Yankees’ Oswaldo Cabrera taken to hospital after suffering gruesome injury vs. Mariners

Yankees third baseman Oswaldo Cabrera left Monday night’s win over the Mariners in an ambulance after suffering a gruesome left injury. 

Cabrera scored New York’s 11th run of the night on an Aaron Judge sacrifice fly in the ninth -- but he had to sidestep the catcher to avoid a tag as he was trying to score, and he appeared to injure himself as he did so.  

He went down in a heap of pain as he reached back to touch home plate, and trainer Tim Lentych immediately raced out of the dugout. 

The T-Mobile Park crowd fell silent as Cabrera remained down for several moments at home plate and an ambulance made it’s way in from center field. 

After being loaded onto a gurney, he was taken in the ambulance to a local hospital. 

“Everyone understands it’s a pretty serious situation,” Aaron Boone said postgame. “We’re just praying for our guy Cabby tonight and hoping for the best and trust that he’s in good hands as he goes through the night here.”

The Yanks went on to close out the victory, beating the Mariners 11-5 for their second straight win.

Why a Lottery Decides the Fate of Cooper Flagg and the Mavericks

The Dallas Mavericks won the NBA lottery Monday night by securing the first overall pick in the 2025 NBA draft and the chance to draft Cooper Flagg, the NBA’s most heralded prospect since LeBron James was selected first overall in the 2003 NBA Draft.

Once again, an NBA team’s fortunes for the next decade or so turned on the sequence of ping pong balls generated by a lottery machine. The San Antonio Spurs came close to landing Flagg, securing the second overall pick based on the lottery balls, but will instead have to identify the best of the rest.

It can be rightfully asked why such a franchise-altering event is determined by a lottery. There is no league more fixated on data, analytics and algorithms than the NBA. Teams invest massive resources in hiring talented and data-driven basketball operations staff in hopes of outsmarting each other. Yet the player thought to be “the next great one” is going to a team because it won a lottery, by definition a random process.

There are other ways Flagg could enter the NBA. 

Like in the NFL, the first pick could be awarded to the team with the worst regular season record (the Utah Jazz). From 1966 to 1984, the NBA used a variant of that approach by having the team with the worst record in each conference flip a coin. The league moved away from the use of records because of concerns it incentivized teams to tank. To that point, in 1982, then-Clippers owner Donald Sterling was recorded as saying, “Maybe I have to lose the battle to win the war, we must end last to draw first to get a franchise-maker.”

Although the current lottery is weighted to favor the team with the worst-record and is limited only to the 14 teams that failed to make the playoffs, the lottery’s outcome remains a mystery until it is revealed. In other words, an NBA team losing this past season didn’t guarantee it the chance to draft Flagg. San Antonio and Philadelphia, meanwhile, now hold the numer two and three picks in the upcoming draft, while teams accused of tanking to lower their position fared far worse in the lottery.

A more radical approach would be to eliminate the draft altogether. Flagg could sign with the team with whom he most wishes to sign. He’s from Maine, so maybe he’d want to sign with the Boston Celtics. Or maybe Flagg wants to team up with James and Luka Dončić in Los Angeles. Or if he’s liked living in North Carolina over the last year, the Charlotte Hornets are right there.

That sounds radical from a sports perspective, yet it captures 99.9% of employment in the United States. Employers in other industries don’t “draft” college students, nor are bad employers rewarded with the best college prospects. The valedictorians of MIT, Princeton, Stanford and similarly prestigious schools–including Duke, where Flagg’s freshman classmates will enter the job market in a few years–aren’t assigned to the worst companies in America. That idea sounds nonsensical because it is. If a company is struggling, it goes out of business. It’s not rewarded.

Yet major sports leagues use drafts because they help to ensure that every team has a legitimate chance to succeed. That, in turn, retains and grows fan bases, boosts TV ratings and ultimately generates more revenue for the league. It might not be “fair” to Flagg that he’s denied the chance to pick his employer, but the logic is that the league is healthier if a weaker team’s fortunes are boosted with Flagg and other top prospects. Even when a fan’s team is bad, there is hope that everything will change with the draft. That hope might keep that person a fan of a team and not turn their attention and dollars to some other form of entertainment.

Drafts in the major pro leagues are also legal, even if they’re unabashedly anti-competitive. A draft overtly restrains the labor market by preventing both a player from signing with a preferred employer and getting multiple employers (teams) to bid for him or her. If subject to antitrust scrutiny, a draft would be deeply problematic because it impedes choice and price fixes.

