Giants' winless six-game homestand amplified by stunning 19th-century MLB stat

Giants' winless six-game homestand amplified by stunning 19th-century MLB stat originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Giants continue burrowing beyond rock bottom, but that’s not the only excavating being done.

You’d have to dig deep into the annals of 19th century MLB history to find the last time San Francisco had a worse homestand than the one that concluded with the Giants’ 2-1 loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates on Wedensday.

San Francisco went 0-6 against the New York Mets and Pittsburgh Pirates, marking only the second time in franchise history the Giants have gone winless on a homestand of at least six games.

The only other time it happened was in April 1896.

Over the course of the last 129 years of baseball, the Giants never managed to stoop to this level of dispair, but San Francisco’s recent woes snowballed into two-series disaster that now forever lives on in infamy.

The Giants have been in a freefall over the last six weeks, posting MLB’s worst record (13-24) since June 17 — the day San Francisco acquired star slugger Rafael Devers.

Horrendous offensive production has been the common denominator during the Giants’ pitiful slide in recent weeks and the team’s latest homestand followed suit as San Francisco only has mustered 12 total runs during its six-game losing streak.

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Blackhawks Big Defenseman Should Only Get Better

Chicago Blackhawks defenseman Alex Vlasic cemented himself a full-time spot on the Original Six club's NHL roster during the 2023-24 season. In 76 games with the Blackhawks that season, the 6-foot-6 blueliner recorded two goals, 14 assists, 16 points, and 56 hits. Overall, the 2019 second-round pick certainly demonstrated that he has the ability to be a solid defensive defenseman at the NHL level.

After breaking out during the 2023-24 season, Vlasic undoubtedly hit a new level this past campaign with the Blackhawks. In 82 games with the Blackhawks during the 2025-26 campaign, he set new career highs with four goals, 26 assists, and 30 points. With this, the young blueliner became more of an offensive threat for the Blackhawks, while also still being dependable when it came to his defensive play. As a result of this, he was used in all situations and emerged as the Blackhawks' top blueliner in the process.

While it was a tough 2024-25 season for the Blackhawks, it is hard not to be happy with the campaign Vlasic put together. He took another major step in the right direction, and only proved that the Blackhawks made the right call signing him to a six-year, $27.6 million contract extension during the 2023-24 season.

Now, Vlasic's goal from here will be to continue to reach new heights for the Blackhawks. He is an incredibly important part of the Blackhawks' rebuild, and it will be fascinating to see what kind of season he has in 2025-26 because of it.

Ex-Blackhawks Forward Found Perfect Fit With New TeamEx-Blackhawks Forward Found Perfect Fit With New TeamWith the Chicago Blackhawks being at the bottom portion of the NHL standings this past season, they traded veteran forward Taylor Hall to the Carolina Hurricanes back in January. Seeing the Blackhawks trade Hall was not surprising in the slightest, as he was a pending unrestricted free agent (UFA) on a rebuilding Chicago squad. 

Photo Credit:  © David Kirouac-Imagn Images

What Kings' latest reported Jonathan Kuminga trade offer to Warriors included

What Kings' latest reported Jonathan Kuminga trade offer to Warriors included originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

It appears the Kings have enhanced their initial sign-and-trade offer to the Warriors for Jonathan Kuminga.

Sacramento has offered a first-round draft pick and a potential rotation player to Golden State, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported Wednesday on “NBA Today.” However, the Warriors are being particular with the type of first-round pick.

The Kings have offered a conditional first-round pick, but the Warriors are asking for a fully unprotected first-round pick, Charania reported, citing sources.

Meanwhile, the Phoenix Suns, who in addition to Sacramento have been the most aggressive in their pursuit of Kuminga, don’t have a first-round pick to trade, so their offer likely would include one or two rotation players and second-round compensation.

Golden State also doesn’t want to take on a bad salary in return, Charania added, and the Warriors don’t want a player they don’t feel has the value moving forward that Kuminga could have.

Sacramento previously offered second-year guard Devin Carter, big man Dario Šarić and two second-round picks to the Warriors, sources told NBC Sports California. But even after the Kings revised their offer, it appears the Warriors still aren’t moved by Sacramento’s offer or any other proposed to them thus far.

“Clearly their asking price has not been met in these potential offers,” Charania said, “and there’s still about a month in a half to two months left before Jonathan Kuminga has a real decision to make with that Oct. 1 qualifying offer.”

The waiting game continues.

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Jonathan Kuminga reportedly turned down two-year, $45 million offer from Warriors

The Golden State Warriors and Jonathan Kuminga have picked up the pace around talks, but that doesn't mean a deal is done — or even that close.

Kuminga has rejected the Warriors' two-year, $45 million contract offer in large part because Golden State insists on a team option for the second season that he waive the built-in no-trade clause, reports Shams Charania and Anthony Slater of ESPN. Both of those requests would make Kuminga easier to trade, but giving up those things — particularly the no-trade clause, which he would get automatically because he could lose his Bird rights in the deal — would mean Kuminga would have no control over what would happen to him. He could be traded to a team just looking to waive him and clear cap space.

