Amid unacceptable stretch, Giants left searching for answers after Padres sweep

Amid unacceptable stretch, Giants left searching for answers after Padres sweep originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — Willy Adames was playing about as far up the middle as is allowed under the new rules regarding shifts. The Giants shortstop was positioned perfectly. 

When the ball left Jake Cronenworth’s bat at 61 mph, Adames took a couple of steps toward the bag. In his mind, he scrolled through all the different ways he might be able to turn an inning-ending double play. There was an obvious first choice: Scoop the ball on one hop, race to tag second, and then make a strong throw to first. 

“Hell yeah,” Adames said later. “It was a double-play ball. It was a jam shot. You could have turned a double play in any direction.”

Adames never got the chance. 

Cronenworth’s soft liner hit second base and ricocheted into the outfield, scoring two runs. By the end of the inning, the Giants trailed 7-0. The game effectively was over. 

The Giants ended up falling 11-1, losing for the 13th time in 14 games at Oracle Park. Over their last five, all losses, they have scored five total runs. 

It’s a stretch that defies belief, and the Giants have been left searching for answers. This won’t pacify anyone watching, but they truly, honestly, do not know what has happened. They are healthy, and when they hit the road, they occasionally still look dangerous. They took four of six on their last trip and the lineup looked like, well, a normal lineup. 

But at home, the losses have been automatic. The frustration continues to build. 

“It feels like for the last two months, it’s the same story,” Adames said. “It feels like for some reason nothing positive is coming. It’s either a jam shot hitting the base with the bases loaded [that was] a double-play ball. Something negative is in the air. We haven’t been able to figure out how to beat it and how to be better out there. It seems that it’s been the same story. 

“It sucks. It’s bad, because we have a really good team in here but it hasn’t gone our way lately.”

Adames stood in front of a large pack of reporters for seven minutes on Wednesday afternoon and spoke openly about the skid that has all but mathematically ended the season. The Giants are three games under .500 for the first time and trail the first-place San Diego Padres by 10 games. They have been caught by an Arizona Diamondbacks team that has had unbelievably bad injury luck and went into full sell mode at the 2025 MLB trade deadline. 

It has been an unacceptable stretch of baseball, one that leads to obvious questions about the future.

It wasn’t long ago that president of baseball operations Buster Posey picked up Bob Melvin’s option for 2026, but this is a brand of ball that does not reflect well on a manager or his coaching staff. This will not be a comfortable six weeks no matter what the contracts say. 

Melvin on Wednesday began his postgame session by defending Heliot Ramos for spiking a throw into the grass during the seven-run second inning. 

“It wasn’t his fault,” Melvin said. “It was more of how we were positioned for the cut-off.”

It was a fair explanation, but it brings to mind other questions. Why after 120 games are the Giants still so sloppy on defense? Why are people forgetting things like the infield fly rule? Why is the lineup, as Melvin talked about at length before the game, so poorly prepared to hit fastballs?

The mistakes are piling up, and that has to be particularly annoying to Posey. After he traded two of his best relievers and his starting right fielder at the deadline two weeks ago, Posey said he had talked to Melvin about the need to play a cleaner brand of baseball over the final two months. 

“We talk about being a pitching and defense team. We’ve pitched well but our defense has not been good — really, all year,” Melvin said. “That’s the main part that we need to clean up. That’s the part that really looks bad, when you play games like this.”

Melvin has six weeks to get the ship in order, and Posey has that much time to evaluate. At the moment, it feels like he needs to take a closer look at just about every part of the organization, which is a baffling place to be for a clubhouse that was full of energy for the first three months of the season. They have no idea how it all went so wrong so fast. 

“It’s just, like, every day, something happens,” Adames said. “Everybody feels the same way, or at least some of the guys feel the same way. It feels like in the dugout we kind of, like, lose the energy right away and from [there] it’s hard to come back when you don’t have it. It’s just tough. We have to be better. That’s the bottom line. We have to play better baseball, that’s how it is.”

Adames said this is the hardest stretch he has experienced as a big leaguer. He struggled at the plate early this season, but he was able to keep a smile on his face every day because the team was winning. Right now, just about the entire team is struggling, and it’s hard to find a light at the end of the tunnel. 

At some point during his seven minutes, Adames repeated something that Giants ace Logan Webb said earlier this week, and that other veterans have mentioned. “I don’t even know how to describe it,” he said. 

The Giants are at a loss. They show up every day thinking things will get better, because things have to get better. Nine innings later, they sit in a silent clubhouse, trying to make sense of another loss. 

