Cam Payne served as ‘catalyst’ for Knicks during fourth quarter surge in Game 1 win over Pistons

Things weren’t looking good for the Knicks in Game 1. 

After a back-and-forth first two quarters, the Pistons came out of the locker room resurged and they began taking things over -- suddenly New York found themselves trailing by eight points heading into the final frame. 

Then, everything changed in a hurry.  

The Pistons opened the fourth taking a five-second violation and the Knicks were able to build off of the energy from the fired up Madison Square Garden crowd, as Karl-Anthony Towns knocked down back-to-back baskets. 

New York ran with the momentum, scoring the next 21 points before Detroit’s Malik Beasley knocked down a three, pushing themselves back in front and re-establishing the double-digit advantage in less then five minutes. 

The Pistons made a push down the stretch, but the Knicks never looked back, holding on for the Game 1 victory

“We didn't end the third quarter the way we wanted to," Jalen Brunson said. "But there was never a doubt that we were just going to lay down without a fight -- we just had to figure things out and just keep battling, and it turned rather quickly."

Brunson was in the middle of the surge as always, but easily the biggest boost came from veteran reserve Cam Payne, who stepped up tremendously after a quiet first half showing. 

Payne had just three points over the first three quarters -- but during that stretch in which the Knicks completely turned things around he simply couldn't miss as he knocked down 4-of-5 shots including a pair of threes to give him 11 of his 14 points during the final frame.

He was also a key factor in forcing the momentum changing five-second turnover.

“We all know what Cam is capable of -- that’s what he does,” OG Anunoby said. 

“He’s a catalyst, he gets in there and makes things happen,” head coach Tom Thibodeau added. “The thing about him is he knows exactly who he is. He comes in with great energy every game, and he prepares himself well -- he gave us a huge spark, but that’s who he’s been all season.”

Payne, who averaged 6.9 points during his first year in New York, received a rousing ovation from the MSG faithful as he was subbed out late in the fourth quarter -- it was an ovation and performance he's been waiting for all season.

"It's fun man," he said. "It's a hell of an atmosphere. I was on the opposing side of it last year and it was tough, it was loud as s--t in there. Being on the flip side of it felt good, that ovation felt good. I've been waiting on that all year, how I played today all year, so I'm just grateful.

"I thank God for everything that happened tonight, I'm just grateful to still be playing in this league."

Three Takeaways From Blues' 5-3 Loss Against Jets In Game 1 Of Western Conference First Round

Robert Thomas (18) and the St. Louis Blues dropped Game 1 to Neal Pionk (right) and the Winnipeg Jets, 5-3, on Saturday. (Terrence Lee-Imagn Images)

Things were going like they intended it for the St. Louis Blues in Game 1 of the Western Conference First Round on Saturday.

Their special teams were strong, they started the game hitting everything that moved, with a whopping 32 in the first period, and their special teams helped them carry a lead into the final 20 minutes.

But the Blues succumbed in a big way. The Winnipeg Jets scored three times, including Kyle Connor's one-timer with 1:36 remaining to rally for a 5-3 win against the Blues at Canada Life Centre.

The Blues, who trail the best-of-7 series 1-0 with Game 2 on Monday at 6:30 p.m., were 35-2-1 in the regular season when leading after two periods. It was almost automatic they would have the capability to close out a game but couldn't on Saturday.

Robert Thomas and Jordan Kyrou scored power-play goals, Oskar Sundqvist scored and Jordan Binnington made 21 saves.

Let's look at Saturday's Three Takeaways:

* Horrendous third period -- The Blues are usually good at locking down the third, and coach Jim Montgomery has praised the players for their abilities to do so since the 4 Nations Face-Off break.

Whatever that was on Saturday, this will be a quick series if that same blueprint and way of execution is in play.

Instead of managing the game, the Blues played prevent defense for seemingly 20 minutes, sat back, didn't dictate any play and had just one shot on goal until a meaningless Mathieu Joseph shot on Connor Hellebuyck with seconds remaining.

They had a chance to put a stranglehold on the game with a power play after killing off a Nick Leddy minor to begin the period but Zack Bolduc took an inexplicably bad cross checking minor to negate what was left of it and it seemed the Jets, even through they didn't score on the ensuing power play of their own, fed off the momentum.

"We can’t take that penalty in the playoffs, I do know that," Montgomery said." I thought we killed the penalty pretty good. I can’t say it built momentum for them, but it took us from a situation where I thought we were a little bit in control and then we weren’t."

The Blues managed things until Alex Iafallo tied the game 3-3 when Scheifele took a puck around the net, and was defended well by Thomas, but Cam Fowler jumped into try and defend as well, leaving that side of the ice open. Scheifele's pass hit the side of the net right to an open Iafallo, who deposited a lot shot beyond Binnington's right pad.

The Blues didn't generate any offense because their play with the puck was poor at best. They couldn't string together, forget two passes, they couldn't put one pass together. They kept giving it back in the neutral zone, then had to defend much of the period, getting hemmed in and when they would get it, would give it right back. Then they iced a number of pucks, including Kyrou late that started the sequence that led to Connor's eventual game-winner. Connor had been robbed twice in the game earlier by Binnington.

After Scheifele won the face-off from Thomas, who was 11-for-15, the puck came to the point, Josh Morrissey found Scheifele curling around the net along the left side, a pass to the low circle to Connor for a one-timer and it was 4-3. Adam Lowry iced it with an empty-netter to make it 5-3 at 19:07.

