Juan Soto hunting mistakes, coming through in big moments for Mets

As it has happened many times before, the big moment found Juan Sotoon Tuesday night at Citi Field. 

With the Mets down two in the bottom half of the eighth inning, Soto came to the plate to face Jose A. Ferrer, Washington's hard-throwing left-hander out of the bullpen.

After taking a strike on a 99.4 mph sinker and fouling off a second one that came in at 100.1 mph, Soto, like the Mets had been all night, was behind. But his approach didn’t change; he was trying to “hunt the mistakes.”

“I know that guy, and he has nasty stuff. I’m just trying to stay locked into my zone,” he said. “He missed in my zone and I made the adjustment.”.

And when Ferrer's 0-2 slider hung in the middle of the zone, and Soto smacked it (107.3 mph off the bat). In fact, he nearly hit the ball too well as right fielder Rober Hassell III looked to have a decent shot at making the catch, but the ball just dipped below his glove, allowing Starling Marte to score all the way from first.

“How things are going, I definitely was hoping [it] got down,” Soto said. “I thought the ball was a little farther than it went, but got it done.”

Of course, Soto had the hit, but praised the man who set the table for him and the man after, Pete Alonso, who pulverised a game-tying hit to score Soto en route to the Mets’ extra-inning win.

“That was a 12-year veteran taking an at-bat right there,” Soto said of Marte's ability to work a walk after falling behind 0-2. “He did a really good job, he stayed on his plan. Everybody wants to come through in that situation, but he stayed patient and give myself and Pete another chance to come through.”

The late double was Soto's second big hit of the night. In the bottom of the third, Soto battled MacKenzieGore, who Washington got from the Padres in the trade that sent the slugger to San Diego in 2022, and drove a 2-2 slider that got a lot of the middle of the plate for a 373-foot opposite-field home run.

“Just a great swing,” Soto said. “Another mistake, I’m waiting for mistakes and he made a mistake and I put the ball in play.”

While the homer landed just over the left field wall, Soto spent time admiring the drive and appeared to exchange words with Gore. The slugger was coy about the interaction, “We were just saying 'hi' at each other. That’s it.”

With the two-hit day, Soto is now batting .341 (14-for-41) with 14 runs, three doubles, four homers, eight RBI, and 14 walks in his last 12 games. Does he feel this is about his luck starting to change after a slow (by his high standards) start?

“Little by little, we just gotta be patient,” he said. “Keep doing my thing, definitely really happy to see the ball landing in some spots and coming through in big moments. I’m really happy, I’m just gonna try and keep it the same way.”

While his bat will always get the headlines, Soto also contributed in the field, taking a run off the board when he nailed Jose Tena at the plate as he tried to score from first with two outs in the top half of the second inning.

The right fielder, who had been working with the Mets’ pitching coaches to sort out some mechanical issues with his arm, said he feels great with how he is progressing in the outfield.

“I feel like we going in the right path with the coaches,” he said. “We’ve been doing great things so far and I’m happy for that.”

Austin Wells drives in five to power Yankees' 10-2 win over Royals

The Yankees put up 10 runs, with Austin Wells providing half of them, on 16 hits as New York defeated the Royals, 10-2, in Kansas City on Tuesday night.

Here are the takeaways...

-Aaron Judge has done plenty of things not seen by baseball fans and he did so again. Ahead in the count 2-0 in the first inning, Judge took a Noah Cameron fastball over the middle of the plate and launched it 469 feet (117.9 mph exit velocity) for his 24th home run of the season. The ball landing was not caught on camera and seemingly reached the Royals Hall of Fame in deep left field.

Judge's smash wasn't the only one on Tuesday, as Austin Wells took Cameron deep in the fourth after fighting back from a 2-2 count. On the ninth pitch of the at-bat, Wells launched a changeup 381 feet over the right field wall to put the Yanks up 5-1.

-The Yankees would pour it on with a five-run sixth inning. Wells got the scoring started with a two-run double. Trent Grisham, Judge and Cody Bellinger followed with RBI singles.

