Plaschke: Stop trying to make Roki Sasaki a starter. He belongs in the bullpen

Los Angeles, CA - April 12: Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Roki Sasaki (11) walks back to the mound after a pitch during the third inning of an MLB game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Texas Rangers at Dodger Stadium on Sunday, April 12, 2026 in Los Angeles, CA. (Ronaldo Bolanos / Los Angeles Times)
Dodgers pitcher Roki Sasaki walks back to the mound after a pitch during the third inning of Sunday's game against the Texas Rangers. (Ronaldo Bolaños / Los Angeles Times)

Fans chanted his name. Teammates toasted his name. His manager deified his name, claiming he had just unleashed one of the greatest bullpen performances in baseball history.

Everybody loved him. Nobody doubted him. And in the middle of the Dodgers' postseason run last October, nobody was more valuable than him.

Remember Roki Sasaki?

It’s tough, but try.

Read more:Dodgers don't need Shohei Ohtani's bat, just his arm, in rout of Mets

Remember his first October appearance last fall, finishing the clinching game of the wild-card series against the Cincinnati Reds, one hitless inning, two strikeouts, everything disappearing at 100 mph out of this skinny kid’s right arm?

That was the beginning of the chants, arguably louder than for any other player in Dodger Stadium history, stronger than Moo-kie, deeper than Fred-die, chants thundering enough to seemingly be heard for a lifetime.

“Ro-ki, Ro-ki, Ro-ki!”

Remember what happened next? He finished off the first two wins of the division series against the Philadelphia Phillies amid a taunting mob in Citizens Bank Park, becoming the first pitcher in history to record his first two career saves in the playoffs.

Then, back home, he created what was, at the time, the highlight of the season.

With a depleted pitching staff needing him, with the Dodgers' teetering hopes balanced on him, Sasaki came through with three perfect innings to essentially win the clinching Game 4.

Remember this? He started his work in the eighth inning by blowing past Kyle Schwarber, Bryce Harper and Alec Bohm. He finished his work after the 10th by being hugged by jubilant manager Dave Roberts while still on the field.

The Dodgers won it in the 11th on that incredible throwing error by Phillies’ reliever Orion Kerkering and the rest is shiny blue history.

The Dodgers couldn’t have won the World Series without Sasaki and, judging from their reaction after that clincher against the Phillies, they thought they had found their closer of the future

“One of the great all-time appearances out of the pen,” said Roberts.

Fellow Dodger pitcher Tyler Glasnow went even farther, saying, “Since … coming in from the bullpen, he’s honestly one of the best pitchers I’ve ever seen.”

The highest compliment, though, was paid by teammate Miguel Rojas, who raised a post-game clubhouse toast in his honor.

Read more:L.A.’s Blue Era: How popular are the Dodgers? Even the Lakers look up at them. Way up

“Shot for Roki!” he shouted.

Fast-forward to Sunday afternoon, Dodger Stadium, where the starting pitcher looks lost.

He can’t find the strike zone. He can’t find his fastball. He can’t find himself.

He gives up five hits and five walks in four innings. He requires the use of four relievers. He is eventually saddled with an 0-2 record with a 6.23 ERA after piling up a 4.46 ERA in eight starts last season.

The fans faintly begin chanting his name, then their voices disappear into a hush. Nobody is coming to hug him. Nobody is coming to call him the greatest pitcher ever.

He’s no longer the benefactor of a toast, because he is toast.

Remember Roki Sasaki?

Not like this, you don’t.

The former star reliever has become their most embattled starter and one who has made the season’s first big move seem inevitable.

They’ve got to put him back in the bullpen, no?

They’ve got to put him back to where he found his greatest success, where his lack of a variety of pitches will not hurt him, where he can throw 100 mph for 20 pitches and save the team with his strength.

As last October showed everyone, the bullpen is where he belongs. The rotation, featuring budding star Justin Wrobleski, will survive without him. The bullpen needs him more.

Don’t believe the Dodgers’ public shrugs about the recent dead-arm condition of Edwin Díaz. Something was wrong. Maybe nothing serious, nothing long-term, but something was wrong.

You don’t bring in the highest-paid closer in history and then not use him in consecutive save situations unless something was wrong. You don’t have him throw a bullpen for Dodgers officials unless something was wrong.

Read more:Dodgers lefty Alex Vesia closes out pitchers' duel on 'very emotional' night

That “something” may have already been fixed, as Díaz was available to pitch Wednesday after being sidelined for four days, but still. He could need help, and that is exactly what Sasaki offers and exactly what should happen.

C’mon Dodgers, send him across the field and into the left-field corner where he belongs.

Bullpen him, now.

“My goal is, kind of, go deeper in the game a little more,” he told the media Sunday through his interpreter Kensuke Okubo.

No, no, no. He doesn’t possess enough pitches to go deeper in games. He possesses just enough pitches — a fastball and a splitter — to last two innings, tops.

Look at this startling statistic:

In his first two innings of work, in three starts, he’s allowed zero earned runs.

In his other seven innings of work, he’s allowed nine earned runs.

Enough said. He’s a two-pitch pitcher who needs to be moved from the rotation into relief, and don’t think it hasn’t been done here before.

Eric Gagné made 48 starts from 1999 until 2001. At that point, the Dodgers decided he didn’t have the arsenal or attitude to be a starter, so they moved him to the bullpen.

He made 354 relief appearances without ever starting again, using his strength and skill and, yes, perhaps steroids, to convert a record 84-straight save chances while winning a Cy Young and coining the phrase “Game Over.”

Gagné was like Sasaki long before Sasaki. Even his entrance song, “Welcome to the Jungle,” matches Sasaki’s “Bailalo Rocky” with its ominous tones.

This is all so obvious, it’s a miracle the Dodgers haven’t put him in the bullpen already. But this is just the Dodgers being the Dodgers, an organization that puts the players first.

Sasaki wants to be a starter. When they convinced him to go to the bullpen last October, the Dodgers promised him he would return to the rotation.

“We were just honest with him, that as things stood, the only real pathway … was in the bullpen,” president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman told reporters at the time. “But we wanted his full buy-in.”

Sasaki, who had mostly started while growing up in Japan, told the Japanese magazine Shukan Bunshun he was “very hesitant” to make the switch but only agreed when the Dodgers promised it would be temporary.

“Because they will let me try to start again next season, it was a relatively easy decision to make,” he said.

Now it is the Dodgers who have the relatively easy decision. Sasaki will be upset, but the bullpen is surely a better option than an extended stay in Oklahoma City, where there are triple-A hitters whom he has already dominated. He’s too good for the minors. The problem is, as a starter, he’s also not good enough for the big leagues.

Into this limbo, the bullpen fits perfectly and if he’s unhappy, well, he was given a $6.5-million signing bonus to accept the ramifications of the following numbers:

Read more:How changes last year set up Dodgers' Justin Wrobleski's gem against Mets: 'He was at a crossroads'

In 11 career starts, he has a 5.13 ERA.

In 11 career relief appearances, he has an 0.71 ERA.

You do the math.

Remember the Roki Sasaki of your October dreams?

Bullpen him.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Pens Points: Chinakhov the Maple Leaf?

