Why The Maple Leafs Signed Vinni Lettieri To A One-Year, $775K Contract

The Toronto Maple Leafs have added another depth player via NHL free agency.

The Maple Leafs have signed Vinni Lettieri to a one-year, $775,000 contract. The 30-year-old right-shot forward spent all of last season in the Boston Bruins organization. Lettieri appeared in 26 games with the Bruins, scoring three goals and two assists, and 47 games with the AHL's Providence Bruins, where he put up 21 goals and 29 assists for 50 points in 47 games.

As an undrafted forward out of the University of Minnesota, Lettieri signed an entry-level contract with the New York Rangers in 2017. After three years in the organization, the Excelsior, Minnesota native played two seasons in the Anaheim Ducks' system (2020-2022).

He signed a one-year contract with the Bruins in 2022, spent most of the season in Providence, and joined the Minnesota Wild on a one-year contract in 2023. Lettieri played a career-high 46 NHL games with the Wild and scored nine points (five goals and four assists).

Why the Maple Leafs Are Expected to Target Top-Six Forward Help Through Trades, Not Free AgencyWhy the Maple Leafs Are Expected to Target Top-Six Forward Help Through Trades, Not Free AgencyThe Toronto Maple Leafs have a Mitch Marner-sized hole in their lineup opted for a sign and trade with the Vegas Golden Knights. But when the clock struck noon for the opening of free agency, the Leafs were quiet.

In 155 NHL games, Lettieri has 15 goals and 17 assists for 32 points, plus 287 points (141 goals and 146 assists) in 324 career AHL games.

This is the fifth depth signing Toronto has made over the last 24 hours after losing the likes of Pontus Holmberg, Alex Steeves, Alex Nylander, and Nick Abruzzese to free agency. The Maple Leafs signed Michael Pezzetta and Benoit-Olivier Groulx, along with defenseman Dakota Mermis, to two-year deals with an annual average value of $812,500.

Toronto also added former Maple Leaf Travis Boyd on a one-year, $775,000 contract.

'We Wanted To Get Through The First Part Of Free Agency': Maple Leafs Not Closing The Door On Max Pacioretty Return'We Wanted To Get Through The First Part Of Free Agency': Maple Leafs Not Closing The Door On Max Pacioretty ReturnEven after a quiet free agency, the Toronto Maple Leafs aren't closing the door on bringing Max Pacioretty back.

According to PuckPedia, on a 23-man roster, the Maple Leafs now have just shy of $5 million to play with for the remainder of the offseason.

(Top photo of Lettieri: Timothy T. Ludwig / Imagn Images)

New York Knicks finalizing agreement to make Mike Brown next head coach

After a month-long search to replace Tom Thibodeau, the New York Knicks have offered their head coaching job to Mike Brown and are finalizing a deal to make him their next head coach, according tomultiple reports.

Brown had been considered a frontrunner in recent weeks, including being the only coach known to get a second interview.

In addition to his coaching experience, Brown entered the race with ties to the labyrinth that is the Knicks front office. Brown has a strong connection with William "Worldwide Wes" Wesley (going back to when Wesley was advising LeBron James while Brown was the Cavaliers' coach). Wesley is the right-hand man of Knicks president Leon Rose.

Brown is also a two-time NBA Coach of the Year, boasting a .599 winning percentage across more than 10 seasons coaching the Cleveland Cavaliers, the Los Angeles Lakers, and most recently the Sacramento Kings. He's had his successes, such as leading the Cavaliers to the Eastern Conference Finals during the LeBron era, and he was the coach who broke the Kings' record 16-year playoff drought.

While Brown is a high-floor, potentially high-ceiling hire to take over the Knicks, this is not a sexy hire to replace the popular Thibodeau. The Knicks made the playoffs four of the five years Thibs was their coach — they had been to the playoffs four times in the previous 20 years — and he established a strong culture and identity with this team. He was tight with star Jalen Brunson, and last season he coached the Knicks to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time in 25 years.

