Monday Rockpile: The Rockies use real-world lessons to structure their Cultural Education & Development Program

DENVER, COLORADO - AUGUST 19, 2022: Carlos Estevez #54 and Elehuris Montero #44 of the Colorado Rockies following the game against the San Francisco Giants at Coors Field on August 19, 2022 in Denver, Colorado.(Photo by Harrison Barden/Colorado Rockies/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Last week, I gave you some background on the Rockies’ Cultural Education & Development Program. This week, I’m going to follow up by providing some insight into the curriculum. Specifically, I will detail the program in the Dominican Academy and the Dominican Summer League since those are the most intensive programs. 

The focus is on helping players from Latin America gain skills that will allow them to be successful in the US on and off the field.

Basic Structure

Classes run for 20 weeks, which is a little longer than a traditional high school or college semester (those are 15-16 weeks). It is broken down into six different units that are taught by Angel Amparo, Julio Medina, or a combination of the two:

  • Weeks 1 & 2: Orientation, Onboarding, Placement Testing & Rockies Culture
  • Weeks 3 & 4: Introduction to Computers, Dawere Accelerated High School Program & Classroom Assignments
  • Weeks 5-9: English 101, Intermediate & Advanced ESL
  • Weeks 10-14: Cultural Development 101
  • Weeks 15-17: Critical Thinking 101
  • Weeks 18-20: Math 101 & Off-Season Planning

“We have classes Monday through Friday from 4-7,” Angel Ampardo explained. “We do smaller groups, no more than 15 players, just to have better control. And we have office hours so they can come and see us for one-on-one attention.

“(The syllabus) shows you what we’re going to do, what’s required, a brief description of what we do and the goals and just the basic English structure,” he continued. “But then here, you see things like learning leadership, planning self-discipline skills and some of the resources and websites that we use. We have a classroom and a computer lab area, too. We also grade them.”

Players are graded on the following:

  • Journals (10%)
  • Completion and Effective Demonstration of Personal Improvement Plan (45%)
    • Based on Rockies Evaluation Matrix
  • Quizzes, Tests and Projects (30%)
  • Homework (10%)
  • Punctual Attendance (5%)

In addition to formal classroom lessons, the players also participate in other educational opportunities.

“I throw in professional development workshops,” Amparo said. “(Last) week, we had a workshop about interview processes and how to handle the press. That (was) on Monday, and the following Wednesday, we have a financial planning workshop. I throw in a lot of personal workshops. I have facilitators that I’ve worked with for years that are good at what they do that I get in contact with and have them come in to do specialized workshops and trainings with the players. We also have several community outreach programs and projects that we do throughout the season.”

And at the end of the season, the Rockies conduct exit interviews with the players. 

“We tell them what their offseason plan is and what we want them to work on during the offseason,” Amparo said. “We get their feedback, too. We do anonymous surveys. What did you like about this season? What classes were good? What didn’t you like? What do you want to add? Because we want this to be interactive. 

“We want to add stuff that they like,” he continued, “hence why chess came into it, then a video game tournament came into it and a domino tournament. So we get their feedback, and then we review it during the offseason, and then we modify the syllabus based on what we think would benefit them.”

No Offseason

During the offseason, the Rockies also keep tabs on the players. 

“In the offseason, players are home, so if I’m not in Arizona or Denver, we do home visits as well for the players,” Amparo said. “We visit them, we talk to their parents and loved ones, just to let them know how they’re progressing. It helps them put a face to a name to tell them what our role is and just to let parents know that there’s a more personal connection.”

Amparo stressed that this comes from the Rockies’ emphasis on getting to know the players as individuals.

“I’ll never forget what I was told by my boss during my interview. He was like, ‘Look, focus on creating genuine and authentic relationships with the players. If you put the players’ needs first, always, you’ll do a good job. I guarantee it,’” he said. “He said it’s a lot of work – ‘I’m not going to lie to you, you’ve got to dive in head first. But it’ll be the most rewarding work that you’ll do.’ And I’ve never forgotten that interview. So I like the fact that players can come to me with their personal problems or something like that. I enjoy that role, if I can provide some sort of guidance or direction.”

A Work in Progress

This program has been in place for 14 years, and has evolved with changing needs. 

“I remember my first day of work,” Amparo said. “I went with a suit and tie with a briefcase, and I had this plan of what I wanted to do because I’ve taught before at a university level and in high schools. But when I got there on my first day, I was like ‘Oh no, this is not going to work.’

“So I did a lot of observing in that first season at all levels,” he continued. “And after all of the observing and the feedback that I received, I said ‘Okay, let’s build a syllabus, a curriculum and lessons based on these pillars here that we feel are important.’ And it’s been going like that for years.”

Every year, the Rockies modify their lessons based on feedback from players as to what was most beneficial to them as well as adjusting the projects and activities to accommodate the world landscape. 

“It’s changed so much now,” Amparo said.

“I was told ‘You probably won’t see the fruits of your success for about six or seven years.’ And since I’ve been here so long, I find players who have made it – who signed with us and couldn’t speak a lick of English – who are now playing at the major-league level. But even the ones who didn’t make the majors, but had this good work ethic and are now working as international crosscheckers or hitting coordinators or scouts or pitching coordinators… Those are success stories to me because these are all the kids who came through our program here. They played baseball for a few years and didn’t make it to the majors, but they’re still involved with the sport that they love.

“And those are the ones I can use with new players,” he continued. “I can show you [Ezequiel] Tovar’s first interview with us here in the DSL and look where he is now. He’s been in the league for eight years now, and now I can show tangible proof that this works if you put in the effort. Obviously, I don’t want to discourage them and say, ‘Even if you don’t make it to the majors…’ I never say that to them, but they know if they don’t make it to the majors, they can still have a career and a life in baseball. So this is tangible proof that I can show them.”

Amparo also likes to call players back who have graduated from the program to talk to the players currently in the program. He’s brought back Tovar, Carlos Estévez, and others to be interviewed and share their stories about how they signed and their career trajectories. He likes to implement tangible interactions to motivate the students, and that’s the biggest way that things have evolved and continue to evolve.

Coming Up Next

Next week, I will share the stories of some players who spent time in the program in various stages. Stay tuned!


Triple-A:Albuquerque Isotopes 8, Sacramento River Cats 6

In a back-and-forth affair, the Isotopes ended up topping the River Cats 8-6. The Topes jumped out to an early 4-0 lead on a homer by Sterlin Thompson (No. 13 PuRP) in the second, followed by a double from Nic Kent, single from Drew Avans and sac fly from Charlie Condon (No. 1 PuRP) in the third. However, they then gave up three runs in the third and fourth. They gave up another in the sixth on a ground-rule double to tie the game. In the ninth, though, they scored four more runs to put themselves up 8-4. They bent to give up two more runs in the bottom on a two-run shot by Bryce Eldridge, but still came out victorious. Welinton Herrera (No. 17 PuRP) ended up getting the win, as he pitched two scoreless innings with two hits, one walk and three strikeouts.

The Isotopes return home to face the El Paso Chihuahuas (Padres) next.

Double-A:Portland Sea Dogs 3, Hartford Yard Goats 2

While the Yard Goats scored two runs, they did not record a single hit against the Red Sox Double-A team. Both runs were scored in the third inning, where Jose Torres led off with a walk. Zach Kokoska and GJ Hill popped and lined out, and then Torres stole second. Dyan Jorge walked, and Torres stole third. Then, Andy Perez reached on a fielding error to score both Torres and Jorge, but Braylen Wimmer struck out on a foul tip to end the inning. In total, the Yard Goats ended up walking five times and striking out 12.

On the pitching side, it was Cade Denton who blew the save by giving up a two-run homer to Nate Baez in the the sixth to tie the game. The third run was scored in the eighth, though, after Carlos Torres recorded back-to-back strikeouts of Max Ferguson and Nate Baez to lead the inning off. But then Brooks Bannon walked and stole second, but then Ronald Rosario singled to score Bannon before Nelly Taylor struck out looking to end the inning.

The Yard Goats return home to play the Reading Fightin’ Phils (Phillies) again. They went 2-4 in their last series in Reading three weeks ago.

High-A:Spokane Indians 7, Everett AquaSox 6

The Indians got the scoring going early and never looked back. Tevin Tucker led off the ballgame with a double and then stole third base, which allowed him to score on a wild pitch. Jocob Hinderleider struck out swinging, but then back-to-back baserunners set up Kelvin Hidalgo for a three-run homer to put the Indians up 4-0 in the first inning.

In the fourth, Roynier Hernandez hit his own solo shot to put them up 5-0. The AquaSox finally struck back in the bottom of the inning, as Luis Suisbel and Axel Sanchez led off with back-to-back hits off Yujanyer Herrera. Anthony Donofrio singled to score Suisbel and make the score 5-1. The AquaSox scored two more runs in the sixth and one more in the seventh to make it a one-run game. But the Indians gave themselves some insurance with a Robert Calaz triple to score Kelvin Hidalgo, who reahced on a fielding error right before him.

