Malcom Brogdon returns to UVA basketball as Strategic Advisor with unique perspective

WASHINGTON, DC -  DECEMBER 30: Malcolm Brogdon #15 of the Washington Wizards warms up before the game against the New York Knicks on December 30, 2024 at Capital One Arena in Washington, DC. 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2024 NBAE (Photo by Stephen Gosling/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Malcolm Brogdon is officially returning to the Virginia Cavaliers men’s basketball program but this time, in a professional capacity. On Tuesday, the Virginia Cavaliers announced that the Virginia alumnus would be returning to serve as Strategic Advisor, a newly created position. 

In the statement, head coach Ryan Odom said Brogdon will bring “a wealth of knowledge, leadership and expertise from his successful nine-year NBA career and All-American career at Virginia.”

Brogdon, who led Virginia to their first ACC Tournament Championship in 38 years, recently retired from the NBA after nine seasons. After his historic college career, he immediately made a name for himself in the NBA as the 2017 Rookie of the Year. 

Before the announcement (and seemingly before the job offer) Brogdon, on March 4, made an appearance on Carla Williams’ podcast, Inside Virginia Athletics with Carla Williams. The discussion focused on the current state of college sports, especially compared to Brogdon’s experience. While there’s no telling if his analytical back-and-forth with Williams played a role in securing the new role, the conversation was certainly insightful. Of course, “the president,” as his Virginia teammates fondly called him, is known for his wisdom.

“Clearly I think one of the biggest benefits is guys are getting paid,” Brogdon said on the podcast. “But at the same time, I think it’s a double-edged sword.”

While Brogdon felt he could pick a university that provided him a top education and player experience, he believes the education is a smaller factor when recruits are also comparing pay. This is especially true, he notes, for players coming from a lower socioeconomic status and who would otherwise rely on an athletic scholarship to fund their education. 

“It’s hard to say that … everybody should go get the best education when money is a factor,” Brogdon said. “These guys are making choices that I didn’t have to make when I was in college.” 

When reflecting on the transfer portal, he noted his five years at Virginia gave him the development opportunity and preparation for the pros. While Brogdon doesn’t blame the young players for moving around, he thinks they’re missing the chance to establish themselves and create a legacy. 

Their conversation got more technical when it turned to the discussion on student athletes being classified as employees. Both Brogdon and Williams noted that it’s a hard debate to settle. However, Williams noted that the University can fire employees easier than it can pull an athletic scholarship – which would put student athletes in a position with fewer protections. Brogdon followed up to confirm that when signing contracts, the students’ pay is guaranteed under certain standards, making the classification even muddier.

Most college contracts, Williams added, are re-newed annually, which Brogdon likened to the signing of one-year NBA deals, which carries an emotional weight for players beyond the court.

“It’s annual free agency,” Williams added. 

And, Brogdon knows something about that life. He played on five different teams throughout his nine years in the NBA. In his last three years, he went from the Boston Celtics, to the Portland Trailblazers, to the Washington Wizards. 

He said the mental health impact of the business side of basketball is real and “ruins a lot of guys’ careers.” 

“When you come up in basketball, they say the game is 90 percent mental and 10 percent physical. That holds to be true at the NBA level.”

Now, it’s becoming a reality at the college level.

While the details of Brogdon’s role have yet to be clarified, his perspective and experience is expected to help the staff navigate the largely unchartered waters of today’s college landscape.

Pirates promoting 19-year-old Konnor Griffin, MLB's top prospect

The Pittsburgh Pirates are promoting 19-year-old shortstop Konnor Griffin, the consensus top prospect in baseball, the team revealed on Thursday morning.

Griffin was named USA TODAY Sports' Minor League Player of the Year in 2025, batting .333 with 21 homers, 94 RBIs, a .941 OPS and 65 stolen bases across 122 games in his first full pro season.

The ninth overall pick in the 2024 draft, Griffin was already off to a blazing start in 2026, going 7-for-16 in five games with Class AAA Indianapolis.

The Pirates play their home opener at PNC Park on Friday, April 3, against the Baltimore Orioles.

Griffin made some early noise in spring training, crushing a pair of long home runs against the Boston Red Sox in one of the Pirates' first exhibition games.

However, he cooled off considerably as the spring progressed and finished with seven hits in 41 at-bats (.171). He also had trouble making consistent contact with 13 strikeouts and only two walks.

That was presumably the reason the Pirates chose to send him to the minors to start the 2026 season. However, his performance at Indianapolis − and just maybe the fact that the Pirates play their home opener on Friday − was enough to convince the front office Griffin is ready to make his MLB debut.

Konnor Griffin an MLB rarity

When he makes his major league debut, Griffin will do so exactly three weeks before his 20th birthday.

According to MLB researcher Sarah Langs, he will become the first teenage position player to appear in the majors since Juan Soto did in 2018 for the Washington Nationals.

At 19 years and 344 days, he will be the youngest position player to appear in an MLB team's first seven games of the season since Andruw Jones did with the Atlanta Braves in 1997 (just barely edging out Adrian Beltre in 1999).

New contract next for Griffin?

