spot in the Yankees rotation. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

“At the end of the day, I got to concentrate on what I need to do,” Gil said through an interpreter. “For me, [being consistent] is the focus and that’s the key, to control what I can control and work on my craft and be as consistent as possible. … It takes time to get there, to be at 100 percent, and I think that’s what’s important.”

Gil, who missed four months last year with a lat strain, averaged 95.8 mph with his fastball Sunday (up from 95.3 in 2025) and topped out at 97.5.

But he only got two whiffs on 19 swings against the fastball, after not generating any on 18 swings against it in his last outing. 

“That’s definitely something we’re looking into,” Blake said. “The profile from ’24 to now is slightly different. There’s a little bit less ride to it from a little bit slower slot. Sometimes that’ll play into the visibility of the pitch, the life above the barrel, those type of things. But the velos started to trend up as the spring’s gone on, so you feel like it’s improving. 

“Ultimately, the batters will tell you, so we got to find a way to get some miss and stay off the barrel with it.” 

Of the three home runs Gil gave up Sunday, one came on a changeup down the middle to Spencer Torkelson, one came on a slider on the inner third of the plate to Matt Vierling, and the last came on a 95 mph fastball on the inner third to Riley Greene.

He came away from the outing encouraged by the uptick on his fastball but displeased with his changeup. 

Boone, who acknowledged earlier this spring that he still wanted to see more from Gil, was asked if he has seen enough with a week left in camp. 

“I’ve seen a lot of good from Luis and again, it’s ticked up every time,” Boone said. “I want him to get back to where that first half of ’24, that next level of electricity with the heater. He’s still having trouble right now getting swing-and-miss with the heater. But it’s the whole package. But I also don’t want to ignore a lot of the good that’s gone on in some of the starts he’s had as well. So this was a rough one today, without question, but we got to get back and keep working on it.”

Not perfect — but still pretty good

SURPRISE, ARIZONA - MARCH 11: Tyler Fitzgerald #49 of the San Francisco Giants hits a single against the Kansas City Royals during the third inning of the spring training game at Surprise Stadium on March 11, 2026 in Surprise, Arizona. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Is this an omen? Like Benny the Jet knocking the cover off a ball in “The Sandlot” — is Gregory Santos botching a perfect game with two outs in the 9th a sign of terrible things to come?  Is this 2026 bullpen going to be the death of the San Francisco Giants? Did not the soothsayer warn Julius Caesar to “beware the ides of March” before his assassination by the Roman senate? And here the Giants are, on the 15th, smack dab in March’s ides, bringing the Scottsdale faithful to their feet in the 9th only to have them slump down in their seats as a walk, followed by an RBI double claimed perfection, a no-hitter, and a shut-out in quick, successive stabs.

Disappointment in Spring Training, as Bryan points out, is never a good look… but so is getting carried away by Spring Training one-offs.

The perfect game would’ve definitely improved vibes in the moment, but losing the achievement on the 27th man hardly takes away from how well the Giants are playing as a whole. If Santos had sealed the deal, I doubt teammates would’ve flooded out of the dugout into a celebratory dogpile at the mound. The crowd in attendance would’ve cheered, strangers would’ve exchanged hi-fives, guffawed incredulously, and that would’ve been the extent of it. Fans at home would’ve checked the box score and smirked at the five-pitcher perfect-o. That’s kind of neat, some would think to themselves before seeking out more substantial things to sink their teeth into, like Robbie Ray’s 8-strikeout performance over 5 innings pitched, or Grant McCray’s beautifully caressed bunt up the third base line, or Jerar Encarnacion’s lumberjack cut in the 2nd. 

Nearly ten days ago, on March 6th, I wrote about how Encarnacion’s slow start meant “the big man was in serious danger of getting left behind” in San Francisco’s developing outfield race. The next day, after reading my post and resolving to prove me wrong, Encarnacion went 3-for-3 with a double and 2 runs batted-in in a game against Texas. Including those results and his mash from this afternoon, he’s now collected 9 hits over his last 20 at-bats, including 4 extra baggers, 9 RBIs and just 3 strikeouts.

Luis Matos, who was the hot hand a week-and-a-half ago, has cooled considerably. He’s gone 2-for-18 with no extra baggers, no RBIs, and has now seen his no-strikeout-spring blemished by two K’s, including one today. While Matos and Encarnacion are not mutually exclusive options for the Opening Day roster, their option-less inflexibility, as well as their right-handedness, puts them at odds with each other for many. While the Giants did beat the Brewers 7-1 today, the real competition of Spring Training are these internal battles. Matos had his moments with runners on base today and didn’t do much. He struck out with Matt Chapman on 2nd in the 1st, then rolled weakly to short with the bases loaded in the 2nd and can’t really take credit for David Hamilton’s two-run throwing error.

Meanwhile Encarnacion made a cutter disappear in a puff of smoke and won the day. Things are getting interesting.  

And on the mound, Robbie Ray looked regular-season ready in his fifth start of the Cactus League. He threw 64 pitches over 5 perfect innings while striking out 8 Milwaukee batters. The approach was simple and to the point: Heavy on the four-seamer with the hard slider peppered in just enough to keep hitters on their toes. He snuck a dozen fastballs by hitters for called strikes. 6 of his K’s came on the slider and 6 of the 8 swings taken at the pitch were whiffed. What made his outing so successful was not the swing-and-miss stuff, it was his efficiency. He fought back into counts and kept balls in play grounded, which are not necessarily well-established aspects of his game. 