“It’s a tough spot to be in,” Adames said. “We’ve got to do something different. We’ve got to figure it out.”

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Shaquille O'Neal talks about abusing painkillers, his regrets and his fragile kidneys

NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - FEBRUARY 7: Shaquille O'Neal performs at Shaq's Fun House at Mardi Gras World on February 7, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo by Skip Bolen/Getty Images)
Shaquille O'Neal performs at Shaq's Fun House at Mardi Gras World on February 7, 2025, in New Orleans. (Skip Bolen / Getty Images)

Shaquille O'Neal was never suspended for drug use of any kind during his decorated 19-year NBA career. The rugged 7-foot-1, 325-pound Hall of Fame center freely acknowledged playing through pain and openly worried about damage to his kidneys and liver from his prolonged use of legal anti-inflammatory medications.

He also recently recounted on "Inside the NBA" a bizarre story about testing positive for cocaine ahead of the 1996 Olympics. The result was thrown out — and never publicized — because O'Neal told officials he'd eaten a poppy seed muffin shortly before the test.

Never mind that while poppy seeds can trigger a false positive test for opioids such as morphine or codeine, they can't do the same for cocaine, which is identified in drug tests by the presence of its major metabolite, benzoylecgonine.

So in his recounting of an episode from nearly 30 years ago, O'Neal was wrong either about the illegal substance for which he tested positive or about what he ingested that caused the false positive. Perhaps he just meant to say codeine rather than cocaine.

Point being, recollections can be fuzzy, and O'Neal isn't immune to such fuzziness, something to keep in mind when listening to the four-time NBA champion 'fess up to his use of painkillers on this week's "Armchair Expert With Dax Shepard" podcast.

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O'Neal toggled between referring to opioid painkillers such as oxycodone and powerful, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories such as Indocin. He said he used opioids when recovering from injuries and took NSAIDs throughout his career.

But he also said his doctor told him he was addicted to painkillers, leading to "a heated discussion." O'Neal didn't feel high, he said, even when he would take more than the prescribed dose. "I would do homeboy math," he said. "If it said take one, I'm taking three."

"It was a club sandwich, fries and two pills for 19 years."

O'Neal first discussed painkillers during his four-part HBO documentary "Shaq," which premiered in 2022, and on the podcast Shepard mostly asked him to expand on what he'd said then about the potential damage to internal organs, the warnings from doctors and his current regrets.

In the documentary, O'Neal had this to say: "Sometimes I couldn't play if I didn't take it. All it did was mask the pain.... Had a lot of painkillers. I got limited kidney stuff now going on. I don't have the full range, but I took so many painkillers that [doctors are] saying, 'Hey, man, we don't need you taking that stuff now. You got to be careful.'

"My kidneys are kind of just chilling out right now," he continued. "I don't want to flare ‘em back up."

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Both opioids and NSAIDs can cause kidney and liver damage, and O'Neal didn't specify on the podcast which substances caused him the most concern. He said he struggled with accepting that he might have an addiction, eventually concluding, "I had to have them. So, is that addiction?"

And he hid the use of painkillers from his wife and kids, although he said "the trainers knew."

As far back as 2000 — a year when O'Neal was the NBA's most valuable player and led the Lakers to the first of three consecutive championships — he expressed concern about the dangers of anti-inflammatories.

O'Neal suspected that the kidney disease that threatened the life of fellow NBA star Alonzo Mourning might be the result of anti-inflammatories and said he would stop taking them.

Two years later, however, O'Neal had resumed NSAID use. After a stomach ailment he originally believed was an ulcer, diagnostic tests were done on his kidneys and liver.

He described the results to The Times thusly: “I’m not great, but I’m cool.”

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O'Neal was playing with a badly aching arthritic big toe, a sprained wrist and a handful of unlisted bangs and bruises. He needed the pills, although it was unclear whether he was referring to painkillers, anti-inflammatories or both.

“I tried to stay off of them, but if I don’t take them I can’t move or play,” he said in 2002. “I was taking them. When my stomach was giving me problems I had to get the test."

O'Neal has long championed nonprescription means of addressing pain. He's been the spokesperson for the topical analgesic Icy Hot since 2003 and he spoke on Capitol Hill in 2016, plugging efforts to give police better tools to recognize when drivers are under the influence of drugs. He pledged two years of funding for officers to become drug recognition experts.

O'Neal's comments on Shepard's podcast are a clear indication that his use of painkillers and NSAIDs continues to weigh heavily on his mind. He added that these days he relaxes with a different vice: a hookah.

