MLB Tokyo Series: Ohtani and Yamamoto lead Dodgers to 4-1 win over Cubs in opener

MLB Tokyo Series: Ohtani and Yamamoto lead Dodgers to 4-1 win over Cubs in opener originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

TOKYO — For a moment, it felt like all of Japan held its collective breath. The Tokyo Dome, known throughout the globe for its energy and electric atmosphere, fell silent as the sheeted dead. Then, as Shohei Ohtani’s bat connected on a curveball, the crowd erupted. 

Shohei Ohtani, an international megastar playing on his home soil for the first time as a major leaguer, delivered the hit that jolted the Los Angeles Dodgers to life, setting the stage for the team’s thrilling 4-1 comeback over the Chicago Cubs in the opening game of the 2025 MLB season.

The journey to Opening Day was nearly a year in the making as both teams traveled over 6,000 miles for this moment. None of the other 28 teams in Major League Baseball had to travel across the world to play two games before heading all the way back across the Pacific Ocean for more exhibition games. 

No one else had to arrive a week early to spring training, break camp early, disrupt their lives and routines for a couple of games on the other side of the world. But nobody else is Shohei Ohtani and the reigning World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers.

In front of a packed house, in a city that is buzzing with baseball fever, two historic franchises clashed under the Tokyo lights. The 2025 MLB Tokyo Series was a celebration of Japanese baseball at its finest. Five Japanese-born players were on the active rosters and will play in the series.

Even though this was a series between two of baseball’s iconic franchises, it was still the Shohei Ohtani show. 

Ohtani is more than just famous in his home country. He’s an A-list celebrity, a rock star and a cultural icon all rolled into one. During the two-game series, over a dozen different commercials featuring Ohtani flashed across TV screens in Tokyo. His face is featured on billboards, taxi cabs, subway trains, storefront windows and more. 

Each and every time Ohtani stepped to the plate, fans roared and cheered. They all took out their phones to record his every movement and held their collective breath during each pitch. They oohed and aahed at every ball he put into play and gasped when he struck out.

So, after the flags were unfurled and the national anthems, played by Japanese musician Yoshiki, were completed, after the Pokemon introductions and the plethora of Pikachu’s danced across the diamond, there was finally baseball being played in 2025.

For the first time since the Dodgers defeated the Yankees in Game 5 of the 2024 World Series at Yankee Stadium on Oct. 30, the games actually counted, and LA’s title defense has officially begun.

Ohtani finished the game 2-for-5 with a single, a double and two runs scored. His first hit of the 2025 season, a line drive to right field, came in the top of the fifth inning. 

Tommy Edman tied the game with a line drive to left field, and Ohtani scored the go-ahead run on an errant throw by Cubs second baseman Jon Berti. 

Teoscar Hernandez added an insurance run in the top of the ninth.

That would be all the Dodgers would need as their pitching staff did the rest. Anthony Banda, Ben Casparius, Blake Treinen, and free agent acquisition Tanner Scott combined for four shutout innings with the latter earning his first save in Dodger blue.

Dodgers’ starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto knows what it’s like to travel across the world to pitch in a baseball game. He’s no longer a rookie with the weight of the world on his shoulders. After a dominant postseason in which he was the ace of the Dodgers injury riddled World Series-winning pitching staff, Yamamoto has emerged as the ace of this year’s staff.

Los Angeles Dodgers v Chicago Cubs: MLB Tokyo Series
TOKYO, JAPAN – MARCH 18: Yoshinobu Yamamoto #18 of the Los Angeles Dodgers reacts after the bottom of the fifth inning during the MLB Tokyo Series game against Chicago Cubs at Tokyo Dome on March 18, 2025 in Tokyo, Japan. (Photo by Masterpress/Getty Images)

Yamamoto’s three-pitch mix of fastball, curveball and splitter kept the Cubs hitters off-balance all night long. His only blemish was an RBI double to Miguel Amaya in the bottom of the second. 

In a polar opposite performance from his first start of the 2024 season, Yamamoto allowed just one run on three hits with four strikeouts in five innings. He seized the opportunity in his home country and earned the win over his fellow countryman Shota Imanaga in the first all-Japanese Opening Day starting pitching matchup in MLB history.

Both teams will play again tomorrow, but the memories of this game will last a lifetime, and for the 42,635 fans in attendance at Tokyo Dome, they will remember it for years to come.

MLB Tokyo Series: Ohtani and Yamamoto lead Dodgers to 4-1 win over Cubs in opener

MLB Tokyo Series: Ohtani and Yamamoto lead Dodgers to 4-1 win over Cubs in opener originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

TOKYO — For a moment, it felt like all of Japan held its collective breath. The Tokyo Dome, known throughout the globe for its energy and electric atmosphere, fell silent as the sheeted dead. Then, as Shohei Ohtani’s bat connected on a curveball, the crowd erupted. 

Shohei Ohtani, an international megastar playing on his home soil for the first time as a major leaguer, delivered the hit that jolted the Los Angeles Dodgers to life, setting the stage for the team’s thrilling 4-1 comeback over the Chicago Cubs in the opening game of the 2025 MLB season.