Perfection was out of reach in today’s 7-1 win. But that’s okay. Ten days out from Opening Day, fans aren’t picky right now. Entertaining works, so does promising, or intriguing — descriptors that fit the Giants’ Cactus League performance so far.

Other things of note: 

Matt Chapman’s 3-for-3 day, including two more doubles, improved his Spring Training totals to 13-for-29 with 8 extra base hits (6 2Bs, 2 HR). He frankly looks bored at the plate.

Grant McCray singled twice with two stolen bases, before he was picked off from second attempting to swipe a third. That being said, the outfielder continues to put on a pointed display for Tony Vitello and the coaching staff. The Giants don’t need him to be a power-threat, they need him to be fast. So far, McCray has matured into this understanding: He’s walked more (7 BB) than he’s struck-out (6) so far, he’s bunting, he’s being aggressive on the bases. If he can show he can consistently get on base and turn dinky singles into scoring threats with his speed, he’s going to find his way onto the big league roster.   

The important reality that surrounds Mets’ $5 million teenage prospect Elian Pena

Elian Peña (L.)
Elian Peña (L.)

PORT ST. LUCIE — For anyone paying attention to Yankees spring training over in Tampa, you know the danger of expecting too much too soon from young prospects, regardless of how high they were drafted or, in Jasson Domínguez’s case, how much money they signed for. 

Nearly seven years after getting a $5.1 million bonus from the Yankees, as well as the nickname “The Martian,” the switch-hitter is still trying to establish himself as a major leaguer. 

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That brings us to Elian Peña, the 18-year-old infielder who signed with the Mets in January 2025 for $5 million out of his native Dominican Republic

Now 18, Peña is in his first spring training not only in Port St. Lucie but in the United States. 

He spent last season in the Dominican Summer League, where he began his professional career by going 0-for-26. 

The 5-foot-10, 180-pound Peña rebounded with a solid two-plus months in the DSL and has spent much of this spring playing minor league games on the backfields behind Clover Park — where he was at shortstop Sunday. 

The lefty-swinging Peña will get his first chance on a bigger stage Thursday in the Mets Spring Breakout game at Clover Park. As Andy Green, the Mets senior vice president of player development, said Sunday, “That will be the first opportunity to see him in a sanctioned game atmosphere, but we’ve seen some of the things he can do against pretty high competition already.” 

That includes when Carlos Mendoza saw Peña deliver immediately in a minor league game. 

“He homered as soon as I saw him, left-on-left,” the manager said. “It was a good first impression.” 

Elian Peña (L.) is in his first spring training not only in Port St. Lucie but in the United States.  Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

But as Domínguez and the Yankees know, it takes more than a few good swings to get to the majors and stay there. 

And the franchise record bonus Peña received — which nearly doubled the previous high of $2.7 million that Francisco Alvarez received in 2018 — will add some challenges. 

Just ask Domínguez, who appears to be headed to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre to open the season

Domínguez became aware of Peña last July, when Peña broke out with a three-homer game in the DSL and Domínguez saw the clips on social media. 

He had two pieces of advice for Peña: “I hope he has someone to tell him what to do with his money. Just leave it alone like I did.” 

And secondly, Domínguez added, “Don’t worry about expectations from other people and be careful with social media. It’s good when you get hits and everyone says you’re great, but if you strike out four times, it’s, ‘I hope you die and your family dies.’ You get used to it, but that can be a lot when you’re young if you pay attention to it.” 

That startling reality will be among the things Peña will have to contend with as he works his way up the system. 

“I think that’s part of being in New York and high expectations,” Mendoza said. “There are gonna be a lot of eyes on him. He’s mature and I think he’s built for it, but you’ve got to go through it and learn. Our job as an organization is to guide him and get him locked in on things he can control.” 

There have been promising signs, according to Green, especially with how he recovered after his rough start to his pro career. 

“The resilience he showed after going 0-for-26 and bouncing back is important,” Green said. “This game is going to smack every player around at some point, and you have to be tough.” 

The Mets are also confident Peña can be a shortstop despite some questions there. 

But with just 55 professional games under his belt, not even the Mets can predict where Peña will wind up. 

He could be with the team’s Florida Complex League affiliate this season, as they try to forge a path for him to Queens. 

Green, though, has seen plenty of examples of young players exceeding expectations and falling short. He managed the Padres when Fernando Tatis Jr. debuted with San Diego as a 20-year-old in 2019. That was a year after he watched Juan Soto hit his second major league homer with Washington at age 19. 

“Those guys are extreme examples,’’ Green said. “There are a ton of really successful outcomes that show up in the big leagues at 22, 23 or 24. I have no idea what his timeline will be. Nobody does. It’ll take the amount of time it takes.”

Rothrock scores a goal, Thomas has 7 saves as Sounders beat Earthquakes 1-0

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) — Paul Rothrock scored a goal in the 20th minute, Andrew Thomas had seven saves, and the Seattle Sounders beat the San Jose Earthquakes 1-0 on Sunday.

