When will College Basketball Crown bracket, teams be revealed?

The 2026 College Basketball Crown bracket reveal has a set date and time.

The men's college basketball postseason tournament will unveil its field Monday, March 16 at 5:30 p.m. ET, USA TODAY Sports confirms. The bracket will be announced on the FS1 show "First Things First" with Nick Wright, Chris Broussard and Kevin Wildes. Fox Sports analysts LaPhonso Ellis and Danny Parkins will join the program as part of the reveal.

Introduced in 2025, the College Basketball Crown is a postseason tournament in Las Vegas for teams that don't make the NCAA Tournament, with name, image and likeness prizes as its major selling point. The inaugural field featured 16 teams, capped by Nebraska beating Central Florida in the final.

Nebraska coach Fred Hoiberg hoists the Crown Championship trophy following the championship game of the College Basketball Crown tournament between the Nebraska Cornhuskers and the UCF Knights T-Mobile Arena on April 06, 2025 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

As a result, the Cornhuskers received a $300,000 prize pool for winning the tournament, while the Knights got $100,000 as the runner-up. Semifinalists Boise State and Villanova each got $50,000 for their respective finishes.

Nebraska used that Crown run as a springboard into the 2025-26 season, which saw the Huskers finish second in the Big Ten regular season.

The 2026 edition will remain in Las Vegas, but with a smaller field of just eight teams. It will have the top two teams from the Big Ten, Big 12 and Big East that didn't receive an NCAA Tournament bid, as well as two wild card selections determined by its committee.

By having automatic spots from the three conferences, the Crown hopes to avoid a growing issue in the sport where teams turn down postseason invitations after missing March Madness. Not getting the chance to win a national championship usually means players hit the transfer portal, leaving rosters in doubt of whether it will have suitable lineups to play with.

When will College Basketball Crown 2026 bracket be announced?

The College Basketball Crown bracket will be announced one day after the NCAA Tournament and NIT reveal its field

  • NCAA Tournament bracket announcement: Sunday, March 15 at 6 p.m. ET
  • NIT bracket announcement: Sunday, March 15 (Time TBD, after NCAA Tournament announced)
  • College Basketball Crown announcement: Monday, March 16 at 5:30 p.m. ET

College Basketball Crown 2026 schedule

The 2026 College Basketball Crown will be played April 1-5 at the MGM Grand Garden Arena and T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. It will air on Fox and FS1.

  • Quarterfinals: April 1-2 at MGM Grand Garden Arena
  • Semifinals: April 4 at T-Mobile Arena
  • Final: April 5 at T-Mobile Arena

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: College Basketball Crown tournament bracket date, time set

Three reasons to be optimistic about an underrated Red Sox lineup

WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 4, 2025: (L to R) Trevor Story #10 and Marcelo Mayer #39 of the Boston Red Sox return to the dugout after scoring runs as Roman Anthony #19 gets ready to bat during the fifth inning of an interleague game against the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park on July 4, 2025 in Washington, DC. The Red Sox beat the Nationals, 11-2. (Photo by Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

The Boston Red Sox definitely made upgrades this offseason, though those moves mostly came in the starting rotation with additions in Sonny Gray, Johan Oviedo and Ranger Suarez. 

Deserved or not, that’s left plenty of underwhelming feelings and question marks about the state of the Red Sox lineup. 

Boston never replaced Rafael Devers after the four-alarm disaster his trade to the San Francisco Giants turned out to be last June. The Red Sox only took another uppercut when Alex Bregman called their bluff in free agency and signed a five-year deal with the Chicago Cubs. 

The Red Sox will call upon sustained success from internal candidates and improved production from others. There’s no true thumper in the middle of the order to intimidate opponents, though the panic button does not need to sit right next to this lineup card to start this season.

Are shorter expectations understandable for these bats? Sure. 

Is there still reason to believe that the lineup can do enough to support one of the league’s best rotations and send Boston back to October? 

Yes. 

Here are three reasons why. 

Willson Contreras swings it


Alex Cora has begged for years for right-handed pop for the home team to maximize offensive production at Fenway Park. 

The Red Sox saw spurts of that ask from Tyler O’Neill in 2024 and Bregman in 2025. While Pete Alonso chose the Baltimore Orioles among other free-agent misses, Craig Breslow made another deal with old friend Chaim Bloom and acquired Willson Contreras from the St. Louis Cardinals. Now Contreras gives Cora has stability at first base, a veteran presence, and an offensive profile that deserves more attention. 

Contreras finally gets to play home games in a hitter-friendly park for the first time. His first decade in the show came with the Cardinals and the Chicago Cubs. Busch Stadium and Wrigley Field both respectively rank in the bottom half of the sport in park factor. 

The 33-year old posted 20 home runs in 2025, the third time in four seasons he’s hit that mark. He should take advantage of the Green Monster this summer. He rocks a .941 OPS to start spring training with wall shots at JetBlue Park. 

The Red Sox unintentionally put plenty on Contreras’ shoulders given his value to the lineup. With that said, if there’s ever a hitter-friendly situation for a mid-30s resurgence, this is it. 

More at-bats for quality hitters

Remember what we referenced about how many hitters missed time for the Red Sox a season ago. Beyond Bregman and Devers, Triston Casas struggled then went down for the year in early April. Marcelo Mayer didn’t finish the season. Anthony played in just 71 games, albeit as one of the more productive hitters in the sport.