The AquaSox scored another run in the eighth and tied it in the ninth on a lead-off Brandon Eike homer, but Tommy Hopfe doubled in the tenth to snatch the victory for the Indians. In total, the Indians walked four times and struck out nine; the AquaSox walked 11 times and struck out 15.

The Indians have two off days, and will head to Eugene to play the Emeralds (Giants) starting on Wednesday. To fit in a full six-game series, they are scheduled to play a doubleheader on Saturday.

Single-A:Rancho Cucamonga Quakes 7, Fresno Grizzlies 2 | Rancho Cucamonga Quakes 6, Fresno Grizzlies 0

Like their major league brethren, the Fresno Grizzlies played a doubleheader today. Unfortunately, they were on the losing end of a sweep.

Their first game was a make-up of a suspended game from Saturday, where they ultimately lost 7-2. They got the scoring going early when Cameron Nelson led off with a solo home run. But the Quakes singled, reached on an error and walked to set up a two-RBI single by Marlon Quintero in the second. Two batters later, Hayden Alvarez singled to score two more Quakes and three batters after that, Lucas Ramirez singled to score two more and drive up the score 6-1. That’s when things were suspended on Saturday night. When the game resumed, it was a pretty uneventful game. In the bottom of the fourth, Derek Bernard homered to tack on another Grizzlies’ run. The final run was scored in eighth, when Anyelo Marquez hit a homer of his own.

In the second game, Rancho Cucamongs kicked things off in the first. They jumped out to a 3-0 lead after two innings, and tacked on three more in the seventh. They completely blanked the Grizzlies, who were held to just three hits — a Clayton Gray double in the first, a Luis Mendez single in the fifth, and an Ethan Holliday (No. 2 PuRP) triple in the sixth.

They will head back on the road to face the Stockton Ports (Athletics) next.


Rockies’ Mickey Moniak channels Ted Williams, thanks to his grandfather | Denver Post ($)

Patrick Saunders wrote a wonderful profile on Mickey Moniak and his grandfather, Bill, who was coached by Ted Williams during his minor league days. Mickey, Bill and Matt (dad) all share stories of how their mutual love of baseball has connected them throughout the years, and how Mickey leaned on them during his early career struggles with the Phillies before having breakout years with the Rockies.

Rockies Making Early Case For Multiple All-Star Selections | Sports Illustrated

The All-Star Game isn’t for another 2.5 months, but folks are already starting to make way-too-early cases for players. In this case, SI makes the potential cases for eight players who might be deserving after the Rockies have only had one representative in each Midsummer Classic since 2021. How many players will the Rockies send to Philadelphia this year?


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NL West report: Padres, D-backs split in Mexico, Rockies hanging tough

MEXICO CITY, MEXICO - APRIL 26: General view of Estadio Alfredo Harp Helú prior the MLB Mexico City Series game between San Diego Padres and Arizona Diamondbacks at Estadio Alfredo Harp Helú on April 26, 2026 in Mexico City, Mexico. (Photo by Hector Vivas/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Divisional battles highlighted the week in the National League West.

The San Francisco Giants took two of three games against at home the Dodgers, a series in which runs were at a premium, with 10 runs total between the two teams and two shutouts, nobody scoring more than three in any contest.

Dalton Rushing was in the middle of things, running through the old baseball cycle of perceived slight, followed by retribution with a hit batter, then a hard slide. That was mostly background noise in a rivalry that still has some juice to it even when one team is competitive and the other isn’t.

Tuesday’s game was decided on a three-run home run by light-hitting catcher Patrick Bailey on an extremely hittable slider by Jack Dreyer. That spoiled six scoreless innings by Shohei Ohtani, which reminded Brady Klopfer a lot of Matt Cain’s time in San Francisco.

The San Diego Padres and Arizona Diamondbacks played south of the border, splitting two games in Monterrey, Mexico.

Mason Miller amazingly didn’t strike anybody out in his two appearances this week, lowering his strikeout rate to a still gaudy 61.4 percent. On Saturday he set a Padres record with 34 2/3 consecutive scoreless innings, dating back to last August.

Division notes

San Diego has starters Nick Pivetta, Joe Musgrove, and Griffin Canning all on the injured list, so they signed free agent Lucas Giolito last week to a one-year deal worth $3 million plus a mutual option for 2027. He pitched in a tuneup game Saturday in Class-A Lake Elsinore, and left in the third inning after taking a comebacker off his hand, but after the outing Giolito said he was fine, per Marty Caswell.

Arizona lost four games in a row last week before winning Sunday. Over at AZ Snakepit, Ben Siegel wondered how much time Alek Thomas — hitting .213/.253/.400 through Sunday with a career .276 on-base percentage — has before the Diamondbacks pursue other options in center field and/or the roster.

Rockies hanging around

Renee Dechert, who writes for Purple Row and her own Rockies Pitch newsletter, offered some perspective after the Rockies’ Friday win over the New York Mets.

Colorado also won the last two games of that series in New York to complete a weekend sweep, and are now 13-16. Still in last place, but no longer hopeless.

Colorado reached its nadir as a franchise in 2025, losing 119 games, and since then they have revamped the front office for the first time in years — including hiring former Dodgers executives Paul DePodesta and Josh Byrnes — and have new partial ownership coming as well. Last season, the Rockies lost 50 games before they won their 10th game.

Evan Lang at Purple Row noticed the improvement as well:

The Rockies are still not a great team. The offense has a lot of question marks when it comes to their “swing first and ask questions later” approach to hitting and inconsistent ability to win close games. However, most of the games are still close, the pitching has been shockingly solid—dare I say even good—and they’re keeping fans engaged. Our comments sections are proof positive of that!

NL West standings

Dodgers 19-9, – –
Padres 18-9, 0.5 GB
D-backs 15-12, 3.5 GB
Giants 13-15, 6 GB
Rockies 13-16, 6.5 GB

The week ahead

  • Dodgers: vs. Marlins, at Cardinals
  • Padres: vs. Cubs, vs. White Sox
  • D-backs: at Brewers, at Cubs
  • Giants: at Phillies, at Rays
  • Rockies: at Reds, vs. Braves

Recap: Bruins on the brink of elimination after Game 4 blowout

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - APRIL 26: Members of the Boston Bruins look on from the bench during the third period of Game Four of the First Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at TD Garden on April 26, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. The Sabres defeat the Bruins 6-1. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After a tightly played Game 3, where the Bruins could point to missed opportunities as the difference between a win and a loss, fans hoped to see a little more jump on offense and a little more finish in Game 4.

Instead, the Bruins turned in one of the more calamitous defensive performances in recent memory and got absolutely pummeled by Buffalo, losing Game 4 by a score of 6-1.

The Bruins were booed off the ice at the end of a first period that saw them allow four goals, including three within a span of less than five minutes.

It was, in a word, an embarrassing effort from just about everyone wearing a Bruins jersey or standing behind the Bruins bench.

The B’s ultimately trailed 6-0, only for Sean Kuraly to score the team’s only goal with 40 seconds left in the third period.

The Bruins melted down further down the stretch, with Nikita Zadorov getting five-and-a-game for cross-checking Rasmus Dahlin, potentially earning himself supplemental discipline in the process.

If you enjoy watching horror movies, here are your highlights:

The B’s will have to win in Buffalo on Tuesday night in order to extend their season, though fans could be forgiven for being hesitant to coming back out after Sunday’s debacle.

Bruins lose, 6-1.

Game notes

  • This game was a horror show for the Bruins, just about from the opening face-off. They came out flat, with Buffalo outshooting them 3-0 in the first couple minutes of the game, then the wheels fell off. To me, the game was reminiscent of the B’s more recent playoff loss to Florida, where they spent the majority of the series looking like they were playing on half speed and ended up completely overwhelmed.
  • Perhaps the most frustrating part is that the B’s first period meltdown was almost entirely self-inflicted. The first goal was a calamity of errors: Charlie McAvoy and Jonathan Aspirate couldn’t complete a 15-foot pass. Fraser Minten tried to carry the puck back into the defensive zone instead of just chipping it out. Buffalo scores ten seconds later. They compounded that by taking a too many men on the ice penalty a couple minutes later, then gave up a goal just after that power play expired when Hampus Lindholm failed to clear the zone. It was mistake after mistake after mistake.
  • To compound matters, the Bruins showed pretty much no push-back the entire game. It wasn’t until just about the end of the second period, when the B’s were given a power play opportunity down 4-0, that they showed a little jump on offense; predictably, it didn’t lead to a goal.
  • Jeremy Swayman was pulled after allowing six goals, the vast majority of which (if not all) can be placed squarely on the shoulders of the team in front of him. He could be seen barking at the bench on his way down the tunnel as frustration boiled over.
  • You could make an argument that Swayman should have been mercy-pulled earlier than that, given the way the team was playing, but Marco Sturm failed to really pull any of the right levers yesterday.
  • Viktor Arvidsson left the game with an upper-body injury after skating just over three minutes. He didn’t return, and his status for Tuesday is in doubt.
  • I’d imagine Sturm makes another swap on the third line in Game 5, as Lukas Reichel wasn’t the solution. I don’t mean to call him out directly for any real reason, but he ended up with no shots, blocks, hits, etc., so we’ll likely see Mikey Eyssimont or Alex Steeves tomorrow.