Except it’s not subject to antitrust scrutiny. A league and a players’ association negotiate the draft as a term of employment in a collective bargaining agreement. A draft is thus insulated by the non-statutory labor exemption, which embodies a series of U.S. Supreme Court rulings that instruct when management and labor collectively bargain pay, wages and other employment conditions, those conditions are exempt from antitrust scrutiny. Federal courts have blessed drafts as a result.

That is true for the NBA, which saw its draft challenged in the early 1980s. Leon Wood, a Philadelphia 76ers first round pick out of Cal-State Fullerton who later became an NBA referee, made the case against the draft. But Wood lost because the NBA and players’ association had negotiated the draft. The same legal point applies to rookie wage scales. Even though those scales adversely impact new players, new players are still subject to the conditions negotiated by their union with the league.

Even players who, by virtue of an eligibility rule, are barred from being part of the union have been held subject to unions’ negotiations with leagues. I know this personally, having served as an attorney for Ohio State star running back Maurice Clarett in his antitrust challenge against the NFL and its eligibility rule requiring that players be three years out of high school. 

So Flagg doesn’t have a say on where he’s picked, and that is legal. It might not be a great system,  but it’s arguably the best for the league as a whole.

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Winners, Losers from 2025 NBA Draft Lottery: Nico Harrison and Dallas win big, the West just gets deeper

"Deserve's got nothing to do with it."

Clint Eastwood’s classic line from “Unforgiven” resonates with the many hoops fans angered by what they saw as a karmically unjust 2025 NBA Draft Lottery (that's without even getting to the conspiracy theorists). It wasn't just fans shocked by the way the ping-pong balls bounced, players were caught off guard as well.

Dallas made arguably the worst trade in NBA history, sending out Luka Doncic for pennies on the dollar, fell into the lottery because of it, and were rewarded with the No. 1 pick. The Spurs have the last two Rookies of the Year and were handed the No. 2 pick. Philadelphia had a disaster of a season, decided to tank to try and keep their pick, and was rewarded with No. 3.

Whatever you feel about the outcomes, there are winners and losers from the 2025 NBA Draft Lottery. Let's break it down.

Winner: Nico Harrison

"When we win, I believe the frustration will go away."

Mavericks GM Nico Harrison uttered those words after the Doncic trade, when he was forced to meet with the media and explain the deal. Landing Cooper Flagg and plugging him into the lineup will bring wins, could bring a bright future, and that should help the mood of Mavericks fans.

It felt too obvious just to say "Winner: Dallas Mavericks," although they are — Flagg provides a boost to Anthony Davis/Kyrie Irving era and a bridge to whatever is next — but in the short term Harrison is the big winner.

Winner: Philadelphia 76ers

As losses mounted and injuries piled up (plus throw in disappointing seasons from some players), Philadelphia pivoted their season and decided to tank and try to hold on to its first-round pick. The 76ers needed to stay in the top six to keep their pick (or the rich got richer and it went to the Thunder).

Not only did they keep it, but Philly also jumped up to the No. 3 pick, meaning they can add VJ Edgecomb or Ace Bailey to a young core of Tyrese Maxey and Jared McCain, a bridge to the future no matter what happens with Joel Embiid and Paul George's health.

Losers: Utah Jazz, Washington Wizards

The team that has had the worst record in the NBA for each of the last three seasons has fallen as far as it possibly could, to fifth. For the previous two seasons it was Detroit.

This season, it was Utah. Washington had the second-worst NBA record, and they fell to sixth.

Two teams that needed a little luck to jumpstart their rebuilds were as unlucky as they could be and now need to try and find a diamond in the rough. And be patient, which is not so easy to do.

Winner: San Antonio Spurs (and their trade prospects)

Two years ago, San Antonio won THE lottery and drafted Victor Wembanyama. Last season, the Spurs drafted fourth and took Stephon Castle out of UConn, who went on to win Rookie of the Year.

This year, the Spurs had a 26.2% chance of landing a top-four pick, and lottery luck smiled on them once again, landing the No. 2 pick. They also have the No. 14 pick in this draft.

San Antonio could use that second pick to draft Dylan Harper, the Rutgers guard who has become a clear No. 2 on draft boards, and play him in a rotation with Castle and De'Aaron Fox. That would be a dynamic backcourt.

