Mets/Dodgers preview: The jet-lagged Mets try to wake up against the two-time defending champion Dodgers

Apr 12, 2026; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers two-way player Shohei Ohtani (17) hits a solo homerun during the first inning against the Texas Rangers at Dodger Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jonathan Hui-Imagn Images | Jonathan Hui-Imagn Images

The New York Mets (7-9) travel to the West Coast to face the Los Angeles Dodgers (11-4) in a three-game series in Chavez Ravine. While there is never a good time to face the best team on the planet two years running, coming off of a sweep by the lowly Athletics, the Mets could really have used an easier draw.

Where do we start?

With the exception of a failed comeback on Saturday afternoon, the Mets’ bats have been taking a spring siesta for the better part of a week. During their current five-game losing streak, the Mets have scored nine runs, but six of those came in Saturday’s attempted comeback. They’ve been shut out twice, scored one run once, and scored two runs once in the other four games in that period.

It is easy to blame some of this offensive drought on Juan Soto’s stint on the injured list, but that is far too easy of a scapegoat. The entire team isn’t hitting with any consistency, including players who we all know are too good for this to be a long term issue, such as Bo Bichette and the notoriously slow-starting Francisco Lindor.

But for a team that lost a playoff spot by one game last season, that is cold comfort at best. And while there are some solutions that may be temporary balms (hello Thomas James Pham!), there was a narrative in the offseason that once Eric Chavez and his “hammer the ball into the ground as hard as you can as often as you can” philosophy was jettisoned, things would improve.

And they will. We know this. But for the short term, watching Marcus Semien take an even further dive into offensive irrelevance, Jorge Polanco unable to do much of anything, and Carson Benge look consistently overmatched at the plate, it is hard to feel good about the players that required an optimistic lens in the first place. Benge will adjust, Polanco will heal, Semien will…I don’t know, man. But right now, none of them are helping the team with their bats.

The good news, if there is any, is that the pitching staff hasn’t been as dreadful as the stat line looks. Luke Weaver has eaten shit twice in the last week and he’s more or less responsible for two of those losses. That’s not great, but I would rather one reliever be struggling than an entire bullpen of ineptitude. The Mets moved on from both Richard Lovelady and Luis García over the weekend, and while we shouldn’t be printing up Joey Gerber or Craig Kimbrel shirseys just yet, at least the Mets aren’t resting on their broken down laurels and are trying something new.

As for the starting pitching, it continues to be a mixed bag. Nolan McLean has been as advertised and Freddy Peralta is doing lots of Freddy Peralta stuff. Kodai Senga had two fantastic starts and then a terrible one, and David Peterson did the same in reverse. Clay Holmes left Friday’s game with hamstring tightness, but apparently is on track to start on Thursday, despite his spot still being listed as TBD.

Look, it’s early in the season, and we all know how this goes. But this offseason was a tough sell for a few reasons, but some of the major talking points included run prevention, versatility, a deeper lineup, and an improved relief corps. The versatility has been more or less accurate, but everything else has been flat-out wrong. If the Mets turn things around and waltz into a playoff spot, we will all laugh about our April panic, but that doesn’t make being in the middle of the panic any less frustrating.

Again, if they were traveling (without an off day to the opposite side of the country) to play almost any other team, things would feel better. But the Dodgers are the owners of the best record in baseball, the best player of the 21st century, and more money than some mid-sized nations. They snatched up the Mets’ All-Star closer, they outbid the Mets for their outfield target, and generally are the best run franchise in baseball.

While they lost to old friends Jacob deGrom on Sunday and Tyler Rogers on Wednesday, the team looks strong, even with Kyle Tucker hitting below league average thus far. Andy Pages isn’t going to have a 1.181 OPS the entire season, but there is enough thump in the Los Angeles lineup that they don’t need him to. This is what a deep lineup actually looks like.

Monday, April 13: David Peterson vs. Justin Wrobleski, 10:10 PM EDT on SNY

Peterson (2026): 14.2 IP, 14 K, 6 BB, 0 HR, 6.14 ERA, 2.44 FIP, 166 ERA-

After a good first start, Peterson has been downright awful in his next two appearances. Ten earned runs over nine and two-third innings is never pretty, but if FIP is to be believed, Peterson isn’t having as bad of an April as his ERA would have us believe. Until the Mets’ bats heat up, the club could really use Peterson’s FIP instead of his ERA.

Wrobleski (2026): 9.0 IP, 4 K, 5 BB, 0 HR, 4.00 ERA, 3.90 FIP, 105 ERA-

In his first start against the Guardians, Wrobleski gave up three runs in four innings. It wasn’t exactly a terrible start, but it is one that he would build on when he faced the Blue Jays in a rout a week later. While he’sbeen fine thus far, he’s not necessarily a pitcher of the caliber of the next two starters in this series. The Mets need to win this game in order to have any real shot at taking the series, if there’s any hope of that at all.

Tuesday, April 14: Nolan McLean vs. Yoshinobu Yamamoto, 10:10 PM EDT on SNY

McLean (2026): 16.2 IP, 20 K, 6 BB, 1 HR, 2.70 ERA, 2.76 FIP, 73 ERA-

The Mets have a wonderful history of producing top-level starting pitching over their history, and McLean appears to be the latest in that line. Over his first 11 MLB starts, McLean has exactly one (1) start of more than three earned runs. He’s been the recipient of some lackluster offense behind him, and while that doesn’t appear to be changing too much against the Dodgers and one of the best pitchers in baseball, the long term outlook for McLean looks very, very bright.

Yamamoto (2026): 18.0 IP, 14 K, 2 BB, 2 HR, 2.50 ERA, 3.51 FIP, 66 ERA-

In what still feels like a ‘the one who got away’ situation, Yamamoto spurned the Mets in favor of the Dodgers ahead of the 2024 season. Since then, he had a good ‘24 and a great ‘25, and 2026 is looking to be more of the same. In his last start against the Blue Jays, Yamamoto struck out six, walked one, and allowed just one run. This pitching matchup looks to be one of the best of the early season.

