Steve Cohen’s High Payroll Can’t Guarantee Mets Success

It’s been a steep learning curve for Mets owner Steve Cohen, just as it is for most successful businessmen who buy professional sports franchises.

Since purchasing the team from Fred Wilpon in late 2020, Cohen has tried to buy his way to a World Series title, spending $1.57 billion on players, as accounted for by Major League Baseball’s luxury-tax system. That’s on top of the $2.4 billion he paid for the franchise.

What does he have to show for it? Mostly a bunch of early postseason exits, and a team this year spending the final days of the season trying to make the playoffs after frittering away a big lead to the Philadelphia Phillies.

Even after a furious comeback to win 9-7 in Chicago last night, they’re11 games behind the NL East-winning Phillies and only a game up on the Cincinnati Reds and Arizona Diamondbacks for the final NL Wild Card spot. Both the Reds and Diamondbacks own the head-to-head tie breakers over the Mets.

Last season, the Mets lost in six games to the eventual World Series-winning Los Angeles Dodgers in the National League Championship Series. And they had to survive a three-way tiebreaker on the last day of the regular season to clinch an NL Wild Card spot to get that far.

That’s not a huge return on investment, particularly this season.

“This [year] has been a grind for this entire group,” David Stearns, the club’s president of baseball operations, said last week at a press conference in New York.

It wasn’t supposed to be this way, but the second half of this season has echoes of the Mets’ “worst team money could buy” squad of 1992. On June 12, the Mets had the best record in MLB at 45-24 with a 5.5 game lead over the Phillies. It has been all downhill ever since.

“When you’re sitting where we were in mid-June, we would not have expected to be in this spot, no question about it,” Stearns said, stating the obvious. “We’ll have time to evaluate and diagnose and do all of that stuff [after it’s all over].”

To be sure, the Mets could recapture come of last year’s magic and still make the playoffs. But that was the antithesis of this season when they went 19-9 from Aug. 28, 2024, on to barely clinch a Wild Card spot. This year, they are 7-12 in September, losing eight in a row at one point and haven’t shown much of a pulse. 

Put it all in the pot.

Cohen’s record of sustaining his managers and baseball ops leaders is a lot like firing hedge fund personnel who do not perform. No matter what it costs him, he could bring in a whole new crew.

He’s had four heads of baseball ops and three on-field managers in the five seasons he’s owned the team, which may indicate trouble for Stearns and manager Carlos Mendoza. Billy Eppler lasted three seasons as general manager. The veteran Buck Showalter was fired after the Mets hosted and lost a three-game Wild Card Series to the San Diego Padres in 2022 and failed to make the playoffs in 2023.

Mendoza, who’s overseen a club playing 35-52 ball since its June apex, has to be on very thin ice. Stearns built a team that has hit the fifth-most homers in the league at 215 but has a 17th-ranked pitching staff with a 3.99 ERA. He, too, has to be accountable.

Milwaukee, which spent about $200 million less than the Mets second-ranked payroll of $340.6 million, has a pitching staff with the second-best ERA in baseball at 3.61. The Brewers have won 15 more games than the Mets and have the best record in MLB.

Cohen has certainly thrown money at it. Under his watch, the Mets’ payroll has ranked fourth, first, first, second and second. Last offseason he outbid the New York Yankees, signing Juan Soto to a 15-year, $765 million contract that will take him through 2040 when he’s 40 years old.

After a slow start adjusting to a new team, Soto has had another MVP-caliber season with 42 homers, 104 RBIs, a .931 OPS, a 163 OPS+ and a WAR of 6.3, the last number in the Shohei Ohtani range. He swiped his 36th bag on Tuesday night—an improbable feat for a not-so-fleet-footed player.

But when the Mets broke spring training at Port St. Lucie, Fla., this past March, their five projected starters—Clay Holmes, Tylor Megill, David Peterson, Griffin Canning and Kodai Senga—were earning a combined $38.7 million this season. That’s $12.3 million less than the $51 million paid to Soto alone.

That worked fine into June until pitchers started to go down, but now only Holmes and Peterson are still healthy. The Mets are using young starters Nolan McLean and Jonah Tong to carry them down the stretch. 

The Mets didn’t retool their rotation in the offseason after losing Luis Severino and Jose Quintana from last year’s team. They added free agent Holmes, the Yankees closer, and converted him to a starter. Sean Manaea opened the season on the injured list because of a right oblique strain sustained in camp and didn’t return until July 13. He failed to replicate last year’s 12-win season and has won only two games.