PITTSBURGH, PA - MARCH 05: Egor Chinakhov #59 of the Pittsburgh Penguins in action during the game against the Philadelphia Flyers at PPG PAINTS Arena on March 5, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Here are your Pens Points for this Friday morning…

In an alternate universe, Egor Chinakhov might be wearing blue and white and playing for the Toronto Maple Leafs. The Leafs reportedly tried to trade for Chinakhov from the Columbus Blue Jackets, including discussions around a swap involving Nick Robertson. They couldn’t finalize a deal before he was ultimately sent to the Pittsburgh Penguins. [PensBurgh]

Penguins forwards Connor Dewar and Blake Lizotte appear to be in the final stages of recovery from their respective maladies. When asked recently whether they would be able to suit up for Game 1 on Saturday night, both players said they were ready to “go.” [Trib Live]

Many within the Penguins’ locker room are embracing their return to the Stanley Cup Playoffs after missing out in recent seasons, with players and coaches emphasizing that meaningful spring hockey is exactly what they worked for all year. [Trib Live]

Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro and Plum native and ESPN host Pat McAfee made a friendly wager on the Penguins-Flyers first-round playoff series, with Shapiro backing Philadelphia and McAfee rooting for his hometown Penguins. If the Penguins win, Shapiro will wear a tank top to work; if the Flyers win, McAfee will wear a suit on his show. [Trib Live]

The Penguins are moving on from defenseman Matt Dumba after the team reportedly placed the veteran on waivers for contract termination. [TSN]

News and notes from around the NHL…

Maple Leafs captain Auston Matthews has made waves in Hockey Mecca, creating uncertainty about his long-term future with the Leafs by refusing to commit beyond his current contract, saying he “can’t predict the future” as the team searches for a new general manager. [Sportsnet]

The New Jersey Devils have hired Sunny Mehta as the team’s newest general manager. Mehta had been working in the Florida Panthers’ front office since 2020. [ESPN]

The Columbus Blue Jackets and Rick Bowness have agreed to a contract extension through the 2026-27 season, the team announced on Thursday. [Yahoo! Sports]

MLB Power Rankings: Pirates start off season high in ranking

PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 14: Mitch Keller #23 of the Pittsburgh Pirates pitches during the first inning against the Washington Nationals at PNC Park on April 14, 2026 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Sargent/Getty Images) | Getty Images

One of the first group of MLB Power Rankings has been released, and the Pittsburgh Pirates are somewhere we are not used to seeing them: near the top.

Sports Illustrated has released their first MLB Power Rankings since right before Opening Day, and your Buccos are sitting pretty in fourth place. Here’s what SI has to say about our squad:

How about those Pirates?! After an uncharacteristic Opening Day meltdown, ace Paul Skenes has righted the ship for the Buccos, Braxton Ashcraft is quietly pitching like an ace and Mitch Keller continues to be a quality start machine. But it’s been the Pirates’ rebuilt lineup, led by an apparent breakout year from Oneil Cruz and hot starts from newcomers Ryan O’Hearn and Brandon Lowe, that has Pittsburgh residents already dreaming of the club’s first postseason appearance since 2015. 

So while SI isn’t as presitgious these days as the power rankings on MLB.com, it’s nice to see Pittsburgh being recognized for their 11-8 start. Right now, that puts the Bucs on a 92-win pace, which is better than any of us predicted here on the staff. I think most importantly, baseball has been fun, which hasn’t been the case here in Pittsburgh for a while. I legitimately enjoy watching each member of the starting five, and now that the team is hitting the ball a little bit, it’s been a pretty good watch on that side of the ball as well.

Since I am an elementary teacher, I don’t usually get to games in person until the summer, so it would be nice for the games I attend to matter for a change. It’s been a while since the Bucs were still playing for something in June, July and August when I can actually go. Let’s hope the power rankings hold. Go Bucs!

Lancashire to put matches behind paywall; Rew sparkles for Somerset on rain-hit day – as it happened

James Rew’s unbeaten 77 helped put Somerset in a strong position after bowling out Hampshire for 238, while Jamie Porter made inroads for Essex at Egbaston before the weather intervened

Bad news for Lancs at Bristol, where Ajeet Singh Dale seems to have done something nasty to his hamstring and has limped off. A real shame on his return to his old club. Glos 8-0.

A fascinating piece by Emma John, with a mention of Benny Howell of Hants, Glos and more.

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Yankees news: Details on Gerrit Cole’s rehab

MESA, AZ - MARCH 24: Gerrit Cole #45 of the New York Yankees pitches during the game between the New York Yankees and the Chicago Cubs at Sloan Park on Tuesday, March 24, 2026 in Mesa, Arizona. (Photo by Julia Jacome/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

New York Daily News | Gary Phillips: The day after finding out Gerrit Cole is headed to Double-A to begin his rehab assignment, we got some details. Cole’s pitch count is expected to be in the mid-40s and the Yankees plan to build him to a “higher threshold” during his rehab then be conservative with him once he returns to the major leagues — so don’t expect to see Cole back in pinstripes after only a few rehab starts. He’ll make several but that kind of timeline dovetails nicely with the end of May or so. The Cole Train could be approaching the station soon.

MLB | Rhett Bollinger: Kids these days don’t understand how incredible Peak Mike Trout was. Or, before this week’s series at Yankee Stadium, they didn’t. The future Hall of Famer, whose career arc was derailed by injury, was absolutely in his bag against the Yanks: five home runs in four games, at least one in each. After he homered in his last game at Yankee Stadium last season, he’s now only the second player to homer in five straight games at the Stadium (joining Aaron Judge, who put his own power on display this week). He also joins George Bell, Darrell Evans, and Hall of Famer Jimmie Foxx as the only players who’ve ever clubbed five round-trippers in a single series against New York. Good work. Now go away.

NJ.com: YES broadcaster Michael Kay is dissatisfied with the Yankees’ handling of Ben Rice in the early part of 2026. He decried what seems like a platoon arrangement at first base, pointing out that it’s depriving the club of one of its best bats. He’s also not convinced by the late game pinch-hitter argument. But Kay is no mere angry fan. He brings a possible solution with his complaint: get Rice ready to don the tools of ignorance. Having Rice backup Austin Wells would allow Paul Goldschmidt to start at first base against lefties while keeping Rice’s bat in the lineup.

The Athletic | Eno Sarris ($): This is perhaps not the most opportune time for this article to come out, considering Max Fried’s ugly start Thursday against the Angels. But we have a new set of Sarris’ pitcher rankings. All four Yankee starters appear, with two in the top 20. Fried lands at #6, with Sarris highlighting his pitch mix, velocity, and command. Cam Schlittler meanwhile, comes in at #20. Sarris’ Stuff+ model has been sold on Cam since last season and Sarris wraps up his thoughts on Schlitter with “Put the bubble wrap on him, this kid’s arm is golden.”

5 Storylines to watch in the Suns vs. Warriors winner-take-all

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - NOVEMBER 04: Stephen Curry #30 of the Golden State Warriors guards Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns during the first quarter at Chase Center on November 04, 2025 in San Francisco, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Phoenix Suns now await the Golden State Warriors tonight in Downtown Phoenix. It’s a game we didn’t want, but we got it anyway.

Phoenix finished the regular season 45-37, good for the 7th seed. Golden State finished eight games behind them at 37-45, which locked them into the 10th seed. As we all know, the Suns dropped their first play-in game to the Blazers, so they take on the winner of the 9-10 matchup.