The next burning question is whether or not the Pirates will sign Griffin to a long-term contract, as several other MLB teams have done with their top prospects in the past week.

The Seattle Mariners reached an agreement on March 31 with shortstop Colt Emerson, 20, on an eight-year, $96 million contract without him ever taking an at-bat in a major league game.

One day earlier, the Milwaukee Brewers locked up shortstop prospect Cooper Pratt, 21, with an eight-year, $50.75 million contract after he'd played just four games at Class AAA.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Pirates' Konnor Griffin promoted: 19-year-old MLB top prospect to PIttsburgh

Leading off Kyle Schwarber could give Phillies' offense a boost

Leading off Kyle Schwarber could give Phillies' offense a boost originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

It’s early. Don’t get it twisted.

Still, the Phillies are hitting .220 as a club. Their top four hitters — Trea Turner, Kyle Schwarber, Bryce Harper and Alec Bohm — are batting .149 with a .557 OPS.

That’s the lowest combined average from the one-through-four spots through the first six games in club history, worse than the 1939 Phillies.

That group will figure it out. It’s too star-studded not to, and it’s also April 2. But the slow start does invite a fair question about the top of the order, especially when the bottom has been more productive.

Rookie Justin Crawford, hitting ninth, has been locked in thus far. The 22-year-old is 7-for-17, batting .412 through the first week. His natural ability to slap the ball around the field, especially the other way, has stood out immediately.

He’s also difficult to defend. Texas and Washington both adjusted for him already, bringing the third baseman in and shading the right fielder toward right-center.

That matters because consistent production from the nine-hole is rare. Last season, the spot produced a .246 average for the Phillies. Crawford is a much better hitter than that.

So what does it mean?

The Phillies don’t need the double-leadoff setup between Crawford and Turner. If Crawford keeps reaching, there will be traffic on the bases when the lineup turns over.

A change can be made in the leadoff spot.

Kyle Schwarber to the leadoff spot.

HERE’S WHY

That would not be new territory for the Phillies’ slugger. From 2022-24, Schwarber put together three straight seasons with 34 or more home runs, then tallied 104 runs batted in across 2024, all while hitting leadoff.

Only two players ever have driven in more runs as a leadoff hitter in a single season. Jimmy Rollins is the only other Phillie to collect more than 80 RBIs.

That year, Schwarber broke the all-time single-season record for the most leadoff home runs with 15.

The argument against Schwarber batting first has always been simple: if he’s leading off, his homers won’t drive in many runs. But this year, the Phillies have Crawford. A tougher at-bat at the bottom changes that equation.

Schwarber has slugged to begin the season. He’s hit two homers already and laced an RBI double in Wednesday’s contest.

He’s also a great four-seam fastball hitter. He mashes sinkers and cutters too. Out of the spot where he’s already been phenomenal for the Phils, he’d likely see even more pitches to damage.

There is one question worth asking.

Would moving Schwarber back to leadoff create a lefty-lefty issue at the top and bottom of the order?

The easy answer is no.

Crawford hit .376 against lefties last season at Triple-A. Schwarber posted a .964 OPS against southpaws in 2025. He’s been historically good in same-sided matchups and launched 23 homers in 234 at-bats against lefties last year.

Neither of them are overwhelmed by that look. They thrive.

TO FOLLOW

Moving Turner to the two-hole, ahead of Harper, would be something different.

Although, when Turner last hit there regularly in 2024, he drove the ball out of the yard (21 HR), hit .295 and posted an .807 OPS.

The move also makes sense because Turner has long excelled with runners on base.

Last season, among National League hitters with runners on base (minimum 250 plate appearances), Turner ranked fourth in batting average at .321.

He won the NL batting title at .304 and constantly put the ball in play. He’s exactly the kind of hitter you want up with traffic on the bases. Schwarber creates more of that traffic at the top, especially with his innate ability to walk.

Despite the early struggles, Turner has squared the ball up over the last few games, even if he doesn’t have much to show for it yet. He’ll come around.

He’s still a leadoff-type hitter, mind you, but Crawford can provide some of that same table-setting once the lineup turns over two to three times a game.

And for Harper, Wednesday was a great sign.

It’s been a rough start. He hasn’t quite looked like himself, and his bat speed is down a tick from last season. But he got to trot around the bases and feel the energy of the home crowd. He crushed his first homer of the year off Nationals lefty Cionel Pérez.

The cleanup spot has been part of the conversation, too. Bohm has had some of the same bad luck as Turner in that he’s made good contact, without much to show outside of his Opening Day homer. Adolis García has since moved to fifth, and he could play himself into the clean-up spot as a more traditional power bat.

His hard-hit numbers have jumped off the page already, but the bigger early sign is that he’s making more contact. That has been the biggest knock on the Phillies’ new right fielder the last few seasons.

THE CHANGE

Again, it’s early. That has to stay front of mind, but this topic can remain prominent as the season moves along.

Even after Wednesday’s electrifying win, the Phillies could still use a jolt at the top.

They got one in Tuesday’s win, when the offense again looked like it was starting to scuffle. Schwarber put them on the board with a solo homer.