Even with that predicament, the Mets didn’t add any starting pitching at the July 31 trade deadline. They did add to the bullpen, acquiring relievers Ryan Helsely, Taylor Rogers and Gregory Soto. But that hasn’t staunched a meltdown of late and 27 blown saves. Helsley, the former St. Louis Cardinals All-Star closer, has been awful with an 8.47 ERA in 20 appearances. Should Stearns have been even more proactive?

“If I knew how our season was going to play out? Absolutely,” Stearns said.

Those are the decisions Stearns is paid to make. As Cohen continues to navigate his own learning curve, you can bet the owner is evaluating.

Watch this space.

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Ramp to Camp: Predicting bold midseason headlines for 2025-26 Celtics

Ramp to Camp: Predicting bold midseason headlines for 2025-26 Celtics originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

We’ve spent most of our Ramp to Camp series trying to answer the big questions surrounding the Boston Celtics to open the 2025-26 season. Now, only a few days out from the first training camp practice of the year, we are really hitting the accelerator on this year’s squad.

For Day 17, and continuing our Predictions Week, we asked our panel to fast forward all the way to early February and give us one bold midseason headline about the Celtics that you might read on NBC Sports Boston before the All-Star break.

What will we be screaming about on Early Edition? What will occupy the conversations on Pregame Live?

We all know that, heading into March and April, the speculation about Jayson Tatum’s return is likely to crescendo (but we tackled that on Tuesday). So, what else will be top of mind as the Celtics make the turn to the back nine of the 2025-26 season?

Our headline: “How Payton Pritchard set the tone for overachieving Celtics.”

Good things happen when Pritchard is on the floor for the Boston Celtics. Two seasons ago, even before last season’s Sixth Man of the Year glow-up, Pritchard finished second in the NBA in net rating (+13.6, trailing only teammate Sam Hauser). 

Now the Celtics are going to heap even more on Pritchard’s plate, regardless of his role, and we think his energy and grit could define how the 2025-26 Celtics play. 

Pritchard’s playing time is going to spike, particularly if he slides into a starter role. Last season, he posted per-36 minute averages of 18.6 points, 4.9 rebounds, 4.4 assists, and 1.1 steals, all while displaying some of the best ball security in the NBA.

We’ll keep saying it: If Boston is better than the pundits expect out of the gate, then either Pritchard or Derrick White is going to claw their way to All-Star status.

After making a strong case in each of the past two seasons, it’s easy to see a pathway for White landing that elusive nod. But we can’t shake this feeling that Pritchard will thrust himself into that conversation, too.

Pritchard should serve as a bit of a role model to the younger players on Boston’s roster. He’s proven to be a professional, even when the depth chart conspired against him. He not-so-patiently waited for his opportunity and was ready when it arrived.

Now he has a chance to do the same thing yet again in the 2025-26 season. And the rest of the Celtics should follow his lead.

Heck, the NBA is tweaking its own rules based on Pritchard’s recent impact. He hit so many big heaves during Boston’s 2024 title run that the league is changing heave rule statistics to inspire more players to be like him.

The younger Celtics should want to be like Pritchard, too. If they operate with the same energy and desire as Pritchard, the 2025-26 Celtics will go a long way toward masking the talent that was lost in the overhaul brought upon by the second apron.

Let’s check out the headlines our panel came up with:

Darren Hartwell, Managing Editor

“Celtics still have playoffs in sight after Simons trade.”

I can absolutely see this group overachieving and being in the postseason mix as the Feb. 5 trade deadline nears. I can also see Brad Stevens finding a trade partner for Simons’ expiring contract as part of Boston’s goal to get out of the luxury tax.

This might be the one unpopular move Stevens makes — especially if Simons is playing well — and how Celtics players respond in this totally hypothetical scenario will be fascinating to watch.

Michael Hurley, Web Producer

“Amari Williams isn’t bad.”

Is that bold enough? I like the idea of a young 7-footer getting increased opportunities and playing well. I wouldn’t expect a rookie to have the know-how of Al Horford, but can he help replace Horford’s nightly production (9.0 points, 3.8 rebounds, 3.5 assists) while blocking a shot or two per game?

Perhaps he’s not at all ready, but you asked me for a bold headline, Chris, so you freaking got one, buddy.

Sean McGuire, Web Producer

“Jaylen Brown is in the running to win the 2025 NBA MVP.”

What does in the running mean? Brown opened at 100-1 to win the award behind the heavily-favored Nikola Jokic, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and 12 other players including Cade Cunningham, Jalen Brunson, Joel Embiid and Kevin Durant.

