Insiders Predict Where Blues' Robert Thomas Could End Up

The Athletic released the fourth part of their matchmaker series, and this edition featured St. Louis Blues center Robert Thomas. 

Thomas’ name is beginning to build up a lot of steam in the trade market, although many reports have indicated that the price to acquire Thomas is high. Understandably, the Blues are expecting a large haul for Thomas given his age and contract.

Thomas is just 26 years old and under contract at $8.125 million until 2031. He has the experience and now the pedigree of a No.1 center. Most NHL teams would be interested in trading for Thomas, but the primary obstacle is matching the high price tag. 

Today, The Athletic’s James Mirtle and Chris Johnston played matchmaker, naming ideal situations for Thomas. 

Johnston’s guess is the Los Angeles Kings, who have shown they aren’t afraid to make a big splash and believe they have a team capable of winning it all. They recently acquired Artemi Panarin at a fairly low price, which means they have the assets to acquire Thomas. 

“He is a bona fide No. 1 center who is under contract into his early 30s,” said Johnston. “It’s not too often a player fitting that profile is available on the NHL’s trade market. This is a rare opportunity.

“One of the best parts of the Panarin trade for the Kings is that they didn’t have to surrender any premium assets to complete it. The Blues are going to need a haul to part with Thomas, but the Kings are in a position to make an aggressive bid with first-round picks in 2026 and 2027 still in the cupboard, plus other young players and prospects to deal.”

Blues' Steep Asking Price For Robert Thomas And Justin Faulk RevealedBlues' Steep Asking Price For Robert Thomas And Justin Faulk RevealedThe St. Louis Blues will most certainly be sellers at the deadline, and the reported asking prices for center Robert Thomas and defenseman Justin Faulk have been revealed.

Mirtle went a different route, naming the Carolina Hurricanes as his prediction. The Hurricanes, more so than the Kings, have shown they have no fear of acquiring top talent on the trade market. Their only issue is retaining that player when their contract expires, but they wouldn’t have to worry about that with Thomas. 

“The Hurricanes have missed on Artemi Panarin, Mitch Marner and (sort of) Mikko Rantanen and Jake Guentzel of late, but Thomas would be an even better fit as a center, given he’d allow Logan Stankoven to shift to the wing and give Carolina two higher-end scoring lines,” Mirtle began.

“Thomas has a full no-trade clause in his deal and five years remaining, so some of this would be contingent on where his head is at, but cap space and playing time won’t be an issue in Raleigh. His exceptional vision and two-way ability would fit in well under coach Rod Brind’Amour.

“Unlike most of the league’s contenders, the Hurricanes have a first-round pick this year, too: the one they received from the Stars for Rantanen at last year’s deadline. But it’ll take a bigger haul than that to coax the Blues to give up one of their biggest stars.”

Robert Thomas has scored 11 goals and 33 points in 42 games this season. (Jeff Curry-Imagn Images)
Robert Thomas has scored 11 goals and 33 points in 42 games this season. (Jeff Curry-Imagn Images)

Both the Kings and the Hurricanes are logical destinations, but they aren’t the only two teams capable of making this move. Although the Minnesota Wild gave up a lot to acquire Quinn Hughes, they still have several enticing prospects, and reports say they could be open to trading goaltender Jesper Wallstedt to acquire a stud forward like Thomas. 

Additionally, the Montreal Canadiens, Detroit Red Wings, and the Seattle Kraken have reported interest in Thomas.

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Lakers without some of their biggest stars in back-to-back against Spurs

Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (middle) watches a game against the Oklahoma City Thunder.
Feb 9, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (middle) watches a game against the Oklahoma City Thunder at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

LOS ANGELES — The Lakers were without multiple key players, including all of their star ball-handlers, when they hosted the San Antonio Spurs on Tuesday night. 

The team ruled Luka Doncic, LeBron James and Austin Reaves out for the matchup against the Spurs, which was the second night of a back-to-back after Monday night’s loss to the Oklahoma City Thunder

At least four of their biggest stars won’t play when they host the San Antonio Spurs on Tuesday night. Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

James’ absence was his 18th of the season, preventing him from reaching the NBA’s 65-game threshold for end-of-season award considerations, meaning his All-NBA honors streak will end at a record 21 consecutive seasons. He was listed on the injury report with left foot arthritis. 

“LeBron, obviously, dealing with the history of injuries he’s had and to start the year,” Coach JJ Redick said. “Just depends on how he wakes up the next day and as he goes through his treatment in the morning.”

Doncic was sidelined for the third consecutive game because of a strained left hamstring. Redick reiterated that Doncic’s status is day-to-day before adding that the six-time All-Star “continues to progress.” The Lakers host the Dallas Mavericks on Thursday in their final game before the All-Star break. 

Reaves was ruled out because of left calf injury management. Redick said the plan was for Reaves to play in either Monday or Tuesday’s game after he missed 19 consecutive games because of a strained left calf before he made his return in the Feb. 3 road win over the Brooklyn Nets.

Deandre Ayton (right knee soreness) and Marcus Smart (right ankle soreness) also weren’t available. Smart hurt his ankle during the fourth quarter of Monday’s loss, according to Redick, while Ayton was sidelined for the second time in the last three games because of a right knee ailment.