Kuminga's agent, BJ Armstrong, reportedly offered a three-year, $82 million contract to the Warriors instead. That seems more than the market appears willing to pay for him.

While the sides have looked for a sign-and-trade deal, there does not appear to be one available. For example, Kuminga spoke with the Kings and Armstrong had longer talks with them as well. The problem is this: The Kings will not put Keegan Murray or Keon Ellis in a trade offer, but the Warriors are not interested in taking back DeMar DeRozan, Dario Saric or Devin Carter, reports Jason Alexander at the Sacramento Bee. So things are stuck.

The Warriors are thinking of ending the sign-and-trade talks, and their current position is that Kuminga can take their two-year offer or sign the $7.5 million qualifying offer, ESPN reports. The qualifying offer would mean Kuminga is a member of the Warriors this season with a no-trade clause, then he would become an unrestricted free agent next summer. However, for Kuminga, that's a lot of money to leave on the table to buy his freedom.

Kuminga, 22, averaged 15.3 points and 4.6 rebounds in 47 games last season (he missed time with an ankle injury). The concern is that he shot 30.5% on 3-pointers and is not a threat from deep, which makes it hard for Steve Kerr to play him and Draymond Green together (both are best at the fours), especially with Jimmy Butler. However, if the Warriors are going to bring back Kuminga with the hopes of trading him at the deadline, Kerr will need to showcase him.

Why Sharp likes a Flyers prospect who has ‘won a lot already'

Why Sharp likes a Flyers prospect who has ‘won a lot already' originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Patrick Sharp can relate to Denver Barkey.

Like exactly. At least when it comes to their draft status.

Both were selected by the Flyers in the third round at 95th overall. Identical pick, just different years.

Sharp made sure to inform Barkey of that distinction when the Flyers’ prospect was drafted in 2023.

“I said, ‘Hey, you’ve got some big shoes to fill there — third round, 95th overall,'” Sharp recalled with a smile earlier this month at Flyers development camp.

Sharp, a product of the 2001 draft, was traded by the Flyers to the Blackhawks in 2005. With Chicago, he won three Stanley Cup titles and scored 30-plus goals four times.

Barkey won and scored quite a bit at the junior ranks. The 20-year-old is now set to turn pro this season with AHL affiliate Lehigh Valley.

Last season, he captained the best team in Canadian major junior hockey. He led London to a Memorial Cup title, scoring two of the Knights’ four goals in the championship. In 10 OHL playoff games and five CHL Memorial Cup games combined, Barkey put up 27 points (12 goals, 15 assists).

Over his OHL career, the 5-foot-9 winger delivered 73 points (27 goals, 46 assists) and a plus-37 rating in 53 playoff games. He made the OHL championship series three times in four seasons and won the last two.

“He’s a guy that the players seem to gravitate to in the locker room,” Sharp, a special advisor to the Flyers’ hockey operations department, said. “Has a lot of tools to his game. Obviously people talk about his size, but his hockey IQ is exceptional, he has got great skating ability, he’s ultra competitive and he has won a lot already.”

The Flyers kept Barkey off the ice at development camp after he battled an ankle injury in the playoffs that cost him seven games.

“It’s a lot better, it’s feeling close to 100 percent right now,” Barkey said. “Just still trying to rest and recover from all the bumps and bruises of a long season.”

Denver Barkey
(Vincent Ethier/CHL)

London’s Memorial Cup run finished just over a month before camp. It wasn’t easy keeping Barkey off the ice.

“He always comes to me every morning, ‘Hey, do you think you can get me out on the ice?'” Flyers director of player development Riley Armstrong said. “I’m like, ‘No, you’re done.'”

As Barkey graduates from the junior level, he’ll have to prove his game translates against pros and that the lack of size won’t hamper him.

“It’s a big jump next year, I’m going to be playing against older men, strong guys,” Barkey said. “Continuing to get stronger, faster and I think the biggest thing is just using my brain and finding a way to adjust.

“Junior was really fun, learned a lot in London, but I’m ready for the next step, new journey with a new team. I’m just excited to get it going and see where it goes.”

Similar to 2023-24, when he racked up 102 points, Barkey was driven by another Team Canada snub last season. For a second straight year, he didn’t make his country’s world juniors roster. He went on to score 1.64 points per game, the best mark of his OHL career.

“Just continuing to use people that don’t believe in me, that kind of doubt me, just use it as fuel to my fire, motivation every day,” Barkey said. “I kind of just keep that in the back of my head.”

The Flyers know to not count him out.

“He has got that nice little chip on his shoulder of proving people wrong,” Armstrong said.

New Penguins Defenseman Is Interesting Addition

The Pittsburgh Penguins have brought in multiple new players this off-season. One of them is defenseman Matt Dumba, as the Penguins acquired him and a 2028 second-round pick from the Dallas Stars in exchange for Vladislav Kolyachonok. 

With this move, the Penguins have added a veteran defenseman who has had past success in Dumba. The Penguins were also to land the second-round pick they received because the Stars needed to clear up cap space, and Pittsburgh took on Dumba's full $3.75 million cap hit.