“I’ve never been into weed,” he said. “Hookah, it enables me to follow the routine of sit your ass down."

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

NBA Board of Governors approves Celtics sale to Bill Chisholm

NBA Board of Governors approves Celtics sale to Bill Chisholm originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Bill Chisholm Era in Boston is set to begin.

The NBA Board of Governors has unanimously approved the sale of the Boston Celtics to a group led by Chisholm, the league announced in a statement Wednesday.

The transaction is “expected to close shortly,” per the NBA.

Last July, Boston Basketball Partners, LLC — a group led by current lead governor Wyc Grousbeck — announced its intention to sell the team in two phases, giving up a majority ownership stake now and parting with the remaining stake in 2028.

An investment group led by Chisholm agreed to purchase the team for a record $6.1 billion in March, with Grousbeck agreeing to stay on until 2028. On Tuesday, it was reported that Grousbeck will transition from lead governor to alternate governor when the sale goes through, with Chisholm assuming the role of lead governor. (Grousbeck will retain his CEO title.)

Wednesday’s approval of the Celtics sale means that process is officially happening. And when the transaction is finalized, Chisholm officially will take the baton from Grousbeck, who will remain with the franchise but in a slightly different role.

“(It’s) a little bit of a change from what was expected, but I don’t think this is going to change a whole lot in how the dynamic is going to work moving forward,” our Celtics Insider Chris Forsberg noted Tuesday night about the dynamic between Chisholm and Grousbeck.

“I think that Bill Chisholm is going to enjoy having Wyc here to help steward the franchise forward in this transition process, but Bill, after paying $6.1 billion, is understandably going to sit in the lead chair. He’ll be the guy who goes to the Board of Governors meetings and has that bigger role as the Celtics chart a path forward here.”

Questions about Suárez arise, Reds show love for Schwarber

Questions about Suárez arise, Reds show love for Schwarber originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

CINCINNATI – In the latest round of health updates on his team, manager Rob Thomson didn’t shed much light at all on whether anything is wrong with starter Ranger Suárez.

In his Tuesday start, the lefthander got tagged for 10 hits and six earned runs during his 5.1 innings of work. It continued an alarming stretch for Suárez, who has compiled a 6.11 earned run average over his last six outings, which amounts to 35 1/3 innings.

“I haven’t talked to him today,” said Thomson. “We’re going to meet with him after we’re done here (pregame meeting with media). Just see how he’s doing, how he’s feeling. He hasn’t said anything to the trainers yet.”

Suárez said often after his outing Tuesday that he felt fine and that there is nothing physically wrong with him at this time. He did complain of back and shoulder pain after a start in Atlanta back in late June, but reiterated after his most recent start that he feels way better than he did back then.

With Aaron Nola seemingly ready to get back to the big club following his rehab, things could be changing quickly. Tuesday, Nola went 5 2/3 innings and allowed four hits and two earned run in his 84 pitches. He struck out 11, including striking out the side three times.

“Well, he’s feeling good,” Thomson said. “I haven’t talked to him but he told Paul (Buchheit, head athletic trainer) that he’s feeling good. He was going to work out today in Lehigh and then meet us in Washington.”

Low voltage offense

The Phillies have been battling against a little bit of a power outage early in games recently, but it seems to be just another one of those things that happen in the game of baseball.

Tuesday against the Cincinnati Reds, the Phillies didn’t get their first hit until the fifth inning when Nick Castellanos hit a bouncer to short that got past Elly De La Cruz and was ruled a hit.

Monday, they also didn’t get their first hit until the fifth inning. That followed two games in Texas against the Rangers in which the first hits didn’t come until the fourth and third innings.

Thomson had no explanation when asked about it, as he shrugged his shoulders and said, “I hope we score five runs in the first tomorrow.”

The wanted man

The Cincinnati Reds organization put on a full court press these past few days, the likes of which would make the 76ers jealous.

Their aim? Kyle Schwarber.

Tuesday, before the Phillies 6-1 loss to the Reds, there was Schwarber, crouching behind home plate to receive ceremonial first pitches from his father, Greg, and his youth baseball coach, Ron Groh. Greg Schwarber is the president of the local little league where Kyle played.

Schwarber, who will be a free agent following this season, was also presented with the keys to the city before Wednesday’s game. The Phillies designated hitter grew up in Middletown, Ohio, which is about 40 miles from Cincinnati.