Still, there was a sense in the Knicks front office — and with some Knicks fans — that Thibodeau had maxed out how far he could take this team, that it needed an upgrade at coach to get the Knicks back to the NBA Finals.

Is the journeyman Brown that upgrade? The Knicks are about to find out.

Red Wings Extend Key Depth Winger to New Two-Year Deal

The Detroit Red Wings announced a two-year extension with depth forward Elmer Söderblom.

The Red Wings announced on Wednesday, the extension of winger Elmer Söderblom to a new two-year deal with an annual cap hit at $1.125 million per season. 

After recording 17 points through 38 AHL games in Grand Rapids this past season, Söderblom could be given a extended look at a main roster spot. 

A former sixth-round pick in 2019, Söderblom has posted respectable numbers with a 0.45 point-per-game pace in the AHL and 0.40 in the NHL. Production that might be giving Steve Yzerman and Detroit’s front office something to think about as they assess potential bottom-six options, where roster spots could be up for grabs.

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At 6-foot-8 and roughly 250 pounds, the 23-year-old Swedish winger can look to borrow from the likes of Brian Boyle. The former longtime bottom-six centre carved out a meaningful role for himself as he would record 20-35 points while also working as a great physical tone setter. 

Boyle's role made him an impact through 124 playoff games in which he went to two straight Stanley Cup Finals in 2014 and 2015 with the Tampa Bay Lightning.

This role could be more than attainable for Söderblom as he's shown slightly higher upside in terms of scoring and could learn how to use his large body to leave to lasting impact on opponents. 

The entire NHL has been put on notice by the Florida Panthers as physical, gritty hockey is what wins championships now and a role player like Söderblom could be a step in the right direction for the Red Wings.

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Penguins Sign Former Canucks Forward, Bring Back Goaltender To Bolster Organizational Depth

While the Pittsburgh Penguins have been making plenty of smaller moves at the NHL level since the start of unrestricted free agency on Tuesday, they've also been shoring up depth at the developmental levels of the organization.

On Wednesday, the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton (WBS) Penguins - Pittsburgh's AHL affiliate - re-signed goaltender Taylor Gauthier and signed forward Aidan McDonough, both to one-year AHL contracts.

Gauthier, 24, has been excellent over parts of the past three seasons within the Penguins' organization. At the ECHL level, he won ECHL Goaltender of the Year honors in 2023-24, when he posted a .923 save percentage and 2.23 goals-against average to go along with four shutouts and a 24-16-2 record.

He was also excellent in split duties with fellow goaltending prospect Sergei Murashov this past season in Wheeling - even improving his numbers from the year prior - as he bolstered a .928 save percentage and a 2.06 goals-against average. Gauthier figures to, potentially, tandem with Murashov again next season, but this time, at the AHL level. 

At the AHL level so far, Gauthier is 10-5-7 with a .908 save percentage and 2.77 goals against average. He will, likely, battle for a role with the WBS Penguins, along with Murashov and Filip Larsson, who is under contract through the end of the 2025-26 season.

Penguins Sign Anthony Mantha To One-Year DealPenguins Sign Anthony Mantha To One-Year DealThe Pittsburgh Penguins have added another forward to their lineup for the 2025-26 season.

McDonough, 25, captained the Northeastern University Huskies from 2019-23 and recorded 66 goals and 124 points in 124 games. A former seventh-round pick (195th overall) of the Vancouver Canucks in 2019, the 6-foot-2, 201-pound forward appeared in six NHL games for the Canucks in 2022-23, registering one point.

He spent the last two seasons in the AHL, first with the Abbotsford Canucks and next with the Charlotte Checkers. Last season for the Checkers, he recorded 10 goals and 16 points in just 16 games, as a broken leg resulting from a fight kept him out for most of the season. 


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Feature image credit: Bob Frid - Imagn Images

Mets’ Frankie Montas says he was tipping pitches — and has fixed it

Frankie Montas knew it from the jump during his season debut versus Atlanta on April 24: He was tipping his splitter.