The journey to Opening Day was nearly a year in the making as both teams traveled over 6,000 miles for this moment. None of the other 28 teams in Major League Baseball had to travel across the world to play two games before heading all the way back across the Pacific Ocean for more exhibition games. 

No one else had to arrive a week early to spring training, break camp early, disrupt their lives and routines for a couple of games on the other side of the world. But nobody else is Shohei Ohtani and the reigning World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers.

In front of a packed house, in a city that is buzzing with baseball fever, two historic franchises clashed under the Tokyo lights. The 2025 MLB Tokyo Series was a celebration of Japanese baseball at its finest. Five Japanese-born players were on the active rosters and will play in the series.

Even though this was a series between two of baseball’s iconic franchises, it was still the Shohei Ohtani show. 

Ohtani is more than just famous in his home country. He’s an A-list celebrity, a rock star and a cultural icon all rolled into one. During the two-game series, over a dozen different commercials featuring Ohtani flashed across TV screens in Tokyo. His face is featured on billboards, taxi cabs, subway trains, storefront windows and more. 

Each and every time Ohtani stepped to the plate, fans roared and cheered. They all took out their phones to record his every movement and held their collective breath during each pitch. They oohed and aahed at every ball he put into play and gasped when he struck out.

So, after the flags were unfurled and the national anthems, played by Japanese musician Yoshiki, were completed, after the Pokemon introductions and the plethora of Pikachu’s danced across the diamond, there was finally baseball being played in 2025.

For the first time since the Dodgers defeated the Yankees in Game 5 of the 2024 World Series at Yankee Stadium on Oct. 30, the games actually counted, and LA’s title defense has officially begun.

Ohtani finished the game 2-for-5 with a single, a double and two runs scored. His first hit of the 2025 season, a line drive to right field, came in the top of the fifth inning. 

Tommy Edman tied the game with a line drive to left field, and Ohtani scored the go-ahead run on an errant throw by Cubs second baseman Jon Berti. 

Teoscar Hernandez added an insurance run in the top of the ninth.

That would be all the Dodgers would need as their pitching staff did the rest. Anthony Banda, Ben Casparius, Blake Treinen, and free agent acquisition Tanner Scott combined for four shutout innings with the latter earning his first save in Dodger blue.

Dodgers’ starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto knows what it’s like to travel across the world to pitch in a baseball game. He’s no longer a rookie with the weight of the world on his shoulders. After a dominant postseason in which he was the ace of the Dodgers injury riddled World Series-winning pitching staff, Yamamoto has emerged as the ace of this year’s staff.

Los Angeles Dodgers v Chicago Cubs: MLB Tokyo Series
TOKYO, JAPAN – MARCH 18: Yoshinobu Yamamoto #18 of the Los Angeles Dodgers reacts after the bottom of the fifth inning during the MLB Tokyo Series game against Chicago Cubs at Tokyo Dome on March 18, 2025 in Tokyo, Japan. (Photo by Masterpress/Getty Images)

Yamamoto’s three-pitch mix of fastball, curveball and splitter kept the Cubs hitters off-balance all night long. His only blemish was an RBI double to Miguel Amaya in the bottom of the second. 

In a polar opposite performance from his first start of the 2024 season, Yamamoto allowed just one run on three hits with four strikeouts in five innings. He seized the opportunity in his home country and earned the win over his fellow countryman Shota Imanaga in the first all-Japanese Opening Day starting pitching matchup in MLB history.

Both teams will play again tomorrow, but the memories of this game will last a lifetime, and for the 42,635 fans in attendance at Tokyo Dome, they will remember it for years to come.

‘I'm Back': Michael Jordan's two-word fax was sent 30 years ago today

‘I'm Back': Michael Jordan's two-word fax was sent 30 years ago today originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

It was long before LeBron James went on national television to say he was taking his talents to South Beach. Long before Kobe Bryant announced his retirement in an essay published on The Players Tribune. Long before Luka Doncic broke social media when news of his trade was tweeted.

Long before the existence of Twitter and TikTok, before the daily use of websites and e-mails, before the reliance on iPhones and Wi-Fi, Michael Jordan sent a fax 30 years ago today.

“I’m back,” it said.

The brevity of the two-word statement announcing his return to the Chicago Bulls after a 17-month retirement, and the now antiquated manner in which it was delivered, add to the legend of what transpired after the fax was sent. And, of course, after the confirmation page was received.

To active NBA players, the fax machine is as foreign as the peach basket. 

And for kids out there who have never dialed anything other than the touch screen of an iPhone, Jordan is to LeBron what fax is to e-mail.

Jordan’s fax is perhaps the most famous in the device’s history. And the day after it was sent, he was back on the court in an NBA game.

Jordan had unexpectedly retired in October of 1993 at the age of 30, just months after he helped lead the Bulls to their third consecutive championship. Citing a lack of motivation — and still mourning the death of his father James, who was murdered that July — Jordan announced that he would pursue a baseball career.