It was simply a terrible period for the Blues, one of their worst third periods all season and came at an inopportune time.

 "I didn’t think we managed the game very well in the third period," Montgomery said. "Penalties. Puck management. A little bit of our emotions.

"... I didn’t think our puck management and decision-making was quick enough."   

* Need more from Schenn line offensively -- Brayden Schenn will never be questioned for his physical nature; the Blues captain had a game-high nine hits of the Blues' 53 in the game. But with a line of Schenn, Kyrou and Jimmy Snuggerud, that line had a Corsi-for/Corsi-against of 0-11 in the game.

The Blues will not play beyond Game 4 if they don't get supportive scoring from someone other than the Thomas, Pavel Buchnevich, Jake Neighbours line. Even the fourth line of Radek Faksa, Alexey Toropchenko and Nathan Walker had a Corsi rating of 3-13.

No offense to Snuggerud, playing his first playoff game and eighth NHL game overall, but Saturday was a prime example of the Blues missing Dylan Holloway, who is a big influence in driving that line.

* Special teams did its job -- You can't go wrong when your power-play gets you two goals, like the Blues' did.

And quite frankly, if it wasn't for a lucky bounce off Ryan Suter's stick that gave Scheifele a gift power-play goal himself, the Blues' penalty killers would have been 4-for-4.

But one way to quiet a home crowd as a visiting player is to make the opposition pay with the man advantage.

Thomas made it 1-0 at 9:31 of the first when Cam Fowler kept a puck alive at the point, the second time on a backhand to Thomas, who made no mistake beating Hellebuyck with a wrister high glove.

And after Sundqvist tied it 2-2 with the Blues' only even strength goal at 18:10, Kyrou gave the Blues a 3-2 lead at 1:13 of the second period after a puck was worked around from left to the point to Kyrou, who had acres, it seemed, to skate into a wrister of his own and beat Hellebuyck high blocker (sense a theme here?).

The Blues finished 2-for-3 with the man advantage and 3-for-4 on the penalty kill, and on most nights, you're winning those hockey games, playoffs or not. Not this night though.

"I think our special teams, ever since 4 Nations, it's been really good," Sundqvist said. "We just keep working on it. And, it's good to get some goals on the power play and killing some penalties off and then we just get back to work tomorrow and see what we need to do 5-on-5."

* Here's what else Montgomery and players said postgame:

Knicks use a 21-0 run in the 4th quarter to beat the Pistons 123-112 in Game 1

NBA: Playoffs-Detroit Pistons at New York Knicks

Apr 19, 2025; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) gestures after making a three-point shot in Game One of the First Round of the NBA Playoffs against the Detroit Pistons at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images

NEW YORK (AP) Jalen Brunson was hobbling and Madison Square Garden had gone quiet as the New York Knicks fell deeper into a hole late in the third quarter.

Brunson then left the court for what appeared to be a change of sneakers, though maybe that wasn't all.

“I think he was grabbing his cape,” coach Tom Thibodeau said.

Brunson and his teammates were sure super from there.

Brunson scored 34 points, Cam Payne had 11 of his 14 in the fourth quarter and the Knicks stunned the Detroit Pistons with a 21-0 run to rally for a 123-112 victory Saturday night in Game 1 of the first-round playoff series.

Karl-Anthony Towns had 23 points and 11 rebounds in his first playoff game with the Knicks and OG Anunoby also scored 23 points for the No. 3 seeds, who will host Game 2 on Monday night.

The Pistons held up well for more than three quarters of their first playoff game since 2019 and had a 98-90 lead, a little more than nine minutes from ending their NBA-record, 14-game postseason losing streak.

By the time they scored again, the Knicks were ahead by 13 points, the delirious fans in the arena roaring louder with every Pistons miscue after they played with such poise for much of the game.

Payne converted a three-point play to start the run, Brunson scored and Payne made a 3-pointer to tie it at 98, and the onslaught would last for nearly five minutes. Payne and Brunson combined for the first 17 points before Josh Hart had the final two baskets to make it 111-98 with 4:50 remaining.

“I been kind of waiting on that all year,” Payne said. “I've been waiting on this game, how I played today, all year.”

Tobias Harris scored 25 points for Detroit, but just three in the second half. Cade Cunningham had 21 points and 12 assists, but the Knicks limited the star guard to 8-for-21 shooting in his playoff debut.

Brunson, who missed 15 games late in the season with a sprained right ankle, was just 4 for 15 in the first half and appeared to tweak the ankle again. But he changed out of his green sneakers and found another gear in the fourth along with the Knicks.

“Obviously, we didn’t end the third quarter the way we wanted to, but there was never a doubt that we’re going to just lay down and not fight,” Brunson said. “We had to find a way to figure things out and keep battling and I mean, it turned around quickly.”

The Pistons remained winless in the postseason since Game 4 of the 2008 Eastern Conference finals.

“Obviously, for this group, guys having first-time playoff experience, just understanding yeah, it stinks to lose, but it’s all about how you come back,” Harris said.

---

AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba

The Hockey News Playoff Frenzy Live: Reacting To Jets' Game 1 Win Over Blues

Mark Scheifele and his teammates celebrate a goal on April 19. (Terrence Lee-Imagn Images)

Welcome to the first show of The Hockey News Playoff Frenzy Live, streaming nightly during the NHL's Stanley Cup playoffs.

After the big game of the night, our experts go live to react to the match that was, break down the key moments and storylines, provide updates on the rest of the night's NHL slate and read your opinions.