The Warriors defeated the Clippers in a 126-121 thriller on Wednesday night in Los Angeles. Steph Curry led the way with 35 points, and Kristaps Porzingis and Gui Santos each chipped in with 20 points each. Draymond had himself quite the defensive showcase as well. The Warriors will be a handful.

1) Are the Suns who they think they are?

The Phoenix Suns’ identity this entire season has been built on this new culture they latched onto during the offseason. Toughness. Grit. Resilliance. If they are who they think they are, this game is the time to prove it. So was the last game, but that’s in the past. Now, their backs are truly against the wall in an elimination game.

Will we get the Suns of old, or will this team show us one more time who they really are? We will learn exactly who they are one way or another tonight. It would be a LOOONG offseason if they lost this one tonight.

And this all starts with their leader, Devin Booker.

PHOENIX, ARIZONA – APRIL 14: Devin Booker #1 of the Phoenix Suns and Scoot Henderson #00 of the Portland Trail Blazers battle for a loose ball during the first half of an NBA play-in tournament game at Mortgage Matchup Center on April 14, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Booker needs to set the tone and protect his home floor. Getting beaten on your own court in consecutive games to get eliminated from playoff contention would be tough to live down for any star, especially considering they are the highest seed in this thing.

Dillon Brooks, this is your time to shine. Can he out-Draymond mister Green himself? These are the types of games that build legacy and reputation. Jalen Green is likely hungry for a revenge game against the Warriors. Those two (Brooks and Green) did lose to this Warriors team in the playoffs a year ago as members of the Rockets, and it’s a full circle moment as that series loss was a major reason the Durant-to-Houston trade happened in the first place.

2) Who guards Steph?

We’ve all seen what Steph can do in big games. Jordan Goodwin had his hands full with Deni in the last game; now it’s not so much a physical disadvantage he’ll have. Great news! Right? Well, instead, now he has to chase around the greatest shooter of all time.

But again, this isn’t a one-man job. It takes a team in sync to be connected defensively to slow someone like Steph down. Switching, hedging, helping, constant communication… disruption. All the things that made the Suns’ defense impactful all season long.

3) Small Ball?

One key matchup to watch will be the center rotation(s), especially if Mark Williams can’t go. Golden State boasts a Porzingis-Green frontcourt duo, along with veteran Al Horford off the bench. They are not afraid to play small and tend to thrive when they do. The polar opposite of the Portland team they just faced.

Oso Ighodaro will likely play a pivotal role in this one.

As coach Ott said above on playing small: “It’s always the balance, but I think Deni (Avdija) got in the paint no matter who we had in the game. His ability to drive is pretty unique. Tomorrow is a whole new geometry. It’s a different team the way they attack offensively. Similar, they want to shoot a bunch of 3s and how they attack is way different. They run a lot of off-ball screens to free up Curry and then they just react off of his gravity. Tomorrow will be a different challenge and in-game, you always have to be willing to adjust. You have a plan going into it. Got to be willing to adjust. Again, it’s all hands on deck.”

The rotations will be very interesting to watch in this one, as Steve Kerr and Jordan Ott play chess against one another.

4) Book must cook

There has been a lot of chatter about Devin Booker’s dud against the Blazers. He is a supermax player, so that comes with a higher standard.

I will not harp on this point too much. We all know the version of Devin Booker that we need tonight. The Warriors will throw plenty of wrinkles his way to make his life difficult, and he needs to be ready for it. Plain and simple.

5) “The Others”

The Suns and Warriors have a similar style of bench mob. Gary Payton II and De’Anthony Melton are there to cause chaos. Al Horford gives them a savvy vet who can stretch the floor. Gui Santos has stepped into a starting role to fill in for Jimmy Butler and shown the ability to produce in big moments. Podziemski hustles.

This is the type of game where Jordan Goodwin, Collin Gillespie, and Royce O’Neale will need to be at their best.

To me, it feels like a perfect environment for Collin Gillespie to have a breakout game with both teams going small. Expect him to have the green light to shoot early and often. If he sees one go down early, that could be all he needs for the floodgates to open up.

Let’s hope the recap I write later tonight is a positive one, and not the last of the season. Hang in there, Bright Siders. We’ve got one last chance.

Carlton and AFL throw support behind Elijah Hollands after ‘mental health episode’

  • Blues player displayed erratic behaviour in game against Magpies

  • Coach Michael Voss said 23-year-old was left ‘shattered’ by his performance

The AFL has joined Carlton in supporting a “shattered” Elijah Hollands after the Blues utility suffered a mental health episode during a close loss to Collingwood.

Hollands initially ended Thursday night’s 13.10 (88) to 12.11 (83) defeat at the MCG without registering a statistic, despite playing 75% of the match across the first three quarters.

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CelticsBlog predictions: hot takes edition

Apr 12, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Celtics guard Baylor Scheierman (55) dives for a ball during the second half against the Orlando Magic at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: Paul Rutherford-Imagn Images | Paul Rutherford-Imagn Images

The playoffs bring out something different in us. Suddenly, media and fans alike have takes they need to get on record — not because it’s right, necessarily, but because there’s a chance it might be. And if it is, well, you’ll be hearing about it for the next six months. The other 480 takes that didn’t quite land? Those quietly disappear into the void.

At CelticsBlog, we like to think we’re above that. Thoughtful. Measured. Responsible. But this time of year has a way of breaking even the strongest wills. So we gave in.

BOSTON, MA – APRIL 12: Baylor Scheierman #55 and Ron Harper Jr. #13 of the Boston Celtics celebrate during the second half of a 113-108 win over the Orlando Magic at TD Garden on April 12, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this Photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo By Winslow Townson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Everyone loves a hot take. Let’s hear one for the Celtics.

Jeff Clark: My hot take is that Baylor Scheierman is going to win us a game. Payton Pritchard is going to win us a series. And Derrick White is going to get us to the Finals. Then it is on the Jays to take us home.

Bill Sy: Hot take, you say? The cold, boring answer is that defense wins championships. The surface-of-the-sun take is where that D comes from. As we’ve seen all year, Mazzulla is going to task all the young wings to do some heavy lifting on that side of the ball. Expect Jalen Brunson and Cade Cunningham to get heavy doses of Jordan Walsh and Hugo Gonzalez.

Rich Jensen: I don’t like hot takes. If you’d ever had the misfortune of waiting for me to decide where to eat, you’d know that I don’t make up my mind quickly. I don’t really have a hot take regarding the Celtics. But I might have a mild or medium take—one with no habaneros and only a few jalapenos. I think that the Celtics might break the tradition of tighter playoff rotations. I think that few championship caliber teams have been this deep—as evidenced by the team’s game 82 win, and I think Mazzulla might find a way to exploit that depth as the playoffs unfold.

Ian Inangelo: My hot take for the playoffs is that Nikola Vucevic has one game where he wins Boston a game with his impact off the bench like Kristaps Porzingis in Game 1 of the NBA Finals.

Mark Aboyoun: The Celtics don’t lose more than two games per series leading up to the Finals. Whether it’s Orlando or Philadelphia, New York or Detroit, the Celtics will win every series in six games or fewer.