Clippers vs Rockets Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

The Los Angeles Clippers made a surprising overhaul of their roster at the trade deadline, and that shake-up alone leaves them at a clear disadvantage against the Houston Rockets tonight.

My Clippers vs. Rockets predictions lean on Los Angeles’s lone mainstay, one of many NBA picks on Tuesday, February 10.

Clippers vs Rockets prediction

Clippers vs Rockets best bet: Kawhi Leonard Over 28.5 points (-115)

The Los Angeles Clippers will not tank their way out of the postseason, nor should they waste a season like Kawhi Leonard’s.

But in trading both James Harden and Ivica Zubac, L.A. put far too much of an onus on Leonard. Since Zubac was moved, Leonard has taken at least 19 shots in every game and averaged 32.3 points.

L.A. found quality in exchange for Harden and Zubac, but Darius Garland is not healthy, and Bennedict Mathurin overlaps with Leonard more than Zubac does, to Mathurin’s expense.

Even against the Houston Rockets’ quality defense, Leonard should shoot in bulk.

Clippers vs Rockets same-game parlay

Houston has come to depend on its defense; its offense has been undone by the lack of a quality point guard.

Clippers vs Rockets SGP

  • Kawhi Leonard Over 28.5 points
  • Rockets -7.5
  • Under 213

Our "from downtown" SGP: Kawhi Only

Mathurin’s Clippers debut comes with low stakes, and he should not be expected to produce at volume while Leonard feels such a weight on his shoulders.

Clippers vs Rockets SGP

  • Kawhi Leonard Over 28.5 points
  • Bennedict Mathurin Under 14.5 points
  • Rockets -7.5
  • Under 213

Clippers vs Rockets odds

  • Spread: Clippers +7.5 (-105) | Rockets -7.5 (-115)
  • Moneyline: Clippers +240 | Rockets -300
  • Over/Under: Over 213 (-110) | Under 213 (-110)

Clippers vs Rockets betting trend to know

Seven of Houston’s last nine games have gone Under their totals, falling short of bookmakers’ expectations by an average of 7.3 points per game. Find more NBA betting trends for Clippers vs. Rockets.

How to watch Clippers vs Rockets

LocationToyota Center, Houston, TX
DateTuesday, February 10, 2026
Tip-off8:00 p.m. ET
TVNBA TV

Clippers vs Rockets latest injuries

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Report: Unidentified investor group wants to partner with Mark Cuban, buy back Mavericks

Could Mark Cuban once again own the Dallas Mavericks?

An unidentified investor group wants to partner with Cuban and do exactly that, reports Marc Stein at The Stein Line. He reports that a group of investors — who are unnamed — "registered tangible interest in partnering with former majority owner Mark Cuban to try to buy the franchise back from the Dumont and Adelson families." Cuban declined to comment on the report.

There are a couple of reasons this feels like not just a long shot but a non-story.

First, Miriam Adelson and her family (including team governor Patrick Dumont) have given zero indication that they want or plan to sell the team. Stein himself reports "the family remains excited about the future of the franchise and the Cooper Flagg era." Even Cuban and other billionaires cannot buy what is not for sale.

Second is the real estate question.

When Cuban sold the franchise he was honest, saying that the NBA had become more of a real estate investment tool than the technology business it was when he bought in. Owners can now leverage the team to build a new arena, then use that anchor of people and activity to build mixed-use retail around it (or other developments). That was rumored to be the plan for the Adelsons — owners of the Las Vegas Sands corporation — who are said to want to build a resort complex with an arena part of it (and a casino, although gambling is not legal in Texas; and while Adelson has pumped money into a campaign to get gambling legalized in the state it is nowwhere close to happening).

Could the Adelson family realize the Dallas casino idea is nowhere close to happening and decide to get out of the Mavericks business? Nothing is impossible, but that seems like the kind of impatient decision that the billionaire owners tend not to make, they can be patient and play a longer game. They can wait and decide whether to build something else around a new arena. It's not like the Mavericks' value is going down (especially with Flagg on the roster).

Cuban still owns 27% of the Mavericks, although the Adelsons can buy 20% of that later this year, according to reports. Either way, it sounds more like Cuban will remain in his role as advisor rather than return to the role of owner.

Ramsey winner for Newcastle adds to Frank woes to leave Spurs fearing the drop

To his extensive list of problems at Tottenham, Thomas Frank can add another. The manager is dealing with a ghost from the club’s more successful recent past. There were 49 minutes on the clock when the South Stand choir took up the song. “He’s magic, you know. Mauricio Poch-e-ttino.” The message was clear. They want their former idol back. They cannot persist any longer with Frank.

The only wonder here was that Newcastle, who had arrived on the back of three successive Premier League defeats and with numerous issues of their own, were not out of sight at the interval. If they were bright in the first half, Spurs were impossibly awful. Frank’s injury list numbered 10 players and he lost another one – Wilson Odobert – in the 34th minute. The captain, Cristian Romero, is suspended, of course. Nobody wants to hear excuses.

Continue reading...