For so long, Schwarber injected energy into Citizens Bank Park from the leadoff spot. The same could be true again this year if Rob Thomson is willing to tweak a top three he hasn’t touched yet.

Thomson originally moved Schwarber out of the leadoff spot prior to last year to split up the lefties. This year, Schwarber at the top could actually help break up the lineup in a more natural way. Crawford and Schwarber can both hold their own if opponents counter with a southpaw.

The Phillies have that flexibility in 2026.

Now they head to Colorado and then San Francisco for a six-game road trip. The ball flies at Coors Field in Denver, and that could be the right place to test a new order and, more importantly, find another offensive spark.

Italian football in crisis as FA chief resigns and Ceferin issues Euro 2032 warning

  • Exit could spell end of Gennaro Gattuso’s tenure

  • Ceferin: ‘Infrastructure is among the worst in Europe’

The crisis engulfing Italian football has deepened with the country’s football federation president, Gabriele Gravina, resigning and the Uefa president, Aleksander Ceferin, warning that it risks losing its co-hosting rights for Euro 2032.

Gravina announced his resignation at an emergency meeting of the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) general council two days after Italy failed to reach a World Cup finals for the third successive time, losing on penalties to the outsiders Bosnia and Herzegovina. He had come under heavy scrutiny since their exit in Zenica, the country’s minister for sport, Andrea Abodi, intensifying the pressure by calling for “a renewal of the FIGC leadership”.

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Where to watch Minnesota Twins vs. Kansas City Royals: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Thursday, April 2

The Kansas City Royals (3-2) are looking to complete a three-game sweep of the Minnesota Twins (1-4). Kansas City won a wild 13-9 game on Monday in which the Royals led 12-1 heading into the seventh inning. The starting pitchers are scheduled to be Taj Bradley for Minnesota and Cole Ragans for Kansas City.

  • Date: Thursday, April 2

  • Time: 2:10 p.m. ET / 11:10 a.m. PT

  • Where: Kauffman Stadium, Kansas City, MO

  • TV Channels: Royals.TV, Twins.TV Presented by Progressive

  • Live Stream:ESPN+, MLB.TV | Follow on Yahoo Sports

  • Minnesota Twins: 1-4 (No. 4 in AL Central)

  • Kansas City Royals: 3-2 (No. 1 in AL Central)

  • Spread: Kansas City Royals -1.5

  • Moneyline: Kansas City Royals -160.0 / Minnesota Twins 135

  • Over/Under: 9.5

Minnesota Twins: Taj Bradley (0-0, ERA: 2.08, K: 9, WHIP: 1.38)
Kansas City Royals: Cole Ragans (0-1, ERA: 9.00, K: 5, WHIP: 2.50)

Weather: 77°F at first pitch

Ballpark: Capacity: 38,427 | Roof: Open | Surface: Grass

Thursday Morning Links

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - MARCH 29: Andrew McCutchen #4 of the Texas Rangers is congratulated by teammates in the dugout after hitting a three-run home run in the fourth inning during a game against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on March 29, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Hunter Martin/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Morning, all!

Chris Martin has made a lot of appearances so far this season but says that he ““feels great.”

The Ranger hitters have yet to use an ABS challenge despite many called strikes out of the strike zone, which Skip Schumaker attributes to being good teammates.

Baltimore ended last night’s game against the Rangers with a successful ABS challenge during Evan Carter’s at bat in the ninth.

Mackenzie Gore will start in Friday’s home opener against Cincinnati, with Kumar Rocker starting in the following game.

The beat writers are all talking up how much fun the Rangers are having and how loose the clubhouse is, which is a definite change from previous seasons.

No Game Today

Sep 21, 2025; Chicago, Illinois, USA; A general wide view during the ninth inning during a game betweenn the Chicago White Sox and the San Diego Padres at Rate Field. Mandatory Credit: Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images | Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images

In case you missed the news yesterday, the White Sox have postponed today’s game, their home opener. It’s going to be decently warm in Chicago today, 19 degrees, but there are apparently high winds and the risk that a rainstorm is going to blow through around game time. Here in Calgary it’s blizzarding sideways, but, sure, I’m sure some warm rain is uncomfortable too.

Not much for news today. The Jays have officially sent Angel Bastardo back to the Red Sox. That was always the most likely outcome when he didn’t make the team, although there was a chance someone could trade for him. His rough spring probably foreclosed that opportunity, so now he’s back in Boston’s system.

Bonus pools for the 2026 draft were announced. The Jays have the second smallest pool, ahead of only the Dodgers. Their first selection gets knocked back 10 places for trying too hard to win exceeding the second luxury tax threshold. That means they don’t go until 39th overall. eight teams will pick twice before they get to go, and the Rockies will be on the clock three times. They got a compensation pick after the fourth round for the Mets signing Bo Bichette after he rejected the Jays’ Qualifying Offer, but lose that pick and their second rounder for signing Dylan Cease after he rejected the Padres’ QO. After their ‘first rounder’, then, they pick in the third (103rd overall), 4th (131st), 5th (164th), 6th (193rd), 7th (222nd), and every 30 picks thereafter. So they’re going to have a hard time infusing any premium talent into the system this winter, although there’s plenty of gold to be panned in the later picks.