-Max Fried pitched into an early jam in this one. In the second inning, he had runners at the corners with one out -- thanks to a botched double play attempt by DJ LeMahieu -- when rookie Jac Caglianone came to the plate as the Kauffman Stadium crowd rose to their feet for the top prospect. However, the slugging rookie grounded out, but it did drive in the Royals' first run.

After that, Fried would settle in, retiring 11 straight Royals before a two-out single in the fifth. The long wait in the dugout in the sixth inning probably got Fried off his game, as Jonathan India led off with a solo shot and the southpaw allowed two more singles before he got the final out of the frame.

Fried threw 91 pitches (61 strikes) in seven innings while allowing two runs on six hits, no walks and striking out four. Although his outing was strong, Fried's season ERA actually increased to 1.84.

-Yerry De los Santos got the next five outs but allowed the Royals to load the bases with two outs in the ninth. Aaron Boone made a pitching change, and Tim Hill got Tyler Tolbert to fly out to end the game.

-The Yankees picked up 16 hits on Tuesday, with every starter picking up at least one knock. Judge went 2-for-5 and his average is at .396, while Wells and Grisham went 2-for-4. LeMahieu went 2-for-3 with two walks and made a nice sliding catch in shallow right field.

Jazz Chisholm Jr. went 1-for-4 with a run scored and was replaced in the later innings by Oswald Peraza. The Yankees announced that Chisholm left the game with "neck tightness." He was hit in the helmet by a throw when he stole third base earlier, but remained in the game.

Game MVP: Austin Wells

Wells, his first game batting in the nine-hole, drove in five of the team's 10 runs

Highilights

What's next

The Yankees and Royals continue their three-game set on Wednesday night. First pitch is set for 7:40 p.m.

Clarke Schmidt (2-3, 4.04 ERA) takes the mound while young LHP Kris Bubic (5-3, 1.43 ERA) will be on the bump for Kansas City.

Ottawa Senators 'Rev Up The Red' Again, Provide Glimpse At New Third Jerseys

The Ottawa Senators held their second annual Season Seat Member Spring Summit at Canadian Tire Centre on Tuesday night. It was an opportunity for season ticket holders to rub elbows and get an insider's view on what's happening with the club.

One of the biggest pieces of news on the evening was a glimpse at what the Senators and Fanatics (the NHL's outfitter of on-ice uniforms) appear to have settled on for their new third jersey. It appeared in a video the team showed to fans on the CTC big screen. Naturally, it had some fans and media members grabbing their cell phone cameras to share on the new look on social media.

The video provided close ups of the new third jerseys, which are all-red with black and metallic gold trim (think Vegas Golden Knights). At the end of the video, a blurry image of a player wearing the jersey walks toward the camera, came into reasonably clear view for one single frame before the video ends.

This image falls completely in line with a social media post that surfaced earlier this season from a Reddit user. It had photos of a player wearing a similar uniform, standing on the CTC ice surface on a non-game day, perhaps as part of the production of the very video that was shown to fans on Tuesday, or simply testing how it looked to the TV cameras.

For example, for TV viewers, going with black numbers directly on red is rarely a good choice. They look fine and they're legible up close but the lack of colour contrast makes it a struggle on the standard wide shot from a distance. Perhaps the gold trim in this case will make them stand out enough. Regardless, this is the kind of thing they test for.

The only visible difference in the two images might be the added detail in the centurion's red plume and possibly the removal of the S logo on the shoulders, but it's hard to tell for certain. 

Image

(Image at left credit: Sens Reddit user)

It's probably not fair to fully judge a jersey until you see it in person, or at least in higher resolution. But barring any last minute changes, this gives you a good sense of what appears to be the Sens' new thirds that will launch in September.

We'll have more on Tuesday's Season Seat Member Spring Summit coming up shortly.

