Michigan continues to add to its defensive line in the Class of 2026, landing the No. 101 overall player in the nation per 247sports composite ranks.
Middlesbrough appoint Rob Edwards as head coach on three-year deal
Boro fill role left by sacking of Carrick earlier in June
‘It’s something that’s not lost on me, how big this is’
Rob Edwards has been confirmed as Middlesbrough’s new manager, their eighth since relegation from the Premier League in 2017.
“It’s a real privilege to be given the opportunity to be head coach of this great football club,” said Edwards after long-running negotiations to finalise the 42-year-old’s three-year contract and composition of his coaching staff were finally concluded. “It’s something that’s not lost on me, how big this is, how important this is and what it means to people. There is an amazing fanbase here.”
Continue reading...Shaikin: What Mark Walter's ownership might mean for local fans watching the Dodgers and Lakers
Once upon a time, sports fans wanted freedom of choice. Why pay for dozens — or perhaps hundreds — of television channels when all you wanted to do was to see your favorite teams play?
The cable era is in its sunset. Streaming is all the rage. No longer need you pay for channels that feature news, movies, cooking and gardening in order to watch the home team.
For sports fans, this has become an expensive mess, too.
The Dodgers require one subscription. The Lakers require another. The Angels, Kings and Clippers require another. The Galaxy and LAFC require another. The Ducks require another — although theirs is free for now.
Read more:Shaikin: Why is Dodger Stadium SO LOUD?
Truth be told, the Dodgers and Lakers run L.A. The most valuable sports broadcasting property in town could be one that carries the Dodgers and Lakers.
For many fans in Los Angeles, that might represent freedom of choice: the one and only must-have sports subscription.
Could that future — one broadcast channel and one streaming app for the Dodgers and Lakers — become reality now that Mark Walter, the controlling owner of the Dodgers, is the new controlling owner of the Lakers? Walter hasn’t yet talked publicly about the Lakers deal, so we floated the idea by sports business insiders.
The Lakers are on Spectrum SportsNet. The Dodgers are on SportsNet LA. Who owns those channels?
Charter Communications, the parent company of Spectrum, owns SportsNet. The Dodgers, through an affiliated company, own SportsNet LA, although Charter operates it and pays the team a rights fee every year, just as it does with the Lakers.
Can Charter walk away from the Lakers deal because of the ownership change?
No.
Could Walter buy out Charter and put the Dodgers and Lakers on the same channel?
In theory, yes. Charter probably would give him the Lakers’ channel for free.
In reality? That appears unlikely any time soon. Walter didn’t get to be a billionaire by turning down half a billion dollars every year.
Read more:Shaikin: Why Wayne Randazzo and Mark Gubicza might be best Angels broadcast duo in 50 years
Go on.
When Charter’s predecessor, Time Warner Cable, launched the channels for the Lakers in 2012 and the Dodgers in 2014, cable and satellite channels were the way most fans watched their home teams. And, because cable and satellite packages required subscribers to pay for 100 channels even if they only watched five, those cooking and gardening enthusiasts helped enrich all those teams.
Fast forward to today: Nielsen reported that in May — for the first time — more Americans watched television via streaming than via broadcast and cable combined. This so-called “cord cutting” has turned the ownership of most sports channels from an asset to a liability, and many operators have either gone out of business or forced teams to take nine-figure hits to their rights fees.
What does this have to do with whether I can watch the Dodgers and Lakers on one channel?
The Dodgers’ channel and the Lakers’ channel each lose money. Walter would choose between acquiring a money-losing Lakers channel or keeping intact the two Charter deals that pay the Dodgers and Lakers more than $500 million combined each year. No team in baseball makes as much money from local television as the Dodgers, and no team in basketball makes as much money from local television as the Lakers.
The Lakers’ deal runs through 2032. The Dodgers’ deal runs through 2038.
Why are those dates important?
While other teams are experimenting with various combinations of cable, satellite, streaming and even free TV, the Lakers and Dodgers can cash in on guaranteed income and let those other teams be the guinea pigs for learning what works and what does not work in the new media world.
Major League Baseball would like to sell a national streaming package in 2028 — one spot to watch your team from wherever you are, with no blackouts — and the NBA figures to explore that option, too. That gives the Dodgers and Lakers a fairly long runway to see what might be best for them, including whether to retain their streaming rights or contribute them to a league package — and what they would require in order to do so.
Might a joint Dodgers-Lakers channel be a long-term solution?
It could be. With the NBA joining MLB in making postseason broadcasts entirely national, the calendar would align nicely: April to September for the Dodgers, October to April for the Lakers. Behind the scenes, one staff could largely replace two.
Read more:Shaikin: How the NFL Sunday Ticket trial could impact baseball's streaming future
The time for the single-team sports channel has come and largely gone. The economics are poor, and the enthusiasm for 24-7, all-access coverage of one team has dissipated into the reality that most fans just want to watch the game.
How about Walter adding teams?
Nothing is impossible. Ted Leonsis, who owns the NHL’s Washington Capitals, NBA’s Washington Wizards and WNBA’s Washington Mystics, says the key to sports success could be an ownership bundle: own multiple teams, own the venues in which they play and own the platforms on which fans view their games.
Walter’s investments now include the Dodgers, Lakers and Sparks. SportsNet also airs the Sparks.
In 2012, Walter and his partners looked into buying AEG, which owns the Kings, the Galaxy and Crypto.comArena. AEG owner Philip Anschutz opted not to sell then, but Walter could renew that pursuit and, if successful, would control the two venues and four teams that call downtown L.A. home.