While the Phillies, including president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski, manager Rob Thomson and teammates, have professed their desire to keep Schwarber a Phillie, there is no doubt teams are doing some recruiting when the Schwarber comes to their town. Cincinnati was just a little more blatant in their pursuit.

5 Burning Questions For The New Jersey Devils

As New Jersey Devils players soak up the last few weeks of summer and begin their travels back to New Jersey to prepare for the 2025-26 campaign, let's break down some burning questions that will be answered throughout the course of the season. 

1) Can Jack Hughes Remain Healthy For 82 Games? 

When I was previously asked what the X-factor was for the Devils in 2025-26, I immediately responded with a healthy Jack Hughes. 

Shoulder injuries limited the 24-year-old to consecutive 62-game seasons, where he scored 27 goals. In March, he underwent successful surgery, which Dr. Peter Millett performed at The Steadman Clinic in Vail, Colorado.

His health is a topic that has been discussed ad nauseam. We simply have to see what the 2025-26 season will bring for Hughes. 

2) What Does The Devils' Goaltending Depth Look Like? 

In early July, general manager Tom Fitzgerald spoke about his goaltending depth, which includes 24-year-old Nico Daws.

"You see how often goalies are going down," he explained. "Having depth in the net is crucial. Nico is a guy, he played what, five, six games last year? Definitely played too early in his career, but out of necessity. We really like Nico, but we feel like having this depth makes us a better team."

The Devils will, of course, begin the 2025-26 season with veterans Jacob Markstrom and Jake Allen in goal. Behind them on the organizational depth chart, based on experience, would be Daws, except that may not be true by the conclusion of training camp. 

If New Jersey decides not to carry three goaltenders, the young netminder has to clear waivers to be assigned to the Utica Comets (AHL). With a limited goaltending market in free agency and plenty of teams in search of a netminder, it is not out of the realm of possibilities for Daws to get claimed.

It is hard not to think back to Nov. 4, 2021, when Scott Wedgwood was claimed. In the blink of an eye, Jonathan Bernier suffered an injury, and the Devils went through seven different goaltenders that year. 

If Daws does not clear waivers, the next in line is expected to be Jakub Malek, who will be playing his first season in North America. If either Allen or Markstrom sustains a long-term injury, it would be a tough ask to expect Malek to carry the weight. Beyond the first-year goaltender is Tyler Brennan and Jeremy Brodeur. For those wondering about Isaac Poulter, he signed with the Winnipeg Jets earlier this summer. 

3) Can Any Of The New Additions Solidify The Top Six? 

Next to Jack Hughes' health, this is probably the biggest question after what some consider a "lackluster offseason" with no true top-six winger signed. 

Could one of Arseniy Gritsyuk, Evgenii Dadonov, or Connor Brown find themselves on the wing of either Hughes or Nico Hischier? It is not out of the realm of possibilities to eventually see Dadonov, who scored 20 goals last season, with Hughes or Brown take Stefan Noesen's place on Hischier's line. 

These are answers that will quickly reveal themselves as head coach Sheldon Keefe figures out his lines during training camp and preseason. 

4) Has The Team's Depth Been Solved? 

At the time of publication, the Devils parted ways with six players, who at specific points last season made up New Jersey's bottom six. Nathan Bastian, Justin Dowling, Erik Haula, Cutis Lazar, Daniel Sprong, and Tomas Tatar have all departed in free agency. 

Cody Glass was re-signed and could be the team's third-line center. He reached a career-high 14 goals in the 2022-23 season with the Nashville Predators. Paul Cotter and Stefan Noesen each reached a new single-season career-high in goals last season. If it all goes well and those three players can play a consistent level of hockey throughout all 82 games, the Devils should be in better shape. 

Dadonov and Brown are expected to help with scoring at five-on-five, and we will see what Dawson Mercer looks like at training camp after the organization demanded that he get stronger this summer. 

This question might not be answered until November or December. 

5) What Kind Of Player Will Arseniy Gritsyuk Be In The NHL?

The most important thing to keep in mind with Gritsyuk is that expectations will always lead to disappointment. 

There will be an adjustment period for the 24-year-old on and off the ice. The addition of Evgenii Dadonov should help with Gritsyuk's transition through training camp into the start of the regular season. 

I would give it some time before a judgment is made on what type of player he will be in the NHL. 

Make sure you bookmark THN's New Jersey Devils site for THN's latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more.

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Carolina Hurricanes owner Tom Dundon reportedly to buy Trail Blazers, keep team in Portland

Tom Dundon, owner of the NHL's Carolina Hurricanes, reportedly has reached an agreement to buy the Portland Trail Blazers from Paul Allen's estate at a valuation of more than $4 billion, a story broken by Scott Soshnick and Eben Novy-Williams of Sportico and confirmed by other reports.

