Mets' Jesse Winker exits Sunday's game at Cardinals with right side discomfort

Jesse Winkerwas removed from the first game of Sunday's split doubleheader against the St. Louis Cardinals in the bottom of the fourth inning.

The Mets later announced that Winker was forced to exit due to right side discomfort.

Winker started in left field for the first time this season and was replaced defensively by Jeff McNeil, who moved from second base to the outfield.

In the bottom of the third inning, Winker caught a fly ball and made a throw home. The runner was safe at the plate, but Nolan Arenado ended up getting caught in a rundown to end the inning.

Carlos Mendoza confirmed after the game that Winker hurt himself on that throw home, feeling something in "the oblique area."

"We’ll see what we’re dealing with here. He’s getting an MRI right now," Mendoza said.

"When you hear that area, those are tricky. I don’t want to get ahead of myself here, but he’s getting an MRI.

Winker, who drove in a sac fly with an RBI in his only plate appearance before exiting the game, is hitting .239 with a .739 OPS this season, driving in nine runs to go along with one home run.

Blade Tidwell hit hard in debut, Mets drop first game of doubleheader against Cardinals

The Mets fell to the St. Louis Cardinals by a score of 6-5 in the first game of a doubleheader on Sunday.

Here are the key takeaways...

-Blade Tidwell’s major league debut didn’t exactly go to plan. While the right-hander showed off a 98 mph fastball and a nasty breaking ball, his command was a bit all over the place. Tidwell allowed a solo home run to Willson Contreras in the second inning, but things really didn’t start to spiral until the fourth. Tidwell allowed three hits, walked two, and hit another batter in the fourth, and a four-spot on the board ended his day.

Overall, Tidwell went 3.2 innings, allowing six earned runs on nine hits, striking out two, walking three, and hitting a batter.

-The Mets also dealt with an injury in this game, as Jesse Winker was forced to exit in the fourth inning due to right side discomfort. Making his first start in the outfield this season, Winker made a throw to the plate in the third, but it’s currently unclear as to whether or not that caused the discomfort.

With Winker forced out, Carlos Mendoza had to play some musical chairs, moving Jeff McNeil from second base to left, Luisangel Acuña from third to second, and bringing in Mark Vientos to play third.

-Pete Alonso remains completely locked in at the plate. He doubled in each of his first two at-bats, coming around to score in the first inning on a Brandon Nimmo RBI double. Alonso now has a 1.130 OPS on the season.

-Lefty Genesis Cabrera did a nice job of registering six outs for the Mets, getting out a of a first-and-third situation in the fourth after Tidwell was pulled. With another game coming up this evening, the Mets needed some length out of their pitchers, and Cabrera tossed two scoreless innings, allowing two hits.

-Trailing by three runs in the top of the eighth, the Mets built a rally against former Met reliever Phil Maton. Starting with a Luis Torrens walk, the Mets started passing the baton, and Francisco Lindor came through with the bases loaded, hitting a single up the middle to score a pair of runs and keep the chain moving.

With the bases loaded and JoJo Romero now on to pitch, Alonso was called out on strikes on a more than questionable 3-2 call from home plate umpire Jim Wolf, and Nimmo flew out harmlessly to center to keep the Cardinals up by a run.

In the ninth, the Mets moved the potential tying run to third base with two outs, but Acuña, who had three hits on the day, popped out on the infield to end the game.

Who was the game MVP?

Contreras, who homered and drove in three with three hits in the game.

Highlights

Upcoming schedule

Game two of the split doubleheader is set for 6:15 p.m.

Tylor Megill will take the mound, opposite fellow righty Andre Pallante.

Warriors avoid collapse, advance to West semis by beating Rockets in Game 7

Warriors avoid collapse, advance to West semis by beating Rockets in Game 7 originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Warriors made it more complicated than it needed to be, but they are rocketing to the Western Conference semifinals.

No. 7-seeded Golden State completed the first-round NBA playoff series upset of the Houston Rockets on Sunday at Toyota Center, beating the No. 2 seed 103-89 in Game 7.

Golden State built a 3-1 series lead but coughed up Game 5 in Houston and Game 6 in San Francisco before stabilizing the ship to win Game 7.

Surprisingly, Buddy Hield led the way with 33 points, while Jimmy Butler chipped in 20 points to help the Warriors advance.

Steph Curry was cold for most of the game but got hot in the second half and finished with 22 points. Draymond Green also bounced back with 16 huge points.

Golden State will head to Minnesota to take on the No. 6-seeded Timberwolves in the second round, with Game 1 scheduled for Tuesday night at Target Center.