Nirav Barman: Unfortunately, I’m superstitious, and I also know there are plenty of Green Teamers who see the team with shamrock tinted glasses, so I don’t have any particularly hot takes. I believe this team can hang with anyone in the league, including OKC and San Antonio. We won’t be the favorites in every matchup, but we shouldn’t be far from it, especially if Tatum and White find their strides.

Mike Dynon: This is the spiciest we can make it: Jayson Tatum will duplicate what Jaylen Brown did two years ago, winning Most Valuable Player of both the Eastern Conference Finals and the NBA Finals, and leading the Celtics to yet another banner.

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS – JUNE 21: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics reacts as he holds the NBA Finals Most Valuable Player trophy during the 2024 Boston Celtics championship parade following their 2024 NBA Finals win on June 21, 2024 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Billie Weiss/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Ryan Paice: Queta is going to emerge as the team’s most impactful role player, even ahead of White. Especially with the lack of defensive depth at center behind Queta, I think he’s going to put up some impressive +/- numbers over the course of the playoffs and prove to be a vital key to the team’s success. His defensive impact will be noticeable at all times, both when he’s on the court swatting shots and swallowing up offensive boards, and when he’s on the bench and we have to watch teams repeatedly target Vucevic and Garza. 

White might still be the better overall player, but Queta is less replaceable on this current squad and will have a chance to show he’s a top-tier starting center in the league. I expect him to seize it.

Gio Rivera: Baylor Scheierman will make himself right at home this postseason.

That signature thumbs-up celebration will pop up often enough for the Causeway Street T-shirt vendors to get to work, rolling out a fresh design that floods North Station by the Eastern Conference Finals. Scheierman will rise to the occasion, shoot better than 45 percent from three throughout the playoffs, and even get Joe Mazzulla in on the thumbs-up celebration at some point (OK, maybe that last part is a stretch).

Grant Burfeind: Luka Garza is going to hit a huge corner three late in a tight playoff game, right in front of the opposing bench, and unleash an all-time mean mug. I can see it so clearly it’s basically a memory at this point. You’ll hear the screech of Garzilla before the ball even hits the net.

Three keys to Warriors defeating Suns in win-or-go-home NBA play-in game

Three keys to Warriors defeating Suns in win-or-go-home NBA play-in game originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

PHOENIX – Passing their first test, the Warriors’ season again comes down to one game. But this time, a win gets them into the NBA playoffs for a first-round series against the No. 1 seed Oklahoma City Thunder.

The Warriors’ epic comeback road win Wednesday night against the Los Angeles Clippers in the NBA play-in tournament pushed them to Phoenix, where they will face the Suns on Friday night. The winner moves on, and the loser starts their offseason early. 

Unlike their regular-season struggles against the Clippers, the Warriors didn’t have many problems with the Suns. They went 3-1, and their only loss to them was by one point on a controversial foul call that gave the Suns free throws with 0.4 seconds left. But as the Warriors preached before their first game in the play-in tournament, the past is the past in single elimination.

How the Warriors beat the Clippers brought back memories of the good old days, telling everyone their time isn’t up quite yet. That was probably the most excited they’ve been since the last game the Warriors were in Phoenix and celebrated a crazy comeback like a Game 7 win. Two-plus months have passed, and each team is ready for another shot at one another. 

Here are three keys to the Warriors’ play-in game against the Suns.

Let It Fly 

The 3-point line played a key role in both Western Conference play-in games thus far. The Portland Trail Blazers came back to beat the Suns in a game they had a 24-point advantage from three. Both teams shot 36 percent from three, but it was the Blazers who took 22 more threes than the Suns (47 to 25) and made eight more than them (17 to nine). 

In LA, the Warriors set a record of 19 threes in a play-in game. The Warriors had five players who made multiple threes, led by Steph Curry’s seven, and the Clippers only had two players make more than one three. Golden State should be able to use the 3-ball to its advantage this game, too. 

From an accuracy standpoint, the Warriors didn’t light up the 3-point line this season against the Suns. They shot 36.2 percent, yet they also made 18 more threes than the Suns. The Warriors won the 3-point battle in all four games, and the one that was closest happened to be their one-point loss. 

The Suns’ defense was as good as it gets guarding 3-point shooters this season. Not against the Warriors, though. Let’s see what happens with the playoffs looming.

The Other Three

Warriors coach Steve Kerr kept saying going into Wednesday’s game that he was comfortable playing 10 or 11 guys. He played eight. When you wonder why the Warriors had the secret sauce to overcome the Clippers, remember that five of the eight players Kerr used have won a championship. 

The other three are Gui Santos, Brandin Podziemski and De’Anthony Melton. Each contributed against the Clippers, and the Warriors will need that again. 

Who would have guessed Santos would score 20 points and lead the Warriors as a plus-16? The only playoff game he played real minutes in last season was a blowout loss to the Houston Rockets. The leap Santos has made now has him starting in do-or-die games as a trusted scorer. 

Podziemski also started against the Clippers. He led the Warriors in rebounds (seven), was second in plus/minus (plus-10) and third in points (17). When the Warriors last played the Suns, they held Podziemski scoreless in 12 minutes off the bench, but that isn’t the player he has been the last month and a half.

Between the three, Melton’s numbers jump out the least from last game. He’ll still be equally as needed. Melton’s defense on buckets like Devin Booker and Jalen Green can push the outcome one way or another. Nobody was better than Melton in the Warriors’ celebratory win in their most recent game in Phoenix. 

Dillon Brooks Vs. Everybody 

Specifically, Curry, Draymond Green and Kerr. 

“Steph and Draymond,” Brooks responded Thursday when asked why he wanted to play the Warriors next instead of the Clippers. “That’s it. And Steve Kerr.”

Brooks has so much beef with the Warriors that he’s been loathed by them on three different teams. That isn’t easy to do. After taking him down as a member of the Memphis Grizzlies and then the Rockets, the Warriors now get a postseason crack at him on the Suns. It starts with Curry, Green and Kerr, but the Warriors’ feelings on Brooks extend much deeper. 

It’s not like Gary Payton II will ever forget the dirty play by Brooks that broke his elbow in the 2022 playoffs. Brooks has a reputation and he doesn’t shy away from it. The Warriors will protect Curry from Brooks’ physical shenanigans, and Green will be right in the middle of the action. 

Don’t look away. Some kind of chicanery is coming to the desert. It’s up to the Warriors to let the head games fuel them into keeping their season alive.

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Observations From Blues' 5-3 Win Vs. Mammoth

Some are upset that the St. Louis Blues have ruined what potential top-end drafty status they had coming out of the Olympic break, some are pleased that the team had a level of compete that showed throughout these 25 games since Feb. 26.

Whatever side you're on, you're going to have an opinion on, but one thing is certain, the Blues are one of those teams that wished that the regular season didn't end for them on Thursday. That's because they finished with a season-high tying fourth straight win, closing out 2025-26 with a 5-3 win against the playoff-bound Utah Mammoth at Delta Center in Salt Lake City on Thursday.

The Blues, who closed the season 37-33-12, matched a season-high winning streak done two other times and closed their season winning 17 of 25 games (17-5-3) after the Winter Olympic break, including finishing 10-2-2 in their past 14 road games (4-0-1 to close the season).