The new owners intend to keep the Trail Blazers in Portland, according to the reports. That ultimately will involve Dundon's group building a new arena in the area, something NBA Commissioner Adam Silver had said was part of the discussion involved with this sale.

"The city of Portland likely needs a new arena," Silver said during NBA Summer League in Las Vegas. "So that will be part of the challenge for any new ownership group coming in."

Dundon not only owns the Hurricanes, but also is the majority owner of the Professional Pickleball Association and Major League Pickleball (he has invested heavily in that fast-growing sport). Dundon will head a group that also includes Marc Zahr, the co-president of Blue Owl Capital, and Portland-based Sheel Tyle, co-CEO of Collective Global, Sportico reports.

The Trail Blazers were put up for sale in May, following the wishes of the late Paul Allen, who owned the team in a trust. His sister, Jody Allen, is the trustee and executor of his estate, and she moved more slowly toward this sale than many Trail Blazers fans would have preferred. All the proceeds from the sale of the Trail Blazers will be given to charities and other philanthropic endeavors, as Paul Allen had put in his trust.

Before selling the team, Jody Allen made sure that general manager Joe Cronin and coach Chauncey Billups got contract extensions. On the court, the Trail Blazers are in the midst of a rebuild with some promising young players — Scoot Henderson, Shaedon Sharpe, Deni Avdija, and just-drafted Chinese center Yang Hansen — and it just brought back franchise legend Damian Lillard (who will miss the coming season recovering from a torn Achilles).

Mets have a Clay Holmes conundrum on their hands

As Pete Alonso was breaking the Mets' all-time home run record on Tuesday night at Citi Field, the struggles of Clay Holmes got lost in the shuffle.

After being given a 5-1 lead entering the top of the fourth, Holmes couldn't get through the inning as he dealt with command issues. He allowed four runs in the frame, exiting with two outs after throwing 85 pitches (just 46 strikes) over 3.2 innings.

Overall on Tuesday, Holmes gave up five runs on six hits while walking five and striking out four.

It was the second time in his last three starts that Holmes didn't make it past the fourth inning, with the other start during that stretch -- a strong, economical effort where he threw 75 pitches over 5.0 innings while allowing two runs -- kind of coloring why the situation with him is such a confounding one.

Holmes has been effective at times recently, with the above start and a 5.0 inning, one-run outing against the Giants on July 25 standing out.

But even when he's pitching well, he's been limited to just 5.0 innings by design as the Mets manage his workload in what is his first season since transitioning from being a long-time impact reliever.

That means that even when Holmes' stuff is doing what he wants it to do, the bullpen is given a heavy load.

It's a situation that seems untenable, and stands out more given how Holmes has pitched since July 8.

Aug 5, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets pitcher Clay Holmes (35) delivers a pitch against the Cleveland Guardians during the first inning at Citi Field.
Aug 5, 2025; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets pitcher Clay Holmes (35) delivers a pitch against the Cleveland Guardians during the first inning at Citi Field. / Gregory Fisher-Imagn Images

In 32.2 innings over seven starts during that span, Holmes has allowed 41 hits while pitching to a 5.79 ERA.

Holmes is up to 126.0 innings pitched this season after throwing 63.0 innings each of the last two years. His previous career-high for innings came in 2021, when he threw 70.0.

Before the season, Holmes said his goal was to throw at least 160 innings.

"It's hard to just put arbitrary numbers on things and say, 'If you hit this number, that's all you can handle.' I don't believe in that," Holmes said in December. "I think there's definitely things you need to monitor, to see how your body's holding up and the strength and mobility things. ... I want to throw as many innings as I can."

The Mets have said recently that Holmes is fine physically, and his fastball maxed out at 96.3 mph during his start on Tuesday. So it's clear he still has the ability to be effective this season. But it's hard to make the argument that he should remain in the rotation for much longer.

However, the Mets are facing several issues when it comes to potentially having Holmes switch to the bullpen sooner rather than later.

One issue is that Frankie Montas has been moved from the rotation to the bullpen, and is being replaced in the rotation by Nolan McLean. That means that if the Mets slide Holmes to relief for the remainder of the year, they will need another starting pitcher to take his place.

That could be easy enough, sinceBrandon Sproathas been dominating for Triple-A Syracuse over the last month-plus and could conceivably be that guy. But there would be a roster crunch in that scenario.