Jordan went on to play 127 games with the Double-A Birmingham Barons, hitting .202 with three home runs and 51 RBIs.

Michael Jordan of the Birmingham Barons throws during an August 1994 game against the Memphis Chicks in Alabama. (Photo by Jim Gund/Getty Images)

The Bulls, in the first season of the post-Jordan era, won just two fewer games in the regular season than the year prior at 55-27. Scottie Pippen averaged a career-best 22.0 points per game, finishing third in MVP voting. The Bulls swept the Cleveland Cavaliers in the first round and then pushed the New York Knicks to the limit in the Eastern Conference semifinals, with a Game 7 road loss signaling the end of their dynasty.    

The following season, they were hovering around .500 in March when speculation of Jordan’s return intensified — practicing with his former team earlier that month was kind of a spoiler. The fax made it official.

It was sent on March 18, 1995.

To do so, a document was placed onto the fax machine, a phone number was dialed, the paper was scanned, the images were transmitted to its destination, a hard copy printed out for the recipient, a confirmation page was provided to the sender.

It has some similarities to e-mail, but the delivery process typically would take a few more minutes and require far more paper and patience — particularly if ink was low or if there was a dreaded paper jam. Still, at the time, it was the most efficient way to spread information.

Not much ink or paper was required for Jordan’s fax.

Jordan had looked over drafts of a news release prepared by his agent David Falk.  

“He didn’t like the feel of them,” Falk told ESPN. “He said, ‘I’ll do it myself.'”

The message was typed on Falk Associates Management Enterprises letterhead and opened with the agency’s standard press release introductory language:

WASHINGTON, DC. (March18, 1995) — The following statement was released today by Michael Jordan, through his personal attorney and business manager David B. Falk, Chairman of Falk Associates Management Enterprises, Inc. (“FAME”) located in Washington, D.C., in response to questions about his future career plans:

“I’m back.”

The following day, Jordan was back on an NBA court as the Bulls took on the Indiana Pacers, his first game since June of 1993. Indianapolis transformed into the chaotic center of the basketball world as national media and ticket scalpers descended upon the area.

“It was like David Stern (then the NBA commissioner) deciding the NBA championship would be a one-game playoff, and that one game is in your building and you’ve got 24 hours to prepare,” Pacers media relations staffer David Benner told the Indianapolis Star.

As Jordan took the floor with the Bulls starting lineup, he wore his familiar red Bulls jersey. Same name on the back, but different number. Jordan’s second chapter in the NBA began with him wearing not his familiar No. 23, but the No. 45 he wore on his baseball uniform.

As time passes, and reality fades to myth, it might be said that Jordan instantly returned to dominant form in his first game like a Hollywood movie. The truth is, his field goal percentage wasn’t much higher than his batting average.

Jordan’s first field goal wouldn’t come until just over four minutes remained in the second quarter and the Bulls trailed by 18. Chicago did come back to force overtime, tying the game on Pippen’s 3-pointer with 19 seconds remaining, but went on to lose 103-96.

Jordan finished just 7-for-28 from the field, recording 19 points, six rebounds, six assists and three steals over 43 minutes.

Less than a week later, in the fourth game of his return, Jordan became Jordan. He hit a pull-up jumper at the buzzer to give the Bulls a 99-98 win over the Atlanta Hawks. In his following game, against the Knicks at Madison Square Garden, he scored 55 points in what became known as the “double-nickel” game. 

Jordan, over the 17 regular season games he played that season, averaged 26.9 points, 6.9 rebounds and 5.3 assists. The Bulls would go on to advance to the conference semifinals, where they lost in six games to the Orlando Magic.

It was the last playoff series Jordan would lose in his career.

The following season, he led the Bulls to what was a then NBA record 72-win season and the first of three straight championships.

Following his second three-peat, Jordan retired in 1998 for the second time. And, once again, returned years later.

Having served as part owner and president of basketball operations of the Washington Wizards, Jordan revealed in 2001 than he would be resuming his playing career with the team at 38 years old.     

This time, there would be no fax.

Michael Jordan in his first game as a player for the Washington Wizards in 2001. (Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE/Getty Images)

The formal announcement, which had been expected for weeks, ultimately was made just 13 days after the September 11th terrorist attacks.  

The Wizards released a statement saying Jordan had signed a two-year contract with the team and would be donating his $1 million salary for the upcoming season to relief and victim-assistance efforts.

“Although I am energized by my impending return to the court, I am deeply saddened by the recent tragic events and my heart goes out to the victims and their families,” Jordan said in the statement. “Out of deep respect for them, I will not participate in media interviews before the start of training camp on October 1.

“I am returning as a player to the game I love because during the last year and a half, as a member of Washington Wizards’ management, I enjoyed working with our players, and sharing my own experiences as a player. I feel there is no better way of teaching young players than to be on the court with them as a fellow player, not just in practice, but in actual NBA games. While nothing can take away from the past, I am firmly focused on the future and the competitive challenge ahead of me.”

