Mets 2025 MLB Wild Card Watch: Playoff odds, standings, matchups, and more for Sept. 28

With one game remaining in the regular season, the Mets are looking to secure the third and final Wild Card spot in the National League.

The Reds hold the tiebreaker over the Mets, due to winning the season series.

Here's everything you need to know ahead of play on Sept. 28...


Reds: 83-78, tied with Mets for third Wild Card

Next up: @ Brewers, Sunday at 3:10 p.m. (Brady Singervs. Freddy Peralta)

Latest result: 7-4 win over Brewers on Saturday

Remaining schedule: 1 @ MIL

Odds to make playoffs: 65.7 percent

Mets: 83-78, tied with Reds for third Wild Card (Reds hold tiebreaker)

Next up: @ Marlins, Sunday at 3:10 p.m. on SNY (Sean Manaea vs. Edward Cabrera)

Latest result: 5-0 win over Marlins on Saturday

Remaining schedule: 1 @ MIA

Odds to make playoffs: 34.3 percent

** Arizona was eliminated on Friday with their 7-4 loss to the Padres 

Al Horford leaving Celtics to join Warriors in free agency: Report

Al Horford leaving Celtics to join Warriors in free agency: Report originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

At long last, Al Horford’s time in Boston has come to an end.

The veteran big man has agreed to a multi-year contract with the Golden State Warriors in NBA free agency, his agent confirmed to ESPN’s Shams Charania on Sunday. After spending eight of his 18 NBA seasons with Boston (five in his second stint), Horford likely will end his illustrious career in a new uniform.

Horford confirmed his departure on Instagram, posting a farewell message to Boston fans:

Horford, who turned 39 on June 3, remained productive during the 2024-25 season despite his age. The five-time All-Star averaged 9.0 points over 42 regular-season games, then 8.0 points and 6.0 rebounds over 11 playoff appearances.

Above all else, the Celtics will miss Horford’s veteran leadership. Horford was beloved in Boston’s locker room, with superstar Jayson Tatum going as far as to call him his “favorite teammate.”

Horford’s absence will be glaring during what could be Boston’s most challenging season in years. Multiple pieces of the championship core already have been moved — the Celtics traded Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis, then lost big man Luke Kornet in free agency — while Tatum will spend most (if not all) of the 2025-26 campaign recovering from a ruptured Achilles.

Tatum’s injury as well as the offseason departures of Holiday, Porzingis and Kornet factored into Horford’s decision to sign elsewhere, according to The Boston Globe’s Adam Himmelsbach, but it was still “quite hard” for Horford to leave Boston, “which he considers a second home,” Himmelsbach reported.

With Horford, Porzingis and Kornet out of the picture, Boston’s current frontcourt consists of Neemias Queta, Xavier Tillman Sr., free-agent addition Luka Garza and rookie Amari Williams.

ICYMI in Mets Land: Clay Holmes saves season, Game 162 determines playoff fate

Here's what happened in Mets Land on Saturday, in case you missed it...


‘Smarter’ Brewers Overcome Payroll Cuts in World Series Quest

SAN DIEGO — It hardly seems like it, but it’s been 20 years since Milwaukee Brewers owner Mark Attanasio purchased the team for $223 million from then-commissioner Bud Selig and his family in 2005.

The Major League Baseball meeting where Attanasio received formal approval took place at the Hilton Chicago O’Hare Airport. Attanasio, now 67, was one of the first from the finance industry to buy into the sport, and he received a nice ovation from his new colleagues after the unanimous vote.

“Bud told me that it would be the only time the owners would applaud me,” Attanasio said Tuesday night in the Brewers clubhouse at Petco Park, where his first-place team dropped two of the three games this week to the San Diego Padres. “He was right.”

MLB, now run by commissioner Rob Manfred, has nothing to be ashamed of as the small-market, low-payroll Brewers have recently dominated MLB, at least during the regular season. The unlikely Brewers boast the best record in the league this season, which closes Sunday; they have won their National League Central division for the third consecutive year and fourth time in the past five seasons in pursuit of the franchise’s first World Series title.