The Earthquakes (3-1-0) started a season with three consecutive wins for the first time in club history.

After Antino Lopez kicked away a would-be goal by Preston Judd in the 74th minute, Thomas made a pair of saves in the 83rd and a diving stop in stoppage time to preserve his second consecutive shutout and third this season the Sounders (3-1-0).

On the counter-attack, Jesus Ferreira played a through ball from midfield to Rothrock near the right corner of the penalty box. Rothrock made a couple touches and, as goalkeeper Daniel De Sousa Britto — known simply as “Daniel” — crept off his line, slipped a shot past defender Reid Roberts and inside the near post.

Ferreira has four assists this season, tied with Vancouver's Sebastian Berhalter for most in MLS.

Seattle's Cody Baker, a 22-year-old homegrown in his fourth MLS season, appeared to have scored his first career goal in the 86th minute but it was negated when Albert Rusnák was caught offsides.

Daniel finished with three saves.

Timo Werner, who had an assist in each of his first two appearances, made his first career start for San Jose.

Seattle beat the Earthquakes 3-2 at home July 15 to snap a seven-game winless streak against San Jose.

___

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

When is Women's March Madness First Four? Schedule, dates, location for play-in games

The Women's NCAA Tournament matchups have officially been announced.

The tournament will get underway with First Four play-in games, offering an opportunity to advance to the bracket's first round.

Nebraska, Samford, Richmond and Southern will be among the teams competing in the First Four. Stephen F. Austin, Arizona State, Virginia and Missouri State will also compete in the round.

Who is playing in the First Four of Women's March Madness?

Nebraska vs. Richmond and Stephen F. Austin vs. Missouri State will kick off the First Four action on March 18.

Virginia vs. Arizona State and Samford vs. Southern will take place the following day.

When is the Women's First Four?

The First Four will be played on Wednesday, March 18 and Thursday, March 19.

It's the official start of the Women's NCAA Tournament; eight teams will compete in the play-in games to determine which two teams will punch their tickets to the dance.

Once the bracket has been cut down from 68 teams to the final 64-team field, the first round will begin on Friday, March 20.

Women's First Four schedule

Time and channel to be determined for all games. Locations via ESPN

Wednesday, March 18

  • Nebraska vs. Richmond: ESPN2 | 7 p.m. ET (Cameron Indoor Stadium, Durham, NC)
  • Stephen F. Austin vs. Missouri State: ESPN2 | 9 p.m. ET (Moody Center, Austin, TX)

Thursday, March 19

  • Samford vs. Southern: ESPN2 | 7 p.m. ET (Colonial Life Arena, Columbia, SC)
  • Virginia vs. Arizona State: ESPN2 | 9 p.m. ET (Carver-Hawkeye Arena, Iowa City, IA)

Women's March Madness schedule

Below are all the dates for the 2026 women's NCAA Tournament:

  • First Four: Wednesday, March 18 through Thursday, March 19
  • First Round: Friday, March 20 through Saturday, March 21
  • Second Round: Sunday, March 22 through Monday, March 23
  • Sweet 16: Friday, March 27 through Saturday, March 29
  • Elite Eight: Sunday, March 29 through Monday, March 30
  • Final Four: Friday, April 3
  • National championship: Sunday, April 5

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Women's First Four schedule, dates, location for 2026 NCAA bracket

SEE IT: Yankees' Aaron Judge makes another perfect throw for USA vs. Dominican Republic in WBC semis

In a must-win game for Team USA, Yankees star Aaron Judge is doing all he can.

With the Dominican Republic up 1-0 in the bottom of the third inning of the World Baseball Classic semifinal, Judge showed off his arm strength with an incredible throw from right field to third base to get Padres' Fernando Tatis Jr. out.

It's the second time in a week that Judge has thrown out a runner trying to go from first to third base on a single, as he nabbed Mexico's Joey Ortiz inpool play.

Judge's clutch play seemed to spark life into the US bats as they hit two homers in the top of the fourth inning, with Gunnar Henderson and Roman Anthony going deep to give them all the runs they needed.

Judge's defense came to the rescue again in the fourth, robbing Juan Soto of a leadoff base hit with a diving catch.

The Americans hung on –  thanks to a great escape in the seventh from Yankee teammate David Bednar – as the Dominicans got the tying run to third base with two outs in the bottom of the ninth, thanks to a questionable strike three call to end it. The 2-1 win means they will head to the Championship Game on Tuesday against the winner of Monday's Venezuela-Italy game.

 

White Sox pitching falters in loss to Kansas City

GLENDALE, ARIZONA - MARCH 16, 2025: Hagen Smith #33 of the Chicago White Sox throws a pitch during the second inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the Colorado Rockies at Camelback Ranch on March 16, 2025 in Glendale, Arizona.
Hagen Smith was simply phenomenal in his brief and final Cactus League start. | (Photo by David Durochik/Diamond Images via Getty Images)

There is exactly one baseball game truly worth watching today, and it isn’t from Spring Training. If nothing outside of tonight’s drool-worthy WBC semifinal matchup between the United States and the Dominican Republic is of interest to you, I wouldn’t be able to place any fault. Because from afar, there is exactly one thing and one thing only you need to take away from the Spring Training action that took place today, and it’s that Hagen Smith looks like he’s figured it out.