Phils went shopping, came back with only small change

Phils went shopping, came back with only small change originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

CLEARWATER, Fla. — If a fan bought a replica jersey of his favorite Phillies hitter ahead of the 2023 season, there’s a real good chance they’ll be able to wear it while cheering for their guy again at Citizens Bank Park this year.

After being stunned by the Diamondbacks in the ’23 NLCS, the only change in the lineup was replacing Kody Clemens with Johan Rojas. After being ambushed by the Mets in the ’24 NLDS, the projected position players for the upcoming marathon are the same except for Max Kepler instead of Rojas.

Since going all the way to Game 6 of the World Series in 2023, the Phillies have checked out of the postseason dance a little earlier each succeeding year. That’s left a fan base used to changes — often loud, whizbang changes of the nine-figure variety — feeling a little lost. Especially after the biggest plum of the free-agent market, outfielder Juan Soto, signed with the rival Mets.

Earlier this spring, president of baseball operation Dave Dombrowski, who has a reputation as a bit of a gunslinger, sat in his BayCare Ballpark office and discussed what had happened between the early expectations that the Phillies’ roster would undergo a significant makeover and ending up with only a few cosmetic changes.

“We basically said we were open-minded to make changes. We didn’t say we were going to make big changes. That’s a significantly different vernacular,” he said, prefacing his explanation for why the Phillies were far less aggressive than many observers anticipated.

For the third straight year, then, the plan is that the core eight of Bryce Harper, Trea Turner, Kyle Schwarber, Nick Castellanos, J.T. Realmuto, Bryson Stott, Alec Bohm and Brandon Marsh will remain intact when the new season begins at Nationals Park on March 27.

It’s worth inserting at this point that Oakland A’s general manager Billy Beane was famously quoted in “Moneyball” saying, “There can never be a status quo. … You have to always be upgrading. Otherwise, you’re (screwed).”

But also that former Phillies GM Pat Gillick earned the derisive nickname “Stand Pat” early in his career with the Blue Jays by fans who disagreed with what they viewed as an overly slow-and-steady approach. He now has a plaque in the Hall of Fame.

It’s all about the Ws and Ls, right? So it remains to be seen whether or not running it back one more time will work. That answer will only begin to reveal itself beginning at Nationals Park; the final grade won’t be posted until six or seven months later.

Without getting into specifics — rumors that Bohm had one spike out the door were rampant all winter — Dombrowski stressed again that he was willing to shake up the lineup … but was also willing not to.

“A lot of times in the past it might have been, ‘Well, if we can fill in this spot, that’s all we’re doing.’ But we were very open-minded to (aggressive moves),” he said. “Maybe people envisioned that as we were going to make a bunch of changes. Or that we were just going to get rid of players to get rid of them. But that wasn’t the case. Because we had a lot of good players and we had a good team. We won 95 games and we won the division.

“We had a lot of conversations, particularly early, about our players. But we just didn’t feel that any of the deals made sense for us. We weren’t going to make a move just to make a move. So after that, we needed to make some other moves. So we signed Kepler, we signed (righthander Jordan) Romano, we signed (righthander Joe) Ross. We traded for (starter Jesus) Luzardo. And those things started happening quickly because at that point if you don’t start making those moves, players are going to be gone.”

Weren’t going to make a move just to make a move …

Late on the night of October 9, 2024, shortly after being bounced by the Mets in Game 4, several of the position players were already campaigning for another opportunity to get it right with the players already on hand. “I think we’ve got the right guys in here,” Turner said, a sentiment that echoed through the room. “I would hope they keep us together.”

At the time, that seemed unlikely. The Phillies had already tried that and it resulted in an earlier exit rather than a deeper run. It called to mind the overused cliché about the definition of insanity being doing the same thing over and over but expecting a different result.

Dombrowski wasn’t thinking that way, though. Asked if changing just for the sake of changing ever works, he smiled.

“Ever is a big word, so I’d probably have to say yes,” he said. “But I don’t think I’ve ever made a trade just to make a trade, no. I’ve always gone in with the focus of, ‘We need this. This makes sense.’ And made a deal like that.”

There’s a flip side to that, too. From all outward appearances, the Phillies have had exceptional clubhouse chemistry the past few seasons. Asked if he would shy away from trading certain players or bringing too many new personalities into the mix to avoid upsetting that balance, he shook his head.

Then he told a story about a lesson he learned in 2018 when he was president of the Red Sox baseball operations. Boston won 108 games in the regular season. Won the World Series. “We had a great club and I went to great efforts to keep that team together,” he said.

“And it didn’t work. For a few reasons. Some were injuries. But there were other things. Every club is different. But I don’t think any more I would go back to just saying, ‘I’m keeping that team together from a chemistry perspective.'”

Realmuto and Schwarber are free agents. Castellanos has one more year on his deal. Bohm, Stott and Marsh are all arbitration-eligible, at a point in their careers when tough decisions have to be made about whether to tie them up with long-term, big-bucks deals.

In spring training, the lockers of the once-and-future lineup are grouped in the back left corner of the clubhouse. No matter what happens this season, that most stable neighborhood will almost certainly look different a year from now.