Or, this pick could be part of a trade to bring in a win-now star and accelerate Wembanyama's timeline. If San Antonio went to Milwaukee and offered the No. 2 pick, Castle, a couple more future picks and some players to make the salaries work (Harrison Barnes and Keldon Johnson), that might be hard for the Bucks to pass up. There are other ways to make that trade, and other teams the Spurs want to talk to.

However, this No. 2 pick gives the Spurs a major trade chip.

Loser: The West (and conference balance)

As if the West wasn’t deep enough — five teams had 50+ wins, and in the playoffs we watched the No. 6 and 7 seeds knock off the No. 2 and 3 seeds — now Dallas brings another franchise cornerstone talent into the conference.

With Flagg, Anthony Davis, Kyrie Irving (once he gets healthy, a torn ACL will sideline him most, if not all of next season), and Klay Thompson, the Mavericks are positioned to make some noise in the West in the coming years, and they have a bridge to the future with Flagg.

If the NBA is ever going to balance out the talent in the conferences, the East needs to win the lottery someday when there is a generational prospect on the board.

Winners, Losers from 2024 NBA Draft Lottery: Nico Harrison and Dallas wins big, the West just gets deeper

"Deserve's got nothing to do with it."

Clint Eastwood’s classic line from “Unforgiven” resonates with the many hoops fans angered by what they saw as a karmically unjust 2025 NBA Draft Lottery (that's without even getting to the conspiracy theorists). It wasn't just fans, players were caught off guard as well.

Dallas made arguably the worst trade in NBA history, sending out Luka Doncic for pennies on the dollar, fell into the lottery because of it, and were rewarded with the No. 1 pick. The Spurs have the last two Rookies of the Year and were handed the No. 2 pick. Philadelphia had a disaster of a season, decided to tank to try and keep their pick, and was rewarded with No. 3.

Whatever you feel about the outcomes, there are winners and losers from the 2025 NBA Draft Lottery. Let's break it down.

Winner: Nico Harrison

"When we win, I believe the frustration will go away."

Mavericks GM Nico Harrison uttered those words after the Doncic trade, when he was forced to meet with the media and explain the deal. Landing Cooper Flagg and plugging him into the lineup will bring wins and will help the mood of Mavericks fans.

It felt too obvious just to say "Winner: Dallas Mavericks," although they are — Flagg provides a boost to Anthony Davis/Kyrie Irving era and a bridge to whatever is next — but in the short term Harrison is the big winner.

Winner: Philadelphia 76ers

As injuries — and disappointing seasons from some players — piled up, Philadelphia pivoted its season and decided to tank and try to hold on to its first-round pick. The 76ers needed to stay in the top six to keep their pick (or the rich got richer and it went to the Thunder).

Not only did they keep it, but Philly also jumped up to the No. 3 pick, meaning they can add VJ Edgecomb or Ace Bailey to a young core of Tyrese Maxey and Jared McCain, a bridge to the future no matter what happens with Joel Embiid and Paul George's health.

Losers: Utah Jazz, Washington Wizards

The team that has had the worst record in the NBA for each of the last three seasons has fallen as far as it possibly could, to fifth. For the previous two seasons it was Detroit.

This season, it was Utah. Washington had the second-worst NBA record, they fell to sixth.

Two teams that needed a little luck to jumpstart their rebuilds were as unlucky as they could be and now need to try and find a diamond in the rough.

Winner: San Antonio Spurs (and their trade prospects)

Two years ago, San Antonio won THE lottery and drafted Victor Wembanyama. Last season, the Spurs drafted fourth and took Stephon Castle out of UConn, who went on to win Rookie of the Year.

This year, the Spurs had a 26.2% chance of landing a top-four pick, and lottery luck smiled on them once again, landing the No. 2 pick. They also have the No. 14 pick in this draft.

San Antonio could use that second pick to draft Dylan Harper, the Rutgers guard who has become a clear No. 2 on draft boards, and play him in a rotation with Castle and De'Aaron Fox. That would be a dynamic backcourt.

Or, this pick could be part of a trade to bring in a win-now star and accelerate Wembanyama's timeline. If San Antonio went to Milwaukee and offered the No. 2 pick, Castle, a couple more future picks and some players to make the salaries work (Harrison Barnes and Keldon Johnson), that might be hard for the Bucks to pass up. There are other ways to make that trade, and other teams the Spurs want to talk to.

However, this No. 2 pick gives the Spurs a major trade chip.