When the trade deadline nears in early February, Brown will be in the top six.

Josh Canu, Media Editor

“Are the Celtics real contenders in the East?”

I think this team is capable of winning a lot of games, and odds are one of the projected top teams in the East will deal with injuries or underachieve, so I think the Celtics could be in the mix even without Tatum.

We know the East is thin, so I don’t think it is that crazy the Celtics could be perceived as real contenders.

Kevin Miller, VP, Content

“Minott Us?!”

Josh Minott becomes a fan favorite and finds a sustainable role on a good team.

Adam Hart, EP, Content Strategy

“Winning DNA has Celtics in the drivers’ seat.”

Regular-season basketball is different, and this team will remain competitive for the top spot in the East.

Kayla Burton, Celtics Pregame Live host

“A new home for Hauser: The Boston Celtics trade away Sam Hauser.”

I am not going to say where because I have no idea, and as sad as this headline makes me feel, I just think they make a bold, somewhat sad move around the trade deadline and acquire a big man.

The Spin | Cricket and a custom-made diplomatic row over missing handshake

#Handshakegate between India and Pakistan reflects a sporting history dotted with moments when the clasp of palms stood for something

It is seen on village greens and in Test arenas alike. It is there at the start of the game, just after the coin toss, and it is there at the end when the final run is struck or wicket falls. According to research from the University of Dundee it should last between one-and-a-half and three seconds, just long enough to reassure both participants, but not so long as to feel overbearing.

In the tapestry of the sport it is less consequential than the colour of the captain’s socks or what the home team has laid out for tea. And yet its absence is instantly conspicuous, sometimes enough to spark controversy, fines or even diplomatic fallout.

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Tributes to Dickie Bird as Nottinghamshire edge towards County Championship title

A minute’s applause was held at Bird’s spiritual home, Headingley, on the first day of the season’s last round of fixtures

David Hopps is at Headingley, where Dickie Bird’s death will leave a huge hole:

“It’s hard to exaggerate how fond, and in many ways protective, Yorkshire cricket was of Dickie Bird. The county has marked his passing this morning with a minute’s applause (a full minute - that must be worth 10 minutes anywhere else in the country!) and the players are wearing black armbands.

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Sixers roll out official return of black jerseys for 2025-26 season

Sixers roll out official return of black jerseys for 2025-26 season  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Sixers are officially back in black.

The team on Wednesday morning rolled out the long-teased return of the black uniforms worn by their 2000-01 Eastern Conference champion team. 

Here’s how they look on the Sixers’ current players: 

According to the Sixers’ press release, they’ll sport the black jerseys 14 times at home during the upcoming 2025-26 season and “six more times during road games against playoff contenders from the 2000-01 season.” The home dates, which will also feature a throwback court honoring the 25th anniversary of the 2000-01 team, are below. Ticketing details for those games can be found here.

  • Nov. 8 vs. Raptors
  • Nov. 9 vs. Pistons 
  • Nov. 23 vs. Heat 
  • Dec. 4 vs. Warriors 
  • Dec. 7 vs. Lakers 
  • Dec. 20 vs. Mavs
  • Dec. 23 vs. Nets 
  • Jan. 24 vs. Knicks
  • Jan. 31 vs. Pelicans 
  • Feb. 11 vs. Knicks
  • March 3 vs. Spurs 
  • March 4 vs. Jazz
  • March 23 vs. Thunder 
  • April 12 vs. Bucks 

The Sixers’ 2025-26 hardwood classic merchandise will first be available to buy at SixersShop.com on Oct. 15 at 10 a.m. The jerseys will be at Xfinity Mobile Arena starting Oct. 17 at 6 p.m. ahead of the Sixers’ preseason game vs. the Timberwolves. 

Sixers roll out official return of black jerseys for 2025-26 season

Sixers roll out official return of black jerseys for 2025-26 season  originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Sixers are officially back in black.

The team on Wednesday morning rolled out the long-teased return of the black uniforms worn by their 2000-01 Eastern Conference champion team. 

Here’s how they look on the Sixers’ current players: 

According to the Sixers’ press release, they’ll sport the black jerseys 14 times at home during the upcoming 2025-26 season and “six more times during road games against playoff contenders from the 2000-01 season.” The home dates, which will also feature a throwback court honoring the 25th anniversary of the 2000-01 team, are below. Ticketing details for those games can be found here.