The good news?

That discovery — along with another that surfaced Sunday in Pittsburgh — suggests that Montas and the Mets have a path forward. Despite early struggles, Montas still has high-end stuff and now believes he can pitch more effectively.

“I’m not going to say exactly what I was doing,” Montas told SNY. “But I was tipping the split. We got it cleaned up.”

In that game, Montas pitched five scoreless innings, but the Braves swung at just one of the nine splitters he threw -- a strong indicator that they knew what was coming.

Then, after Montas’ first few pitches on Sunday, folks on the Mets bench noticed that runners on second base were picking up a tell on Montas’ sliders and/or sweepers, and using a signal to relay their findings to the batter (this is not cheating, but long accepted gamesmanship when a pitcher reveals what he is going to throw).

Like the issue of tipping his splitter, Montas believes that he has addressed the tells on the breaking ball.

“I feel good about the new pitch, the sweeper,” Montas said. “A hundred percent I was tipping it [in Pittsburgh]. We’re good. We’re definitely trying to clean it up.”

Montas’ first inning on Sunday ended up a disaster. He allowed five runs en route to a 12-1 loss against one of baseball’s worst offenses. But the tipping revelation offers a legitimate explanation for it, and reason for hope that Montas will stabilize in the near future.

It makes sense: In his first two starts for the Mets, Montas’ stuff has actually been high-end, particularly his heavy sinker and mid-90s fastball. The four-seam fastball was down an average of one mile per hour from the first start to the second, but it did not appear that the quality of Montas’ pitches were the problem.

Tipping wasn’t the entire issue. In Pittsburgh, Montas also threw a handful of pitches in unwise sequences. But that is good news, too, in that it is as fixable as tipping.

At a dark time for the Mets’ rotation, consider this a small reason for hope.

Giants still confident in Hayden Birdsong but no guarantee in his rotation spot

Giants still confident in Hayden Birdsong but no guarantee in his rotation spot originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Zack Minasian believes Giants starter Hayden Birdsong eventually will turn it around.

The 23-year-old has struggled in his last few outings, including a rough game against the Arizona Diamondbacks, which has made his spot in the rotation uncertain moving forward.

“In this sport, I don’t think there are ever guarantees [about having a spot in the rotation],” Minasian said Wednesday on KNBR’s “Murph and Markus” show. “It’s a super competitive industry. We’re in the business of winning games. When I say that, I don’t want it to come off as negative towards Birdy because, like I’ve said about the team in general, we know how good he can be this year. I think he flashed it last year and earlier this season.”

While the young righty has flashed plenty of brilliance, his control issues flared up during an 8-2 loss to Arizona, where he threw 10 consecutive balls in the fourth inning before giving up a three-run home run.

The San Francisco general manager understands there will be growing pains for a young pitcher adjusting to the rigors of the major leagues.

“I think that’s where the frustration sets in, you see it and then it kind of goes away,” Minasian explained. “And I was watching some of his comments on the postgame show just on my phone, and I think there’s a mechanical component to this…but there’s also the mental component of a young pitcher, first full season in the big leagues.

“My expectation is [that] guys are going to go through things. It’s just trying to shorten that timeframe as much as possible, so the downs don’t last very long.”

Birdsong and the Giants have been slumping ever since trading for slugger Rafael Devers, with spotty pitching and weak offensive production being the main culprits.

A season that started with so much promise quickly is turning into a disaster, with San Francisco continuing to freefall in the National League West standings, now nine games back of the first-place Los Angeles Dodgers. While the team has plenty of talent, things will need to start going in a more positive direction fast.

Birdsong and the rest of the pitching staff are crucial to this turnaround task as the season approaches its halfway mark.

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Golden Knights Development Camp Day 1 Spotlight: Jakob Ihs-Wozniak

The Vegas Golden Knights have a lot of young talent at this year's development camp, with another standout being this year's second-round draft pick, Jakob Ihs-Wozniak.  