MLB Opening Day 2025: Full schedule, dates, times and matchups

MLB Opening Day 2025: Full schedule, dates, times and matchups originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

It’s officially baseball season.

After weeks of spring training, MLB teams across the country are gearing up for Opening Day — and two have already played their first game over in Japan. While it may still be chilly in some cities in late March, warmer days are ahead — and baseball is a sure sign of it.

So, when exactly are the first games of the new season? Who is playing on Opening Day? And where can you watch all the games?

Here’s a preview for 2025 MLB Opening Day:

When is MLB Opening Day in 2025?

MLB Opening Day is officially scheduled for March 27, 2025.

The defending champion Los Angeles Dodgers and Chicago Cubs got a head start on the action with the MLB Tokyo Series in Japan, starting on March 18 with the Dodgers’ victory.

What teams are playing on Opening Day in 2025?

Twenty-eight of the 30 teams will be playing on Opening Day, including the Dodgers and Cubs.

The Tampa Bay Rays and Colorado Rockies are the only two teams who won’t suit up on March 27. Their opening series will begin the following day at the Rays’ temporary home of George M. Steinbrenner Field.

2025 MLB Opening Day schedule, games and probable starters

Here are the 14 matchups and probable starting pitchers for Opening Day:

Away teamHome teamPitching matchupFirst pitch time
Milwaukee BrewersNew York YankeesFreddy Peralta vs. Carlos Rodon3 p.m. ET
Baltimore OriolesToronto Blue JaysZach Eflin vs. Jose Berrios3:07 p.m. ET
Philadelphia PhilliesWashington NationalsZack Wheeler vs. MacKenzie Gore4:05 p.m. ET
Boston Red SoxTexas RangersGarrett Crochet vs. Nathan Eovaldi4:05 p.m. ET
Pittsburgh PiratesMiami MarlinsPaul Skenes vs. Sandy Alcantara4:10 p.m. ET
San Francisco GiantsCincinnati RedsLogan Webb vs. Hunter Greene4:10 p.m. ET
Los Angeles AngelsChicago White SoxYusei Kikuchi vs. Sean Burke4:10 p.m. ET
Cleveland GuardiansKansas City RoyalsTBA vs. Cole Ragans4:10 p.m. ET
New York MetsHouston AstrosClay Holmes vs. Framber Valdez4:10 p.m. ET
Atlanta BravesSan Diego PadresChris Sale vs. Michael King4:10 p.m. ET
Minnesota TwinsSt. Louis CardinalsPablo Lopez vs. Sonny Gray4:10 p.m. ET
Detroit TigersLos Angeles DodgersTarik Skubal vs. TBA7 p.m. ET
Chicago CubsArizona DiamondbacksTBA vs. TBA10:10 p.m. ET
AthleticsSeattle MarinersLuis Severino vs. Logan Gilbert10:10 p.m. ET

How to watch MLB Opening Day 2025

Two games will air nationally on Opening Day: Brewers-Yankees and Tigers-Dodgers.

The two pennant winners from last season will both host Central division interleague foes.

First up, the Brewers travel to Yankees Stadium at 3 p.m. ET with Joe Buck on the call alongside Joe Girardi and Bill Schroeder. The “Monday Night Football” broadcaster hasn’t called an MLB game nationally since joining ESPN, but he was formerly the voice of FOX’s World Series coverage continuously from 2000 to 2021.

In the nightcap at 7 p.m. ET, reigning AL Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal will face the defending World Series winners. The Dodgers picked up a win in Tokyo in their season-opener with Yoshinobu Yamamoto on the mound, but their starting pitcher for Opening Day stateside is still to be announced.

George Mason squares off against Samford in NIT matchup

George Mason's average of 6.9 made 3-pointers per game is 1.7 fewer made shots on average than the 8.6 per game Samford allows. Samford averages 10.8 made 3-pointers per game this season, 3.1 more made shots on average than the 7.7 per game George Mason gives up. TOP PERFORMERS: Haynes is scoring 14.1 points per game with 7.1 rebounds and 1.4 assists for the Patriots.

Florida Atlantic plays Dayton in NIT matchup

Dayton Flyers (22-10, 12-7 A-10) at Florida Atlantic Owls (18-15, 11-9 AAC) Boca Raton, Florida; Wednesday, 7 p.m. EDT BOTTOM LINE: Florida Atlantic takes on Dayton in the National Invitation Tournament. The Owls' record in AAC games is 11-9, and their record is 7-6 in non-conference games.

SMU and Northern Iowa square off in NIT

Northern Iowa Panthers (20-12, 14-7 MVC) at SMU Mustangs (23-10, 14-8 ACC) Dallas; Wednesday, 9 p.m. EDT BOTTOM LINE: SMU and Northern Iowa meet in the National Invitation Tournament. The Mustangs' record in ACC play is 14-8, and their record is 9-2 against non-conference opponents.