Wednesday, April 13: TBD vs. Shohei Ohtani, 10:10 PM EDT on ESPN

Ohtani (2026): 12.0 IP, 8 K, 4 BB, 0 HR, 0.00 ERA, 3.04 FIP, 0 ERA-

I must admit, I don’t keep as informed about other teams’ individual performance as I probably should. And so while it was somewhat of a shock to see Ohtani’s 0.00 ERA, it’s not really surprising. Just when we start to get used to who Ohtani is as an absolute once in a generation superstar, he does something else seemingly unbelievable. And so while this sparkling ERA won’t last, don’t be surprised if Ohtani continues to make the best baseball players on the planet look like little leaguers.

Islanders Anxiety – Episode 369 – They Threw It Away

Mike and Dan react immediately to the Islanders getting eliminated from playoff contention after a lost weekend against Ottawa and Montreal.

We’ve seen the Islanders lose in many different ways over the years. But we’ve never seen them choke away a season like this. They played almost every game since the Olympic Break as if they were playing out the string, whittling away a playoff berth that they might not have totally deserved. And while a few players get a Hall Pass, namely Matthew Schaefer and Cal Ritchie, many of the guys who have been here a while conducted themselves in a despicable, cowardly fashion. Which calls into question what the franchise’s real intentions are and where their true priorities lie. Do they want to get people to watch them and spend money on them, or do they actually want to win games first and foremost? Do they want to be just good, or truly great?

In the second half, we look ahead to their final, meaningless game against Carolina and the few milestones that we’d like to see get hit. We also talk briefly about the week’s one victory over a DOA Leafs team in a game we can’t even enjoy anymore because, like everything else, it amounted to nothing. Very few of their games over the last five seasons have been purely enjoyable because of the team’s attitude. There have been players and moments to remember but overall, this era can be personified by a noticeable and unsatisfying lack of accomplishment.

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The week ahead: Here come the playoffs

PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA - DECEMBER 30: Sidney Crosby #87 of the Pittsburgh Penguins celebrates with Rickard Rakell #67 after scoring a goal in the first period against the Carolina Hurricanes at PPG PAINTS Arena on December 30, 2025 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Justin Berl/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Go back to the start of September when the Pittsburgh Penguins were just entering training camp, and imagine somebody telling you this week the Penguins would be playing their third consecutive meaningless game, preparing to sit everybody important for Game 82 so they can be ready for the playoffs.

Then imagine the Penguins would be spending that week likely preparing to play either the Philadelphia Flyers or Washington Capitals in the first round.

Chaos. Mayhem. You would have never believed it.

Nor would you have believed an 18-year-old Ben Kindel would show up right from the NHL Draft and make an immediate impact. Or that Anthony Mantha would be the team’s leading goal-scorer. Or that they would find another potential star in Egor Chinakhov, one that is just entering his prime years, in a mid-season trade with the Columbus Blue Jackets. Or that Stuart Skinner would be their starting goalie thanks to a Tristan Jarry trade. Or that Erik Karlsson would rediscover his Norris Trophy form. Or that Parker Wotherspoon would be a reliable first-pairing defenseman partner for him.

Each of these things on their own seem a little unbelievable. All of them together would have seemed impossible. But here we are, and after playing two meaningless games (for themselves) over the weekend, the Penguins have one more game that does not matter on Tuesday night at the St. Louis Blues.

It is really not even worth trying to analyze that game because it means literally nothing.

The Penguins spot as the No. 2 seed in the Metropolitan Division is locked in. They will not move up. They will not move down. They have home-ice advantage in the first-round, no matter who they play. The Blues, meanwhile, are already mathematically eliminated from Stanley Cup Playoff contention. None of the Penguins top players are expected to play, and it is the right call.

The focus now is Saturday. That is when the Stanley Cup Playoffs begin, and the Penguins are still waiting to see who their opponent will be.

The odds are that it will be the Flyers. Philadelphia needs just one win, or two points via two overtime losses, to clinch the No. 3 seed in the Metropolitan Division.

They can do that on Monday night with a win against the Carolina Hurricanes.

If they lose that game, and especially if they lose that game in regulation, it would set up a potentially massive game between the Washington Capitals and Columbus Blue Jackets on Tuesday night. The winner would still be relying on yet another Flyers loss, but it would at least produce some tremendous theatre.

Regardless of which team the Penguins play, I would put them as favorites in any matchup, but the Capitals would be the one I feel the worst about from their perspective. Washington is better than its record indicates, is the best 5-on-5 team of the three potential opponents and also has the best goalie in Logan Thompson. Thompson is a legitimate Vezina candidate this season and has been one of the league’s best goalies. I would rather take my chances against Dan Vladar or Elvis Merzlikins and Jet Greaves than him.

The Flyers defend exceptionally well, allowing just 2.38 expected goals against per 60 minutes of 5-on-5 play, the third-best mark in the NHL behind only the Vegas Golden Knights and Ottawa Senators. They are not an especially potent offensive team, however, and have only won 26 games in regulation going into Monday.

Assuming they get in, they will be the only Eastern Conference playoff team that will have less than 30 regulation wins. They have 26 going into Monday, and can only max out at 28. Every other team that has clinched a spot has at least 32. They also have just 32 regulation and overtime wins, also the fewest among Eastern Conference playoff teams. They have been heavily boosted by a 9-4 shootout record.

Columbus has had one of the weirdest seasons in the league, underwhelming for the first half of the season, looking unbeatable after the coaching change from Dean Evason to Rick Bowness, and then completely going in the tank when it played itself back into playoff contention, losing nine of their past 12 games going into play on Tuesday.

There would be some intrigue with this matchup given the presence of Chinakhov in Pittsburgh and the way his season (and potentially career) has turned around since the trade. This would be a different type of revenge series.

Overall the Penguins are 5-2-4 against the three teams this season, with all four overtime losses being in shootouts. There is no shootout in the playoffs. The only two regulation defeats were against the Capitals this past weekend, games where the Penguins had nothing to play for, rested a bunch of people, and games the Capitals absolutely had to have.

They should matchup well with any of these teams. They can beat any of these teams. Now they have to actually show they can do it.

Knicks vs. Hawks first-round preview and prediction for 2026 NBA playoffs

In the most pivotal season of Leon Rose’s Knicks tenure, it’s a rematch with the Atlanta Hawks, the winners of a 2021 first-round matchup with New York, setting the stage for this potential championship run. 

Trae Young is no longer here to rekindle that rivalry, but Atlanta is still every bit as dangerous, if not more. But New York isn’t the same team, either, and has lofty expectations for their June plans.