I cannot emphasize enough how much it does not matter that the White Sox (13-10-1) lost to the Royals (8-14). It doesn’t matter that Erick Fedde got shelled to the tune of seven hits and three earned runs over 3 2/3 innings. Fedde may be likely to open the year in the Sox rotation, but that likeliness remains true for exactly as long as it takes Getz to decide that one of Smith, Tanner McDougal or Noah Schultz is ready for the big leagues.

It does not matter that if it wasn’t clear that Rule 5 draft pick Alexander Alberto isn’t going to be this year’s version of Shane Smith, the four runs (two earned) in just an inning of work today ought to have all but punched his ticket back to Tampa Bay’s minor league system. He’s an intriguing prospect, for sure, but even for a team that hasn’t quite emerged from the devastation of a multi-year rebuild, there are just too many other pitchers who deserve a shot at the big league bullpen to justify rostering Alberto beyond Opening Day. Similarly, while the innings he soaked up last season are greatly appreciated, Brandon Eisert is close enough to the bullpen bubble that I simply am not terribly concerned about the four hits and three runs he gave up in his inning-and-a-third of work.

So, back to the point. There is exactly one takeaway from today, and it’s that Hagen Smith was absolutely filthy. He only threw two innings, but recorded five of those six outs via strikeout, with nothing but a single walk to blemish the final statline.

Between Jac Caglianone, J.J. Wetherholt, and current consensus top overall prospect Konor Griffin, the Sox passed up on a LOT of talent to take Hagen Smith with the fifth overall pick of the 2024 draft. I’m not going to make a sunk-cost argument that the Sox need to get plus value out of Smith for this entire experiment to work, but it’s pretty tough to wonder what might have happened if Riley Greene or C.J. Abrams had gotten the South Side pinstripes instead of Andrew Vaughn, and goodness knows we don’t want to have those conversations again. If the Sox see any success in the late 2020s, it’s probably going to be at least in some part because Hagen Smith turned into the bonafide top-of-the-rotation pitcher that we all hoped for as recently as a year ago. Amid a frustratingly inconsistent start to his pro career, this is the most promising step forward we’ve seen in quite some time.

What else happened in this game? The Royals scored a lot of runs, and the Sox scored few. On the bright side, Miguel Vargas’ absolutely torrid spring continued with two doubles and two walks. Edgar Quero was responsible for the first RBI of the game on a single, and was successful on all three of his pitch challenges from behind the plate.

Miguel Vargas throwing a ball.

The less bright side is that the Sox other runs came courtesy of Dustin Harris and Tanner Murray, two players unlikely to have much bearing on the future of the franchise.


Similarly, the large majority of Kansas City’s damage came off of bats that are unlikely to be much of a factor at Kauffman Stadium this season. Spring Training legend Brandon Drury hit a homer for the Royals, and we sincerely hope that he finds the regular season success this year that he may have been robbed of with the White Sox after an injury spoiled his white-hot March last year.

Outfielder Lane Thomas was responsible for a pair of ribeyes via a third inning sacrifice fly that got KC on the board, as well as a run-scoring single that gave them a 3-2 lead they’d never relinquish. Thomas is likely to play a substantial role on the Royals this year, but the same can’t be said for the sources of the rest of their runs, including a bases-loaded, bases-clearing double from up-and-down infielder Gavin Cross, a dinger from second baseman Peyton Wilson, and another smash in the late innings from backup catcher candidate Luca Tresh.

That was all she wrote for this one, as the Sox prepare to take the field against the Rangers tomorrow behind Sean Burke, who will face off with Texas’ top offseason acquisition in lefthander Mackenzie Gore. First pitch is at 7 p.m. CT in some rare March evening action, and we’ll see you there!


Junior Caminero hits Dominican Republic's record 15th home run of World Baseball Classic

MIAMI (AP) — Junior Caminero hit the Dominican Republic's record 15th home run of the World Baseball Classic, breaking a mark set by Mexico in 2009.

Paul Skenes, the reigning NL Cy Young Award winner, retired five straight batters before Caminero drove a 1-2 sweeper at the top of the strike zone 401 feet over the left field wall for a 1-0 second-inning lead against the United States in the semifinal round on Sunday night.

Caminero fired his bat about 30 feet toward teammates in the third base dugout in excitement, and they ran off the bench to greet him at the plate after he rounded the bases.

He entered batting .375 in six WBC games.

___

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

Bucks vs. Pacers Player Grades: Portis picks up the slack for injured Giannis

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - MARCH 15: Giannis Antetokounmpo #34 of the Milwaukee Bucks holds his knee during the third quarter against the Indiana Pacers at Fiserv Forum on March 15, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. 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 Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Though the Bucks dropped the tanking Pacers 134-123, Giannis left midway through the third quarter with what’s so far being called a hyperextended left knee. Read our full summary of the game here and catch a six-minute audio recap on the Bucks+ podcast, Bucks In Six Minutes, below.