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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
ESPN tabs Giants as one of ‘best fits' for sluggers potentially on trade market
ESPN tabs Giants as one of ‘best fits' for sluggers potentially on trade market originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
The Giants already made the biggest blockbuster trade of the 2025 MLB season, but do they have another sizable move up their sleeve?
After acquiring slugger Rafael Devers in a stunning deal with the Boston Red Sox on June 15, well before the league’s July 31 trade deadline, it’s safe to assume Giants president of baseball operations Buster Posey is not done making calls to teams around the league about potential upgrades to the roster.
While it’s highly unlikely that San Francisco pulls off another move as big as the Devers trade, there are some players who could make sense for the Giants in a trade before next month’s deadline.
ESPN’s Jeff Passan and Kiley McDaniel ranked MLB’s top-50 trade deadline candidates in their latest column and listed the Giants among the “best fits” for numerous hitters that could become available.
2. Jarren Duran, OF, Boston Red Sox
ESPN’s chance of trade: 25 percent
Season stats: .257/.309/.406/.715 with five home runs, 38 RBI, 15 stolen bases and a 98 OPS+
ESPN’s best fits: San Diego Padres, Atlanta Braves, Cleveland Guardians, Kansas City Royals, San Francisco, Philadelphia Phillies
5. Eugenio Suarez, 3B, Arizona Diamondbacks
ESPN’s chance of trade: 50 percent
Season stats: .251/.323/.569/.892 with 25 home runs, 67 RBI and a 142 OPS+
ESPN’s best fits: Detroit Tigers, Milwaukee Brewers, Chicago Cubs, New York Yankees, Kansas City, Seattle, San Francisco
9. Josh Naylor, 1B, Arizona Diamondbacks
ESPN’s chance of trade: 30 percent
Season stats: .303/.358/.467/.824 with nine home runs, 51 RBI, 10 stolen bases and a 128 OPS+
ESPN’s best fits: Seattle, Boston, San Francisco, Texas Rangers
10. Ryan O’Hearn, 1B, Baltimore Orioles
ESPN’s chance of trade: 85 percent
Season stats: .305/.387/.480/.867 with 10 home runs, 29 RBI and a 148 OPS+
ESPN’s best fits: Seattle, Boston, San Francisco, Texas
11. Marcell Ozuna, DH, Atlanta Braves
ESPN’s chance of trade: 25 percent
Season stats: .250/.378/.413/.791 with 11 home runs, 40 RBI and a 121 OPS+
ESPN’s best fits: San Diego, Seattle, Detroit, Kansas City, San Francisco, Cleveland, Boston
19. Luis Robert Jr., OF, Chicago White Sox
ESPN’s chance of trade: 90 percent
Season stats: .184/.271/.302/.573 with seven home runs, 31 RBI, 22 stolen bases and a 62 OPS+
ESPN’s best fits: San Diego, Philadelphia, Cleveland, New York Mets, San Francisco
20. Taylor Ward, OF, Los Angeles Angels
ESPN’s chance of trade: 45 percent
Season stats: .210/.279/.464/.743 with 19 home runs, 53 RBI and a 104 OPS+
ESPN’s best fits: San Diego, Philadelphia, Cleveland, Seattle, San Francisco, Kansas City
26. Adolis Garcia, OF, Texas Rangers
ESPN’s chance of trade: 80 percent
Season stats: .233/.285/.401/.685 with nine home runs, 37 RBI, seven stolen bases and a 97 OPS+
ESPN’s best fits: Philadelphia, Seattle, Cleveland, San Diego, San Francisco
Giants fans, would you like to see any of these players in orange and black?
Newcastle fail with £45m Elanga bid and step up pursuit of £40m-rated Trafford
Nottingham Forest extremely reluctant to sell Elanga
Goalkeeper Trafford was also wanted by Howe last year
Newcastle have had a £45m bid for the Sweden right-winger Anthony Elanga rejected by Nottingham Forest but hope to succeed where they failed a year ago by signing the Burnley and England goalkeeper James Trafford.
Eddie Howe has long admired Elanga but, as first reported by the Athletic, Forest are extremely reluctant to sell. They also appear uninterested in a potential part-exchange deal involving the Newcastle left-winger Harvey Barnes.
Continue reading...SGA v Jokić, dynasty death and justice for Doris Burke: 20 things we learned from the NBA playoffs
It ain’t over till it’s over
If a single, overarching lesson can be taken from this year’s NBA postseason, it’s this one: no game is over until the clock hits 00:00. Whether it was the New York Knicks stealing victory from the jaws of defeat against the Celtics in Boston in round two, Aaron Gordon’s buzzer-beating dunk sealing a crucial win for the Nuggets against the Clippers in Los Angeles in round one, or the Indiana Pacers defeating the odds over and over again with their clutch time brilliance throughout the playoffs, a lead has never felt less safe in the NBA.
The depth era is here
Once upon a time in the NBA, it was pretty much agreed upon that a team needed at least a big two, if not a big three, to reach the promised land. But in a post “apron” era, where it’s increasingly difficult to afford to keep more than one top-tier player on your roster, it’s become more important than ever to have a bench that’s not just playable, but excellent. The playoffs are as fast, physical, and exhausting as they’ve ever been. Having the luxury of fresh legs is a superpower.
You can live by the three, but you may die by it
We are indisputably living in the three-point era, much to the chagrin of the internet. But one thing hasn’t changed: you still have to have other options. The Celtics found this out the hard way, as their blind allegiance to chucking ‘em up from beyond the arc, which proved a winning formula last season, came back to bite them against the Knicks in round two.