In the end, they fell four point shy of reaching the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the second straight season, instead missing out of the second season now for three of the past four years, and there will come a time which we can go into the logistics of why they didn't reach the tournament again this year, but with their strong showing down the stretch, the Blues, who were once second-to-last in the overall standings and 14 points out of the second wild card in the Western Conference, will head into the NHL Draft lottery with the 11th spot. They also own the Detroit Red Wings' pick, which is 15th. So they didn't do themselves any favors of drafting high this year with this strong finish but there were several parts to their game that they did find, that they can hopefully take with them into the off-season and get themselves geared up for 2026-27.

On Thursday, Robert Thomas scored his second career hat trick in a span of 11 days; Dylan Holloway finished on a torrid pace with two assists; Pavel Buchnevich reached 20 goals with one on Thursday, and Logan Mailloux potted the game-winner with 2:57 to play that held off as the game-winner. Joel Hofer made 20 saves to finish the season with 24 saves.

One last time, lets look at Thursday's game observations:

* Among the draft shortcomings (for those that see it that way), the Blues have themselves a top line -- For the detractors that feel this strong play was too little, too late, that this should have come sooner than it did and that the Blues ruined their chances of getting a lottery pick, first of all, let the draft lottery play out first. Sure, the Blues' chances of getting the top overall pick is a slim three percent chance, and getting No. 2 is at 3.2 percent, according to tankathon.com and they have a 79.9 percent chance of drafting right where they are at No. 11, but of you look at the big picture, and Thursday night was another example: the Blues have a No. 1 line loaded with talent and one that can be dominant -- barring injury -- for many, many years to come.

Thomas recording a hat trick, his second in the NHL and first since April 5 in a 3-2 win against the Colorado Avalanche, was no coincidence.

With Dylan Holloway getting two assists and Jimmy Snuggerud setting Thomas up for the insurance empty-net goal with 38 seconds to play, that line closed with 95 points in 25 games since Feb. 26. 

Holloway was tied for sixth in the NHL with 34 points (14 goals, 20 assists), as many points as San Jose Sharks teenage star Macklin Celebrini in two fewer games and as many as Avalanche star Nathan MacKinnon. Thomas was tied for 11th with Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Erik Karlsson and Montreal Canadiens sniper Cole Caufield with 31 points (14 goals, 17 assists), doing it in two fewer games; and Snuggerud was tied for 24th with Winnipeg Jets sniper Kyle Connor with 24 points (11 goals, 16 assists). 

That trio (Holloway, plus-26; Thomas, plus-25 and Snuggerud, plus-21) was No. 1, 2 and 4 in the NHL in that time frame.

Look at Holloway's elite assist on Thomas' first goal at 8:14 of the second period that tied the game at 2-2 and tell me that wasn't elite playmaking skill:

And Blues coach Jim Montgomery has always described Holloway, when he's on top of his game, as someone hunting pucks, and he did so here, with Thomas starting it off, that ended with Thomas finishing for a 3-2 lead at 11:07 of the second:

I can remember how good the line of Jaden Schwartz-Brayden Schenn-Vladimir Tarasenko was in the 2019 Stanley Cup-winning season. This trio is running away with the elite playmaking skills. This is a bonafide top line, and the Blues found it, and they should under no circumstances keep it together when 2026-27 starts.

Blues fans have been craving for top-end skill for years, and they finally have it.

Despite missing 18 games with his right leg injury, Thomas ended a point per game player (64 points in 64 games), and Holloway (51 points in 59 games) and Snuggerud (51 points in 70 games), each who missed time with a high ankle sprain and wrist surgery, respectively, finished with 50-plus points.

So instead of being upset that the Blues fell to 11th in the draft odds, be glad and optimistic they have a talented top-end line that can be generational for years to come.

Oh, and can we finally stop talking about all this Thomas getting traded once and for all?

* Buch reaches 20 -- I've been as hard on Buchnevich as anyone covering this team. And of you look at the numbers from earlier in the season, it's justifiable.

But he finished the season on a three-game goal streak, including putting the Blues on the board first at 1-0 just 3:45 into the game:

Eleven of his 20 goals were scoring since the beginning of February (26 games) and he finished fourth on the team in points with 48 in 81 games played.

* Mailloux's goal a beauty -- Mailloux took plenty of grief this season, despite being a rookie, for the many shortcomings of his early Blues tenure after being acquired from the Canadiens on July 1, 2025 for Zack Bolduc.

But his fifth goal, which was an absolute beauty of a backhand with 2:57 to play, turned out to be the game-winner:

Mailloux, who at one point this season was a minus-20, finished as a minus-10 with 13 points (five goals, eight assists) in 67 games, played 20 of 24 games with 20-plus minutes of ice time each game.

Her grew so much from the start of the season that's enabled him to play important minutes playing alongside Philip Broberg on the team's top line. 

He finished a plus-3 in 22:24 of ice time in the game.

* Colt 800 -- In a season that almost saw him get traded at the deadline to the Buffalo Sabres, Colton Parayko finished his 11th season with the Blues playing in his 800th game on Thursday, leaving him third on the franchise all-time list and just three off tying Barret Jackman (803), with Bernie Federko (927) as the top player in that category.

Parayko, who played 17:58 for the game with seven shot attempts and two takeaways, was a mentor down the stretch and played with Theo Lindstein before the Blues assigned the young Swede to help in Springfield's playoff push.

"It's pretty special obviously to be able to do it here in St. Louis," Parayko said of reaching 800 games. "It's a special team, special organization. There's been so many great players and great coaches that came before me that I've gotten to play with. I'll take that and keep passing down all throughout and hope to keep that going."

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Warriors must deodorize stinky habit if they want to beat Suns in play-in game

Warriors must deodorize stinky habit if they want to beat Suns in play-in game originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Walking out of Intuit Dome late Wednesday night after a play-in tournament victory over the Los Angeles Clippers, the Warriors felt such jubilation that not a soul among them would consider examining the musty underside of their triumph.

“Look, we finished 10th. We’re lucky to even be here,” coach Steve Kerr told reporters in Inglewood after extending their season with a 121-116 win over the Clippers. “If this were seven or eight years ago, we would be on vacation already.”

The glow of success was not the time for the Warriors to peek at their sloppy work. They overcame it, earning the right to smell the roses. Their most reliably prevalent flaw was highly visible but not fatal.

With an opportunity to extend their impaired season, the Warriors instead made a spirited effort to end it, failing only because of their overall resilience and the brilliance of veterans Stephen Curry, Draymond Green, Al Horford and Kristaps Porzingis.

After ceding numerous potential regular-season victories due to an astonishing number of turnovers, the Warriors reminded everyone that even as the stakes rise, the habit nags.

“We haven’t had our group together for a long enough time where you know how it’s going to go,” Curry said after the game. “In years past, you know kind of what to expect just based on the body of work that a team puts together. With this team, we don’t have that. So, we’re trying to piece it together on the fly.”

Golden State’s 20 turnovers fed numerous LA possessions, with the Clippers scoring a whopping 35 points – almost 30 percent of their total of 121 – with found money. The Warriors survived their most self-destructive habit largely because they stole more possessions than LA during the pivotal fourth quarter.

Los Angeles, through the first three quarters, scored 28 points off Golden State’s 17 turnovers. Seven of the eight Warriors who played had committed at least one giveaway, with Gui Santos (four) and Brandin Podziemski (three), Curry (three) and Green (three) leading the way. Their risky game didn’t so much keep the Clippers in the game as keep them ahead.