Player Grades

Giannis Antetokounmpo

23 minutes, 31 points, 14 rebounds, 8 assists, 11/22 FG, 9/13 FT, +17

Stupidly efficient. Ran the offense even while Rollins was on the floor, and everything came easy for him in his initial shift. The injury took place when he came down hard on a monster dunk over Jay Huff in the third and was so slow to get up on defense, that he hadn’t left the restricted area after the Bucks forced a quick Pacers turnover (that did get him a cherry-picked dunk). And yes, the left knee was the one he famously hyperextended in the 2021 Eastern Conference Finals and returned from a week later.

Grade: A+

Myles Turner

30 minutes, 13 points, 4 rebounds, 1 block, 4/7 FG, 3/6 3P, +6

Maybe Turner didn’t do a whole lot on the stat sheet outside of shooting the ball well, but this was one of his better rim protection games (Indy had just 30 in the paint). Nice to see him play legit minutes over Sims.

Grade: B+

Ryan Rollins

37 minutes, 20 points, 2 rebounds, 7 assists, 3 turnovers, 3 steals, 8/12 FG, 3/5 3P, +14

The most I’ve seen out of Rollins as a three-level scorer in a while. Probably could have used more of him on Aaron Nesmith rather than T.J. McConnell, who was surprisingly a non-factor.

Grade: A

Kyle Kuzma

36 minutes, 8 points, 8 assists, 3 rebounds, 2 steals, 1 block, 3/7 FG, 2/6 3P, -1

Not sure when the last time Kuzma has led the Bucks, or any team, in assists. Missed a couple clean looks but this is about all you can ask for when he’s limited to standing in the corner.

Grade: B

AJ Green

24 minutes, 12 points, 4/7 3P, +8

It’s been so rough for Green lately, but he came alive in the second quarter hitting 3/4 from deep, keeping the Bucks in the game as their defense scuffled. Just under eight minutes in the second half was kind of weird.

Grade: B

Bobby Portis

27 minutes, 29 points, 10 rebounds, 2 steals, 11/21 FG, 6/11 3P, -4

In a month of big Portis performances, this season-high output easily took the cake. Post-game, he talked about how he felt much more pressure in the three-point competition at All-Star weekend and ever since, he’s felt a lot more confident shooting in-game threes. Sure enough, he’s 28/57 from deep since then, good for 49.1%.

Grade: A+

Taurean Prince

22 minutes, 13 points, 5/7 FG, 3/5 3P, +13

Today’s first sub. Missed his only three-point attempt very long, but redeemed himself in the corner his next shift. His two triples as the third finished were big. Defense isn’t all the way back yet, as he got into Jarace Walker’s landing space in the second half, which was upgraded to a flagrant-one. Cheers to another season high.

Grade: A-

Jericho Sims

14 minutes, 2 points, 3 rebounds, 1/3 FG, +1

Another game where Sims hasn’t had much impact on the glass, but was certainly the Bucks’ most active frontcourt defender. This just feels like a more right-size role for him, because even when setting aside his shooting, Turner was the more impactful Buck today.

Grade: C+

Gary Harris

22 minutes, 6 points, 2/4 FG, 2/4 3P, -2

Dusted off for real minutes for just the second time since the break, and his heaviest workload since January 23rd. Not sure why he was the choice over Thomas, but he held his own.

Grade: B-

Doc Rivers

I didn’t get some of the jumbo lineups early but I liked how Doc leaned into Portis after halftime. Seems like he’s really tried to get Portis more involved in the last week after a scoreless first half against Utah last Saturday.

Grade: B+

Limited Minutes: Pete Nance

Garbage Time: Thanasis Antetokounmpo, Andre Jackson Jr.

DNP-CD: Cam Thomas, Gary Trent Jr.

Inactive: Alex Antetokounmpo, Ousmane Dieng, Kevin Porter Jr., Cormac Ryan

Bonus Bucks Bits

  • Doc’s comments on Giannis’ injury in the press conference were foreboding. He didn’t know whether or not Giannis would get imaging tonight, nor even which knee was hurt:

“I really didn’t see it until after the game. I thought I saw live something that didn’t look good, honestly. But I [didn’t] have video. So I just looked at it and my guess is that he hyperextended his knee. But I’m guessing.”

  • For what it’s worth, Giannis agreed with the diagnosis but seemed less concerned, and confirmed that no imaging occurred this evening:

“Yeah, I think I hyperextended my knee. I haven’t seen the clip, I wanna see the clip, but it doesn’t matter. I’m just gonna go back home, sleep, see how I feel tomorrow. Try to lift some weights, and if I have a little bit of discomfort, then I’ll go from there, but as of now I’m not really bothered.”

  • Predictably, Giannis wanted to return and thought he could finish the game, but the Bucks’ training staff convinced him it wasn’t a smart idea, being up around 13 points at the time. He acknowledged they were right: “you just gotta listen… and I listened… just gotta trust them.”
  • Ousmane Dieng missed his second consecutive game with illness. Kevin Porter also didn’t play in this SEGABABA after 30 minutes yesterday in Atlanta.
  • Indiana had a long list of inactives too: regulars Andrew Nembhard, Ben Sheppard, and Pascal Siakam sat out, joining Johnny Furphy and Tyrese Haliburton with their long-term injuries.
  • A very awkward Bucks lineup ended the first: Harris, Kuzma, Nance, Portis, Sims. It even stayed on the floor the first 44 ticks of the second. Ballhandlers? Who needs ‘em!
  • Having said that, I don’t understand why Cam Thomas didn’t see any action today. Sure, he’s not a point guard, but creation would helped, even if it was for himself.
  • Can’t dispute this kind of creation, though: on 23 made threes, the Bucks assisted on 22 of them. Where was this earlier in the year?
  • Somehow the Bucks outrebounded the Pacers on the offensive glass 13-10. I’d be embarrassed if I was Indy.
  • After today, Nance now has four games left on his two-way contract. Decision time is coming, and everything I’ve heard suggests Andre Jackson Jr. will be cut to make way for a new deal for Nance.