Here’s the schedule for the Warriors-Timberwolves series:

Game 1: Tuesday, May 6 — Warriors at Timberwolves — 6:30 p.m. PT — TNT
Game 2: Thursday, May 8 — Warriors at Timberwolves — 5:30 p.m. PT — TNT
Game 3: Saturday, May 10 — Timberwolves at Warriors — 5:30 p.m. PT — ABC
Game 4: Monday, May 12 — Timberwolves at Warriors — 7 p.m. PT — ESPN
Game 5*: Wednesday, May 14 — Warriors at Timberwolves — Time TBD — TNT
Game 6*: Sunday, May 18 — Timberwolves at Warriors — Time TBD — TV TBD
Game 7*: Tuesday, May 20 — Warriors at Timberwolves — 5:30 p.m. PT — ESPN

NBC Sports Bay Area will have Pregame coverage one hour before tip-off of each game, along with Postgame coverage immediately after the final buzzer.

The winner of the Warriors-Timberwolves series will face the winner of the Oklahoma City Thunder-Denver Nuggets second-round series.

The Warriors won three of their four regular-season meetings with the Timberwolves, including both games at Target Center in Minneapolis.

The contentious first-round series with the Rockets featured several dust-ups between the players, but the Warriors prevailed in the end.

The Warriors stole home-court advantage by winning Game 1 in Houston. But the Rockets bounced back in Game 2, aided by Butler leaving eight minutes into the contest due to a pelvic contusion sustained after being undercut by guard Amen Thompson.

When the series shifted to the Bay Area, the Warriors pulled out a thrilling Game 3 without Butler. When the six-time NBA All-Star returned in Game 4, he gutted through 40 minutes and sealed the win with clutch free throws and a huge rebound in the final seconds.

The Warriors failed to put the nail in the Rockets’ coffin Wednesday in Houston and Friday in San Francisco, needing to travel back to the Lone Star State to take care of business.

The Warriors now are 5-0 in NBA playoff series against the Rockets.

Curry, Butler and Draymond Green believe they have enough to win the NBA championship this season, and they took another step toward achieving that goal by defusing the Rockets.

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Playoff Notes For Rangers Fans And Others

Perry Nelson-Imagn Images

1. Edmonton's Oilers could very well make it to the Final Round. Guess who's coaching McDavid, Inc.? None other than Kris Knoblauch. He's the fella who the Rangers bypassed for Peter Laviolette. (Chris Drury's mistake of a lifetime.)

2. Tonight's Game Seven between St.Louis and Winnipeg figures to be as exciting as last night's amazing Dallas third period comeback that upset Colorado.

What Mike Sullivan Could Change About The RangersWhat Mike Sullivan Could Change About The RangersThe Rangers media propagandists already have anointed newly appointed coach Mike Sullivan hockey sainthood above and beyond all stupidity.

3. The demise of the Avalanche should persuade Brock Nelson to return to Long Island where he belongs.

4. Leafs vs. Panthers looks like another series that could go the limit.

5. Toronto has its strongest team – from coach Berube on out – since Auston Matthews signed on as captain. 

6. Goaltending, which once was the Leafs' weakness, is more than adequate with Anthony Stolarz between the pipes.

7. The Maven considers Brad Marchand Florida's secret weapon.

8. In Vegas, the saying is "Never bet against the Champions."

9. If Florida has any distinct advantage it's coach Paul Maurice.

10. But the Champs' invisible threat remains attrition. (Alias: too much hockey for too many seasons.)

New York Knicks vs Boston Celtics Preview: 2025 NBA Playoffs series prediction, schedule, player to watch

The Boston Celtics swept the season series from the New York Knicks and it wasn't particularly close, with the average score being 125-109. Will the playoffs be any different, with both teams a little banged up? Let's break this series down.

When does the Knicks vs. the Celtics begin?

New York travels to Boston for Game 1 of the series on Monday, May 5, at 7 p.m. Eastern. The series goes almost every other day (with a couple of two-day breaks) the rest of the way.