Dodgers notes: Joe Thon, Michael Vilchez, World Baseball Classic

New logos adorn hats during the home opener Minor League baseball game between the Oklahoma City Comets and the El Paso Chihuahuas at Chickasaw Bricktown Ballpark in Oklahoma City on Tuesday, April 1, 2025. | NATHAN J. FISH/THE OKLAHOMAN / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Joe Thon is in his second year coaching in the Dodgers’ system, serving this year as the bench coach for Triple-A Oklahoma City after holding the same job for High-A Great Lakes in 2025.

During part of last season, Thon was undergoing kidney dialysis, and needed a kidney transplant in December. The donor was his father, Dickie Thon, a major league shortstop for 15 years. From Brian McTaggart at MLB.com:

Joe, 34, was a bit hesitant at first to take his father’s kidney, and for good reason. Dickie is 67 years old and healthy, but the idea of taking a kidney from his father made Joe uncomfortable. It took urging from his dad and doctors to convince him it was the right course of action.

“I didn’t want to put him in a tough spot, either,” Joe said. “But the doctors assured me that everything was good. It wouldn’t really take too much of a toll physically, but you hate to put somebody in a spot like that. But it was best for me and my family, too. Dad was really adamant he wanted to do it.”


Dodgers minor league pitcher Michael Vilchez, a 22-year-old right-hander out of Curacao who pitched last season for Class-A Rancho Cucamonga, was among the pitchers listed in reserve for The Netherlands as part of the designated pitcher pool for the World Baseball Classic. Michael Clair at MLB.com has more info on the complete list.


Neil de Mause writes about the economics of publicly-financed sports stadiums at Field of Schemes, and he talked to Marc Normandin about that in relation to MLB’s labor battle and the upcoming collective bargaining agreement negotiations:

The books are never opened for a reason, and MLB teams insisting that real estate revenue made at a baseball stadium isn’t baseball revenue is another reason to keep them closed. Having to open the books and argue about what is or isn’t revenue would take longer than the rest of bargaining combined, and it’s not even clear if the owners would agree with each other, never mind the players, about what constitutes baseball revenue.

Are the Astros Already Adding Insult to Injury, Again?

HOUSTON, TEXAS - JULY 29: Josh Hader #71 of the Houston Astros pitches during the ninth inning against the Washington Nationals at Daikin Park on July 29, 2025 in Houston, Texas. (Photo by Alex Slitz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Spring Training Hope Comes With a Familiar Astros Fear

This is the week baseball fans have been waiting for. Pitchers and catchers are reporting to spring training, and with that, the long offseason finally gives way to possibility. For Astros fans, it’s the chance to put last season firmly in the rearview mirror and focus on what still lies ahead during another year of the Golden Era of Houston baseball.

But as much as I want to lean fully into optimism, there’s already a familiar knot forming in my stomach.

The excitement of a fresh start is real. So is the hope that this team, one that played quality baseball for most of last season, can bounce back and reassert itself as a legitimate contender. Yet before workouts have even started, one lingering issue from the past has already resurfaced, and it’s the same one that has haunted this franchise for the last several years: injuries and how they’re handled.

On Monday, ESPN’s Buster Olney reported that All-Star closer Josh Hader has begun throwing lightly on flat ground, with the Astros expecting to learn more about his readiness for the season sometime midweek. On the surface, that may not sound alarming. But for those of us who have lived through the Astros’ recent medical misadventures, it was enough to make us cringe.

We’ve seen this movie before.

Over the past several seasons, the Astros have been plagued not just by injuries, but by what felt like repeated missteps, vague timelines, and frustrating outcomes tied to player health. Whether it was pitchers, position players, or cornerstone stars, too many situations ended with prolonged absences and more questions than answers. Last year, it cost the team dearly, contributing to an unthinkable finish: a strong regular season that still ended with Houston on the outside looking in at the postseason.

That’s why the organization’s decision to clean house and make wholesale changes to the medical staff this offseason felt like a necessary reset. For the first time in a while, there was real hope that the Astros were finally ready to turn the page on the constant cycle of setbacks, misdiagnoses, and lost time.

Which is why hearing even a mildly concerning update on Hader this early hits differently.

When you start stacking the names, Isaac Paredes, multiple pitchers including Christian Javier and Luis Garcia, Josh Hader, Jake Meyers, and even Kyle Tucker the year before, it’s hard not to feel exhausted and disgusted by the pattern. Astros fans have been conditioned to brace for the worst, not because we want to, but because history has taught us to.

Call it PTSD. Call it precedent. Whatever the label, it’s hard to shake.

To be clear, this may amount to nothing. Hader could ramp up without issue, be fully ready for Opening Day, and anchor the bullpen the way he’s supposed to. That’s the outcome everyone is hoping for, and I genuinely want to believe that the Astros are better positioned, both on and off the field, when it comes to player health moving forward.

But until we actually see a noticeable difference, skepticism is fair.

Spring training is supposed to be about clean slates and renewed belief. Starting the season with injury uncertainty, especially involving a key arm like Hader, doesn’t exactly inspire confidence. I’ll keep my fingers crossed and stay hopeful for positive news in the coming weeks.

Just don’t blame me if, for now, I’m already fearing the worst.