Finally, it’s opening day for all the leagues below AAA (which opened the same day the Majors did). Only the A ball Dunedin Blue Jays actually play today, though, at 4:30pm ET. They haven’t announced a starter yet, but top prospects Jojo Parker and Blaine Bullard should be in the lineup. They’ll face sixth overall pick Seth Hernandez, so it’ll be a good test from the jump. The AA New Hampshire Fisher Cats and A+ Vancouver Canadians open their seasons tomorrow night.

Scenes from a big league clubhouse

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - MARCH 30: Shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. #7 of the Kansas City Royals celebrates with teammates after the Royals defeated the Minnesota Twins 3-1 to win the opening day game at Kauffman Stadium on March 30, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Do you think your office is interesting? Most people probably would disagree. Maybe parts of your job are interesting, but the office-y parts? The ones where you’re answering emails or getting a Gatorade from the fridge or politely asking your coworker if they had a good weekend while you pass each other in the hallway? Probably not.

I would argue that the clubhouse is the baseball office. It shouldn’t be interesting. And it’s really not. But there is some intrigue in the mundane. The following are some scenes from the Royals clubhouse. Some of them important. Some less so.


Sam Mellinger, VP of communication, waves at the reporters and TV camera operators in the room: Stephen Cruz is ready for his interview. We crowd around Cruz, the cameras turn on, and questions are sent his way, taking a short detour through a translator. Cruz answers in Spanish, the translator responding to the rest of us in English. Cruz threw all of one (1) inning in Triple-A Omaha before being summoned to Kansas City, Cruz ostensibly making the trip down the well-trod I-29 thoroughfare like so many before—including himself.

Cruz is excited about his slider, which he worked on in the offseason. He wasn’t worried about getting called up, because that was outside his control. He was just ready to pitch, and pitch he did, and pitch he will in Kansas City. Maybe even that night. Cruz seems ready.


That Cruz is here at all is because the Royals decided to send Carlos Estevez to the injured list due to his foot bruise. Er, “contusion,” manager Matt Quatraro clarifies a little later in his daily dugout interview. But Q used “bruise” first, and this is one of those situations where the technical term removes some of the teeth of what actually happens. A contusion is clinical, specific. A bruise is that nasty purplish-orange-green thing that happens when you accidentally slam your knee into the corner of the table and try to say every curse word you personally know all at once.

Estevez seemed to be in good spirits. He was walking around without much of a limp and without a boot. But, man, he has to be going through it. Imagine if you had a bad day at work and then someone threw a 90-something mile per hour fastball at your foot.


I’ve been in the clubhouse when the Royals have been blasting music before. Today is quiet. There’s some muffled sound coming from a few of the televisions, which are playing sports shows and varying baseball-related content.

But there was one TV that is just playing, you know, Bluey, as you do. The press gets clubhouse access for 45 minutes to an hour, give or take. And during that whole time, just like, constant Disney Jr., a marathon of children’s television. It’s the sort of thing I’d do as a joke, just to see how long it would stay on before someone did a double-take. No one did.


As I walked in, my eyes narrowed and I wonder what’s different about the room. I’m only there a dozen times a year, but something is different. I compile my memory and eventually ask Jake Eisenberg, who I know won’t mock me for asking a potentially dumb question: “New carpet?” “Yes, new carpet,” he replies. It’s got a new blue pattern in it and two very large Royals logos that weren’t there before.

Also new: some locker locations. Jac Caglianone and Carter Jensen, besties, are now together on the right side. Tyler Tolbert is now by Vinnie Pasquantino. And Maikel Garcia got an upgrade, moving by one of the empty lockers in the back by his Team Venezuela teammate Salvador Perez.

It’s an upgrade because having an empty locker next to yours means more space, and that privilege is granted to the best players. Which two Royals have an empty locker on either side? You can probably guess: Bobby Witt Jr. and Salvador Perez.


Boredom can strike anywhere. For Carter Jensen and Lane Thomas, they decide to pass the time by doing something as old as time: playing cards.

Now, what kind of cards? I don’t know, I prefer not to loom over players who are doing something in their own space, in which I am a guest. But Noah Cameron looms. He is invested in the card game, which is funny because he will start on the mound of a Major League Baseball game in a few hours. Some pitchers keep to themselves during their starting day. But not Cameron, who seems lose—an embrace of the doldrums of work that even baseball players go through.

Agent Rich Paul on speculation about LeBron's next team: 'There’s no truth to any of it'

"When I know, you guys will know. I don't know. I have no idea. Just want to, just wanna live. That's all."

That is all LeBron James has said about retirement. It's not a topic open for discussion with him. However, his strong play of late — he had a triple-double this past week against Washington — and the Lakers' strong play down the stretch has only strengthened the belief in league circles that the 41-year-old NBA icon will play at least one more season. It also has fueled speculation about where he would play: Cleveland? Golden State? New York? Back with the Lakers?