Manager Pat Murphy, in charge the last two seasons, called it a miraculous “three-peat,” offering no apologies to then Los Angeles Lakers coach Pat Riley, who trademarked the term back in the 1980s when his squad was trying to win three NBA titles in a row.

“Maybe I can talk to Pat, and we can use the term,” Attanasio said. It’s out there to be licensed on T-shirts and caps, with the licensing fee going to charity.

The fact is, this season’s results were a surprise. “Not one prognosticator predicted us to have more than 80 wins,” Murphy said.

On cue, the Brewers opened the season 0-4, the first three losses coming at Yankee Stadium where the New York Yankees outscored them 20-9 and hit nine homers, sparking the Torpedo Bat controversy. Five Yankees used the bat, but the hubbub has since faded into obscurity.

“Yeah, how did that work out?” Murphy said.

Christian Yelich, the Brewers lone candidate for NL MVP honors, called it a “non-story” at the time. “If we had allowed only eight runs in that series, nobody would’ve cared about it,” he said.

The Brewers were still 28-28 on May 27 and playing lackluster baseball, 6.5 games behind the Chicago Cubs with a much higher payroll. The wins then started accumulating, the Brewers sprinting out to a 79-45 mark, nine games up, on Aug. 18.

They haven’t wavered since.

The Brewers achieved this despite cutting payroll by $21.3 million after the 2024 season, spending $141.5 million for luxury tax purposes, ranked 21st in MLB, to produce a team that has dominated the regular season. That’s $275.1 million less than the top-ranked Los Angeles Dodgers, who have won fewer games. The division-rival Cubs spent an 11th-ranked $226.3 million for luxury tax purposes on players this season and made the playoffs for the first time since 2020.

The Brewers are succeeding by developing good young players, such as center fielder Jackson Chourio, Attanasio said, using the Tampa Bay Rays model. Over the years they traded stellar closers Josh Hader to the Padres and Devin Williams to the Yankees, without missing a beat. 

This past offseason, free agent shortstop Willy Adames was allowed to walk to the San Francisco Giants for seven years, $182 million. The Giants were just eliminated from playoff contention.

Attanasio did retain Yelich for seven years, $188.5 million through 2028, but that was an anomaly.

“He’s the core of the team,” Murphy said. “I don’t know where we would be without him.”

The tight-fisted budgeting is the way it’s always been since Attanasio bought the Brewers and under the Selig family before him.

“We don’t generate the revenue to justify that kind of spending,” Attanasio said. “We never have.”

Even in publicly funded and renovated American Family Field, the Brewers generated only $343 million of revenue in 2024, 16th in the league, according to Sportico.

They are valued at $1.63 billion. In comparison, the Dodgers have MLB’s top revenue of $855 million and are worth $7.73 billion in the second largest market in the U.S. Milwaukee is the 33rd-largest.

How does a team like the Brewers compete?

“We just have to be smarter,” Attanasio, whose net worth is $1.9 billion per Forbes, said.

Milwaukee’s success comes at a time when smaller-market owners are trying to level the playing field by evenly sharing all of their local television money and seeking a salary cap in collective bargaining negotiations with the players next year.

As of now, each team gets to keep its own local TV money. In 2024, the Brewers earned $335 million, compared with $752 million for the Dodgers.

Changing the TV revenue structure would take a 75% vote of the owners, like all MLB issues. The players union has already said a salary cap is a non-starter. The threat of another MLB lockout looms when the current Basic Agreement expires after the 2026 season.

Attanasio said he “has no idea” how all of that is going to turn out.

The goal is for the Brew Crew to go where they’ve never gone before. In Attanasio’s 21 seasons, they’ve been to the playoffs nine times—seven in the past eight seasons—but have never made it beyond the NL Championship Series.

The Brewers have only been to the World Series once, losing the 1982 Fall Classic under Selig to the St. Louis Cardinals in seven games. They are one of five teams to have never won the World Series. 

“I’m well aware,” Attanasio said. “But going into these playoffs we’ll have some company.”