Mets continue to execute at high level after another come-from-behind win

Monday's win against the Pittsburgh Pirates was about as complete of a team-win as the Mets could have asked for.

It had everything -- defense, pitching, baserunning, coaching, all resulting in Pete Alonso's walk-off sacrifice fly to improve the team's home record to 16-4 this season. Four of those wins have come in walk-off fashion.

Let's start with the defense.

In the eighth inning, with New York having just taken a 3-2 lead, Brandon Nimmo made a leaping catch at the wall in left field to rob Joey Bart of a game-tying home run against Dedniel Nuñez. It was Nimmo's second home-run robbing catch of the season as the outfielder has made a habit of thievery during his Mets career, especially at Citi Field.

"I knew that if I could get a really good jump on it I would have a great shot of catching it," Nimmo said. "I think that relative comfort with your home field, it helps you to be able to go and make those plays."

For how impressive Nimmo's catch was, it wasn't the only great defensive play New York made in the field. Brett Baty made a beautiful snag to his left at third base and threw the runner out at first to keep a run from scoring in the fifth and the Mets turned a pretty double play in the top of the ninth to end the inning and keep things tied.

What about pitching?

On a night facing off against one of the game's best young pitchers in Paul Skenes, David Peterson matched him and went six terrific innings to keep New York in the game as the two starters were locked in a pitcher's duel.

"I think it’s always fun when you go up against someone’s best and you get into a pitcher’s duel," Peterson said. "It’s fun when you’re just trading blows like that and the offenses are grinding...

"In games like that it’s kind of a matter of us as the pitching staff holding it together where it is and giving the offense the opportunity to finally break through and be able to score enough runs to win the game."

Speaking of the offense, that brings us to baserunning.

Down 2-1 entering the bottom of the seventh inning, the Mets got to work with the lower part of the lineup proving crucial. Pinch-hitter Tyrone Taylor got on thanks to a hit-by-pitch and then stole second base. Luisangel Acuña followed with an infield hit, outhustling the pitcher to the first base bag on a grounder to the first baseman, to put runners on the corners.

After Taylor scored to tie the game on a groundout, Acuña also came around after the ball deflected off the Pirates' third baseman's glove on a single. Unaware at first of how far the ball had trickled away, Acuña was sent home by third base coach Mike Sarbaugh who read it all the way. Coaching? Check.

"I’m always trying to impact the game in my defense, in my baserunning and anything I can do," Acuña said through an interpreter.

"His speed is electric," added Alonso, whose single deflected off Ke'Bryan Hayes' glove. "He causes a ton of havoc on the base paths. He’s a burner and having that skillset is huge for us. Any time he’s on base he causes so much pressure on the defense."

Even when things didn't go as planned for New York, like Huascar Brazoban blowing the save opportunity in the ninth, the team still found a way to rebound almost immediately.

Francisco Lindor, after his error in the top half of the ninth led to the tying run to score, reached thanks to an error by the Pirates. But given just a little bit of leeway, the Mets have made teams pay this season which is what happened when Juan Soto singled to put runners on first and third before Alonso's sacrifice fly won it.

"We don’t give up. We’re a scrappy bunch," Alonso said. "Yeah we got guys who can drive the ball out of the yard, we got guys who can put up some good numbers offensively and hit the ball a long way and stuff like that, but at the end of the day our identity is we’re just a scrappy team. We fight til the last out and that’s just who we are."

"I think we did a lot of good things today," Mendoza added. "... As a whole, yes we’re a good team but we’re a good team not just because we’ve got good players, we’re going out there and we’re executing."

Kings Closing in on Ken Holland as New GM per Elliotte Friedman

© Jim Rassol-Imagn Images

Sportnet's Elliotte Friedman, who has built a 30-year career in hockey on getting things right, is indicating that the Los Angeles Kings are very close to naming Ken Holland as their new general manager. 

After team president Luc Robitaille announced on May 6th that he and former GM Rob Blake had mutually agreed to go in a different direction, many initially speculated that a change would come from within. Ex-Montreal GM and Kings senior advisor Marc Bergevin was thought to have an inside track but after Robitaille mentioned the success that the Detroit Red Wings had enjoyed over the years during his media availability, speculation began to turn toward Ken Holland, architect of Detroit's three Stanley Cup wins between 1998 and 2008.

Under Holland, the Red Wings put together a 25-year postseason streak, behind only Chicago (28) and Boston (29) and became a model franchise for over two decades. During his tenure at the helm in the Motor City, the Red Wings won the President's Trophy four times and were a Cup contender virtually every season. 

