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Starting Pitcher News: Chris Sale's struggles, Andrew Abbott flashes some changes

It's Wednesday, which means it's time for us to visit the bump on Hump Day and discuss starting pitcher news. Each week in this article, I'll be taking a deeper look at a few trending/surging starting pitchers to see what, if anything, is changing and whether or not we should be investing in this hot stretch.

The article will be similar to the series I ran for a few years called Mixing It Up (previously Pitchers With New Pitches and Should We Care?), where I broke down new pitches to see if there were truly meaningful additions that changed a pitcher's outlook. Only now, I won't just look at new pitches, I can also cover velocity bumps, new usage patterns, or new roles. However, the premise will remain the same: trying to see if the recent results are connected to any meaningful changes that make them worth buying into or if they're just mirages.

Each week, I'll try to cover change for at least four starters and give my clear take on whether I would add them, trade for them, or invest fully in their success. Hopefully you'll find it useful, so let's get started.

Most of the charts you see below are courtesy of Kyle Bland over at Pitcher List. He created a great spring training app (which he's now carried over into the regular season) that tracks changes in velocity, usage, and pitch movement. It also has a great strike zone plot feature, which allows you to see how the whole arsenal plays together.

Chris Sale - Atlanta Braves (Arm Slot Change, Four-Seam Fastball Location)

Last year was a resurgent season for Chris Sale, who pitched more innings than he had in any season since 2017 and won the NL Cy Young Award with a sparkling 2.38 ERA, 1.01 WHIP, and 32% strikeout rate. While nobody expected him to duplicate that feat this year, the first five starts of the season from the 36-year-old have been far more troublesome than anybody could have imagined.

Though five starts, Sale has allowed 17 runs (16 earned) on 31 hits in 23.1 innings while striking out 32 and walking seven. The strikeout rate is solid, and his overall velocity remains the same, but a 6.17 ERA and 1.63 WHIP are alarmingly high for the veteran. So what could be the root of the problem? Thanks to Alex Chamberlain's Pitch Leaderboard, I spotted something that could explain a bit of these issues.

Chris Sale CHart

Alex Chamberlain Pitch Leaderboard

As you can see from the chart above, Sale has dropped his arm angle by four degrees. The scale above uses zero degrees to signify a pitcher who releases from a pure side-arm angle, perfectly parallel to the ground. The fact that Sale has fallen from 11 degrees to seven degrees is a pretty stark difference when you're already that close to side-arm. It could be just a comfort issue for Sale, who might feel better pitching from a lower arm slot; however, pitchers can sometimes lower their arm slot to compensate for fatigue or pain in their normal delivery. We have no evidence that this is the case for Sale, but given his injury history, it's hard to prevent the thought from popping into your head.

The more immediate issue is what the lower arm slot has done to the movement profile on Sale's pitches. Through five starts, Sale has the lowest grades he's ever gotten on pitch models. His slider has lost almost an inch of horizontal movement and 2.5 inches of drop, while his four-seamer has lost a little bit of Induced Vertical Break (iVB). However, the bigger issue has been his fastball locations.

Sale has a relatively flat fastball with a 1.2 Height Adjusted Vertical Approach Angle. That means, the vertical approach angle, after controlling for the release point of the pitch, fights the drop of gravity more than the average fastball. Those types of fastballs work better at the top of the strike zone since they appear to "rise" rather than drop as they approach the plate. Last season, Sale threw his four-seam fastball up in the zone 59% of the time overall and 62% of the time to righties. This season, he has thrown it up in the zone just 51% of the time overall and 53% of the time to righties. While that may not seem like a major issue, failing to get the fastball up in the zone has led to him also throwing 9.3% of his fastballs middle-middle, which is worse than the league average and up for Sale from last year.

It wouldn't be a stretch to think that lowering his arm angle has made it harder for Sale to elevate his fastball as much as he did last year. He's fastballs have landed middle far too often this year, and that has led to a staggering 72.7% Ideal Contact Rate (ICR), which is a Pitcher List stat that measures barrels and solid contact and hard groundballs allowed. That means 73% of Sale's four-seam fastballs have ended in ideal contact for a hitter, which is why the pitch has allowed a .536 average, 13.6% barrel rate, and .630 wOBA. The pitch also has just a 14% PutAway Rate this season, down from 22% last season, which means he's missing far fewer bats in two-strike counts.

Since the cause of the arm angle change is unclear, it's hard to see how permanent it is. All we know is that Sale seems healthy from a velocity standpoint but is struggling from a pitch shape standpoint, and his fastball has taken the brunt of that. If he can fix the locations on the four-seam fastball, we could look at this as a small five-game blip, but there are some reasons to be mildly concerned right now.

Landen Roupp - San Francisco Giants (New Cutter, Different Change-up)

Roup jumped onto my radar last year when Eno Sarris was gushing about him after a few late-season starts with the Giants. Up until that point, I had not been aware that Roupp was posting 39% strikeout rates in the minors or a 35% strikeout rate in a full minor league season in 2022. I knew that he had battled some injuries and was sometimes used in the bullpen, but when the Giants announced they were going to let Roupp try to earn a starting rotation spot, I was intrigued. Then I became even more intrigued when he showed up to spring training with a few changes to his arsenal.

The most obvious change for Roupp has been the introduction of a cutter. He's only thrown the pitch 6.4% of the time overall this season, but he uses it 14% of the time against lefties and throws it 83% of the time early in counts as his primary fastball to them. He does a good job of locating the pitch up and in and pounds the zone with it at a 56% zone rate and 72% strike rate to lefties.

He does use the sinker to lefties as well, and he locates that up in the zone often, so the two fastball variations play well off of one another, but using the cutter up and in also sets up his changeup, which he throws 19.4% of the time to lefties and keeps down in the zone 96% of the time. He has also added more movement overall on the changeup, so he's been able to post a solid 37.5% chase rate on the pitch to lefties this year.