Games like this certainly take the proverbial wind out of your sails, but hey, there’s still another game to enjoy!

Game 5 will be back in Buffalo on Tuesday night, with a 7:30 start.

Get stoked!

Monday’s Brotherhood Playoff News & Links

TORONTO, CANADA - APRIL 26: Brandon Ingram #3 of the Toronto Raptors drives to the basket during the game against the Cleveland Cavaliers on April 26, 2026 at the Scotiabank Arena in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Vaughn Ridley/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

In Monday’s Brotherhood Playoff Action, RJ Barrett and Brandon Ingram helped lead Toronto past Cleveland, 93-89. Mason Plumlee and San Antonio took care of Portland, 114-93. Jayson Tatum and Boston smacked Philadelphia around, 128-96. Finally, Luke Kennard and Los Angeles fell to Houston, 115-96.

Ingram had 23 for Toronto, while Barrett finished with 18 points and 8 rebounds. Neither shot well, with Ingram hitting 6-23 while Barrett was slightly better at 8-22.

Rookie Tyrese Proctor got a DNP for the Cavs.

Plumlee got in for 2 minutes for the Spurs but didn’t put anything in the box score.

For his part, Tatum racked up 30 points, 11 assists, and 7 rebounds to pace the Celtics.

And for JJ Redick’s Lakers, Kennard finished with 7 points, 3 rebounds, and 2 assists.

On Monday, we’ll see Paolo Banchero and Orlando take on Detroit, Oklahoma City try to eliminate Phoenix, and Denver and Minnesota in the nightcap.

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Catan, blacking out, and Reggie Miller: inside Payton Pritchard’s Game 4 masterpiece

PHILADELPHIA, PA - APRIL 26: Payton Pritchard #11 of the Boston Celtics reacts during the game against the Philadelphia 76ers during Round One Game Four of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 26, 2026 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jesse D. Garrabrant/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

PHILADELPHIAPayton Pritchard is sitting at his locker, his ankles submerged in ice.

“I need another win on the way home,” he says, grinning.

Neemias Queta chuckles and shakes his head.

Pritchard, after all, is just a few minutes removed from the best individual playoff game of his six-year NBA career, a 32-point, 5-assist masterpiece that saw him drain 6 three-pointers, including a ridiculous end-of-first-quarter buzzer-beater.

But, with the Celtics’ 128-96 Game 4 win over the Philadelphia 76ers in the rearview, he’s already begun to think about his next conquest, which will come on the plane ride home. That’ll be a victory in the team’s plane-ride game of Catan, which Pritchard, Queta, Ron Harper Jr, Jordan Walsh, and Derrick White all regularly partake in.

The first time I heard Pritchard talk about Catan was a month ago, when he crashed my pregame interview with Hugo Gonzalez about the team’s obsession.

Gonzalez had been carrying a Catan board in several Celtics social media posts, so I mistakenly assumed he was passionate about the game (“I am the Catan hater,” Gonzalez clarified emphatically, explaining it was his rookie chore. “I am the Catan hater.”)

Pritchard, always one of the chattiest Celtics in the locker room, wanted to make sure I knew that he won more than anyone else on the roster.

That he was the ultimate Catan competitor.

That, really, the rest of them were just battling for second place.

“I’m the best,” Pritchard told me, explaining that Walsh sucked. “It’s more of a strategy game, more mental to it. You’ve got to be better.”

During that interview, in which Pritchard’s demeanor appeared hilariously serious, I tried my best to suppress a smile.

I just might be talking to the most competitive person in the world, I thought to myself.

Four weeks later, at the Xfinity Mobile Arena, Pritchard yells at Reggie Miller, who is announcing Game 4, after each one of his made baskets.

“Reggie is my man,” he said afterwards. “It’s just a friendly banter. I get going off that, and I probably use it to my advantage to get going even more. I don’t even know. I black out in those moments, so I don’t really know what I say at times. But it helps.”

Jaylen Brown says he doesn’t know what it is that Pritchard is yelling, either, but he laughs at the question.

“Whatever it is, tell him to keep doing it.”

Four days before that, Pritchard felt he had let the team down

After the Celtics’ 111-97 Game 2 loss on Tuesday night, Pritchard was bummed out.

In the loss, he attempted 8 shots — making just two — and finished the night with just 4 points, 13 less than his season average.

“I was definitely very disappointed after Game 2,” Pritchard said. “Felt like I was kind of a shell of myself. Bad decisions. Shot making wasn’t great.”

“I did not give the game what it needed, or my team, and it hurt us.”

It was time to turn the page.

On the flight to Philadelphia, Pritchard took care of business: he handily beat his teammates in the plane ride Catan game, a reality that Derrick White conceded at shootaround on Friday.

Then, with the series back on the road, Pritchard was back in his element, in a hostile environment, faced with a whole sea of 76ers fans he could talk trash to.

In Game 3, the tides began to turn. He hit 5 three-pointers, including a massive one with just over a minute to play that gave the Celtics a five-point lead.

He claims he doesn’t remember what he said after that shot, though the words were flowing.

”I probably blacked out in that moment,” he said. (I’m honestly still not sure if Pritchard truly can’t remember what is that he’s bellowing after these big-time shots, or if he just knows that he can’t repeat it).

Still, though Pritchard said that Game 3 was a step in the right direction after a lackluster Game 2, he emphasized after that one that it still wasn’t his best.

He had another gear to reach.

Two days later, he reached it, pouring in 13 first-quarter points, and another 14 in the third quarter, en route to Sunday’s career night.

“When you get in that flow stage, it’s the rhythm: how you’re dribbling, the moves you can get to, the shot making,” Pritchard said afterwards.

It’s a feeling that he’s — intentionally — used to: “In my workouts, I try to hit that on the daily, so then when I get in the games, it’s a regular thing.”

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA – APRIL 26: Payton Pritchard #11 of the Boston Celtics celebrates a basket with head coach Joe Mazzulla during the first half of game four of the Eastern Conference first round playoffs against the Philadelphia 76ers at Xfinity Mobile Arena on April 26, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 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 Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Game 4 served as Pritchard’s ultimate bounce-back

Pritchard’s best game of the series came on a night when Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum both struggled in the first half, combining for just 13 points on 4-17 shooting.

Brown didn’t score until the second quarter. Tatum started the game 1-8.

Still, the Celtics led by 16 points after one quarter, and never looked back.

“It’s a luxury to have a guy like that, that can score with the best of them, coming off the bench on your team,” Tatum said.

Brown felt that, two nights after he and Tatum combined to score 27 of the team’s 29 points, the 76ers made a concerted effort to take the ball out of their hand.

“They wanted to take away me getting to my spots, and also, JT — and make us play on the backside,” he said. “And we made the right rim read in the seam. Our bigs made the right plays, and then our shooters punished them, and then once you see a couple go down, it’s open from there. I thought we just did a good job of just trusting our system. And then everything took care of itself.”

On Sunday, Pritchard attempted 21 shots, his most attempts in a month. He’s only reached that number 7 times all year.

But, there’s a direct correlation between his shot attempts and the team’s success: The Celtics were 9-10 (47.4%) this season when Pritchard took less than 11 shots, and they were 45-15 (75%) when he took 11 or more shots.

“We’re at our best when he’s aggressive,” Joe Mazzulla said.

Mazzulla makes sure that the former Sixth Man of the Year knows that, too.

“He’s definitely in my ear all the time about being aggressive, especially since the playoffs have come around. He wants me to be in attack, and to be able to touch the point,” Pritchard said. “When you’re hearing your coaches say that — that gives you the ultimate freedom.”

And ‘free’ is a pretty good way to describe how Pritchard played on Sunday.

He beat the end of the first quarter buzzer with a wild three-pointer and drew a shooting foul at the end of the third quarter. Gonzalez, Harper Jr., Baylor Scheierman, and the rest of the Celtics bench watched it all unfold in disbelief, chuckling to themselves at the shotmaking display.

Scheierman typically watches Pritchard play with a grin.

From my vantage as someone who’s been around this team almost every day this season, it’s long felt like the two have something unique in common: a seemingly unshakeable confidence that is rare even in the NBA, this belief that they’re destined to be on the court, a swagger, a showmanship.

Everyone is confident at the pro level — that’s how they got here — but Scheierman and Pritchard seem to be on another level.

After Pritchard’s 32-point masterpiece, I asked Scheierman if he felt that was an accurate representation, if he could confirm my perception that he and Pritchard were uniquely competitive.

He grinned. He agrees.

“We’re both just super confident in our abilities,” Scheierman said. “And I think that comes from being maybe under-looked, overlooked throughout our careers, and maybe just [playing] with a chip on our shoulder, just wanting to go out there and just kind of put on a show every night.”

All of Pritchard’s teammates are familiar with his almost ridiculous level of competitive spirit at this point.

“I’ve known P since we was in high school, same high school class,” Tatum said. “Obviously, he’s a better version of himself, but he’s always been that competitive. Doesn’t back down from anybody. Always takes on a challenge.”