It’s been a crazy few days for the right-winger. Drafted one moment, on a plane to Vegas the next, and now he’s diving into his first development camp in a city he’s never been to before. Ihs-Wozniak touched on his thoughts and emotions from draft day.

“Super happy,” Ihs-Wozniak expressed. “I mean, it was a relief, like this is, that's the day you've been waiting for. When they traded up and picked me, it was super fun. I landed in a super great spot.” 

The second-round pick is coming off a season of growth after a rocky showing at the Hlinka Gretzky Cup, where he admitted his performance “wasn’t good enough.” According to Golden Knights’ assistant director of player personnel Bob Lowes, that tournament became a turning point. 

“He even said the more I engage, the better I play,” Lowes noted. “The skill is all there, the size, the ability. He just needed to add that edge to his game. I think with our development, physical development, I think we can get him to be a good-sized power element with his game, as well as the offensive skill.”

The motivation is there for him, and he’s using this time on the ice to channel it. With the draft behind him and a clear path ahead, Ihs-Wozniak has the opportunity to turn potential into performance. 

“It's super fun that they traded up to me, that's super fun,” Ihs-Wozniak said, “But of course, it's just after the draft. It's just to keep working and when you get drafted, it's just the start. So you just have to keep going.”

Ihs-Wozniak’s improvement over the year has put him firmly in the conversation for Sweden’s U20 World Junior roster, and the Knights are excited to be a part of his development.

Max Verstappen reportedly in advanced talks with Mercedes over blockbuster move

  • Dutch driver’s camp believed to have made first move

  • Sky Italy say deal ‘close’ with Mercedes yet to make call

Max Verstappen’s future with Red Bull is under scrutiny with reports that talks about a move to Mercedes have intensified in the buildup to this weekend’s British Grand Prix.

Speculation over Verstappen jumping ship had dominated the Austrian Grand Prix, where the Mercedes team principal, Toto Wolff, confirmed they were considering a move to tempt the four-time champion to join the team.

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Giants will be ‘very active' ahead of MLB trade deadline, per GM Zack Minasian

Giants will be ‘very active' ahead of MLB trade deadline, per GM Zack Minasian originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Giants made the biggest trade of the 2025 MLB season by acquiring star slugger Rafael Devers from the Boston Red Sox last month, but they might not be done.

Giants general manager Zack Minasian joined KNBR’s “The Executive Show” on Wednesday morning to discuss where the team stands ahead of MLB’s July 31 trade deadline.

“I definitely think we’ll be active,” Minasian said. “As far as completing trades, it’s just difficult to say because it takes two. But as far as making calls and checking around and seeing what’s available, I definitely think we’ll be very active. One of the things that teams who are finding themselves in the race are going to face is so many teams are bunched together. So it might create this stagnant market for what’s actually available.

“As far as needs and what we need to get, I think we’re still kind of fact-finding when it comes to things like that. Still getting a sense of where we are from a health standpoint. If [Matt] Chapman comes back and [Casey] Schmitt comes back, it obviously changes our offense a little bit. Hopefully, [Hayden Birdsong] can get back on track and how that looks with our starting pitching. Our bullpen’s been a strong suit.

“But I like to try to prepare for the trade deadline almost in a vacuum. Give me all the major league players available, let’s rank all the minor league systems, all the information is there. We’re prepared for whatever may come our way. And try to get as much information as you can obviously on your own team and then move forward.”

Since acquiring Devers, San Francisco has gone 4-10 with him in its lineup and is on track to lose their third consecutive series after being swept by the Miami Marlins and dropping two against both the Chicago White Sox and Arizona Diamondbacks.

Just two weeks ago, the Giants were neck-and-neck with the reigning World Series Champion and divisional rival Los Angeles Dodgers in the NL West standings.