You can also see in the graphic below how well his changeup (green dots) tunnels with his sinker (orange dots) with similar release points and attack angles, but with a six mph velocity gap and different movement profiles.

Landen Roupp

Pitcher List

The tunneling effect of the changeup and sinker is also part of the reason Roupp has upped his changeup usage against righties to 10%, and the pitch has posted a 19% SwStr% to them so far.

You can also see that Roupp has a very East-West movement profile with the sinker and changeup running arm-side, and then his big curveball (blue) featuring tons of gloveside movement. Since Roupp has a lower release point, his curve has a lot of sweep, with about 20 inches of horizontal movement and 10 inches of vertical drop that make it almost like an old school slurve. He uses the pitch confidently to both righties and lefties, and while it misses more bats to righties, it's an above-average swinging strike rate to both, and he does an impressive job of keeping it low in the zone.

All of this means that Roupp now has three pitches that he can throw to hitters of both handedness, including a fastball that he can command for strikes to both, and a true go-to pitch in his curve. He's had all this success so far this season while sporting a .358 BABIP, and while there may be some ups and downs in his first full season in an MLB rotation, I expect Roupp to be somebody you want to hold on your roster all season.

Walker Buehler - Boston Red Sox (Four-Seam Shape, Sweeper Usage, Changeup shape)

It has not been a great start to his Red Sox career for Buehler, who has a 4.23 ERA, 1.19 WHIP, and just a 22.6% strikeout rate in his first five starts. However, there has been some mild cause for optimism that goes beyond, "He faced the White Sox in his last start."

When I ranked Buehler as SP51 in my pre-season starting pitcher rankings, part of my reasoning was that "Boston hates to throw four-seam fastballs, which is great because that pitch has become a mediocre one for Buehler. The Red Sox could easily lean into his cutter and sinker more as early fastballs and then dial up his sweeper usage, and we could be looking at another strong season for Buehler."

In his last two starts, we started to see that attack plan come into focus a little, but in particular in his last start against the White Sox.

Walker Buehler

Pitcher List

As you can see from Kyle Bland's Live Pitching Stats above, Buehler has not backed off the four-seam fastball. He used it 30% of the time against the White Sox and 27% of the time overall on the season, just a slight decrease from last year. He is throwing it early in the count slightly less than last year, but the two changes that stand out are that he's throwing the pitch inside to righties way more, and the vertical movement seems to be coming back.

Last year, Buehler threw the four-seam inside to righties 14% of the time. That has jumped to 39% this year. Jamming hitters inside could be a big reason why the batting average and ICR allowed to righties have fallen considerably. He has also added both vertical and horizontal movement to his four-seam fastball, which has tweaked the vertical approach angle enough to make this pitch succeed up in the zone more than it did last year.

However, the fastball inside to righties has also freed up the outside part of the plate for Buehler's sweeper, which was been a big usage change for him this year. As you can see above, he used the sweeper 15% of the time against the White Sox and has used it 14% of the time on the season, which is up from just 4% last year. The pitch also has 2.5 more inches of horizontal movement and now comes in with over 18 inches of horizontal break and very little vertical break. It has graded out as his best pitch so far and has a staggering 28.3% SwStr% to righties. It also has a 70% strike rate on the year, and has been a real difference-maker for him.

One of the last changes I wanted to highlight was with Buehler's changeup. He's nearly doubled his usage of the pitch to lefties in 2025 and has produced far better swinging strike rates and ICR marks despite showing less command of the pitch. Part of the reason the command has gotten worse is that the movement profile on the pitch has changed drastically, with less drop by over three inches more arm-side run. He's also using the pitch far more in two-strike counts, and it has gotten plenty of swings and misses out of the zone and has a well-above-average PutAway Rate.

Yes, his fastball velocity has been down a bit, and the new tweaks to his pitch shapes have led to inconsistent command early on, but it's beginning to get easier to see the Red Sox's plan for Buehler right now. He has a primary four-pitch mix to righties with both his four-seam fastball and a sinker that he can throw inside. He then uses the cutter and sweeper away from swinging strikes. Against lefties, he'll use all three fastball variations and then use both the curveball and changeup to try and miss bats. That's a deep pitch mix with varied shapes and attack locations, and can certainly lead to a run of success as he starts getting more comfortable with it.

Andrew Abbott - Cincinnati Reds (New Cutter, Arm Slot Change, New Changeup Shape)

I will admit to never being a huge believer in Andrew Abbott from a fantasy standpoint, but his 3.69 career ERA in 258.1 MLB innings has maybe proven that he's a solid big league starter. However, his 16 strikeouts in 11 innings in his first two starts gave me reason to dig in and see if anything had changed this year that was worth me modifying how I think about Andrew Abbott.

The first change was that he appeared to add a cutter this off-season. As a lefty whose four-seam fastball had a below-average swinging strike rate and league-average ICR against right-handers last year, that makes some sense. However, so far, he's only thrown five of them, and the vast majority have been down and in to righties. I'm not sure that's what he wants to do, and the pitch doesn't seem to have lots of break in on the hands, so we've seen a new pitch, but I'm not sure it's anything that actually moves the needle. Abbott also has a new cutter, which he’s thrown 5 times, all in the first or second pitch of an at-bat to righties. Usage is still pretty low (~5%). He’s also hammering down-and-away from righties, as opposed to elevating away like he did last season (see below).

However, one of the things that may move the needle is a new movement profile on his changeup. As you can see from Kyle Bland's pitch chart below, the changeup has over three inches more vertical drop and slightly more arm-side run. He's also almost doubled the usage of the pitch against righties up to 32% this year from 19.4% last year. His SwStr% has jumped to 23.3% on it from 12.5% last year, and that would be huge for him since he doesn't want to rely much on his sweeper to righties, and both his four-seam and curve didn't miss many bats against righties last season.

Abbott can now use the four-seam, curve, and change to righties and eventually mix in the cutter more often, while going four-seam, curve, sweeper to lefties.