Steve Warne
The Hockey News Ottawa

Two Intriguing Right-Shot UFA Defensemen Who Would Look Good In Ottawa This FallTwo Intriguing Right-Shot UFA Defensemen Who Would Look Good In Ottawa This FallWith veteran Nick Jensen recovering from hip surgery and uncertain to start the 2025–26 season, the Ottawa Senators would be wise to explore the free agent market for some reliable, defensively sound options to stabilize and provide some top-four depth to their blue line.

More Sens Headlines:

Drake Batherson Doesn’t Belong Anywhere Near Ottawa's Trade Bait Board
Ottawa Senators Shed Light on Nick Jensen’s Injury, Still Uncertain On Recovery Timeline
Senators Sign Tyler Kleven To New Contract As His Two-Way Potential Begins To Emerge
Building A Contender: What The Ottawa Senators Can Learn From The Oilers And Panthers
Will The Sens Use Their First-Round Pick On Another Calgary Hitman?
Potential First-Round Draft Targets For The Ottawa Senators: Defenceman Blake Fiddler

Shohei Ohtani (and Glasnow and Snell) could be back on Dodgers' mound sooner than expected

Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani winds up to throw a pitch from the mound during batting practice
Shohei Ohtani throws live batting practice before a game against the New York Mets on May 25. (Adam Hunger / Associated Press)

The most important pitches for the Dodgers on Tuesday came long before the start of their game that night.

In the second of a key three-game series against the San Diego Padres, the Dodgers found themselves in an uncomfortably familiar position: Lacking an available starting pitcher amid a wave of early-season injuries, and turning instead to a collection of minor league arms thrust into big league duty; set to open the game with Lou Trivino, and then have Matt Sauer pitch bulk innings.

It’s not what the Dodgers envisioned entering the year, when they expected to have a rotation of potential All-Stars on the mound every day.

It was eerily similar to the circumstances they faced last October –– their Game 4, elimination-staving win against the Padres in last year’s National League Division Series, specifically.

Earlier Tuesday, however, the Dodgers had reasons for optimism: These current circumstances might not last much longer.

Hours before the game, Shohei Ohtani, Tyler Glasnow and Blake Snell took notable steps in their recovery from injuries.

For the first time in a while, they could start to see light at the end of the pitching tunnel.

On the Petco Park mound, Ohtani threw the third live batting practice in his continued recovery from a 2023 Tommy John surgery, hurling 44 pitches over three simulated innings while racking up six strikeouts against a pair of rookie league hitters from the organization.

Read more:Shaikin: Despite a quiet offseason, Padres are still making noise in competitive NL West

Back in Los Angeles, Glasnow threw the third bullpen session of his recovery from a shoulder inflammation injury, and could be getting close to facing live hitters himself in the near future.

And after Ohtani finished his session in San Diego, Snell threw 15 pitches in the bullpen, his first full bullpen session since suffering a setback in his recovery from shoulder inflammation back in April.

“Really encouraging,” manager Dave Roberts said. “You can start to see us get to the other side. It’s stuff to look forward to.”

Ohtani’s live session was the day’s biggest development. He made a significant jump in workload, going from the 29 pitches he threw two weekends ago at Dodger Stadium to a 44-pitch outing Tuesday that concluded with 23 throws in his third and final inning. But, after battling poor command in his previous live BP, he showed increased consistency and sharpness with all of his pitches, giving up just a ground-ball single and a lone walk while including 15 swings-and-misses with a variety of offerings.

“It wasn't just pure power and velocity,” pitching coach Mark Prior said of Ohtani, whose fastball averaged around 94-96 mph. “He got some swing-and-misses on his off-speed pitches. He's being able to keep guys off balance and mess up their timing. There's different types of misses. I think from that standpoint, those are good things.”

Roberts came away so encouraged, he even hinted at a more optimistic timeline for when Ohtani –– who hasn’t pitched in a big league game since August 2023 –– might be able to join the team’s active rotation, saying the chances are “north of zero” that the right-hander could return before the All-Star break.

In recent weeks, Roberts had said Ohtani wouldn’t be back until after the Midsummer Classic.