  • Nov. 8 vs. Raptors
  • Nov. 9 vs. Pistons 
  • Nov. 23 vs. Heat 
  • Dec. 4 vs. Warriors 
  • Dec. 7 vs. Lakers 
  • Dec. 20 vs. Mavs
  • Dec. 23 vs. Nets 
  • Jan. 24 vs. Knicks
  • Jan. 31 vs. Pelicans 
  • Feb. 11 vs. Knicks
  • March 3 vs. Spurs 
  • March 4 vs. Jazz
  • March 23 vs. Thunder 
  • April 12 vs. Bucks 

The Sixers’ 2025-26 hardwood classic merchandise will first be available to buy at SixersShop.com on Oct. 15 at 10 a.m. The jerseys will be at Xfinity Mobile Arena starting Oct. 17 at 6 p.m. ahead of the Sixers’ preseason game vs. the Timberwolves. 

When Arsenal scraped past Port Vale on their way to winning the Double

Arsenal were the best team in the country in 1998 but needed a replay and penalties to beat second-tier Port Vale

By That 1980s Sports Blog

As Arsenal prepare to take on Port Vale in the League Cup third round on Wednesday night, fans making their way from London to Stoke-on-Trent will be hoping history can repeat itself. Twenty-seven years ago Arsenal supporters – including this writer – made the same journey at the start of a cup run that would end in celebrations. But the Wembley sunshine seemed a million miles away in January 1998.

The first of Arsène Wenger’s seven FA Cups as Arsenal manager was far from straightforward. In all, Arsenal played nine matches on their way to lifting the trophy, a run that involved three replays, two penalty shootouts and narrow victories over second-tier teams. The third round tie against Port Vale was a microcosm of Arsenal’s road to Wembley.

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Prem Rugby 2025-26: complete club-by-club guide to the season

Defending champions Bath are favourites to retain their title but Saracens will be boosted by Owen Farrell’s return

There have been six different title winners in as many seasons but the defending champions are favourites to buck that trend. In Johan van Graan Bath have a relentlessly process-driven coach, not someone who would allow an ounce of complacency to creep in, and they have Ollie Lawrence and Jaco Coetzee back for the start of the season after long-term injuries.

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Former A-League players who deliberately got yellow cards for $10,000 cash spared conviction

Ex-Macarthur Bulls players Kearyn Baccus and Clayton Lewis will serve a two-year conditional release order for their part in the football betting scandal

Two former A-League players who deliberately received yellow cards in exchange for $10,000 have escaped a conviction on their criminal record.

Ex-Macarthur Bulls duo Kearyn Baccus and Clayton Lewis will serve a two-year conditional release order, similar to a good behaviour bond, after they were sentenced in Sydney on Wednesday.

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Mets bullpen picks up David Peterson to allow for huge comeback win over Cubs

It looked as if Tuesday night's pivotal game against the Cubs was going to get away from the Mets after David Peterson's poor start, but the bullpen buckled down and allowed New York to complete the comeback win.

The Mets used six relievers, including Edwin Diaz for a six-out save, to lock down a 9-7 win that vaulted the team back into a playoff berth. 

"Huge," Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said of his bullpen after the win. "Starting with [Huascar] Brazoban and to be able to get us through the fifth. Then you start matching up. [Ryne] Stanek was good, [Gregory] Soto was good. [Tyler] Rogers came in, walked a guy ended up scoring with a single, and then going up for a second up… and then [Brooks] Raley getting the lefty with two guys on and then Sugar with two innings there, shutting it down. Huge."

Peterson could only get four outs before Mendoza had to pull his starter. Although the southpaw only tossed 42 pitches, with a playoff spot on the line with just six games remaining, Mendoza was playing Tuesday like it was the last day of the season. He said so himself after the win, stating that he can't think about tomorrow's game and that he is only dealing with the current game. He managed like that, being aggressive with a rested bullpen and it paid off.

The bullpen allowed just one unearned run heading into the fifth when the Mets' offense came alive for five to tie the game at 6-6. Although the bullpen gave back the lead after the Mets scored the go-ahead run in the sixth, the relievers gave the team enough for Francisco Alvarez to hit his go-ahead homer in the eighth.

Once the Mets had the lead, Mendoza was sticking with his closer.

"Where we’re at now, we’re gonna to continue to push those guys," Mendoza said. "I just thought, tie ballgame, top of the order coming up for them, we had our guys coming up for the ninth, I needed to give our offense another chance to score runs. I’m glad Alvy hit that two-run homer there. I start with Diaz, once he was pitch efficient, I checked with him, he’s like “let’s go” and I gave it to him."