While the primary reason the Penguins made this move was to get the second-rounder, the possibility of Dumba being a solid addition to Pittsburgh's blueline should not be ruled out. Although expecting him to regain his previous top-four form may be a big ask, he certainly could end up being a nice pickup for the Penguins' bottom pairing and penalty kill. 

In 63 games this past season with the Stars, Dumba recorded one goal, nine assists, 10 points, 60 penalty minutes, and 70 hits. While it was another quiet offensive season for Dumba, he provided some bite on the Stars' blueline, and he should give the Penguins plenty of grit next season, too. This is especially so when noting that Dumba had a career-high 202 hits in 2023-24 split between the Arizona Coyotes and Tampa Bay Lightning. 

Furthermore, if Dumba bounces back a bit next season, he could end up becoming a decent trade chip for the Penguins at the 2026 NHL trade deadline. There is no question that playoff teams love to add hard-nosed right-shot defenseman, so he could end up being a popular rental target for contenders if the Penguins are once again sellers next season.

Nevertheless, there is truly no harm in the Penguins taking on Dumba's contract for the season, especially with him only signed for one more year. It will be fascinating to see what kind of campaign he can put together for the Penguins from here. 

Penguins Intriguing Prospect Is Big Player To WatchPenguins Intriguing Prospect Is Big Player To WatchWith the 21st overall pick of the 2019 NHL Entry Draft, the Pittsburgh Penguins selected forward Sam Poulin. Since then, the 6-foot-2 winger has had trouble cementing himself as a full-time NHL player. Yet, while this is the case, the Blainville, Quebec native still has time to change that. 

Photo Credit: © Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

MLB trade deadline: Eugenio Suárez, Mitch Keller, Merrill Kelly among prized players who could move

PHOENIX — The Arizona Diamondbacks got the trade deadline party started when they dealt 2024 All-Star Josh Naylor to the Seattle Mariners for two pitching prospects.

That probably won’t be the last time the D-backs make news before the July 31 deadline.

Arizona has had a disappointing season with a 51-57 record and now appears to be one of the most active sellers on the MLB market, dangling third baseman Eugenio Suárez and starting pitchers Zac Gallen and Merrill Kelly.

The potential buyers include teams like the New York Yankees, New York Mets, Detroit Tigers, Philadelphia Phillies, Chicago Cubs and Los Angeles Dodgers, who are all trying to beef up their rosters in hopes of a deep playoff run.

The market is heating up quickly: The Yankees acquired third baseman Ryan McMahon from the Rockies, while the Orioles traded left-handed reliever Gregory Soto to the Mets and right-hander Seranthony Dominguez to the Blue Jays.

The Royals are among the teams who look like they’ve decided to keep possible trade chips. Right-hander Seth Lugo was expected to be a prized addition at the deadline, but Kansas City decided to extend the veteran on a two-year, $46 million deal that goes until 2027.

The D-backs have been one of the most intriguing teams in baseball over the past few weeks because management has had to make a tough decision whether to buy or sell. Arizona had a 50-50 record after sweeping the St. Louis Cardinals following the All-Star break but were then swept by the Houston Astros, lost two of three to the Pittsburgh Pirates and two more to the Tigers.

Naylor’s already gone and he’ll help a Seattle lineup that could use a little more punch. Suárez is having one of the best seasons of his career, slugging 36 homers over 104 games, and arguably is the best bat on the market.

Here’s a look at some of the top players who could be available as teams try to upgrade for the stretch run:

Eugenio Suárez, 3B, Arizona Diamondbacks

Suarez is just an average defensive third baseman these days, but that’s not why teams want to acquire him. He’s got the kind of bat that can carry a team for weeks at a time, major pop from the right side of the plate. He has 312 career homers, is well-liked in the locker room and has been productive in limited postseason at-bats with a .300 average.

Mitch Keller, SP, Pittsburgh Pirates

The 29-year-old Keller has been overshadowed in the Pirates’ rotation thanks to the emergence of young star Paul Skenes, but the right-hander has been a reliable starter for the past four seasons and was an All-Star in 2023. The one catch is it’ll take a sizable haul for the Pirates to make a deal: He’s under contract through 2028 as part of a relatively reasonable five-year, $77 million deal.

Zac Gallen, SP, Arizona Diamondbacks

Gallen is having the worst full season of his career with a 7-12 record and 5.60 ERA but could still be an attractive add for a team that needs a starter. The 29-year-old right-hander has been one of the top pitchers in the National League over the past five years, finishing in the top 10 of the Cy Young Award voting in 2020, 2022 and 2023. His stuff is still good and he’s had a handful of dominant starts this season.

Merrill Kelly, SP, Arizona Diamondbacks

The 36-year-old righty quietly has been one of the most consistent pitchers in baseball with a 9-6 record and 3.22 ERA. He was also excellent during the D-backs’ postseason run in 2023 with a 3-1 record, 2.25 ERA and 28 strikeouts over 24 innings. Kelly doesn’t have an overpowering fastball but has a five-pitch mix that has consistently delivered results.

Sandy Alcantara, SP, Miami Marlins

The 29-year-old Alcantara isn’t the same pitcher he was when he won the 2022 NL Cy Young Award, but the right-hander still has quite a bit of upside. He’s allowed just one unearned run over 12 innings in his last two starts, which might help his value. His rotation partner Edward Cabrera — another right-hander — also could garner attention with a 3.35 ERA over 18 starts.