They also know him as one of the most relentlessly hard-working people.

“The work ethic speaks for itself,” Brown said, “and when you see someone put in the work behind the scenes, moments like this are all the better.”

“He’s a gym rat,” Tatum said. “That’s one thing that is consistent and constant about him always, is he is always gonna be in the gym, working on his game, working on his craft, trying to get better. It shows in moments like tonight.”

On Saturday, a day before his monster Game 4, I asked Pritchard where his Game 3 three-pointer ranked as far as big shots made in his Celtics tenure.

He was reluctant to herald it as one of the biggest because he wanted it to be followed by many more.

“I knew it was a big shot,” Pritchard said. “It was needed in the moment. But, hopefully, I can hit more like that.”

A day later, amid the heater of all heaters, that line felt prescient.

Blackhawks Goalie Should Keep Getting Better Next Season

Chicago Blackhawks goalie Spencer Knight had a solid 2024-25 season. In 55 games on the year, he had a .902 save percentage, 2.82 goals-against average, and three shutouts. With numbers like these, he showed that he is capable of being a solid starting goaltender in the NHL.

Yet, with Knight still being only 25 years old, the possibility of him hitting a new level with the Blackhawks next season should not be ruled out. The Darien, Connecticut native has high potential, and he could take that next step now that he has gained more experience as a true No. 1 goaltender for the Blackhawks.

Goaltenders can take a longer to develop at the NHL level, so it would not be particularly surprising if we see Knight improve next season. He has already shown plenty of promise with Chicago, and if the Blackhawks' defense improves in front of him, he could have a big year in 2026-27. 

It will be interesting to see what kind of campaign Knight has for the Blackhawks next season, but there is plenty to be optimistic about when it comes to his game. 

Phillies news: Zack Wheeler, Rob Thomson, Alex Cora

Apr 26, 2026; Cumberland, Georgia, USA; Philadelphia Phillies first baseman Bryce Harper (3) reacts after striking out against the Atlanta Braves during the third inning at Truist Park. Mandatory Credit: Dale Zanine-Imagn Images | Dale Zanine-Imagn Images

The Phillies are off today and that’s probably best for everyone involved. They won a game Saturday, but they’re still playing pretty badly, so maybe a day off will help them.

That and the schedule, which eases up a bit with the Giants coming into town.

On to the links.

Phillies news:

MLB news:

Orioles news: The O’s are spinning their wheels

BALTIMORE, MD - APRIL 26: Jarren Duran #16 of the Boston Red Sox steals second base in the third inning during the game between the Boston Red Sox and the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yards on Sunday, April 26, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Alyssa Piazza/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Good morning, Camden Chatters.

What if I told you that one team at Camden Yards this weekend dropped two out of three games and lost one of them by 16 runs…and it wasn’t the team that fired their manager and half their coaching staff in the middle of the series?

Such is life for the 2026 Orioles. Even when playing against an opponent that’s going through a public self-immolation, the O’s still can’t seem to find a way to win. After briefly getting back to the .500 mark on Friday, the Birds are now two games under .500 heading into their off day, losing back-to-back contests both before and after the Red Sox fired Alex Cora. Tyler Young recapped the Orioles’ 5-3 loss in the rubber game.

The same old problems continue to plague the Orioles. In both of their losses, the defense was sloppy again, committing three errors and turning some possible outs into Red Sox baserunners. Key members of the Orioles lineup continue to struggle, including Pete Alonso — whose 1-for-13 performance in the series dropped him below the Mendoza line to .196 — and Gunnar Henderson, who is hitting for plenty of power but isn’t getting on base (.280 OBP). That duo makes up the heart of the Orioles lineup, so until they get going, the O’s will struggle to score runs consistently.

Also distressing is the underperformance of the Orioles’ starting rotation. Both Trevor Rogers and Kyle Bradish turned in outings this series that ranged from mediocre (Bradish) to outright disastrous (Rogers). When the front office eschewed acquiring an ace this offseason, much was said about how they already had a pair of #1-type starters on the roster in Rogers and Bradish. That idea is, uh, aging poorly. The two have combined for a 4.48 ERA and each is averaging more than 10 hits per nine innings. Elsewhere in the rotation, Shane Baz hasn’t broken out as the top-flight starter the O’s envisioned, Chris Bassitt is rocking a 6.75 ERA, and Zach Eflin is out for the season after one start. The Orioles’ rotation plan has soured quickly, and it’s not even May.

At times, the Orioles have shown they’re capable of playing quality baseball. The opener of this series, when the O’s bashed six home runs behind a solid Brandon Young start, was evidence of that. But those impressive showings are just too few and far between.

It’s still early, but it’s not that early anymore. It’s time for the Orioles to start playing with a purpose. So far, they just haven’t been able to get any traction.

Links

As tough stretch continues, O’s affirm they’re ‘more than capable of stepping up’ – MLB.com

This would be more encouraging if we hadn’t heard these same sentiments from the Orioles last April. The O’s always think they’re capable of stepping up until they prove they aren’t.

What’s wrong with Henderson, Alonso, Cowser? | MAILBAG – BaltimoreBaseball.com

I’m reasonably confident in two of those three guys being able to turn it around. Sorry, Colton.

Slow-starting offense and traffic against Bradish conspire to leave Orioles with 5-3 loss (updated) – School of Roch

Gunnar Henderson says that Samuel Basallo has “the stupidest juice I’ve ever seen.” And he’s not talking about crab juice.

Orioles birthdays and history

Is today your birthday? Happy birthday! The only O’s player in history with an April 27 birthday is 2019 right-hander Aaron Brooks (36). You could also sort of count righty Michael Rucker (32), who pitched in spring training with the Orioles in 2020 as a Rule 5 pick but was sent back to the Cubs near the end of camp.

On this date in 1968, Baltimore-born Orioles righty Tom Phoebus pitched a no-hitter against the Red Sox, the second individual no-no in O’s history. Phoebus walked three and struck out nine in throwing his masterpiece, shutting down a Sox lineup that included Hall of Famer Carl Yastrzemski. Phoebus even had two hits at the plate (remember, this was the pre-DH era) to help the Orioles compile six runs of support.

And on this day in 2015, the Orioles canceled their scheduled game against the White Sox at Camden Yards due to civil unrest in Baltimore following the death of Freddie Gray in police custody. The O’s would cancel the next day’s game, too, and play the following game with no fans in attendance.

Random Orioles game of the day

On April 27, 1989, the Orioles lost to the Athletics in Oakland, 9-4. The game was tied 3-3 until the bottom of the seventh, when the A’s erupted for a six-run rally. The Athletics pounded out eight hits in the inning, including five singles, a double, a triple, and a Mark McGwire home run, his second of the game. Orioles reliever Mark Williamson took the brunt of the damage, giving up five runs and seven hits while recording just one out. Mickey Tettleton and Phil Bradley homered for the Birds in the losing effort.

Open Thread: Happy birthday to George Gervin

SAN ANTONIO, TX - APRIL 19: George Gervin looks on during the game between the Portland Trail Blazers and San Antonio Spurs during Round One Game One of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 19, 2026 at the Frost Bank Center in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photos by Michael Gonzales/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Today the Iceman turns 74.

That doesn’t seem possible, but it’s true.

He moved here in 1974 in after being traded to the San Antonio Spurs by the Virginia Squires. This was in the final years of the ABA.

Soon after the trade, Gervin became eligible for the NBA draft and was chosen 40th overall by the Phoenix Suns, but he turned down the NBA to stay with the Spurs. Two years later, the ABA and NBA merged, bringing Gervin into the NBA.

Gervin brought an offensive flair the Silver & Black that revolutionized the Spurs game. He was their centerpiece elevating them as contenders. He played with the Spurs until 1985, making the postseason for all but one year.

In his final NBA season, he was traded to the Chicago Bulls. He played one season alongside a young Michael Jordan, then moved to playing in Italy with Banco di Roma, Continental Basketball Association Quad City Thunder, and TDK Manrese in Spain before retiring in 1990.

After retiring, Gervin returned to San Antonio as a community leader, creating safe spaces for underprivileged children. In 1991, he established the George Gervin Youth Center.

The following year he rejoined the San Antonio Spurs, this time as an assistant coach. He served for two years while David Robinson was the centerpiece of the Spurs, the mantle being passed as Gervin worked with the next player to revolutionize the franchise.

At the first Spurs playoff game since 2019, George and his sister Barbra Gervin-Hawkins were honored on the court in recognition of the 30th anniversary of the George Gervin Academy.

30 years in the community after retiring from basketball. And The Iceman chose to stay here in San Antonio. A reminder that this community embraces its players, part of the reason you can see George Gervin walking through a furniture store, or David Robinson sitting next to you in a Mexican restaurant, or bump into Bruce Bowen at H-E-B, or Monty Williams coaching high school ball, or see Tim Duncan, Manu Ginobili, and Gorgui Dieng watching a Spurs game, or Tony Parker on the front row, or Fabricio Oberto or Boris Diaw returning for a visit.

The community embraces them, the crowds love them, and they had great years here.