Playoff Frenzy Live - April 19, 2025 | The Hockey NewsPlayoff Frenzy Live - April 19, 2025 | The Hockey NewsWelcome to Playoff Frenzy Live by The Hockey News presented by STIX.com, where we give our live reactions and break down the latest news to all the biggest g...

On tonight's show, Emma Lingan and Michael Augello look at the Winnipeg Jets' comeback victory against the St. Louis Blues in the first game of the playoffs.

Will the shaky start for both goaltenders cause any issues later in the series? How did the battle of the Schenn brothers go down? What's something to follow in the Dallas Stars and Colorado Avalanche series?

Check out the show right now and share your opinions in the live chat and in our comment section.

Golden Knights Sticking With Lines That Have Worked

Vegas Golden Knights center Tomas Hertl (48) and right wing Mark Stone (61) and center Jack Eichel (9) celebrates a power play goal scored by Stone against the Dallas Stars during the first period in game five of the first round of the 2024 Stanley Cup Playoffs at the American Airlines Center. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images

The Vegas Golden Knights flamed out in the first round of the playoffs last year to the Dallas Stars in large part due to HC Bruce Cassidy’s inability to find the best lines. The blame can’t all be put on him as the Golden Knights were ravaged with injuries and did not have enough time to build chemistry among linemates. 

This season, however, is different. No long-term major injuries have leaked into the playoffs, and Cassidy feels comfortable with what he’s seen from his players. 

Heading into a series against a Minnesota Wild team that ranks 15th in goals allowed per game despite an abundance of injuries, Cassidy will go with what’s brought them success throughout the 2024-25 regular season. 

“Karlsson, Olofsson and Smith have been very good since Karly’s comeback, and we got Smitty through trade, so we don’t have to mess around," said Cassidy. "We’ve got Hertl, Dorofeyev and Saad; they’ve been very good together. Hertl missed a few weeks, but in general, they’ve been healthy. So it’s just Jack and Stoney, and then is it Barbie or Howden." 

"Then we got Roy, Kolesar and Pearson, and we have to decide that, but in general, we’re going to revert back to those lines we had earlier because guys have moved around. I think the positive side to losing guys to injury is that you get to look at guys in a more advanced role, so that can come in handy down the road. That's how we’re going to approach it to start and see how it turns out."

Jack Eichel, Mark Stone and Ivan Barbashev have been a mainstay on the top line, recording 462:00 of ice time together.

Tomas Hertl and Pavel Dorofeyev lead the team in goals and have been complemented nicely by Brandon Saad, who they signed as a free agent after he was cut by the St. Louis Blues

Victor Olofsson, who was not known for his defensive game with the Buffalo Sabres, has blossomed this season on that side of the puck and has become the perfect final piece to the formidable duo of William Karlsson and Reilly Smith. 

Smith And Karlsson’s Penalty Killing Pose Additional Offensive Threats For Golden KnightsSmith And Karlsson’s Penalty Killing Pose Additional Offensive Threats For Golden KnightsWilliam Karlsson and Reilly Smith are the Vegas Golden Knights franchise leaders in shorthanded goals and points, and after being reunited at the deadline, they are showing just how dangerous and effective they can be on the penalty kill.

At the moment, Cassidy is unsure about who will be playing on the fourth line. One player out of Nicolas Roy, Brett Howden, Keegan Kolsear and Tanner Pearson will be held out of the Game 1 lineup despite being more than deserving of playing. 

The phrase "it’s a good problem to have" gets thrown around a lot in hockey, mostly when referring to having a plethora of depth options, and no team embodies it more than the Golden Knights. 

With several lineup options to choose from, Cassidy can benefit from being able to switch things quickly when it’s not going the Golden Knights' way and have the trust in his players that they can rely on the chemistry they’ve previously shown. 

The Golden Knights may be the odds-on favourite, but a team rostering Kirill Kaprizov, Matt Boldy, Marco Rossi, Joel Erickson-Ek, Mats Zuccarello and Brock Faber will not roll over and let the Golden Knights breeze by. 

Stay updated with the most interesting Golden Knights stories, analysis, breaking news and more! Tap the star to add us to your favourites on Google News to never miss a story.

Storylines Abound When In Opening Round Series Between Golden Knights And Wild, Including Several Head-To-Head MatchupsStorylines Abound When In Opening Round Series Between Golden Knights And Wild, Including Several Head-To-Head MatchupsLAS VEGAS -- There are storylines aplenty across every NHL Playoff series, and will be as we get closer to the Stanley Cup Final. Which Golden Knights Players Have Contract Implications Heading Into The PlayoffsWhich Golden Knights Players Have Contract Implications Heading Into The PlayoffsThe Vegas Golden Knights are heading into the playoffs with an abundance of confidence, winning the Pacific Division and ranking second in the Western Conference. Although most of the team is under contract beyond this season, some are not, and that could bode well for the Golden Knights. 

Knicks take over in fourth quarter, pull out 123-112 Game 1 win over Pistons

The Knicks pulled out a huge 123-112 win over the Detroit Pistons in Game 1 of their first round matchup on Saturday at Madison Square Garden.

Here are some takeaways...

- The Garden was rocking and the Knicks responded with a strong start on both ends of the floor. New York did a good job suffocating Cade Cunningham defensively, and three of their starting five found the bottom of the basket to open an early advantage.

- Landry Shamet was the first man off the bench, subbing in after Josh Hart picked up two early fouls.