San Diego State squares off against North Carolina in First 4 matchup

North Carolina Tar Heels (22-13, 15-8 ACC) vs. San Diego State Aztecs (21-9, 14-7 MWC) Dayton, Ohio; Tuesday, 9:10 p.m. EDT BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Tar Heels -4.5; over/under is 142.5 BOTTOM LINE: San Diego State faces North Carolina in the First Four round of the NCAA Tournament. The Aztecs are 14-7 against MWC opponents and 7-2 in non-conference play.

Warriors prove most dangerous enemy is themselves in loss to Nuggets

Warriors prove most dangerous enemy is themselves in loss to Nuggets originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO – In the wake of the most disappointing loss as a member of the Warriors, Jimmy Butler III divulged what haunted him but didn’t cast blame and point fingers over what taunted him most. He didn’t have to.

The box score provided all necessary explanation. Faced with a prime opportunity to create space for themselves in the crowded Western Conference playoff race, the Warriors gave it away, donating 24 unearned points.

The Denver Nuggets took the gifts and ran out of Chase Center with a 114-105 victory even they could not have expected insofar as they were without three starters, including three-time MVP Nikola Jokić and his most productive sidekick Jamal Murray.

“All I asked of our guys, going into it, I said, ‘Just compete. Have each other’s backs, just compete,’” Nuggets coach Michael Malone said. “And did they do that at such a high level.”

Denver outcompeted the sixth-place Warriors, who blew a chance to pull within 2.5 games of the third-place Nuggets but instead are now 4.5 games to the rear.

Being outhustled in defeat bothered every member of the Warriors, players and coaches, as it should. Butler, however, zeroed in one of his pet peeves. One he shares with Golden State coach Steve Kerr.

“Our care for the basketball,” Butler said. “We turned it over way too much. We were very loose with the basketball, careless with it. Got them into the open floor, and they saw the ball go in early and it never stopped.”

Denver’s B team, led by veterans Aaron Gordon (game-high 38 points) and Russell Westbrook (a 12-points, 16-assists, 12-rebounds triple-double), made a mockery of the Warriors’ lax defense, which too often was compromised by live-ball turnovers.

“It hurts me,” said Butler, who had two turnovers in 33 minutes. “I ain’t going to lie to you. I hate turning ball over. I hate when we turn the ball over. We’ve just got to be better at that. If we get shots on goal, we’re a very hard team to beat.

“But you ain’t going to beat many people in this league, no matter who’s on the floor, with 20 turnovers.”

The Warriors are 0-5 when they commit at least 20 turnovers. They are 2-7 when they give away 24 or more points off turnovers.

A high-turnover team in their dynastic seasons, these Warriors, with diminished overall talent, had managed their turnovers relatively well in the first 12 games with Butler on the roster. Over the last five, though, they have returned to an old habit, giving away 118 points off 101 turnovers.

Golden State’s most dangerous enemy is, as Butler implied, itself.

Stephen Curry, moving more carefully than usual due to back soreness, committed seven turnovers in 36 minutes. Draymond Green committed four in 33 minutes. Jonathan Kuminga and Gui Santos each committed three.

“Dumb plays all night,” Curry said.

The accuracy of that comment is pinpoint, which can’t be said of many of the passes the Warriors flung around Chase Center. The kind of passes that sabotaged Golden State’s fourth-quarter comeback.

“It’s hard to win an NBA game when you throw the ball to the other team 10 times,” Kerr said. “That’s what we were facing tonight.”

Trailing by eight with 2:35 remaining, Green hurled a 60-foot pass that was intercepted. Two possessions later, trailing by six, Curry’s underhand lob for Kuminga sailed wide – and led to a Denver bucket that pretty much sealed the outcome.

“I didn’t play great at all,” said Curry, who scored 20 points on 6-of-21 shooting from the field, including 4 of 13 from deep. “Whenever we have the amount of turnovers that we did – and not even the amount but type – that can’t happen. And obviously that starts with me.”

No need for Butler to point fingers. The story of this game was told in black and white. Curry knew it and didn’t try to hide his guilt.

The Milwaukee Bucks are up next, Tuesday night at Chase. A dangerous team, to be sure, but that’s true of any Warriors opponent when they conspire against themselves.

Download and follow the Dubs Talk Podcast

Kerr slates 'awful' Warriors as winning run ends

Steve Kerr with his head in his hands.
Steve Kerr has led the Golden State Warriors to four NBA titles [Getty Images]

Coach Steve Kerr said the Golden State Warriors were "awful" as their seven-game winning run came to an end against the Denver Nuggets in San Francisco.

Aaron Gordon scored a season-high 38 points in a 105-114 win for the Nuggets, who were without star centre Nikola Jokic.

It is Gordon's highest points haul since joining the Nuggets from the Orlando Magic in 2021.

"We played poorly out of the gate and never found rhythm and they played great," said Kerr.

"The right team won. We didn't deserve anything. We were awful."

Russell Westbrook, the NBA's all-time leader in triple-doubles, secured his 203rd by scoring 12 points with 11 rebounds and 16 assists.

Jimmy Butler III scored 23 points and Stephen Curry 20 in reply for the Warriors, who lost for just the second time in 14 matches.