“It’s tempting,” Roberts said. “I’m sure Shohei feels tempted to just kind of rip the Band-Aid off and get into a big league game. But I think we’re doing a good job of being patient. And truth be told, I don’t think anyone knows the right time to get him in a big league game. We’re still being very careful, I guess.”

Read more:Andy Pages is used to beating the odds, and he's doing it again with the Dodgers

Another notable development from Roberts on Tuesday: Ohtani might not have to complete “a full build-up” before pitching in big league games.

“Anything he can give us is certainly additive,” Roberts said, an idea underscored by Ohtani’s two-way player status, which would effectively make him an extra arm on the Dodgers’ staff without counting against their 13-pitcher roster max.

“I still stand by him, and [head team physician] Dr. [Neal] ElAttrache and the training staff are going to drive this,” said Roberts, who wasn’t sure when Ohtani would throw his next live session. “I’m just anxious for the next one.”

Glasnow and Snell have more steps to complete in their comebacks, from their own live sessions to likely minor league rehab stints.

Prior also noted that those two will have to be more fully built up before they are activated, given the already overworked state of the Dodgers’ bullpen.

Still, Snell said after two months of lingering shoulder pain earlier this year, the breakthrough he has experienced in the last two weeks has renewed his confidence about how he’ll perform when he returns.

“I’m very excited,” he said after throwing at about 70% intensity level in his 15-pitch bullpen. “After this ‘pen, the ramp up is gonna start, and I can start pitching, and I know I’m gonna be a factor on the team again.”

Read more:Hernández: It's tempting to rush Shohei Ohtani back on the mound, but the Dodgers shouldn't do it

Prior offered similar encouragement with Glasnow’s recent work, noting his fastball is up to 95-96 mph.

“Everything looks good,” Prior said of Glasnow. “He really has been feeling good and the ball has been coming out really good.”

In the meantime, the Dodgers will have to continue to tread water. They currently have only four healthy starters in the rotation between Yoshinobu Yamamoto, Clayton Kershaw, Dustin May and Justin Wrobleski. And though Emmet Sheehan could be an option to return from his own Tommy John surgery after one more start in his minor league rehab next week, the recent loss of Tony Gonsolin –– and continued absence of Roki Sasaki, who has yet to progress past light catch play –– has only further limited the club’s pitching options.

That’s why, even on a day the Dodgers were patching together a pitching plan once again, they were finally feeling hopeful about the long-term state of their staff.

Ohtani, Snell and Glasnow are finally making strides toward returning.

The star-studded pitching staff the club had been planning for this season might soon become a reality once again.

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

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Jeff McNeil walks off Nationals as Mets steal 5-4 win in extra innings

Jeff McNeil needed just one pitch in the bottom of the 10th inning to drive in the winning run as the Mets came from behind to beat the Washington Nationals, 5-4, on Tuesday night at Citi Field.

McNeil jumped on a 94 mph fastball from Washington rookie reliever Cole Henry and hit it off the end of his bat (just 68.7 mph exit velocity), but the ball found the grass in right field and Luisangel Acuña, in as a pinch-runner, easily scampered home to end the game, which New York once trailed 3-0.

The Mets are now 25-7 at home this season, the best home start in franchise history and have MLB’s best home winning percentage as they have won four straight in Flushing and eight of their last nine. New York improved to 43-24 on the year.

Here are the takeaways...

- With the Mets down two with two outs in the eighth, Jose A. Ferrer looked to be cruising to a clean inning and had Starling Marte down in the count 0-2. But Marte worked a seven-pitch walk. Juan Soto, down 0-2 to the Nats' lefty, hit a sharp liner to right that Robert Hassell III missed with a dive and had the ball bounce past him, to score Marte and put Soto at second.

Washington then went to closer Kyle Finnegan to face Pete Alonso, who was 0-for-3 to that point. But the Mets' slugger got an 0-1 splitter that hung just enough, and he smashed it off the wall in the left field corner to tie the game. Alonso beat the throw to second, but came off the bag and was tagged out to end the inning, but the damage was done.