They now are nine games back of Los Angeles, and Arizona slowly is creeping behind them as they are just 1.5 games back of San Francisco.

The Giants are making it clear that something needs to change — soon — or Minasian and Co. might have to roll up their sleeves and adjust things themselves.

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Knicks officially name Mike Brown as new head coach

The Knicks have officially announced Mike Brown as their new head coach.

Brown garnered support during his first interview with the club, and he was back just a few days later for a second sit-down, which included owner James Dolan.

The 55-year-old will now take over for Tom Thibodeau, who was fired after coaching the Knicks to back-to-back 50-win seasons and leading them to their first Eastern Conference Finals in 25 years this past season.

"I would like to welcome Mike Brown to New York and the Knicks organization," Dolan said in a statement. "Leon [Rose] and our staff ran a thorough and thoughtful process that led our organization to Mike, and I am please to see him on the sideline for us next season."

Brown began his coaching career as an assistant coach for the Washington Wizards for three seasons (1997-1999) before joining Gregg Popovich's staff in San Antonio (2000-2003), followed by another assistant job with Indiana (2003-2005).

His first head coaching job came with the Cleveland Cavaliers, where he guided a young LeBron James for five seasons (2005-2010). Brown went 272-138 during that time, highlighted by a trip to the NBA Finals in 2007 (swept by the Spurs) and back-to-back 60-win seasons (2008-2009 [NBA Coach of the Year] and 2009-2010). Following the 2009-2010 season, with James' pending free agency (in which he left Cleveland for Miami), Brown was fired by Cavs owner Dan Gilbert.

After taking a year off, Brown replaced the legendary Phil Jackson as head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers in 2011, but was fired five games into his second season with the team after the "super team" of Kobe Bryant, Dwight Howard, and Steve Nash failed.

He then was rehired by the Cavs for the 2013-2014 season, going 33-49 before getting fired by Gilbert again.

Brown took a backseat as an assistant coach for six seasons under Steve Kerr with the Golden State Warriors, replacing Luke Walton who left for the Lakers' HC job. He won three NBA titles as part of the Warriors coaching staff, giving him four career championships (Spurs in 2003).

The veteran coach was hired by the Kings ahead of the 2022-2023 season and helped turn the franchise around, going 48-34 and making the playoffs for the first time since 2006 — helping him become the first unanimous NBA Coach of the Year.

Brown went 46-36 with the Kings in 2023-2024, but finished ninth in the West and missed the playoffs. He was relieved of his duties after a disappointing 13–18 start to the 2024-2025 NBA season.

Brown owns a career head coaching record of 454-304 (.599) and is 50-40 (.556) in the postseason with one conference title and two Coach of the Year awards on his resume.

"Mike has coached on the biggest stages of our spot and brings championship pedigree to our organization," Rose said in a statement. "His experience leading the bench during the NBA Finals, winning four titles as an assistant, and his ability to grow and develop players will all help us bring a championship to New York."

Malik Beasley was dealing with serious financial issues before U.S. Attorney's gambling investigation

Malik Beasley has earned $59.2 million in salary across his nine NBA seasons. However, he is dealing with serious financial issues — including a lawsuit by a former agency he worked with — all of which have surfaced in the wake of the news that he is being investigated as part of an inquiry into gambling on NBA games.

Hazan Sports Management Group sued Beasley for $1.65 million in U.S. District Court for breach of contract, a story first reported by ESPN. Hazan was the agency that negotiated Beasley's $6 million contract with the Pistons last season and reportedly gave him a $650,000 advance. It is now suing him for the return of that advance, plus $1 million in damages. After the contract was signed, Beasley fired Hazan and switched to Seros Partners, according to the lawsuit, however Hazan said its contract incuded a four-year exclusive marketing agreement. The sides are reportedly working toward a settlement.

Beasley's financial issues go well beyond that lawsuit and include issues with "a celebrity barber, a dentist, a landlord," and a couple of firms that make bridge loans to professional athletes, according to a story at the Detroit News.