Denver remain fourth in the Western Conference, with Golden State occupying the final play-off place in sixth.

The Los Angeles Lakers, still without the injured LeBron James, are just behind the Nuggets in fourth after beating the San Antonio Spurs 125-109.

Austin Reaves top-scored with 30 points for the Lakers, with Luka Doncic adding 21 points with nine rebounds and 14 assists.

The Houston Rockets overturned a 25-point third-quarter deficit to beat the Philadelphia 76ers 144-137 in overtime and stay second in the Western Conference.

The Minnesota Timberwolves also needed overtime to beat the Indiana Pacers 132-130, with Obi Toppin scoring 34 points, 10 rebounds and two assists.

The New York Knicks won 116-95 against the Miami Heat to stay third in the East, while the Detroit Pistons are sixth after beating the New Orleans Pelican 127-81.

Fantasy Basketball Waiver Wire: Jared Butler providing stability in Philly

As things continue to get sillier and sillier across the league, it is easy to get lost as a fantasy manager. There are already enough headaches managing back-to-backs and injuries throughout the season, but now during the playoffs, teams are playing their stars less minutes and less games. It’s easy to get frustrated, but these players can help you come out on top in your leagues despite not having your key pieces.

PG/SG Jared Butler (11% rostered in Yahoo! leagues), Philadelphia 76ers

Feel free to take a dart throw on anybody that is healthy in Philly, but Butler feels like the safest option to me. He has averaged 13.2 points, three rebounds, six assists, one steal and 1.8 threes over the 76ers’ last five games and scored 21 points on Monday. He ranks just outside the top-100 in nine-cat leagues during this five-game stretch as a starter, and it is unlikely that he will relinquish the starting point guard role over the final month of the season.

PG Tre Jones (25%), Chicago Bulls

Jones continues to start for Chicago and has provided top-50 value over the past two weeks with averages of 15.3 points, 4.7 rebounds, 6.9 assists and 1.3 steals per game. He recorded an 18/4/12/3 line in Monday’s win over Utah. If you’re looking for dimes without sacrificing efficiency, Jones is the perfect pickup.

SG/SF Kevin Huerter (11%), Chicago Bulls

Huerter is newer to the starting lineup than Jones, but he has also been productive. He has started their last three games and averaged 14.7 points, 6.3 rebounds, three assists and 2.7 threes per game. He finished with 17 points, nine rebounds and five three-pointers against the Jazz.

SG Jordan Hawkins (5%), New Orleans Pelicans

Hawkins hasn’t been productive, but this is more about opportunity. Trey Murphy (shoulder) is done for the year, making Hawkins a candidate to take on even more minutes on the perimeter. When he’s been at his best, he has been a viable source of three-pointers. Unfortunately, that hasn’t happened consistently this season.

SG/SF Gary Payton II (5%), Golden State Warriors

I’m not a huge fan of GP2 in fantasy basketball, but he’s playing too well to ignore. He has provided fifth-round value over the last two weeks in nine-cat leagues, and he tallied an 18/3/1/3/1 line with two triples on Monday. Plus, Stephen Curry may get a rest night on Tuesday, which only raises Payton II’s ceiling. Again, I don’t typically trust him, but he has been playing well.

PG/SG Jordan Goodwin (1%), Los Angeles Lakers

Head coach JJ Redick has raved about Goodwin recently, and it showed up in the box score on Monday, He finished with 15 points, four rebounds, three assists, three steals, one block and three three-pointers in a big win over the Spurs. Goodwin should continue to start until LeBron James returns, which means that he should be a solid option for at least a few more games.

SG AJ Johnson (less than 1%), Washington Wizards

The rookie started for the first time in his career on Monday, and while the numbers weren’t great (8/7/4), it shows that Brian Keefe wants to see what Johnson can do. It may not be pretty all the time, but Johnson should continue to play a large role for Washington moving forward.

SG/SF Matisse Thybulle (less than 1%), Portland Trail Blazers

Thybulle had five steals and a block in 22 minutes on Monday after having two steals and a block in six minutes on Sunday, which was his season debut. It was a long injury layoff, but Thybulle has nine “stocks” in 28 minutes so far this season. If you’re desperate for some defensive stats, he’s a fun dart throw.

MLB Tokyo Series: Ohtani and Yamamoto lead Dodgers to 4-1 win over Cubs in opener

MLB Tokyo Series: Ohtani and Yamamoto lead Dodgers to 4-1 win over Cubs in opener originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

TOKYO — For a moment, it felt like all of Japan held its collective breath. The Tokyo Dome, known throughout the globe for its energy and electric atmosphere, fell silent as the sheeted dead. Then, as Shohei Ohtani’s bat connected on a curveball, the crowd erupted. 

Shohei Ohtani, an international megastar playing on his home soil for the first time as a major leaguer, delivered the hit that jolted the Los Angeles Dodgers to life, setting the stage for the team’s thrilling 4-1 comeback over the Chicago Cubs in the opening game of the 2025 MLB season.