This time around, Anthony is healthy and brings All-Star expectations into his first full campaign. 

Alex Cora will go down swinging (see what we did there?) in pushing more at-bats to Wilyer Abreu against lefties. The outfielder has 25-homer pop. That’s pop Boston needs. To maximize his bat, Boston needs him to get better against southpaws (.205 AVG, .589 OPS career vs. LHP). Cora seems intent on giving him every opportunity to do just that. 

Injuries are inevitable, but Boston feels stable with key hitters ready for 500 to 600 at-bats in 2026. 

History favors Alex Cora’s lineup

Big expectations or not, the Red Sox just seem to get it done at the plate consistently with Alex Cora in the dugout. 

The Boston skipper makes the most of platoons and pushes the right button with pinch-hitters more often than not.

Need the numbers? 

The Red Sox finished with the ninth-best OPS (.745) in baseball in 2025. That’s with swirling uncertainty in who stepped into the box all season long: just two and a half months of Rafael Devers, two months without Rafael Devers and three months without Roman Anthony on either side of his call-up and his season-ending oblique injury. 

That trend stands the test of time in recent Boston baseball memory. 

Boston finished top-10 in team OPS in every season dating back to 2018. That’s Alex Cora’s entire managerial tenure, plus the always-forgetful 2020 COVID season. (Cheers to you, Ron Roenicke and Top-10 MVP finalist Alex Verdugo!)

Time takes care of worries. 

AP WAS THERE: Kobe Bryant scores 81 points

EDITOR'S NOTE: When Kobe Bryant scored 81 points for the Los Angeles Lakers on Jan. 22, 2006, against the Toronto Raptors, it was the second-most points scored by a player in NBA history. The record was set by Wilt Chamberlain, who scored 100 points on March 2, 1962, against the New York Knicks. Miami Heat forward Bam Adebayo scored 83 points Tuesday night against the Washington Wizards to pass Bryant on the list of most points scored in an NBA game. The Associated Press is republishing its story from Bryant's historic performance:

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By JOHN NADEL

AP Sports Writer

LOS ANGELES — Kobe Bryant kept shooting, from all over the court and from every angle.

By halftime, he had 26 points — not a bad tally for most players. By the end of the game, he had put up the second-highest total in NBA history.

The Los Angeles Lakers’ star scored a staggering 81 points Sunday night against the Toronto Raptors in a 122-104 win. Only Wilt Chamberlain’s 100-point game stands ahead of him.

“It just happened, man,” Bryant said. “It really hasn’t, like, set in for me. It’s about the ‘W,’ that’s why I turned it on. It turned into something special.

“To sit here and say I grasp what happened, that would be lying. Not even in my dreams.”

The NBA’s leading scorer left to a standing ovation with 4.2 seconds remaining, having shot 28-of-46 from the floor, including 7-of-13 from 3-point range and 18-of-20 from the foul line.

With the fans at Staples Center chanting “MVP! MVP!” Bryant made two free throws with 43.4 seconds remaining for his final points. He scored 27 points in the third quarter, 28 in the fourth.

“It feels great to put on a great show here,” he said.

Chamberlain scored 100 points for Philadelphia against the New York Knicks at Hershey, Pa., on March 2, 1962, making 36-of-63 from the field and 28-of-32 from the foul line while playing all 48 minutes.

Chamberlain had 59 points in the second half — the only player with more points in a half than Bryant’s 55 after halftime in this game.

Chamberlain’s second-highest total was 78 against the Lakers in three overtimes on Dec. 8, 1961.

Elgin Baylor held the previous franchise record of 71 points at New York on Nov. 15, 1960. Lakers assistant Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the NBA’s all-time leading scorer, saw that game, too.

“Elgin’s game was an incredible performance, also. I don’t think there’s any comparison. Elgin did it without 3-point lines. His game was attacking the hoop and hitting jumpers inside 20 feet. Kobe’s range is unreal, and he does it his way,” Abdul-Jabbar said.

“It was a real treat. His ability to shoot from long range and also attack the hoop, split the defense and get in close for opportunities near the basket is unique. He’s made a niche for himself and he deserves it.”

Michael Jordan’s career high was 69 points, and only four players had ever scored more than 70 — Chamberlain, Baylor, David Thompson and David Robinson.

The 27-year-old Bryant made it five. His previous career high was 62 points during a 112-90 victory over Dallas last month — he sat out the fourth quarter because of the one-sided nature of the game.

“I was just determined. I was just locked in, tuned into what was going on out there,” Bryant said. “These points tonight mattered. We needed them. The points I put in the basket were instrumental. It means a lot more.”

Bryant raised his scoring average to an NBA-leading 35.9 points this season.

“I never imagined I would see history like that,” said Devean George, a teammate of Bryant’s with the Lakers for 6 1/2 seasons. “I can’t tell you where that came from. He just kept attacking, attacking, attacking — every time he got the ball.”

Bryant played nearly 42 minutes, going the entire second half until being lifted by coach Phil Jackson.

Jackson coached Jordan and the Chicago Bulls to six championships in the 1990s and the Lakers, with Bryant and Shaquille O’Neal, to three more titles, from 2000-02.