Ryan O’Hearn, 1B/DH, Baltimore Orioles

The 31-year-old is having a career year with a .284 average, .375 on-base percentage and 12 homers, helping him earn All-Star honors for the first time in his career. His left-handed bat would be useful in a contender’s lineup.

Yankees bolster outfield, acquire veteran Austin Slater from the White Sox

CHICAGO — Austin Slater is heading to the New York Yankees.

The Yankees acquired the veteran outfielder from the Chicago White Sox in exchange for minor league pitching prospect Gage Ziehl.

The Yankees have a pressing need to bolster their outfield ranks with star Aaron Judge out indefinitely while dealing with a flexor strain in his right elbow.

The 32-year-old Slater hit .236 with five home runs and 11 RBIs in 51 games with the White Sox this season. The well-traveled Slater can play all three outfield positions. He spent the first seven-plus seasons of his career with San Francisco before being traded to Cincinnati last summer. New York will be Slater’s fifth team in just over a year.

The Yankees will assume $564,516 of Slater’s remaining $1.75 million salary, which also will increase their luxury tax by about $621,000.

The trade is the latest in what has been a busy run-up to the deadline by New York. The Yankees acquired third baseman Ryan McMahon from Colorado and infielder Amed Rosario from Washington.

José Butto emotionally exits Mets bullpen after hearing news of Giants trade

José Butto emotionally exits Mets bullpen after hearing news of Giants trade originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The MLB trade deadline can be tough on players who are dealt, and new Giants reliever José Butto showcased that perfectly after the New York Mets sent him to San Francisco during Wednesday’s game at Petco Park.

Butto was traded to the Giants, along with top-12 prospects Blade Tidwell and Drew Gilbert, in exchange for Tyler Rogers in the middle of New York’s game against the San Diego Padres. The emotions of his forthcoming departure were written all over his face, as the reliever took some time away from the dugout before returning later in the inning.

Butto signed with the Mets as an international free agent in 2017 and made his MLB debut with the team in 2022. Since then, the right-hander has posted an 11-9 record and 3.45 ERA with 163 strikeouts in 74 appearances.

In 2025, Butto has a 3.64 ERA with 41 strikeouts. He now goes from the second-place Mets, who are 62-47 and currently hold the second NL wild-card spot, to the Giants, who dropped below .500 for the first time this season after Wednesday’s loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates and are six games out of the wild-card race.

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Luca Doncic takes a jab at Mavericks while showing off his revenge body

NEW YORK, NY - JULY 28: Luka Doni greets Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees prior to the game between the Tampa Bay Rays and the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium on Monday, July 28, 2025 in New York, New York.
Lakers guard Luka Doncic, left, greets slugger Aaron Judge of the New York Yankees before a game at Yankee Stadium on July 28. (Kyrease Desseau / Getty Images)

Guy spends his summer transforming his body from flab to fighting trim. He wants to share the results with the world. Where is his first stop?

New York, New York, would suffice.

So there Luka Doncic stood, newly toned and beaming, posing for a photo opp at Yankee Stadium with none other than 6-foot-7, 282-pound slugger Aaron Judge, as legit a symbol of freakish physique gifts as exists on today's sports landscape.

Both men have been featured in Men's Health magazine, including a cover story on Doncic published Monday that detailed his commitment to redistributing weight through intense workouts and a better diet.

The 6-6, 230-pound Doncic didn't wither in Judge's presence, exhibiting muscle tone unseen during his 28-game Lakers debut after being acquired from the Dallas Mavericks in a truly shocking Feb. 1 trade for center Anthony Davis.

Doncic also chatted with the Yankees' broadcast team, and play-by-play announcer Michael Kay suggested Doncic do what any self-respecting New Yorker would in this situation: Make sure the Mavericks are aware of his physical transformation.

"After that deal was made, the Mavericks got a lot of criticism regarding it," Kay said. "Then they start to leak out stuff — 'Oh, we don't know if he's ever going to be in shape.' You should mail them a copy of that Men's Health magazine."

Behind a sly grin, Doncic replied, "They probably saw it. I don't have to worry about that."

New York is one of three destinations on Doncic's summer sojourn, a one-day stop in Chicago next followed by an intriguingly timed visit to Los Angeles on Saturday. That happens to be the first day Doncic, 26, can sign a contract extension with the Lakers.

The five-time All-NBA guard can sign a four-year deal for $224 million or a three-year deal for $161 million with a player option in 2028, which would allow Doncic to sign a max contract in 2028 that would give him 35% of the salary cap for that season.

Read more:Luka Doncic says 'whole body looks better' after summer of change: 'This is just the start'

Any lingering doubts that the Lakers might have had before dropping that kind of money in Doncic's lap likely were assuaged by his apparent commitment to superior physical conditioning.

Even with a bit of a belly and rounded jowls, Doncic averaged 28.2 points, 8.2 rebounds and 7.7 assists a game last season — a mere tick lower than his career totals. Now he could be poised to assume the mantle of best player in the world, handed off from Kobe Bryant to LeBron James, Lakers both.