The journey to Opening Day was nearly a year in the making as both teams traveled over 6,000 miles for this moment. None of the other 28 teams in Major League Baseball had to travel across the world to play two games before heading all the way back across the Pacific Ocean for more exhibition games. 

No one else had to arrive a week early to spring training, break camp early, disrupt their lives and routines for a couple of games on the other side of the world. But nobody else is Shohei Ohtani and the reigning World Series champion Los Angeles Dodgers.

In front of a packed house, in a city that is buzzing with baseball fever, two historic franchises clashed under the Tokyo lights. The 2025 MLB Tokyo Series was a celebration of Japanese baseball at its finest. Five Japanese-born players were on the active rosters and will play in the series.

Even though this was a series between two of baseball’s iconic franchises, it was still the Shohei Ohtani show. 

Ohtani is more than just famous in his home country. He’s an A-list celebrity, a rock star and a cultural icon all rolled into one. During the two-game series, over a dozen different commercials featuring Ohtani flashed across TV screens in Tokyo. His face is featured on billboards, taxi cabs, subway trains, storefront windows and more. 

Each and every time Ohtani stepped to the plate, fans roared and cheered. They all took out their phones to record his every movement and held their collective breath during each pitch. They oohed and aahed at every ball he put into play and gasped when he struck out.

So, after the flags were unfurled and the national anthems, played by Japanese musician Yoshiki, were completed, after the Pokemon introductions and the plethora of Pikachu’s danced across the diamond, there was finally baseball being played in 2025.

For the first time since the Dodgers defeated the Yankees in Game 5 of the 2024 World Series at Yankee Stadium on Oct. 30, the games actually counted, and LA’s title defense has officially begun.

Ohtani finished the game 2-for-5 with a single, a double and two runs scored. His first hit of the 2025 season, a line drive to right field, came in the top of the fifth inning. 

Tommy Edman tied the game with a line drive to left field, and Ohtani scored the go-ahead run on an errant throw by Cubs second baseman Jon Berti. 

Teoscar Hernandez added an insurance run in the top of the ninth.

That would be all the Dodgers would need as their pitching staff did the rest. Anthony Banda, Ben Casparius, Blake Treinen, and free agent acquisition Tanner Scott combined for four shutout innings with the latter earning his first save in Dodger blue.

Dodgers’ starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto knows what it’s like to travel across the world to pitch in a baseball game. He’s no longer a rookie with the weight of the world on his shoulders. After a dominant postseason in which he was the ace of the Dodgers injury riddled World Series-winning pitching staff, Yamamoto has emerged as the ace of this year’s staff.

Los Angeles Dodgers v Chicago Cubs: MLB Tokyo Series
TOKYO, JAPAN – MARCH 18: Yoshinobu Yamamoto #18 of the Los Angeles Dodgers reacts after the bottom of the fifth inning during the MLB Tokyo Series game against Chicago Cubs at Tokyo Dome on March 18, 2025 in Tokyo, Japan. (Photo by Masterpress/Getty Images)

Yamamoto’s three-pitch mix of fastball, curveball and splitter kept the Cubs hitters off-balance all night long. His only blemish was an RBI double to Miguel Amaya in the bottom of the second. 

In a polar opposite performance from his first start of the 2024 season, Yamamoto allowed just one run on three hits with four strikeouts in five innings. He seized the opportunity in his home country and earned the win over his fellow countryman Shota Imanaga in the first all-Japanese Opening Day starting pitching matchup in MLB history.

Both teams will play again tomorrow, but the memories of this game will last a lifetime, and for the 42,635 fans in attendance at Tokyo Dome, they will remember it for years to come.

Alabama’s bench could be key to the Tide making another deep run in the NCAA tourney

With versatile point guard Mark Sears and mustachioed forward Grant Nelson, Alabama has two of the more recognizable players in the NCAA Tournament. The duo led the Crimson Tide to the Final Four last year and returned to school in hopes of delivering the program’s first national title. The second-seeded Tide (25-8) open NCAA play against No. 15 seed Robert Morris in Cleveland on Friday, giving Nelson an extra day to recover from an injury sustained in the first half of a loss to Florida in the semifinals of the Southeastern Conference Tournament on Saturday.

Pelicans' Trey Murphy III out for remainder of season with torn labrum in right shoulder

The New Orleans Pelicans, already hit hard by injuries this season, now will be without another key player for the rest of this season: Trey Murphy III has a torn labrum in his right shoulder and will need to undergo surgery, the team announced.

The injury happened just 49 seconds into the game Monday night when Murphy dislocated his shoulder going after a loose ball.

Murphy has taken a step forward this season and is averaging 21.6 points, 5.2 rebounds and 3.6 assists a game. Once healthy, he and Jones form an impressive two-way core of wings to fit with whatever the Pelicans roster looks like next season.

Detroit had an easy time of it on Monday night, getting 24 points and eight assists from Cade Cunningham on their way to a 127-81 win. Simone Fontecchio added 23 points for Detroit, which got a much-needed win after dropping 4-of-6 coming in. Zion Williamson had 30 points to lead New Orleans.