Better Know Your Blue Jays 40-man: Alejandro Kirk

TORONTO, ONTARIO - OCTOBER 31: Alejandro Kirk #30 of the Toronto Blue Jays looks on against the Los Angeles Dodgers during the first inning in game six of the 2025 World Series at Rogers Center on October 31, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Alejandro Kirk is a 27-year-old, right-handed hitting catcher from Tijuana, Mexico. He’s played the last five seasons (plus 9 games) with the Jays.

In 564 MLB games, he has a .268/.345/.398 batting line with 51 home runs, 1 stolen base and a 11.3 bWAR (fWAR likes him better, 14.9 career).

When he came up, we thought he would be a good bat/ok glove catcher, but his defense has been terrific. Baseball Savant has him at the 100th percentile for ‘Fielding Run Value’, as well as 100th percentile for Blocks Above Average (as much as we continue to be told that the one-knee-down catching cause more wild pitches/passed balls) and 98th percentile for Framing.

Kirk wasn’t all that great at throwing out baserunners this year, 56th percentile. He was great early, through the end of June he had thrown out 15 of 49 stealers (31%). The rest of the way he was 2 of 37 (5%). I don’t know what happened; maybe there was an injury that we didn’t know about.

On the season he threw out 22% of base streals, in 2024 he threw out 31%.

And, of course, he’s slow. Baseball Savant has him at the 1st percentile in Baserunning Run Value, and Sprint Speed is 2nd percentile. I tend to think the talk about his speed is overblown, If I have to choose between a fast catcher and a great defensive catcher, I’ll take the latter.

I think the same thing when people complain that he’s heavy. I’d rather have a very good catcher than a catcher in great shape. As John Kruk said ‘He’s a baseball player, not an athlete’. Again, I’d rather the ballplayer than the athlete. Of course, he’s my middle son’s favourite players, my son says he can relate to Krik, he can’t relate to

Kirk is in the 91st percentile in hard hit balls, squared-up balls and expected batting average. He’s 95th percentile in strikeout percentage.

His best season with the bat was 2022, when he hit .285/372/.415. I think he’s going to have a season where he puts it all together with the bat and his .300+ with 20+ home runs.

Steamer thinks he’ll play 106 games this year, with a .276/.354/.435 line and 14 home runs for a 4.2 fWAR.

‘Be more aggressive.’ How Andrew Friedman led Dodgers spending spree

The first time Andrew Friedman reached the World Series as a general manager, his upstart 2008 Tampa Bay Rays team had a payroll of $43 million, the second-smallest in the majors that year.

When last year’s Friedman-built Dodgers squad won its second-consecutive World Series title, the club’s star-studded roster cost almost 10 times that amount, with a record-setting $415 million payroll that incurred another $169 million in luxury tax penalties on top of it all.

Looking back at that juxtaposition now, Friedman can’t help but chuckle.

Los Angeles Dodgers general manager Andrew Friedman eyes a third straight World Series title. AP

“(When I got to the Dodgers), I didn’t even know what the CBT really was, or how it exactly worked,” he said. “And even to think back to where we were then, to where we are now, is comical.”

Indeed, such has been the transformation of not only the Dodgers in recent years, but also their longtime president of baseball operations.

Once the posterboy for small-market success, sustainable spending, and an analytically-driven approach that was supposed to help negate the traditional financial disparities within the salary cap-less sport, Friedman has a new reputation now:

Architect of a villainous Dodgers dynasty widely criticized as being “bad for baseball.”

“I’ve heard that over the last couple years,” Friedman deadpanned last month, when asked about public outcries over the Dodgers’ near-limitless spending. “For us, all we’re consumed with is the partnership that we have with our fans … That’s our only focus.”

For much of his 20-year front office career, of course, Friedman operated differently.

Such has been the transformation of not only the Dodgers, but also their longtime president of baseball operations. AP

In Tampa Bay, he built a consistent winner on shoestring budgets, pioneering a value-based operation to work around the club’s financial limitations. Even early in his Dodgers tenure, he practiced fiscal constraint when constructing his teams, occasionally dipping under the luxury tax threshold while avoiding many big-money free-agent signings.

That all changed when the Dodgers signed Shohei Ohtani two offseasons ago –– turning the team into a revenue-generating machine with resources unmatched by any other club in baseball.


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Since then, Friedman has embraced his new financial reality, completing one star signing after another, including additions of Edwin Diaz and Kyle Tucker this winter that have pushed the team’s 2026 payroll back over the $400 million mark.

“The moment that we signed Shohei, it was important to back that up and continue to show our commitment to winning and reinvesting in the team,” Friedman said in a recent interview with The California Post. “How that has played out, in conjunction with having Shohei, I think has increased (our willingness to spend) and made it an even more aggressive plan than we initially thought. But again, we didn’t sit down and say, ‘OK, now it can be X instead of Y.’ It was more like, let’s be more aggressive. And as we’ve done that, aggressiveness has beget more aggressiveness.”

Friedman has completed one star signing after another, including Edwin Diaz (above) and Kyle Tucker this year. AP

Friedman didn’t always envision, or even seek, this kind of opportunity. During his time in Tampa Bay, “I thought I was going to be with the Rays forever,” he said.

Coming to the Dodgers in 2014, however, represented what he described as a “perfect situation” –– in large part because it meant “throwing myself in the deep end and activating a totally different part of my brain.”