New York vs. Boston Playoffs Schedule 2025

All times are Eastern (* = if necessary)
Game 1: Knicks at Celtics (Mon. May 5, 7 ET, TNT)
Game 2: Knicks at Celtics (Wed. May 7, 7 ET, TNT)
Game 3: Celtics at Knicks (Sat. May 10, TBD, ABC)
Game 4: Celtics at Knicks (Mon. May 12, TBD, ESPN)
Game 5: Knicks at Celtics (Wed. May 14, TBD, TNT)*
Game 6: Celtics at Knicks (Fri. May 16, TBD, ESPN)*
Game 7: Knicks at Celtics (Mon. May 19, 8 ET, TNT)*

Player to watch: Karl-Anthony Towns

With the Celtics having Kristaps Porzingis, this is the series where the Knicks truly need KAT to be at his best. New York got away with his subpar efforts in Games 5 and 6 of the Pistons series, but that's an easy path to a sweep if he plays that way against the reigning champs. And it isn't only about his offensive production. Boston exposed Towns repeatedly on the defensive end of the floor in their regular-season meetings, three of which were blowouts. Having a healthy Mitchell Robinson should help; we'll see how often Tom Thibodeau uses the "two bigs" lineup. However, New York needs a consistently elite Towns to pull off the upset, regardless of what Jalen Brunson brings to the table.
Raphielle Johnson, Rotoworld basketball analyst

Keys to watch for in New York vs. Boston

1) Can Knicks follow Magic’s defensive blueprint?

Orlando's defense did the best job we have seen of mucking up Joe Mazzulla's offensive doctrine, defending on an island (not helping as much and not getting in rotation), chasing Boston's shooters off the arc, forcing the Celtics to beat them another way (a lot of Jayson Tatum, plus the Boston's own elite defense).

Can the Knicks follow that blueprint? More importantly, will Tom Thibodeau even try? OG Anunoby and Mikal Bridges are quality perimeter defenders, but Boston rolls out five players who can shoot, which means Towns will have to defend in space this series. That is trouble. Beyond not having the personnel to execute the Magic's strategy — Orlando is loaded with long, physical defenders, New York is not — it's not Thibodeau's style to change drastically from what got the Knicks to the dance. Expect the Knicks to switch a lot this series, it's what they did in the last two meetings against the Celtics in the regular season.

The problem is that it allows Boston to get back to its drive-and-kick, swing-swing to an open 3-pointer offense where they thrive.

2) Brunson and Towns as targets

The Celtics are relentless — if they find a weakness they will go at it repeatedly, every chance they get. The most glaring weakness for the Knicks is that their two key offensive players, Jalen Brunson and Karl-Anthony Towns, are not great defenders. The Celtics will drag them into pick-and-rolls every chance they get, then drive the lane, which starts their kick-out-to-a-three offense. The Celtics will look to wear the Knicks' stars down.

If the Knicks are going to have any chance in this series, they have to play faster than normal, and Brunson and Towns have to hold up defensively. That may be too much to ask.

3) Injuries

The Celtics come in a little banged up after a very physical series with the Magic. Jrue Holiday has missed time due to a sore hamstring and that likely continues into the start of this series, Jayson Tatum is playing through a sore wrist, and Jaylen Brown has a bone bruise and right knee posterior impingement issue. However, Boston had a lengthy rest after knocking off Orlando, while the Knicks kept playing. Boston is feeling better.

For New York, Brunson is playing through a sore ankle (which appeared to limit him at times in the final game, except in the clutch), and Josh Hart has a wrist issue. While both teams are not at 100%, injuries are not what will decide this series.
—Kurt Helin, NBC Sports lead NBA writer

Predictions

Jay Croucher (NBC Sports Lead Betting Analyst): Celtics in 5

Worst possible matchup for the Knicks - KAT struggles in space defensively, and no team is better placed to punish him than Boston with the best spacing in the league. Tatum and Brown will hunt Brunson on switches relentlessly.

On the other end, the Celtics have elite defensive options to make Brunson's life difficult. The Knicks have great talent but it hasn't clicked at the highest level all year - it magically happening in round 2 of the playoffs seems improbable.

Vaughn Dalzell (NBC Sports Betting Analyst): Celtics in 6

This series will be a dogfight and while the Knicks improved this year, the Celtics are just too well-rounded to beat. While both teams have four constant scoring threats in the lineup (Tatum, Brown, Porzingis, White vs Brunson, KAT, Anunoby, Bridges) -- I am not sure about the New York role players and bench having enough in them to give the Knicks more than two wins in this series. Boston's bench is so much deeper and offers instant offense, unlike New York's trio of Miles McBride, Mitchell Robinson, and Cam Payne.

Kurt Helin (NBC Sports lead NBA writer): Celtics in 5

If anything, I would be closer to moving this to Boston in a sweep over Boston in six, I just don't see a path to success in this series for New York: The Celtics will win not only the 3-point game but also the possession game in this series, and that is just too much for the Knicks to overcome. However, we'll give the Knicks one game, assuming a cold-shooting Celtics squad and a big Jalen Brunson night, and say it's a gentleman's sweep.

Ramírez returns to Guardians' lineup after missing time because of a sprained right ankle

TORONTO — Cleveland Guardians star José Ramírez was back in the lineup for Sunday’s game against the Blue Jays, two days after the third baseman left in the third inning because of a mild right ankle sprain.