“That was something to behold,” Jackson said. “It was another level. I’ve seen some remarkable games, but I’ve never seen one like that before.”

Bryant’s performance came on the same night the NBA had its highest-scoring game in 11 years when Seattle beat Phoenix 152-149 in two overtimes. The last 300-point game in the league came when Dallas beat Houston 156-147 in two overtimes on April 11, 1995, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.

“You’re sitting and watching, and it’s like a miracle unfolding in front of your eyes and you can’t accept it,” Lakers owner Jerry Buss said. “Somehow, the brain won’t work. The easiest way to look at it is everybody remembers every 50-point game they ever saw. He had 55 in the second half.”

Lamar Odom’s 3-pointer with 7:04 remaining gave the Lakers a 100-93 lead, and Bryant scored 30 seconds later to give him 61 points and his team a nine-point advantage. The Raptors didn’t pose a serious threat after that.

Bryant scored all but 15 of the Lakers’ 42 points in the third quarter, shooting 11-of-15 including 4-of-5 from 3-point range. Six of his points came during a 12-0 run to finish the period, giving Los Angeles a 91-85 lead.

The Lakers outscored the Raptors 38-14 to finish the third quarter to go ahead for good. They trailed by as many as 18 points early in the period, angering Bryant.

“He was ticked off,” Odom said.

When asked what Bryant said at that stage, Odom replied: “Nothing. That’s when it’s bad.”

Bryant scored 51 points after the Raptors took a 71-53 lead. It was 63-49 at halftime.

“The thing about him that is most amazing is that he is relentless,” Raptors coach Sam Mitchell said. “We played man-to-man, box-in-one and zone. We tried to put smaller guys on him to deny him the ball.

“I saw that game he had against Dallas where he scored 62, what more can you say?”

Smush Parker added 13 points and Chris Mihm had 12 points and six rebounds for the Lakers.

Mike James led Toronto with 26 points and 10 assists. Chris Bosh added 18 points and eight rebounds and Jalen Rose scored 17 points for the Raptors.

Notes: Bryant scored a season-low 11 points in the Lakers’ 102-91 victory over the Raptors in Toronto last month. He had 14 in the first quarter of this game. ... Bryant has led the Lakers in scoring in the last 21 games in which he’s played. He is averaging 45.5 points in 10 games since sitting out a two-game suspension. ... Toronto C Rafael Araujo, who has made 30 starts this season, missed his second straight game and third of the season because of a sore right shoulder. ... Bryant made his first five foul shots before missing late in the second quarter, snapping his streak of consecutive made free throws at 62. Michael Williams made an NBA-record 93 straight for Minnesota in 1993. ... Bryant received a technical foul with 10:44 left — shortly after being accidentally struck above the right eye.

Three Takeaways from Brooklyn’s 138–100 loss to Detroit

DETROIT, MI - MARCH 7: Danny Wolf #2 and Michael Porter Jr. #17 of the Brooklyn Nets celebrate after winning the game against the Detroit Pistons on March 7, 2026 at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, Michigan. 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 2026 NBAE (Photo by Chris Schwegler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
NEW YORK, NEW YORK – MARCH 10: Jalen Duren #0 of the Detroit Pistons dunks the ball during the third quarter against the Brooklyn Nets at Barclays Center on March 10, 2026 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. 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 Ishika Samant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

All good things must come to an end, and in this case, that might not be the worst thing.

With a chance to build a three-game win streak on Tuesday against the Detroit Pistons, the Brooklyn Nets instead got smacked around, falling 138-100.

Things snapped back to reality, and despite the brief burst, this is still a team that has lost 11 of its last 13 games and owns the third-worst record in the NBA.

While Brooklyn has managed to pull off a few head-scratching wins throughout the season, there’s no hiding this team’s place among the league’s bottom tier and its tendency to revert to the mean.

Now sitting at 17-48 and holding the fourth slot in the lottery standings, NetsDaily breaks down a few takeaways from the past few days of Nets basketball.

A True No. 1 Keeps Teams Afloat

When the role players aren’t rolling and Michael Porter Jr.’s rather questionable shot selection isn’t falling, a true No. 1 option would keep things steady on nights when the lights haven’t come on.

A star player doesn’t just provide offensive firepower. It gives a team a standard, a constant reminder of the best possible outcome when everything goes right.

Whether it comes by way of the draft, trade, or free agency, one player alone won’t completely reverse course in the standings. But don’t expect to see as many 38-point blowouts if Brooklyn finds that centerpiece.

Having a clear No. 1 option also creates safety valves and two-man games that lead to a more well-rounded offense.

On nights like this one, when a player like Bam Adebayo — not even Miami’s primary scoring option — can put up a generational 83-point scoring performance, the Nets’ lack of a dependable go-to scorer becomes glaring.

Rookies Showing What We’re Waiting For

Following this team would feel far bleaker without the promise of improvement, but many of the ingredients are already on the table.

On Tuesday, rookie point guard Ben Saraf delivered one of his most well-rounded performances of the season, scoring 10 points on perfect shooting while adding six assists against just two turnovers.

“Ben will always fight. He’s a competitor,” said Nets head coach Jordi Fernandez. “Sometimes you have to be challenged to fight and come back harder, and he always does that.”