Related: Does Tom Thibodeau really run his players into the ground? The data says ... not exactly
No job is safe
This trend technically kicked off before the playoffs, when the Memphis Grizzlies and the Denver Nuggets fired their coaches with a handful of games left to play in the regular season. But it was truly crystallized with the abrupt firing of Knicks head coach Tom Thibodeau just days after he helped lead the team to their first Eastern Conference Finals in decades, plural. Sure, Thibs had faced (warranted) criticism before. But if upsetting the defending champs and breaking generational playoff curses can’t ensure coaching job security, it’s fair to assume that nothing can.
Justice for Doris Burke
Burke was only added to the “A-team” at ESPN in recent years, a job that includes being a part of the voice of the NBA finals. But Burke put in time on her way to the top of the basketball broadcasting pyramid. In her 12 years at ESPN alone, she worked her way up the ladder from sideline reporter, to color commentary in less high-profile games, to, eventually, her current seat. The way the internet has been discussing her aptitude during these finals was nothing short of disrespectful – if anyone knows ball, it’s Doris Burke.
Oklahoma loves its basketball team
Every team has in-arena chants. Every team, at this point, gives away matching T-shirts to their fans to wear during playoff games in a show of solidarity. But the Oklahoma City Thunder’s fanbase has demonstrated an allegiance to their team in a tier all its own. Everyone in the building knows the chants, no prompts on the jumbotron necessary. And you’d be hard-pressed to find a single soul in Paycom Center not wearing that evening’s T-shirt giveaway: no one is too cool to show their support and fall in line. I’ve been to a lot of NBA arenas; I’ve never heard screaming at that decibel, so consistently. Thunder fans are, as the kids say, built different.
Speed is a superpower
It is, admittedly, a little on the nose that the defining characteristic of the Eastern Conference champion Indiana Pacers is that they play really, really fast – but their speed has proven to be their superpower. The Pacers left a graveyard of drained, hands-on-knees stars in their wake: even MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander looked worn down by the end of the first few games when his Thunder, a fast-paced team in their own right, met Indiana in the NBA finals. It’s hard to make shots in the clutch when you’re dead tired, and the Pacers and their unique stamina capitalized on that beautifully.
Related: The Lakers’ Luka-LeBron era begins with a stumble, not a statement
The changing of the guard
LeBron James suffered a first-round exit, Stephen Curry was sidelined with a hamstring injury before round two even really started, and Kevin Durant’s team didn’t even make the play-in-tournament. While I’m not ready to write off the NBA’s elder statesmen just yet, it was glaringly obvious in this postseason that the young guns, including the eventual champion Thunder (the youngest NBA champions ever) are coming for the crown, not tomorrow, but right now.
Rick Carlisle is a Hall of Famer
Carlisle has long been held in high esteem by basketball fans, especially in light of his stewardship of the Dallas Mavericks squad that upset the three-headed juggernaut Miami Heat to win the title in 2011. But what he’s done with this year’s Pacers, who are without a top five (or, arguably, even a top 10) superstar, is nothing short of remarkable. His group is incredibly poised, confident, and well prepared, and most importantly, they never say die. Carlisle deserves a lot of credit for that identity, and he will be etched into the annals of the highest echelon of coaching because of it.
It’s time for the Heat to set it on fire
It is strange to say that the East is wide open and, at the same time, that the Heat need to blow it up in the same breath, but it feels right. Seeing Miami’s “performance” in round one, if you can even call it that, distilled just how far they are from contention with their bizarre, post-Jimmy-Butler but pre-another-superstar roster. As nice of a contributing piece as Andrew Wiggins can be on a contending team, Butler he is not, and the Heat are sorely lacking in talent and identity. Assuming a Giannis Antetokounmpo trade isn’t on the horizon (and, really, how could it be? What would Miami offer?) blowing it up seems like the shrewd move.
Giannis should stay in the East (but maybe leave Milwaukee)
The East has been the weaker of the two NBA conferences for ages. But it feels more wide open than ever heading into the 2025-2026 season: The Celtics are all but eliminated for next year with the loss of Jayson Tatum to injury, the Knicks are in the middle of a potentially disastrous coaching search, and while the conference champion Pacers are excellent, they certainly don’t feel unbeatable, especially after Tyrese Haliburton’s injury. Milwaukee don’t have a clear path to put a contending team around Antetokounmpo, so it would probably be wise of him to move elsewhere, but he’d be well served to stay in the same timezone or eastward.
The Clippers may truly be cursed
If you buy a plot of land that’s an ancient burial ground, it doesn’t really matter, ultimately, how nice the house is that you build on it. Steve Ballmer is an exemplary NBA owner: deep pockets, smart hires, boundless enthusiasm. The word “ball” is in his name: that’s how much he’s about this life. But he bought a franchise that, for whatever reason, seems to be destined to fail in the most spectacular fashion. This year, it was getting annihilated, with little to no resistance, by the Nuggets in Game 7 of their first-round meeting. This came after the Clippers showed flashes of being a true contender, with one of the best defenses in basketball. Kawhi Leonard was healthy, and the excuses were slim: the Clippers just clipped.
Championship windows can close in a blink
There’s already talk of a budding “dynasty” in Oklahoma City, due to the youth of the team’s core. But if anything came to light in this year’s playoffs, it’s that championship windows are fleeting – and fragile. After their victory last year, many predicted the Celtics were about to start a dynasty, but they were staring down the barrel of a 1-3 deficit against the Knicks in round two even before their best player, perennial MVP candidate Tatum, went down with an achilles tear that will sideline him for most, or even all, of next season. And the Pacers went from being on the doorstep of a championship to facing a year without their star player, Haliburton. Time is of the essence for teams seeking out the Larry O’B: you never know when even the most wide-open windows will slam shut.