The six-time All-Star was injured when he stumbled and fell while crossing first base on an infield single. Ramírez went down after being struck in the back by a throw from Blue Jays right-hander Chris Bassitt.

Ramírez was batting third Sunday against right-hander Bowden Francis.

Ramírez sat out Saturday when Cleveland beat Toronto 5-3. He went 2 for 2 before departing Friday, boosting his average to .274. He has five home runs and 15 RBIs in 31 games.

In last Thursday’s 4-3 victory over Minnesota, Ramírez became the first primary third baseman to reach 250 homers and 250 stolen bases.

Josh Hart expects Knicks to play with 'level of freedom' as playoff underdogs against Celtics

If the Knicks soon punch a ticket to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time in 25 years, they'll achieve the long-coveted feat as undisputed underdogs. Their semifinal-round opponent is the reigning champion Boston Celtics, poised to defend the NBA's crown and reassert dominance shown during four regular-season matchups.

The storied history between the Knicks and Celtics holds no weight with today's players. While this series marks the 17th playoff meeting between the division rivals -- the second most for any pair of opponents in league history -- they haven't battled this late in a season since 2013.

Nevertheless, the Knicks face a rather tall order with the Celtics stamped as clear-cut favorites and owning home-court advantage. But the outside noise from doubters isn't penetrating their walls. The upcoming games will provide a clean slate and an opportunity to change narratives.

This is how Josh Hart feels, at least.

"If we're counted out already, we should play with a great level of freedom," the Knicks' guard said after Sunday's practice. "We don't really care too much what the outside world said. We're focused on how we feel internally... We don't really involve ourselves with what other people think. The same people who praise us one day, kill us the next. We're focused on us."

The Knicks were consensus favorites in the first round, and nearly closed out their series against the Detroit Pistons in five games. But inconsistent play from some key contributors and the natural uptick in physicality stretched the bout, and New York managed to avoid a do-or-die Game 7 with last-second heroics from Jalen Brunson on the road in Game 6.

In order to outlast the Celtics, the Knicks will need to display toughness from the jump. They'll also need to learn from past mistakes and address their weak points. Boston made 39 more three-pointers than New York in their four-game regular-season sweep. According to NBA.com, that's tied for the fourth-biggest differential for any regular-season series since the three-point line's inception in 1979.

Hart serves best as a facilitator in transition and ball hawk near the glass. His aggressiveness on both ends of the floor can wreak havoc on opponents. But the Knicks would welcome more offense from the double-double machine in extended minutes -- he averaged just 11.8 points across six first-round games. Suffice to say, there's room for growth and pressure to deliver with the stage even brighter.

"I think it'll be a different series. I've never played against [the Celtics] in the playoffs," Hart said. "The physicality always heightens in the playoffs. We can handle the physicality, but they're such a skillful team, we've got to make sure we're not just worried about physicality. We're making sure we're locked-in mentally to their tendencies. Not just their plays, but their personnel."

A trip to the East Finals requires four wins, and the odds of the Knicks racking them up are undoubtedly daunting. They struggled mightily against elite competition this season, finishing a lowly 0-10 against the NBA's top three teams. Four of those losses came against the Celtics, while two came against a potential East Finals opponent in the Cleveland Cavaliers.

The Knicks and Celtics will begin their Eastern Conference semifinal series on Monday night, with tip-off scheduled for 7 p.m. at TD Garden.

Atalanta fan stabbed to death in clashes with Inter supporters, police confirm

  • Male in his late teens arrested over incident, say police
  • Violence ‘must never happen again’, says Gasperini

A 26-year-old fan of Serie A side Atalanta was stabbed to death during clashes between Atalanta and Inter supporters in the northern city of Bergamo, Italy’s police said.

The groups of supporters clashed in a pub in Bergamo on Saturday night after one of the Inter supporters chanted provocatively, the head of the carabinieri office in Bergamo, Carmelo Beringheli, said.

Continue reading...

Jrue Holiday off injury report, on track for Game 1 vs. Knicks

Jrue Holiday off injury report, on track for Game 1 vs. Knicks originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Celtics guard Jrue Holiday is expected to return from a strained right hamstring when Boston opens its Eastern Conference finals series against the Knicks on Monday night.

No Celtics players were listed on the injury report Sunday, meaning they could be at full strength when Game 1 tips off. It’s the first time Holiday hasn’t been on the injury report since he missed the final three games of Boston’s first-round series win over Orlando in five games.

Coach Joe Mazzulla said Holiday was able to “work on everything he wanted to work on” during Boston’s practice session Saturday.