Diaz said they approached him before the game that he may pitch in the eighth inning if needed, and once he got through his first frame and Alvarez hit the home run, the Mets closer was ready to close it out.

"I was really fired up. After seeing that homer from Alvy, it was big," Diaz said after the game. "I came out, shut it down and then came on in the ninth to get the last three outs quick. It was pretty fun. It was great. It was a battle, back and forth… It was a really great game for both teams."

"At times, it’s been a struggle for those guys," Mendoza said of his bullpen. "But we believe in them."

Peterson was probably happiest with the bullpen's performance on Tuesday. After he couldn't get out of the second, the bullpen picked him up in a big way and the 30-year-old was grateful.

"Amazing team win – can’t say enough about the bullpen, they stepped up big and I don’t have enough words to show my appreciation for what they did," Peterson said. "They picked me up big time, the offense picked it up and kept us in the game… this is the team that we have and we’re gonna stick together and guys are gonna pick each other up and I’m extremely grateful and proud to be a part of this group."
Tuesday's win puts the Mets one game ahead of the Reds, who lost earlier in the evening, for the third NL wild card spot. With five games to go, the Mets will continue to lean on their bullpen as they try and navigate the end of the regular season with question marks in their rotation. But with Diaz always looming at the end of games, the Mets have a shot to end the season on a high note.

"We just gotta finish strong and see what happens on the last day of the season," Diaz said. "Just get outs. I think every guy in the bullpen knows what he has to do to get outs. Today we saw it, the bullpen did a really good job. From Brazoban to me, we did a really good job staying in the game and at the end we got the win. Tomorrow we got a game with the same mentality – when they give us the ball, just go out there and compete, get outs and try to win the game."

From the Pocket: blunt and brilliant Chris Scott is master of a job few have done better

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“This job changes you,” Chris Scott tells author Anson Cameron in his book, Neil Balme: A Tale of Two Men. “It has the real potential to negatively affect your life. Neil used to say to me, ‘Don’t let this turn you into a maniac.’ I mean, I respect Bomber as a coach. But what did it do to him?”

The book is full of fantastic little nuggets like that. Nathan Buckley’s thoughts on Mick Malthouse warrants its own column. So does Cameron’s sketch of Eddie McGuire: “A man who can scan a room and rank everyone it in from greatest to least before he blinks, a mix of blokeish bonhomie and clear analytical smarts, a man to be reckoned with.”

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Shohei Ohtani is dominant, but bullpen blows another game as Dodgers lose

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - SEPTEMBER 23: Tim Tawa #13 of the Arizona Diamondbacks celebrates after scoring the game-winning run to beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 5-4 at Chase Field on September 23, 2025 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images)
Arizona's Tim Tawa celebrates after scoring the walk-off run to beat the Dodgers. (Chris Coduto / Getty Images)

Shohei Ohtani entered uncharted territory in his final pitching start of the regular season, shutting out the Arizona Diamondbacks over a season-high six innings in the Dodgers’ 5-4 walk-off loss Tuesday night.

The question now, with the start of the playoffs looming: When will the two-way star toe the rubber next?

After a season spent mostly in rehab mode as a pitcher, building his workload inning by inning as he slowly worked his way back from a second Tommy John surgery, Ohtani has checked every box in his recovery and looks primed for what will be his first career postseason pitching outing.

On Tuesday, his fastball was elite once again, topping out at 101.2 mph and accounting for five of his eight strikeouts. The rest of his seven-pitch mix kept the wild-card-seeking Diamondbacks off balance, resulting in just five hits (all singles) and no walks.

Most of all, the right-hander was also efficient, needing only 91 throws to work past the fifth inning for the first time this year.

“Over the last three or four starts, there's been a ramp-up of intensity and performance,” manager Dave Roberts said of Ohtani, who has given up one run in 19 ⅓ innings over his last four outings to finish the regular season with a 2.87 ERA in 15 starts.

“I think that was his plan.”

Now it's up to the team to make a plan for its postseason pitching rotation and figure out exactly where Ohtani fits within it.

Read more:‘A good message.’ Why celebrating Clayton Kershaw’s retirement gave Dodgers mental ‘reset’

Roberts has virtually guaranteed that the reigning National League MVP will be used as a starter in next week’s best-of-three wild card round (which the Dodgers are all but assured of playing in, even if they sew up an NL West division title that has a magic number of three.