Let’s dive into previewing the series, and predicting who comes out on top...

Atlanta’s strength is on the defensive side of the ball, where they ranked third in the league since the trade deadline. They’re connective with a ton of athletic size -- qualities that have given the Knicks fits in the past.

When you’re game-planning shutting down New York’s offense, the first bullet point will be Jalen Brunson, and Atlanta has the pieces to ensure he’s constantly hounded. Dyson Daniels (6-foot-7) has been their lead option, and guards Brunson well despite a number of strong performances. 

They’ll also lean on Nickeil Alexander-Walker (6-foot-5) to take some reps, though he has a lot of the offensive creation on his plate. Expect stretches from big bench wings Jonathan Kuminga (6-foot-7) and Zaccharie Risacher (6-foot-8) as well. 

With all that size, the Hawks may be content not sending much help early one-on-one, and blitz him in pick-and-rolls. They have the speed to quickly rotate on the backside if they’re caught 4-on-3, so Brunson will have to make quick decisions to make them pay.

Getting him off the ball, like in last year’s Pistons series, can help wear out their primary defenders and get Brunson easier opportunities. He usually takes a couple games to get going and adjust to the postseason, so that’s when the Knicks will be at their most vulnerable and need others to step up.

Mike Brown’s motion offense will get to prove its worth in a playoff setting, and they can use it to find favorable matchups in most lineups. The Hawks have used a lot of CJ McCollum plus Gabe Vincent off the bench, two smaller guards the Knicks should be able to attack at will. 

They can just keep having Brunson call for the right screen and switch. It will be on Karl-Anthony Towns, OG Anunoby and Mikal Bridges to identify and expose mismatches. The Knicks will need a big Towns series, as this matchup may be won in the restricted area.

Both teams are strong on the boards, so whoever shows up there may end up with the edge in a given game. Expect Mitchell Robinson to be an X-factor here once again.

Dec 19, 2025; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks center Mitchell Robinson (23) reacts after a dunk against the Philadelphia 76ers during the second quarter at Madison Square Garden.
Dec 19, 2025; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks center Mitchell Robinson (23) reacts after a dunk against the Philadelphia 76ers during the second quarter at Madison Square Garden. / Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Off the bench, New York will need a ton from Jordan Clarkson in a defensive series, as one of the best penetrators on the team. It’s possible we see Mohamed Diawara back in the swing of things to combat Atlanta’s size.

Finally, the Knicks will have to limit their turnovers. The Hawks feed off mistakes to bolster their defense and create opportunities on the other end.

Atlanta’s offense, while solid, is definitely the weaker point in their game, especially in the halfcourt. They also boast motion schemes, but with less of the talent to break down defenses and score.

Their shot diet is relatively balanced, with more mid-range shots than your average team, but they still get a healthy amount of threes and rim attempts. They don’t shoot a lot of free throws, so the Knicks can make life easier on themselves by controlling the flow of whistles from the outset.

McCollum and Alexander-Walker are their primary guard creators. The Knicks are likely to hide Brunson on Daniels, a 19 percent three-point shooter who will get called into lots of screening actions and asked to convert to not let Brunson off easy.

Bridges and Josh Hart likely cover the other two guards to provide some point-of-attack capability. Expect a pick-and-roll defense that gets more switch-heavy as the series rolls on and the Knicks force talented but not elite scorers to make one-on-one plays in big moments.

The big matchup will be All-Star Jalen Johnson, who likely sees the Anunoby assignment off rip. He’s a bit quick for Towns and towers over the other starters, so the Knicks have some limited optionality here.

Johnson scores more efficiently in the flow of the offense than isolated, so any hampering Anunoby can do to make catches tougher, get him in the wrong position, and make life physical will be huge. Getting Johnson to fall into the 2021 Julius Randle hole of getting trapped and struggling to find flow in a debut postseason is the ideal scenario.

Atlanta will have some hot performances from non-headlining names, too. Kuminga has been a solid addition and Corey Kispert/Buddy Hield could see some minutes thanks to their knockdown shooting.

The Knicks can and should win this series defensively, but it will take a full effort, all-around performances, and a strong coaching job out of Brown, who’s going up against the formidable Quin Snyder. 

Some other things to watch out for: going under Alexander-Walker screens to make him beat you with pull-up threes (33 percent clip this season), putting Towns on Daniels, and going to the Towns-Robinson lineup much more to dominate the paint and glass.

It’s no doubt going to be a grueling and challenging march through the playoffs for the Knicks, and this first round matchup offers no warmup. Still, the Hawks are at a talent and experience deficit that will be tough to overcome.

Knicks in 6.

Knicks Bulletin: ‘It was nice, man’

Knicks Godzilla vs. Hawks Wannabe
Knicks Godzilla vs. Hawks Wannabe | Google Gemini

The season is over, fellas.

Ah, sorry, I only meant the regular thing.

We still have the playoffs and the parade coming up next. Bring it on!

Mike Breen

On the greedy NBA:

“This is the first time ever that no longer can the home team announcers and broadcasters televise the first round. The entire playoffs exclusive to the national TV partners. … I personally think it’s a poor decision. Fans want to hear their team’s announce team, at least 1st round, because for so many of us, … the home team announcers become part of the family. … I get it. The networks pay a fortune for exclusivity … But I just think the fans deserve to be thrown a bone once in a while. This is our final telecast of the season.”

Mike Brown

On OG Anunoby’s ankle injury:

“I didn’t ask that question because we’re not in that position, but they say he’s day-to-day, which to me means he’s fine. I would assume he’s fine, but we [didn’t] even need to think about it so I didn’t check on it.”

On evaluating the regular season:

“I wish I could have figured some things out a little sooner than what I did. But we’ve had some — more ups than downs. You want to win your conference, you want to end up with the best record. So those two areas are disappointing. You’re out there trying to compete every night, no matter who you play. And so winning the [NBA Cup In-Season Tournament] was nice because our guys competed at a level when things were manufactured to mean more with those games. And then, going into the playoffs, we feel pretty good where we are offensively and defensively as a group. Feel connected.”

On waiting to learn the playoff opponent:

“Just wait until it’s over. At the end of the day, I’m sure somehow, some way, I might be told it. But at the end of the day, I’m a firm believer that trying to ask for this opponent or that opponent is not good for you, when you mess with the basketball gods. So whatever happens, happens.”