One of the Celtics’ top defenders and facilitators on offense, Holiday averaged 10 points, 5.5 assists and 3.5 rebounds in the opening two games of the Magic series.

Also not listed on Boston’s latest report is Jaylen Brown, who has been dealing with a right knee injury that sidelined him for the Celtics’ final three regular-season games.

Giants recall Kyle Harrison from Triple-A, designate Lou Trivino for assignment

Giants recall Kyle Harrison from Triple-A, designate Lou Trivino for assignment originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Left-handed pitcher Kyle Harrison is back in the big leagues.

The Giants recalled the 23-year-old a few hours after their 9-3 win over the Colorado Rockies on Sunday.

To clear a spot for Harrison on the 26-man roster, the Giants designated veteran reliever Lou Trivino for assignment.

Harrison was a key member of the Giants’ 2024 starting rotation but didn’t earn a roster spot this spring, losing the fifth starter competition to Landen Roupp.

The Giants had Harrison begin the 2025 season with Triple-A Sacramento, where he posted a 3.46 ERA and 38 strikeouts in 26 innings over six starts.

San Francisco currently doesn’t have an open rotation spot, so Harrison could provide bullpen depth as the team heads on the road for three games against the Chicago Cubs and three more against the Minnesota Twins this week.

A day after Harrison started for the River Cats last week, Giants manager Bob Melvin was asked about the possibility of the Bay Area native joining San Francisco soon.

“I think he could be an option at any point in time, but what we have here is what we have,” Melvin told reporters last Thursday. “We’ve played pretty well, we’re trying to create an environment of some stability. Now obviously you’re going to want to get the best possible complement that you can here. But it’s good to see that the velocity is picking up, because for a guy like him, that’s important. More swings and misses. So it’s probably his best performance and we’ll see where we go from here.”

Trivino didn’t pitch poorly during his brief Giants tenure, but he gave up five earned runs in the Giants’ 11-3 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers on April 22 and had pitched just twice since — April 29 and Sunday.

The Giants always have had high hopes for Harrison, and the dynamic lefty gets his first chance to help the big-league club this week.

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Maple Leafs' Calm Vs Senators Could Shape Panthers Battle

May 1, 2025; Ottawa, Ontario, CAN;The Toronto Maple Leafs celebrate their win against Ottawa Senators in game six of the first round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Canadian Tire Centre. Mandatory Credit: Marc DesRosiers-Imagn Images

The Toronto Maple Leafs hit the ice for practice a day before the puck drops for Game 1 of their second-round series against the Florida Panthers on Sunday. As for the matchup, the Leafs can redeem themselves from 2023, in which they lost to the Panthers in just five games. 

With a new opportunity on the horizon, the Leafs are putting forth an aspect they lacked in that 2023 series – composure. 

It’s that same composure that helped Toronto close out the Ottawa Senators in six games during the Battle of Ontario last week during their first-round meeting. After taking a commanding 3-0 series lead, the Leafs saw Ottawa claw back with two straight wins, forcing a Game 6 on the road. For a team that had long been criticized for its inability to close out series, just 1-13 in elimination games since 2018, ahead of the game, it was a familiar, uncomfortable position.

‘Sometimes It’s Difficult’: Maple Leafs Head Coach Craig Berube Emphasizes Composure, Helping Assistant Marc Savard Stay Grounded During Postseason‘Sometimes It’s Difficult’: Maple Leafs Head Coach Craig Berube Emphasizes Composure, Helping Assistant Marc Savard Stay Grounded During PostseasonToronto Maple Leafs assistant coach Marc Savard has learned from bench boss Craig Berube to keep his composure amid his postseason passion.

But this time, the result was different.

“I think dealing with the ups and downs during the game and things not going well during the game, there's not a lot of emotion involved in it. It's just like, okay, we're good, we're going to keep working. I think our leaders have done a great job of handling that. I hear them on the bench talking, not just (Auston) Matthews and (Mitch) Marner. It's a lot of guys. (Chris) Tanev, (Jake) McCabe, these guys,” said head coach Craig Berube on Sunday.

“Just stick with it. Just stick with it. Being patient and not letting your emotions get too involved in everything. Yes, you need emotion to play this game, but it has to be directed in the right way,” he added.

‘That’s How You Win A Series’: Craig Berube Praises Scott Laughton’s Shot-Blocking Heroics, Maple Leafs' Bottom-Six Delivers Against Senators‘That’s How You Win A Series’: Craig Berube Praises Scott Laughton’s Shot-Blocking Heroics, Maple Leafs' Bottom-Six Delivers Against SenatorsWith 25 seconds left on the clock in a one-goal game, it wasn’t a member of the ‘Core Four’ who made the defining play of the Toronto Maple Leafs' series-clinching win – it was Scott Laughton, throwing himself in front of a Jake Sanderson slap shot to preserve the lead.