And if we’re really being honest, it started with Gervin. He came in with his winning smile, and his pinache and simply took over. He set the tone that brought the leadership of David Robsinon and Tim Duncan, and now Victor Wembanyama.

It started over fifty years ago.

That doesn’t seem possible, but it’s true.

Happy birthday, Iceman. I hope it is an epic day.


Welcome to the Thread. Join in the conversation, start your own discussion, and share your thoughts. This is the Spurs community, your Spurs community. Thanks for being here.

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Three adjustments Hawks need to win this Knicks series

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - APRIL 25: Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks drives against Onyeka Okongwu #17 and Jonathan Kuminga #0 of the Atlanta Hawks during the second quarter of game four of the Eastern Conference first round playoffs at State Farm Arena on April 25, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. 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 Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Hawks (2-2) had a listless Game 4 loss on Saturday meaning they’ve now squandered the home court advantage they picked up with their clutch win in Game 2.

Certainly, there have been some disappointing performances from an individual player perspective. But let’s zoom out a tad and focus on a trio of tactics the Hawks as a team could (and in my opinion should) address.

These three adjustments could be instrumental if the Hawks are to go at least 2-1 in the next two or three games and advance.

Punish New York for going under screens

The Knicks have consistently soft switched or bump switched most screen actions all series long. But even when they have fought through screens, they have pointedly navigated under a majority of these actions no matter the ball handler.

Their biggest goal has been to cut off drives into the paint at all costs.

One solution: take what the defense gives you. Empower your better three-point shooters into taking step back threes.

It may seem like keeping the ball moving and putting the defense in rotation is the move, but in reality, their usual offense hasn’t generated enough good looks in the halfcourt to this point.

The Hawks were 11th in the NBA in the 2025-26 season in three-point attempt rate (3PAr) — with 42.9% of their field goal attempts coming from behind the arc. Little has changed in the playoffs — fifth among the 16 teams at a 41.8% 3PAr.

Of course, they hit 37.1% of attempts from deep in the regular season, but that mark is down to 32.6% through four playoff games.

I will admit self-creating three-point attempts at volume is a bit of uncharted territory for these Hawks. In the regular season, they were 27th in the percent of unassisted threes made (9.1%), but they’ve had to double that rate in the playoffs. Of course, adding CJ McCollum — still one of the best self-creators around — for this late season run obviously altered that distribution some.

It may sound silly, but the unassisted three-point rate still isn’t high enough. Beyond McCollum, you would of course trust Alexander-Walker (who is largely scuffling, alas) and Vincent with those sorts of attempts.

But the elephant in the room is how disappointing Jalen Johnson has been this series. He could really benefit from launching instead of driving into traffic.

Here’s what it should like — an example from Game 3. After the screen-the-screener action, Josh Hart’s first instinct is to dive under the Onyeka Okongwu screen. It’s a great look for Jalen Johnson:

But on this possession, despite Dyson Daniels sealing off both defenders to the inside for an open wing step back or sidestep attempt, Johnson tries to beat all-world defender OG Anunoby off the dribble. He just never had the angle to get to the rim considering his All-Defensive First Team-caliber matchup:

Johnson and Alexander-Walker have to keep letting the three-ball fly as soon as they see this coverage in my mind. Otherwise, you’re playing right into New York’s hands.

Put Jalen Brunson in action from the opening tip

Clearly, Jalen Brunson provides little resistance as a defender. And yes, the Hawks have been diligent in attacking him late in close games.

But they need to step it up even more. It’s time to target Brunson relentlessly starting from 12:00 in the first quarter.

This particular line of logic is pretty straightforward. If you start wearing down Brunson from the beginning of the game, you get the benefits of both compromising New York’s defense and the exhaustion of his energy defending instead of attacking.

Overall, the Hawks have done a solid enough job on Jalen Brunson so far this series. He’s averaging 25.5 points per game but on a 52% true shooting — six points lower than his regular season mark.

After averaging 9.6 assists and 3.4 turnovers per 100 possessions in the regular season, he’s at 7.1 and 4.8 per 100 respectively during this series.

But Brunson has scored 10.5 points (on 58% true shooting) in the first quarter of these playoffs, the most of any NBA player who has played at least two postseason games. He has also played all 12 minutes in three of those first quarters.

The Hawks should expect this minutes allocation for Brunson the rest of the series and put him constant action on offense. Maybe he wears down by the end of the game. Maybe he picks up two — or even three — early fouls.

Atlanta has struggled with starting slowly so far. The Hawks have found themselves down at least six points at the end of the first quarter in three of the four playoff games so far.

Digging out of early holes every game is just not a recipe for success. It’s time to take the kiddie gloves off and be ruthless.

Make Karl-Anthony Towns a driver

Towns is obviously a gifted big man scorer — maybe one of the most skilled ever. So far this series, Towns is cooking the Hawks to the tune of 21 points per game on a blistering 72% true shooting percentage.

The shooting range speaks for itself, and he’s also got a soft touch near the rim. But still, the Knicks have received a lot of criticism for his offensive usage during his two-year stint in New York.

Or maybe his play style is just harder to incorporate into a team setting than it seems on the surface.

A big gap in his game is the combination of ineffective driving mixed with poor passing vision. Towns’ drives are often grindingly slow, and they rarely create significant separation to generate an uncontested look.

Towns not being able to get up a clean shot over Gabe Vincent, almost a full foot shorter than him, is pretty problematic:

Quite simply, he’s a poor passer out of double teams and drives. In the 2025-26 regular season he passed on just 18.8% of his 499 drives this season. And he was the league leader in offensive fouls committed — often driving straight into already set defenders.

Among the 102 players with at least 400 drives this regular season, Towns passed out of them the second-fewest percentage of driving possessions (18.8%) behind only Dillon Brooks.

So far on 20 drives this series, he has passed out of just one of them according to the NBA’s tracking stats.

The Hawks need to do their work on him both early and late. Early, in the sense that you can’t let him get low post position for easy shots and foul-drawing — especially given how few big men the Hawks have available.

But the late piece is critical.

Solutions? For one, Atlanta needs to make sure to go over inverted screen actions and trail drives when ‘KAT’ is the trigger man.

For two, close out on his pick-and-pop game as hard as humanly possible. From Game 4, Okongwu and Johnson scramble their coverage communication. After the pop to the corner, Okongwu can do a lot more to force ‘KAT’ to drive baseline towards help:

Why send him baseline? Because he has too many drives that end like this:

And finally, let Towns start his dribble before crowding him with a double team, preferably from the low man. The Knicks have been reluctant to play Towns at the four, so any pass into the restricted area behind the low man would be for a non-lob threat (so, not Mitchell Robinson).

None of these three tweaks are a panacea, of course. If the Hawks’ two leading scorers, Johnson and Alexander-Walker, don’t get it together soon, the above may not matter.

But there are still opportunities to squeeze out advantages in your favor from a Knicks team that, frankly, looks very beatable.

Game Preview: Philadelphia Flyers @ Pittsburgh Penguins , Round 1 Game 5, 4/27/2026

PITTSBURGH, PA - APRIL 20: Dan Vladar #80 of the Philadelphia Flyers eyes the puck against Connor Dewar #19 of the Pittsburgh Penguins in Game Two of the First Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at PPG PAINTS Arena on April 20, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Who: Philadelphia Flyers (3-1) @ Pittsburgh Penguins (1-3) in Game 5 of the best of seven series

When: 7:00 p.m. ET

How to Watch: Locally broadcast on Sportsnet Pittsburgh and NBC Sports Philadelphia, nationally on ESPN, streaming on ESPN+

Pens’ Path Ahead: The Penguins are fighting to make sure they have a path ahead. That would be a Game 6, back in Philadelphia on Wednesday night if Pittsburgh wins today to extend the series.

Opponent Track: The Flyers are up 3-1 in the series and looking to close out and move onto next round against the Carolina Hurricanes. Carolina wrapped up a sweep of Ottawa on Saturday and now sits back to await the PIT/PHI winner in the next round.

Hidden Stat: From Pens PR, Arturs Silovs (28 saves in Game 4) became the second goaltender in franchise history to make his Penguins playoff debut in an elimination contest and earn a win, following Frank Pietrangelo (Game 6 of 1991 division semifinals). 

Hidden Stat 2.0: By my count the Penguins are 11-13 in the Sidney Crosby era when facing elimination in the playoffs (11-12 in the games Crosby has played, 0-1 when he hasn’t in 2011 vs TB). The Pens have won two games in the same series when facing elimination on three occasions (2009 vs DET, 2012 vs PHI, 2016 vs TB).