With the season winding down, Saraf may have left the most to be desired among Brooklyn’s NBA-record five first-round picks. That said, earning five starts as a rookie while averaging five points and 2.8 assists per game is nothing to scoff at for a No. 26 overall pick.

After being called up from the G League ahead of Monday’s matchup against the Memphis Grizzlies, Drake Powell returned to Brooklyn with two solid outings of his own, scoring nine points Monday and 10 more on Tuesday.

With his efficiency dipping late in that stretch, Brooklyn sent Powell back to the G League so he could work through the slump and regain his rhythm without the pressure of nightly NBA minutes. If the early returns are any indication, the reset may have been exactly what he needed.

While rookie point guard Nolan Traoré finished Tuesday with just two points, he continues to flash enough potential to be viewed as a promising playmaker for the future.

During Monday’s win over Memphis, he scored 17 points on 66.7% shooting while adding four assists and committing just one turnover.

In his case, the talent is obvious to anyone watching. It’s simply a matter of adjusting to the NBA pace and occasionally remembering to slow down and take a breath.


A True No. 1 Defender Is Needed

Just as much as the Nets are starving for a reliable offensive anchor, they also need a No. 1 option on the defensive end.

As players like Cade Cunningham and Luka Dončić continue to define the modern NBA with their combination of size, fluidity, and strength, Brooklyn will need someone capable of slowing them down.

As athletically gifted as Nic Claxton is, his best work comes in and around the paint, and asking him to venture too far from it wouldn’t be the best use of the team’s pieces

Brooklyn’s best bet on the current roster may be Powell, who has shown a willingness to defend and a knack for understanding the intricacies of being a stopper.

With some added physical development in the offseason, he could grow into a reliable defender capable of guarding positions one through four and giving head coach Jordi Fernández some breathing room when facing elite offensive talent.

Iran’s sports minister says the country can’t take part in the World Cup because of US attacks

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran’s sports and youth minister said it's “not possible” for the country to take part in the World Cup after the United States killed its supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in its ongoing war.

Iran was expected to take part in the World Cup that will be held across North America in June, but Iranian Sports and Youth Minister Ahmad Donyamali told state television that his country’s soccer team players are not safe in the U.S., according to a video of the interview posted Tuesday.

“Due to the wicked acts they have done against Iran — they have imposed two wars on us over just eight or nine months and have killed and martyred thousands of our people — definitely it’s not possible for us to take part in the World Cup,” he said.

Iran is scheduled to play in Inglewood, California, against New Zealand on June 15 and Belgium on June 21 before finishing group play against Egypt in Seattle on June 26. The U.S. is hosting the tournament with Canada and Mexico from June 11 to July 19.

FIFA said Tuesday night that it anticipates Iran’s national team will be allowed to come to the United States.

Last week, U.S. President Donald Trump said “I really don’t care” if Iran takes part in the 48-nation tournament.

FIFA President Gianni Infantino said he met with Trump on Tuesday night “to discuss the status of preparations” for the tournament and received assurances that Iran would be permitted to come to the U.S.

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AP soccer: https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

St. Louis Cardinals vs Washington Nationals Game Discussion

Feb 14, 2026; Jupiter, FL, USA; St. Louis Cardinals starting pitcher Dustin May (3) pitches during spring training at Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images | Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

The St. Louis Cardinals will travel to the Spring Training home of the Washington Nationals on Wednesday, March 11. According to MLB.com, Dustin May will get another start for the Cardinals while Cade Cavalli will take the mound for the Nationals. Here’s the starting lineup according to the St. Louis Cardinals website:

  1. Masyn Winn (R) SS
  2. JJ Wetherholt (L) 2B
  3. Alec Burleson (L) 1B
  4. Jordan Walker (R) RF
  5. Nolan Gorman (L) 3B
  6. José Fermín (R) LF
  7. Pedro Pagés (R) C
  8. Nathan Church (L) CF
  9. Rainiel Rodriguez (R) DH

Wednesday spring training Orioles game thread: vs. Pirates, 1:05

Feb 28, 2026; Sarasota, Florida, USA; Baltimore Orioles starting pitcher Kyle Bradish (38) throws a pitch during the first inning against the Atlanta Braves at Ed Smith Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images | Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

If it feels like a long time since you’ve seen Kyle Bradish on the mound for the Orioles, you’re not imagining things. Bradish hasn’t pitched a Grapefruit League game since Feb. 28, a full 11 days ago. But that changes today, as he takes the hill against the Pirates in Sarasota. Bradish gave up two runs apiece in his previous two spring starts and has yet to pitch more than three innings. It’s about time to get him stretched out some more, especially if he’s going to be the Orioles’ starting pitcher on Opening Day as most fans expect.

Today the O’s will get a look at mega-hyped young Pirates shortstop Konnor Griffin, the #1 prospect in baseball, who has a real chance to break camp with the team despite just 21 games of experience above High-A. By all accounts he’s set to be baseball’s next superstar, joining Paul Skenes to give the Pirates a team that’s actually worth watching for once.

The Orioles’ batting order includes some of the regulars, but without the players who went on yesterday’s road trip, and Gunnar Henderson and Tyler O’Neill still away at the World Baseball Classic, it’s not exactly an Opening Day-looking lineup just yet.

This game will air locally on MASN. If you’re out of market, you can catch it on MLB Network.