Berube, a Stanley Cup-winning coach with the St. Louis Blues, has emphasized a business-like approach since taking over behind the Leafs’ bench and throughout the postseason. It prioritizes emotional control not just in-game, but in the noise that surrounds the team, both on and off the ice. 

That mindset was tested throughout the first round.

In Game 6, after holding a 2-0 lead early in the second period, the Leafs watched it evaporate. Ottawa tied the game with goals in the second and third, a situation that has unraveled for Toronto in years past. But instead of folding, the Leafs responded – just 101 seconds after David Perron’s equalizer, Max Pacioretty reclaimed the lead, before sealing the 4-2 win with an empty-net goal from William Nylander.

After Ottawa tied the game, Berube mentioned that the attitude was positive and he didn’t have to step in – instead, the group was composed without his direct help in the situation.

“Yeah, it was really good on the bench, I thought. That happened, and I could just hear the guys talk and the things they said, which was very good. I didn't have to say anything,” Berube explained. “I thought that we went right back to playing our game, and we ended up scoring the goal that counted and mattered.”

The same pattern held in earlier games throughout the series. In Game 2, Toronto let a 2-0 lead slip away late in regulation but recovered to win in overtime on home ice. In Game 3, they trailed early, then led, then gave up another late equalizer – and still managed to earn another overtime victory.

In previous years, those games have not gone their way.

Maple Leafs’ ‘Business-Like’ Mindset Overcomes Potential Playoff Disaster to Advance to Second RoundMaple Leafs’ ‘Business-Like’ Mindset Overcomes Potential Playoff Disaster to Advance to Second RoundKANATA, Ont. — When the final horn sounded at Canadian Tire Centre on Thursday, the Toronto Maple Leafs celebrated their 4-2 win against the Ottawa Senators, pushing them through to the second round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

But during these playoffs, it’s been different. There was plenty of noise on the outside after the club failed to close out the series two games in a row, including being shut out on home ice in Game 4. Yet, in round one, when Toronto got down, they were not out of it as they had been in years past. That’s a positive sign and something that a Stanley Cup-winning head coach has instilled in a group that has struggled to get over the hump in the postseason.

“Well, we talked about composure before the series, and composure is not just the in-game composure. That's very important. But it's the outside composure, too, that you need when there are losses and there is noise, there's outside noise, and there's going to be. That's part of it all. You've got to let it slide off your back and get ready, just focus on the next game, next shift,” Berube explained. 

Ahead of a matchup with the defending Stanley Cup champions, who had their number in the regular season, going 3-1 against Toronto, poise, patience, and composure will be the key to any version of success. There isn’t expected to be much margin for error, and if the Leafs get away from what’s made them successful in the opening round, a repeat of the 2023 series will likely occur.

Morgan Rielly, Maple Leafs Seek Redemption In 2023 Rematch Vs PanthersMorgan Rielly, Maple Leafs Seek Redemption In 2023 Rematch Vs PanthersTwo years ago, the Toronto Maple Leafs walked into a second-round series against the Florida Panthers riding high from their first playoff series win since 2004. It was a long-awaited breakthrough for the franchise and the ‘Core Four,’ finally getting over the hump after years of early playoff exits. But the success was short-lived.

“That'll be important in this series because, like I said, there's not going to be a lot of room out there. There's going to be a lot of times where there's just not a lot going on the way you want,” said Berube. “You've got to keep battling and stay patient with it.”

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Phillies make spirited late comeback but can't overcome untimely mistakes

Phillies make spirited late comeback but can't overcome untimely mistakes originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Phillies’ offense mounted a late comeback with seven runs in the sixth inning or later Sunday afternoon but a series of small moments prevented them from pulling out a sweep over the Diamondbacks.

There was Ranger Suarez’ inability to stop the bleeding in the third and fourth innings of his season debut. His start began as smooth as possible with a pair of 1-2-3 frames but he allowed three runs in the third and four in the fourth, both rallies beginning with a walk of eight-hole hitter Garrett Hampson, not much of an offensive threat.

There was Alec Bohm bobbling a difficult grounder that cost Suarez and the Phils at least one run, maybe two.

There was J.T. Realmuto’s split-second decision to try to take third on a dropped third strike in the bottom of the seventh. He was nailed on a perfectly applied tag by Eugenio Suarez for the final out with the tying run on base.

“You never want to make the third out at third base and he knows that,” manager Rob Thomson said. “He came in and was mad at himself.”