- OG Anunoby's offensive surge continued in the first quarter, knocking down five shots including a pair of threes for 12 points. New York limited Cunningham to just two points but his teammates stepped up and made baskets around him, evening things up at 27.

New York-native Tobias Harris had nine points and Malik Beasley drilled a pair of threes off the bench.

- Karl-Anthony Towns was held scoreless in the first, but he led the way for the second unit early in the second. The big man knocked down his first three field goals of the quarter and a technical free throw for defensive three seconds, to help the Knicks jump back in front.

- With Hart picking up his third foul early in the quarter, Towns received minutes alongside Mitchell Robinson, who provided a nice spark with a monster putback jam. The duo struggled defensively, though, as KAT lost Harris at times and the Pistons were able to keep things within shouting distance.

- Anunoby continued leading the way for New York with 19 first-half points, but Harris was just as good as he knocked down 7-of-10 from the field to lead all scorers with 22 points, making it a three-point game heading into the break.

- Former Knick Tim Hardaway Jr. stepped up for Detroit coming out of the break, helping them open the quarter on a 7-0 run to jump back in front. The Pistons continued finding different ways to get to the basket and they opened their largest lead of the game -- before the Knicks came storming back.

- The rest of the quarter was back and forth, but back-to-back blocks from Dennis Schröder and Isaiah Stewart resulted in a five-point swing towards the Pistons, and suddenly the Knicks found themselves trailing by eight heading into the fourth.

- Desperate for a spark, Towns started the quarter knocking down back-to-back baskets. The Knicks used that to help push them back in front, regaining all of the momentum with an incredible 21-0 run, which helped them reopen a double-digit advantage.

Detroit was able to close the gap, but big buckets down the stretch helped the Knicks close out the Game 1 victory.

- Brunson led all scorers with 34 points on 12-of-27 shooting while dishing eight assists. Anunoby and Towns both finished with 23 points, Cameron Payne knocked down three threes and contributed 14 points off the bench (11 in the fourth), while Robinson had six points and six boards.

Bridges sat the entire fourth quarter and was a non-factor, finishing with just six points.

- New York did a really good job on Cunningham, holding him to just 21 points but he had 12 assists. Big man Jalen Duren was limited to just seven points and six boards. Harris stepped up with 25 points, Beasley had 20 points, and Hardaway Jr. had 19.

Game MVP: OG Anunoby

Anunoby was tremendous on both ends of the court, helping New York grab a Game 1 victory.

Highlights

Whats next

The Knicks and Pistons meet in Game 2 of the series on Monday at 7:30 p.m.

Jets Battle Back for 5-3 Win in Game 1 vs. Blues

Photo by Scott Stroh 

The vibes were high, the crowd was loud, the colour was white.

And the home team got the win. 

Entering the game with an NHL-best 116 points in 82 games, the Winnipeg Jets came out and took the first game of the opening round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs by a 5-3 final over the eighth-seed St. Louis Blues.

The Saturday night affair was the first scheduled game of the playoffs for any team, and it most certainly did not disappoint.

Kyle Connor scored the winner with just 1:36 remaining off a cross-ice pass from Mark Scheifele, while Connor Hellebuyck turned aside 14 of the 17 shots he faced for his first win of the playoffs. 

A chaotic first period saw four total goals scored, two per team. 

It was an up and down first period for trade deadline acquisition Luke Schenn. He was in the box to see the Blues score the game's opening goal, on a play that left Robert Thomas all alone in the high slot. He didn't miss, and beat Connor Hellebuyck just 39 seconds into the interference minor.

After Scheifele scored a power play goal just moments into a Jake Neighbours slashing call, Schenn set Jaret Anderson-Dolan up for a deflection, leading to Winnipeg's 2-1 lead. His long-range point shot was tipped by both Morgan Barron and Anderson-Dolan, bouncing past Jordan Binnington and into the Blues' net.

But then, Schenn was victimized on a bad bounce later in the period. He blocked a point shot but couldn't corral his rebound. It landed directly on the stick of Oskar Sundqvist, who quickly buried up high, past Hellebuyck, making it 2-2 before the period came to a close.

But before the clock his zeros, Neal Pionk found himself in the box for yet another suspicious call. All three of the first period penalties were questionable at best.

Again, the Blues struck, getting their second of the game shortly into the second. It was Jordan Kyrou who put a perfectly-placed wrist shot through traffic and into the net, making it 3-2 just 1:13 into the middle stanza. 

Kyrou's goal was the difference in the period, with St. Louis holding onto a 3-2 lead through 40 minutes of play. Winnipeg outshot the visitors 10-6 in the frame, pulling ahead to a 17-15 lead entering the third period.

Winnipeg tied things up on a gritty goal from first-line fill-in Alex Iafallo midway through the third. A power move from Scheifele behind the net saw Iafallo grab the puck in close and beat Binnington five-hole. 

Then, with just 1:36 remaining, Connor blasted his first of the postseason into the net - a goal that proved to be the game-winner. Once again, it was Scheifele who picked up the primary assist, helping the Jets to the 4-3 advantage. 

Adam Lowry got the insurance marker, banking a missed Mason Appleton dump in into the empty net, sealing the deal on a Game 1 victory. 

Some minor fisticuffs ensued, but it was the Jets that came out on top 5-3. 

Game 2 goes on Monday night, with the Jets and Blues facing off at 6:30 PM central time. The game will be aired live on Sportsnet. 