On scouting potential opponents:

“Our staff has been fantastic all year. We’ve had guys assigned to that stuff already, on both sides of the ball. Our two advanced scouts have been doing a good job taking care of it, too.”

On team standards and accountability:

“The things that you set as your standard are the things that I brought to the table. While I’m trying to hold people accountable, people are holding me accountable, too.”

On playing Mikal Bridges to preserve his streak:

“The streak that he has going is amazing and I definitely don’t want to be the one to screw that up. It’s crazy because load management is a real thing. And that’s something that’s thought of by everybody. Not just the medical performance group — by coaches, by individual players, by agents, by family members — people push to take time off for whatever reason. So for a guy like that to be at the number that he’s at in consecutive games played speaks volumes.”

On managing Bridges’ streak carefully:

“I’m sure he’s probably cool with [playing a few seconds to keep the streak alive] but at the end of the day, that’s definitely led by me. It’s a streak that he has going on, and I want it to continue, but in the same breath, I also don’t want him to get hurt or anything like that, so we’re gonna try to be as smart about it as best we can.”

On the Hawks as a playoff opponent and the overall playoff field:

“Atlanta’s a good team. They’re a good team. Everybody’s good. Everyone is going to pose challenges. I don’t know who we’re gonna play, but we’re gonna face different challenges from everybody because everybody is special at this time.”

On team belief entering the postseason:

“Going into the playoffs, we feel pretty good where we are offensively and defensively as a group. We feel connected. I feel like everybody on the team has sacrificed in one way, shape or form. You need that from your group in order to have some success. Our guys compete, and like I said, at this point in the season, I feel like the guys really believe, not just in what we’re trying to do, but in each other.”

On Miles McBride’s performance:

“He looked good. It was good to see him just go play free and take any shot he wanted and be aggressive … It was good to see the ball go in a few times.”

On the season’s resilience:

“Like most teams, you go through a lot of ups and you go through and it can get tough. And there can be plenty of opportunities for individuals which can turn into a collective group of guys to quit, throw in the towel any time. Any time we face a little bit of adversity our guys try to handle it the right way. I really like their resiliency and I like their openness to trying different things or new things. Because we’ve done some things differently here than what they’re probably used to when they had a successful run doing the things that they were doing in the past.”

Mikal Bridges

On playing 23 seconds on Sunday:

“It was nice, man.”

On playing every game:

“For the people that’s paying attention, I just want to try and play everyday. It’s who I am. It’s who I’ve always been. I don’t really look at [the all-time list] but I guess it’d be cool one day. Hopefully, I have kids one day and maybe brag about that.”

On the Hawks matchup:

“They play very hard and very fast and have a lot of good basketball players.”

Miles McBride

On the Hawks series:

“They’re a great team. I’m looking forward to the matchup. They are a team that defends really well. They’ve got guys who can go get a bucket on the offensive end, but their team defense is really something challenging. So, it’s going to be an exciting playoff series.”

On his return performance:

“Just being back out there healthy, playing with the guys, it was a great team win – I just wanted to go out and give it my all, really ramp my intensity up and get ready for this run.”

On his health:

“I’m solid. Being out for some long, just getting my wind back. Dealing with the residual pain of the surgery isn’t fun but it’s part of the journey – just trying to do everything I can to help the team win.”

Jordan Clarkson

On not focusing on Atlanta’s approach:

“We didn’t pay any attention to that. It’s just what they wanted to do.”

On the Hawks roster:

“Just a really good team. They’re led by Nickeil. He’s been playing great all year. They made some trades at the deadline and got CJ McCollum [for Young]. Down the line they are a really good team. So it’s going to be an exciting series.”

Quin Snyder (ATL Hawks Coach)

On the uncertainty of matchups and prioritizing health in the regular-season finale:

“Right now, I think we’re excited to be in this situation. Whoever we play is gonna be really good. It’s hard to even try to figure that out. It’s possible that certain teams wanna play us. The primary thing is for us to be healthy going into the postseason. That’s been the one thing that has been consistent the last few weeks and months — you don’t know what’s gonna happen. It’s hard to predict all these games, they’re all going on. Wherever it falls is where it falls, and we’ll prepare for the playoffs, regardless of who that is.”

Kings vs Kraken Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NHL Game

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Anze Kopitar has seen an uptick in production since the Los Angeles Kings acquired dynamic forward Artemi Panarin and stuck him on Kopitar’s wing.

My Kings vs. Kraken predictions and NHL picks expect a productive performance from Kopitar in an advantageous matchup against a team struggling to keep the puck out.

Kings vs Kraken prediction

Kings vs Kraken best bet: Anze Kopitar Over 0.5 points (-125)

Anze Kopitar centers the top line alongside star wingers Artemi Panarin and Adrian Kempe, and the results are encouraging. The Los Angeles Kings have scored 3.96 goals per 60 minutes of 5-on-5 play with that trio on the ice, an elite rate.

Kopitar also skates on the No. 1 power play, giving him exposure to the team’s top players in prime offensive situations.

He's hit the scoresheet in 57% of games since Panarin was acquired — well above the 46% rate prior.

Facing a Seattle Kraken team that’s conceded 3+ goals in 12 of the last 13, Kopitar is primed for a productive night.

Kings vs Kraken same-game parlay

Trevor Moore is shooting more without Kevin Fiala or Andrei Kuzmenko in the fold. He's averaging 3.3 shots per game and has cleared 2.5 at a 71% clip over 21 games.

He’s yet to go back-to-back without 3+ shots, and has a perfect bounce-back opportunity against a Kraken side that sits eighth in 5-on-5 pace and 26th in shot suppression over their last 10.

The Kings have allowed just three goals over their last three games. They’re a tough team to score on, and the Kraken (27th in goals per game) are likely to struggle breaking through.

Kings vs Kraken SGP

  • Anze Kopitar Over 0.5 points
  • Trevor Moore Over 2.5 shots
  • Kings moneyline

Kings vs Kraken odds

  • Moneyline: Kings -140 | Kraken +120
  • Puck Line: Kings -1.5 (+170) | Kraken +1.5 (-210)
  • Over/Under: Over 5.5 | Under 5.5

Kings vs Kraken trend

The Kings have won six of their past eight games. Find more NHL betting trends for Kings vs. Kraken.