Related: A year ago Tyrese Haliburton was a punchline. Now he’s the NBA’s finest punch-out artist
If anything, Tyrese Haliburton is underrated
It’s not hyperbolic to say that no individual player has ever had a clutch run through the playoffs like Haliburton had this year. It was truly heartbreaking to see the guard go down with an achilles rupture in Game 7 of the finals, especially considering that he was having a brilliant first quarter, coming out with all the aggression his detractors have been clamoring for. But the lore from the 2025 playoffs will be one that leads with Haliburton for ever – he (and his underdog Pacers squad) have etched themselves into NBA history, and he’s earned a ton of due respect along the way.
The KAT/Randle trade was a net neutral
We spent much of this season deliberating who “won” the Karl Anthony Towns for Julius Randle trade between the Minnesota Timberwolves and the Knicks. The battle took some wild swings, with Towns having a hellacious start to the season (warranting him both an All-NBA and All-Star roster spot), and Randle shaping into form towards the end of the season and into a damned impressive start to the postseason. But both players, too, showed their significant flaws in the postseason, and ultimately, the answer to the question of who “won” the trade is muddy. They are two flawed players with tremendous highs and forehead-slapping lows, and for now, at least, it appears to be a draw.
Related: Thunder’s thrilling nerd juggernaut ushers in NBA’s nice guy era
Nikola Jokić is still the best player on Earth …
To be fair, I knew this before the playoffs. But watching Jokić drag a ramshackle Nuggets team to Game 7 against the eventual champion Thunder, while serving, in many ways, as their honorary interim head coach, was impressive even by the Serb’s impossibly high standards. He’s the kind of spectacular, once in a generation talent who can render context irrelevant, who can make the craziest pass you’ve ever seen appear routine, who is such a ridiculous offensive force that he’s almost an offense unto himself. He may not be the most valuable player this year, but he is the best.
… But SGA deserved his MVP award
If there has been one constant this postseason, it’s Gilgeous-Alexander and his dependable, humming offensive output. You could set a clock to it. That’s been the case since day one of the regular season, and it really didn’t wane in the postseason, either. The Canadian had one of the greatest single statistical seasons ever by a guard, and yes, that includes all those on the NBA’s Mount Rushmore. In this season alone, he won the scoring title, league MVP, Western Conference finals MVP, and NBA finals MVP. That’s a historical run, and makes him a truly generational player by any measure.
Houston were a piece away (and it’s Kevin Durant)
As impressive of a season as the upstart Houston Rockets had this year, it came as no surprise to anyone who’d been paying attention that the Western Conference No 2 were sent packing in round one. The team were on a string defensively, and play hard (kudos to Coach of the Year candidate Ime Udoka), but there was a glaringly apparent hole on the offensive end, especially late in game, when it mattered. Hopes were high for young guard Jalen Green, but he flamed out in a real way in his first postseason. Enter stage right: Kevin Durant, one of the greatest scorers the league has ever seen. It should be exciting for all basketball fans to see how this age-gap marriage turns out come October.
The NBA has an injury problem
The evidence is, at this point, beyond anecdotal. According to Jeff Stotts of InStreetClothes, the eight (eight!) achilles tendon ruptures this season are an NBA record, clearing the previous mark of five easily. What was shaping up to be a fascinating NBA finals Game 7 ended with a depressing whimper as Haliburton went down in a heap in the first quarter, sobbing and yelling “No! No! No!” as he banged his fist on the hardwood in anguish. The rest of us could only watch helplessly, having all become injury experts after watching Damian Lillard and Tatum meet the same fate in this postseason alone. The NBA can no longer afford to ignore the pressing issue: the game is faster and more difficult, the season is far too long, and the injuries are mounting.
Faith is a skill
It’s a rare occasion when the team who ultimately hoists the trophy is not what we, as a collective, will remember about a given season. But this version of the Pacers, who came just two quarters shy of a championship, will live on in the hearts and minds of basketball fans for years to come. In true Hoosiers fashion, this team was all heart, no fear. They taught us perhaps the most valuable lesson of all: unwavering belief may very well be the most powerful skill. Chips down, odds long, down double digits with a minute to go. There was no challenge too big, no order too tall, for the never say die Pacers. Even though their season ended in horrible fashion, with a devastating injury to Haliburton and an everlasting “what if” along with it, their identity as one of the most resilient and joyful teams in recent memory will for ever be the stuff of legend.
Six center options Warriors should consider in NBA offseason search for size
Six center options Warriors should consider in NBA offseason search for size originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
SAN FRANCISCO – Now that summer is upon us, the smart money is betting Warriors general manager Mike Dunleavy and his front-office lieutenants will cook up something to add a dash of curiosity to training camp.
Consider the history. Dunleavy turned Jordan Poole into Chris Paul in the summer of 2023, and then basically flipped Klay Thompson for Buddy Hield last summer. That Dunleavy broke character at the 2025 trade deadline, making a seismic move to acquire Jimmy Butler III, raises the stakes this summer.
“There’s a lot of different ways we can go,” Dunleavy said Monday. “We’ve got some free agents that are priorities. We’ve got to handle that. But some of that stuff may lead into trades and other things.”
The smart money also says Dunleavy will go big. Big names are a longshot, but big men are now essential to compete at the upper levels of the Western Conference.