Andrew Abbott

Pitcher List

The other change I saw this season was that Abbott has added almost two inches of vertical break to his four-seam fastball while getting rid of some of the arm-side run. I think a lot of that has to do with the fact that his arm angle seems to be raised almost four degrees. That has changed the shape of the pitch and gotten him a little more swing-and-miss, but the fastball velocity is also down to 91.2 mph after being 92.8 mph last year. I don't love that. I also don't love that he's using the fastball low in the zone far more often than he did last year.

At the end of the day, I like the idea of the cutter, and I love the new movement profile on the changeup, but I'm not sure I like the new four-seam fastball if the arm angle is the cause of the velocity dip. When you add that to the fact that he pitches in one of the best parks in baseball for offense, I still think Abbott is more of a streaming option for me until I can see a larger sample size with this new approach and arm slot.

Eduardo Rodriguez - Arizona Diamondbacks (Cutter Shape, Slider Shape, Changeup Command)

Early on in the season, it's easy to get caught up in trying to find the "new breakout star" or the pitcher who has changed their arsenal the most and could be in for a breakout. I understand why. I do it too, so I don't knock it. However, there can also be some value in looking for a veteran pitcher who is making subtle changes to potentially unlock the best version of themselves. The current SIERA leaderboard is littered with names like that: Chris Bassitt, Logan Webb, Nathan Eovaldi, and Eduardo Rodriguez.

Rodriguez has always intrigued me because he seems to have a season every other year where he flashes an intriguing skill set. In 2018, with Boston, we saw that 3.82 ERA and improved command. In 2021, we saw the strikeout rate jump up to 27%. In 2023, we saw a (luck-fueled) 3.30 ERA. That whole time, Rodriguez has been a solid but unspectacular pitcher who seems to vacillate between being better than his poor results and not being quite as good as his strong results.

Well, through four starts in 2025, Rodriguez is top-15 in SIERA, K-BB%, strikeout rate, and xFIP. It's a small sample size, but it made me think it might be worth digging into to see if anything is different.

For starters, I noticed that, like Andrew Abbott, Rodriguez has raised his arm angle a bit, which has led to more vertical movement across his arsenal but less horizontal movement. The vertical attack angle on the arsenal overall is up, and some of the pitch models like it, with Pitcher List giving Rodriguez the highest PLV grade he's had since 2021.

E-Rod

Alex Chamberlain Pitch Leaderboard

The biggest change I see is with his cutter. It now has 1.5 inches more vertical movement, which means it's dropping less than it did last year as it approached the plate. He's throwing it up 10% more and inside to righties 6% more to take advantage of that added "rise". It also seems like keeping it up in the zone is helping his swing-and-miss because he's elevating it out of the strike zone with two strikes, and his two-strike chase rate has jumped from 9% to 20% this year. Additionally, the PutAway Rate on the cutter is 40% to righties, which means it has been really effective as a strikeout pitch for him. Overall, the cutter has posted a SwStr% of 14% and an ICR of 37.5% after posting just a 6% and 56.3% mark respectively last year. Those are intriguing changes, but may just be small sample size noise.

However, we have also seen some minor changes in his slider as well. The pitch is about 1 mph harder with 1.5 inches more vertical drop and 1.5 inches more horizontal break this season. It's another pitch he's using in the zone far less often than he did last year. This year, his slider has a 34% zone after posting a 51% zone last year. While that may not seem good, he's throwing the pitch exclusively to lefties and using it low in the zone 89% of the time, up from 65% last year, which means he's starting it near the bottom of the zone and letting it drop out of the strike zone. It may not end up in the strike zone, but the SwStr% on the slider jumped from 3.5% to 13.6% this year, so the new approach change on it has really helped his strikeouts.

Part of the reason he can do this is because the command of his changeup has improved, so he can throw the four-seam, sinker, and changeup for strikes and then use the cutter and slider for whiffs out of the zone. The zone rate on change is up 6%, but the strike rate is up 16% on the year. The movement profile and locations are similar, he's just missing in the left-handed batter's box far less and throwing more competitive changeups.

All of these are minor tweaks, and the four-seamer is still getting hit a lot, but the added swing and miss feels real if Rodriguez can keep his command gains. I'd be trying to add him and see how long this new approach lasts for because he'll be useful in all league types while it's here.

'He Came In Wanting To Be A Starter': Inside Anthony Stolarz's Rise To Maple Leafs Stardom In Series Against Senators

Apr 20, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender Anthony Stolarz (41) during a break in the action against the Ottawa Senators during the second period of game one of the first round of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Scotiabank Arena. Mandatory Credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

Ridly Greig stood before Anthony Stolarz and received a few chops and shoves before getting knocked down by the towering goaltender shortly after.

It's been a series of physicality for the goaltender, who, after Tuesday's 3-2 overtime win, has a .934 save percentage, the third-best among goaltenders during the playoffs.

Greig drove the net hard and barreled into Stolarz during Toronto's Game 1 win. But when the Senators forward planted his skates in front of Stolarz on Tuesday, the goaltender was having none of it.

"It was just caught up in the heat of the battle. Just one of those things that, it didn’t matter. I didn’t even know who it was," Stolarz said post-game. "It’s just one of those, you’re in the heat of the moment, and it is what it is."

It's not the first time, and likely not the last, that Stolarz gets into it with an opponent who stands their ground in front of him. "I’ve taken quite a few penalties in my day," he grinned.

"I’ve known Stollie for a long time, and I’ve seen that in junior, too. He’s a big man. He sticks up for himself," said Mitch Marner, who played with Stolarz on the OHL's London Knights.

"We Stayed With It': Maple Leafs Halt Senators' Comeback Bid To Take 2-0 Series LeadMax Domi scored the overtime winner as the Toronto Maple Leafs defeated the Ottawa Senators 3-2 to take a 2-0 lead in their best-of-seven series on Tuesday. 