New York Mets starting pitcher Clay Holmes (35) delivers a pitch during the first inning against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park
New York Mets starting pitcher Clay Holmes (35) delivers a pitch during the first inning against the Boston Red Sox at Fenway Park / Paul Rutherford - Imagn Images

Ahead of Wednesday's game, the Mets are expected to call up Paul Blackburn for a bullpen role. The move for Blackburn will likely be optioning Justin Hagenman to Syracuse. When McLean is promoted ahead of Saturday's start, New York could possibly DFA Blackburn to make room on the 26-man roster.

If the next move after that is to slide Holmes to the bullpen and call someone up to replace him in the rotation, the Mets would have a hard decision on their hands.

Of all the pitchers in the regular eight-man bullpen, the only one with minor league options is Reed Garrett, who has a 2.59 ERA and 1.13 WHIP. So he's obviously going nowhere.

That leaves Ryne Stanek (5.31 ERA, 1.54 WHIP) as the potential DFA candidate if Holmes is moved to the bullpen soon. But Stanek has shown he can be a difference-maker when he's on, including during last year's run to Game 6 of the NLCS.

Because of all that, the Mets could perhaps wait until Sept. 1 to slide Holmes to a relief role.

At that point, active rosters will expand to 28, which would theoretically allow the Mets to put Holmes in the 'pen, call someone up to replace him in the rotation, keep Stanek, and still have one active roster spot left for an extra position player.

If the Mets choose the above route, they will have to send Holmes out to start two or three more times -- something that would be easier to handle if their other starters not named David Peterson began pitching into the sixth inning and beyond.

In an ideal world, the Mets reach the playoffs and have Holmes in the bullpen as a multi-inning weapon when they get there. But they're going to have to do some finessing between now and then in high-stress games, with someone's roster spot possibly on the line if things go haywire.

Choose Your Fighter: Gallant Joins Small List Of Former NHL Coaches Now Working In KHL

Gerard Gallant joined the list of former NHL coaches leading KHL teams in thrilling fashion.

The newly rebranded Shanghai Dragons announced Gallant as their new coach in a dramatic Mortal Kombat-style video posted to their social media channels on Wednesday.

"Inside every heart lives a child dreaming of legendary journeys," the video said. "And in every legend, there is a master – one who has shaped the greatest heroes."

The video then showed depictions of Jaromir Jagr and Artemi Panarin, two former KHL players Gallant coached during his time with the NHL's Florida Panthers and New York Rangers.

"Now, the master has arrived to build a new team with a new name: Gerard Gallant," the video said.

The announcement transitioned from a dragon's fiery eyes into a depiction of Gallant wearing armor.

The Dragons rebranded last week from Kunlun Red Star Beijing with a similar action-packed video announcement. They are the KHL's only team from China, although they'll play in St. Petersburg, Russia, this upcoming season, with a two-year window to return to China.

Gallant is the third active KHL coach to have also been an NHL bench boss. Here are details on the three "masters."

Gerard Gallant, Shanghai

Gallant, 61, signed a two-year contract to coach the Dragons, whose CEO said they must make the playoffs and push deep into the post-season to maintain strong interest in China.

"We understood that building a strong team usually takes more than one season — the example of Lokomotiv Yaroslavl speaks for itself," Dragons CEO Sergey Belykh said in a statement. "Unfortunately, we don’t have that kind of time. That’s why the Dragons needed not just an experienced, high-profile head coach, but a specialist capable of building a competitive team in the shortest possible time.

"That instantly reminded us of Vegas, a team that made it to the Stanley Cup final in their very first season, with Gerard Gallant serving as head coach at the time."

Gallant won the Jack Adams Award as the NHL's coach of the year when the Golden Knights reached the final in 2017-18. He first coached the Columbus Blue Jackets from 2004 to 2006, then the Panthers from 2015 to 2016 before joining Vegas. After his time with the Golden Knights, he guided the Rangers to the Eastern Conference final in 2022 before losing in the first round in 2023, leading to a mutual parting of ways.

In 705 regular-season NHL games, Gallant has a 369-262-70 record, with four ties and a 31-29 playoff record. He's also a two-time QMJHL champion, Memorial Cup champion and two-time World Championship gold medallist.

The Dragons feature Winnipeg Jets prospect Auston Wong, 2007 Nashville Predators draft pick Jeremy Smith, former Calgary Flames prospect Spencer Foo and his brother, Parker Foo.

Last year, Kunlun finished ninth of 11 teams in the Western Conference and missed the playoffs.