And then there is the free-agent market, which Dunleavy says is the most likely route to a plug-and-play veteran in accordance with a core – Stephen Curry, Draymond Green and Butler – that will average 36.3 years of age when camp opens in September.
And remember, the Warriors have four first-round picks, next summer, to offer in trade.
Here are six players, four potentially available vets and two in the draft, that are worthy of Golden State’s consideration:
Veterans
Clint Capela (free agent): At age 31, the 6-foot-10 native of Switzerland has lost some of his bounce but remains a lob threat and one of the strongest rebounders in the league. The Warriors value Kevon Looney, but Capela is appreciably more athletic. He made $20.6 million last season with the Hawks, but likely understands he’ll earn less at his next stop. How much of a pay cut would he accept?
Daniel Gafford (trade candidate): He’s 26, a legit 6-foot-10, averaged two blocks per game over the past three seasons and is offensively efficient in the paint. As one of four big men under contract in Dallas – along with Anthony Davis, Dereck Lively II and Dwight Powell – there is a chance he moves. Rampant speculation has him landing with the Lakers. That would be a missed opportunity for the Warriors. Having reportedly agreed to a three-year extension worth $39 million over the weekend, he’s a good value.
Brook Lopez (free agent): At 7-foot-1, 280 pounds, he is an imposing paint presence on defense and an elite stretch-5 on offense. With the Bucks losing Damian Lillard to a torn Achilles’ tendon, they likely will engage in roster reshuffling. Lopez, 37, is older than Butler and Green but 17 days younger than Curry, so that is cause for a bit of caution. He made $25 million last season. Would he accept a huge cut to finish his career in his home state?
Ben Simmons (free agent): He might be the league’s worst finisher at the rim. Just awful. But hear me out. He’s 6-foot-10, 240 pounds, still has some of his once-stunning athleticism and remains a strong, switchable defender. He entered the NBA in 2016 as a point guard but has transitioned to center, finishing last season as a backup to Ivica Zubac with the Clippers. If Simmons aches for a redemption season, he could be a good value.
Others
Myles Turner and Naz Reid are too costly and likely to re-sign with their current teams. Al Horford is interesting, but he loves Boston and, at age 39, probably will finish his career there. When scanning the middle tier and lower, the Warriors would be wise to remember the failed Willie Cauley-Stein experiment.
In the draft
Quality size is available in every draft, often in the second round, where the Warriors are holding the 41st overall pick. Consider a few big men selected in the second round and making an impact: Nikola Jokić (No. 41, 2014), Zubac (No. 32 in 2016), Isaiah Hartenstein (No. 43, 2017), Nic Claxton (No. 31, 2019) and Gafford (No. 38, 2019).
Yanic Konan Niederhauser (Penn State): A two-year starter, first at Northern Illinois and then as a junior with the Nittany Lions, the Switzerland native is a shade under 7 feet with plus athleticism who led the Big Ten in blocks in each of the last two seasons. He’s 22 and still developing, but might be able to earn minutes as a change-of-pace rim runner and rim protector.
Amari Williams (Kentucky): A three-year starter – the first two at Drexel before finishing at Kentucky last season – who is not much of a shooter but brings something to both ends of the floor. At 6-foot-11, 260 pounds, he’s a good athlete whose impressive feel for the game is something the Warriors value. At age 23, he doesn’t project as a future All-Star, but possesses enough desirable qualities to have a solid NBA career.
Pacers' Haliburton could miss all of 2025-26 season
Indiana Pacers superstar Tyrese Haliburton could miss the entire 2025-26 NBA season after having surgery on a torn right Achilles tendon.
The 25-year-old fell to the court without any contact as he attempted to drive to the basket seven minutes into the first quarter of the decisive game seven of the NBA Championship play-off finals at the Oklahoma City Thunder.
He was in obvious distress as he was helped from the court and missed the rest of the game, which his side lost 103-91 to end their hopes of a first NBA title.
The Pacers confirmed he would have surgery on Monday on the injury, which has a likely recovery time of eight to 10 months.
The two-time All Star is the third high-profile player to suffer a ruptured Achilles tendon in this season's play-offs, following Boston's Jayson Tatum and Milwaukee's Damian Lillard.
The injury is similar to one that kept Kevin Durant out for a full season when he was hurt in the 2019 NBA Finals while playing for the Golden State Warriors.
Haliburton had played in Sunday's decider despite suffering a calf strain in game five of the finals.
It followed an amazing run where he hit a tying or winning shot in the final seconds in all four rounds of the play-offs.
"I'd do it again, and again after that, to fight for this city and my brothers," he posted on X after the surgery. "For the chance to do something special.
"Words cannot express the pain of this letdown. The frustration is unfathomable. I've worked my whole life to get to this moment and this is how it ends?"
Pacers coach Rick Carlisle paid tribute to Haliburton after Sunday's game.
"What happened with Tyrese, all of our hearts dropped," he said. "But he will be back in time, and I believe he'll make a full recovery."
The first domino? Reacting to Holiday trade, Simons addition for Celtics
The first domino? Reacting to Holiday trade, Simons addition for Celtics originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston
The first domino has fallen for the Boston Celtics. It won’t be the last.
The Celtics started the anticipated overhaul of their championship core late Monday night by dealing Jrue Holiday to the Portland Trail Blazers in exchange for Anfernee Simons and a pair of second-round picks, per ESPN’s Shams Charania.
The Celtics get off the three seasons and $100-plus million remaining on Holiday’s contract but save just $4.7 million for the upcoming 2025-26 season. Boston now sits $18 million over the second apron line, which suggests there’s more dealing in the team’s future.