Among the playoff qualifiers this fall, the Seattle Mariners have never played in the World Series, and the Padres have been there twice but failed to win.

If the Brewers can finally win it all, perhaps Attanasio will finally hear that second round of applause at the next owners meeting.

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Tatum's latest workout video amid Achilles rehab has NBA world stunned

Tatum's latest workout video amid Achilles rehab has NBA world stunned originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

We now know why Jayson Tatum isn’t ruling out a return to action at some point in the 2025-26 season.

The Boston Celtics forward, who underwent surgery to repair a ruptured Achilles tendon just over four months ago, posted a six-minute video to YouTube on Saturday that featured footage of him lacing up his brand-new Tatum 4s and doing actual basketball drills at the Auerbach Center in Boston.

The good stuff starts around the 5:10 mark, with a clip of Tatum deadlifting a large amount of weight before hitting the court for dribbling, shooting and running drills.

Did we mention that Tatum ruptured his Achilles — an injury that sidelines many professional athletes for a full year — in MAY??

The 27-year-old has attacked his recovery maniacally, however: After getting surgery just hours following his initial injury, Tatum stayed in Boston the entire offseason, essentially treating his rehab like a full-time job and taking only the occasional weekend trip throughout the summer.

Tatum’s hard work appears to be paying off, to the point where he’s leaving his fellow NBA superstars in awe. Houston Rockets superstar Kevin Durant, who tore his Achilles during the 2019 NBA Finals, reacted fittingly on X after seeing Tatum’s workout video:

“Insane. Let’s get it JT,” Durant wrote.

Of course, there’s still no guarantee Tatum will return to action this season. The Celtics likely will take a conservative approach with their superstar, and there are risks associated with throwing Tatum into the fire late in the regular season if Boston is fighting to make the playoffs.

But it’s clear that Tatum is hell-bent on returning to action as soon as possible — Tatum admitted to Sports Illustrated’s Chris Mannix he has a date “circled” on his calendar that he wants to return by — and at this rate, it’s hard not to envision his potential return becoming a serious storyline when the calendar flips to 2026.

Willy Adames becomes first Giants player with 30 home runs since Barry Bonds

Willy Adames becomes first Giants player with 30 home runs since Barry Bonds originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — When the Giants gave Willy Adames the largest free-agent contract in franchise history last offseason, they were counting on him ending the long-running 30-homer drought. On Sunday, Adames finally did it, although the path to 30 was unlike anything he or the organization could have imagined. 

Adames did it on the first pitch Sunday, becoming the first Giant since Barry Bonds in 2004 to reach 30 in a season. After an incredibly slow start to his Giants career, he has hit 21 homers since the start of July, ending an infamous streak. 

This is Adames’ third 30-homer season, and he’ll end up giving the Giants exactly what they hoped for this year, despite having a batting average under .200 as late as June 10. When he was slumping, Adames took pride in celebrating teammates’ homers, capping each one by taking the helmet off as a fellow Giant approached the dugout. That enthusiasm helped make him the Willie Mac Award winner, and he gave a speech Friday, a few minutes before hitting No. 29. 

The wild thing about the 30-homer drought is that, most years, nobody has even come close. Since Bonds hit 45 homers in 2004, only nine Giants have even reached 25. Brandon Belt gave it the best shot, getting to 29 in 2021 with a red-hot streak that came while he dubbed himself The Captain. But Belt fractured his left thumb in the 156th game that season, missing the final homestand and the postseason. 

Adames got No. 28 back on Sept. 9, but then went 14 games without a homer, batting just .176 with three extra-base hits during that span. He broke out in the first inning Friday when German Marquez grooved a fastball. Adames blasted it 402 feet down the left field line; at 110.2 mph, it was his hardest-hit ball of the season. 

Adames was moved up to the leadoff spot on Sunday to get extra opportunities. It was his first time doing it since 2018, and he crushed a fastball from McCade Brown over the center field wall as Oracle Park roared. It was Adames’ first career leadoff homer. 