Orioles lineup:

LF Taylor Ward
C Adley Rutschman
1B Pete Alonso
DH Ryan Mountcastle
RF Heston Kjerstad
3B Blaze Alexander
CF Leody Taveras
2B Weston Wilson
SS José Barrero

RHP Kyle Bradish

Cubs vs. Royals at Mesa preview, Wednesday 3/11, 3:05 CT

MESA, Arizona — Wednesday notes…

  • FORMER CUBS IN ROYALS CAMP: Jose Cuas, Eli Morgan and Hector Neris.
  • ABOUT CUBS CAMP: 53 players remain in camp: 28 pitchers (six non-roster invitees), six catchers (three non-roster invitees), 10 infielders (four non-roster invitees) and nine outfielders (four non-roster invitees). Miguel Amaya and Christian Bethancourt should be returning soon, since Panama was eliminated from the WBC.

Here are today’s particulars.

Cubs lineup:

Royals lineup:

Colin Rea will start for the Cubs. Other Cubs pitchers scheduled today: Hunter Harvey, Caleb Thielbar, Hoby Milner and Jacob Webb.

Mitch Spence will start for the Royals. Other Royals pitchers scheduled today: Matt Strahm, Mason Black and Frank Mozzicato. The Royals are a split squad today.

No TV or radio today. This is the last Cubs game this year that will have no broadcasts. All remaining spring games will be on either TV or radio or both.

MLB.com Gameday

Here is the complete MLB.com live streaming page for today.

Please visit our SB Nation Royals site Royals Review. If you do go there to interact with Royals fans, please be respectful, abide by their individual site rules and serve as a good representation of Cub fans in general and BCB in particular.

As we have done in the past, we’ll have a first pitch thread at five minutes to game time and one overflow thread, 90 minutes after game time. For today, that will be 3 p.m. CT and 4:30 p.m. CT.

These threads will not post individually onto the front page; instead, you can find links to them in the box marked ”Chicago Cubs Game Threads” at the bottom of the front page. There will also be a StoryStream on the front page with all the game thread links, as well as the recap after the game is over. The pitcher photos and regular-season stats will return on Opening Day.

Discuss amongst yourselves.

GameThread: Tigers vs. Twins, 1:05 p.m.

Mar 6, 2026; Lakeland, Florida, USA; Boston Red Sox second baseman Tyler McDonough (91) bunts during the third inning against the Detroit Tigers at Publix Field at Joker Marchant Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mike Watters-Imagn Images | Mike Watters-Imagn Images

Detroit Tigers vs. Minnesota Twins

Time/Place: 1:05 p.m., Lee Health Sports Complex – Fort Myers, FL
SB Nation Site:Twinkie Town
Media: MLB+ Audio (Twins broadcast)

Lineups

TIGERSTWINS
Parker Meadows – CFMatt Wallner – RF
Kevin McGonigle – DHLuke Keaschall – 2B
Matt Vierling – 1BJosh Bell – 1B
Riley Greene – LFTrevor Larnach – DH
Austin Slater – RFRoyce Lewis – 3B
Jace Jung – 2BVictor Caratini – C
Jake Rogers – CJames Outman – LF
Trei Cruz – SSAlan Roden – CF
John Peck – 3BRyan Kreidler – SS

Huascar Brazobán still has options in 2026

ATLANTA, GA - JUNE 17: Huascar Brazoban #43 of the New York Mets delivers a pitch in the 10th inning during the Tuesday evening MLB game between the Atlanta Braves and the New York Mets on June 17, 2025 at Truist Park in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by David J. Griffin/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Thanks to his relatively lengthy path to accruing major league service time, Huascar Brazobán still has one option remaining heading into the 2026 season. We’re starting there because it figures to come into play as the Mets have built another bullpen that’s designed to see a lot of roster churn, even though approach went pretty poorly as the team struggled mightily over the final few months of the season.

From June 13, the beginning of the end for the 2025 Mets, through the end of the season, Mets relievers had a 4.60 ERA that was the fifth-worst mark in all of baseball. A relief corps that might’ve already been too thin on talent and major league track records wound up being overworked by a rotation that was seemingly allergic to going deep in games, and despite using 39 different players in relief, the team didn’t find a single new arm last year that’s currently projected to make the Opening Day bullpen this year.

Nevertheless, the Mets have stuck to that approach, and hey, it certainly could break in their favor this time around. Devin Williams, Luke Weaver, and Brooks Raley—to be joined soon afterwards by AJ Minter—should be a pretty solid bullpen core. If the Mets roll with a six-man rotation and a seven-man bullpen, that leaves four open spots in the Opening Day bullpen and three spots once Minter returns, assuming everyone else avoids injury in the meantime.

The Mets have made some early roster cuts, but Brazobán wasn’t one of them and figures to have a good shot at making the roster. If there’s a roster crunch to start the season or once Minter returns, though, that aforementioned option could see him spend time in Triple-A Syracuse like he did last year.

In his time with the Mets last year, Brazobán was effective if unspectacular. He had a 3.57 ERA and a 4.04 FIP in 63.0 innings of work. And since joining the Mets in a trade with the Marlins in 2024, he has a 3.96 ERA and a 4.11 FIP.