Holland, who was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2020, left Detroit in 2019 to take over GM duties in Edmonton, where several number one overall picks in succession had failed to move the needle for the Oilers. Holland added key pieces like Mattias Ekholm, Zach Hyman, and Evander Kane to the dynamic duo of Connor McDavid and Leon Draisaitl, culminating in a Western Conference Finals appearance in 2022 and a Stanley Cup Finals appearance in 2024. Failing into a 3-0 hole against the Florida Panthers, the Oilers picked themselves off the deck to force a Game 7, but couldn't come all the way back, losing 2-1 in the last game of the season. 

The desire for the Kings to add someone with Holland's pedigree is understandable. If Robitaille truly believes that the Kings are just a few tweaks away from winning it all, Holland could be just the guy to make the necessary moves to bring a third Cup to Los Angeles. For a franchise whose longest playoff streak is just nine seasons and has never won the President's Trophy, let alone four of them, bringing in an executive of Holland's caliber seems, at least on paper, to be a big upgrade. 

Although they have been bounced in the first round for the last four seasons, Holland will inherit a pretty solid team. The Kings set a franchise record with 31 wins on home ice last year and tied a regular season best with 105 points. They even led the Oilers 2-0 in the first round series this year and outplayed the Oilers for much of Games 3 and 4 before inexplicably falling apart. 

Could Holland's familiarity with the nemesis Edmonton Oilers be a factor in the Kings' desire to hand him the keys? Any nugget of insider information that could possibly help LA get the Edmonton monkey off their back would surely be welcome but that alone probably doesn't get Holland the job. Besides, after four straight playoff series, the Kings already know pretty much everything there is to know about the Oilers. 

Except how to beat them.

Knicks praise ‘best fans in the world’ for rocking Game 4 environment at MSG

Homecourt advantage is huge in the playoffs. 

The Knicks weren’t able to take advantage of it during Game 3 -- the MSG crowd was quickly taken out of the equation as they fell behind early in a blowout loss in what was their first home matchup of the second round. 

But Tuesday was a different story -- the Knicks again found themselves trailing by double digits early in the second half, but this time they were able to stage another miraculous comeback sparked by the rocking MSG crowd.

“It was crazy,” big man Mitchell Robinson said. “I think it was way crazier than the other playoff games we’ve been in here before -- this one was definitely No. 1.”

New York was trailing by as many as 13 points early in the third quarter, but another late barrage from Jalen Brunson pushed them back in front for the first time since late in the first quarter. 

Brunson made clutch bucket after clutch bucket down the stretch. But he wasn’t alone in the late-game heroics as Mikal Bridges and OG Anunoby were also tremendous and it took a complete team-effort to pull out the win -- including the sixth man. 

It was just the second home victory for the Knicks this postseason but it was certainly a big one, as it helped them establish a commanding series lead. 

“We always say we have the best fans in the world,” head coach Tom Thibodeau said.

“They’ve been special all year,” Karl-Anthony Towns added. “When you have the fans we have and you have the city that supports you the way our city does, anything is possible. It’s because of them we have such a joy in our hearts coming to work everyday. Shoutout to them for sticking with us through the ebbs and flows of the season.”

The Knicks will now go back on the road to TD Garden looking to close out the series.

Knicks know commanding lead over Celtics ‘doesn’t mean anything’ heading into Game 5

The Knicks have been resilient all season long so it was obvious they weren’t going to just roll over after being punched in the mouth by the Celtics in a Game 3 blowout loss on their own court. 

However, Game 4 did start out on a similar note -- as was the case just a few days ago, Boston simply couldn’t miss from the beginning and the Knicks got off to an extremely slow start on the offensive end. 

Led by the red-hot shooting of Jayson Tatum and Derrick White, the Celtics opened a double-digit advantage less than five minutes into the game. 

"Early on there was a lot of miscommunication in transition," Mikal Bridges said. "White was getting a lot of open looks -- having the early struggles offensively, we can't let that happen on the other end."

New York would answer back time and time again, but they simply could not put together multiple stops and a sustained run, and again found themselves trailing by as many as 13 points early in the second half.

Then, late in the third, things changed -- the Knicks had the MSG crowd rocking as they captured all of the momentum and opened their first lead since the first quarter heading into the final frame. 

As has been the case all season long, Jalen Brunson shined the most during clutch time, going bucket for bucket with Tatum before the Celtics’ superstar power forward left with a non-contact lower-body injury. 