How much of that speculation should we believe? None of it, LeBron's agent and long-time friend Rich Paul said on his Game Over podcast:

"There's no truth to any of it. First of all, I don't know what's happening. He don't know either. We don't even talk about it…

"Just enjoy the moment. The man is playing minutes with his son. Meaningful minutes. The Lakers are 12-1 and playing well. Why are you talking about some stuff for next year? I get you have to talk about it, but it's like, oh my god, nobody knows! I don't care what article is written, I don't care what tweet is out there, nobody knows anything."

It's a good effort by Paul — and I don't doubt him for a second. I am sure he and LeBron have not talked about this directly.

It also will not end the speculation.

Two quick thoughts about LeBron's future (and we're betting on him returning to play one more season and have a grand farewell tour).

First, the playoffs will have a lot to say about LeBron's market (and the same is true of any potential Giannis Antetokounmpo trade market). Good teams are going to be eliminated early this postseason and rethink their strategy. How hard Cleveland comes for LeBron would be very different if they are again eliminated in the second round, versus making the East Finals or the NBA Finals. Or, look at it this way, of the top six in the West (the Thunder, Spurs, Lakers, Nuggets, Rockets and Timberwolves), two of those teams will be eliminated in the first round. Teams such as Houston in the West or New York in the East could have very different offseasons depending on how the playoffs play out.

Second, any discussion about LeBron's future has to hinge on one question: How big a pay cut is he willing to take? How little money is he willing to pay for?

LeBron opted into the final year of his contract at $52.6 million this season — a big pay cut is coming. Even if he returns to the Lakers, who have his Bird Rights and can pay him whatever, he is going to have to take a steep pay reduction. Will he demand at least $30 million (which would force a sign-and-trade to a new contending team)? Would he take the mid-level exception for $15 million? Would he play for the minimum, or closer to it, to get to a destination he wants? LeBron's salary demands will help shape what teams might target him this summer.

Random Penguins thoughts: Kris Letang, Sam Girard, Elmer Soderblom and more

PITTSBURGH, PA - MARCH 31: Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Kris Letang (58) passes the puck during the third period in the NHL game between the Pittsburgh Penguins and the Detroit Red Wings on March 31, 2026, at PPG Paints Arena in Pittsburgh, PA. (Photo by Jeanine Leech/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Time for some random Pittsburgh Penguins thoughts because I have a lot on my mind, but none of it is probably enough for a full article on its own. There is a lot to discuss!

The biggest thing is just the Eastern Conference standings and the Stanley Cup Playoff race in general.

1. The Pittsburgh Penguins did themselves a big favor this week, and they got some big help

The Penguins started the week on Monday and Tuesday with back-to-back wins against the New York Islanders and Detroit Red Wings. They were not just big wins on the scoreboard, beating the Islanders 8-3 and the Red Wings 5-1. They were statement wins. They were the Penguins two biggest games of the regular season, against teams directly competing with them for potential playoff spots and seeding, and they absolutely dominated both games and kicked the snot out of both of them. It was impressive. Combined with the help they received on the out-of-town scoreboard on Tuesday night, when literally every team around them and chasing them lost in regulation, it put the Penguins in a really good position.

They are three points ahead of the Islanders with a game-in-hand on them. They are four points ahead of the Columbus Blue Jackets. They currently have the tiebreaker on both teams. They are six points ahead of non-playoff teams Ottawa Senators, Detroit Red Wings, Philadelphia Flyers and Washington Capitals. Those are big cushions and a lot of breathing room when every team has between six and eight games remaining on their schedules.

From a percentage standpoint, the Penguins playoff odds by pretty much every model are over 94 percent.

But let’s look at it another way. In my view, if the Penguins win three more of their remaining seven games, I think they are in. It is possible that even two more wins does it for them. Let’s put some numbers on it. Here is a quick look at what every team behind the Penguins would need to do to finish ahead of them if the Penguins win between one and four more games.

Keep something in mind with this: In each scenario at least three teams, and at least two Metropolitan Division teams would have to finish ahead of them.

Keep something else in mind with this: Every team on that table plays at least one other team on the table. Some of them play a team on the table multiple times. There are games that teams are going to lose just based on that. It does not even get into the overall strength of schedule some of these teams have to play, including the Islanders and Blue Jackets.

The Penguins are not in yet. They still have some work to do. They have still put themselves in a good position. The start of this week was extremely important.

2. Kris Letang and Sam Girard hold a lot of keys for the Penguins

Perhaps the biggest development out of the two games to open this week is that the defense pairing of Kris Letang and Sam Girard seemed to finally start clicking a little bit. The Penguins have been consistent in sticking with them, perhaps frustratingly so, and finally got some pay-off with it. They played two of their best games on Monday and Tuesday and the numbers support that.

In the two games the pairing produced:

  • A 3-0 goals advantage on the scoreboard when they were on the ice together during 5-on-5 play.
  • A 64.06 percent expected goals share.
  • A 57.1 percent scoring chance share.
  • A 58.8 percent high-danger scoring chance share.

They also seemed to pass the eye test for really the first time since they have started playing together.

With the way Erik Karlsson is playing the Penguins have at least one outstanding defensive pair. It can not be overstated how important a second strong defensive pair can be. If these guys can figure it out and play well together, that changes a lot for the Penguins.