Adames hit 32 homers for the Milwaukee Brewers last year, but got off to a slow start in orange and black. Everything finally clicked into place midway through the season. 

The shortstop hit seven homers in July and nine in August, joining Rafael Devers — who reached 30 homers combined with the Red Sox and Giants — in giving the lineup a dangerous one-two punch. His 30 homers are the most by a right-handed-hitting Giant since Jeff Kent had 37 in 2002 and the second-most by any shortstop in the Majors this year. 

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Seamus Casey Debuts in Devils’ Preseason Win Over Islanders

Seamus Casey made his preseason debut for the New Jersey Devils last night in a 4-2 victory over the New York Islanders.

The 21-year-old had been sidelined at the start of preseason due to injury and, aside from playing one game in the Prospects Challenge in Buffalo, had not seen ice time until two nights ago.

Casey played 14 games with the Devils last season after being drafted 46th overall in the 2022 NHL Entry Draft, recording eight points in the NHL.

Ahead of the game, Casey spoke with NHL.com about how he felt going into his debut:

“Body feels great. I’m ready to go,” he said. “It’s been a great week of preparation. It’s so exciting. I’ve been waiting since last year to get a game going.”

On the ice, Casey made an immediate impact, tallying two points on assists. Reflecting on returning to action, he added:

“It’s been a long summer. I’m just pumped to get out there with the guys. I missed the first two games, so I’m just excited to be out there.”

Despite the strong start, Casey emphasized that he knows it’s a long process:

“You have to prove it every day. It’s ‘what have you done for me lately.’ You can’t be happy with the way things went in the past and think that’s going to carry you forward. I have to keep getting better, and it starts tonight. It’s going to be a long season of getting better and adding more consistency. It starts now.”

Head coach Sheldon Keefe also acknowledged the progress Casey has made:

“You look for him to take a step in his confidence, sense of belonging—just be himself, go out and play. I felt he did a good job of that last year, that’s why we felt comfortable putting him in. This year the circumstances are a little different. There are maybe more expectations since he played last year and is more comfortable.”

With defenseman Johnathan Kovacevic out at the start of the season due to an injury sustained last year, there’s an opportunity for Casey to secure a more permanent spot on the roster.

Keefe praised the young defenseman’s performance last season, saying:

“I really like the way that he played for us last year when he was up.”

Former Blackhawks Goalie Marc-Andre Fleury Has Special NHL Ending

The Chicago Blackhawks had the pleasure of having Marc-Andre Fleury on their team for 45 games played over the course of his 1051-game career. He helped make what turned out to be a rough 2021-22 season for the Blackhawks better. 

At the trade deadline of that season, the Blackhawks traded him to the Minnesota Wild, where he would finish out his days in the NHL. At the end of the 2024-25 season, Fleury played his last game before retiring. 

During the off-season, however, the Pittsburgh Penguins announced that he would return on a PTO to play one preseason game so he could retire with the team where he became a legend. While in Pittsburgh, Fleury was a big part of three Stanley Cup-winning teams. 

That game took place on Saturday night in Pittsburgh against the Columbus Blue Jackets. He came in for the third period, didn’t give up a goal, and the Penguins won. They also allowed him to be the goalie in a shootout for entertainment purposes once regulation ended. 

He was saluted by the Penguins crowd, which is an organization that will always have him around going forward. Fleury’s legacy in Pittsburgh is right up there with some of the greats of every sport. 

Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, and Kristopher Letang played a key role in the celebration process, as those three helped Fleury form the winningest core in Penguins history. 

To say that the Penguins got everything they expected and more out of Fleury when they took him first overall in 2003 would be an understatement. The NHL and the entire hockey community are better for knowing Marc-Andre Fleury.

Next up for Fleury is the Hall of Fame. It shouldn’t take long to get him inducted now that his playing career is over. He will likely make it on the first ballot. 

Fleury will go out with his three Stanley Cups, a Vezina Trophy, a Jennings Trophy, a record of 575-339-97, 76 career shutouts, a 2.60 goals against average, and a .912 save percentage. Retiring on their own terms makes sense for a player of his caliber. 