How to watch Kings vs Kraken

LocationClimate Pledge Arena, Seattle, WA
DateMonday, April 13, 2026
Puck drop9:30 p.m. ET
TVESPN

Kings vs Kraken latest injuries

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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West Brom say they have not broken EFL financial rules as points deduction fears grow

  • Points penalty would affect this season’s total

  • West Brom are 20th, two points above relegation zone

West Bromwich Albion insist they have complied with the EFL’s financial rules despite fears of a points deduction for the relegation-threatened Championship side.

The Daily Telegraph reported on Monday that the EFL’s Club Financial Reporting Unit (CFRU) filed a compliance report to West Brom over a breach of the loss limits for the 2024-25 season under profitability and sustainability rules (PSR). Under guidelines, sanctions would be applied in the season after breach. That would mean if a points penalty were imposed, it would affect West Brom in the current campaign, with the club 20th in the Championship, two points above the relegation zone.

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Jets vs Golden Knights Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NHL Game

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Dylan Samberg is always a consistent shot blocker, but he has put his body on the line even more frequently as Winnipeg has scratched and clawed to get in playoff contention.

My Jets vs. Golden Knights predictions and NHL picks expect Samberg to pile up the blocks against a Vegas team that has generated shot attempts at an extreme rate since making a coaching change.

Jets vs Golden Knights prediction

Jets vs Golden Knights best bet: Dylan Samberg Over 1.5 blocked shots (-150)

Dylan Samberg has blocked at least two shots in 15 of his past 19 games, averaging 2.2 along the way. He cleared his line in eight of nine matchups with playoff-bound teams during that stretch.

Samberg is in a terrific spot to pile up the blocks Monday night. The Vegas Golden Knights rank third in shot attempt rate — behind only Colorado and Carolina — since they hired John Tortorella, creating plenty of block opportunities.

Samberg is playing more than anybody on the Winnipeg Jets at 5-on-5 and on the penalty kill. He’ll see high usage in defensive situations, putting him in prime position to block shots.

Jets vs Golden Knights same-game parlay

Kyle Connor has generated 69 shot attempts over his past 10 games and recorded at least two shots on target each night. With their season on the line, the Jets will funnel as many pucks in his direction as they can.

We’ll round out the SGP with a bet on Connor to hit the score sheet. He has gone back-to-back games without a point, tying his longest drought of the entire year. With big minutes and plenty of shooting opportunities coming his way, I like his chances of getting back on track.

Jets vs Golden Knights SGP

  • Dylan Samberg Over 1.5 blocked shots
  • Kyle Connor Over 2.5 shots
  • Kyle Connor Over 0.5 points

Jets vs Golden Knights odds

  • Moneyline: Jets +150 | Golden Knights -175
  • Puck Line: Jets +1.5 (-160) | Golden Knights -1.5 (+140)
  • Over/Under: Over 5.5 | Under 5.5

Jets vs Golden Knights trend

Dylan Samberg has blocked 3+ shots in three straight games against the Golden Knights. Find more NHL betting trends for Jets vs. Golden Knights.

How to watch Jets vs Golden Knights

LocationT-Mobile Arena, Las Vegas, NV
DateMonday, April 13, 2026
Puck drop10:00 p.m. ET
TVTSN3, SCRIPPS

Jets vs Golden Knights latest injuries

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Not intended for use in MA.
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Highlights: De’Aaron Fox leads Spurs in dress rehearsal against the Nuggets

Apr 12, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; San Antonio Spurs guard De’Aaron Fox (4) drives to the basket against Denver Nuggets guard Bruce Brown (11) during the second half at Frost Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Scott Wachter-Imagn Images | Scott Wachter-Imagn Images

In a final tuneup before the playoffs, the Spurs took to the court and walked away relatively healthy (I’m looking at you, Dylan Harper’s thumb), which is all that matters. De’Aaron Fox led the team with 24 points along with 6 rebounds and 5 assists. Keldon Johnson contributed 18 points with 6 rebounds in the loss to the Denver Nuggets.

Stephon Castle seems ready for the playoffs to begin, but judging from this half court pass to Carter Bryant, he’s ready for the NFL draft as well.

Here’s a different angle of that pass: the recipient, Carter Bryant, put on an absolute aerial display on Sunday. This flying rookie made the most of his impactful minutes, scoring 13 points and recording 5 boards, 5 assists, and 3 blocks (more on that later).

This version of the Spurs’ inaugural playoff debut will be a memorable one for players like Victor Wembanyama, Stephon Castle, and Dylan Harper, but it will also be extra special for longtime Spurs like Keldon Johnson and Devin Vassell who trudged through some dry years.

If at first you don’t succeed, follow through on your shot and slam it home.

Devin Vassell, here, was reaping what the Spurs’ defense sowed. As mentioned before along with Keldon Johnson, Spurs fans could not be happier for the two longest tenured Spurs about to embark on their first playoff series.

As cool as the other side of the pillow (RIP Stuart Scott) . . . De’Aaron Fox smoothly and (just) casually drains this long-range bomb all the way from the west side of SA.

I promised you more Carter Bryant, and by golly gillicky willickers, you’re going to get more Carter Bryant. In this frame, the best basketball player in the world was channeling his best Dante from “Clerks,” thinking to himself, “I wasn’t even supposed to be here today! Stupid 65-game rule” while trying to block the energetic rookie barrelling down the lane.

If both the Spurs and Nuggets advance out of the first round, they will meet in the second round so personally I hope the 3-time MVP has a short memory or will conveniently be busy thinking of his prized horses rather than having an ax to grind with CB.

—————————————————————————————————————————————————————————

Well folks, we made it. This chapter of the regular season finally closed, and after a brief drought, our favorite basketball team is headed back to the playoffs. I wanted to thank J.R. Wilco for giving me another year to wax on about the San Antonio Spurs. I first started writing for Pounding the Rock in the fall of 2018, which means that was also the last time the Spurs made the playoffs. It’s been some lean years, but all worth it to see this team rebuilt from the ground up, brick by brick—or rather, rock by rock. Go Spurs Go!

If you missed the game because you were too busy getting “Memorial Day Miracle” tattooed across your back next to Sean Elliott’s face also inked across your back, here are the full-game highlights:

Next up, the Spurs host the first round of the playoffs against the (to be determined) at the Frost Bank Center on Sunday, April 18, 2026!