"... a company that specializes in loaning money to professional athletes won a nearly $5.8 million judgment against Beasley in Maryland, court records show...

Almost one year ago, in August, Beasley signed a deal with a Florida firm that provides bridge loans to pro athletes. As collateral, Beasley pledged his current and future NBA contracts, according to a copy of the financing statement obtained by The News...

In January, a celebrity barbershop with a long roster of NBA stars won a $26,827 judgment against Beasley. The barbershop, Cairo Cuts, operates in Milwaukee, where Beasley played for the Milwaukee Bucks from 2022-24."

Beasley has also been sued twice by The Stott, a historic apartment building in Detroit, for unpaid rent.

All of this paints a troubling picture, especially when considering the U.S. Attorney's Office is investigating Beasley regarding gambling allegations for games in the 2023-24 season (which Beasley was with the Bucks). Beasley has not yet been charged with any crimes.

NBA league spokesperson Mike Bass told NBC Sports, "We are cooperating with the federal prosecutors' investigation."
Last season, Beasley averaged 16.3 points a game, shooting 41.6% from 3 for the Pistons. Beasley is a free agent, and he and Detroit were negotiating a new contract for the coming season, however news of this investigation put that on hold.

NHL News: Penguins Bring In Former Canadiens Forward

The Pittsburgh Penguins have added to their forward depth.

The Penguins have announced that they have signed forward Rafael Harvey-Pinard to a one-year, two-way contract. At the NHL level, he will carry a $775,000 cap hit. 

Harvey-Pinard played in one game this past season with the Montreal Canadiens, where he posted zero points and one hit. He spent the rest of the year in the AHL with the Laval Rocket, recording five goals, 19 points, and a plus-2 rating in 40 games.

Harvey-Pinard has played in 84 career NHL games over four seasons, where he posted 17 goals, 14 assists, 31 points, 117 hits, and a plus-3 rating. His best season was in 2022-23 with the Canadiens, posting 14 goals, 20 points, and a plus-7 rating. 

Overall, this is a low-risk move for the Penguins. If he regains some of his previous scoring touch, he could make a case for himself to play on Pittsburgh's roster in 2025-26. 

NHL News: Penguins Sign Big Former Oilers DefensemanNHL News: Penguins Sign Big Former Oilers DefensemanThe Pittsburgh Penguins are adding more size to their defensive depth. 

Photo Credit:  © David Kirouac-Imagn Images

Report: Blues Place Veteran Defenseman On Waivers

The St. Louis Blues have reportedly placed defenseman Nick Leddy (4) on waivers Wednesday. (Jeff Curry-Imagn Images)

MARYLAND HEIGHTS, Mo. -- In light of trading for a young defenseman on Tuesday when the St. Louis Blues acquired 22-year-old Logan Mailloux from the Montreal Canadiens for forward Zack Bolduc, the team has begun the process of reshaping what has been a veteran group on the blue line.

Reports have surfaced that the Blues have placed veteran defenseman Nick Leddy on waivers.

The 34-year-old has one year remaining on a four-year, $16 million contract ($4 million average annual value). 

With Mailloux's addition, it gave the Blues eight ready defensemen in their lineup, and when asked on Tuesday about the makeup of it with the addition of Mailloux, Blues general manager Doug Armstrong said, "We'll look at it."

There's the potential at some point this becomes a Brandon Saad situation, where the Blues put the forward on waivers last season, he wasn't claimed, the team was prepared to send him to Springfield of the American Hockey League but instead terminated the remaining year and a half of his four-year, $22.5 million contract and became a free agent and signed with the Vegas Golden Knights.

It's tough to envision Leddy willing to go to the AHL at this point in his career and is less than likely to get claimed on waivers, but that would be the perfect case scenario, and there are teams that need to get to the cap floor that may be willing to take a flier on him.