- The Mets were only in a position to erase the two-run deficit late because the bullpen got out of some tight spots. Jose Butto was the first man out of the Mets’ bullpen and stranded an inherited runner with a strikeout and groundout to short before getting the first out of the seventh. Lefty José Castillo entered and promptly walked and hit the first two batters he faced. Against James Wood, a third straight lefty, Castillo induced an inning-ending 6-3 twin killing.

Castillo stayed on for the eighth and got a strikeout but allowed a double to the right-center gap to pinch-hitter Andrés Chaparro, in his first at-bat of the season, and walked Luis Garcia Jr. The lefty allowed three of the five lefties he faced to reach. But Justin Garza entered with runners on first and second for his Mets’ debut and got Alex Call looking at some 98 mph heat and Hassell III swinging at a cutter.

Edwin Diaz got the top half of the ninth in the tie game and struck out two on some nasty offerings, needing just 12 pitches to get the job done. Reed Garrett, pitching on four days' rest, got a grounder to first to push the ghost runner to third to start the tenth. But ge stuck out Nathaniel Lowe swinging at a splitter in the dirt and got Chaparro on a soft fly to left to strand the runner.

- Griffin Canning got in trouble with hangers in the first inning: CJ Abrams rocketed a knee-high changeup off the wall in right for a double before Lowe uncorked a hanging slider for a 415-foot home run to right to put the Mets behind early.

Canning allowed the leadoff man to reach in the second with a single to center off his hands and a two-out, 0-2 single to center off the end of the bat to give Washington another scoring chance. Abrams stung the Mets’ starter again this time with an RBI double on a bouncer just over the first-base bag, but the Nationals ran themselves out of the inning. After the ball bounced off the half wall, Soto reached the ball with José Tena still two steps short of third base. Third base coach Ricky Gutierrez waved Tena home, but Soto’s one-bounce throw from shallow right got him at the plate by 10 feet.

The Mets' starter allowed another leadoff single to start the third, but he retired the next seven batters he faced, including an eight-pitch 1-2-3 fourth. But Abrams ended that streak when he snuck an opposite-field homer over the left-field wall on a down-and-away fastball.

Canning ended the fifth with his 12th career pickoff and first with the Mets, nailing Wood at first. But his night came to an end with a one-out walk in the sixth. His final line: 5.1 innings, four runs on seven hits, two walks, and four strikeouts, throwing 87 pitches (53 strikes). Canning did keep a streak alive: Mets starters have now allowed four or fewer runs in 66 of 67 starts.

- Brandon Nimmo singled through the right side of the infield to start the bottom of the second and, with two outs, stole second base to give McNeil a RBI chance off MacKenzie Gore, a pitcher he likes hitting against. McNeil made it eight hits in 11 at-bats (all singles) with a bloop to right that just found the outfield grass to score Nimmo from second.

The rest of the Mets weren’t so successful against Gore, who entered the game leading the NL with 108 strikeouts, as Soto, Luis Torrens, Tyrone Taylor, Ronny Mauricio, and Marte were all strikeout victims early. 

But Soto got revenge on Gore and his former team, driving a 2-2 slider up in the zone 373 feet the opposite way for a solo homer, his 12th on the season. Taylor also got some revenge, lacing a high fastball down the left-field line for a two-out double in the fourth, but this time McNeil flied out to left to strand the runner.

After six innings of two-run ball with six strikeouts, the Nats lifted Gore, who had thrown just 89 pitches, and the Mets were glad to see the back of him.

- In Aug. 2022, the Nationals traded Soto to the Padres. In Tuesday’s game, six of the eight players in the deal appeared in the game as Washington started four of the five players they received (Abrams, Wood, Gore, and Hassell III) and had Josh Bell, who went to San Diego in the deal, but is back with Washington. The only players not to appear were one-time Met Luke Voit and Jarlin Susana, the No. 2 prospect in the Nats’ organization.