A decade later, it has led more of Friedman’s offseason focus to now be on pursuing top free agents with eye-popping financial proposals, rather than more marginal maneuvers with payroll management in mind.

And while the Dodgers “are doing some things that probably aren’t sustainable, or we probably wouldn’t do for 10, 15, 20 years,” he acknowledged, the opportunity to capitalize on this current window has warranted such a drastic change in spending habits.

“(We are) appreciating this moment in time and the talent we have on our roster,” he said, “and not being flippant about the fact that it will always be like this.”

A decade later, it has led more of Friedman’s offseason focus to now be on pursuing top free agents like Tucker. IMAGN IMAGES via Reuters Connect

When asked if such unprecedented resources has made his job any less stressful, Friedman paused to consider his career path.

“Whatever the rules are, whatever the unique challenges of your market and situation are, my focus has always been on just doing the best that we can to put the best team on the field and give us the best chance to win a championship,” he said. “So while it’s been very different in my two experiences, the pressure you feel, the work you put in, feels very similar. Because the constraints are given to you, and then you do your best within them to do the best you can.”

Still, the fact that the constraints are so much less now has led to a marked shift –– turning the man who once represented the antithesis to the Dodgers’ current style of spending, the face of a deep-pocketed dynasty sparing no expense in its hunts for more championships.

“I think it speaks to the success that we’ve been able to enjoy organizationally,” Friedman said. “And our mindset is to pump that back into our team on the field.”

VOTE: Do you approve of Yankees GM Brian Cashman?

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across Major League Baseball. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Yankees fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

Spring training is almost here! Despite a winter that moved at a glacial pace, we’ve somehow already arrived at pitchers and catchers reporting to camp, the Yankees contingent arriving in Tampa on Wednesday. But before the warmer weather arrives, we ought to take one final look back at the business conducted by the Yankees during a frigid offseason and the man pulling the strings behind those decisions, general manager Brian Cashman.

The Yankees’ offseason began just over four months ago with their unceremonious dumping out of the ALDS at the hands of the Blue Jays. From that point forward, focus turned to 2026 and the calculus it would require to get the Yankees back to the playoffs. The team could boast a solid foundation of players — one which produced the best offense in baseball — and the question became whether to run in back and hope for better results vs. taking a more proactive approach to improving the roster.

Four months later, we know the answer to that question. Despite his public protests to the contrary, Cashman held firm to a policy of rolling the dice with largely the same group of players that fell well short of the ultimate prize in 2025, hoping that better luck might bring improved results. Let’s review the decisions he made before I hand the floor over to you to voice your opinions on the course charted by the front office.

Upon the conclusion of the World Series, eight players became free agents — Trent Grisham, Paul Goldschmidt, Devin Williams, Luke Weaver, Amed Rosario, Austin Slater, Ryan Yarbrough, and Paul Blackburn — with Cody Bellinger joining them a day later when he declined his player option for 2026. You’d be forgiven if you missed the Yankees’ opening moves of the offseason, the team picking up their club option on Tim Hill while declining the option on Jonathan Loáisiga. In a similar vein, their first free agent signing was Yarbrough, retained on a one-year, $2.5 million deal to reprise his swingman role from 2025. The focus remained on the margins of the bullpen in the early weeks of November, the front office trimming the fat by non-tendering Mark Leiter Jr., Ian Hamilton, Jake Cousins, and Scott Effross.

Then came the Rule 5 Draft, the Yankees selecting righty pitcher Cade Winquest from the Cardinals while adding Spencer Jones, Elmer Rodríguez, and Chase Hampton to the 40-man roster to protect them from departing. “Operation: Run it Back” kicked into another gear as the Yankees focused on returning even the fringe role players from 2025, both Rosario and Blackburn re-signed on one-year pacts. Shortly thereafter, the Yankees came to agreements with all of their remaining arbitration-eligible players — Clarke Schmidt, Oswaldo Cabrera, Jazz Chisholm Jr., David Bednar, Anthony Volpe, Fernando Cruz, Camilo Doval, Luis Gil, José Caballero, and Jake Bird. (The final piece of the ”Run it Back” puzzle fell into place this past week with the reunion with Paul Goldschmidt for one year and $4 million.)

The first real contentious decision of the offseason actually occurred a few weeks prior to the arb calls, when the Yankees extended the $22.025 million qualifying offer to Trent Grisham. The 29-year-old center fielder accepted it pretty quickly. Focusing solely on the player, one could make the argument that it’s a high-reward, low-risk move — he either repeats his career year from 2025 and plays for a relative bargain, or he regresses in which case he’s only on the books for one season. However, in the broader context of the offseason’s overall budget, many fans worried that his salary would dissuade ownership from authorizing spending on a potential foundational piece for the future.

The majority of the Yankees’ rumors were dominated by the dance between Bellinger and the front office — Cashman adamant in his desire to keep Bellinger in the Bronx, and Bellinger and Scott Boras holding out for an unattainable jackpot before returning to reality when a seven-year offer failed to materialize. The two sides reunited on a five-year, $162.5 million contract with Bellinger possessing opt-outs after each of the first two seasons. Because of how much money is front-loaded in the terms, Bellinger will be the Yankees’ most expensive player in 2026 and 2027 carrying a luxury tax hit of $44.75 million — almost $5 million more than the AAV of Aaron Judge’s contract and roughly $6 million less than Juan Soto’s AAV with the Mets.