But Leddy has a 16-team no-trade list and a team needing to get to the cap floor may be on his list of teams he'd be unwilling to go to. And Leddy, who has spent the past three-plus seasons in St. Louis after being acquired from the Detroit Red Wings, has $3 million in actual salary left on his contract.

Austin WNBA Bid Group Says NBA Owners Were Biggest Competition

The group behind Austin’s WNBA expansion bid, which came up short in the latest round, believes its proposal would have been stronger with the backing of an NBA team.

After receiving 11 bids, the WNBA chose Cleveland, Detroit and Philadelphia as its next three expansion teams, with all three teams backed by owners of the NBA teams in those cities. The owners of the three WNBA expansion teams preceding these—the Golden State Valkyries, the Toronto Tempo and Portland—also have NBA ties. Last September, Allen & Co. was hired by the league to lead the expansion process.

“If there are NBA owners in the back room saying, ‘Hey, when am I getting my team?’ I think Adam [Silver] is probably listening,” Austin expansion backer Fran Harris, an entrepreneur and former WNBA player, told Sportico in a phone interview. “It’s hard to tell a billionaire with a thriving NBA team and operation that they can’t run it back with a W team. It’s hard to look at them and just go, ‘I don’t think you’re right.’”

In addition to Harris, Austin’s proposal was supported by NBA superstar Kevin Durant (who starred one year at the University of Texas), former Milwaukee Bucks owner Marc Lasry and PEAK6 founder Jenny Just. All big names, but none with active control of an NBA team.

Some of the regions that came up short in the expansion bidding process were specifically told that having NBA ties wasn’t a firm prerequisite for getting a team, according to two sources who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the discussions were private.

Of the eight rejected bids, only two (Houston and Charlotte, N.C.) were backed by NBA team owners. The other six (St. Louis; Kansas City, Mo.; Austin, Texas; Nashville, Tenn.; Miami; and Denver) sent proposals without support from NBA ownership. While Miami and Denver have NBA teams, the ownership was not involved in the WNBA bid.

From the moment potential expansion clubs backed by NBA groups began to raise their hands, Harris believed those cities would be Austin’s biggest competition. She said existing NBA markets and their ownership groups brought “a level of credibility because they’re in the family.” Still, she didn’t believe that independent cities didn’t have any shot, saying her group’s bid was competitive with the winners even as requirements began to change as more bidders threw their hat in the ring.

“I always knew that if we didn’t get it, that it would be an NBA operator,” Harris said, noting that Austin’s biggest competition would be bids with NBA ownership support. “While there’s an anticipatory gloom about that, there’s also a freedom in the way I felt about it; ‘OK, at least I wasn’t beat out by another independent city.’”

Not already being in the NBA’s “family” caught the attention of least one bidder: Bill Haslam, the former governor of Tennessee (and brother of Jimmy Haslam, owner of the Cleveland Browns), who led the Nashville effort. His group included former athletes Candace Parker and Peyton Manning, who both starred at the University of Tennessee before embarking on their pro careers.

In a statement, Haslam said that despite Nashville putting its best foot forward in its bid, “we understand and accept the WNBA’s decision today in awarding franchises to NBA ownership groups.” Haslam also said his group remains committed “to Nashville and women’s sports fans.” Separately from the WNBA bid, Haslam is set to become the new majority owner of the NHL’s Nashville Predators this month.

During Monday’s press conference, commissioner Cathy Engelbert noted that the Toronto Tempo and the Portland team, both of which will enter the league in 2026, are not owned by NBA franchises in those cities. But Tempo owner Kilmer Sports Ventures is led by billionaire businessman Larry Tanenbaum, who is the Raptors’ governor and chairman of the NBA Board of Governors. Portland is owned by the Bhathal family via RAJ Sports, who have a stake in the Sacramento Kings.

The Golden State Valkyries, which began play this season, are a sibling franchise of the Warriors.

The NBA owns 42% of the WNBA, while WNBA team owners have 42% equity and the 2022 investment consortium holds 16%.