Devin Williams implodes in ninth inning as Yankees fall to Rays in extras, 10-8

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Brandon Lowe tied the score with a two-run single in a four-run ninth inning off Devin Williams, Jonathan Aranda hit a two-run homer in the 10th and the Tampa Bay Rays beat the Yankees 10-8 Saturday to stop New York’s five-game winning streak.

Williams, an All-Star closer acquired from Milwaukee during the offseason, has a 9.00 ERA and has allowed runs in four of nine appearances. He has walked seven in eight innings.

Given an 8-4 lead, Williams allowed José Caballero’s one-out single on a chopper as third baseman Oswaldo Cabrera made a high throw, then walked No. 9 batter Ben Rortvedt. Chandler Simpson hit an RBI double to left for his first big league hit, Yandy Díaz hit a run-scoring infield single and Lowe singled to left.

After New York wasted runners at the corners with no outs in the 10th against Edwin Uceta (1-1), Aranda led off the bottom half against Yoendrys Gómez with his fourth homer, stopping the Rays’ four-game losing streak.

New York went 6 for 15 with runners in scoring position.

On a foul popup that ended the Yankees’ fifth, Aranda collided with Rortvedt and was on the grass with training staff before walking off on his own power.

Aaron Judge had three hits and three RBIs, and Trent Grisham homered for the Yankees.

Yankees designated hitter Ben Rice left with a bruised left elbow after getting hit by an 88.2 mph slider from Manuel Rodríguez in the fourth inning. X-rays were negative.

Rays starter Shane Baz allowed five runs, his most since July 10, 2022, in 3 1/3 innings. Yankees starter Carlos Carrasco threw just 35 of 78 pitches for strikes and gave up four runs in four innings.

Key moment

With the bases loaded and no out in the first, Paul Goldschmidt grounded sharply to Caballero at shortstop, who started a double play by throwing the ball between his legs to force Austin Wells at second.

Key stat

Simpson was 1 for 5 in his major league debut.

Up next

Yankees LHP Max Fried (3-0, 1.88 ERA) and Rays RHP Ryan Pepiot (1-2, 4.91) start Sunday’s series finale.

'Locked in' Pete Alonso helping Mets play 'great ball'

At no point last season did Pete Alonso ever look as good as he's looked at the plate to start his 2025 campaign for the Mets.

After another 2-for-4 day, including a double, home run and two RBI in New York's 3-0 win over the St. Louis Cardinals, the first baseman is "locked in" offensively right now.

In fact, Alonso said this is the best he's felt at the plate since his junior year of college -- even better than his rookie season in 2019 where he set the rookie home run record with 53 long balls.

"From a consistency aspect, yes," he said, talking about feeling better this year compared to his rookie year. "I mean, I know in 2019 I hit a lot of homers, obviously [I] had a phenomenal year that year, but from a consistency aspect and controlling the zone I definitely feel better [now]."

Alonso's production in the middle of the Mets' lineup since the start of the year has helped carry them to a 14-7 record as other players such as Francisco Lindor and Juan Soto are just now starting to find their groove offensively.

In 21 games, Alonso is batting .356 (26-for-73) with a 1.220 OPS and has six home runs, nine doubles and a triple to go along with 23 RBI.

"He’s locked in. He’s got conviction, he’s got a plan and he’s executing it," said manager Carlos Mendoza. "I don’t think we saw this version last year, maybe towards the end and definitely in the playoffs, but I think right now he’s got conviction, he’s dictating at-bats, he’s ready for his pitches, he’s not missing them and he’s taking his walks when they don’t want to pitch to him. He’s a dangerous hitter."

Following a down season in 2024 that just so happened to be Alonso's walk year which led to him and New York agreeing to a two-year, $54 million late in the offseason -- much less than what Alonso was expecting -- the Mets must be thrilled with the offensive output they're seeing from their first baseman.

Always a threat to go deep, even last year when he hit 34 home runs, Alonso would still strike out a lot and his batting average and on-base percentage were never the highest as a career .251 hitter. However, this season he's striking out less, walking more and not missing when pitcher's make mistakes.

"I think my mechanics are super clean," he said. "I’m able to hold those and carry those pitch to pitch, at-bat to at-bat."

Alonso also credits "having a great gameplan" which includes "staying aggressive in [his] zone" for the start to his season.

But with another great Citi Field crowd on hand, with 42,339 in attendance on Saturday, Alonso isn't discounting the effect the fans have had on the team, who is 8-1 at home, as well

"Obviously having sellout crowds is awesome and I feel like having a jam-packed stadium like this it’s almost like having a 10th guy out there. It’s honestly awesome," Alonso said.

"It’s a good feeling knowing that the ballpark is going to be packed and the fanbase is going to be right behind you," Mendoza added. "Not only are we feeling it, the other team is feeling it… It’s an environment that people probably don’t want to come over here and that’s what you want. That’s why they’re the best fans."

New York hopes to keep the good times rolling as it looks to go for the series sweep on Sunday before starting a three-game series with the Philadelphia Phillies on Monday.

"Just wanna keep playing well," Alonso said. "The team is absolutely playing great ball, we’re playing as a unit."

Inside The Numbers: Penguins' Record In Season Finales

Marc-Andre Fleury and Sidney Crosby Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

The Pittsburgh Penguins just finished their 57th season with a 34-36-12 record, missing the Stanley Cup playoffs for the third consecutive campaign.

Despite the ups and downs of the 82-game schedule, the Penguins finished the year on a positive note, defeating the top team in the Eastern Conference, the Washington Capitals, by a 5-2 score on Thursday, April 17, 2025.