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The Bucks hit the Fiserv Forum floor again on Tuesday evening as the Cavs come to town for one last matchup. Tip-off is at 7 p.m. CDT on NBC, Peacock, and FanDuel Sports Wisconsin.

Who has toughest March Madness path to Final Four? Ranking 1-seeds' paths

A 68-team NCAA men's basketball tournament bracket has finally been unveiled.

Following an eventful Selection Sunday, the path to a national championship has been set, with the country's top teams learning the road they'll have to traverse to make a Final Four and maybe, just maybe, cut down the nets on the first Monday of April and earn their one shining moment.

Not all roads to Indianapolis are created equally, though.

For some teams, the mystical forces of March gift them a relatively navigable path. For others, though, tougher opponents or matchups stand in their way of the biggest stage in the sport.

So where do things stand for the NCAA tournament's four No. 1 seeds — Michigan, Duke, Arizona and Florida — and their title aspirations? Who will have to clear the highest hurdles just to make it to Naptown?

Here are the hardest roads to the Final Four:

Toughest roads to the Final Four

1. Duke

The Blue Devils earned the tournament's No. 1 overall seed after a 32-2 record and ACC regular-season and tournament titles, but they didn't get many other favors from the selection committee.

After an almost-certain first-round victory against college basketball legend Gerry McNamara and No. 16 seed Siena, coach Jon Scheyer's team has a taxing path to Indianapolis. In the second round, it will get either No. 8 seed Ohio State, who has one of the best players in the country in guard Bruce Thornton, or No. 9 seed TCU, which is 9-2 since Feb. 2.

In the Sweet 16, the Blue Devils will likely get No. 4 seed Kansas and potential No. 1 overall NBA Draft pick Darryn Peterson or No. 5 seed St. John's, which won the Big East regular-season and tournament championships, has won 19 of its past 20 games and has one of the best coaches in the sport's history in Rick Pitino.

Then, they'd have an Elite Eight matchup likely against No. 2 seed UConn, which has won two of the past three national titles, or No. 3 seed Michigan State, with Jeremy Fears Jr. and noted March wizard Tom Izzo. Even with likely national player of the year Cameron Boozer, Duke had enough questions with injuries to starters Caleb Foster and Patrick Ngongba. Now, it's got even more standing in the way of its national championship dreams.

2. Arizona

For all of their regular-season wins and overall success, the Wildcats have been among the biggest NCAA tournament underachievers under fifth-year head coach Tommy Lloyd, with no Elite Eight appearances despite being a No. 1 or No. 2 seed in three of the past four seasons. Even beyond that recent history, the path to their first Final Four in 25 years won't be easy.

A stiff challenge awaits in the Sweet 16 against either No. 4 seed Arkansas — the SEC tournament champion that has one of the country's best players in Darius Acuff Jr. and a long, athletic supporting cast — or No. 5 seed Wisconsin, which has won 15 of its past 20 and has one of the most explosive offenses in the sport.

After that, it would likely have to get through No. 2 seed Purdue, the Big Ten champion that has the nation's most efficient offense, according to KenPom, and a number of key players from its 2024 national runner-up squad, led by record-setting guard Braden Smith.

3. Florida

The Gators enter the tournament as one of the country's hottest teams, with 17 wins in their past 19 games after an underwhelming 9-5 start. They've got all the potential to make a second-consecutive Final Four, with Sunday's bracket reveal confirming as much.

Either No. 8 seed Clemson or No. 9 seed Iowa could be a squirrely second-round opponent, but the Sweet 16 won't be nearly as daunting for Todd Golden's squad as it will for some of its fellow No. 1 seeds. No. 5 seed Vanderbilt beat Florida by 17 in the SEC tournament, but the Gators have shown they can beat the Commodores, with a 98-94 in Nashville back in January. Or they could take on No. 4 seed Nebraska, which is just 6-6 since a 20-0 start to the season. No. 2 seed Houston, a rematch of last year's national title game, or No. 3 seed Illinois would be challenging in the Elite Eight, but Florida's path to that point isn't especially arduous.

4. Michigan

There's no such thing as an easy road to the Final Four, but among the 1 seeds, the Wolverines have the most manageable set of tasks in front of them.

No. 8 seed Georgia or No. 9 seed Saint Louis could offer a fun second-round game, but neither squad has the horses to keep up with coach Dusty May's squad. In the Sweet 16, they'd probably get a beat-up No. 5 seed in Texas Tech without All-American forward JT Toppin or a No. 4 seed in Alabama that has a frontcourt so thin that it went to court to try to add a 23-year-old G Leaguer to it, making it a group that Yaxel Lendeborg, Aday Mara and Morez Johnson Jr. should feast against.