Doncic's summer at his Croatia home includes two 90-minute workouts a day, according to Men's Health. He also has adopted a gluten-free, low-sugar and high-protein diet that includes intermittent fasting.

The unveiling of his new physique included Judge giving him a game-used bat and a pair of his Air Jordan 1 Low cleats. In the interview with Kay, Doncic was asked if he could put the gifts to use. Has he played baseball?

“A lot, on the Wii console," he replied with the same wry humor he displayed shading the Mavericks. "Yeah, on Wii, I was great. Here? Probably not.”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

NBA headed to Berlin, Paris, London and Manchester to play six games in the next three years

The NBA is heading to Europe for at least six games in the next three years, the league announced on Wednesday.

That starts with the Memphis Grizzlies and Orlando Magic playing in Berlin on Jan. 15 and then in London on Jan. 18 in this coming season. That game in Berlin will be the NBA's first regular season game in Germany, and it will feature German-born brothers Franz and Moritz Wagner.

"To have the Orlando Magic and the NBA play a regular-season game in our hometown of Berlin means everything to us," the brothers said in a statement. "Growing up here, we dreamed of moments like this. It's a huge honor to represent Berlin and Germany and show how much the city and country love basketball. We hope we can inspire kids the way we were inspired watching games from afar."'

In 2026-27, the NBA will play games in Manchester, England, and Paris, then in the 2027-28 season it will be Berlin and Paris. The games will be played at Berlin's Uber Arena, London's The O2, Manchester's Co-op Live and Paris' Accor Arena.

" Announcing the next three season's regular-season games in Europe reflects the incredible momentum and appetite for NBA basketball in France, Germany, the UK, and across the region," George Aivazoglou, the NBA's managing director for Europe and the Middle East, said in a statement. "We look forward to welcoming the Grizzlies and the Magic to Berlin and London and to engaging fans, players and the local communities through the games and the surrounding events."

The NBA is banking on that appetite, as these games come while the association is working toward launching an NBA-branded league in Europe, something NBA owners seem more eager to do in the next handful of years than expanding the league to cities such as Seattle or Las Vegas. The form of this European league is still being decided — it likely would be a mix of existing teams and some new, expansion ones — and would be direct competition with the existing EuroLeague.

Whatever happens with the new league, the NBA will continue to play games on the continent and will try to grow its brand and presence there.

A closer look at the Hall of Fame chances for 8 current, former Phillies

A closer look at the Hall of Fame chances for 8 current, former Phillies originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

This year’s class for the National Baseball Hall of Fame was a fulfilling one for Phillies fans. Beloved slugger Dick Allen, one of the best hitters in the Era of the Pitcher, was finally voted in posthumously, and Billy Wagner became one of the few closers to make it to the Hall.

There haven’t been many players who played a majority of their careers in Philadelphia in Cooperstown. In fact, before Allen, you have to go all the way back to Richie Ashburn’s induction in 1995. Such is the existence for the losingest franchise ever.

However, in the more recent history of the Phillies, and the current roster, there are several players who have Hall of Fame possibilities. And in the wake of Hall of Fame weekend, and as he head toward Phillies Wall of Fame and Alumni festivities this weekend, it’s a fine time to examine eight current and former Phils and Hall of Fame chances.

Bobby Abreu

Abreu definitely produced offensively during his career. Seven seasons with 40-plus doubles, nearly 2,500 hits, 400 stolen bases, 1,453 runs scored, and a lifetime OPS of .870. His problem is that he was never among the best for multiple seasons running. The Hall is reserved for the best of the best. Abreu played 18 seasons, but he was named to just two All-Star teams. One Silver Slugger, one Gold Glove, zero top-10 finishes in MVP voting. The cumulative numbers look good, but when you put them up against fellow players, they just don’t measure up. He appeared on 19.5% of Hall of Fame ballots in 2025, his 6th year of eligibility.

Hall Watch (out of 5 stars): 1.5 stars

Cole Hamels

Hamels has an interesting argument. 163 career wins doesn’t sound like a Hall of Fame number, but from the start of his career in 2006 to 2018, he has 156 wins, which ranks 7th in baseball, just behind Max Scherzer (159) and Felix Hernandez (164), and third in Ks behind Scherzer and Justin Verlander.

He was named to four All-Star teams, finished in the top-10 in Cy Young Voting four times, and we all remember how unhittable he was during the 2008 playoffs. Coming up big in the postseason carries some extra weight. But in the end, I’m not sure he separated himself enough. 2026 is his first year on the ballot, the returns should be interesting.

Hall Watch: 2 stars

Bryce Harper

Where do you start when listing the accolades for Harper? Two MVP awards, 8 All-Star games, four Silver Sluggers, 351 home runs… and he’s three months shy of 33 years old! He has hit 767 extra-base hits in his career to date. That ranks 24th of all players prior to their 33rd birthday. More than Barry Bonds, more than Ted Williams, more than Mike Trout.

34 players have won two or more MVPs; 23 of the other 28 eligible players are in the Hall of Fame. The outliers? Barry Bonds, Alex Rodriguez, Juan Gonzalez, Roger Maris, and Dale Murphy. Harper already has more career home runs than Maris, and is 47 shy of Murphy. I shouldn’t have to explain the other three.