That the Celtics were able to trade Holiday back to the Blazers, the team that essentially redirected him from Milwaukee before Boston’s 2023-24 title season, is amusing. That president of basketball operations Brad Stevens was able to acquire draft assets as part of the deal, after heavy speculation that Boston would have to attach a first-round pick to move Holiday, is even more noteworthy.
🔊 Celtics Talk Podcast: Jrue Holiday TRADED?! Celtics instant reaction & what’s next! | Listen & Subscribe | Watch on YouTube
If Simons sticks in Boston, he feels like the type of player the Celtics can take a hard look at over the first months of the season. The 6-foot-3 shooting guard turned 26 earlier this month and has averaged 20.7 points per game over the last three seasons.
Simons averaged 19.3 points per game in 70 appearances for the Blazers last season, and despite a downturn in his shooting efficiencies, he has shot 38.1 percent from beyond the 3-point arc for his career. He could potentially help fill some of the scoring void while Jayson Tatum recovers from Achilles surgery.
If the Celtics don’t see Simons as a long-term fit, or if they eventually need to explore a subsequent deal to trim more money, he could have value to other contenders as an expiring contract.
Holiday was a key part of Boston’s success over the past two seasons. He saved some of his finest basketball for the 2024 Eastern Conference Finals against the Pacers, where he routinely made the sorts of winning plays that helped Boston produce a harder-than-it-looked sweep of a team that made the NBA Finals this year.
But it was obvious entering the summer that Holiday’s time in Boston was coming to a close.
The Celtics got ahead of the new collective bargaining agreement by acquiring Holiday on the eve of training camp in 2023. Stevens rewarded him with a long-term extension before Boston’s title run. The Celtics will miss Holiday’s defensive versatility. He paired well with Derrick White in the defensive-minded “Stock Exchange” backcourt.
Simons is a solid playmaker who averaged a career-best 5.5 assists two seasons ago. He ranked in the 80th percentile in assist percentage among all combo guards this past season, per Cleaning The Glass data.
The question is whether he can play defense to a level that allows Joe Mazzulla to confidently lean on him. Opponents shot 50.6 percent against Simons last season, or 4.4 percent higher than expected output, per the NBA’s tracking data.
2025 NHL mock draft roundup: Final No. 7 pick predictions for Bruins
2025 NHL mock draft roundup: Final No. 7 pick predictions for Bruins originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston
The 2025 NHL Draft is of the utmost importance to the Boston Bruins.
They have the No. 7 overall pick — their highest first-round selection since 2011. If the Bruins keep the pick and don’t trade it, the position they need to target is center.
The Bruins were lucky to have a top-tier center tandem in Patrice Bergeron and David Krejci for well over a decade. The franchise has been unable to draft a worthy replacement for either player, but that drought could end this year.
The 2025 draft class is loaded with quality centers. We might even see seven of them taken in the top 10 picks.
A talented wing such as Porter Martone or Victor Eklund could be enticing, but the Bruins desperately need a top-six center, and given how expensive that kind of player is to acquire via trade or free agency, the most effective way to get one is through the draft.
Which players should the Bruins consider with the No. 7 pick? Here’s a roundup of projections from recent expert mock drafts, including our own.
Nick Goss, NBC Sports Boston: Jake O’Brien, C, Brantford (OHL)
“It’s no secret the Bruins need a center. They haven’t drafted well at that position for a long time. Luckily for the B’s, they have a top 10 pick (their first since 2011) in a draft that’s loaded with quality centers.
O’Brien is the best center available at this point in Round 1. He has a really strong two-way skill set with the high-end offensive talent to consistently create scoring chances for himself and teammates. He tallied 66 assists in 66 games for Brantford last season.”
Corey Pronman, The Athletic: Roger McQueen, C, Brandon (WHL)
“Despite their needs, I don’t think Boston is as hard pressed to take a center here as the organizations in front of them, in part because six centers in a row just got picked. I could see the Bruins lean toward winger Martone or defenseman Radim Mrtka for that reason but it wouldn’t surprise me as well if they took another center. McQueen, O’Brien and Hagens would all be possible fits here.”
Scott Wheeler, The Athletic: James Hagens, C, Boston College (NCAA)
“Everyone I’ve talked to in the last week or so seems to think O’Brien/Martin/Hagens don’t get past the Flyers and Bruins at 6-7, and yet one of the top eight guys has to go outside the top seven. I’ve also heard the Bruins have looked into moving up. I do think it’s interesting that the Flyers and Bruins seem to like the same three guys and pick back-to-back, though, and Hagens just makes so much sense for the Bruins as that high-end piece to build around if he’s there.”
Lyle Richardson, Bleacher Report: Victor Eklund, RW, Djurgarden (Sweden)
“With only one natural right wing among their top 15 prospects, the Boston Bruins could use this opportunity to address that particular need. They could turn to Victor Eklund of the SHL’s Djurgårdens IF. NHL Central Scouting ranked him No. 2 among international skaters.
“Eklund is the younger brother of San Jose Sharks forward William Eklund. The 5’11”, 170-pound Swede had 31 points in 42 games this season for Djurgårdens’ HockeyAllsvenskan squad, helping them earn promotion to the SHL alongside teammate and fellow NHL prospect Anton Frondell.
“NHL.com’s Mike G. Morreale considers him to be the second-best right wing in this year’s draft. Corey Pronman praised Eklund’s speed and creativity, while Steven Ellis cited his playmaking and excellent shot. Eklund will likely spend next season with Djurgårdens IF, where he’ll garner valuable experience against SHL talent. He has the potential to become a top-six right wing for the Bruins.”