Getting to know the Flyers

Projected lines

FORWARDS

Travis Konecny – Christian Dvorak – Porter Martone

Denver Barkey – Trevor Zegras – Owen Tippett

Alex Bump – Noah Cates – Tyson Foerster

Luke Glendening – Sean Couturier – Garnet Hathaway

DEFENSEMEN

Travis Sanheim / Rasmus Ristolainen

Cam York / Jamie Drysdale

Nick Seeler / Noah Juulsen

Goalies: Dan Vladar and Samuel Ersson

Potential scratches: Matvei Michkov, Garrett Wilson, Carl Grundstrom, Emil Andrae, Helge Grans, David Jiricek, Oscar Eklind, Oliver Bonk, Hunter McDonald, Jacob Gaucher, Aleksei Kolosov, Carson Bjarnason

Injured Reserve: Rodrigo Abols (fractured ankle), Nikita Grebenkin (upper body)

  • It looks like there is going to be a lineup change among forwards for the Flyers for the first time in this series. Michkov is going out and Alex Bump is headed in to make his NHL playoff debut, based on a practice the Flyers held yesterday before traveling to Pittsburgh.
  • Michkov hasn’t done much of anything (no points, four shots on goal and barely averaging above 10 minutes per game) but was Philadelphia’s fourth highest scorer with 51 points in the regular season. Removing him would take some skill out of their lineup, even though he hasn’t been able to get much of anything going as it was.
  • There was another change in the middle lines with Barkey and Foerster trading spots. Barkey scored a goal in Game 4 on a nice setup from Zegras, it looks like the Flyers will be wanting to see them play together.
  • Updated the scratch list for the Flyers, with their AHL affiliate didn’t qualify for the playoffs they have quite the taxi squad of young players sticking around.

And now for the Pens

Projected lines 

FORWARDS

Rickard Rakell – Sidney Crosby – Bryan Rust

Egor Chinakhov – Tommy Novak – Evgeni Malkin

Elmer Soderblom – Ben Kindel – Anthony Mantha

Connor Dewar – Blake Lizotte – Noel Acciari

DEFENSEMEN

Parker Wotherspoon / Erik Karlsson

Sam Girard / Kris Letang

Ryan Shea / Ilya Solovyov

Goalies:  Arturs Silovs and Stuart Skinner

Potential Scratches: Connor Clifton, Justin Brazeau, Kevin Hayes, Ryan Graves, Jack St. Ivany, Sergei Murashov

IR: Filip Hallander, Caleb Jones (season-ending shoulder surgery)

  • The Penguins did not have practice yesterday while traveling back home. That probably means there will be a well-attended gameday skate this morning for the club where we’ll see what, if any, changes happen from last game. Being as it was a win, the status quo sounds like the play at this point.
  • We updated the Penguin scratch list as well, technically Murashov is up with the NHL roster right now to serve as an informal emergency third goalie. It’s expected he’ll be assigned back to the AHL by the time WBS’s series kicks off on Thursday against Hershey, assuming the NHL Penguins are still alive and kicking by that point.
  • Crazy good stat about Letang being the first Penguin defenseman to register a playoff GWG in an elimination game since Darius Kasparaitis ‘sniped’ Dominik Hasek in the 2001 series against Buffalo. Wild last game was the first time since back then given all the playoff games played in the Crosby era, though from the hidden stat above there were ‘only’ 10 GWG’s when facing elimination prior to Letang’s goal on Saturday.

Multi-point monsters

Evgeni Malkin had a two-point night in Game 1 to tie Joe Sakic for seventh all-time in NHL playoff history multi-point games. Sidney Crosby still sits solidly in third place after his multi-point last outing in Game 3.

DitD & Open Post – 4/27/26: Mending Fences Edition

NEWARK, NEW JERSEY - APRIL 02: Dougie Hamilton #7 of the New Jersey Devils celebrates his goal with teammates on the bench during the first period against the Washington Capitals at Prudential Center on April 02, 2026 in Newark, New Jersey. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Here are your links for today:

Devils Links

“Given the importance of stacking undervalued players and making every dollar count in the cap world, there are a few guys on the Devils who stand out as bets Mehta will not want to make. Let’s take a closer look.” [Infernal Access ($)]

“Dougie Hamilton is still the New Jersey Devils’ best defenseman. They need to mend fences and get him back in the fold for 2026-27.” [Devils on the Rush]

“Sunny Mehta is the New Jersey Devils’ newest GM, a position he himself dreamed of as a kid. It’s a dream come true for many of us as well, with a data-driven, calculated individual at the helm who has a back-to-back Stanley Cup-winning pedigree to boot. Of course, there are certainly some lessons he likely learned or integrated with the Panthers during his five years there, and, as such, I certainly hope he brings those with him to his new organization.” [Devils’ Advocates]

Hockey Links

The Hurricanes and Avalanche advance:

Anze Kopitar heads to retirement:

What does the future hold for Brady Tkachuk in Ottawa? “…He was a major disappointment this series. Tkachuk is now two years away from unrestricted free agency. His future and the chatter around him will hang over the team until he’s signed to an extension, is traded or walks away from the nation’s capital. Next season could even be a last dance of sorts for this core.” [Sportsnet]

A scary moment for Nils Lundkvist the other night:

PWHL expansion is coming:

Feel free to discuss these and any other hockey-related stories in the comments below.

Chicago Cubs history unpacked, April 27

Free of charge for the discerning reader.

Happy birthday to the Rajah and a mighty host of others.

Today in baseball history 1997, Ryne Sandberg breaks the major league record for most home runs by a second baseman, and other stories as well.


Cubs Birthdays:Michael Rucker, Joey Gathright, Rogers Hornsby* HOF. Other notables, Enos Slaughter HOF.


Today in history:

  • 1392 – Korean Confucian scholar and statesman Jeong Mong-ju is assassinated on the Sonjuk Bridge in Gaeseong (now North Korea). A brown spot on the bridge is still said to be his blood.
  • 1859 – US Congressman Daniel E. Sickles is acquitted in the murder of Philip Barton Key on grounds of “temporary insanity,” the first time this defense is used successfully in the US.
  • 1865 – Confederate General Joseph E. Johnston surrenders remaining forces to Union General William T. Sherman at Bennett Place in Durham, North Carolina, ending the American Civil War.
  • 1905 – Cubs Jack McCarthy becomes only major league player to throw out 3 runners at plate in 1 game, all were ends of a double play.
  • 1954  – “Seven Samurai”, Japanese film directed by Akira Kurosawa, starring Toshiro Mifune, is released
  • 1954 – Mass trials of Jonas Salk‘s anti-polio vaccine begin; the first shot is delivered in Fairfax County, Virginia; more than 443,000 children receive shots over three months.
  • 1986 – The world’s worst nuclear disaster occurs when the fourth reactor at the Chernobyl nuclear power station in the Soviet Union explodes, resulting in 31 deaths and radioactive contamination spreading to much of Western Europe.
  • 2021 – US Census results shows its population growth second slowest in recorded history, population at 331,449,281 with only 7.4% increase on 2010.

*pictured.

The Red Sox are Craig Breslow’s team now, so what happens next?

Fort Myers, FL - February 11: Boston Red Sox chief baseball officer Craig Breslow. The Boston Red Sox held their second day of Spring Training at JetBlue Park on February 11, 2026. (Photo by Barry Chin/The Boston Globe via Getty Images) | Boston Globe via Getty Images

Long time readers of the MMBB know that I like to divy these articles up into three points discussing three things that caught my attention across the previous week. They could be positive trends, concerning developments, or stuff about the Red Sox that I just find amusing and fun. Either way, I like to give the OTM readers a collection of things to discuss.

But, like, what else am I gonna write about this week?

Am I really gonna sit here and try to dive into the plate approach of guys hitting in the bottom half of the order? Do you really need me to drone on about pitch mixes and why Brayan Bello shouldn’t be throwing his cutter as much anymore? I like doing that analysis, and I hope you folks continue to read it because I enjoy outlining it to you. More typical Brushback articles will be published on a consistent basis in the future.

Alex Cora just got fired, though! That’s the only topic worth diving into today! Normally I’d be looking forward to talking about a series victory after an awful mid-week series, but there are bigger fish to fry here. That’s the only thing I have the bandwidth to talk about right now! Regardless of how you feel about the decision, it’s one that’s so massive that I would hope you’d understand the decision to only focus on that this time around. I’d also hope you’d understand that the rest of the site is going to be flooded with the Cora fallout in the coming days; these things happen when a manager with almost a decade’s worth of experience with a team is cut off in late April after a piss poor start.

As for the specific topic of my musings, though, I do want to focus on President of Baseball Operations Craig Breslow. This is the not the first time the front office has made a decision at this scale, so I think it makes sense to discuss what it could mean for Breslow’s future.

It’s Monday Morning Brushback time, y’all.

Before We Begin…

I want to give a summary of where I think I stand, as I write this early Sunday afternoon before the finale in Baltimore, regarding the Red Sox’s decision to fire manager Alex Cora along with numerous members of his now-former coaching staff. Apologies if these thoughts are a bit scattered, because I’ve got a lot to say before I get into my main point. I wanted to make this a quick snapshot, but if you’ve ever read the MMBB or listened to Pod On Lansdowne before you’d know that brevity is not really in my toolbox.

I was shocked when I heard the news Saturday, and it’s still very surprising now. I thought Cora was made of teflon. I’ve been more of a Cora apologist in years’ past, but perhaps it was time for a change—as our own Bryan Joiner wrote recently.