Harper has been in the harsh media spotlight since well before his MLB career began, and he has excelled throughout. All that’s really missing from his career to this point is a World Series ring.

Hall Watch: 4.5 stars

Ryan Howard

From 2006-to-2011, Howard was a player you could describe as an SWYD All-Star: when he’s up to bat, Stop What You’re Doing. Homework, dinner, taking out the trash, it can wait. Howard’s up. And often, he rewarded your patience. He was the most feared power hitter in the game during that span, averaging – averaging! – 43.7 homers and 132.7 RBI over that 6-year romp. For context, in the last 105 seasons, only seven players aside from Howard had THREE seasons with 43 HR and 132 RBI. Ruth, Sosa, Gehrig, Griffey, A-Rod, Manny Ramirez, and Jimmy Foxx.

Howard won the 2006 NL MVP, then finished fifth, second, third, tenth, and tenth again in MVP voting. The issue with Howard’s unreal run is that, frankly, that was it. He tore his Achilles to end the 2011 NLDS against the Cardinals, and never fully got back to super status. Many players have shooting-star careers like Howard, very few of them shine so brightly during their meteoric flight to alert Hall voters.

Sandy Koufax’s best seasons were the final five of his career, and in those five seasons, he was untouchable. 3 Cy Youngs, an MVP, and two World Series titles. The best pitcher in the game, during the Era of the Pitcher. Outside of those seasons, however, he was a below-average pitcher for eight seasons. But what he did at his best superseded all of that mediocrity.

While Howard’s best was great, it wasn’t great for long enough.

Hall Watch: 2.5 stars

Jimmy Rollins

On to another cornerstone from the 2008 roster, and the player that ignited the team whenever it seemed they needed it. The Phillies hit king (2,306 of his 2,455 career knocks) has 500+ doubles and 400+ stolen bases, one of 12 players all-time to reach those milestones. Nine of them are in Cooperstown. Four Gold Gloves, and the 2007 NL MVP, a season he put the team on his back down the stretch.

But J-Roll made just three All-Star teams. One Silver Slugger. For his career, his OPS+ was 95, which is below league average for his position. Rollins’ career, while made up for several great Moments, didn’t have many great seasons.

Hall Watch: 2 stars

Kyle Schwarber

Before signing with the Phillies prior to the 2022 season, Schwarber wasn’t a player you’d consider as anything approaching a Hall-of-Famer. But the last three-plus seasons have been a reinvention for the slugger. To count how many players with more homers than Schwarber’s had as a Phillie (168) since the start  of 2022, you’d need just two fingers: Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge. He has nearly reached SWYD status.

This blistering run has more than doubled his career home run total to 321 and counting. At the age of 32, his next 4-5 seasons will go a long way toward determining his candidacy for the Hall. Currently with just three All-Star nods and a Silver Slugger, a career home run figure would likely need to be in the high 400s for Cooperstown to come calling.

Hall Watch: 3 stars (with a bullet)

Chase Utley

Utley was arm-in-arm with Howard during the Phillies’ Golden Era of 2007-2011, and, you could argue, was more valuable overall than The Big Piece. His bWAR in that span (34.7) was second only to Albert Pujols. He always gave it his all, and was a fan favorite as a result.

But he was sorely lacking in one area during those years, and several others in his career: availability. Utley’s hair-on-fire playing style took a severe toll on him, and just as an example, he missed 145 games from 2007-2011. That’s nearly an entire season sitting out.

Also similar to Howard, his injuries caused his late-career production to suffer greatly. From 2009 until his final season of 2018, he topped 140 games in a season just once. Had his knees not betrayed him, who knows? So far, the Hall of voters have given him some love (39.8% in 2025), but he has a ways to go.

Hall Watch: 3.5 Stars

Zack Wheeler

The final candidate here could reap the benefits of voters changing their calculus on what determines Cooperstown worthiness for career starting pitchers.

Wheeler, 35, stands at 112 career wins. But in this era of starters going just 5-6 innings, bullpens notoriously blow what could have been several sure wins for the starter. The 3-time All-Star, like Schwarber, is another player whose career has undergone a resurgent second act in his Phillies Era.

Here are his ranks among Starters (min. 125 GS) since the start of the 2021 season:

  • 2.89 ERA (1st)
  • WHIP (1st)
  • 64 wins (T-2nd)
  • 1,018 strikeouts (2nd)
  • .601 opponents’ OPS (2nd)
  • .211 opponents’ average (3rd)

The one thing noticeably lacking from his resume is a Cy Young, and he has been mind-numbingly close, finishing second to Corbin Burnes in 2021 and Chris Sale last season. (Can someone kidnap Paul Skenes for a couple weeks?)

Wheeler has said on the record that he will play until his current Phillies contract expires, at the end of the ’27 season. If healthy, he could earn another 25-30 wins. Could 150 career wins be a magic number? 140? We shall see.

Hall Watch: 3.5 Stars

A closer look at the Hall of Fame chances for 8 current, former Phillies

A closer look at the Hall of Fame chances for 8 current, former Phillies originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

This year’s class for the National Baseball Hall of Fame was a fulfilling one for Phillies fans. Beloved slugger Dick Allen, one of the best hitters in the Era of the Pitcher, was finally voted in posthumously, and Billy Wagner became one of the few closers to make it to the Hall.