Game MVP: Jeff McNeil

McNeil has now reached base safely in each of the last 13 games and is batting .319 (15-for-47) with six runs, four doubles, four home runs, nine RBI, four walks, and a steal.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets and Nats renew their hostilities on Wednesday night with first pitch set for 7:05 p.m. on SNY.

Left-hander David Peterson (2.80 ERA, 1.259 WHIP in 70.2 innings) makes his 13th start of the season. He will look to outduel Washington right-hander Jake Irvin (4.02 ERA, 1.226 WHIP in 78.1 innings), making his 14th start of the campaign.

Mets prospect Jonah Tong strikes out eight, Ryan Clifford hits another home run for Double-A Binghamton

Mets pitching prospect Jonah Tong continues his domination of Double-A ball on Tuesday, striking out eight batters to pick up his fifth win of the season.

Tong made his 11th start with Binghamton and went through 5.1 innings relatively unscathed. His one blemish came in the fourth inning when he gave up a leadoff triple to Turner Hill and a one-out single to Adrian Sugastey to allow his one and only run of the game. Tong finished throwing 92 pitches (62 strikes) of one-run ball on four hits and two walks. He lowered his ERA to 1.99 on the season.

Along with his sub-2.00 ERA, Tong improved his record to 5-3 and now has 91 strikeouts in 54.1 innings pitched this season. His eight-strikeout performance followed his 11-K outing last week and now has seven starts with at least eight strikeouts in a game.

It was a fitting start for the reigning Eastern League Pitcher of the Month.

In support of Tong, Ryan Clifford got the Binghamton offense going. With two outs in the first, Clifford launched a solo shot to give Binghamton a lead they wouldn't relinquish. The left-handed slugger finished 2-for-3 and has now homered in three of his last four games.

Clifford bumped his average to .234 and now has 11 home runs to go with his 34 RBI.

San Antonio Spurs star Victor Wembanyama staying at Shaolin temple in China for a few days

Victor Wembanyama is in China, and it's not all about vacation.

The San Antonio Spurs star is in the midst of what's expected to be a 10-day stay at a Shaolin temple in Zhengzhou, China. The temple is a place that welcomes visitors who wish to study Chan meditation, Shaolin Kung Fu, traditional Chinese medicine and more.

The NBA China office confirmed that Wembanyama is at the temple, and some Chinese media also confirmed his presence there with the temple itself. “Concentrate on training!” read part of a social media post on the NBA's Weibo account, which also revealed the plans for a 10-day stay.

Then again, the secret was getting out through other social media means anyway.

Some photos of Wembanyama with a shaved head - it wasn't shaved when he arrived in China - and wearing a robe similar to the other monks began widely circulating this week. One of the photos showed the 7-foot-4 center sitting on a Chinese style chair in front of multiple Buddha sculptures.

There evidently was some sightseeing going on earlier in the trip as well.

“Victor Wembanyama, live from China, on the Great Wall itself, having an amazing time. It's crazy," he said on a video posted to Instagram by the Spurs' account and others.

Wembanyama is expected back in the U.S. in the coming weeks and likely will be with the Spurs' delegation that goes to the NBA Summer League in Las Vegas next month. The Spurs, like many teams, often have many players on their NBA roster with the summer league team for various events.

The 21-year-old Frenchman led the NBA in blocked shots during the regular season, despite his season ending in February - just after his first All-Star Game appearance - because of deep vein thrombosis in his right shoulder. The Spurs are hopeful that he will be able to play when next season begins, and the French national team also has expressed hope that Wembanyama will be able to play for his country at this summer's European championships.

Wembanyama was the league’s rookie of the year last season and was widely expected to be a front-runner in this season's defensive player of the year race. He attempted 403 3-pointers and blocked 176 shots this season - no player in NBA history has ever finished a season with those numbers - and he was averaging 24.3 points, 11 rebounds, 3.8 blocks and 3.7 assists when the DVT was detected.

The only other player in NBA history to finish a season averaging all those numbers was Kareem Abdul-Jabbar in 1975-76.