And as things stand, Ohtani would be lined up to go in Game 1, after the team moved his weekly pitching schedule this month to have him start on Tuesdays. Coincidentally or not, Game 1 of the wild-card round would be next Tuesday.

The reasons for opening that series with Ohtani on the mound are obvious — from his electric stuff, to his penchant for performing in big moments, to ensuring he does pitch in a series that could end in only two games.

However, Roberts insisted team officials “don't know yet” how their postseason rotation will be ordered. Between the ever-present concerns about managing Ohtani’s two-way workload, and the team’s other wealth of starting options in what has been a resurgent rotation over the last month, there’s debate to be had about how to best maximize their $700-million superstar.

The Dodgers could, for instance, opt to start the wild-card series with Blake Snell and Yoshinobu Yamamoto in Games 1 and 2, and save Ohtani for a potential Game 3. The benefit there: Ohtani could focus solely on his duties as designated hitter the first two games, and wouldn’t be required to play the day immediately after a pitching start (he is hitting only .138 in such games this season, and the Dodgers have made an effort to get him starts immediately before off days in recent months).

Because Ohtani isn’t as built-up as the team’s other starters, delaying his start could also ease the burden early in the series on a shaky bullpen, which coughed up a 4-0 lead Tuesday after rookies Jack Dreyer and Edgardo Henriquez combined to surrender three runs in the seventh, and closer Tanner Scott blew his 10th save in a two-run ninth punctuated by Geraldo Perdomo’s walk-off single.

The Diamondbacks' Jorge Barros tied it 4-4 with a sacrifice fly before Perdomo's two-out heroics off Scott, who hit the leadoff batter, issued a walk and gave up a sacrifice bunt to set up Arizona's comeback.

Read more:Hernández: Roki Sasaki a playoff reliever? Don't put it past desperate Dodgers

“I think it just kind of gives us some options,” Roberts said of having Ohtani potentially lined up for a Game 1 start. “But the likelihood of him starting a playoff game in that first series is very high."

Whenever Ohtani takes the mound again, the Dodgers are hopeful that concerns about his pitching stamina will be somewhat assuaged.

Up until this week, the team had a hard cap of five innings for whenever Ohtani took the mound. For the sake of his health, they were reluctant to waver from it, even when Ohtani had a no-hitter through five his last time out, against the Philadelphia Phillies.

Prior to Tuesday’s series-opener at Chase Field, however, Roberts said that “if all goes well,” Ohtani would pitch into the sixth inning and that his leash could be further loosened in October after recent conversations between the player and club.

“I feel really good with the conversation I had with Shohei about how today could potentially play out,” Roberts said pregame. “This is me talking to the training staff, talking to Shohei, feeling like we've got a really good base now.”

Once the sixth arrived Tuesday night, Ohtani made Roberts’ decision easy. He had yielded just three hits to that point (one of them, a comebacker that got him in the palm of his glove in the third). The Dodgers had a comfortable early lead, after Teoscar Hernández homered in the second and belted a two-run, two-out triple in the top of the sixth (catcher Ben Rortvedt added a run with his first Dodgers homer in the seventh).

Five batters later, Ohtani’s night was done, the right-hander stranding a pair of sixth-inning singles by getting Gabriel Moreno to line out to center and retire the side.

The next time he takes the mound, it will be his first time pitching in a postseason setting. Whether it comes in Game 1, or later in the best-of-three wild card series, will now be up for the team to decide.

Bullpen reinforcements

The Dodgers have at least one bullpen reinforcement coming in this series, with rookie right-hander Roki Sasaki set to be activated on Wednesday in his long-awaited return from a shoulder injury.

Read more:Dodgers Dugout: Is this the worst bullpen in L.A. Dodgers history?

However, the status of trade deadline acquisition Brock Stewart remains in question. Though Stewart completed a recent minor-league rehab stint, and was with the team in Arizona on Tuesday, Roberts said the club is still “making sure he feels good” after missing the last six weeks with a shoulder injury. It is unclear if he will be activated this week, as originally expected.

“[We’re] making sure he's put in a position to feel good if he is activated,” Roberts said. “That's no guarantee … We'll know more tomorrow."

Before Tuesday’s game, Stewart threw an extended flat-ground session in front of a team trainer and general manager Brandon Gomes. The three talked for several minutes once Stewart’s session was complete.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Finnie, Danielson Shine as Red Wings Slip Past Blackhawks in Preseason Opener

Detroit prospects Emmitt Finnie and Nate Danielson delivered impressive performances in the Red Wings’ 3-2 preseason-opening win over the Chicago Blackhawks on Tuesday.