Then came a fourth quarter that the Warriors might not be able to replicate Friday night in Phoenix, where they face the Suns in the final NBA play-in tournament game. They got serious about winning, ringing up 43 points, shooting 75 percent from the field, including a preposterous 72.7 percent from deep. In a related issue, they committed three turnovers to give the Clippers seven points while scoring 11 points off six LA turnovers.

The Warriors won the fourth quarter by 11 points.

“We turned the ball over 18 times for 26 points,” Clippers coach Tyronn Lue said of his team’s game totals. “We talked about how we can’t do that, and then give up 43 points in the fourth quarter.”

Turnovers, in Lue’s mind, undid his team and ended its season.

Turnovers, in Kerr’s mind, have been the correctible shortcoming most responsible for Golden State being a sub-.500 team in the regular season. Couldn’t prevent injuries, but could prevent silly passes to the opponent.

The Warriors during the regular season studied hours upon hours of incriminating video, watching the damage they caused to themselves. They practiced incessantly in an honest effort to break a habit so consistently maddening that Kerr at one point decided he no longer would say the word “turnovers.”

The coach wasn’t asked about it Wednesday night, and neither he nor any of those who engineered the victory volunteered a comment. Golden State’s stinky corner closet was deodorized by the comeback victory.

The Warriors took their W and moved on, their season continuing in Phoenix, with the winner advancing to the first round of the playoffs, where they will be ticketed for Oklahoma City to face the No. 1 seed and defending champion Thunder.

“We’ve had coaches preparing for both Portland and Phoenix over the last week, so our game plan is all set,” Kerr said 45 hours before the scheduled tipoff at Mortgage Matchup Center. “We just have to present it to the players probably (Thursday) evening. We won’t have a practice, but we’ll go through the game plan and then shootaround Friday to walk through some things.

“We’ll be ready.”

The loser of Warriors vs. Suns immediately sinks into the offseason. The exploits of the four ringleaders — Curry, Green, Horford and Porzingis — on Wednesday were enough to indicate this is a very winnable game for Golden State.

Assuming, that is, the Warriors curtail their habit of inviting defeat and avoiding testing the law of averages.

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How Adolis García's path to the bigs still shapes him a decade later

How Adolis García's path to the bigs still shapes him a decade later originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Ten years ago, Adolis García did not look much like the player Phillies fans see today.

Back then, the top Cuban prospect was listed at 6-foot and 175 pounds, still slight, and years away from becoming the broad-shouldered right fielder who now plays with the force and edge that earned him the nickname “El Bombi.”

In 2016, García was 23 and still trying to fulfill his dream of playing in the Major Leagues, where his brother Adonis was the everyday third baseman for the Braves.

That spring, after winning MVP honors during a Serie Nacional title run in Cuba, Adolis left his homeland for Japan and signed with the Yomiuri Giants. It was the first real stop of his career outside the baseball world he knew, and the adjustment hit him immediately.

“I went to Japan straight from Cuba,” García said through Phillies interpreter Diego D’Aniello. “At first, it impressed me because I didn’t know anything else from a cultural standpoint.”

But his game never clicked in Nippon Professional Baseball. García appeared in only four games for Yomiuri and roughly two dozen more in the minors before the club released him. He still points to that stop; however, as a turning point, saying he learned “discipline and work ethic,” which felt “completely new and different from what I knew at that point.”

For Cuban players of that era, the path to MLB was not a direct one. Opportunities to play abroad existed, and Japan became one sanctioned outlet for Cuban players. Others had made similar stops there. García, though, navigated it without any real connection to those paths. He was the only Cuban in the Yomiuri organization without a single familiar face.

Instead of returning to Cuba, García defected and went to the Dominican Republic, beginning the process of establishing residency as an international free agent.

García was living that uncertainty, three countries in one calendar year. In real time, though, looking back, he sees it simply as part of the process of becoming the player he aspired to be.

“I think it was all part of becoming a Major Leaguer,” he said. “From a work ethic standpoint, from a getting-better standpoint. So a lot of things to learn on that end.”

It also helps explain the way García sees the turbulence that followed.

The climb did not smooth out once he reached the United States. García signed with the Cardinals organization in 2017 and debuted in the majors a year later, but never found a real foothold there. He spent all of 2019 in Triple A, hit 32 home runs and still did not get recalled. After the season, St. Louis designated him for assignment.

Texas took a chance on him, but the COVID-shortened 2020 season limited his opportunities. Before the 2021 season, he was DFA’d again. García went unclaimed, received a non-roster invitation to spring training – where he’d rake – and broke camp with the Rangers’ big league club. His exceptional play that year earned him his first All-Star nod.

“I think from the moment that I started playing in the big leagues, I never had any doubt that I could do it, that I could be here,” he said. “Of course, slumps can happen, bad years can happen, everything that’s happened in my career can happen, but that’s just part of the process. So on that point, I’ve never doubted that I belong here.”

That level of confidence and passion was on full display two years later, when he became a playoff hero in Texas. He hit 39 home runs, drove in 108 runs and made his second All-Star team in 2023. He won ALCS MVP, playing his way into the spotlight of October as Texas charged to a championship, but setbacks returned. 

This time, they were physical. His 2023 postseason ended with an oblique injury in the World Series. 

In 2024, he dealt with a lingering left patellar tendon issue that required eight weeks of rehab after the season. In 2025, he suffered an oblique strain in camp, then ran into more injuries later in the year. Across those two seasons, he posted a weak .675 OPS. The Rangers non-tendered early this past offseason.

The 2023 version is what made him so appealing to the Phillies, though. And even with the recent struggles, they were still bringing in a right fielder who offers big power, premium defense with an elite arm. On a one-year, $10 million deal, the organization still felt he offered more upside than Nick Castellanos, whom they are paying over $19 million to play elsewhere.

It starts with the range. Last season, García posted 16 Defensive Runs Saved, the best mark among Major League right fielders. And this year in Philadelphia, he’s already tallied two outfield assists. His arm has been a huge difference maker — sitting at 94.2 mph on average, which ranks in the top two percent among outfielders. That alone gives the Phillies an element of the game they did not have at the position a year ago.

Offensively, the goal has been clear: get him closer to the hitter he was in 2023, before the chase rate soared and his plate discipline fell.

When García arrived at camp this year, the Phillies’ hitting coaches made clear in camp that they believed in his bat. He said the focus was on “a few tweaks and adjustments” — improving his pitch recognition, going after good pitches and building from there.

In 2023, García’s chase rate was 29.3 percent. By 2025, it had ballooned to 35.7 percent. This season, it is back down to 30.5 percent. His in-zone contact rate has jumped to a career-high 87.5 percent, and his hard-hit rate is running about three points higher than his 2023 numbers. All positive signs.

So far, much of his success with the Phils has come against left-handed pitching, something the club has struggled mightily against. He is slashing .333/.375/.462 in those matchups. He also leads the Phillies in multi-hit games.

“Ever since we had those conversations [in camp], I think we’ve had good results with it, and it’s just keep going forward with it,” he said.

Slight tweaks to his batting stance and hands early this spring have stuck. Adjustments are the common thread that have carried through García’s career. Both on and off the field. 

When asked what keeps him grounded now, it’s not some elaborate routine. It is the path itself, and the people attached to it.