The 2026 Red Sox have had an unacceptable start as they’ve simply looked unprepared out of the gates. A bad plate approach, some bone-headed decisions, you know how this shit has gone in the first few weeks. And not for nothing: this is not the first time the Sox have had stretches of playing sloppy and—frankly—dumb baseball.

Errors are a funky stat, yes, but Boston has been in the top three in errors per game (so, I guess overall errors too because everyone plays 162 lmao) in each of the previous three seasons; that ain’t a small sample size. I know you’ve noticed how many outs this team has had a tendency of running into in recent years. Entering play Sunday, the Red Sox only had the 17th best OPS with runners in scoring positions (.737; thought it would be worst frankly, though I’d guess that Saturday’s win boosted those stats a bit). They haven’t ranked within the top 10 in MLB in OPS with RISP since 2021. Does that not speak to some approach with the coaching? Have you not lamented the lack of situational hitting from this club in recent times? The platooning within the lineup at times made sense, but didn’t it annoy you to see Wilyer Abreu consistently get benched against lefties prior to this year? A guy who has 30 home run potential, even if he’s cooled off recently? I know my answer to that.

Yet at the same time, I can’t levy every failure at Cora’s feet. He wasn’t the guy ultimately tasked with buying the groceries, to borrow a platitude from Bill Parcells. Craig Breslow was, and still is, that guy. Those groceries have been pretty shit to start this year. The checks are being signed by the FSG brass, but the decisions he’s made in developing this roster haven’t gone swimmingly in 2026. There’s still a huge question mark regarding the outfield logjam, a conundrum he’s been unable to solve for months at this point. Guys can’t consistently get playing time because of that pickle. The infield defense has improved overall (Contreras has been awesome at first, Durbin has gotten way better at third after a shaky start, while Mayer and IKF have rated out as positive defenders thus far. Just don’t look at Trevor Story’s OAA). But that’s come with big offensive production dips at third base and second base. Breslow made huge decisions to bring on—and also let go—of guys with offensive track records at the hot corner (Devers has been bad to start the year, to be fair, while Bregman is starting to turn things around after his slow start. So, who knows how those deals end up. Whether you liked those decisions or not, the final story on those sagas have yet to be written). The club is currently tied for last place in homers after we (me, you, your friends and family who watch this team regularly, the front office guys themselves!!!!!) identified power as a big thing to address this winter. The pivot in the off-season was to invest in run prevention through sound defense and improved pitching; the Sox’s errors per game has dropped from 0.72 to 0.59 prior to Sunday’s game, sure, but that’s still in the bottom 10 across MLB.

If guys ultimately aren’t performing to the level they should be, I don’t know how much I can blame the manager for that. AC doesn’t go out there and cough up a ton of runs as the starter. AC doesn’t strike out on three pitches with ducks on the pond. How much of those struggles are coaching, and how much of those struggles are stemming from the front office’s philosophies?

Cora’s also seen pretty consistent roster churn over the last few years; the 26-man list has been consistently inconsistent. But on the other other hand, isn’t his job to elevate that roster—regardless of the churn—to be the best that they can be? They’ve under-performed in 2026. They under-performed between 2022 and 2024.

How all of the guys in that clubhouse feel about a clubhouse guy-type of manager being shown the door remains to be seen, though I do know that Trevor Story ain’t happy about it. I also want to make it clear that players learning about this news on social media with the rest of us, per Chris Cotillo of The Mexican Times MassLive, is unacceptable stuff from FSG—especially when you consider that guys like John Henry and Sam Kennedy were physically there in Baltimore when the news broke over the weekend. Jarren Duran didn’t seem to have any thoughts about it (hmm), while Roman Anthony was actually pretty well-spoken for a guy who’s just 21 and was just thrown through an absolute loop along with his teammates.

All of this is to say that there’s a lot of blame to go around for where we stand right now, well below .500 and with legitimate questions about the future. I don’t think Cora is totally innocent, though I do think he will continue to have a solid career in coaching within this sport. I hate to sound like a fence-sitter here, but this is a complicated situation. It’s a clusterfuck, and it often takes a lot of different people to create a clusterfuck. The team did not look prepared to start 2026 (a coaching issue) while there are legitimate question marks regarding the roster construction (a front office issue). I get why FSG and/or Breslow (they can’t even agree about who made this decision; more on that later) would want to pull the plug now if they didn’t want this soap opera to drag on for months, though I can’t say for sure that this is or is not the right decision right here and right now. Sorry to disappoint.

Is there something to be said about a new perspective in the clubhouse? Maybe; the guys playing still seem to like Cora, but I’ve also heard nothing but good things about Chad Tracy—a guy who has already mentored a lot of young Sox players in Worcester. At least there’s some familiarity there, though who knows if Tracy’s interim title turns into a full-time one. I’ll forever be appreciative of the 2018 Red Sox, and he’s going to land on his feet, but how much leeway do you give to the manager of the 2018 club if that same franchise is currently on pace to have its fourth losing season in five years when he’s been the one constant that entire time? Simultaneously, how much do you blame the guy who has already made transactions—and balked at others—that are going to have ramifications that haven’t even come to pass yet? These aren’t only rhetorical questions, folks; I’m genuinely asking these things out loud, because I just don’t know.

Over 1,600 words to say “I don’t know.” Nice job, Fitz, you fuckin’ stiff.

I know it sounds like a cop out, but that’s just how I feel. There are merits to the “Cora should’ve stayed” camp. There are merits to the “Cora had to go” camp. These are the realities, at least in my book, when you have a complicated clusterfuck like the one that the Red Sox have found themselves in. It’s complicated. There are nuances here. I can’t look at this as a black-and-white thing. I don’t know what else to tell ya…other than the entire novel I just wrote.

Either way, I suppose I’m happy that AC is happy.

With All That Said…

Regardless of how you feel about the Cora decision itself, it seems pretty obvious to me that this is the end of a power struggle between manager and CBO. Mr. Breslow himself doesn’t think it’s fair to call the relationship he had with Alex Cora as a power struggle, but come on dude: when your guy Andrew Bailey is the only major coach not given a pink slip this weekend, what do you expect this to look like?

I do find it funny that FSG’s failure to communicate doesn’t even stop at their communications with their players and their fans; no, it leaks into their own understanding of franchise-altering decisions. Breslow and Kennedy couldn’t even seem to find…………….alignment……….on where the onus of this decision fell.

Regardless of who actually pulled the lever here, this is now Craig Breslow’s show whether you like it or not (again: not sure if I’m all the way in on that myself, but this is the nature of the situation we’re living in). This team is primed to be shaped in his vision.

The question then becomes: how much time did Craig Breslow just buy himself with this decision?

If he’s being given the keys to the car, does FSG ride this out until at least the end of 2026? Barring a 2027 lockout (oh God I don’t even want to think about that in this equation, just assume we’ve got a season next year), does he also get the lion’s share of that year to see out another season of the contracts he provided and traded for? Does he get to go through his own managerial search in the coming months? If he’s canned within the next year and a new full-time manager had already been appointed, does that hinder the team from finding the best CBO candidate considering that they won’t have their choice of a manager—just like the hand that Breslow was dealt following Chaim Bloom’s departure? Does Breslow even make it to the end of 2026? Does he even make it to fumble one last trade deadline this summer, for ol’ times sake?

Are we talking years here? Months? Weeks?! Say this team has really and truly taken a nosedive and the season is dead by Memorial Day; how does the guy who took enormous swings such as the Devers trade last year, the Bregman balk this winter, and the firing of Alex Cora survive a nightmare opening third of the 2026 campaign? His DNA would be all over the body of a dead team. If John Henry and the rest of Fortress Fenway really wanted to turn the page, that would have to be final straw, no?

Point is: Breslow better be reeeeeeeeeeally fuckin’ sure, for our sake as fans and for his own sake as a professional within the sport, that this gambit pays off. He showed the door to a respectable manager within the baseball world (look at just about any national writer’s take within the last 48 hours; regardless of how you feel about Cora, that’s the perception he has nationally); he better be certain that this is the right call for the team we all love.

Maybe Breslow thinks he bought himself at least another year or so of time in charge here. Hell, maybe he’s right. He could also be dead wrong and he could be sent packing sooner than he expects. Mr. Henry’s been present at games more often. For all of his faults (I don’t have another 2,000+ words in me this weekend; perhaps another time) and for all the criticism he’s been hit with for seemingly being tuned out of the baseball team he owns, Henry’s now currently watching. The excuses for Breslow are gone, right, wrong, or indifferent.

Jake T. O’Donnell (great Twitter follow, by the way) had a great point while referencing the greatest TV show ever, ironically while the team was playing in Baltimore.

Jake’s right: Craig is in the game. Let’s see what happens.

Song of the Week: “Whatever” by Oasis

Yeah. 🙂

Same time and same place—with what I would imagine would be a regular format, barring Breslow being fired—next week! Go Sox.