That mix-up might've been the most comedic part of the night. However, it won't be overshadowed by his strong play throughout Game 2, where he only allowed two goals on 28 shots.

He's been through a lot this season: getting more games than ever in the NHL and having knee surgery in mid-December, which cost him nearly two months. Stolarz came back from that and didn't miss a beat.

‘He’s Ready To Go’: Craig Berube All But Confirms Maple Leafs Goaltender Anthony Stolarz As Game 1 Starter Ahead Of Battle Of Ontario‘He’s Ready To Go’: Craig Berube All But Confirms Maple Leafs Goaltender Anthony Stolarz As Game 1 Starter Ahead Of Battle Of OntarioThe Toronto Maple Leafs held their first full skate of the 2025 Stanley Cup Playoffs on Saturday, a day before the puck drops for Game 1 against the Ottawa Senators. While head coach Craig Berube didn’t officially name his starting goaltender for Game 1, his words left little doubt, with all signs pointing to Anthony Stolarz getting the nod. 

He's backstopping the Maple Leafs as they take a 2-0 series lead to Ottawa.

"He's just getting going in pro. You go through your career, how he went through it, kind of always was like the backup, but not a starter, and still a valuable position," Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube said.

"He's coming off a very good season last year and won a Stanley Cup. He came in this year wanting to be a starter, and I know it was a shared net for the most of the year. I think a lot of the reason for that was we had two guys that have not played a significant amount of games throughout the season. I like the combination of both of them, but he's been excellent all year."

Stolarz left Scotiabank Arena on Tuesday evening with four goals against through two games against the Senators. Part of that was because of how the Maple Leafs played in front of him, though his calm play also played a key role.

'He Made Big Saves': How Anthony Stolarz Won Game 1 Of The Goalie Battle Against Senators' Linus Ullmark'He Made Big Saves': How Anthony Stolarz Won Game 1 Of The Goalie Battle Against Senators' Linus UllmarkAnthony Stolarz showed up and showed out against the Ottawa Senators in Game 1 of the Battle of Ontario, which the Toronto Maple Leafs won commandingly, 6-2.

Most of what the 31-year-old has learned about playoff hockey came from getting a front-row seat to Sergei Bobrovsky's run with the Florida Panthers last spring.

"Last year, being able to be behind Bob and see how he conducted his day-to-day routine and what it took to prepare, and sit next to him in the locker room and just speak to him, I think that went pretty far for me," Stolarz said.

"I’m just trying to take all that experience from last year and roll it over to this year."

Clearly, what he's learned is working for him.

Before the playoffs began, Stolarz admitted he's not like other goaltenders, or in his words, the "weirdo." Stolarz likes to be around his teammates off the ice. However, when it comes down to business, he wants to win.

It's been a long road for the goaltender. He's a playoff starter in his ninth NHL season. Stolarz is enjoying the ride. The next stop: Ottawa for a crucial Game 3 of the Battle of Ontario.

"You obviously want your opportunity [to be a starter], but at the end of the day, I’m playing in the NHL. I like to have fun out there," said Stolarz. "I like to enjoy the moment with everyone on the team. We’ll enjoy this one tonight, but tomorrow, right back to work."


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Sanchez feeling ‘normal' the morning after forearm injury

Sanchez feeling ‘normal' the morning after forearm injury originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

NEW YORK — Cristopher Sanchez showed up to the ballpark on Wednesday morning feeling normal. It doesn’t mean he’s out of the woods yet, but it’s better than the alternative after he left Tuesday’s game with left forearm tightness.

“Nothing really other than he feels normal, that’s what he said,” manager Rob Thomson said Wednesday morning. “I haven’t had a report from the trainers yet. He actually wanted to play catch today. I don’t know whether they’re gonna let him. The last I’d heard, they just want him to rest today and that gives him tomorrow with the day off and then we start up again on Friday.”

Sanchez threw 58 pitches over two innings in Tuesday’s loss. His velocity was down, his command was off and he didn’t feel comfortable from the time he warmed up in the bullpen. Catcher J.T. Realmuto could tell something was up but thought it might be a finger issue Sanchez has dealt with over the years, including in the recent Cardinals start when he induced four double plays.

Thomson asked Sanchez after the second inning if he was OK. Sanchez responded that he felt tight and Thomson pulled him then.

His turn in the rotation comes up next on Tuesday at home against the Nationals. The Phillies will almost certainly play it safe with Sanchez and delay that next start. They have off-days on Thursday and Monday before and after a series at Wrigley Field, which allows them to realign the rotation to give Sanchez more time.

Zack Wheeler starts on Wednesday and would be on five days’ rest if he pitches next Tuesday. Jesus Luzardo, Taijuan Walker and Aaron Nola would be on the standard four days’ rest.

“We can fiddle with the rotation and put him at the back end,” Thomson said of Sanchez.

There’s also the looming return of Ranger Suarez, who threw 59 pitches over five scoreless innings at Triple A on Tuesday. Suarez will start again for Lehigh Valley on Sunday and extend to the six-inning, 80-pitch range.

Suarez could be back in the Phillies’ rotation by next weekend against the Diamondbacks, and his return would allow them to be extra cautious with Sanchez if they so choose.

“You could be. That’s not necessarily how we’re gonna go, it all depends on how Sanchy feels,” Thomson said. “But Ranger will go Sunday (at Triple A). He only threw 59 pitches last night so it’s not like we’re gonna take him to 95 after that. There’s still some build-up there.”

Sanchez was not scheduled for an MRI as of Wednesday morning and the plan is for him to play catch on Friday in Chicago. More will be known after he throws, but the Phillies might have dodged a bullet.

Containing Alex Ovechkin Has to be The Mission

Image

One thing that Montreal Canadiens’ fans have to be noticing is the magical year that Washington Capitals star, Alex Ovechkin is having. I’m afraid his two-goal game is just the tip of the iceberg.