“It’s just thinking about my family and the long road that I’ve had all the way here,” he said. “I think that’s what keeps me focused — thinking about my family and just staying present in the moment.”

That road began in 2016.

Now it runs through Philadelphia, where García is trying to prove himself once again for a club with World Series expectations. For him, that’s familiar territory.

Fantasy Hockey Waiver Wire Heroes: Scott Wedgewood, Darren Raddysh among top pickups in 2025-26 NHL season

Even with strategic planning and adept drafting, players slip through the cracks. Fantasy managers need to adjust quickly and scoop up talent that may have been overlooked on draft day because those players could be major difference-makers in determining championship depth. The players below represent waiver wire pickups who delivered better-than-expected seasons and could have given your team a meaningful edge.

Wedgewood was selected in just 15% of leagues at the start of the year and had an ADP (average draft position) of 118.8. He was rostered in only 33% of leagues in the first week of the season. However, he became a popular pickup after a lower-body injury kept Mackenzie Blackwood sidelined until November. Wedgewood remained a solid option once Blackwood returned. The 33-year-old Wedgewood tied for fourth in the league with 31 wins while making a career-high 45 appearances. He led the league with a 2.02 GAA and a .921 save percentage. He was also tied for third in the NHL with four shutouts. 

Raddysh was chosen in 3% of leagues, and his ADP was 76.9. Following a sluggish start, he ended the season 84% rostered and was one of only seven defenders in the league to reach the 70-point plateau. He also finished third among all blueliners with 22 goals and tied for seventh with 26 power-play points. He also added 212 shots on net, 67 hits and 69 blocked shots in 73 appearances en route to becoming a tremendous value pickup.

Despite the hype of being the No. 1 overall pick in the 2025 NHL Entry Draft, fantasy managers took a cautious approach to Schaefer out of the gate. He was drafted in 36% of leagues, and his ADP was 119.5 in all drafts. However, it didn't take long for his stock to rise, and a six-game point streak to kick off his career served as a precursor to an impressive showing. He tied Brian Leetch for the most goals (23) in a season by a rookie defenseman in NHL history. The 18-year-old Schaefer had 59 points, 222 shots on net, 111 blocked shots and 18 power-play points in 82 appearances. 

Gauthier was selected in just 20% of leagues at the start of the year, and his ADP across all drafts was 110.0. However, he remedied that situation shortly afterward, scoring 11 goals on 62 shots and adding seven assists in his first 13 appearances. He jumped from 20 goals and 44 points in his rookie campaign to 41 markers and 69 points over 76 contests during his sophomore season. He also amassed 285 shots in 2025-26, which placed him sixth overall in the league. Gauthier's high-volume shooting and ability to light the lamp should make him a fantasy mainstay going into next season.

Schmaltz has rarely been a popular choice for fantasy managers on draft day, but he typically becomes a well-received option from the waiver wire. He was picked up in a mere 7% of leagues at the beginning of the season, and his ADP was 122.6 across all drafts. However, he was rostered in 82% of leagues by the end of the campaign. He had a career year offensively, collecting 33 goals and 74 points in 82 outings. He also posted a personal best with 206 shots on net. His performance helped him cash in with an eight-year, $64 million contract extension in March.

Malkin was largely an afterthought at the start of the 2025-26 campaign. He was selected in only 10% of leagues, and his ADP in all drafts was 127.1. His rostered percentage going into the first week of the season was 21%, but it didn't take long for fantasy managers to correct that mistake. Despite being limited to 56 games, he provided plenty of bang for your buck to fantasy managers. He registered 19 goals, 61 points and 147 shots on net. He also finished fourth on the team with 22 power-play points.

Vladar was selected in 2% of leagues and had an ADP of 131.4. He started a career-high 51 games in 2025-26, earning a 29-14-7 record with a 2.42 GAA and .906 save percentage over 52 games. After five seasons of serving as a backup, the 28-year-old netminder emerged as Philadelphia's go-to option in the crease. He also became a reliable fantasy contributor. 

Sennecke's surprised look after being the No. 3 overall pick in the 2024 NHL Entry Draft was an instant viral moment. The offensive upside and talent were clearly there, but the speed at which he became an impact performer probably surprised fantasy managers as well. Sennecke had two goals and two assists over a three-game point streak to begin his NHL career. He was rostered in only 5% of leagues in the second week of the season. However, his blend of scoring, shots and hits quickly made him a popular addition in standard leagues. Sennecke tied for the league lead among first-year players with 23 goals and finished second with 60 points in 82 games. He also added 97 hits and 197 shots on target. 

Zegras was drafted in 4% of leagues, had an ADP of 131.5 and was rostered in 16% of pools going into the final week of October. He rode a hot start to his tenure in Philadelphia to a career-high 67 points (26 goals, 41 assists) in 81 contests. He also led the Flyers with 23 power-play points. Zegras' efforts made him integral to the team's return to the playoffs. 

Nelson was drafted in 29% of leagues to start the season and had an ADP of 128.4 across all drafts. He was 35% rostered as of Nov. 17, and that is when he began to ramp up offensively. He operated at nearly a point-per-game pace from late November until the end of the year, finishing with 33 goals and 65 points in 81 appearances. Nelson was rostered in 82% of pools by the end of the 2025-26 campaign. 

18 thoughts and tidbits on Sixers vs. Celtics 1st-round series

18 thoughts and tidbits on Sixers vs. Celtics 1st-round series originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Though there’s nothing unfamiliar about the Sixers’ first-round playoff opponent, the team’s upcoming series vs. the Celtics is still full of storylines.

Before Game 1 Sunday afternoon in Boston, here are 18 thoughts and tidbits on the series: 

1. Boston isn’t invincible, but the Celtics are very strong and just about everyone will reasonably pick them to win this series.

Since starting 5-7, Boston has gone 51-19. According to Cleaning the Glass, the Celtics rank second in offensive rating outside of garbage time and fourth in defensive rating over those 70 games. 

Counting their play-in tournament win over the Magic, the Sixers are 46-37. They won’t need to force the underdog role whatsoever.

2. As has been the case in plenty of prior postseasons, the great unknown is Joel Embiid. 

The Sixers’ star center underwent an appendectomy last week and is out indefinitely. Embiid’s instinct has always been to rush back from injury in the playoffs, although appendicitis is obviously not a traditional basketball ailment.

For now, the Sixers haven’t given any indications that Embiid has a targeted return date. They were happy to have him in attendance for Wednesday night’s victory. Embiid stopped by the Sixers’ locker room pregame and cheered from the bench.

“I’d talked to him via phone and I was surprised to see him there,” Tyrese Maxey said. “I gave him a big hug. I’m glad to see him and his spirits are high. We’re happy for him.” 

3. Embiid’s on-court presence remains invaluable to the Sixers and he played at an All-Star level in many of his 38 games this season. The Sixers were 24-14 when he was available. Excluding the play-in, they went 21-23 without him. 

4. The Sixers aren’t satisfied just to have cracked the playoffs again. However, a year after enduring nonstop injuries and finishing 24-58, returning to the postseason is certainly meaningful. 

“I told the guys I’m proud of them,” Sixers head coach Nick Nurse said Wednesday. “There’s many times this season I’ve told them I’m proud of them for how they kind of picked themselves up and kept playing. This was another example tonight with some stakes and some pressures. We played extremely hard. I thought we made a lot of winning plays.