And there was the slow exchange on a potential inning-ending double-play ball hit by Corbin Carroll in the top of the ninth. Carroll is one of the fastest players in the majors and it would have required a perfect flip from Bryson Stott to Trea Turner and an even better rocket to first base. Stott’s toss was high and Turner never got a grip on the ball, throwing it into the dirt. The next pitch was hit by Randal Grichuk for an RBI double. It would have been difficult either way, but if executed perfectly, the Phillies end the top of the ninth trailing by one rather than two.

“Stotty had a tough time getting it out of his glove and then Trea had a tough time getting it out of his glove too,” Thomson said. “Normally that’s a double-play ball.”

The lineup — Bohm, Realmuto, Stott and Turner included — put together plenty of good at-bats, particularly late. Bryce Harper snapped a home run drought of 62 plate appearances in the first inning and Weston Wilson hit a three-run shot in the sixth when the Phillies trailed by five, his first big knock since coming off the injured list on April 23.

Realmuto singled in Harper in the seventh to bring the Phillies within a run. Kyle Schwarber did the same with a two-out home run off Shelby Miller in the ninth. Nick Castellanos, Realmuto and Bohm followed with singles to tie the game.

The Phillies extended Jose Alvarado to a second inning and Arizona scored three times to win, 11-9. Schwarber grounded out hard with two aboard to end it.

Harper reached base three times but was annoyed with himself after striking out looking in the ninth and flying out to center as the winning run in the 10th.

“It got in on me a little bit. Just frustrated I couldn’t come through right there,” he said. “Obviously a big moment, big opportunity right there and couldn’t get it done.

“I’m just frustrated on a bigger level. Just want to come through for the team and play well. I’ve been through bigger ruts in my career, gone through ups and downs worse than what I’m on right now. Just frustrated for the fans, frustrated for the team. That last moment there against (Jalen) Beeks, not coming through right there, super frustrated for that. Just wanna play better, gotta play better. Just gotta be a better ballplayer.”

Harper did hit two balls hard and walk Sunday so he might be working his way out of the 6-for-42 slump he was in entering the afternoon.

It has come from necessity but Alvarado is probably being used too much. Sunday was his 16th appearance in 34 games, putting him on pace for 76. The Phillies don’t want any of their relievers reaching 70. He has also made three appearances already of more than one inning after not doing it once last season.

“It does (concern me) with all the guys, really,” Thomson said. “If we have to give him a couple of days after that, we will. That’s what we did the last time.”

The bullpen work before him was terrific. Orion Kerkering, Jordan Romano, Matt Strahm and Joe Ross combined for 4⅓ scoreless innings after Suarez allowed seven runs over 3⅔.

Making his first start in the Phillies’ 34th game after missing two months with a back injury, Suarez retired six in a row to begin the afternoon, striking out four. He was locating his sinker, fastball, changeup, curveball and cutter through two innings, missing bats with four of them and pitching almost artfully, the way things look for Suarez when he’s in sync.

It all fell apart once he had to pitch out of the stretch. Four consecutive Diamondbacks hitters reached base in a three-run third inning and five straight reached in a four-run fourth.

As rough as Suarez’ second half was last season, he didn’t have an outing quite this poor. The only time in his career he allowed more runs was his second start in the majors back in 2018.

His stuff looked fine, he just failed to command his pitches with men on base. Suarez averaged 92 mph with his sinker and four-seam fastball, his usual range. His slow hook was effective early, and he did a good job of pairing the mid-70s curveball with his low-90s fastball, at one point striking out Eugenio Suarez on a 93 mph heater after a 73 mph curve. The Phillies will hope this was just a matter of shaking off rust.

“It just looked like he lost his command getting out of the stretch, leaving his breaking ball up, changeup up,” Thomson said. “I don’t think he had many baserunners in his rehab starts. But he’s better than that and he will be.”

Suarez said it was less about rust and more about overthrowing out of the stretch, which he’ll work on in between starts. He will pitch next on Saturday in Cleveland.

The Phillies won the series and have gone 6-3 since being swept by the Mets last week but still haven’t gotten on an extended roll in any phase — offensively, defensively or with full-game pitching performances. The flipside is they’re on pace for 91 wins without having played close to their best baseball.

“I thought we fought,” Harper said. “It’s what you want. We could’ve just laid down and said we won the series already and we didn’t do that. Just really good, hard-fought. I know we lost but fought to the end.”

The Phils are off Monday before playing three games in Tampa at Steinbrenner Field, the Rays’ home for 2025 because of the devastation to Tropicana Field from Hurricane Milton. Zack Wheeler, Cristopher Sanchez and Jesus Luzardo will pitch in the series. From there, the Phils head to Cleveland, which like Tampa Bay has a bottom-third offense in runs scored and OPS.