The victory in the season finale extended their record in the final game of the regular season to 30-23-2-2. Meanwhile, thanks to a plus-3 goal differential in that game, the club closed the gap in this statistical category, now just minus-1 in season finales, scoring 197 goals and giving up 198. 

Moreover, after being winless in their last two season finales, the Penguins earned their 12th win of the Sidney Crosby era, which began in the 2005-06 season. Ultimately, under his guidance, Pittsburgh has had its best run in the final regular-season games. 

Let's dive into the numbers. 

In the Beginning (1967-1984)

The Penguins won their first two season finales, defeating the Philadelphia Flyers in 1968 (5-1) and 1969 (2-1). They suffered their first loss to the Minnesota North Stars (5-1) in 1970, followed by their first tie in 1971 against the St. Louis Blues (1-1).

During this time, Pittsburgh compiled four two-year win streaks: 1968-69, followed by 1972-73 and 1981-82, with their best run occurring from 1976 to 1978, when they won three straight. 

25 Fascinating Facts About The NHL In 2005-06, The Last Time The Penguins Had A Losing Season25 Fascinating Facts About The NHL In 2005-06, The Last Time The Penguins Had A Losing SeasonWin or lose on Thursday night, the Pittsburgh Penguins (33-35-12) will have their first losing season since the 2005-06 campaign, when the club was 22-46-14.

On the other hand, they also experienced three consecutive streaks of back-to-back losses, in 1970-71, 1974-75, and 1983-84. Meanwhile, during the nine seasons the Penguins qualified for the playoffs, they finished the regular season with a record of 5-4 in those years.

Overall, in the first 17 seasons, Pittsburgh was 9-7-1 in season finales, outscored by opponents 64-54.

Lemieux & Jagr Era (1985-2004)

During one of arguably the greatest eras in franchise history, the Penguins didn't have as much success when Mario Lemieux and Jaromir Jagr were winning scoring titles and Stanley Cups. 

As expected, after having the NHL's worst record in 1983-84, the Penguins lost Lemieux's first season finale in 1985 to the Capitals, 7-3.

Mario Lemieux - Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

However, the club responded by winning their next four final regular season games from 1986 to 1989, including three in overtime against the New York Rangers (1986), Detroit Red Wings (1987), and Hartford Whalers (1989).

After a few years of success, they dropped three straight finales from 1990 to 1992, including back-to-back years when they would go on to win the Stanley Cup in 1991 and 1992. 

Meanwhile, 1993 featured the only tie of the era, as the Penguins battled the New Jersey Devils to a 6-6 tie to end the 1992-93 season, a year in which the franchise established an NHL record with 17 consecutive victories. One year later, in 1994, the team recorded its first shutout in a season finale, blanking the Ottawa Senators 4-0.

The losses continued into the late 1990s, as the Penguins lost their final regular-season games in 1995, 1996, and 1997, before experiencing a winning streak in 1998 and 1999. This was followed by alternating wins and losses until they suffered back-to-back defeats in 2002 and 2003. 

Penguins Achieved A Historic Goal Scoring Milestone in 2024-25, First Time In Crosby's CareerPenguins Achieved A Historic Goal Scoring Milestone in 2024-25, First Time In Crosby's CareerThe Pittsburgh Penguins are no strangers to scoring, having employed some of the game's greatest snipers like Mario Lemieux, Jaromir Jagr, Joe Mullen, Mark Recchi, Sidney Crosby, and Evgeni Malkin.

While Lemieux and Jagr wore black and gold, an era stretching from 1984 to 2004, the Penguins finished 9-10-1 in the season finales, going 0-2 in years they would capture the Stanley Cup. Once again, they were outscored during this time, 85-71, and had a 5-6-1 record in years they qualified for the postseason.

Sidney Crosby Era (2006-Present)

The Penguins won the 2005 NHL Draft Lottery and selected Crosby with the top pick. During his first season, Pittsburgh lost its season finale 5-3 to the Toronto Maple Leafs. But that loss would end up being one of the few for Crosby and the Penguins in the past 20 seasons. 

Besides alternating wins and losses to begin the Crosby era, the Penguins would go on to establish a franchise record with five consecutive season finale wins from 2009 to 2013, thanks to victories over the Montreal Canadiens, New York Islanders, Atlanta Thrashers, Flyers, and Carolina Hurricanes. 

Sidney Crosby - Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

Only once during Crosby's tenure have the Penguins lost consecutive season finales, which occurred in both Stanley Cup title years, 2016 (Flyers) and 2017 (Rangers). 

Meanwhile, the club won another three straight games from 2020 to 2022 before losing in overtime to the Columbus Blue Jackets in 2023 and then to the Islanders in 2024. 

The 2025 season finale victory against the Capitals improved the Penguins' record under Crosby to 12-6-2.

Despite the 2008 club becoming the only one in franchise history to be shut out in a season finale, the 2015, 2018, and 2021 teams recorded shutouts in the final game of the season. Overall, the goal differential during Crosby's tenure is positive at 67-49.

Considering Pittsburgh advanced to the Stanley Cup playoffs from 2007 to 2022, their record in season finales during those seasons was 11-4-1, while they were just 1-2-1 in years they didn't qualify. 