3. Give Stuart Skinner the chance to take the starting job

The goalie rotation has done its job. Without a clear No. 1 from the start they have mostly managed the situation, kept both guys fresh while also giving them consistent playing time, and put themselves in a good position. At some point, though, somebody is going to have to take the job and become the No. 1 guy. Right now it is looking like it should be Stuart Skinner. Not only because he has been the marginally better goalie recently, but also because Arturs Silovs is just really struggling right now.

Skinner was outstanding on Tuesday against Detroit and should have earned himself another start on Thursday. We know both goalies are going to play over the weekend due to the back-to-back situation, but for Thursday you need to give Skinner another chance to to show he deserves to get the primary playing time.

4. Elmer Soderblom is looking more impressive with each game

The Penguins trade deadline was a little quiet, only adding young forward Elmer Soderblom from the Detroit Red Wings for a third-round pick. It is the type of low-risk, potentially high-reward chance the Penguins have been taking recently and the early returns were a little mixed. At times you could see glimpses of why the Penguins would want to take a chance with him. At other times you could see glimpses of why the Red Wings were willing to give up on him for a third-round pick.

Over the past two games things have really come together for him. He already has more goals and points in a fraction of the games with Penguins than he had at the start of the season with the Red Wings. He is also really starting to look more comfortable and use his size. Even though he only recorded an assist on Tuesday against the Red Wings, I honestly thought he was one of their best players. He was everywhere. He was clearly trying to send a message to the Red Wings and seemed to be trying to score 1,000 goals. He was a physical force. He won fights for the puck along the walls. He controlled the puck. He created chances.

On Monday, he scored a huge goal to get them on the board and get things rolling offensively for them.

He is getting more impressive with each game, and he might even be starting to make an argument for himself ot stay in the lineup. I do not expect this trade to work out as well as, say, the Egor Chinakhov trade has. It still seems like there is at least a chance the Penguins may have found a useful player that can contribute for them.

Panthers Host Boston With New Additions To Growing Injured List

The Florida Panthers will wrap up their second-to-last homestand of the season on Thursday night in Sunrise.

Despite being decimated by injuries, the Panthers continue to fight for every point they can get, as that’s the culture Florida Head Coach Paul Maurice and General Manager Bill Zito have built.

After taking down the playoff hungry Ottawa Senators on Tuesday, the Panthers will again face a team clawing for every point they can get in a crowded playoff race when the Boston Bruins visit South Florida.

One big difference, or two, in the Panthers from Tuesday to Thursday will be that defenseman Aaron Ekblad and Dmitry Kulikov will not be in Florida’s lineup.

Both were injured after being hit by the puck; Ekbald suffered a broken finger and won't play again this season, while Kulikov has a broken nose and could still play at some point, according to Panthers Head Coach Paul Maurice. 

Now while the Bruins are looking to get back into the playoffs after missing out last season, the Panthers are in a position to retain a high-end asset if they can finish low enough in the standings.

Florida’s first round pick in this summer’s NHL Draft is top-10 protected, so even though they traded it Chicago at last year’s Trade Deadline in the Seth Jones deal, the Panthers will retain the selection if they end up with a pick in the top 10 after the NHL Draft Lottery.

Currently, there are five teams below Florida (75 points) in the league-wide standings: the Vancouver Canucks (52 points), Chicago Blackhawks (68 points), Calgary Flames (70 points), New York Rangers (71 points) and the St. Louis Blues (74 points).

The Seattle Kraken have the same 75 points as do the Panthers, but they’ve played one less game than Florida.

With just eight games left in their season, it will be interesting to see how things shake out for the Panthers from here on out.

They’ll be fighting for every point they can get, but when you’ve got half an AHL roster and you’re fighting against NHL squads looking to make noise in the playoffs, it’s going to be tough.

Here are the Panthers projected lines and pairings for Thursday’s battle with Boston:

Carter Verhaeghe – Sam Bennett – Matthew Tkachuk

Mackie Samoskevich – Eetu Luostarinen – A.J. Greer

Noah Gregor – Tomas Nosek – Jesper Boqvist

Cole Reinhardt – Luke Kunin – Vinnie Hinostroza

Gus Forsling – Tobias Bjornfot

Donovan Sebrango – Seth Jones

Mikulas Hovorka – Mike Benning

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Photo caption: Jan 11, 2025; Sunrise, Florida, USA; Florida Panthers defenseman Tobias Bjornfot (2) moves the puck past Boston Bruins center Charlie Coyle (13) during the third period at Amerant Bank Arena. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

Matt Chapman has vulgar reprimand for Giants teammate in viral mound moment

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Baseball players on the San Francisco Giants, including pitcher Houser, in a discussion on the field, Image 2 shows A baseball player on second base attempting to steal third base while a player in red holds a glove near him
Giants issues

There seems to be some tension in the Giants infield.

In Wednesday’s 7-1 road loss to the Padres, San Francisco third baseman Matt Chapman fielded a slow grounder off the bat of Xander Bogaerts.