Bridges and OG Anunoby were tremendous defensively and made some huge baskets of their own down the stretch -- helping the Knicks hold on for a massive 121-113 victory.

“They hit us early, but I love the way we fought back,” head coach Tom Thibodeau said. “We showed a lot of toughness and more discipline in the second half and then timely play with everyone working together on both ends of the floor. It starts with the defense -- you have a lot of toughness and you have to do it together.”

So now, New York finds itself heading back on the road to TD Garden just one win away from eliminating the defending champs and advancing to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time since 2000.  

Only 13 teams have been able to pull off that comeback in NBA history -- no one has done it since Denver did so twice back in 2020 -- and the Celtics may have to do so without Tatum pending the results of his MRI.

Still, the Knicks know the job is far from complete. 

"The toughest game is the one to close out someone's season," Karl-Anthony Towns said.

"We’ve got to go into this next game with a sense of desperation," Josh Hart added. "We need a sense of urgency from the jump. We have to stop giving up leads in the first quarter and doing those kind of things -- we just have to keep getting better.”

Celtics vs. Knicks Game 4: Brunson sparks Knicks comeback to lead series 3-1, Tatum leaves with leg injury

2025 NBA Playoffs - Boston Celtics v New York Knicks - Game Four

NEW YORK, NY - MAY 12: Jalen Brunson #11 of the New York Knicks drives to the basket during the game against the Boston Celtics during Round 2 Game 4 of the 2025 NBA Playoffs on May 12, 2025 at Madison Square Garden in New York City, New York. 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 Nathaniel S. Butler/NBAE via Getty Images)

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Give the New York Knicks their due. On a night they needed a win, they withstood hot shooting early from Boston, came back from 14 down in the third quarter, taking over the second half of that frame, and once again executed better down the stretch behind 39 points from Jalen Brunson.

New York won 121-113 and now has a commanding 3-1 series lead — and that's not the biggest story out of this game.

Late in the fourth quarter, Celtics star Jayson Tatum — who had a game-high 42 and had kept Boston's offense going at points — took a hard step to go after a loose ball then went to the ground with a non-contact injury, grabbing his ankle.

Tatum was clearly in severe pain, and later was shown in tears while being wheeled down the tunnel in the back of Madison Square Garden. Tomorrow, Tatum will get an MRI, Coach Joe Mazzulla said, but that looked a lot like a torn Achilles. It's an injury that would impact this series and, more importantly, most or all of next season for Boston.

"The loss is the loss. More importantly, it's Jayson I'm worried about," Al Horford said.

That emotion and genuine concern for Tatum does not take away how well the Knicks played in this game, particularly Jalen Brunson.

Game 4 started a lot like Game 3 — Boston was red hot. In the first quarter, the Knicks were 9-of-14 from 3 and 4-of-5 inside the arc. The hot shooting continued as Boston shot 50% from from 3 in the first half (12-of-24) and that led to a ridiculous 70.5 true shooting percentage in the first 24 minutes.

At the same time, it felt hard to be optimistic about the Knicks after the first half, they were hitting tough shots but not creating great advantages. The only reason to be hopeful was that the Knicks had been here before.

That hope was well founded. The Knicks closed the third quarter on a 12-2 run to take the lead. The first half of the fourth quarter remained close, but Thibodeau leaned into Miles McBride and Mitchell Robinson for what proved to be a critical stretch late, one where that duo and Mikal Bridges helped spark an 11-0 New York run that gave them a comfortable lead.

In addition to Brunson's 39, New York got 23 each from Bridges and Karl-Anthony Towns and 20 from OG Anunoby.

While Jalen Brown finished with 20 points and seven rebounds, he had a rough game that included five fouls and four turnovers. Derrick White had 23 for Boston.

The Celtics' backs are against the wall, and it is doubtful Tatum plays in Game 5, which puts more on the shoulders of Brown, who is playing through his own injuries and has not looked like the Finals MVP of a season ago. If he doesn't look like that on Wednesday, Boston's season will be over a lot earlier than expected.

Celtics’ Jayson Tatum undergoes season-ending surgery on torn right Achilles

The Celtics were said to be expecting the worst, and, unfortunately, that did turn out to be the case for superstar Jayson Tatum, who underwent season-ending surgery on Tuesday to repair a ruptured right Achilles tendon.

There is no timetable for Tatum's return, per the Celtics, but he is expected to make a full recovery.