Last year, Harris said that the league was okay with smaller or mid-sized arenas with up to 7,000 seats. Yet when viewership and attendance across the W exploded—riding the Caitlin Clark wave— the math changed, and bidding arenas needed to have at least 10,000 seats.

The Austin bidding group’s target venue was the Moody Center, the $375 million arena built by Oak View Group on the University of Texas campus. Home to UT’s men’s and women’s basketball team’s, the venue hosts close to 11,000 for basketball with a wider capacity of 16,233 for concerts.

Harris also said the league wanted the bidding cities to have histories of supporting women’s sports, in particular women’s basketball. Among the four Austin investors, Harris has the most direct involvement with the WNBA. In addition to being a TV commentator for the Dallas Wings, she won a WNBA title with the defunct Houston Comets in 1997 and playing a second season with the Utah Starzz (now Las Vegas Aces).

Yet she noted that two of the three teams announced in this round—Cleveland and Detroit—already had a shot at hosting an WNBA club before their teams slipped away.

A founding WNBA franchise, the Cleveland Rockers folded in 2003 when the league was unable to secure new ownership after Cavaliers owner Gordon Gund no longer wished to run the franchise. When the estate of former Pistons and Shock owner Bill Davidson liquidated his assets after his death in 2009, the Shock were sold to a group in Tulsa, Okla., where the team would spend few seasons. The Shock relocated once more—this time to Dallas and becoming the Wings in 2016.

“The whole thing is when it gets hard, are you going to stay in this relationship? Let’s run it back from the history,” Harris said. “Yes, most of them defected. Most of them left. Yes, stuff got hard, and they were like, ‘Deuces!’”

So, what’s next for the Austin group? Harris said that it remains committed to bringing a franchise to the city. “I do believe Austin deserves a spot. So [that’s] my press answer, but it’s also the truth. We’ve let the WNBA and the NBA know that.”

“I see that there are openings. I don’t know if those are true openings for independent cities or if those are just openings for NBA cities, but we remain interested.”

(With assistance from Scott Soshnick and Eben Novy-Williams)

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Giants option Carson Seymour to Triple-A Sacramento, recall Mason Black

Giants option Carson Seymour to Triple-A Sacramento, recall Mason Black originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

The Giants made a roster move Wednesday, optioning right-handed pitcher Carson Seymour to Triple-A Sacramento, while recalling pitcher Mason Black.

After recording his first career strikeout Tuesday, Seymour is headed back down to the minors. The 26-year-old righty was roughed up in his first two outings, giving up four hits in seven innings pitched.

“It’s for some length”, Melvin told reporters before Wednesday’s game, “We’re in pretty good shape with our bullpen today, but you know you always need somebody that could give you some length. Obviously, using Seymour like we did yesterday … you know replace that and have someone that could give us multiple innings on either side of a … backend of a game if we need it.”

The Kansas State alum made his major league debut Sunday, holding the White Sox scoreless in one inning, allowing two hits.

“They just made him work, you know the [Randal] Grichuk at-bat kind of was the same pitch,” Melvin told reporters. “I think it was six or seven of them … made him look bad on a couple of them … kind of tried to stay in with the two-seamer … and then finally got one over the plate and got him. So, I think those are all just experiences at the big league level that you learn from.”

Black’s call-up will be his first stint of the season with the big league club. Last year with the Giants, the former No. 85 overall pick posted a 6.44 ERA in 8 starts. The 25-year-old righty will be used out of the bullpen, for now.

“Good games, bad games,” Melvin told reporters. “You know … sometimes it’s hard to evaluate the PCL just because the ball flies … you know typically there’s some runs scored … he’s been here before he has some experience … it’s not like we’ll be using him in a role where we’ll be pitching him eight or ninth inning of a plus game so … it’s more about length with him and they felt like he was the guy at this point.”

San Francisco’s skid has been hard to watch, as they have dropped seven of their last eight games, and the Giants are hopeful that Black can be the spark they need to get back on track.

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