Unless several other pitchers establish themselves as better major league relievers, Brazobán looks like he’ll spend the majority of his time in Queens again this year. On average, the projections at FanGraphs have him ending up with an ERA around four with fifty-something innings pitched. If that’s how things go, it’d be a continuation of what he’s done since the Mets traded for him. There’s no bold prediction to be extracted here, but he should be able to contribute to a successful season if the rest of the team has one.

Devin Booker is finding his rhythm at the perfect time for a playoff push

Mar 6, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Phoenix Suns guard Devin Booker (1) looks on before the first half of the game against the New Orleans Pelicans at Mortgage Matchup Center. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images | Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images

It has been a solid run lately for the Phoenix Suns as they work through the schedule following the All-Star break and move toward a spot in either the Play-In or the postseason. The team is 4–1 over its last five games. You can certainly point to the level of competition during that stretch, although when you consider the injuries and the increase in minutes for young players, what Phoenix has done deserves some credit.

A month ago this team was not rolling out lineups featuring Khaman Maluach, Rasheer Fleming, Haywood Highsmith, and Amir Coffey. Those combinations simply did not exist. Head coach Jordan Ott has pulled the right levers with those players, placing them into the rotation in moments where they can succeed, and that has helped fuel this recent stretch. Make no mistake, though. The biggest driver behind this run is not the flashiest storyline, although it might be the most reliable one.

Devin Booker is back.

His return following the injury has steadied the ship for Phoenix and helped spark this stretch that now includes a three-game winning streak. Booker does not always deliver the loudest highlights. He is not drilling a deep three and signaling for defenders to fall asleep. He is not launching himself toward the rim for poster dunks or pointing toward the floor after breaking an ankle like his teammate Jalen Green might.

Book? He simply attacks the mid-range and puts the ball in the basket. For a team that spent much of February struggling to score consistently, watching Booker operate again has been a welcome sight.

Something else has started to happen since Booker returned to the lineup. His efficiency is slowly climbing back to where you expect it to be. It has been one of the season’s most interesting paradoxes. Devin Booker has experienced a down year relative to scoring, three-point percentage, and overall efficiency. Yet the team has continued to win games.

Why? The biggest reason is the way Booker has leaned into facilitation and his overall gravity as a player. He has used his scoring ability to create opportunities for everyone else. Defenses collapse toward him, the ball swings, and teammates find clean looks. Booker is averaging 6.1 assists per game, and players around him are producing some of the best seasons of their careers. That shift has changed the structure of the offense. Booker does not need to score 30 points every night for the Suns to win.

That was one of the concerns entering the season. There was a belief that Phoenix might rely too heavily on Booker’s scoring burden. If that happened, the wear and tear over the course of the season could break him down and drag the offense with it. Instead, the opposite occurred. Even with the efficiency dip, the team continued to succeed.

And now Booker is starting to look like Booker again.

Over the last five games, he is averaging 26.6 points while shooting 42% from the field, 39% from three, and 94% from the free throw line. He is also averaging 5.8 assists during that stretch. He has four consecutive games scoring 25+ points.

The three-point shot, in particular, is beginning to rebound. Before this five-game run, Booker was sitting at 30.8% from deep. After going 16-of-41 from beyond the arc over the last five games, that number has climbed to 32%. It is slowly inching its way back toward his career average of 35.2%. And if that trend continues, the offense around him becomes even more dangerous.

As the team prepares for whatever the postseason holds, Devin Booker is starting to regain the efficiency that has defined his game. The timing could not be better. For much of the season, the team carried some of the weight created by his inefficiencies. Now the pendulum is swinging the other direction. Booker is returning the favor by looking more like the version of himself that Suns fans have grown accustomed to watching.

The mid-range assassin. The player who can halt a scoring run with a calm pull-up from fifteen feet. The player who slows the game down when things begin to spiral. One possession, one jumper, momentum changes.

It quiets a lot of the noise that has surrounded his season. Even before this recent stretch, he was putting together an All-Star-level campaign. This run only strengthens that case. If he stays healthy and plays every remaining game, there is a real path where he finds himself back in the All-NBA conversation. But more importantly, the level rises on what the Suns could be once the postseason arrives.


Astros CL Josh Hader to start season on IL

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - AUGUST 08: Josh Hader #71 of the Houston Astros pitches during the game against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium on August 08, 2025 in the Bronx borough of New York City. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Hader has missed most of Spring Training with biceps tendinitis.

Houston Astros closer Josh Hader will begin the season on IL, according to a report by Brian McTaggart of MLB.com.

Hader, who missed the last 2 months on the 2025 season with a shoulder capsule strain, experienced biceps tendinitis while rehabbing and was shut down. Yesterday, he threw his first bullpen session in weeks, as we detailed here:

https://www.crawfishboxes.com/houston-astros-spring-training/72465/astros-injury-updates-hader-pena

Hader reportedly threw 15 fastballs, getting as high as 87 MPH before being instructed to back it down. Hader’s normal fastball velocity last season was 95.5 MPH per Statcast.

With Hader missing the start of the season, Bryan Abreu will be the interim closer. Bryan King, Bennett Sousa and Steven Okert are all expected to have roles in the pen.

With 3 spots in the pen open, the Astros will likely choose from among AJ Blubaugh, Ryan Weiss, Kei-Wei Teng, Rule 5 pick Roddery Munoz, Peter Lambert and Christian Roa to fill those 3 spots.