Mets Daily Prospect Report, 4/27/26: Prepare for trouble, and make it double

PORT ST. LUCIE, FL - MARCH 19: Randy Guzmán #39 of the New York Mets stands on the field prior to the game between the Tampa Bay Rays and the New York Mets at Clover Park on Thursday, March 19, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida. (Photo by Scott Audette/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Triple-A: Syracuse Mets (13-13)

WORCESTER 6, SYRACUSE 2 (BOX)

Jonah Tong’s maddening start to 2025 continues. The right-hander continues getting plenty of strikeouts (38 in 25.1 innings), but has been allowing too many free passes (15 in 25.1 innings) and has been far too hittable, leading to afternoons like this one, where he allowed three runs in four-plus innings. Jonathan Pintaro, he wasn’t great in relief, and the offense on the whole kind of stunk.

·  RF Nick Morabito: 1-4, 2B, RBI, K

·  SS Vidal Bruján: 0-4, 2 K

·  LF Ryan Clifford: 1-4, 3 K

·  2B Christian Arroyo: 1-4, 2 K

·  CF Cristian Pache: 0-4, 3 K

·  3B Yonny Hernández: 2-4, R

·  C Hayden Senger: 0-3, K, PB (5)

·  DH Ben Rortvedt: 1-3, R, K

·  1B Trace Willhoite: 1-3, 2B, RBI, K

·  RHP Jonah Tong: 4.2 IP, 5 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 3 BB, 6 K, HBP, L (1-2)

·  RHP Jonathan Pintaro: 2.0 IP, 4 H, 3 R, 3 ER, 3 BB, 1 K, WP

·  RHP Mike Baumann: 0.1 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K

·  LHP Anderson Severino: 1.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K

Double-A: Binghamton Rumble Ponies (8-12)

GAME ONE

ERIE 5, BINGHAMTON 1 / 7 (BOX)

The SeaWolves plated three runs off of Jonathan Santucci before the southpaw could even record a single out. He settled down, allowing one more in the top of the sixth, his last inning of work, but the Rumble Pony offense wasn’t able to do much against starter Joe Miller or the Erie bullpen despite plenty of batters getting on base.

·  CF A.J. Ewing: 0-2, R, 2 BB, K, SB (11)

·  SS Marco Vargas: 0-3, BB, K

·  DH Jacob Reimer: 1-3, RBI, HBP

·  C Chris Suero: 0-2, BB, K

·  RF Jose Ramos: 0-2, HBP

·  1B JT Schwartz: 0-2, BB, K

·  3B Nick Lorusso: 0-2, K, HBP

·  LF Matt Rudick: 0-3, 2 K

·  2B Wyatt Young: 1-3

·  LHP Jonathan Santucci: 5.1 IP, 4 H, 4 R, 4 ER, 3 BB, 8 K, L (0-3)

·  LHP Matt Turner: 0.2 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 2 K, WP

·  LHP Felipe De La Cruz: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 1 K

GAME TWO

BINGHAMTON 5, ERIE 2 / 7 (BOX)

In Game Two of the afternoon, Binghamton struck first, with AJ Ewing and Marco Vargas hitting back-to-back triples. Vargas did the heavy lifting for the Rumble Ponies in this one, going 3-3 with 3 of their 5 runs. Binghamton used seven pitchers in total, with only Jordan Geber and Zach Peek allowing runs.

·  DH A.J. Ewing: 2-3, 2 R, 3B, BB, K, SB (12)

·  2B Marco Vargas: 3-3, 2 R, 2B, 3B, 3 RBI, BB, SB (9)

·  3B Jacob Reimer: 0-2, 2 BB, K, CS (1)

·  CF Eli Serrano III: 1-3, 2B

·  LF Jose Ramos: 0-3, 2 K

·  C Kevin Parada: 1-3, RBI, K, SB (3)

·  RF Matt Rudick: 0-3

·  1B Vincent Perozo: 1-3, R

·  SS Wyatt Young: 1-3, 2 K

·  RHP Jordan Geber: 3.0 IP, 5 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 4 K

·  RHP Douglas Orellana: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, W (1)

·  LHP Jefry Yan: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 1 BB, 2 K, H (2)

·  RHP Zach Peek: 0.1 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 1 K, HBP, H (1)

·  RHP Saul Garcia: 0.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, H (1)

·  RHP Kevin Gowdy: 0.1 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 0 K, BLK, H (2)

·  RHP Brian Metoyer: 0.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 2 K, S (2)

High-A: Brooklyn Cyclones (5-15)

GAME ONE

BROOKLYN 6, HUDSON VALLEY 2 / 7 (BOX)

Brooklyn’s own Channing Austin continued his excellent week with another four-plus innings of scoreless ball, giving him 9.1 innings against the Renegades this week. The Cyclones took the lead in the top of the second on an RBI single by Kevin Villavicencio and a two-run homer off the bat of Mitch Voit and never looked back. A Kaeden Kent two-run homer in the bottom of the seventh broke up the shutout, but this one was all Brooklyn.

·  SS Mitch Voit: 1-3, R, HR (3), 2 RBI, HBP, SB (6)

·  3B Antonio Jimenez: 0-3, R, BB, K

·  1B Corey Collins: 1-4, 3 K

·  DH Ronald Hernandez: 2-4, 2B, RBI, SB (2)

·  C Daiverson Gutierrez: 0-4, 2 K

·  CF John Bay: 1-2, R, BB, HBP, SB (5)

·  2B Colin Houck: 2-4, 2 R, 2B, K, SB (2), E (3)

·  RF Yohairo Cuevas: 0-4, 4 K

·  LF Kevin Villavicencio: 2-3, R, 3 RBI, SB (3)

·  RHP Channing Austin: 4.1 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 3 BB, 3 K

·  RHP Hoss Brewer: 1.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K, HBP, W (1-1)

·  RHP Danis Correa: 0.2 IP, 0 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 1 K

·  RHP Juan Arnaud: 0.1 IP, 1 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 0 BB, 1 K

GAME TWO

HUDSON VALLEY 7, BROOKLYN 2 / 7 (BOX)

The Cyclones were a bit less fortunate in Game Two, with Jonathan Jimenez allowing a five-spot in the fourth to put Brooklyn well behind the eight ball. Corey Collins put the Cyclones in the driver’s seat in the top of the first with a solo homer, but Jonathan Jimenez sunk any chance of Brooklyn sweeping the doubleheader, allowing seven runs- six earned- in total.

·  SS Mitch Voit: 1-3, R, BB, 2 SB (7, 8)

·  2B Antonio Jimenez: 0-4, 2 K

·  1B Corey Collins: 1-2, R, HR (2), RBI, BB, E (1)

·  DH John Bay: 0-1, 2 BB, CS (1)

·  C Ronald Hernandez: 1-3, K, E (5)

·  RF Yohairo Cuevas: 0-3

·  3B Kevin Villavicencio: 0-2, 2 K

·  LF Diego Mosquera: 0-3, K

·  CF Heriberto Rincon: 0-2, BB, K, E (1)

·  REHAB ALERT RHP Dylan Ross: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 1 K

·  RHP Jonathan Jimenez: 3.0 IP, 5 H, 7 R, 6 ER, 3 BB, 2 K, WP, 2 BLK, HBP, L (0-2)

·  RHP Bryce Jenkins: 1.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K, WP

·  RHP Cristofer Gomez: 1.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 2 K

Single-A: St. Lucie Mets (10-11)

ST. LUCIE 11, PALM BEACH 2 (BOX)

The St. Lucie offense found their stroke, with Randy Guzman having another explosive day. Getting a start at the hot corner, a position he only has a handful of professional games at, Guzman went 3-4 with two doubles and a homer, his fourth of the season. Branny De Oleo also had a three-hit afternoon; in fact, every St. Lucie batter notched at least one hit, with five of the nine getting on base multiple times. Nicolas Carreno threw five scoreless, and while the bullpen after him allowed a pair of runs, St. Lucie won convincingly.

·  RF Sam Biller: 1-4, 2 R, RBI, BB, K, HBP, 2 SB (6, 7)

·  2B Sam Robertson: 2-4, R, 2B, RBI, BB, K, HBP, SB (12), E (2)

·  LF JT Benson: 1-5, 2B, 2 RBI, 3 K

·  3B Randy Guzman: 3-4, 3 R, 2 2B, HR (4), 2 RBI, BB, K

·  DH AJ Salgado: 1-5, R, 2 K

·  CF Simon Juan: 1-5, R, HR (1), 3 RBI

·  1B Chase Meggers: 1-3, 2 R, 2 BB, K

·  C Francisco Toledo: 1-5, R, HR (1), 3 RBI, K, E (2), PB (2)

·  SS Branny De Oleo: 3-4, R, BB, 2 SB (1, 2)

·  LHP Nicolas Carreno: 4.0 IP, 1 H, 0 R, 0 ER, 2 BB, 5 K

·  RHP Luke Jackson: 1.0 IP, 3 H, 1 R, 0 ER, 0 BB, 0 K

·  RHP Emilio Obispo: 4.0 IP, 2 H, 1 R, 1 ER, 1 BB, 4 K, WP, W (1-0)

Rookie: FCL Mets (0-0)

NO GAME (SCHEDULE)

STAR OF THE NIGHT

Randy Guzman

GOAT OF THE NIGHT

Jonathan Jimenez