While not an identical roster to 2025, the Yankees’ external additions could still be construed as lateral moves at best. They traded for lefty starter Ryan Weathers from the Marlins, but he’s effectively replacing Schmidt in the rotation as the latter recovers from Tommy John surgery. They lost two of their highest leverage relievers in Williams and Weaver, but filled their vacancies with a Rule 5 dice roll (Winquest) and the worst qualified reliever in baseball in 2025 (no matter how tantalizing the stuff might be) in Angel Chivilli. And of course, true to form, Cashman likened Gerrit Cole’s return from Tommy John rehab to a big-ticket acquisition despite the now-35-year-old starter having pitched just 95 innings since the end of 2023. Cashman also cited the 2025 Trade Deadline additions as 2026 pickups as well, given that the likes of Bednar and Doval will now have full seasons in the Bronx.

Obviously, all of these decisions have to be viewed in the context of the needs of the roster and the players they declined to pursue to upgrade it. Cashman somewhat oddly labeled Kyle Tucker as the backup plan to re-signing Bellinger despite the former being the younger, more superior player and settling for a short-term (albeit a record-high-AAV) deal with the Dodgers. They were vaguely linked to Bo Bichette before he signed his own short-term, high-AAV deal with the Mets, but seemingly felt that the defensives upside and cheaper cost offered by Ryan McMahon and Anthony Volpe justified passing on Bichette’s superior offensive profile.

The same goes on the pitching side. They were never players in the markets for the top-end names like Dylan Cease, Framber Valdez, and Ranger Suárez. They passed on Tatsuya Imai, who joined Astros for a surprisingly cheap three years and $54 million. They had varying levels of interest in trading for Freddy Peralta, MacKenzie Gore, and Edward Cabrera, but opted for the less expensive option in Weathers, despite the expectation that Cole, Schmidt, and Carlos Rodón will miss the start of the season as they rehab from their respective elbow surgeries. For whatever it’s worth, at the end of the day, both FanGraphs and Baseball Prospectus project the Yankees as the 2026 AL East winners, though both also project the Mariners and Dodgers for better records and World Series odds.

So now I would like to turn it over to you. Do you approve of the job Yankees GM Brian Cashman has done this winter in filling out the roster? Additionally, we are asking that you assign a letter grade to the Yankees’ offseason, giving us a slightly more concrete understanding of how the fanbase is feeling heading into spring training. Vote in our poll below:

PECOTA projects 88.4 wins, 2nd place NL East finish for the 2026 Mets

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - JULY 12: Juan Soto #22 of the New York Mets celebrates his two-run home run with Francisco Lindor #12 of the New York Mets in the fourth inning against the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium on July 12, 2025 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Baseball Prospectus has released its PECOTA projections for 2026. PECOTA projects the 2026 Mets to win 88.4 games and come in second place in the National League East, and it puts the Mets’ chances of making the playoffs at 78.3% with a 28.5% chance of winning the division and a 49.8% chance of finishing with an NL Wild Card berth.

As for the rest of the NL East, PECOTA taps the Braves as the likeliest division winners, projecting Atlanta for 92.2 wins and over 90% playoff odds. The top three teams in the NL East are once again tightly packed with the Phillies projected for 85.1 wins with 58.9% playoff odds. Not surprisingly, there is a large gap between those top three teams and the Miami Marlins and Washington Nationals, who are projected for 75.2 and 65.6 wins, respectively.

Taking a deeper dive into what PECOTA likes and doesn’t like about the 2026 Mets, the short answer is that the lineup is headlined by two very good players in Juan Soto (156 DRC+, 5.7 WARP projection—behind only Shohei Ohtani for all hitters) and Francisco Lindor (121 DRC+, 3.7 WARP projection). Going further down the depth chart, PECOTA predicts a bounce back season from Marcus Semien offensively (101 DRC+) and projects above average offensive production from all of Bo Bichette, Francisco Alvarez, Jorge Polanco, and even Mark Vientos. PECOTA also notably thinks Luis Robert Jr. will have a fully healthy season, penciling him in for 535 plate appearances of roughly average output with the bat, which would put him at 2 WARP and would represent a huge upgrade over what the Mets got out of the center field position last year.

On the other hand, PECOTA projects only 14.8 WARP from the Mets’ pitching staff—ten wins less than what it projects from their position players. Though it is quite bullish on the Mets’ bullpen and thinks Devin Williams projects similarly to Edwin Díaz in 2026, PECOTA is not enamored with Nolan McLean, despite his prospect ranking and big league success last year. McLean is projected to throw just 150 innings and put up a 100 DRA- and less than 2 WARP—pretty pedestrian numbers for what the Mets are hoping is a top of the rotation starter. McLean is probably the most obvious candidate to overperform his PECOTA projections. PECOTA does think Freddy Peralta (91 DRA-, 2.8 WARP projection) will have a very Freddy Peralta season—the exact boon to the rotation the Mets hoped for when they traded for him. And it is also intriguingly optimistic about Sean Manaea (90 DRA-, 1.3 WARP projection), but has him down for only 80 innings. PECOTA is less optimistic about the rest of the Mets’ rotation, which it projects as below average outside of Jonah Tong, who PECOTA thinks will make 11 starts with a 91 DRA-.