How this year's Celtics compare to 2024-25 squad in key stat categories

How this year's Celtics compare to 2024-25 squad in key stat categories originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Is the whole “gap year” narrative surrounding the Boston Celtics a bit overblown? Perhaps. But there’s a reason why national and local media alike predicted a steep drop-off for the C’s this season.

Boston lost a total of 8,749 minutes and 4,415 points — 46 percent of its total scoring output — from its 2024-25 squad over the offseason. Its best player, Jayson Tatum, was sidelined due to a ruptured Achilles, while four core contributors — Kristaps Porzingis, Jrue Holiday, Al Horford and Luke Kornet — departed via trade or free agency, replaced by the likes of Anfernee Simons, Luka Garza, Josh Minott and rookie Hugo Gonzalez.

And yet… Joe Mazzulla’s squad hardly missed a step. The 2025-26 Celtics enter the postseason as the No. 2 seed in the Eastern Conference — the same seed as last year — and their 56-26 regular-season record was just five wins off last season’s pace of 61-21.

That’s a remarkable achievement, especially when you consider Tatum played in just 16 games after making his season debut on March 6. President of basketball operations Brad Stevens also traded away four players ahead of the NBA trade deadline in February — Anfernee Simons, Josh Minott, Chris Boucher and Xavier Tillman Sr. — leaving the Celtics to lean more heavily on Jaylen Brown, Derrick White, Payton Pritchard and Sam Hauser while giving expanded roles to young players such as Baylor Scheierman and Jordan Walsh.

Despite all that turnover, the results were impressively similar. Here’s a look at where the 2025-26 Celtics finished in multiple team stat categories, and how they compared to the 2024-25 squad:

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This year’s Celtics maintained the same elite scoring defense — 107.2 points per game allowed — despite losing four excellent defenders in Porzingis, Holiday, Horford and Kornet. They increased their rebounding output from last season, shot better from the floor and posted a better offensive rating than the 2024-25 team.

Interestingly, the most notable difference between the two squads is the drop-off in 3-point attempts — the C’s attempted 6.1 fewer 3-pointers this season than last season, as Brown led the league in 2-point attempts per game (23.6) while making a concerted effort to get to the basket.

Brown was instrumental in keeping the Celtics humming this season despite the talent drain. He averaged career highs in points (28.7), rebounds (6.9) and assists (5.1) per game while posting a 35.1 percent usage rate that ranked second in the NBA behind only Luka Doncic (minimum 50 games played).

But make no mistake: The success of the 2025-26 C’s was a full team effort.

Case in point: Eight different players averaged career highs in at least four major stat categories. The full list: Jaylen Brown, Neemias Queta, Payton Pritchard, Derrick White, Sam Hauser, Luka Garza, Baylor Scheierman and Jordan Walsh.

You could argue career highs are expected for regulars like Brown, Pritchard and White, who saw upticks in usage to fill the void of lost talent. But few could have predictedthe majority of the roster rising to the challenge — especially Queta, who doubled his scoring and rebounding outputs from last season while making a legitimate case for the NBA’s Most Improved Player.

Of course, the Celtics aren’t chasing regular-season stat improvements. Their goal is to have a different playoff outcome than last spring, when they fell to the New York Knicks in the second round after Tatum’s devastating injury.

With Tatum now back in the fold and several players operating at the highest level of their careers, the 2025-26 Celtics have a golden opportunity to one-up last season’s squad in the only stat category that matters: playoff wins.

NHL Player Props & Best Bets for Today, April 13: McDavid Strikes Back

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We head into the last week of the regular season today, with 10 games on the schedule. My NHL player props expect productive showings from Mark Scheifele, Adam Fox, and Connor McDavid. 

Read more in my NHL picks for Monday, April 13. 

Best NHL player prop bets today

PlayerBet99
Jets Scheifele Over 0.5 assists-125
Rangers Fox Over 0.5 assists-130
Oilers McDavid anytime goal+105

img alt="Get a first bet encore up to $800 with the BET99 promo code COVERSNHL" width="100%" loading="lazy" src="https://img.covers.com/promo-articles/bet99nhlcreative2526.jpeg"Get a first bet encore up to $800 with BET99 bonus code COVERSNHL.
(not available in Ontario)

Our best NHL player props for Monday, April 13

Take a look at our best bets and expert analysis below.

Prop #1: Mark Scheifele Over 0.5 assists

-125 at BET99

Mark Scheifele continues to produce the goods for the Winnipeg Jets. He’s scored 34 goals and tallied 65 assists this season, ranking 10th in the NHL. The veteran has cashed the Over in helpers in three of his last four contests. 

In fact, Scheifele has already notched seven assists in April. The Jets take on the Vegas Golden Knights this evening, and the 33-year-old has two helpers across two meetings with Vegas. He’s also grabbed 28 assists in 39 road contests.

  • Time: 10:00 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: TSN3, SCRIPPS

Prop #2: Adam Fox Over 0.5 assists

-130 at BET99

Adam Fox is one of the best playmaking defensemen in the NHL. He’s registered 43 assists in 2025-26. The veteran has cashed the Over in helpers in three of his last four appearances, and he’s posted 2+ assists in two of those games.

He’s part of the New York Rangers’ top defensive pairing. He also plays on the PP1 alongside the likes of Mika Zibanejad, JT Miller, and Vincent Trocheck, all guys who can put the puck in the back of the net. 

That also means more opportunities to create chances for his scorers. The Rangers also face the Florida Panthers, who rank 28th in goals allowed, and Fox has already notched an assist against them. 

  • Time: 7:00 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: MSG, SCRIPPS

Prop #3: Connor McDavid anytime goal

+105 at BET99

It’s a rare sight to see Connor McDavid have barely a shot on target and zero points. That was the case on Saturday in a 1-0 loss to the Kings, but he’ll bounce back tonight. The three-time Hart Trophy winner has 47 goals this season, which is third in the NHL. 

He’s also netted in two of his last three, scoring a hat-trick against the Sharks on Wednesday. McDavid is in for a tough matchup tonight against the Colorado Avalanche, but he's never shied away from a challenge and has already scored twice against them this season across two matchups. He also has nine SOG in those meetings. The chances will be there. 