DeMarcus Cousins suspended for remainder of Puerto Rican league season after confrontation with fans

DeMarcus Cousins

Sacramento Kings center DeMarcus Cousins watches the final minutes of the game against the San Antonio Spurs from the bench after fouling out of during the second half of an NBA basketball game a in Sacramento, Calif., Wednesday, April 18, 2012. The Spurs won 127-102.(AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)

AP

It's 2025, DeMarcus Cousins has been out of the NBA for three years, yet we're still talking about him beefing with fans.

Cousins was playing for Mets de Guaynabo in the Puerto Rican Professional Basketball League — "was" because he has been suspended from the league for the remainder of the season and fined $4,250 for a "disqualifying foul, a technical foul, and acts that incite violence or provocation," fines that could jump up to $10,000 if Cousins cannot "show cause" as to why he should not be fined more, reports, Baloncesto Superior Nacional.

Videos of the confrontations went viral. First, there was an incident with a fan courtside.

When Cousins was ejected, he went back to the locker room, and on the way, fans threw their drinks on him, which led him to try an go after those fans.

While the behavior of those fans was more aggressive than anything Cousins would have seen in his 11 NBA seasons, no league is going to let physically attacking fans go unpunished.

Cousins played in 11 NBA seasons, averaging 19.6 points and 10.2 rebounds per game, being a four-time All-Star and two-time All-NBA player.

Sienna Toohey, 16, surfaces as bright hope for Australian swimming

  • Schoolgirl wins 100m breaststroke to qualify for world championships

  • Toohey only started swimming as she wanted to play water polo

A 16-year-old schoolgirl is being hailed as the future of Australian swimming after earning world championship selection. Sienna Toohey left seasoned campaigners including Kaylee McKeown in awe with a stunning swim at Australia’s selection trials in Adelaide on Tuesday night.

The Albury teenager, who only started swimming because she wanted to play water polo, triumphed in the women’s 100m breaststroke. Toohey’s victory, in a personal best time of 1:06.55, secured her berth at the world titles in Singapore from 27 July to 3 August.

Continue reading...

Pacers need more from Tyrese Haliburton in Game 3, but that’s more than simply scoring

INDIANAPOLIS — Indiana struggled to score in the first half of Game 2 against the swarming Oklahoma City defense, putting up just 41 points on 34.9% shooting, including shooting just 46.2% in the paint. The problems started with their all-everything point guard, Tyrese Haliburton, who shot just 2-of-7 through three quarters, with not one of those attempts coming in the paint.

That's happened to the Pacers a handful of times this season and in the playoffs — most notably Game 5 of the Eastern Conference Finals against the Knicks, when he had 8 points on 2-of-7 shooting for the game. In the face of intense defensive pressure, Haliburton defers to teammates — if the defense is loading up on him, someone else has to be open. His instinct is to find that open man.

As fans, we have been conditioned to expect our stars to attack in the face of that pressure — people want Haliburton to go Kobe and start shooting over triple-teams. People want him to be like Mike. Be selfish and pull his team up with him.

That's not how Haliburton is wired. That's not the Pacers' formula.

That's Indiana's dilemma for Game 3 and the rest of the series: The Pacers need more Haliburton, but it can't be just scoring. He's not going to go out and jack up 25 shots Wednesday night in Game 3 — he hasn't taken more than 23 in any game this season. Indiana thrives when Haliburton is setting the table and everyone is eating, but he's got to eat more, too.

Thunder pressure defense

Haliburton's challenge starts with the problem 28 other teams have faced this season: Oklahoma City's physical, high-pressure defense.

"They got more guys than most teams in the NBA that are high level at the point of attack," Haliburton said. "They're really connected on the defensive end. I feel like they mix up coverages. I think coach [Mark] Daigneault isn't afraid to do things on the fly. He doesn't do everything that's like very traditional…

"I think the biggest thing is just personnel. Their personnel is different than everywhere else."