With just minutes remaining in the final frame of Monday night's Game 4 at Madison Square Garden, the Knicks had recaptured all of the momentum and were on the verge of closing out the victory on their home court to establish a commanding 3-1 series lead. 

Coming out of a timeout, Tatum went down with a non-contact lower-body injury while diving for a loose ball in the open court. 

As OG Anunoby broke free for a huge fastbreak slam, Tatum remained down in the backcourt and was rolling around in an immense amount of pain before calling the Celtics’ final timeout on his own.

The All-Star forward was very emotional as he was immediately helped to the locker room by trainers.

He wouldn't return over the final few minutes, which saw the Knicks completely take things over to close out yet another come-from-behind victory.

Celtics head coach Joe Mazzulla described the injury as "definitely tough to watch" after the game.

Prior to the injury, Tatum was putting together a tremendous showing -- leading all scorers with 42 points on 16-of-28 shooting from the field and 7-of-16 from behind the arc.

"I never want to see a player get hurt," Knicks head coach Tom Thibodeau said. "He's been a great player and he's a great guy too, so I hope it's not a serious injury."

The Knicks have a chance to close out the series on Wednesday, with Game 5 in Boston set to tip off at 7:00 p.m.

Pete Alonso's walk-off sacrifice fly gives Mets 4-3 win over Pirates

The Mets won in walk-off fashion on Monday night, beating the Pittsburgh Pirates by a score of 4-3 thanks to Pete Alonso's sacrifice fly.

Here are the takeaways...

-New York got a taste of last year's NL Rookie of the Year in Paul Skenes, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2023 MLB Draft who entered the contest with a 2.77 ERA, and the 22-year-old lived up to the billing.

Even with Skenes not at his best, particularly early in the game, the right-hander was still able to hold the Mets to just one run over six innings, despite dealing with traffic on the bases in five of those innings. In fact, New York got the leadoff man on three times in the first four innings but couldn't do more damage against the youngster.

-The Mets broke through in the fourth inning after Brandon Nimmo led off with a screaming double off the wall in right-center before trading places with Jeff McNeil who hit his first double of the season down the right field line to tie the game at 1-1.

-Coming into the game, David Peterson was likely going to need to match Skenes for New York to have a chance and the left-hander did just that.

After a solo homer by Isiah Kiner-Falefa in the second inning, Peterson retired the next 10 hitters in a row before Jared Triolo ended that streak with a double in the fifth. A two-out single would put runners on the corners, but Peterson struck out Bryan Reynolds to end the inning and let out a burst of emotion heading off the mound as the game remained tied.

-A pitcher's duel for most of the night, things got hairy once the bullpens were deployed. It started in the top of the seventh inning afterPeterson began the frame by walking the only batter he faced following a 10-pitch at-bat. Manager Carlos Mendoza turned to Jose Buttó after that, but he wasn't able to strand the runner.

With a runner at second following a stolen base, Buttó was playing close attention and after throwing over twice he disengaged a third time without getting the baserunner who was then awarded third base. After a walk, Reynolds hit into a force out that scored a run that wouldn't have had the runner stayed at second base.

-The Mets returned the favor in the bottom half of the inning, scoring the tying and go-ahead run thanks to three close plays that all went their way. First, after pinch-hitter Tyrone Taylor was hit by a pitch, he immediately stole second by getting his hand on the base just before the tag. Luisangel Acuña followed with an infield hit, beating the pitcher to first base by a hair, to put runners on the corners.

A Juan Soto groundout tied the game before Pete Alonso singled on a ball that was deflected by third baseman Ke'Bryan Hayes. With Acuña running, the speedster kept going after the deflection and slid into home plate before the catcher was able to slap the tag which gave New York its first lead of the night.

-Dedniel Nuñez pitched the eighth inning and was saved by Nimmo who robbed Joey Bart of a home run at the left field wall to start the frame. Nuñez ended up pitching a 1-2-3 inning in his third appearance since returning from the IL.

-Without Edwin Diaz, Mendoza turned to Huascar Brazoban for the final three outs, but the right-hander allowed a run on two hits and an error by Francisco Lindor. With runners on the corners, the Mets turned an inning-ending double play to keep the game tied.

-Right after making a costly error in the top half, Lindor reached base in the bottom half thanks to an error by Kiner-Falefa, Pittsburgh's shortstop. That allowed New York's offense to get to work with Soto hitting a single to put runners at the corners for Alonso who hit a sacrifice fly to give the Mets their fourth walk-off win of the season.