That playoff overtime goal was the first of his illustrious career. That’s hard to believe since he’s played for so long and he has a Stanley Cup ring - - but here we are. Now, I think the Canadiens have to game plan more for stopping Ovechkin.

You have to try and keep Ovechkin on the outside. His stamina isn’t what it used to be so make him skate more. The Canadiens’ best defense might be holding on to the puck more than they did. That’s a total team effort that could pay dividends.

After looking at NHL Edge stats, I would boost Mike Matheson and Alexandre Carrier’s minutes and pull back a lot of Jayden Struble and some from Lane Hutson. And use David Savard less at the beginning of games and more from the second period on. There may be a way to give him a few more minutes but have him out there in key spots for his experience even though he has slowed down.

The Canadiens’ are playing with house money but that doesn’t mean that they can’t put a scare into the Capitals while gaining valuable playoff experience. Ovechkin is the Capitals best player once again and Montreal needs to play him tighter. I felt like he was able to roam free at times and that’s just dangerous.

New Avalanche Forward Is Playoff X-Factor

Martin Necas (David Kirouac-Imagn Images)

It all comes down to this: the Stanley Cup Playoffs.

Every team either suffers immense heartbreak or incredible joy.

The Colorado Avalanche knows about the incredible joy, after all, they recently won the Cup in 2022. However, this is a different year, marked by distinct challenges and new personnel.

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One of those new faces is going to be a key piece for the Avalanche’s success.

Martin Necas was the big piece coming back in the Mikko Rantanen trade. To say that things have gone well since his acquisition is certainly an understatement.

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After the trade, the Czech forward scored 28 points in 30 games while playing 20:30 a night. Necas found a home alongside Nathan MacKinnon and Artturi Lehkonen. That line was able to dominate the fancy stats (63.1 Corsi For Percent) and out-score the opposition whenever they were on the ice (13-4).

The Avalanche will need that magic in the postseason.

This is why Necas is the Avalanche’s X-Factor for this playoff run. MacKinnon has been his usual self through two games, amassing three goals and one assist for four points total. But, the Avalanche are going to need more than their (assumed) Hart Trophy Finalist to win the Stanley Cup. They definitely need more to make it past the Dallas Stars in the opening playoff round.

Necas currently has one assist in two playoff games. Jack Drury, Ryan Lindgren, and Logan O’Connor all have more points than he does. He’s going to have to step up his game on the offensive side of the puck to become an X-Factor for the Avalanche.

With Game 3 scheduled for Wednesday night, fans will see if tonight is the night that Necas kicks things into high gear for the Avalanche.

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2025 NBA Playoffs results, highlights, recap Apr 22 including Luka, Lakers tying series, Bucks are in trouble

While the Lakers answered the questions in front of them before in Game 2 on Tuesday night, the Bucks just have more questions.

LAKERS 94, TIMBERWOLVES 85 (series tied 1-1)

After dropping Game 1 at home, the Lakers came out with the urgency of a desperate team.

Minnesota came out Tuesday night like they already had one in the bag and were comfortable.

The result was a first quarter that flipped the script on Game 1 — the Lakers were the physical, aggressive, defensive team and the Timberwolves were the ones struggling to deal with it. Los Angeles led by 16 after one quarter and hung on from there to get the 94-85 win behind 31 points from Luka Doncic.

Both sides can head into Game 3 thinking this series is theirs to take.

For Minnesota, their defense still has the Lakers stumbling — Los Angeles has averaged 94.5 points a game through the first two games of this series. While Doncic has played well, LeBron James and Austin Reaves have combined to shoot 5-of-24 from 3 and have been held in relative check.

Save for one bad half, the Timberwolves can say they have been the best team in this series, and now they head home where Naz Reid, Donte DiVincenzo and the rest of the Timberwolves bench — as well as their shooters — should feel more comfortable.

For Los Angeles, it has found its urgency and defense, and they still have a couple of other gears on offense. Plus, as this series gets deeper and tighter, they have the proven winners in LeBron and Luka.

The next two games in this series are going to be wild.

PACERS 123, BUCKS 115 (Indiana leads series 2-0)

This was Andrew Nembhard’s night.

Nembhard was given the defensive assignment of Damian Lillard and held the All-Star in check in his return, allowing 14 points on 4-of-13 shooting. Milwaukee needed Lillard to be an offensive force (and keep all the pressure on Giannis Antetokounmpo) and that did not happen.

Nembhard also scored 17 points, was 3-of-5 from beyond the arc, and hit a dagger 3-pointer with 1:11 left to help seal the Pacers' win.

Nembhard had a little help from Pascal Siakam and Tyrese Haliburton in the win.

"I think it's just doing your job. Winning at home is just doing your job,” Haliburton said postgame.

The Bucks are up against it and expect Doc Rivers to make a big move in Game 3 — could Brook Lopez (who has struggled this series) be benched in favor of Bobby Portis, who scored 28 in Game 2? Is there another bold move out there?

Rivers needs to do something to change the dynamic, or this series is going to be over quickly.

THUNDER 118, GRIZZLIES 99 (OKC leads series 2-0)

Sometimes, a picture is worth a thousand words.

Screenshot 2025-04-22 at 10.13.00 PM.png

Two stats to emphasize the point:

• OKC has led 92:58 in the two games of this series. Memphis has led 3:02.

• Counting the regular season and playoffs, the Thunder and Grizzlies have played six times this season, and Oklahoma City has won all six by an average of 24.2 points per game.

Phillies prospect hit by pitch FOUR times in a single game

Phillies prospect hit by pitch FOUR times in a single game originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

The old baseball adage goes, if you watch enough baseball, you’re going to see something you’ve never seen before.

If Otto Kemp never heard that saying before, he now believes it.

Last night’s IronPigs/Columbus Clippers game at Coca-Cola Park was an eventful one. The big story was rehabbing Phillies starter Ranger Suarez, who took a big steps toward returning by throwing five shutout innings for Lehigh Valley in a 7-3 win for the ‘Pigs.