Then, in the Elite Eight, their most likely opponents would be No. 2 seed Iowa State, which is 11-7 in its past 18 games and has underplayed its tournament seed in recent years, or No. 3 seed Virginia, which has only one win this season against a team currently in the top 25 on KenPom.

It's fair to wonder whether Michigan can win a national title without injured guard L.J. Cason, but now that a bracket's out, a trip to Indianapolis should be much more of an expectation than a hope.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: March Madness predictions: Who has toughest Final Four road?

Big Ten poised for another year of March Madness sadness without men's title

CHICAGO - Maybe next year, Big Ten.

The conference still doesn’t have a team that can win the men's NCAA Tournament and give the Big Ten its first title since 2000. That much is obvious after Michigan, which spent most of the season in the top three of the USA TODAY Sports coaches poll, including five weeks at No. 1, struggled throughout the conference tournament before finally losing to Purdue in the title game.

Oh, the Wolverines are still the No. 1 seed in the Midwest Region. But Michigan looks like one of those teams that peaked too early, and has a Sweet 16 or Elite Eight exit written all over them.

“This loss … makes us know that we are not unbeatable. We can lose games, too,” Aday Mara said after the 80-72 loss to Purdue on Sunday, March 15.

“We cannot relax during games. We’ve just got to keep learning, keep improving and make sure we don’t relax during games.”

That’s a lovely sentiment. But when you need a reminder of that at this stage of the season, you’re already cooked.

As are the Big Ten’s big hopes for ending its title drought.

Michigan forward Yaxel Lendeborg (23) walks off the court after his team's loss to Purdue at the 2026 Big Ten tournament championship game at United Center in Chicago.

There was a time the Big Ten was as much a constant in the list of NCAA champions as Indianapolis was in the list of Final Four host cities. But you have to go back to Michigan State’s Flintstones in 2000 since a Big Ten men’s team has won it all.

That might not sound like that long ago. When you realize that was in the quaint old days of the Big Ten still having 11 teams, however, it might as well be ancient history.

It’s not that the Big Ten hasn’t had its chances. Eight teams from the conference have made the title game since 2001. Another seven teams have made the Final Four. Once there, however, it’s been clear the Big Ten wasn’t on the same level as ACC, SEC and Big East.

Michigan was supposed to be different. It has the Big Ten player of the year in Yaxel Lendeborg, the defensive player of the year in Mara and an elite point guard in Elliot Cadeau.

The Wolverines won all but two games during the regular season, and went unbeaten in road conference games. They were explosive on offense and tenacious on defense.

Yet Michigan didn’t look like a team capable of a title run during the Big Ten tournament. The Wolverines seemed to be on their heels for most of the tournament, responding rather than setting the tone.

Against Wisconsin, the Wolverines led by 15 with less than 10 minutes to play but needed a last-second 3 from Lendeborg to avoid overtime. In the title game, Purdue opened the second half with a 13-4 run and Michigan never recovered.

Even after Boilermakers center Oscar Cluff picked up his fourth foul with 5:31 still to play, he was able to bang at will down low, scoring seven of his 21 points in the closing minutes.

“I think we let Cluff get in deep catches, so he was able to score like really easy baskets around the rim,” Mara said.

Let that sink in for a second.

Michigan had three players on the Big Ten’s all-defensive team: Lendeborg, Mara and Morez Johnson Jr. Nobody should be getting easy baskets on those guys, and certainly not at this time of year.

As for Lendeborg, though in good form against Purdue — he was 4-of-7 from deep and finished with 20 points — he wasn’t a factor offensively against Ohio State and for the first half against Wisconsin.

Michigan also lost the turnover battle in each of its games; even though it only had seven against Purdue, the Boilermakers had all of two.

“We didn't want this to happen. We planned to go three-of-three: Big Ten (title), Big Ten tournament championship, NCAA,” Nimari Burnett said. “But this is a part of the process, and we're going to use this as fuel into this next month of basketball.”

Again, it’s a little late for that.

As for the Big Ten's other top-tier teams, well, Nebraska, Illinois and Michigan State left the tournament without winning a game. Nobody eats their own quite like the Big Ten, but that doesn't bode well for the next three weeks.

The conference's best hope might actually be Purdue, which played this weekend like the No. 1 team it was when the season began.

"It's a great sign," Purdue coach Matt Painter said. "There's a lot of teams, and we've been one of those teams before, that have just played great and then all of a sudden get into tourney time and not play as well.

"It's a little bit of a mix. You've got to keep working toward getting better."

With hopes for an NCAA title dimming once again, it sounds like an assignment for the entire Big Ten.

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Michigan's Big Ten tournament flop predicts more March Madness sadness

Canadiens' Kirby Dach leaves game after high hit from Ducks' Jeffrey Viel

MONTREAL (AP) — Montreal forward Kirby Dach left the Canadiens’ game Sunday night against the Anaheim Ducks because of an upper-body injury after a high hit from winger Jeffrey Viel.

Viel caught the unsuspecting Dach in Anaheim’s end three minutes into the first period after the Montreal forward swatted at the puck with his arm but missed.