There haven’t been many players who played a majority of their careers in Philadelphia in Cooperstown. In fact, before Allen, you have to go all the way back to Richie Ashburn’s induction in 1995. Such is the existence for the losingest franchise ever.

However, in the more recent history of the Phillies, and the current roster, there are several players who have Hall of Fame possibilities. And in the wake of Hall of Fame weekend, and as he head toward Phillies Wall of Fame and Alumni festivities this weekend, it’s a fine time to examine eight current and former Phils and Hall of Fame chances.

Bobby Abreu

Abreu definitely produced offensively during his career. Seven seasons with 40-plus doubles, nearly 2,500 hits, 400 stolen bases, 1,453 runs scored, and a lifetime OPS of .870. His problem is that he was never among the best for multiple seasons running. The Hall is reserved for the best of the best. Abreu played 18 seasons, but he was named to just two All-Star teams. One Silver Slugger, one Gold Glove, zero top-10 finishes in MVP voting. The cumulative numbers look good, but when you put them up against fellow players, they just don’t measure up. He appeared on 19.5% of Hall of Fame ballots in 2025, his 6th year of eligibility.

Hall Watch (out of 5 stars): 1.5 stars

Cole Hamels

Hamels has an interesting argument. 163 career wins doesn’t sound like a Hall of Fame number, but from the start of his career in 2006 to 2018, he has 156 wins, which ranks 7th in baseball, just behind Max Scherzer (159) and Felix Hernandez (164), and third in Ks behind Scherzer and Justin Verlander.

He was named to four All-Star teams, finished in the top-10 in Cy Young Voting four times, and we all remember how unhittable he was during the 2008 playoffs. Coming up big in the postseason carries some extra weight. But in the end, I’m not sure he separated himself enough. 2026 is his first year on the ballot, the returns should be interesting.

Hall Watch: 2 stars

Bryce Harper

Where do you start when listing the accolades for Harper? Two MVP awards, 8 All-Star games, four Silver Sluggers, 351 home runs… and he’s three months shy of 33 years old! He has hit 767 extra-base hits in his career to date. That ranks 24th of all players prior to their 33rd birthday. More than Barry Bonds, more than Ted Williams, more than Mike Trout.

34 players have won two or more MVPs; 23 of the other 28 eligible players are in the Hall of Fame. The outliers? Barry Bonds, Alex Rodriguez, Juan Gonzalez, Roger Maris, and Dale Murphy. Harper already has more career home runs than Maris, and is 47 shy of Murphy. I shouldn’t have to explain the other three.

Harper has been in the harsh media spotlight since well before his MLB career began, and he has excelled throughout. All that’s really missing from his career to this point is a World Series ring.

Hall Watch: 4.5 stars

Ryan Howard

From 2006-to-2011, Howard was a player you could describe as an SWYD All-Star: when he’s up to bat, Stop What You’re Doing. Homework, dinner, taking out the trash, it can wait. Howard’s up. And often, he rewarded your patience. He was the most feared power hitter in the game during that span, averaging – averaging! – 43.7 homers and 132.7 RBI over that 6-year romp. For context, in the last 105 seasons, only seven players aside from Howard had THREE seasons with 43 HR and 132 RBI. Ruth, Sosa, Gehrig, Griffey, A-Rod, Manny Ramirez, and Jimmy Foxx.

Howard won the 2006 NL MVP, then finished fifth, second, third, tenth, and tenth again in MVP voting. The issue with Howard’s unreal run is that, frankly, that was it. He tore his Achilles to end the 2011 NLDS against the Cardinals, and never fully got back to super status. Many players have shooting-star careers like Howard, very few of them shine so brightly during their meteoric flight to alert Hall voters.

Sandy Koufax’s best seasons were the final five of his career, and in those five seasons, he was untouchable. 3 Cy Youngs, an MVP, and two World Series titles. The best pitcher in the game, during the Era of the Pitcher. Outside of those seasons, however, he was a below-average pitcher for eight seasons. But what he did at his best superseded all of that mediocrity.

While Howard’s best was great, it wasn’t great for long enough.

Hall Watch: 2.5 stars

Jimmy Rollins

On to another cornerstone from the 2008 roster, and the player that ignited the team whenever it seemed they needed it. The Phillies hit king (2,306 of his 2,455 career knocks) has 500+ doubles and 400+ stolen bases, one of 12 players all-time to reach those milestones. Nine of them are in Cooperstown. Four Gold Gloves, and the 2007 NL MVP, a season he put the team on his back down the stretch.

But J-Roll made just three All-Star teams. One Silver Slugger. For his career, his OPS+ was 95, which is below league average for his position. Rollins’ career, while made up for several great Moments, didn’t have many great seasons.

Hall Watch: 2 stars

Kyle Schwarber

Before signing with the Phillies prior to the 2022 season, Schwarber wasn’t a player you’d consider as anything approaching a Hall-of-Famer. But the last three-plus seasons have been a reinvention for the slugger. To count how many players with more homers than Schwarber’s had as a Phillie (168) since the start  of 2022, you’d need just two fingers: Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge. He has nearly reached SWYD status.