Chapman collected and fired on the run to first baseman Casey Schmitt, but the ball ticked off Schmitt’s glove and rolled to the wall on what would be ruled a throwing error by Chapman.

The play came with runners on first and third and two outs, so it led to a run that could’ve been prevented with a clean throw and catch.

Instead, Gavin Sheets scampered home to make it 2-0 Padres in the fifth.

During a mound visit a few minutes later, Chapman had some harsh words for Schmitt.

“Hey, catch the f—cking ball,” Chapman said twice.

Matt Chapman telling Schmitt to catch the (expletive) ball. @TalkinBaseball_/X

After the game, Chapman and Schmitt both said they’d made up. Chapman said it was just a “heat of the moment” incident.” Schmitt added that he stretched too early on the play.

“I’ve already talked to Casey. It’s all good,” Chapman said. “I figured that people would try to make that a big deal, but it’s baseball. Stuff happens. We all learn from it. We’ll move on.”

“I’m not mad about it or anything. It’s baseball,” Schmitt added. “Those are things I should have done and didn’t. At the end of the day, we wake up tomorrow, we play another game and we get back at it. We’re trying to win games. That’s the bottom line. Sometimes things happen. I just messed up.”

No other runs scored in the inning despite the blunder, but the Giants were still beaten 7-1 by San Diego.

Giants starter Adrian Houser gave up just one run over 5 ⅓ innings, but Jose Butto allowed four runs in the bottom of the eighth to stretch the Padres’ lead to six.

The Giants had just four hits in the affair to the Padres’ 10 and struck out 14 times.

Casey Schmitt can’t catch the ball at first base. @TalkinBaseball_/X

Chapman, known for his stellar defense at the hot corner, is in the second year of a six-year, $151 million extension he signed in September 2024.

Last year, he appeared in 128 games and slashed .231/.340/.430 with a .770 OPS, a letdown after the massive deal. He also hit 21 homers and had 61 RBIs.

He spent the first five years of his career in Oakland and the next two in Toronto before moving to the Giants on a three-year contract in 2024 that would ultimately be extended.

Chapman won four Gold Gloves across his first eight seasons, a reason why Wednesday’s mishap was uncharacteristic.

Matt Chapman has won four Gold Gloves across his MLB career. Denis Poroy-Imagn Images

Of course, it doesn’t help that Schmitt isn’t playing his natural position. Before this season, he’d only played a total of 18 games at first base at the MLB level, playing every other infield position instead.

San Francisco is now 2-4 through the first six games of the season after being swept by the Yankees in its opening series and winning two of three against the Padres.

The Giants are looking to make the playoffs for the first time since 2021. They’ve finished within the 79-81 win range in the last four campaigns, a consistently mediocre squad.

Brett Wisely clears waivers and is assigned to Triple-A Gwinnett

TAMPA, FLORIDA - FEBRUARY 26: Brett Wisely #0 of the Atlanta Braves hits a single in the fifth inning against the New York Yankees during a Grapefruit League spring training game at George M. Steinbrenner Field on February 26, 2026 in Tampa, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images

We’ve got a roster move that fell through the cracks a little bit but still needs to be talked about since it affects the depth of this squad. Back around Opening Day, infielder Brett Wisely was designated for assignment once it was clear that he wouldn’t be making the team. That was all the way back on March 25 when that particular move was made. Now, he’s cleared waivers and has been subsequently assigned to the Gwinnett Stripers.

As DJourn mentions above, this should help the depth when it comes to the infield (and the outfield as well since Wisely can play out there, too) and it’s something that the Braves have learned over the past couple of seasons that you can never have too much of. Meanwhile, this ends a wacky offseason journey for Wisely — one that saw him get picked up off waivers by the Braves last September, traded to the Rays in January and then brought back from the Rays before settling into the Braves Triple-A club.

Wisely made four appearances for the Atlanta Braves and didn’t record a hit in nine plate appearances. With that being said, he’ll probably be used as a defensive substitute if (and hopefully not when) he’s needed to return to the Braves any time soon. For now, he’ll be plying his trade in Gwinnett where he will surely play in more than two games for the Stripers like he did last season.

Knicks Bulletin: ‘It was a group effort to regroup’

MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE - APRIL 01: Jahmai Mashack #21 of the Memphis Grizzlies looks to shoot against the New York Knicks during the second half at FedExForum on April 01, 2026 in Memphis, Tennessee. 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 Justin Ford/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Who would have thought the Knicks would beat the Grizz… on the road, not least!

Get-right game got New York on the right path again as the Knickerbockers are one win away from reaching 50 dubs for the third consecutive season.

Two more wins, and Coach Brown would match Thibs’ best record in just his freshman season on the Knicks sideline. Bananas!

Mike Brown

On the Knicks showing some urgency on Wednesday:

“It’s good to have that mindset.”

On closing out Memphis:

“A game like that, it’s always tough if you play against a group that’s free and can attack and has nothing to lose. But our guys at the end of the day, we were good in a lot of areas.”