Both the Mets and the Atlanta Braves had disappointing finishes in 2025. The Mets turned over a significant chunk of their roster in response while the Braves are trusting their core and more or less running it back in 2026—an approach the other major competitor in the division in the Philadelphia Phillies is also taking this season. PECOTA projects a bounce back for both the Mets and the Braves, but a much more significant one for Atlanta, whose position player core outside of the shortstop position PECOTA likes quite a bit, expecting a regression to the mean for many of the Braves’ key players.

LeBron James is officially ineligible for All-NBA, ending his record streak

While Father Time has been unable to stop LeBron James, the NBA rules have found a way to do it.

LeBron James has been ruled out for LA’s upcoming game against the Spurs, meaning he will not reach the 65-game threshold needed to be eligible for NBA awards.

This means that LeBron’s All-NBA streak will be coming to an end. LeBron holds the NBA record for most All-NBA selections at 21, but he won’t make a 22nd team this season, regardless of his production, due to missing too many games.

It was clear that LeBron’s All-NBA streak was in jeopardy once he missed the first 14 games of the season due to his sciatica injury.

Since that extended absence, LeBron has been relatively healthy. However, given his age and recent injury history, he’s only played both legs of a back-to-back once and with no wiggle room left, it was inevitable that he’d ultimately become ineligible for end-of-season awards due to this restriction.

LeBron is having a season that certainly warrants All-NBA consideration. He is averaging 21.8 points, 5.7 rebounds and 6.9 assists per game.

LeBron’s consecutive All-NBA selections aren’t the only historic achievements from James that ended this season. Earlier in the year, his double-digit scoring streak came to an end dramatically in a win over the Raptors.

The NBA began this 65-game rule for NBA awards began during the 2023-24 season. How fair it is that players who are worthy of such accolades miss it due to injuries has always been a point of contention for fans and media alike.

This season, with superstars like Nikola Jokić set to miss significant time and now LeBron being ineligible, the rule has come under even more scrutiny.

We’ll see if the NBA makes another change in the future, but for this season, James will not be eligible and his potential spot will go to someone who played in enough games, regardless of whether they had a better year than LeBron or not, which is definitely the point of these awards.

You can follow Edwin on Twitter at @ECreates88 or on Bluesky at @ecreates88.bsky.social.

Isiah Kiner-Falefa says Blue Jays ‘were a lot happier’ to face Yankees over Red Sox in 2025 ALDS

Isiah Kiner-Falefa, a former Yankee in his own right, said on Tuesday that the Toronto Blue Jays were "a lot happier" to face the Yankees instead of the Boston Red Sox in their 2025 American League Division series matchup.

“I don’t know if people were expecting Boston to get in last year. But I know in Toronto we were happy they lost because we weren’t ready for (Garrett) Crochet and all those guys,” said Kiner-Falefa, via Lauren Campbell of MassLive.com.

“One-hundred percent,” he answered when asked if that was truly a topic in the Jays clubhouse. “We thought it was a better matchup for us the other way. We were watching Crochet just dice up. ... We definitely felt like it was a tougher matchup for us. So, once we saw the other team (win), we were a lot happier. It was definitely a topic.”

Now a member of the Red Sox, the 30-year-old Kiner-Falefa played two seasons in the Bronx from 2022-23, slashing .253/.311/.333 with 10 home runs, 85 RBI, and 105 runs scored. He was the starting shortstop in 2022 before serving in more of a super-utility role in 2023, when Anthony Volpe won the starting job out of spring training.

IKF played with Toronto in 2024 and ended up back with the Blue Jays late in 2025, as Toronto went on to beat the Yankees in the ALDS in four games before eventually having its dreams crushed in Game 7 of the World Series by the Los Angeles Dodgers. 

Kiner-Falefa went 0-for-6 with a strikeout against the Yankees in the ALDS.

The Yankees, of course, defeated the Red Sox in the Wild Card Round, despite losing to Crochet and the Red Sox in Game 1.

Brandon Ingram IS an All-Star

TORONTO, CANADA - FEBRUARY 5: Brandon Ingram #3 of the Toronto Raptors walks to the dressing room after their NBA game against the Chicago Bulls at Scotiabank Arena on February 5, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement (Photo by Cole Burston/Getty Images) | Getty Images

I’ve never been quite so happy to eat my words.

Brandon Ingram, the Toronto Raptors’ leading scorer this season, has been named an injury replacement in the 2026 All-Star Game. With Stephen Curry out for Team USA, Ingram has been called up to take his spot, and will be playing for the “Stripes” squad , adding some valuable length to the notably centre-absent roster.

The newly minted two-time All-Star has season averages of 22 points per game, 5.8 rebounds per game, and 3.7 assists per game in this bounce-back year from him, after playing only 18 games in the 2024-25 campaign. The Raptors are currently 5th in the Eastern Conference, seemingly destined for the playoffs, sitting 3 games above the 6th seeded Philadelphia 76ers. The Raptors have already surpassed the 30-win mark they achieved last season, when they finished well outside of the postseason, in large part thanks to Ingram’s efforts.