According to McTaggart’s report, the capsule has not been an issue for Hader while rehabbing.

Spring Training March 11 Game Thread: Braves vs Rays

NORTH PORT, FL - MARCH 09: Braves pitcher Spencer Strider during the Saturday afternoon Spring Training baseball game between the Atlanta Braves and the Baltimore Orioles on March 9, 2024 at CoolToday Park in North Port, Florida. (Photo by David J. Griffin/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

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Kyle Teel leaves WBC game with hamstring strain

Kyle Teel lies on second base after his sixth-inning double turned into a right hamstring strain during World Baseball Classic play. | (Kenneth Richmond/Getty Images)

Chicago White Sox catcher Kyle Teel left Tuesday night’s World Baseball Classic tilt between Team Italy and Team USA after suffering right hamstring discomfort while running the bases.

Team Italy manager Francisco Cervelli confirmed the injury as a right hamstring strain and that the team will replace Teel on the roster with Andres Annunziata.

Teel was cooking before injury struck. The 24-year-old launched a solo homer in the second, then ripped a double to right in the sixth. But rounding first on that two-bagger, the hamstring barked. Teel slid in, safe but furious, and that was it. Cervelli immediately removed him from the game for a pinch runner. Before exiting, Teel finished the game 2-for-2 with the home run and double as Italy built a large early lead on its way to an 8–6 stunning victory over Team USA in pool play.

The Chicago White Sox have not yet officially announced the severity of the injury, and his status for the start of the season remains unclear. Teel did seem to be in good spirits after the game, so that’s promising.

Unfortunately, soft-tissue issues have become an all-too-familiar storyline for the White Sox in recent years. Hamstrings, obliques, calves — if it can strain, pull, or tighten, it seems to have found its way onto the South Side injury report at some point over the past several seasons. Whether it’s bad luck, conditioning questions, or just the randomness of baseball injuries, the Sox have rarely enjoyed a clean bill of health for long.

Any extended absence for Teel could have ripple effects for Chicago behind the plate, where catcher Edgar Quero would likely see increased opportunities if Teel misses time. Korey Lee is also suddenly a lock to make the roster. Seems like the strategy of stacking as many quality catchers as possible is working out. Looks smart right now. Ask again in a month.

For now, all White Sox fans can do is wait and hope the hamstring gods show mercy.

What We Learned from the Spurs win over the Celtics

The good times keep on rolling
SAN ANTONIO, TX -MARCH 10: Dylan Harper #2 of the San Antonio Spurs jokes with Ron Harper Jr. #13 of the Boston Celtics at the end of the game at Frost Bank Center on March 10, 2026 in San Antonio, Texas. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The vibe was off from the start in this one. It almost felt like there had been too much buildup for it. Too much momentum for it not to go a little sideways.

“Two title contenders squaring off!”

“Possible Finals preview!”

“Jayson Tatum continuing his incredible return!”

“Wembanyama making an MVP push!”

“The two hottest teams in the league on NBC Coast-to-Coast Tuesday!

And then, of course, what are we all talking about this morning? That’s right. Bam Adebayo dropping 83 on the Wizards. Sure!

It’s not that Spurs vs. Celtics was a bad game. It was actually pretty entertaining once everything settled in. It just felt… off. Like watching two dance partners who couldn’t quite decide who was leading. Everything just a little bit out of step.

I was antsy the whole time watching this. More concerned with how everything looked and what it meant than what was actually happening on the court. It’s like I can feel the eyes of people outside our specific fan Circle of Trust now trained on the Spurs, trying to figure out what the deal is. Trying to poke holes in the plan. Trying to take the air out of it.

Every time we missed a shot or turned the ball over I kept alternating between a feeling somewhere between slight panic and mortification. Boys, how could you embarrass me like this? We have company! I just cleaned in here! Please stop missing corner threes in front of Mike Tirico.

And before you start with me, just trust me: I understand that I’m being ridiculous. This is not a cool or groovy way to watch sports. It’s not a cool or groovy way to do anything.

The Spurs are in the middle of one of the most fun stretches of basketball we’ve seen in almost a decade. The vibes around this team are basically perfect. The ball is flying around. Victor Wembanyama is somehow exceeding expectations. The young guys are growing up in real time. If you sat down in October and tried to draw up the exact emotional temperature you’d want around the team right now, it would look almost exactly like this.

And yet there I was the whole night, sitting on the couch sweaty and nervous. I was mad when Jaylen Brown got ejected because of what it might mean for the narrative if they lost to a shorthanded Celtics team at home. I was frustrated we were tied at the half. I was annoyed at how many threes we were taking.

The threes were going in and I was annoyed about it. What even is that, you guys?

I mean, the Spurs won this game. By a lot! Against a really good team! And I’m sitting here spilling my guts about how miserable I was the whole time. Stupid!

But I also have a suspicion I’m not alone in this. Like most things in sports, it taps into something a little deeper in the human condition. That strange feeling of finally getting the thing you’ve been begging for and immediately wondering what’s wrong with it is familiar to anyone who’s been around the block a few times. One day you look around and realize you’re standing in a beautiful house with a beautiful wife and you may ask yourself, well… how did I get here?