"We've got guys that are hard to screen either because of strength or quickness or both," Daigneault said. "[Lu] Dort comes to mind. [Alex] Caruso comes to mind. [Jalen Williams] comes to mind. Cason Wallace, for sure. They're good pursue guys. Having guys at the rim is helpful [Chet Holmgren, Isaiah Hartenstein]. You can't spring downhill and assume there's something good there for you. Hopefully, the help is deterring that to a degree."

Haliburton and other Pacers mentioned leaning into watching the film of Game 2 (and the first half of Game 1), seeing what didn't work, and what worked better in the fourth quarter of Game 2 (when Haliburton scored 12 points and looked more like himself, but it was too little to late). "The answers always lie in the film," Haliburton said.

Pacers mixing it up

When discussing the Thunder defense, Haliburton employed phrasing typically reserved for describing how to slow down an elite offensive player.

"You can't give these guys the same dosage, the same look of anything," Haliburton said. "If you try to run high pick-and-roll all game, they just crawl into you, really pack the paint, nothing is open. There's got to be a mix of things. Got to be off the ball, playing off the pitch, coming off ball screens. You can't run the same thing consistently against these guys. You got to mix it up.

"We got to do a much better job of that. I feel like I probably got caught in too many high pick-and-rolls where they can really pack it in and end up getting shots late against the clock, especially the first half of both games."

To a man, the Pacers talked about getting the ball into the paint more and working inside-out to get their attempts, as they have done all season. It also could mean a little more Pascal Siakam with the ball in his hands for the Pacers.

"[Siakam is] one of the few guys on their team that really looks for isolation to score. A lot of other guys, it's through the flow of their offense and pace," Caruso said.

Whatever the Pacers do to adjust, it won't change how the Thunder want to play.

"My approach will be the same. Our approach will be the same," Dort said.

Indiana is going to come out at home Wednesday night in a critical Game 3 (with the series tied 1-1) and throw its best punch — and that punch has to have Haliburton shooting more.

Just not too much.

Mets' Sean Manaea strikes out four in second rehab start with High-A Brooklyn

Mets left-hander Sean Manaea had a solid second rehab start Tuesday night in Coney Island as he works his way back from an oblique injury.

After allowing four runs (three earned) in 1.2 innings on Friday, Manaea bounced back to deal 2.2 scoreless innings.

Of course, his outing got off to an auspicious start, as he plunked left-handed batting Joseph Sullivan on the second pitch he threw. Manaea allowed a steal of second on his third pitch before getting a flyout to right, but an infield single to first put runners on the corners with one out. A ball in the dirt put two in scoring position, but the Mets' lefty got a strikeout swinging and a pop-up to right to end the threat.

Manaea got to pitch with a lead after the Cyclones plated two runs in the home half of the first inning, and after retiring the first two of the frame, adding a second strikeout swinging, he issued his first walk of his rehab before recording another strikeout swinging on a nasty breaking pitch.

In his final inning of the night, the lefty sandwiched an infield single to short around another swinging strikeout on a breaking pitch and a pop out to third base.

Manaea threw 46 pitches (31 strikes) to get 10 outs, allowing one hit, one walk, a hit-by-pitch, and striking out four.

Paul Maurice Makes History In Panthers' Game 3 Win

The Florida Panthers picked up a massive 6-1 win over the Edmonton Oilers in Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final. With this blowout win, the Panthers now have a 2-1 series lead over the Oilers in the series. 

With Florida's Game 3 win, Panthers head coach Paul Maurice has hit an incredibly rare milestone behind the bench. 

According to NHL Public Relations, Maurice is now just the third coach in the history of the NHL to reach 1,000 career wins (regular season and playoffs combined). The only other coaches who have reached this incredible feat are Scotty Bowman (1,467 wins) and Joel Quenneville (1,090 wins).

This latest accomplishment for Maurice only shows just how fantastic of a career he has put together as an NHL coach, and the Panthers are certainly lucky to have him as their bench boss. 

Maurice and the Panthers will now look to stay hot and pick up another victory in Game 4 from here. It would be huge if they did, as the Panthers would take a commanding 3-1 series lead over the Oilers. 

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Photo Credit: © Jim Rassol-Imagn Images