Game MVP: Luisangel Acuña

Even with just a 1-for-4 night, Acuña's speed changed the game and allowed the Mets to come back the first time before Alonso won it for them in the ninth.

Highlights

What's next

The Mets and Pirates continue their three-game series on Tuesday night with first pitch scheduled for 7:10 p.m. on SNY.

RHP Kodai Senga (4-2, 1.16 ERA) faces off against RHP Mitch Keller (1-4, 4.40 ERA).

Knicks use another second-half comeback to pull out gutsy 121-113 Game 4 win over Celtics

The Knicks beat the Boston Celtics, 121-113, in Game 4 of their second round matchup on Monday night.

New York now has a 3-1 series advantage over the defending champs.

Here are some takeaways...

- Tom Thibodeau said pregame that the Knicks had discussions about starting Mitchell Robinson to keep the Celtics from fouling him while in the bonus, but they ultimately decided to stick with the usual starters.

- The opening few minutes of this one were a bit of a carbon copy from Game 3. New York got off to an extremely slow start offensively and Boston was able to open an early advantage behind some hot shooting -- headlined by Derrick White knocking down his first four triples.

- The Knicks finally found the scorers touch after an early Thibodeau timeout -- getting back into the game behind an 11-0 run started with five straight points from Mikal Bridges -- but three threes from Jayson Tatum in the quarter's closing minutes helped the Celtics re-establish a double-digit advantage.

Boston opened things up knocking down 9-of-14 threes -- seven of which were Tatum and White.

- The Knicks were dominating the offensive glass in the first half, led by Robinson who saw extended minutes with Karl-Anthony Towns in foul trouble. The big man reeled in five boards but was forced to the bench late in the quarter with Boston once again turning to the 'Hack-A-Mitch' strategy.

- The second quarter was mainly back-and-forth, but the Celtics' hot shooting continued and they were able to carry an 11-point advantage into the break. As a team, they shot an even 50 percent from behind the arc and the trio of Tatum, White, and Jaylen Brown combined to produce 49 of their 62 points.

- The Celtics were able to open their largest lead of the game coming out of the locker room, but once again the Knicks responded right back. Huge buckets from Towns and Jalen Brunson helped New York get back within striking distance.

- Brunson was terrific, going blow for blow with Tatum in the third. An OG Anunoby wide open three and Josh Hart driving lay-in with seconds remaining in the quarter gave New York their first lead since the first heading into the final frame.

- The teams went back and forth trading baskets early in the fourth before back-to-back buckets from Brunson and Bridges helped the Knicks open their largest lead of the series. Coming out of a Celtics timeout, Tatum went down with a non-contact injury going after an open ball and needed to be helped back to the locker room.

On the play, Anunoby took off and put home an exclamation point slam to put this one away for good. Prior to the injury, Tatum was terrific for the Celtics -- putting up a game-high 42 points on 16-of-28 shooting.

- As always, Brunson led the way for the Knicks down the stretch -- finishing with 39 points on 14-of-24 shooting. Towns put together a 21 point and 11 rebound double-double, Bridges had 23 points, Anunoby had 20 points and Hart scored just six but brought in nine boards. Robinson reeled in seven rebounds off the bench.

Game MVP: Jalen Brunson

As was the case all season long, Brunson took over for the Knicks when they needed it the most.

Highlights

Whats next

The Knicks will look to close the series out on Wednesday at 7:00 p.m. in Boston.

The Hockey News Playoff Frenzy Live: Join The Chat As Hurricanes Push Capitals To Brink Of Elimination

Alex Ovechkin and Brent Burns (James Guillory-Imagn Images)

Welcome to 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 and read your opinions.

On tonight's show, Emma Lingan, Mike Augello and Kelsey Surmacz react to the Carolina Hurricanes beating the Washington Capitals to take a 3-1 lead in their second-round series.

Hurricanes vs. Capitals Game 4 - Playoff Frenzy | The Hockey NewsHurricanes vs. Capitals Game 4 - Playoff Frenzy | The Hockey NewsJoin in to Playoff Frenzy Live presented by The Hockey News, where we break down all of the biggest moments from each night of the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

They also take a look at the Vegas Golden Knights facing the Edmonton Oilers in Game 4 and other news around the league.

Share your thoughts in the comments, and the hosts may discuss your message during the stream.

Check out the show right now.