Expect this to become a new tradition for all-time greats who may not end with their original teams. It’s a cool new idea that we’ve never seen before, but it won’t be soon forgotten as the first of its kind. 

Fleury actually got to play, and play well, with the Penguins one last time. It's a memory that will last a lifetime.

The Blackhawks were such a small part of his journey, but a part of it nonetheless. He deserves all of his “flowers” as he impacted so many people at every stop he made in a positive way. If there were a Hall of Humanity, he’d be in that, too. 

Visit The Hockey News Chicago Blackhawks team site to stay updated on the latest news, game-day coverage, player features, and more.

Flyers Must Choose Path of Least Resistance to Resolve Defensive Woes

(Photo: Dan Hamilton, Imagn Images)

The Philadelphia Flyers have a burgeoning issue on defense, but this new problem isn't one that's totally unsolvable.

Through four preseason games, the Flyers have yet to see a young defenseman take the reins and wrest control of an NHL roster spot, and the veterans they're competing with have done little to assure the coaching staff they're reliable alternatives.

Noah Juulsen, a free agent addition who played for Flyers head coach on Rick Tocchet on the Vancouver Canucks in past seasons, has made some big hits - one was penalized - but has done little else so far.

His pace of play, in particular, has not been impressive, and he looks very much like a player who is coming off a season-ending hernia.

Juulsen's biggest competition for a roster spot is prospect Helge Grans, but Grans, whose best attribute is his mobility, has been gashed with speed repeatedly in exhibition games. 

I expect the 23-year-old to get every opportunity to redeem himself as he must clear waivers to reach the AHL, but there is little to be inspired by in his handful of preseason games thus far.

Flyers Roster Battles Leaving Much to Be Desired Early in NHL PreseasonFlyers Roster Battles Leaving Much to Be Desired Early in NHL PreseasonThrough three NHL preseason games, several Philadelphia Flyers roster battles look far from being decided any time soon.

Other players fighting for spots include Dennis Gilbert, Egor Zamula, Hunter McDonald, and Adam Ginning.

Gilbert, McDonald, and Ginning are all of the physical, shot-blocking ilk, can be mistake-prone, and offer little offensively. I've actually liked Ginning's defensive work, especially compared to his disastrous training camp outings last year, but he still lacks consistency, and reliability and upside are key factors when determining this roster.

So, where does that lead us? To one guy who's already being counted out despite clearly having the highest upside of the bunch.

The Flyers and Flyers fans aren't particularly enthused about the idea of having 5-foot-9 Emil Andrae on defense with Cam York and Jamie Drysdale already on the roster, but, like it or not, Andrae would be one of the six best defensemen on the Flyers' roster as things currently stand.

The 23-year-old played 42 games for the Flyers last season - with most coming under John Tortorella, of all people - scoring a goal, six assists, and seven points while averaging 17:21 of ice time.

Yes, Andrae suffered with inconsistencies, but he also played like a defenseman who at times looked to be a legitimate middle-pairing player with offensive potential.

According to Moneypuck, Andrae and Travis Sanheim played 108 minutes together, and their 62.5% expected goals percentage led all Flyers defense pairings with 100 or more minutes played.

Ironically, the third-best defense pairing under those parameters was Andrae and Rasmus Ristolainen (triceps), who held an expected goals percentage of 56.8%.

Flyers Training Camp: Nikita Grebenkin Continues to Shine as Roster Battles Get RealFlyers Training Camp: Nikita Grebenkin Continues to Shine as Roster Battles Get RealAfter three days, forward prospect Nikita Grebenkin has been the one constant in Philadelphia Flyers training camp, flashing his intriguing potential at seemingly every turn.

Can Andrae hold his own next to Sanheim or someone else until Ristolainen comes back sometime in October or November? I'd be willing to bet on that.

In comparison to Zamula and Grans, what's the point of having big defenders with size when they rarely use it to their advantage?