Bob Hartley (Sergei Belski-Imagn Images)

Bob Hartley, Yaroslavl

Hartley is entering his first season coaching Lokomotiv Yaroslavl, which won the Gagarin Cup as KHL playoff champions. The coach who led the team to the championship, Igor Nikitin, left Yaroslavl for CSKA Moscow.

Hartley, 64, hasn't coached a team since 2021-22, his fourth season with KHL Omsk. That year, he won the Gagarin Cup and was the KHL's coach of the year. Before that, he coached Latvia's men's squad for two years.

The Hawkesbury, Ont., native last coached in the NHL in 2015-16. He led the Calgary Flames for four seasons, winning the Jack Adams Award in 2014-15 after advancing to the second round of the playoffs.

Hartley also coached the Atlanta Thrashers from 2003 to 2007, but most of his success came with the Colorado Avalanche before that. 

The Avalanche got to at least the conference final four times under Hartley. And in 2000-01, they went 52-16-10-4 in the regular season and 16-7 in the playoffs to capture the Stanley Cup.

His NHL coaching record is 463-361-59 with 61 ties in the regular season and 54-41 in the playoffs. He's also a playoff champion in the AHL, QMJHL, Swiss National League and Jr. A CCHL.

Hartley told French-Canadian radio station BPM Sports in July he accepted the offer to honor the memory of his friend Brad McCrimmon, a Stanley Cup champion, 1,200-game NHL veteran and assistant coach who was named Yaroslavl's bench boss in 2011 before he and most of the team died in a plane crash. Hartley said in French it touched him to relive the passion and friendship he had for McCrimmon.

Yaroslavl's squad includes Nashville Predators prospect Egor Surin, who was drafted 22nd overall in 2024, as well as former NHLers Alexander Radulov and Byron Froese.

Guy Boucher (James Guillory-Imagn Images)

Guy Boucher, Omsk

Boucher is entering his second season coaching Avangard Omsk after losing to Yaroslavl in the second round of the playoffs.

The 54-year-old hadn't been a head coach since working for the Ottawa Senators from 2016-17 to 2018-19. He helped the Senators reach the Eastern Conference final in 2016-17, when they lost in double overtime of Game 7 against the Pittsburgh Penguins.

The other time Boucher made the playoffs was in 2010-11 with the Tampa Bay Lightning, which also reached the Eastern Conference final.

In parts of six seasons split between the Lightning and Senators, Boucher collected a 191-186-46 regular-season record and a 22-15 playoff record. Before heading to Omsk, he spent one season as an assistant coach for the Toronto Maple Leafs in 2023-24.

Boucher's won the Spengler Cup with Team Canada in 2015, the Swiss Cup in 2014-15 and the QMJHL playoffs in 2009. He also won gold with Canada's U-18 squad in 2008 and the world junior team in 2009.

Omsk's former NHL players include Nail Yakupov, Vasily Ponomarev, Maxime Lajoie and Andrew Poturalski. Their NHL prospects include Colorado's Ivan Yunin and Mikhail Gulyayev.

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Roman Anthony keeps putting himself on short lists with Hall of Famers

Roman Anthony keeps putting himself on short lists with Hall of Famers originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

In the modern era of social media hype trains, rare is the athlete who can actually live up to the billing.

Roman Anthony, though? He has somehow exceeded even the loftiest of expectations placed upon him prior to his MLB debut this season.

The ascent of Boston’s former No. 1 prospect was accentuated on Tuesday night in Houston, when the 21-year-old turned in an ultra-rare stat line with four walks, four runs scored and a home run for good measure. (Anthony did technically strike out on a check swing on a 3-2 pitch in his third plate appearance, though the call certainly could have gone either way.)

According to the Red Sox’ media relations team, Anthony is the third-youngest player since 1901 to have four or more walks and at least one home run in a game, and the youngest to do so since Ted Williams did it for the Red Sox in 1939. Williams was 70 days younger than Anthony when he accomplished that unique feat, and only Mel Ott (at 20 years, 124 days) did it at a younger age.

Barry Bonds turned in that stat line when he was almost a year older than Anthony’s current age.

Anthony also was the first leadoff hitter since at least 1920 to score four or more runs, take four or more walks, and hit at least one homer in a single game.

While that stat line may be a bit of an oddity, it’s merely one of several short lists that Anthony has been joining lately — with most of them filled only with current or future Hall of Famers.