This blistering run has more than doubled his career home run total to 321 and counting. At the age of 32, his next 4-5 seasons will go a long way toward determining his candidacy for the Hall. Currently with just three All-Star nods and a Silver Slugger, a career home run figure would likely need to be in the high 400s for Cooperstown to come calling.

Hall Watch: 3 stars (with a bullet)

Chase Utley

Utley was arm-in-arm with Howard during the Phillies’ Golden Era of 2007-2011, and, you could argue, was more valuable overall than The Big Piece. His bWAR in that span (34.7) was second only to Albert Pujols. He always gave it his all, and was a fan favorite as a result.

But he was sorely lacking in one area during those years, and several others in his career: availability. Utley’s hair-on-fire playing style took a severe toll on him, and just as an example, he missed 145 games from 2007-2011. That’s nearly an entire season sitting out.

Also similar to Howard, his injuries caused his late-career production to suffer greatly. From 2009 until his final season of 2018, he topped 140 games in a season just once. Had his knees not betrayed him, who knows? So far, the Hall of voters have given him some love (39.8% in 2025), but he has a ways to go.

Hall Watch: 3.5 Stars

Zack Wheeler

The final candidate here could reap the benefits of voters changing their calculus on what determines Cooperstown worthiness for career starting pitchers.

Wheeler, 35, stands at 112 career wins. But in this era of starters going just 5-6 innings, bullpens notoriously blow what could have been several sure wins for the starter. The 3-time All-Star, like Schwarber, is another player whose career has undergone a resurgent second act in his Phillies Era.

Here are his ranks among Starters (min. 125 GS) since the start of the 2021 season:

  • 2.89 ERA (1st)
  • WHIP (1st)
  • 64 wins (T-2nd)
  • 1,018 strikeouts (2nd)
  • .601 opponents’ OPS (2nd)
  • .211 opponents’ average (3rd)

The one thing noticeably lacking from his resume is a Cy Young, and he has been mind-numbingly close, finishing second to Corbin Burnes in 2021 and Chris Sale last season. (Can someone kidnap Paul Skenes for a couple weeks?)

Wheeler has said on the record that he will play until his current Phillies contract expires, at the end of the ’27 season. If healthy, he could earn another 25-30 wins. Could 150 career wins be a magic number? 140? We shall see.

Hall Watch: 3.5 Stars

Star attractions absent as scheduling stymies blockbuster Test finale

With England looking to win the series and India still able to share the spoils, the loss of three headliners at the Oval is suboptimal

Much like the Dude in the Big Lebowski during his various moments of confusion, it was impossible not to repeatedly blink upon seeing England’s XI for the fifth and final Test against India that starts on Thursday. Four changes, including the loss of Ben Stokes and Ollie Pope’s return to the captaincy, took a few moments to process.

“I don’t want to eat my words but the likelihood I won’t play is very unlikely,” said Stokes after the stalemate at Old Trafford. While that quote needed scanning a few times, so did the gnarly right shoulder he was seen prodding and poking during what was a chastening failure to claim an unassailable 3-1 series lead. A grade-three tear to “a muscle I can’t pronounce” was the upshot, Stokes confirmed on Wednesday, and his summer is now frustratingly over.

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Former Panthers Defenseman Coming Out Of Retirement To Play In Finland

Florida Panthers defenseman Markus Nutivaara (65) in action during the game between the Dallas Stars and the Florida Panthers at the American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

Former Florida Panthers defenseman Markus Nutivaara is coming out of retirement and joining Karpat, a Finnish team in Liiga.

The 31-year-old's last professional hockey game came with the Panthers during the 2021-22 season, where he recorded one assist in one game. He signed with the San Jose Sharks the following year, but did not play in any games. He remained unsigned for the next two seasons but has decided to return to hockey, joining Karpat, a team with which he has played at several levels.

Nutivaara worked his way through the Finnish ranks playing with Karpat at the U-16, U-18 and U-20 level before joining their professional team, winning a championship.

The Oulu, FIN. native was selected by the Columbus Blue Jackets in the seventh round (189th overall) in the 2015 NHL Draft. He made his NHL debut in the 2016-17 season, scoring two goals and seven points in 66 games. 

In 2018, Nutivaara signed a four-year, $10.8 million ($2.7 million annually) contract with the Blue Jackets but was acquired by the Panthers less than two years later. He played in 30 games during the 2020-21 season, notching 10 assists. The final year of his contract saw him receive just one game of NHL action before signing a one-year, $1.5 million contract with the Sharks, but he did not play any NHL or AHL games with the franchise. 

Now, Nutivaara will join a Karpat side, which features several NHL prospects and former NHL players. 

Niko Mikkola Put The NHL On Notice During The Playoffs, But His Value To The Panthers Remains UnderratedNiko Mikkola Put The NHL On Notice During The Playoffs, But His Value To The Panthers Remains UnderratedNiko Mikkola has played a crucial role in the Florida Panthers' recent success, putting the league on notice during the playoffs, yet his value to the organization can still be considered underrated.