  • Time: 9:30 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: ALT, Sportsnet West

These props are available now at BET99, one of our best betting sites.

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

How Illinois is already building its 2026-27 roster

MILWAUKEE, WI - JANUARY 19: Providence Friars guard Stefan Vaaks (7) reacts to a missed shot during a game between the Marquette Golden Eagles and the Providence Friars on January 19, 2026 at Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, WI. (Photo by Larry Radloff/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

This was one of the most memorable Illinois seasons in recent memory. But with the offseason already in full swing, what’s next?

Scholarship-wise, each team is allowed up to 15 scholarships. Three scholarships will become available following the departure of graduating seniors Kylan Boswell, Ben Humrichous, and AJ Redd.

Keaton Wagler’s exit to the NBA adds another. Wagler, after a slow start, became a key part of Illinois’ success. He led the Illini in scoring with 17.9 points per game and 4.2 assists. Those numbers will be hard to replace. And when you add Kylan and Ben’s numbers, you get 36.0 PPG (44%) and 8 APG (57%). That is a lot of stats to replace offensively and defensively. Kylan was a shutdown defender, and Ben was much improved over last season. Wagler was improving defensively every game.

With Mihailo Petrovic and midseason signee Toni Bilic entering the transfer portal, it’s pretty clear where Brad Underwood & Co. need to build.

So what is left?

From the starters, Jake Davis, Tomislav Ivišić, and David Mirković are expected back. Off the bench, Zvonimir Ivišić, Andrej Stojaković, Brandon Lee, and Blake Fagbemi return, with Ty Rodgers and Jason Jakstys coming off injury-plagued seasons. That’s a solid core—assuming all remain in Champaign.

One intriguing possibility is Naz Rankin, the 5-foot-10, 161‑pound Morgan Park standout who averaged 23.2 points, 3.3 assists, 3.3 rebounds, and 2.6 steals. Rankin signed with Illinois football as a wide receiver but has expressed interest in playing basketball as well.

Incoming help

Recruits

The Illini have four high school signees for the 2026-27 season. Let’s start with a pair of 4-star prospects.

Quintin Coleman, 4-star, 6-foot-4, 180 pounds, from the Principle High School in St. Louis. He is ranked between 34th and 38th nationally. The Illini recruited Coleman earlier, but he committed to Wake Forest. He recently de-committed from the Demon Deacons and signed with Illinois. Coleman possesses a very smooth, effortless jumper from any range (shooting 39% in his EYBL league). He also has good ball skills and is a strong perimeter rebounder.

Lucas Morillo, 4-star, 6-foot-7, 180 pounds, Shooting Guard from the Newman School, Boston. Ranked 59th nationally and No. 2 in the state of Massachusetts. 15.1 points, 8.8 rebounds, and 5.1 assists as a junior last season (2024-25). He is more of a scoring guard than a shooting guard. Like our current backcourt group, Morillo can drive and slash with the best of them. But his jump shot is suspect and needs improvement in range. He is an excellent defender and perimeter rebounder.

3-Star Recruits

Eathan Brown 3-star 6-foot-4 185 pounds, Combo Guard from Rolla Sr. High School, Rolla, MO. Ranked as 117th nationally and 8th in the state of Missouri, a two-time all-state selection. As a junior, he became the all-time leading scorer in Rolla Sr. High history. He averaged 22.2 points, 6.7 rebounds, 6.1 assists, and 3.8 steals last season. He played for the Gateway Knights in the New Balance P32 League. He averaged 17 points, 4.7 rebounds, three assists, and 2.2 steals. For that effort, he earned the 17U MVP. Like Keaton Wagler, some say he could be underrated. He has, as Underwood likes to say, great positional size and could see rotation at the guard spot.

Landon Davis 2-star 6-foot-8, 210 pounds, Power Forward from Waukee Northwest, Waukee, IA. Ranked 227 nationally, 247 Sports has him as the 38th-best power forward in the country. He averaged 10.1 points, 6.4 rebounds, 3.6 blocks, and 2.9 assists. He could use a little time with “Body by Fletch,” but he has the skills and basketball IQ to excel at the next level.

And they may not be done.

The Illini is said to still be pursuing Zavier Zens, a 6-foot-7, 210-pound power forward from Wisconsin Lutheran in Milwaukee. He was named 2026 Mr. Basketball in Wisconsin. Zens has offers from Wisconsin and Utah State. Zen averaged 23.6 PPG and 5.4 RPG and recently de-committed from Northern Iowa.

So that still leaves 4 open scholarships (for now).

Transfers

Underwood has secured one transfer so far: Stefan Vaaks from Providence. He is a 6-foo-7, 200-pound shooting guard. Vaaks averaged 15.8 PPG, shooting 40.3% from the floor and 35% from 3-point range, 3.2 APG, and 2.5 RPG. Vaaks is from Tabasalu, Estonia, and played in the Latvia-Estonia pro league before going to Providence.

Other targets of interest are:

John Blackwell from Wisconsin. Blackwell is the son of former Illini Glynn Blackwell. Blackwell averaged 19.1 PPG, 5.1 RPG, and 2.3 APG, and earned All-Big Ten honors.

Another option could be Kylan Boswell’s former Arizona teammate, KJ Lewis. Offense isn’t the draw here; although his offensive numbers are not bad, 14.9 PPG, 5.1 RPG, and 2.3 APG. It is his defense, averaging 2.1 steals per game and 3.5 defensive box score, playing for Georgetown this past season. Boswell’s defensive numbers are 0.7 seals and a 3.1 defensive box score.

As for any further defections, if the Illini land another point guard, I think very real possibility that Brandon Lee could look for another team. Right now, the Illini still have room to add, so anything can happen.

Mike Breen rips NBA playoffs TV change after $76 billion payday

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Adam Silver speaking at a press conference with an NBA backdrop, Image 2 shows Mike Breen and Walt Frazier posing on a basketball court
Mike Breen NBA tv broadcasts

Knicks fans will be missing Mike Breen and Clyde Frazier in their opening-round playoff series against the Hawks.

For the first time ever, the NBA is pushing all local network broadcasts out of the playoffs in favor of the national television networks, which paid a hefty price for the rights to air the playoff product.

In past years, the first round of the playoffs would air on the local channels with the home broadcast team locally, while also offering a national broadcast to out-of-market fans.