The Red Wings' top prospects were on display Tuesday during Detroit's 3-2 victory over the Chicago Blackhawks in their preseason opener. The win extended the Red Wings winning streak in preseason openers to seven, and improved their record to 9-4 against the Blackhawks in their last 13 exhibition matchups. Stealing the show was 20-year-old Emmitt Finnie, who netted a goal and dished a highlight reel assist for the first star of the game. 

It was an exciting sight for fans in attendance as the future of the franchise was in full display as Finnie, a seventh round pick by the Red Wings in 2023, skated alongside top prospects Nate Danielson (9th overall in 2023) and Michael Brandsegg-Nygard (15th overall in 2024). The trio made an impact in their second-line roles, logging around 15 minutes each, with Brandsegg-Nygard seeing closer to 17 minutes with additional time on the power play. 

Finnie proved to be a 'tenacious' player according to Red Wings head coach Todd McLellan and it showed when he forced a turnover in the Blackhawks end. He kept the offensive zone possession alive and worked the puck back to the point before a shot from the point by Ian Mitchell and a rebound off a shot from Brandsegg-Nygard, gave Finnie an open net for the go-ahead goal. 

Danielson made his presence felt at both ends of the ice, connecting well with Finnie on several offensive sequences. One standout moment came when Finnie created space with a slick series of dekes and set up Danielson for a quick one-timer, but the shot hit the outside of the net. Danielson would eventually find the scoresheet, crashing the net as the puck worked its way back to Wallinder at the point. Wallinder’s shot was perfectly redirected by Danielson, beating the Blackhawks goaltender for his first goal of the preseason. 

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Brandsegg-Nygard was all over the ice, contributing a pair of assists, three shots on net, four hits as well as a tripping penalty that led to a Connor Bedard goal. His play earned himself the second star of the game as he made some influential plays throughout that led to scoring chances like early in the first period on a two-on-one fast break or when setting up a handful of opportunities on the power play.

Another standout came from Carter Mazur, the Red Wings’ 2021 third-round pick, who delivered a stellar performance. The 23-year-old Michigan native made headlines in the hockey world last season when being injured early into his NHL debut and suffering a season-ending injury. Mazur returned from an off-season of rehab and played well in his first action with a goal off a through-the-legs pass from Finnie for an easy goal on a one-timer.

Mazur could've scored more than once as his physical, gritty style of play earned him several scoring chances including a breakaway in the second period that was turned away. His physicality at one point drew a cross-checking penalty from Chicago's Ethan Del Mastro. 

Building on that momentum, the Red Wings' newest first-round pick, Carter Bear, made an impressive debut. Thrust into a significant role right away, he logged nearly 21 minutes of ice time and registered three shots on goal, showcasing poise and confidence beyond his years. The 18-year-old winger was the last player off the ice in warmups and showed offensive talents that garnered his first round selection. McLellan admired Bear's first game with the Red Wings but did note that his young frame was noticeable and that he will need to age a bit more before getting regular NHL minutes. 

"We Have To Make The Playoffs": Andrew Copp Has Blunt Expectation For Red Wings in 2025-26 The Detroit Red Wings enjoyed one of the longest postseason streaks in professional sports, qualifying for the Stanley Cup Playoffs every season from 1991 through 2016.

Bear's offensive skillset is evident but adding weight is something he likely needs to work on. His most notable plays of the game were his scoring chances while playing on a line with NHLers in J.T. Compher and Jonatan Berggren on the first line.

The Red Wings will resume their preseason on Thursday when they host the Buffalo Sabres, before hitting the road for matchups against the Penguins in Pittsburgh and the Sabres again but in Buffalo.

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Kerins Scores Flames' Game-Winner In Preseason Win Over Kraken

Calgary Flames centre Rory Kerins (Joe Puetz-Imagn Images)

The Calgary Flames beat the Seattle Kraken 4-1 on Tuesday night in NHL preseason action.

This team performance was a complete 180 to the one we covered on Sunday night.

The Flames handily outshot the Kraken 34-20.

Calgary opened the scoring with a deflection goal from Yegor Sharangovich off a pass from Hunter Brzustewicz at the 7:40 mark. That must have DEFINITELY felt good for the 27-year-old Belarusian after his already scrutinized five-year $28.75 million contract from a couple of off-seasons ago received even more criticism after he experienced a down season last year.