IronPigs third baseman Otto Kemp – the Phillies’ 24th-ranked prospect – went 1-for-1 with his team-high seventh double of the season in last night’s victory. Kemp’s 2024 season began in single-A Clearwater, and was promoted three times – to high-A Jersey Shore, then to double-A Reading, then to the triple-A ‘Pigs.

A double in your only at bat is a good day. But did Otto really have a good day?

He actually came to the plate five times.

In the first inning, the first pitch he saw hit him in the thigh.

In the second inning, he took an off-speed pitch off his hand, but stayed in the game. He may regret that decision.

In the sixth, he watched a curve that didn’t curve hit him in his… hindparts.

Finally, in the seventh, a slider from a lefty hit him in his right ankle.

That’s four times he was hit by a pitch, a team record.

The MLB record for HBP in a single game is three, set many times. The minor leagues are so broad, and record-keeping isn’t as far-reaching or sophisticated, so it’s tough to say where Kemp stands, or limps.

While Kemp’s painful evening set a record, it isn’t anything he doesn’t have some experience with. Since the start of the 2023 season, counting last night, Kemp has been plunked 52(!) times.

That’s a lot of ice packs.

Plaschke: Lakers found true grit just when they needed it and silenced their critics

L Los Angeles Lakers forward Jarred Vanderbilt
Jarred Vanderbilt dives for the ball against Timberwolves forward Julius Randle in the fourth quarter. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

There, there. All better.

The Lakers recovered from a knee scrape of a playoff opener Tuesday to leap up and kick the stunned Minnesota Timberwolves in the teeth.

Now, now. That wasn’t so hard, was it?

In turning a dread-filled Crypto.com Arena into a place of joyous healing, the wounded Lakers survived a first cut, tied an opening series and saved an entire season with a 94-85 victory over Minnesota in Game 2 of the first round of the NBA playoffs.

What a difference an elbow makes.

One game after being wadded up and tossed aside like a hot dog wrapper by a Timberwolves team that was just hungrier, the Lakers pushed and shoved and fought their way into personifying a must win.

It involves a must jab. A must hook. A must knockout.

Read more:Lakers win a physically demanding Game 2 to even series with Timberwolves

It’s LeBron James running over people, Austin Reaves bouncing off people, Gabe Vincent slugging through people.

“We were physical,” said Lakers coach JJ Redick, who pleaded for this type of play after the Game 1 beatdown. “The playoffs require a different level.”

It took them two games, but they’ve reached that level, as epitomized Tuesday by Rui Hachimura battling into a face injury that initially required a mask, until he threw the mask aside and kept fighting, no room for a must injury on this mustiest of nights.

Hachimura only made four shots, but his 34 minutes set the tone for a game in which Luka Doncic’s 31 points seemed like an afterthought.

“[Hachimura] played like a warrior tonight, I'm sure that he is probably in the X-ray room right now,” Redick said. “But he did a lot of really good things. … There were a few plays that he made just getting deflections and disrupting plays … some plays at the rim that don't show up in the box score, but he was awesome.”

Only 7% of NBA teams that have fallen behind two-games-to-none have won that seven-game series, and the Lakers played like that stat, battering Minnesota in almost the exact opposite of the nightmare that was three days earlier.

Timberwolves guard Donte DiVincenzo charges into Gabe Vincent.
Timberwolves guard Donte DiVincenzo charges into Gabe Vincent. (Robert Gauthier/Los Angeles Times)

On Saturday the Timberwolves had shockingly won the playoff opener by 22 points. On Tuesday the Lakers outscored them by 22 in the first 16 minutes and were rarely seriously challenged again

On Saturday Minnesota’s Naz Reid had six treys and 23 points. On Tuesday he didn’t make a basket until the fourth quarter and finished with nine points.

On Saturday Minnesota’s Jaden McDaniels had 25 points. On Tuesday he had three baskets.

On Saturday it appeared the Timberwolves could win this series, or at least push it deep into six or seven games. On Tuesday, not so much, the Lakers showing their clear dominance in every area backed by a legendarily springtime loud home crowd that annually shakes, rattles and rolls.

The series travels to Minnesota for games Friday and Sunday, at which point the guess here is that the Lakers will be fully in control.

Fans were waving souvenir white towels late Tuesday night, but it was clear that the Timberwolves were the ones in full surrender.

“I thought we looked at what we didn’t do so well, which was a lot of things in Game 1,” James said. “We took that to heart, we hold each other accountable, we make the adjustments and we had a better outing tonight. And now we have to be even better on Friday.”

There was one other notable difference between Game 1 and Game 2, and it involved the color on Redick’s face.

Rui Hachimura wore this mask for only a little while in Game 2.
Rui Hachimura wore this mask for only a little while in Game 2. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

On Saturday the Lakers rookie head coach had been publicly challenged after the opening loss by none other than Magic Johnson, who tweeted, “Coach JJ Redick did a great job all season but he didn’t do a good job for Game 1. The Lakers stood around on offense, played too much one-on-one basketball, and he didn’t make any necessary adjustments.”

On Tuesday, Redick’s mettle was directly tested during the only two times the outcome felt even remotely in doubt.

The first was midway through the third quarter, when the Timberwolves took advantage of the Lakers confusion to pull to within 11. A screaming Redick called a timeout and launched into a profane rant captured by the wonders of national television.

Yeah, he was mad, in a rage that turned his face beet red.

“Yeah, I've done that in a game a handful of times in six preseason games, 82 regular season,” said Redick.”It's not something that I'd want to do. It's not something I'm more than comfortable doing. But I think tonight it was just more about getting that urgency button switched back on.”

The Lakers could have collapsed under the internal pressure. But it turns out, the reddened Redick only made them tougher.

JJ Redick yelled at his team, and it seemed to light a fire under them in Game 2.
JJ Redick yelled at his team, and it seemed to light a fire under them in Game 2. (Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times)

After the timeout they ramped up their defense and sharpened their offense. Doncic hit a bank shot, Dorian Finney-Smith hit a three-pointer, James banked in a follow shot and Doncic hit two three throws to quickly push the lead back to 20.