Alex Daugherty, The Tennessean: Jake O’Brien, C, Brantford (OHL)
“The Bruins need to reload up the middle and O’Brien has the potential to be a top-six center that can lead the way. He had 98 points in 66 games with the Bulldogs last season.”
Sam Russell, Bleacher Nation: Brady Martin, C, Sault Ste. Marie (OHL)
“Martin is an accomplished two-way player and has solid defensive instincts. His game doesn’t involve any unnecessary risks and is good at cutting passing lanes in the neutral zone.”
Celtics trade Holiday to Blazers for Anfernee Simons, draft picks: Report
Celtics trade Holiday to Blazers for Anfernee Simons, draft picks: Report originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston
Jrue Holiday’s brief but very successful tenure with the Boston Celtics has come to an end.
The C’s traded the veteran point guard to the Portland Trail Blazers in return for guard Anfernee Simons and two second-round picks, ESPN’s Shams Charania reported late Monday night.
🔊 Celtics Talk Podcast: Jrue Holiday TRADED?! Celtics instant reaction & what’s next! | Listen & Subscribe | Watch on YouTube
Holiday has three years and around $104 million left on his contract. The Celtics, as one of the few teams in the second apron of the luxury tax, are saving around $4.7 million by completing this trade and are saving $40 million in luxury tax payments for next season, per ESPN’s Bobby Marks.
Boston is now $18 million over the second apron line, so there could potentially be more moves to come; Charania reports the Celtics “remain engaged in trade talks surrounding multiple key players on the roster.”
Simons isn’t the best defensive guard, but he’s a dynamic offensive player who can shoot well from 3-point range. The 26-year-old veteran averaged 19.3 points, 4.8 assists and 2.7 rebounds per game while shooting 36.3 percent from beyond the arc in 70 games for the Blazers last season. He’s entering the final season of his four-year, $100 million contract previously signed with Portland.
The Celtics acquired Holiday in October of 2023 in a trade with the Blazers. Holiday made an immediate impact as a scorer, an elite defender, a great leader and someone with championship experience.
He played a key role in the Celtics’ run to their 18th championship with a 2024 NBA Finals triumph over the Dallas Mavericks.
Holiday made a lot of clutch plays in the 2024 playoffs, including a game-winning steal in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference Final versus the Indiana Pacers.
In two seasons with the Celtics, Holiday averaged 11.8 points, 4.9 rebounds, 4.4 assists and 1.1 steals per game, while shooting 39.2 percent from 3-point range.
Holiday was traded to the Milwaukee Bucks in 2020 and helped lead them to a title the following season. He did the same after being dealt to the Celtics. Accomplishing that feat in Portland will be pretty tough, but Holiday can definitely help a young Blazers team that finished last season strong and is seeking to end its playoff drought in 2026.
Mets having hard time creating opportunities with bottom of the order ‘going through it’
Looking at the Mets’ recent offensive struggles, it’s hard not pointing directly at the bottom of the order.
When this group was clicking, they were arguably one of the deepest lineups in all of baseball.
Of late, though, they’ve become too reliant on the big boppers at the top coming through with the big knocks.
That was again the case on Monday night against Atlanta’s Spencer Schwellenbach.
Juan Soto accounted for New York’s lone runs -- crushing a two-run homer the other way with two outs in the bottom of the sixth to break up the young right-hander’s shutout bid and make it a one-run ballgame.
Other than that, the Mets managed just five hits on the night.
Two of them came from Francisco Lindor, one from Brandon Nimmo, and the other two from Brett Baty as he lifted his average to an impressive .538 in five games out of the nine spot in the order this season.
Other than that, the four through eight spots in the Mets’ lineup went a combined 0-for-18 with five strikeouts on the night as they dropped their ninth in their last 10 games.
They’ve averaged just three runs over that stretch, even with the 11-run outburst on Saturday in Philadelphia.
“We have a lot of guys on the bottom going through it,” Carlos Mendoza said. “We’re relying pretty much on the top four or five guys and then those guys on the bottom are not able to get on base, that’s why we’re having a hard time scoring runs right now.
“We were talking about when we were playing well how good our lineup was -- right now we have a few guys that are struggling.”
The youngsters have’t been as consistent as hoped. Jeff McNeil has slowed down mightily after his hot start. Tyrone Taylor continues to play stellar defense, but his bat has cooled off as well, and the same can be said for newly appointed starting catcher Luis Torrens.
Jared Young also has just six knocks since being called-up from Syracuse, but he continues to see regular at-bats as the DH.
Something needs to change in a hurry -- luckily a big reinforcement in on the way, as Mark Vientos will play two more rehab games with Syracuse this week and he could be back in the lineup as soon as Thursday.
That’s just one addition, though, the rest of this group has to get things turned around quickly.
“We need to continue to support the guys and continue to work,” the skipper said. “But you know this game is all about results, so we continue to have all the confidence in these guys, but we have to be better.”
Report: Celtics trade Jrue Holiday back to Portland for Anfernee Simons, two second-round picks
Jrue Holiday is headed back to Portland. Will he stay there longer this time?
The Boston Celtics have agreed to trade Jrue Holiday to the Portland Trail Blazers for Anfernee Simons and two second-round picks, a story broken by Shams Charania of ESPN and confirmed by other reports.
It was no secret that the Celtics were looking to trade Holiday and the three years, $104.4 million remaining on his contract to save money. Simons, a 26-year-old two guard, has one more season on his contract at $27.7 million. Boston would save $40 million in salary and luxury tax payments, plus be about $18 million under the second tax apron, according to ESPN's Bobby Marks.