When the Flames first power play kicked in, the intensity picked up thanks in huge part to Zayne Parekh. Just like the last game, Calgary had Seattle players scurrying and panicking while undermanned due to Parekh's quarterbacking skills. The upcoming rookie got two scoring opportunities and the ensuing momentum nearly led to a wrap-around goal by Jonathan Huberdeau at the first period whistle.

Parekh WILL revolutionize the Flames power play this upcoming season.

While Calgary didn't get a power point courtesy of Parekh, they did score a game-winning PP goal  by Rory Kerins via Connor Zary and Brzustewicz 3:14 into the second period. We have mentioned how we believe Kerins will be brought up sooner rather than later in the season.

Speaking of the second period, the Flames dominated the Kraken, outshooting the away team 15-6. Of course, it helps that Calgary had two power plays and one trickling power play from the first period in the second period. In the man-advantage, the Flames outshot the Kraken 8-2 in the game. In fact, Calgary got a couple of shots at the Seattle net in the Kraken's own power play.

But the quality of shots were outstanding.

Matvei Gridin and Matt Coronato had high-danger shots in the first three minutes of the second period.

Gridin stole a fumbling puck from Seattle's Ryker Evans at the 12:11 mark and nearly squeezed the puck past goaltender Matt Murray on a breakaway.

Sam Morton had as many as three shots on goals just in the period. It was only fitting he got the empty-netter in the end.

The pace did slow down for Calgary as they put in only five shots on goal in the first 13:29 of the third period. Luckily, one of those was a Matt Coronato goal scored 39 seconds into the period for insurance.

The Flames were a perfect 3-for-3 on the penalty kill which has just become a regular occurrence now.

Dustin Wolf who played in net for a majority of the game looked in shape and registered a save percentage of 0.923. Owen Say who came in later did not give up any goals.

Kerins was designated the player of the game.

Calgary will play their next preseason game tomorrow at Vancouver against the Canucks.

David Peterson's role on Mets undecided after 'tough night' against Cubs

Every game matters for the Mets in the final week of the regular season, and that means tough decisions are going to have to be made, including who will start games down the stretch.

David Peterson was the Mets' best pitcher in the first half of the season, but has struggled mightily of late, including Tuesday against the Cubs, where the southpaw had one of the worst starts of his year. Peterson got just four outs, allowing five runs on five hits and two walks, but the Mets made a furious comeback to win 9-7. 

The win catapulted them back into a playoff position and gave the Mets control of their destiny. However, Peterson's night almost sank those chances.

"Tough night for him, not able to fill the strike zone the way we wanted to, the way he wanted to," Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said of Peterson's start. "Three-ball counts, got behind hitters and then when he came in, they made contact that found holes. the walks. Again, we’re going to need this guy. I know it’s been a struggle; it wasn’t a good one today, but our job is to continue to support him and he’s going to play a big role here in the next few days. Counting on him. He’s got to flush this one, and be ready for whenever we give him the ball again."

Over his last seven starts, including Tuesday, Peterson has pitched to an 8.07 ERA, allowing at least three runs in each of his last five starts. Those performances have now put Peterson's spot in the rotation in jeopardy. Peterson is slated to pitch Sunday in the regular season finale in Miami, but when Mendoza was asked about whether the lefty will come out of the bullpen instead, the skipper said it's a possibility. 

"Where we’re at nowadays, we got to take it one game at a time," he said. "Maybe he starts a game, but we have to get there."

Peterson tossed just 42 pitches before Mendoza pulled him so he could be used out of the bullpen over the weekend, and Peterson does have experience as a reliever. When Peterson was asked if he's concerned about his role on the team, the 30-year-old remained focused on what's best for the team.

“I’m not concerned at all," he said. "We gotta win every game possible and I will do everything that I can to help this team win ballgames.”

Mendoza has had to juggle starters and the bullpen a lot of late. He's already used Sean Manaea and Clay Holmes out of the bullpen and may have to do the same for Peterson. The Mets have already announced Jonah Tong and Nolan McLean will finish up the series in Chicago. Brandon Sproat will pitch a game in Miami, but the probables for the other two games are still up in the air.

But the second-year manager remains confident in his pitchers, including Manaea and Peterson, in whatever role he needs them to fill.

"We’re going to get the best version of themselves pretty soon," Mendoza said. "It’s all hands on deck when you talk about who is going to start, who is going to come out of the bullpen. How can we get 27 outs and give us a chance to win a baseball game? I know those guys will step up; it’s been hard for them, but I wouldn’t be surprised if those guys get us big outs for us pretty soon."