His prowess has elevated the Raptors’ offence, bringing tough shotmaking and consistent scoring to the fold, while allowing his fellow All-Star teammate Scottie Barnes to focus on defence and playmaking. This split of responsibilities has raised Toronto to heights that have not been reached since the early 2020s, and has begun the ushering in of a new identity to replace the last remnants of the championship squad.

Sharing the floor with other scorers like RJ Barrett and Immanuel Quickley has resulted in a slight dip in production for the Notorious B.I.3, but he still stands head and shoulders above the rest of the Raptors squad. Sharing those responsibilities has come hand-in-hand with fantastic team chemistry. William Lou of the Hello and Welcome Podcast posted footage of the team’s joyous celebration upon learning of Ingram’s award.

Ingram’s last All-Star season was in 2020, where he made the roster, as well as being named Most Improved Player in his first year with the New Orleans Pelicans. Ingram was 22 that season, and six years later, approaching 30, he is having a renaissance outside of the Big Easy. What Ingram has done to dig the Raptors out of a seemingly hopeless pit following the Raptors’ collapse in 2024 has already made him a part of Toronto history, but he has truly cemented himself as a team legend by being just the 10th Raptor named to an All-Star Roster.

The tandem of Ingram and Barnes look poised to lead the Raptors for years to come, and the duo ending up as All-Stars this season is a solid foundation for those ambitions.

Are a teenage European duo the Brooklyn Nets future backcourt?

Sep 23, 2025; Brooklyn, NY, USA; Brooklyn Nets guards Egor Demin (8) and Nolan Traore (88) speak at Media Day. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images | Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Back when they were drafted and even into the season, there were doubts — a lot of them — about the Nets top two picks: Egor Demin, the 19-year-0ld Russian guard selected with Brooklyn’s first lottery pick in 15 years, and Nolan Traore, an even younger French guard, selected with a mid-first round pick. Both were seen as stretchs.

Many — how about most — pundits thought both were taken too high or worse. Demin couldn’t shoot, the narrative went, and he was coming off a plantar fascia issue that had put him a wheelchair for a while. Traore was seen as a long-term project at best who needed a lot of time in the G League. There were concerns about whether he was even an NBA player. Oh yeah, he couldn’t shoot either, said the pundits.

Fast forward to this week and a lot of those concerns now seem to have been exaggerated or maybe even foolish. After all., they were very young — the 11th and sixth youngest of 540 NBA players — and needed time to develop. Bottom line, as Tom Cruise told Renee Zellwegger in “Jerry Maguire”, it’s about making each other better.

“Yes, we complete each other, and we play great [together],” Traore told Brian Lewis of The Post. “He is a good shooter, and it is always good for me to play with good shooters.”

For his part, Demin has said that Traore’s ability to fly past defenders and open things up on the perimeter is a big help to his shooting. And while they haven’t played a lot minutes together — including Monday night when Demin rested and Traore had his best game: 13 points and an equal number of assists — the numbers are catching up to the eye test. We’re no longer in small sample theater.

Look at the six games that Demin and Traore have started since January 29. Demin has averaged 11.7 points on 43/38/83 in those games while Traore has put up 11.0 points on 49/37/78. Those are not huge numbers but for teenagers, they’re more than solid.

Indeed, they go a long way to justifying the Nets decision-making back in June. Within that stretch, Demin has twice broken his career highs in points with games of 25 and 26 plus once in rebounds at 10 and registered his first NBA double double. Traore also notched his first double-double within that stretch and had career highs in points — 21 twice — and assists at 13. Moreover, Demin set an NBA rookie record for 3-pointers in consecutive games and Traore became the youngest player in Nets history to register 10 assists in a game. Together they became the two youngest rookies in franchise history to register 20 points in the same game vs. the Magic.

For Traore, it has to be particularly encouraging considering his slow start.

“Each time you improve, and when you go out and improve a level it shows progress. It’s hard in the beginning, and then it becomes easier,” Traore told Lewis, adding of his improved finishing, “I think it’s just the work; the work I put in every day. And then I’m just getting used to the speed of the game.”

Their coach is also encouraged by how they’re progressed as individuals and teammates.

“I like the creation,” coach Jordi Fernández said. “Nolan is able to get into the paint early in possessions, whether it’s to finish or spray it out. We’re starting to see us play earlier, which is good.

“He and Egor can both create. … The next step is the level of physicality. Them being rookies will never be an excuse. They’ve got to use those minutes to improve their technique and learn how to play with more physicality right now.”

That said, he told Lewis he sees the potential.

“I don’t see it as one guy covering for the other: I like the shooting from both of them. Nolan’s not shy when he’s open. We’ve seen Egor shoot at a very high level. Nolan’s speed, his paint touches and pick-and-roll playmaking, same with Egor. … They have clear goals, short-term things they need to do on both ends. As long as they keep taking those steps they’re doing a great job and that’s what matters.”

What also will matter in June, as Lewis notes, is how the Nets will see the 2026 Draft with its plethora of guards. Darryn Peterson, Kingston Flemings and Mikel Brown Jr. all are “on-ball dynamos.” With a little luck, the Nets could have their choice and Sean Marks & co. always professes that it’s about best pick available. We shall see.