On the rebounding effort against the Grizzlies:

“A lot of good performances from our guys, we were able to make it up in terms of the times that they went to the free throw line and our turnovers by offensive rebounding. OG had three offensive rebounds, KAT had six offensive rebounds. KAT had a triple-double tonight, which was great. And especially in 30 minutes of action, and then OG, for him to get 13 rebounds. A big, big night to get a double-double. We needed every single one of those rebounds.”

On Landry Shamet’s return:

“He’s arguably one of our, if not the best, on-ball defenders. Especially when it comes to ball screens and dribble handoffs. He’s really physical in that area. And you feel him. His pace offensively creates gravity for others. And then his ability to shoot. He can string together two or three 3s. And it can create separation for him and give our group confidence. We had to find other ways. But we missed that from him, especially from his size.”

On encouraging Miles McBride to keep shooting amid his post-comeback struggles:

“If you’re open, let it fly. I even told him this before, I don’t care if he’s 0-for-15. I just want him to feel the aggression, get to his spots.”

Jalen Brunson

On the need for accountability:

“Regardless of being veterans or not, we got to turn the page and do something about it. It doesn’t matter how long you’ve been in the league or not.”

Mikal Bridges

On the Knicks’ true-talent level showing up on Wednesday:

“I feel the team we have, a lot of guys able to shoot, drive. I’ve been talking about this since last year. We got a lot of talent that can do a lot of things. Just got to share the ball and play off each other and try to make the right reads.”

On the first-half offense vs. defense against Memphis:

“It was good. We were sharing the ball, all that stuff. I think defensively we could’ve been better, still gave up a lot of points. Offensively, we were sharing the ball, moving well. But defensively, we could’ve done better.”

On the second-half mild letdown:

“I’m still not happy about us in the second half not locked in and them making a run. They play hard. A good young team. But I think it’s unacceptable for us.”

On his ironman streak:

“Hopefully, I have kids one day and I’ll brag about it.”

Karl-Anthony Towns

On ending the road trip on a positive note:

“It’s great. It doesn’t matter about the triple-double, double-double, as long as we get a win, something that has been escaping us in the last week. Good to end the road trip on a high note so we can go back home to our fans where we’re comfortable and we get that energy from our fans and hopefully make it a two-game winning streak.”

On the good ball movement in the win over Memphis:

“I thought we did a good job moving the ball. I thought we did a good job of playing with a point-five mentality and doing everything we needed to do to beat a good team, and a hungry team with a lot of guys trying to prove themselves in this league. I thought we did a good job of weathering the storm. We understood they’re going to play hard. They’re going to play well, and we found a way to win.”

On how he handles double teams:

“When they’re double and triple teaming, I understand that one of my teammates is open. Just staying patient, staying relaxed and trying to make the right play. I was disappointed with the turnovers I had today, but I’m glad that I was able to find my teammates more than not and we were able to come out with a win.”

On regrouping after the three consecutive losses heading into Wednesday’s game:

“It was a group effort to regroup.”

Landry Shamet

On feeling fatigue on his return:

“I was definitely a little tired at the end of the game. The legs — that’s obviously the biggest thing. You can do all you want to stay in shape but playing a real NBA basketball game, that’s like the next layer of your rehab or whatever. You just got to get reps and get your legs back under you. So I felt really good. Just naturally a little heavy at the end. But that’s alright.”

OG Anunoby

On his fourth-quarter scoring:

“I was shooting the same shots, but they were just going in.”

Cam Schlittler continues Yankees’ dominant stretch with second nearly unhittable start

Cam Schlittler was outstanding again taking the ball on Wednesday against the Mariners.

After allowing just one hit in his season debut last week in San Francisco, the young right-hander was nearly unhittable again as he continued the Yankees' dominant stretch of pitching.

Schlittler found himself in trouble from the first pitch he threw, as Brendan Donovan led off the game with a double, but he was quickly able to escape the threat with help from two strikeouts.

He allowed a one-out knock to Luke Raley in the bottom of the second, but that also proved to be no bother, as he set down the next two he faced on just seven pitches. 

The righty was in complete control from there, going on a stretch of 15 straight retired before Aaron Boone came to pull him with one out in the bottom of the seventh. 

“It was exciting to see just how dominant his stuff is,” the skipper said, via YES Network. “He was ahead in counts, got early outs which allowed him to get deep in the game with a pitch count -- he’s just throwing the ball incredibly well.”

Schlittler finished the day with just the two hits while striking out seven on an efficient 79 pitches over 6.1 innings. 

He’s the first pitcher in Yankee history with zero walks, zero runs, and 15+ K's in any two-game span. 

“It was just like last start,” Schlittler said. “Just being in the zone making good pitches, defense was great behind me, so just having the confidence to go out there attack and do what I can to get as far as I can with a limited amount of pitches.”

Seattle struck three times over the last two innings against the Yankees’ bullpen, but they were able to hang on to close the season-opening road trip 5-1. 

Schlittler wasn't the only arm to deliver for New York on the road trip, as their starters have the lowest ERA in MLB history through six games (0.53) and they've allowed the third-fewest runs as a team over that span (six). 

“I think the staff is dominant, the bullpen has been great, as well,” the young righty said. “The team as a whole we’re just feeding off of each other and just taking it each game and each start and just keep rolling with it.”