Same as it ever was.

It’s just such an easy trap to fall into. You spend all of high school trying to get into college and then you’re there. Now what? You spend all of college worrying about trying to get a job and then you get one. Now what? You spend months training for a marathon and then you cross the finish line. Now what?

I think we might just be bad at enjoying things in the moment. The planning, the chase, the hunt… that’s what drives us. That’s what gives the whole thing meaning. Actually sitting there with what we’ve got feels strange. Lazy, almost. Like if we stop swimming for even a second we might sink.

It doesn’t seem particularly healthy.

I don’t think the Spurs are guilty of it, even if the guy writing this clearly is. A very lovable, if not relatable, thing about this team right now is that they really do seem to be living in the moment. They’re staying within themselves. They’re focused on each game as it comes and taking it in stride. They’re having fun out there.

You watch them after the game, all of them peer-pressuring Mason Plumlee into doing the drum thing, and suddenly everything else feels kind of silly. All the stress. All the anxiety. All the little narrative traps my brain spent the night worrying about.

It’s just noise. Mostly self-generated.

The Spurs, meanwhile, just went out and beat the Celtics. Seemed like they had fun, too.

Probably should give that a try.


Takeaways
  • A thing I do against my better judgment is listen to Tim Bontemps on The Hoop Collective wring his hands about Victor Wembanyama’s shot profile. He has this whole thing where he’s very against the idea of Vic taking a high volume of threes. In Bontemps’ ideal world, Wembanyama is finishing at the rim, living in the paint, and generally filling his diet with higher-percentage looks instead of bombing away from the perimeter. I get annoyed when he goes on these rants largely because… I kind of agree with him. Part of it is that my brain still can’t fully wrap itself around the concept of someone that tall playing like a guard. And part of it is just a very simple instinct that kicks in whenever I watch him float around the three-point line: yo man, you’re seven-foot-four. Go dunk it, brother. Please trust that I do not enjoy agreeing with Tim Bontemps on this.
  • Last night was a weird test case for those of us in the “maybe fewer threes?” camp. Of Wembanyama’s twenty shot attempts, fifteen of them were from beyond the arc. Fifteen! That’s almost the exact shot profile Bontemps is so annoying about. The good news is that he made eight of them. The problem is that he made eight of them. What am I supposed to do with that? It’s undeniably cool when he’s raining threes like that, but I also can’t quite shake the feeling that we’re getting away with something. Like the basketball gods are quietly watching this happen and making a note for later. Because without a doubt, there are going to be playoff teams that are perfectly happy to let him launch from out there and live with the consequences.
  • I think, overall, Vic’s game last night didn’t really feel like it was built on him just “falling back” or “settling” for threes all night. A lot of those looks came within the flow of the offense. Catch-and-shoot opportunities, pick-and-pop actions, that sort of thing. The Celtics were clearly trying to keep him out of the paint, and the Spurs were more than happy to let him drift out and punish that choice. He also got to the line a bunch, so it’s not like he was allergic to attacking the basket when the opportunity was there. I don’t know. Look, these are good problems to have. Maybe I should stop worrying about it. How about that?
  • De’Aaron Fox is, somehow, quietly just out here steering this whole operation along. He’s kind of perfect for what the Spurs need, isn’t he? He doesn’t seem to want or need the spotlight. He can pour it in when necessary, but he’s just as comfortable orchestrating things and keeping the whole machine running smoothly. He’s poised, he doesn’t make many mistakes, and he’s constantly plugging little holes all over the floor. I’m honestly a little flabbergasted at how cleanly this has worked out. Think about all the hundreds of names that were floated over the last couple of years for players the Spurs absolutely had to pair with Wembanyama in order to not squander his potential. And somehow the guy who fits like a glove is De’Aaron Fox. Fancy that.
  • I don’t know if it’s just because he’s left handed, but there’s an angle on some of Fox’s three point shots that almost looks like he’s spinning a curveball into the basket. The thing gets to the rim and just like whips down. It’s bizarre and kind of gives me a little jump every time.
  • The only thing I have to say about Jaylen Brown’s ejection is:

WWL Post Game Press Conference

Have you ever been ejected from something you were writing?

– Oh sure, I get tossed all the time?

Wait, really? Like you got two technicals and had to stop writing?

– For sure. Happens more than you’d think. I’ll be in the middle of making a truly excellent point and some ref will come barging into my office blowing his whistle and shouting something like, “PASSIVE VOICE!” And of course I can’t just let that slide, so I get right in his face and say, “You think THAT was passive voice? That? Are you serious? THAT’S THE LEAST PASSIVE THING I’VE EVER SAID! IF YOU WANT PASSIVE, I’LL GIVE YOU PASSIVE.”

Ok. And that…helps?

– Almost never, the refs hate when you get in their face like that.

– Does someone usually have to hold you back?

– Yeah, PTR has security teams on the bench that come out. Sometimes Marilyn has to step in, calm things down, tell me to go take a breather, and then she finishes my… ahem… discussion. It’s all part of the game.

– What happens when you get tossed though? Does someone else finish the column?

-Yeah, we’ll bring someone off the bench. Usually it’s pretty seamless. But if you’ve ever been reading something I wrote and thought, “not his best work,” you can probably assume a biased ref with an agenda sent me to the locker room early.