The Red Sox also noted that Anthony became the second-youngest player in franchise history to score four or more runs in a game. Only Bobby Doerr — a 1986 inductee of the Hall of Fame whose retired No. 1 hangs forever in right field at Fenway — did so at a younger age (back in 1938 and 1939).

The Red Sox were happy to share more Anthony stats, including the fact that he has the fourth-best on-base percentage of any player since 1950 through 52 career games at .406. Ahead of him on that list: Willie McCovey (.429), Albert Pujols (.416) and Juan Soto (.413).

That note also stated that Anthony is the third-youngest major leaguer since 1901 to record 30 or more walks and score 30 or more runs in their first 52 games, with only Juan Soto (19 years old) and Jason Heyward (20) doing so at a younger age.

Here’s one more, from former Red Sox media relations manager J.P. Long: Anthony has reach based the second-most times among players under 22 years old in their first 52 games with 89. That’s two fewer than Pujols and one more than Soto.

All of those tidbits came after Tuesday night’s game broadcast displayed an eye-popping stat: Anthony became the first Red Sox player since Ted Williams with 20-plus extra-base hits and 20-plus walks in his first 51 career games.

Any time any player becomes the first to do anything since Ted Williams, it’s going to draw plenty of attention. Yet the even-keeled Anthony — who signed an eight-year, $130 million extension with Boston last week — seemingly hasn’t been impacted by any of the increasing attention he’s continued to bring upon himself with his nightly performances.

It’s all perhaps even more impressive, considering Anthony started his MLB career on an ice-cold streak. He had just two hits in his first nine games, and from his call-up date on June 9 until June 25, Anthony was just 5-for-44 (.114) with a .291 OBP and .518 OPS.

Since that date, Anthony is hitting .341 with a .445 OBP and .967 OPS. And since being moved to the leadoff spot in the lineup on July 27, he’s hit .340 with a 1.028 OPS.

The Red Sox noted that since June 28, Anthony has the second-highest OBP, third-highest batting average and 10th-highest OPS in the majors.

Needless to say, Red Sox manager Alex Cora has enjoyed the show from the dugout.

“With him, everything is fast, right? Except his at-bats. He slows down everything,” Cora said during his weekly interview with WEEI on Wednesday. “I’m very impressed, just the way he controls the strike zone is something that when you start looking around the league, Juan Soto, he does that. He did it from the get-go. That’s what Roman is doing.”

Cora added: “It’s just fun to watch.”

At such a young age, Anthony obviously has a very, very long way to go before the story of his career is written. Yet as each passing night makes clear, it would have been nearly impossible for Anthony to have written a better opening chapter.

Report: Former Predators Forward Signs With KHL Club

Former Nashville Predators forward Rocco Grimaldi is headed overseas.

The 32-year-old native of Rossmoor, Calif. signed a two-year contract with KHL team SKA St. Petersburg on Wednesday.

Grimaldi was rumored to be headed to Russia late last week. His most recent NHL action came in 2021-22, when he appeared in seven games with the Predators without registering a point. His first full NHL season came with Nashville in the 2018-19 season, when he registered 13 points in 53 games.

The 5-foot-6, 181-pound forward was drafted 33rd overall by the Florida Panthers in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft. He spent three seasons at the University of North Dakota, collecting 77 points (31-46-77) with 68 penalty minutes and a +22 rating over 86 games.

Grimaldi also played in the USHL with USA Hockey’s National Team Development Program. In 55 appearances, he recorded 45 points (23-22-45) with 40 penalty minutes.

Grimaldi has played in 203 NHL games during his career between Florida, Colorado and Nashville, tallying 30 goals and 37 assists for 67 points, along with four points in 11 post-season games.

While his NHL success has been fleeting at best, the right-shot forward has thrived in the American Hockey League. In 499 career AHL games, he’s totaled 428 points (192-236-428).

Grimaldi was mainly a bottom-six forward with the Predators. Despite concerns about his size, the Panthers took him in the second round, though much of his success has come at the AHL level.

Having failed to crack the NHL in the last three seasons, Grimaldi will now try his hand in the KHL.

Venus Williams, 45, will be oldest US Open singles entrant in 44 years

  • Williams to play first slam singles since 2023

  • Oldest US Open singles entrant since 1981

  • Seven-time major champ won in 2000 and 2001

Venus Williams will make her return to Grand Slam singles at the US Open after a two-year absence, having received a wildcard invitation on Wednesday to compete at Flushing Meadows at age 45.

Williams will be the oldest singles entrant at the tournament since Renee Richards played there at 47 in 1981, according to the International Tennis Federation.

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