Penguins' Head Coach Sullivan One Of Three Coaches To Accomplish This Historic FeatPenguins' Head Coach Sullivan One Of Three Coaches To Accomplish This Historic FeatPittsburgh Penguins head coach Mike Sullivan is only the 15th head coach in NHL history to win 400 games with a single franchise. Hall of Famer Scotty Bowman is the only person to achieve this feat with two clubs. 

Finally, the Penguins played in the Stanley Cup Final in 2008, 2009, 2016, and 2017. During those campaigns, they wrapped the regular season with a loss, a win, a loss, and a loss. Surprisingly, when Pittsburgh plays in the Final, they are 1-5 in season finales. 


Penguins Records vs. Opponents in Season Finales

  • Atlanta Flames (1974) 0-1-0 -- 6 GF - 3 GA
  • Atlanta Thrashers (2011) 1-0-0 -- 5 GA - 2 GA
  • Boston Bruins (1996, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2002) 1-4-0 -- 15 GF - 25 GA
  • Buffalo Sabres (1980, 1990, 2015, 2021) 2-2-0 -- 6 GF - 12 GA - 2 SO
  • Carolina Hurricanes & Hartford Whalers (1981, 1988, 2001, 2013) 4-0-0 -- 23 GF - 13 GA
  • Columbus Blue Jackets (2022, 2023) 1-0-0-1 -- 7 GF - 6 GA
  • Cleveland Barons (1978) 1-0-0 -- 3 GF - 2 GA
  • Detroit Red Wings (1976, 1977, 1987) 3-0-0 -- 14 GF - 11 GA
  • Florida Panthers (1995) 0-1-0 -- 3 GF - 4 GA
  • Minnesota North Stars (1970) 0-1-0 -- 1 GF - 5 GA
  • Montreal Canadiens (2009) 1-0-0 -- 3 GF - 1 GA
  • New Jersey Devils (1983, 1993, 2020) 1-1-1 -- 14 GF - 13 GA
  • New York Islanders (1982, 1984, 2010, 2024) 2-2-0 -- 18 GF - 14 GA
  • New York Rangers (1986, 1991, 1992, 1999, 2007, 2017, 2019) 3-3-0-1 -- 18 GF - 26 GA
  • Ottawa Senators (1994, 2014, 2018) 2-1-0 -- 10 GF - 3 GA - 2 SO
  • Philadelphia Flyers (1968, 1969, 1973, 1989, 2008, 2012, 2016) 5-2-0 -- 23 GF - 18 GA
  • St. Louis Blues (1971, 1972) 1-0-1 -- 7 GF - 3 GA
  • Toronto Maple Leafs (2006) 0-1-0 -- 3 GF - 5 GA
  • Washington Capitals (1975, 1979, 1985, 2003, 2004, 2025) 2-4-0 -- 21 GF - 30 GA
Top 10 Winningest Goalies In Penguins History Ft. Greg MillenTop 10 Winningest Goalies In Penguins History Ft. Greg MillenAccording to records available at NHL.com, there have been 71 goalies to play for the Pittsburgh Penguins, 60 of whom have registered a victory. 

Westbrook fuels Nuggets' comeback to edge Clippers 112-110 in OT in teams' NBA playoff opener

DENVER (AP) Russell Westbrook, whose late-game follies hung over the Denver Nuggets as they navigated the stunning dismissals of coach Michael Malone and GM Calvin Booth on the eve of the playoffs, came up clutch against his former team in crunch time Saturday.

“That's who he is,” Nikola Jokic said after watching Westbrook hit an uncontested corner 3-pointer to give Denver a two-point lead late in regulation and then knocking the inbounds pass away from - and off of - James Harden with 9.6 seconds left in overtime to help seal Denver's 112-110 win over the Los Angeles Clippers.

“I just know that (inbounds) play,” from being there the previous two seasons, Westbrook said.

Westbrook had plenty to do with L.A.'s whopping 20 turnovers, including an uncharacteristic seven from Kawhi Leonard.

“Russ is Russ,” interim coach David Adelman said after improving to 4-0. “Defensively, he's absolutely incredible. He was playing free safety out there. I thought a lot of the reasons why the turnovers happened, even if it wasn't him forcing it, (was) just the way he was roaming around and impacting the game.

“And then offensively ... he attacked," Adelman said. “We maybe could have pulled it out and executed. But that's what Russ does. I don't think he's going to change after 17 years. If he sees somebody in front of him 1-on-1, he's going to attack. And then he made an enormous 3.”

Jokic scored 29 points and finished one rebound shy of a triple-double. Aaron Gordon added 25 points and Jamal Murray 21 as the Nuggets overcame a 15-point first-half deficit to power past the hottest team entering the playoffs.

The No. 5 seed Clippers' loss was their first since March 30 at Cleveland. They rolled into the playoffs having won 18 of 21, including their last eight.

“If you turn over 20 times against the team that is No. 1 in offensive transition, then you’re gonna lose the game,” lamented Clippers coach Tyronn Lue.

Harden led the Clippers with 32 points. Leonard added 22 and Ivica Zubac had 21.

Leonard shrugged off the loss, saying the team’s mood was “still good. Just Game 1. You know, Denver’s a good team, especially at home. Still got Game 2.”

That’s Monday night at Ball Arena.

Adelman said the key to the late comeback was actually when Denver closed the second quarter on a 13-2 run to pull to 53-49 at halftime.

“It felt like one of those games where you’re just slowly crawling uphill,” Adelman said.

And Westbrook was leading the way, coming up big despite missing 12 of 17 shots overall.