Dach fell to the ice with his face in his gloves before gingerly making his way to the bench, and eventually to the dressing room. Viel was not penalized.

Canadiens defenseman Arber Xhekaj and forward Josh Anderson approached Viel later in the period, but Viel declined apparent requests to fight.

The hit came three days after Ducks defenseman Radko Gudas ended Toronto captain Auston Matthews' season with a knee-on-knee hit. Matthews has a torn medial collateral ligament in his left knee. Gudas was given a major penalty and ejected, then suspended five games for kneeing — the maximum the Department of Safety could levy because the hearing was by phone.

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AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Dodgers, Japanese company make deal involving Dodger Stadium

Dodger Stadium
10/07/06 new york mets vs la dodgers @ dodgers stadium, chavez ravine, neil miller: nlds game #3/ overhead shot of dodger stadium

Dodger Stadium’s name isn’t changing.

But for the first time in the ballpark’s 64-year history, the playing surface will have an official sponsor.

A source confirmed that the team is striking a sponsorship agreement with the clothing brand Uniqlo that will make the Japanese company the presenting sponsor of the stadium’s field.

Dodger Stadium will have an official sponsor for its playing field for the first time in its 64-year history. Neil Miller

The official branding will likely be along the lines of “Uniqlo Field at Dodger Stadium.” The Athletic earlier reported the news.

Dodger Stadium is one of eight ballparks in Major League Baseball that has not sold its naming rights, along with Angel Stadium, Yankee Stadium, Fenway Park, Wrigley Field, Kauffman Stadium, Nationals Park and Oriole Park at Camden Yards.


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Known as the “Cathedral of Baseball,” it is the third-oldest venue in the league, and one of the most historic, having hosted two All-Star Games and 12 World Series.

In 2028, it will be the baseball host site during the Summer Olympics, as well.

With all that history, plus the Dodgers’ internationally recognizable team brand that has been supercharged by the arrival of Shohei Ohtani, the stadium has long had great appeal to potential sponsors.

And now, the Dodgers have found a way to cash in on that without sacrificing the building’s official name — marking just the latest way the club has capitalized upon a prime marketing opportunity (especially with a Japanese sponsor) as it continues to establish itself as the biggest revenue-driving team in baseball.

The San Antonio Spurs are title favorites

SAN ANTONIO, TX -MARCH 14: Victor Wembanyama #1 of the San Antonio Spurs reacts after a three against Charlotte Hornets in the first half at Frost Bank Center on March 14, 2026 in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Antonio Spurs are one win shy of 50 wins with 15 games left. It’s the first time the team will reach that mark since the 2016-2017 season. With the league’s second-best record, the Spurs have elevated from plucky young squad to a true NBA title contender. According to a survey of SB Nation readers, the Spurs are the favorites to hoist the Larry O’Brien trophy in June.

The Spurs finished 4% higher than the league’s best Oklahoma City Thunder, a team they defeated four times this season. The field and Boston Celtics round out the group of teams considered to be title favorites.

The sentiment is likely driven by the Spurs’ recent stretch in which the team has gone 17-3 over 20 games. That stretch has been defined by shut-down defense, an increase in offensive efficiency, and MVP-level play by Victor Wembanyama. During that time, the Spurs have looked like a team that can win games physically and in a variety of ways. They have a top-10 player and a good supporting cast.

What they lack is experience. Teams like the Thunder, Denver Nuggets, and Minnesota Timberwolves have playoff experience, winning titles and reaching conference finals. The Spurs undoubtedly have the talent to compete with those teams, but the question is whether they can win without being there before. Other teams have done it, like the Thunder.

An emphatic end to the 2025/26 season could cement their status as a title favorite even further. The team has the third-easiest remaining schedule and a real chance to win 60 games. If they are considered a favorite now, ending the season with 60 wins makes them an even more real threat.

Do you think the Spurs are the title favorite? Or will another team take them out come playoff time? You can see the complete title odds at this link: https://sportsbook.fanduel.com/navigation/nba

Grimes leads short-handed 76ers to a 109-103 win over the Trail Blazers

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Quentin Grimes scored 14 of his season-high 31 points in the fourth quarter as the short-handed Philadelphia 76ers beat the Portland Trail Blazers 109-103 Sunday night.

The Sixers were playing without Joel Embiid, Tyrese Maxey and Kelly Oubre Jr. due to injuries.

Justin Edwards scored 21 points, and VJ Edgecombe had 18 points and a career-high 12 rebounds for the rookie’s third double-double this season.

Deni Avdija led Portland with 25 points, and Jerami Grant added 20. But the Trail Blazers shot just 17 for 53 from 3-point range (32.7%). Donovan Clingan added 11 points and 15 rebounds.

Portland led by one point at halftime, 54-53, before the Sixers stretched the lead to as many as 10 points in the third quarter, helped by nine points from Edwards in the period.

The Sixers took their largest lead of the game at 101-87 with 5:34 left, but Portland answered with a 10-0 run. An Edgecombe jumper with 1:53 to play and a steal and slam by Edwards with 1:20 left helped Philadelphia seal the win.

76ers: Open a three-game trip in Denver on Tuesday.

Trail Blazers: Continue a five-game trip in Brooklyn Monday night.

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