Mike Breen, who is the Knicks’ play-by-play voice and also the lead commentator for ESPN, crushed the decision on the final day of the Knicks’ regular season.

“First time ever that no longer can the home team announcers and broadcasters televise the first round,” Breen said on the MSG broadcast during the Knicks’ 110-96 loss to the Hornets in which they sat most of their starters.

“The entire playoffs are exclusive to national TV broadcasters. I mentioned this earlier this season. I think personally, Clyde, it’s a poor decision. Fans want to hear their home team announcers, at least in the first round. For so many of us, they become part of the family. I get it. The networks pay a fortune for exclusivity, and I work for one of the networks, but fans deserve to be thrown a bone once in a while in terms of letting the home team have a little bit of the first round.”

The NBA’s new TV deal started this season, where they agreed to a $76 billion broadcast rights deal, which separated the product across multiple platforms to broadcast the league over the next 11 seasons.

Breen thought “throwing the fans a bone” should have been a priority even after commissioner Adam Silver and the league were able to successfully negotiate massive rights deals with Disney, NBCUniversal and Amazon.

Adam Silver and the NBA reached an obscene broadcast deal that began this year. NBAE via Getty Images

Breen would like the league and its streaming partners to work out a deal to let the local broadcasters step back in, but recognized that it’s unlikely.

“Somehow, if there’s any way they can work out some kind of compromise, I’m not hopeful for that, but it would be wonderful to have it because this is our final telecast of the season,” Breen said.

Mike Breen and Walt Frazier pose for a photo before their final game of the season together between the New York Knicks and Charlotte Hornets. NBAE via Getty Images

Breen has talked about this a few times while on MSG airwaves, as the Knicks hope for a lengthy playoff run after reaching the Eastern Conference Finals last season.

The league has found itself in a difficult place on a number of issues recently.

Between tanking concerns and the season being too long, some pundits have been clamoring for a shorter season.

However, broadcast partners would surely be furious about losing inventory.

What heuristic should the Braves use for ABS challenges?

Apr 4, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Atlanta Braves outfielder Michael Harris II (23) taps his helmet to initiate an ABS challenge during the ninth inning of a game against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field. Mandatory Credit: Allan Henry-Imagn Images | Allan Henry-Imagn Images

This season couldn’t have started much better for the Braves, at least to date. They are the only team that hasn’t yet lost a series (they did split one, though), they have baseball’s second-best record (behind the Dodgers, tied with the Padres), they’re top ten in both position player and pitching fWAR, and they’re top five in a bunch of other things like batting inputs and defensive value. Even though it’s early and a small sample could be responsible for pretty much anything, the only guy they’ll ultimately rely on that are struggling are Mike Yastrzemski. It’s baseball, and things can change on a dime at any time. But, right now, anyway, the Braves look pretty good. This recent series with the Guardians reminded me a lot of 2022-2023: broadly and wildly successful, but on the basis of smashing the ball rather than any kind of holistic, fundamental baseball excellence. In other words, booting balls and getting thrown out trying to stretch a single into a double doesn’t matter if you’re pummeling the opposing team at the plate.

All of this leaves the Braves’ lack of success in the ABS challenge system as incongruously jutting out from what’s going on with the team otherwise. This is self-evident both from watching the games, and from the data here: https://baseballsavant.mlb.com/abs and here: https://baseballsavant.mlb.com/leaderboard/abs-challenges.

I’ll be quick, but essentially, a few things jump out at me:

  1. Yes, the Braves have been really bad so far.
  2. However, the Braves have not been really bad at actually swinging strikeouts or walks as a result of challenges.
  3. On top of that, where leverage is meaningful, the Braves are okay if not actually good at challenges, at least on a rate basis. They just don’t get these opportunities a lot… because they waste their challenges early on, where it doesn’t matter.

So, I’m not going to write out a long heuristic here (that’s your job), but I do think that whatever heuristic they implement, should they choose to do so, it should definitely include:

A) Only challenges that are relevant to a walk or strikeout, not other stuff futzing with the count; and

B) Only challenges in some semblance of leverage, i.e., tying or go-ahead run at the plate or on deck, and if a low-scoring game early, then not at all until the fourth inning or whatever.

There are of course more complicated and probably better heuristics, but these are also things the players need to remember in real-time. I’d love to say, “Only challenge in the first three innings if you’re 90 percent confident you’ll win” but the players are probably 90 percent confident every time they challenge, so that’s not helpful to anyone.

Anyway, have at it…

The Last Night Of The NBA Regular Season Was Big For Rookies From Duke

CHARLOTTE, NC - APRIL 2: Khaman Maluach #10 of the Phoenix Suns, Sion James #4 and Kon Knueppel #7 of the Charlotte Hornets pose for a photo after the game on April 2, 2026 at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Kent Smith/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The regular season ended for the NBA on Sunday night, and for Duke rookies, it marked the end of a remarkable season.

Phoenix Sun Khaman Maluach finished on a high note, with 18 points, 14 rebounds, and two blocks.

Cleveland Cavalier Tyrese Proctor was close to a triple-double, with 22 points, 11 rebounds, and 8 assists.

In New York, Sion James wrapped up the regular season with 8 points, 5 rebounds, and 2 assists, while Kon Knueppel finished with 14 points, 6 rebounds, and 5 assists. He also finished the season with 273 three-pointers, the first time a rookie has ever led the NBA, but just barely: Charlotte teammate LaMelo Ball finished with 272.

Meanwhile, for Dallas, Cooper Flagg’s spectacular first season came to a premature end. He played just 10 minutes before he sprained an ankle. However, he left the game with 10 points, 4 rebounds, and an assist.

Which brings us back to perhaps the most interesting story of the NBA season: the riveting battle for Rookie of the Year between Flagg and Knueppel.

It’s really too close to call, isn’t it? In this video, Doc Rivers argues that if you go by the numbers, Flagg should get it, but if you go by the impact on his team, Knueppel should.

Rivers says something amazing about Knueppel: “He’s changed the culture of an organization which has had cultural problems.”

We’ve suggested this too. His impact on the Hornets has been amazing.

So how do you resolve this? We don’t know, but we do know this: Flagg would give Knueppel the trophy in a heartbeat if the Mavericks were still playing like the Hornets will be.

There’s only one way for this to end: Co-Rookies of the Year. Nothing else would be fair.

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