They were briefly challenged again in the fourth quarter when their offense again got sloppy — two straight shot-clock violations — and the Timberwolves pushed to within single digits, leading Redick to call another get-in-their-faces timeout with 6:16 left.

Once again, a big shot for the rookie. And once again, he connected. Redick talked, his team responded, James scoring on a layup off a nifty pass from Reaves, James drawing a charge, Reaves fighting for a layup, James with a steal and a layup, the Lakers leading by 11 in the final minutes, the entire arena standing and screaming, threat thwarted, game over.

Next up, Game 3, featuring the outmanned Timberwolves against an emerging Laker team that is finally realizing its own strength.

“Going into Minnesota is gonna be a war,” Doncic said.

One for which the Lakers are now ready.

Or, in the words of Tuesday’s pregame midcourt cheerleader Ric Flair.

“WOOOO!”

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Giants' top prospect Eldridge flashes familiar power in 2025 debut

Giants' top prospect Eldridge flashes familiar power in 2025 debut originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO — When he sat down for his daily pregame session with reporters on Tuesday, Giants manager Bob Melvin was aware that Bryce Eldridge was in Double-A Richmond’s lineup. But the Flying Squirrels started their game right around the time the Giants were taking the field for their workout, so Melvin hadn’t heard how Eldridge was doing in his season debut.

“Hopefully he gets off to a good start and does his thing and we’ll see where it goes from there,” he said. 

The return to the field couldn’t have gone any better. 

Eldridge, the organization’s top prospect, got a hanging breaking ball in his first at-bat of the season and crushed a solo homer to center. It was a nice reminder for the Giants of what might be on the way later this season if they need help at first base or designated hitter. 

Eldridge was in big-league camp this spring and homered in his first Cactus League game, too, but he felt left wrist discomfort in early March and was sidelined most of that month. He missed the start of the minor-league season and had been rehabbing in Arizona up until this week. The Giants did multiple tests on Eldridge’s wrist and never had concerns that there was a serious injury, but given his importance to the franchise’s future, they wanted to be overly cautious with the timeline. 

The 20-year-old finally was cleared to return to action on Tuesday, and it wasn’t a surprise that he ended up back in Richmond. He played just nine games there last season before a late promotion to Triple-A to end the year, and the Giants were leaning toward a second crack at Double-A even before the wrist inflammation popped up. President of baseball operations Buster Posey and vice president of player development Randy Winn have made it clear that they no longer want to rush prospects, and Eldridge is the best talent the Giants have had in their minor-league system in years.

The 20-year-old is coming off a breakout first professional season that included a .890 OPS and 23 homers. The Giants know the power could play in the big leagues right now, but they want Eldridge to continue to sharpen his approach at the plate and his defense at first base, a position where he still is learning some of the basics. 

Asked Tuesday if Eldridge’s timeline could be impacted by what’s happening in the big leagues, Melvin said he’s not sure. The Giants entered Tuesday’s game with a .476 OPS from their first basemen, which ranked 29th in the majors. 

“He’s going to have to perform to get here, and that’s something Buster has stated,” Melvin said. “If you perform well, then you’ve got an opportunity to get to the big leagues, and we’ve done that here.”

Melvin pointed out that the Giants have gotten good production out of Wilmer Flores, their DH, and he said he’s still confident in LaMonte Wade Jr. The veteran is batting just .103 with one homer through 19 games. 

“LaMonte is going to pick it up, too,” Melvin said. 

The Giants won’t rush Eldridge, but given their lack of production at first, it sure will get interesting if he hits the ground running. Shortly after he said he hopes Eldridge gets off to a good start, Melvin was informed that he homered in his first at-bat and shown the video by a reporter.

“Alright, well, get him here now,” he joked. 

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Lakers use defense, physicality to flip script on Timberwolves, even series with win

NBA: Playoffs-Minnesota Timberwolves at Los Angeles Lakers

Apr 22, 2025; Los Angeles, California, USA; Los Angeles Lakers guard Luka Doncic (77) and Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) leave a court after defeating the Minnesota Timberwolves 94-85 in game two of first round for the 2024 NBA Playoffs at Crypto.com Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

Kiyoshi Mio-Imagn Images

Minnesota knew what was coming after pushing the Lakers around in Game 1 of this series.

“We knew they would come with high intensity, with energy. We knew it was going to be physical,” Julius Randle said.

Knowing the Lakers were going to play with a desperate intensity and dealing well with it are two different things.

“We were stagnant, missed open looks, missed layups,” Randle added.

The Lakers flipped the script in Game 2, going from the team getting pushed around to the aggressors, the more physical team on defense. They played like the team in desperate need of a win (because they were).

The result was the Lakers racing out to a 17-point first-quarter lead — again behind a hot start from Luka Doncic, who had 16 points of his 31 points in the first quarter — and this time holding on for the 94-85 win that evens the series 1-1.

This series shifts to Minnesota on Friday night.

Los Angeles’s energy on defense was evident from the opening tip — the Lakers were pressuring out higher, and they put two on the ball whenever Anthony Edwards got it. It all threw the Timberwolves off their game.

“The way that they’re guarding us, when I catch the ball, they kind of go zone, and when I try to attack a gap, it’s like three people,” Edwards said. “I’ve just got to make my decisions a little quicker, and we’ll be all right.”

Doncic was again the focal point of the offense, they even used him in he post more, but what really changed was just an attention to detail — the Lakers did things like set good screens and made solid contact with the defenders, something they didn’t do in Game 1.

LeBron James had a strong night, finishing with 21 points, 12 rebounds and seven assists. He also had a key play in the fourth, a steal and a bucket, that gave Los Angeles the momentum back when Minnesota had put together a run to get the lead down to single digits.