“A lot of people put a lot of emphasis on missing so many shots,” Westbrook said. “But in the playoffs, all you need to do is just win the game. I don't give a damn about how many shots you miss, make. Just make winning basketball plays defensively, offensively.”

And he did just that.

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AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Mets’ Paul Blackburn throws two innings in first rehab start with Brooklyn Cyclones

Mets right-hander Paul Blackburn began a rehab assignment on Saturday night. 

Blackburn took the mound for the Brooklyn Cyclones and he was handed an early lead but gave it right back -- as the second batter he faced crushed a solo homer deep to left-center. 

He issued a walk following that, but got a lineout double play to end the inning. 

The veteran allowed another walk and a hit in the bottom of the second, but was helped out by a caught stealing and a ground out to help him end his first rehab appearance without any further damage. 

Overall, he allowed one run on two hits while walking two and threw 38 pitches. 

Blackburn landed on the injured list after dealing with right knee inflammation late in camp.

Manager Carlos Mendoza said it’s still too early to tell exactly what his role will be when he returns to the big-league club, but they are planning on stretching him out to around 75 pitches to keep the door open on him joining the rotation. 

Blackburn pitched to a 5.68 ERA over five spring training outings.

He has just four appearances in his career out of the bullpen, all with the Athletics.

Clippers lose Game 1 to Nuggets in overtime

DENVER, CO - APRIL 19: Russell Westbrook #4 of the Denver Nuggets celebrates during the game against the LA Clippers during Round One Game One of the 2025 NBA Playoffs on April 19, 2025 at Ball Arena in Denver, Colorado. 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Jamie Schwaberow/NBAE via Getty Images)
Nuggets guard Russell Westbrook lets out a yell during the overtime win against the Clippers on Saturday in Denver. (Jamie Schwaberow/NBAE via Getty Images)

The Clippers dropped a 112-110 overtime game to the Denver Nuggets on Saturday at Ball Arena to open the playoffs.

They are down 1-0 in the best-of-seven series because Russell Westbrook was as a menace against his former team and supplied the Nuggets with the energy and big plays they needed to get the win.

Westbrook’s last big play was knocking the ball off of James Harden’s hand with 9.6 seconds left in the overtime.

Nikola Jokic made two free throws for a 112-107 lead with 6.5 seconds remaining that sealed the victory.

We’re in good shape,” Clippers coach Tyronn Lue said. “We just got to do what we’re supposed to do and what we talked about. We can’t turn the ball over 20 times…We just got to be better with our execution. I think defensively understanding what we’re doing and then offensively understanding how we want to attack them.”

Jokic finished with 29 points, 12 assists and nine rebounds.

Read more:Clippers' Kawhi Leonard still has 'love' for the game of basketball

Harden led the Clippers with 32 points and 11 assists.

Westbrook had 15 points, including two big threes, and eight rebounds and two steals.

The Clippers turned the ball over 20 times.

Jokic not only picked up his fourth foul by getting a double-foul with Ben Simmons in the fourth, he was also hit with a technical foul with 6:41 left.

Jokic felt he was struck in the face by Derrick Jones Jr., knocking him to the court. But no foul was called, drawing the ire of Jokic toward an official who issued the technical foul in a game that was getting tense and tighter as it went along.

Then with 1:27 left and the Nuggets leading by one, Jokic got an offensive rebound and was fouled but he missed both free throws, leaving the Clippers down 95-94.

The Clippers took advantage when Ivica Zubac scored on a goaltending call on Aaron Gordon, giving the Clippers a 96-95 lead with 1:11 left.

But the Clippers turned the ball over after Kawhi Leonard had it bounce off his hip with 33.5 seconds left and the Clippers still up by one.

The Nuggets called a timeout to call an important play after the Clippers’ challenge was unsuccessful.

Jokic, unafraid to make the right pass, and Westbrook, unafraid to take the big shot, combined to make the play. Jokic hit Westbrook in the corner for a three-pointer and a 98-96 Nuggets lead with 23.4 seconds left.

But Harden drove inside for a floater to tie the score at 98-98 with 18.7 seconds left.

That left the ball in Denver’s hands for the final shot.

But the Clippers played great defense and eventually Westbrook intended to put up the ball but could not get off a shot, sending the game into OT tied 98-98.

Harden picked up his fourth foul with 9 minutes and 10 seconds left in the third quarter, but played all 12 minutes in the quarter. Harden didn’t pick up another one before it was over.

Along the way in this game, Harden established himself as one of the NBA’s playoff greats.

He has scored (3,796) career points in the postseason, pushing him past John Havlicek for sole possession of 14th place on the NBA’s all-time playoff points list. Harden has (1,072) assists in the postseason, pushing him past Larry Bird for sole possession of eighth place on the all-time playoff assists list.

When Harden picked up his second foul with 4:55 left in the first quarter, the Clippers had a decision to make. They left him in the game and he immediately attacked with three consecutive drives to the basket — one turning into a three-point play — resulting in an early 12-point lead for the Clippers.

Harden didn’t waver in his play, staying aggressive the rest of the way in playing all 12 minutes in the first, finishing it off with a three-pointer at the buzzer that gave him 15 points on six-for-11 shooting.

Harden’s play seemed to ignite the Clippers, as they built a 15-point lead in the second quarter.

But the Clippers got sloppy with the basketball as the quarter continued, turning it over eight times in the second, leading to the Nuggets trimming L.A.’s lead to 53-49 at the half.

By the end of the third quarter, the game was still close.

But the Clippers still had the lead at 75-72.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.