And for destroyers like McDonald, Ginning, Gilbert, and Juulsen, players like Juulsen, Vincent Desharnais, and Carson Soucy didn't exactly excel under Tocchet, and all three are playing for new teams this year.

Andrae's NHL experience already surpasses that of Ginning and McDonald and is more or less one full season off from Gilbert and Juulsen, who are both five years older.

The good thing, too, is that Andrae, unlike Grans, is waivers-exempt. If Tocchet gives him a try and decides it isn't working, the Flyers can simply turn to Ristolainen once he's healthy and send Andrae back to the AHL.

The Flyers have some decisions to make to remedy an untenable situation on defense, and opting for some familiarity and upside in Andrae would be a worthy short-term pivot until something more favorable shakes out.

Canadiens: Three Takeaways From A Surprise Win

After deploying his top-six against the Toronto Maple Leafs at the Bell Centre on Thursday night, Montreal Canadiens coach Martin St-Louis decided to send a much less experienced group to Toronto. None of the members of the normal leadership group were on the ice, so Alex Newhook, Alex Carrier, and Arber Xhekaj all wore an alternate captain’s A on their jersey.

You Win The Game On The Ice

As silly as it may sound, a hockey game is won on the ice and definitely not on paper. On Thursday, the lineup led us to believe that the Canadiens were the favorite to win the game, but when all was said and done, the Leafs skated away with the win. On Saturday night, the roles were reversed with the Leafs sending out a more veteran-heavy lineup and the visitors keeping their number of regulars to a strict minimum.

Former Canadiens Forward Hits Waivers
Canadiens Lite To Take On The Maple Leafs Tonight
Canadiens: Another Camp, Another Lot Of Injuries

But it was the Canadiens who had the better opportunities in the first frame and who were the only ones to find the back of the net through Newhook with assists to Carrier and Zack Bolduc. Earlier in the frame, Oliver Kapanen also did well early on to create a scoring chance, but Anthony Stolarz would have none of it. After 40 minutes, Montreal had 18 shots to Toronto’s 13—an actual reversal of Thursday’s game.

Hutson Did It All

Lane Hutson was everywhere on the ice in Toronto. When each team had a man in the box, we were reminded of how mobile a defenseman he is and just how dangerous he can be with extra space. He’s quick, he’s shifty and deceptive, and he does what he wants on the ice.

Last year, he wasn’t shooting that much, but on Saturday night, he didn’t miss a single opportunity to take a shot. Through 40 minutes, he had already taken five of the Canadiens’ 18 shots. Just three minutes after John Tavares had brought the Leafs within one goal of the Canadiens, Hutson gave them their two-goal lead back on the power play. With fantastic poise, he walked in, picked his spot, and unleashed a quick wrist shot that found its way through Stolarz.

The Fight Isn’t Over

Kapanen, Owen Beck, Joe Veleno, and Samuel Blais, the players who are competing for the 12th and 13th forward spots, all had a pretty good night. Clearly, none of them wanted to be cut post-game, and they weren’t. The same cannot be said for Joshua Roy, however, who has had numerous opportunities throughout the camp but has not risen to the challenge.

The Canadiens may not have won 7-2, but they put on a dominating display, similar in every aspect but the final score to the Maple Leafs’ win on Thursday night. Montreal now only has two preseason games remaining, and the coach will likely want to ice as complete a lineup as possible. Fans attending the game against the Ottawa Senators in Quebec City can expect a near-complete lineup.

The Habs will enjoy a day off on Sunday before getting back to work on Monday morning in Brossard. They’ll also hold a morning skate in Brossard on Tuesday before travelling to Quebec to face Ottawa in the evening. St-Louis’ men will then have a day off in la vieille capitale, before holding two public training sessions on October 2 and 3. They’ll play their final preseason game on Saturday at the Bell Centre.


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How Al Horford addition gives Warriors something they've never had at center

How Al Horford addition gives Warriors something they've never had at center originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Walking into the Warriors’ locker room at Chase Center, looking directly to the left and seeing an emptiness to spaces Klay Thompson used to occupy was an unfillable void left behind by a legend last season. 