While Randle (27 points) and Edwards (25) got theirs, the Timberwolves' bench, which was key in Game 1, was in foul trouble and much quieter in Game 2: Naz Reid had nine points, and Donte DiVincenzo had four.

Minnesota played better in the second half and can walk away from this game feeling positive: They got the split in Los Angeles and will not have another bad offensive half (or night) like they did in Game 2. What matters for Minnesota is that their defense held up, the Lakers still didn’t break 100 (and for all the focus the Lakers had on isolating Rudy Gobert, Doncic was 1-of-4 in those situations).

Both teams have reasons for optimism heading into Friday night and Game 3.

The Timberwolves believe their role players will feel more comfortable and be better at home. That is likely true.

While the Lakers can feel they've found their defense, they still have proven playoff winners in Doncic and LeBron, who tend to improve as a playoff series progresses.

Why Warriors must heed Riley's warning to win series vs. Rockets

Why Warriors must heed Riley's warning to win series vs. Rockets originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Once again, it’s Jimmy Butler III vs. Pat Riley. Except in this battle, the Golden State Warriors are in the fight with Butler.

Two generations ago, when Riley was coaching the “Showtime” version of the Los Angeles Lakers, he frequently uttered four words of warning to his teams as they chased NBA championships: “No rebounds, no rings.”

More than 40 years later, Butler and the Warriors are formulating a rebuttal. They’re trying to win in deference to rebounding. They won Game 1 of their first-round Western Conference playoff series against the Houston Rockets on Sunday despite being outrebounded 52-36.

Trying that in Game 2 on Wednesday would invite a Rockets resurgence.

“We will be better on the glass tomorrow, for sure,” coach Steve Kerr said Tuesday, speaking to reporters in Houston. “But it’s definitely something we have to be vigilant about throughout the series.”

Golden State surely would like to narrow that 16-rebound deficit, but there isn’t much to inspire belief. This is no one-game anomaly. It’s an emerging and ominous trend.

The Game 1 totals represent the fourth consecutive game the Warriors have lost the rebounding war, and each game was consequential. They were minus-11 in the play-in tournament game against the Memphis Grizzlies – and won. They were minus-17 in the regular-season finale against the Los Angeles Clippers – and lost by five. They were minus-7 in the penultimate regular-season game against the Portland Trail Blazers – and won.

Four significant games, three victories, a .750 winning percentage. Maintaining such a pace in the postseason would ensure the 16 wins Golden State would need for champagne showers in June.

Is it realistic to consistently lose the rebounding battle and still win 75 percent of your postseason games? No. Which is why Riley stressed that facet to his teams as a coach and still does now as the team president of the Miami Heat, where Butler undoubtedly heard or saw his cautionary words.

“We’ve got to be better,” Kevon Looney told reporters after practice in Houston. “We’ve been a pretty great rebounding team all season, so I think they kind of beat us on the 50/50 balls. They’ve got a lot of guys, a lot of big guys. They missed a lot of shots too.”

The Warriors overcame the rebounding deficit in Game 1 because the Rockets shot as if blindfolded, managing only 22 points off 22 offensive rebounds. For context, Golden State scored 12 points off six offensive rebounds. Houston attempted 11 more field goals and made two fewer. Its guards, Fred VanVleet and Jalen Green shot a combined 7 of 34 (20.6 percent) from the field, including 2 of 17 (11.8 percent) from distance.

No matter how well the Warriors defend, and they were terrific in Game 1, they know it’s illogical to expect the Rockets to shoot so woefully in Game 2 and beyond.

“They missed some shots that they’ll probably make tomorrow,” Kerr conceded.

“They got a lot of open looks, which I’m sure they probably felt like they should have made,” Stephen Curry said after the 95-85 victory in Game 1. “A lot of them came off offensive rebounds. Our point-of-attack defense was great, (but) you can’t assume that they’re going to miss open looks if you’re giving them second, third and fourth opportunities.

“That’s going to be a big challenge for us if we want to win again on Wednesday. We expect them to play better, but you got to make it as difficult as possible.”

Riley’s mantra was formed through experience. As a Lakers assistant coach in the 1980 NBA Finals, he saw the team post a 308-223 rebounding advantage to beat the Philadelphia 76ers in six games. Two years later, as head coach, the Lakers again topped Philly in six behind a 284-250 rebounding advantage, 

The following season, with the Sixers adding legendary rebounder Moses Malone, Riley’s Lakers were swept. They were outrebounded 192-171. Malone, who grabbed twice the rebounds of any Laker, earned the Finals MVP award.

Can the Warriors overcome their relative lack of size and athleticism against Houston and, should they advance, any opponents that follow?

It’s going to take all hands, beginning with starting “big men” Draymond Green and Butler, neither of whom is taller than 6-foot-7. They’ll need Looney, a 6-foot-9 rebounding specialist, to be exactly that. Quinten Post, a 7-footer who floats around the perimeter on offense, also must use his frame in the paint. Moses Moody, at 6-foot-5, sometimes is listed at “power forward,” but lives mostly on the perimeter as the primary point-of-attack defender.

Golden State’s leading rebounder in Game 1 was Brandin Podziemski, a 6-foot-4 guard, who snagged eight. Their leading rebounder in the play-in tournament game was Curry, who used his 6-foot-3 frame to grab eight. Podziemski was the leading rebounder, with eight, in the loss to the Clippers, and he tied with Green at seven in the win at Portland.
That speaks to the tenacity and fearlessness of Podziemski and Curry, and it’s something any undersized team must bring to give itself a chance to earn extra possessions.

“We know they’re going to rebound,” Kerr said of the Rockets, who in the regular season led the NBA in that category. “They’re going to get some offensive boards. We’ve got to do a better job in that area. But all in all, it’s about being poised, executing and keeping them from the easy stuff.”

Rebounding alone guarantees nothing, certainly not rings, no matter what Riley says. But winning without them requires appreciable superiority elsewhere, and the Warriors know that won’t be a given for the duration of their postseason.

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