Phillies make spirited late comeback but can't overcome untimely mistakes

Phillies make spirited late comeback but can't overcome untimely mistakes originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Phillies’ offense mounted a late comeback with seven runs in the sixth inning or later Sunday afternoon but a series of small moments prevented them from pulling out a sweep over the Diamondbacks.

There was Ranger Suarez’ inability to stop the bleeding in the third and fourth innings of his season debut. His start began as smooth as possible with a pair of 1-2-3 frames but he allowed three runs in the third and four in the fourth, both rallies beginning with a walk of eight-hole hitter Garrett Hampson, not much of an offensive threat.

There was Alec Bohm bobbling a difficult grounder that cost Suarez and the Phils at least one run, maybe two.

There was J.T. Realmuto’s split-second decision to try to take third on a dropped third strike in the bottom of the seventh. He was nailed on a perfectly applied tag by Eugenio Suarez for the final out with the tying run on base.

And there was the slow exchange on a potential inning-ending double-play ball hit by Corbin Carroll in the top of the ninth. Carroll is one of the fastest players in the majors and it would have required a perfect flip from Bryson Stott to Trea Turner and an even better rocket to first base. Stott’s toss was high and Turner never got a grip on the ball, throwing it into the dirt. The next pitch was hit by Randal Grichuk for an RBI double. It would have been difficult either way, but if executed perfectly, the Phillies end the top of the ninth trailing by one rather than two.

The lineup — Bohm, Realmuto, Stott and Turner included — put together plenty of good at-bats, particularly late. Bryce Harper snapped a home run drought of 62 plate appearances in the first inning and Weston Wilson hit a three-run shot in the sixth when the Phillies trailed by five, his first big knock since coming off the injured list on April 23.

Realmuto singled in Harper in the seventh to bring the Phillies within a run. Kyle Schwarber did the same with a two-out home run off Shelby Miller in the ninth. Nick Castellanos, Realmuto and Bohm followed with singles to tie the game.

The Phillies extended Jose Alvarado to a second inning and Arizona scored three times to win, 11-9. Schwarber grounded out hard with two aboard to end it.

It has come from necessity but Alvarado is probably being used too much. Sunday was his 16th appearance in 34 games, putting him on pace for 76. The Phillies don’t want any of their relievers reaching 70. He has also made three appearances already of more than one inning after not doing it once last season.

The bullpen work before him was terrific. Orion Kerkering, Jordan Romano, Matt Strahm and Joe Ross combined for 4⅓ scoreless innings after Suarez allowed seven runs over 3⅔.

Making his first start in the Phillies’ 34th game after missing two months with a back injury, Suarez retired six in a row to begin the afternoon, striking out four. He was locating his sinker, fastball, changeup, curveball and cutter through two innings, missing bats with four of them and pitching almost artfully, the way things look for Suarez when he’s in sync.

It all fell apart once he had to pitch out of the stretch. Four consecutive Diamondbacks hitters reached base in a three-run third inning and five straight reached in a four-run fourth.

As rough as Suarez’ second half was last season, he didn’t have an outing quite this poor. The only time in his career he allowed more runs was his second start in the majors back in 2018.

His stuff looked fine, he just failed to command his pitches with men on base. Suarez averaged 92 mph with his sinker and four-seam fastball, his usual range. His slow hook was effective early, and he did a good job of pairing the mid-70s curveball with his low-90s fastball, at one point striking out Eugenio Suarez on a 93 mph heater after a 73 mph curve. The Phillies will hope this was just a matter of shaking off rust.

Suarez’ next start will be Saturday in Cleveland. He took the place of Taijuan Walker, who had been assuming a rotation spot in Suarez’ stead. Walker had a 2.54 ERA (plus five unearned runs) in six starts and is now the long man in the bullpen. He probably will find his way back into the Phillies’ rotation at some point given the fragility of starting pitching.

The Phillies won the series and have gone 6-3 since being swept by the Mets last week but still haven’t gotten on an extended roll in any phase — offensively, defensively or with full-game pitching performances. The flipside is they’re on pace for 91 wins without having played close to their best baseball.

The Phils are off Monday before playing three games in Tampa at Steinbrenner Field, the Rays’ home for 2025 because of the devastation to Tropicana Field from Hurricane Milton. Zack Wheeler, Cristopher Sanchez and Jesus Luzardo will pitch in the series. From there, the Phils head to Cleveland, which like Tampa Bay has a bottom-third offense in runs scored and OPS.