Kevon Looney isn’t headed for the Basketball Hall of Fame like Thompson. His locker room presence will be just as missed, or more, when turning to the right and seeing somebody else in that first spot that served as an invitation to laughs and real wisdom for teammates and media members alike. 

“Loon is everything I talked about in terms of committing to the team and sacrifice and getting through adversity,” Coach Steve Kerr said more than four months ago after the Warriors’ 2024-25 NBA season ended. “He is in many ways our moral compass in that regard.” 

The Boston Celtics will find themselves in a similar situation for the 2025-26 season. They’re already in a gap year knowing star forward Jayson Tatum is out for the season after tearing his Achilles in the second round of the NBA playoffs, deciding to make multiple trades and shed money over the offseason. Boston still will have a second star in Jaylen Brown to lean on, as well as Derrick White, Sixth Man of the Year Payton Pritchard and a handful of other talented players. 

Who they won’t have is Al Horford, missing both his play and veteran leadership on and off the court. 

Brown will do his best replacing the talents of Tatum. Horford will be a different kind of absence, especially emotionally

“You can’t replace Al,” Pritchard said the day after the Celtics’ season ended. “I definitely hope we get that figured out because his locker room presence alone is just crucial. We definitely need him back.”

Horford isn’t coming back to Boston, he’s finally coming to the Bay Area to join the Warriors. Golden State and Horford, according to the center’s agent Jason Glushon, have committed to a multi-year contract.

Horford, 39 years old, in his own ways will have influence over the few young players on the Warriors, most notably for 25-year-old centers Quinten Post and Trayce Jackson-Davis. Plus, any help at center is a win for Draymond Green and his health for a full season. Horford also bring something the Warriors have never had at his position. 

Through Horford’s first eight NBA seasons, he attempted a total of 65 threes, making 21 for a 32.3 3-point percentage. Everything changed for him the next year in the 2015-16 season, the same season that Steph Curry won his second consecutive NBA MVP while making a record 402 threes – taking 886 shots from beyond the arc. 

That also was the season Horford took nearly four times as many threes as he had his first eight years in the NBA. Horford went from a total of 65 3-point attempts for his career to making 88 and taking 256 in one season. He now has made the fourth-most threes (877) by a center in NBA history, behind only Karl-Anthony Towns, Brook Lopez and Nikola Vučević, in that order. Horford has made at least 100 threes in each of the last three seasons while connecting on 40.9 percent of them.

This past season he only played 60 games, a career low for a full season, yet still made his second-most threes (114) and also attempted his second most (314). 

Post was an afterthought for the Warriors last season as a rookie until late January. It didn’t take long to notice what a change his ability to stretch the floor as a center made for the Warriors. Post played 42 regular-season games and went 73 of 179 (40.8 percent) on threes. His prowess from deep as a center was a revelation in the Curry era

The 73 threes Post made were the second-most ever by a center to play with Curry, one behind Dario Šarić’s 74 two seasons ago in 64 games. Aside from them, we’re talking about Nemanja Bjelica making 54 threes in the Warriors’ 2021-22 NBA championship season, Omari Spellman making 43 in their 15-win 2019-20 season when Curry only played five games, DeMarcus Cousins making 26 in 2018-19 and Marreese Speights draining 24 in 2015-16. 

Just like in Boston last season, Horford likely won’t play both games of a back-to-back for Golden State, putting more of an emphasis on needed leaps from Post and Jackson-Davis. Horford isn’t the same lockdown defender he once was, but still can be highly effective on that end. He isn’t going to erase the legacy Looney created over his decade as a Warrior. 

Between Kerr and Horford’s new Warriors teammates, that won’t be asked of him. They’ve seen and heard what kind of leader Horford is and won’t want him to change a thing. The Warriors also know what Horford still brings to the hardwood and the history he has against them. 

In the 25 regular-season games Horford has played against the Warriors, he has averaged 14.9 points and 9.4 rebounds, both being career bests of his vs. any team. 

Horford, even at his age, is the player the Warriors had to add this offseason as much as anybody else.

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