Holiday made a stopover in Portland before. He was traded there after helping Milwaukee win a title, a key part of the Bucks' acquisition of Damian Lillard. The Trail Blazers didn't keep him, they re-routed Holiday to Boston, where he was a key part of the Celtics winning a title last year.
Holiday would significantly upgrade Portland's defense, and he would be a good mentor for Scoot Henderson. However, it's very possible the Trail Blazers will re-route Holiday again. Holiday, 35, is an elite defensive guard who averaged 11.1 points a game while shooting 35.3% from beyond the arc last season. He has been a favorite in the locker room wherever he has landed.
The Celtics pick up a scorer. Simons averaged 19.3 points and 4.8 assists a game last season, while shooting 36.3% from 3. He is a bucket getter, but one who does it at a pretty average efficiency. Still, with Jayson Tatum out much, if not all, of next year, the Celtics will need some guys who can just score.
The Celtics are not done looking to make cost-saving trades, according to reports.
Penguins Draft Prospect Profile: James Hagens
With the 2025 NHL Entry Draft later this week, POHO and GM Kyle Dubas and the Pittsburgh Penguins have their work cut out for them.
Since the Penguins have a total of 30 picks over the next three drafts, including 11 this year - which could reduce to 10 if the conditional first-round pick from the New York Rangers defers to 2026 - there will be plenty of opportunity for the Penguins to add impact players. Of their 11 picks in 2025, six of them are in the first three rounds.
After the results of the draft lottery on May 5, the Penguins - as of now - will select 11th overall, dropping down two spots from where they originally were at ninth. And, normally, at this point, we compile a list of potential draft selections who could be available at 11 - which includes the likes of players such as right wing Justin Carbonneau, defenseman Radim Mrtka, and defenseman Jackson Smith.
However, with the recent report that the Penguins are interested in moving up in the draft, we have begun to profile some players who are likely to be drafted in the top-five.
We already spotlighted right wing Porter Martone. Next up? Center James Hagens.
James Hagens
DOB: Nov. 3, 2006 (Age 18)
Position: Center
Shoots: Left
Height: 5-foot-11
Weight: 177 pounds
Team: Boston College (NCAA)
There was a point last year when folks were projecting Hagens - prior to his freshman season at Boston College - to be selected first overall in the 2025 draft.
With the emergence of defenseman Brandon Schaefer and forward Michael Misa, he has fallen ever-so-slightly. But, if the Chicago Blackhawks and Penguins would, indeed, be interested in executing a trade to bump the Penguins up to the third overall selection, Hagens wouldn't be a bad consolation prize by any means.
In his freshman season with Boston College, Hagens registered 11 goals and 37 points in 37 games. That may not "wow" anyone - and he could stand to find a bit more finishing touch in his game - but the centerman's playmaking ability, offensive instincts, and smarts stand out.
FRESHMAN JAMES HAGENS WITH THE BIGGEST GOAL OF HIS CAREER TO SECURE THE W IN THE FINAL MINUTES 🔥 pic.twitter.com/lD8eOmR4xt
— Spittin' Chiclets (@spittinchiclets) March 28, 2025
Although undersized, Hagens's speed and ability to thwart defenders makes him a threat. He is especially dangerous off the rush, where his vision and playmaking are really brought out of the woodwork.
He is also a decent two-way presence, as he's able to backcheck, catch just about anyone with his speed, and has good puck skills in all three zones.
Hagens may not be an elite scoring threat - and this is a bit worrisome to some scouts, who see him as a potential complementary piece of the puzzle in a top-six - but he is an offensive threat every time he touches the ice. He proved as much in his time with the U.S. National Development Team, as he put up 35 goals and 87 points in 57 games from 2022-24.
If the Penguins do trade up in the draft, they'll have some tough decisions to make. But Hagens is certainly an option for them, as his floor is higher than most, even if the ceiling isn't.
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Feature image credit: Eric Canha-Imagn Images
Mets waste tremendous bullpen effort in one-run loss to Braves: ‘Those are tough games to lose’
It’s been a bit of a struggle of late for the Mets’ bullpen.
With the starters failing to work deep into games, they’ve been very overworked.
That was again the case on Monday night, but this time they were able to deliver.
Paul Blackburn was knocked around by the Braves for the second straight outing and was pulled with two outs in the top of the fifth -- that marked the fifth straight game a Mets starter failed to finish five innings.
But José Buttó entered into a first-and-third jam and needed just four pitches to clean up the mess, getting Michael Harris II to roll over to end the inning.
He followed that up with a perfect top of the sixth.
Ryne Stanek was handed the seventh and he fell into some trouble after issuing a walk and allowing a two-out single to Ozzie Albies, but he let out one of his signature roars after punching out Murphy with a nasty slider.
Reed Garrett was called upon in the eighth, coming off back-to-back rough outings, and he rebounded nicely with a pair of strikeouts in a scoreless frame of his own.
Edwin Diaz then entered for the ninth, pitching for the first time in five days, and he worked around a pair of hits, striking out Ozzie Albies on three pitches to keep the deficit at just one run.
Unfortunately, the effort was wasted as the Mets’ offense failed to come through.
“Those are tough games to lose,” Carlos Mendoza said. “When you use your high-leverage and aren’t able to close the deal -- we just have to turn the page, but I thought they did a hell of a job keeping us in the game.
“We only get 4.2 out of Blackburn and then everyone else kind of kept the game right there for us. Everybody that came out of that bullpen gave us a chance, we just couldn’t push those runs across.”