“And to go back to the opening press conference of the year, I said, ‘We’ve got a really, really big hole to dig out of and we want to get into the tournament somehow.’ It wasn’t easy and it wasn’t pretty, but we’re here and now we’ve got to see what we can do with it.”

5. The Celtics and Sixers split their four-game series in the regular season. The first three games were all ultra-close and entertaining. On opening night, Maxey and VJ Edgecombe totaled 74 points and the Sixers stormed back to win in Boston. The Sixers’ speedy, tireless backcourt would love to rekindle that magic in Game 1. 

6. Watching the tape of the season series, it’s remarkable that the Celtics had such an excellent year amid a rather high volume of roster and rotation changes. Xavier Tillman, Anfernee Simons, Josh Minott and Chris Boucher were all in the Celtics’ rotation for the opener and they’re no longer on the team. 

7. By far the most notable in-season Celtics addition was Jayson Tatum. He’s played 16 games since returning from a ruptured Achilles tendon and averaged 21.8 points, 10.0 rebounds and 5.3 assists. Even if he’s a bit worse than his norm as a shooter and isn’t incredibly explosive in the playoffs, Tatum should clearly make the Celtics harder to beat. 

8. Paul George also played zero of the four Sixers-Celtics regular-season games. He appeared in the Sixers’ final 10 games of the season after serving a 25-game suspension for violating the NBA’s anti-drug policy and posted 21.0 points, 5.7 rebounds, 3.3 assists and 2.2 steals per contest.

To upset the Celtics, we imagine the Sixers will need George to score in isolation, easing the offensive burden on Maxey; launch catch-and-shoot three-pointers and make a fair number; play high-quality defense on Boston’s stars while avoiding foul trouble; and provide veteran steadiness to a Sixers rotation without much playoff experience. 

That’s asking a lot, but George has shown signs post-suspension that he’s much healthier and capable of playing like a star. 

9. In sizing up the Celtics, George nicely captured the stiff test ahead. 

“We’re playing against winners,” he said. “We’re playing against champions. This is where they play their best basketball. We respect that. We’re going to have to challenge that. They’ve been great for a couple years now. They’re a well-oiled machine. 

“Great coach, great roster. Two studs, two superstars over there and just a ton of guys that know how to play the right way. It’s going to be a challenge. We’ve just got to be ready for it.”

Jaylen Brown’s a five-time All-Star and Tatum’s a six-time All-Star. Other important pieces from the Celtics’ 2023-24 championship-winning team are still in Boston, among them Derrick White and Payton Pritchard. Joe Mazzulla has a 238-90 record (72.6 winning percentage) in four years as head coach. 

10. The Celtics have a well-earned reputation as a team that bombs away from long range. They were third in the NBA in three-point frequency.

Boston can also hurt the Sixers inside the arc, though. Both Brown and Pritchard torched the Sixers in the mid-range to propel the Celtics to a big first-half lead back on Halloween.

If the Sixers get caught on screens, make small mistakes defending drivers, or fail to fully stop the ball in transition, the Celtics will take and make comfortable two-point looks. 

11. The fact that Boston relied on its half-court offense more than any other team this season may be a small silver lining for the Sixers. 

The Celtics had the NBA’s slowest pace. They also ranked last in transition frequency, per Cleaning the Glass. Mazzulla may very well encourage his team to play faster than usual and target the Sixers’ transition defense, which has often struggled. But at their core, the Celtics lean heavily on their half-court offense. 

12. As would be the case against almost any opponent, the Sixers’ defensive rebounding is a serious concern.

They were 27th in the NBA in defensive rebounding rate. The Celtics were fifth in offensive rebounding rate. Neemias Queta was dominant on the glass against Andre Drummond and the Sixers in Boston’s March 1 win. He posted a career-high 27 points, 17 rebounds (10 offensive) and three blocks. 

Queta’s a true 7-footer and an outstanding athlete. Assuming Embiid stays out to start the series, the Sixers’ center pair of Drummond and Adem Bona must be better against him, especially in the rebounding department. 

13. Maxey’s lingering right pinky finger injury shouldn’t be an afterthought. 

As he acknowledged after the play-in win, that taped-up finger has been impacting his jumper. Although he wasn’t his most efficient vs. Orlando — 31 points on 11-for-25 shooting (3 for 9 from three-point range) — Maxey wasn’t reluctant to fire. 

“It’s just a comfort thing,” Maxey said postgame. “Sometimes the ball feels a little different … but I’m not going to make any excuse. The Indiana game, I was trying to get up more threes just so I could see OK, where do I feel comfortable at? I’ve got to shoot ‘em and I’ve got to make ‘em for this team. 

“That’s how we win games and that’s just my game. It helps me with everything else. … That’s the biggest thing for me, comfort level. But I’m comfortable. It is what it is. It’s the playoffs and everybody’s probably banged up.”

14. The Sixers only used a three-man bench vs. the Magic. That surely won’t be sustainable (or optimal) for an entire best-of-seven series. Justin Edwards would be a logical addition to the rotation for this matchup.

At his best, Edwards is a competitive wing defender with a knack for finding and sinking open jumpers. He’s unafraid to take important shots, too. The 22-year-old lefty had a memorable night vs. the Celtics on Nov. 11, making his first eight field goals. He finally was off on a late go-ahead jumper attempt, but Kelly Oubre Jr. snagged the rebound and made a put-back lay-in. 

“Game-winning miss,” Edwards said. 

15. Some of the defensive assignments are easy to predict. For instance, as he did in the regular season, Oubre will spend a ton of possessions guarding Brown.

We’ll also highlight Jordan Walsh’s defense on Maxey as a significant, intriguing option for Boston. According to NBA.com, Maxey shot 1 for 9 with Walsh defending him in that Nov. 11 game. Walsh has a tenacious approach and a 7-2 wingspan. 

16. During the Embiid era, the Sixers have lost series to the Celtics in 2018 (4-1), 2020 (4-0) and 2023 (4-3). Their last series win over Boston was 44 years ago. 

17. There was a lot for the Sixers to like from that 2023 second-round series until they got blown out in Game 7. 

James Harden was magnificent on multiple occasions, including a 45-point performance in an Embiid-less Game 1 win and a 42-point outing in the Sixers’ overtime Game 4 victory. Embiid raised the MVP trophy at home before Game 3. Role players like De’Anthony Melton, Georges Niang and Danuel House Jr. had bright moments. 

Of course, it didn’t quite add up to enough. The Sixers failed to finish off the Celtics in Game 6 and played a terrible third quarter in Game 7. They were left to wonder what would’ve happened against the eighth-seeded Heat in the Eastern Conference Finals. 

18. The one player in the series who’s been both a Sixer and a Celtic is 35-year-old Boston big man Nikola Vucevic. 

On the executive side, Sixers president of basketball operations Daryl Morey started his NBA career with the Celtics. Assistant general manager Jameer Nelson had a six-game playing stint as a Celtic during the 2014-15 season. 

Sixers assistant coach Mike Longabardi won a title with the 2007-08 Celtics. Mazzulla has several former Sixers coaches on his staff in Sam Cassell, DJ MacLeay and Tyler Lashbrook. Cassell grew close with Maxey during his Sixers years and played a major part in him developing into a superstar.