Sanchez racks up GIDPs, big day for Castellanos as Phillies even series in St. Louis

Sanchez racks up GIDPs, big day for Castellanos as Phillies even series in St. Louis originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

ST. LOUIS – When Rob Thomson decided this weekend to protect Bryce Harper with Kyle Schwarber, the natural next question became, who protects Schwarber?

On Saturday afternoon at Busch Stadium it was Nick Castellanos, who had three hits and a pair of doubles, the first of which scored Harper and Schwarber after both reached base in the opening frame for the second consecutive game.

If the Harper-Schwarber duo remains intact against right-handed starting pitchers, the hitter in the No. 5 spot will have plenty of RBI opportunities. Not only do Harper and Schwarber hit for power but both also walk a ton.

In Friday’s series opener against the Cardinals, Harper and Schwarber walked and singled but were stranded when Castellanos lined out to right field to end the top of the first. Saturday was a good example of how one early swing and a couple of early runs can change an afternoon. With a quick lead and an effective Cristopher Sanchez on the mound, the Phillies were in control the whole way and won, 4-1.

“He’s just driving the ball in the gaps,” Thomson said. “When he does that, he’s in pretty good shape. The five-strikeout game, you don’t see that too often, but like I said the other day, I don’t think a guy like Nick really thinks about it, it’s just a new day and he moves on.”

Castellanos was indeed 0-for-5 with five K’s on Thursday in Atlanta, but the Phillies have played 13 other games and he’s performed in most of them. He’s looked comfortable at the plate since Opening Day. His plate coverage has been solid. He had four at-bats Saturday and picked up hits on a pitch down-and-in, a pitch up-and-in, a pitch over the middle, and he lined out on a pitch just off the plate away. He’s also consistently driving the ball to right and right-center, which has always been his trademark when going well.

“It reassures that I’m in a good spot,” Castellanos said, “and I really like my work that I’m doing with (hitting coaches) Kevin (Long), Raffy (Pena) and Dustin (Lind).

“If you take out that one night in Atlanta, I just feel like I’ve controlled my at-bats decently for the most part.”

Sanchez dealt with traffic on the basepaths but induced double plays in four of the first five innings. Three of them weren’t even on particularly well-located pitches, but Sanchez has an elite changeup, a mid/high-90s sinker and a slider that continues to improve. The better the stuff, the more wiggle room a pitcher is afforded.

“That keeps me in the game, too,” he said. “That’s one of the reasons I was able to stay out there until the seventh inning. I love double plays. The defense did a great job today.”

Sanchez’ sinker averaged 96.1 mph in his first two starts but, curiously, he threw a couple at 91 in the first inning. The velocity was right back to the 96 mph range thereafter, including some 97s. Sanchez said his body just felt off on Saturday.

The results weren’t. The Phillies lefty is 1-0 with a 3.12 ERA through three starts after Orion Kerkering, Jordan Romano and Jose Alvarado recorded eight outs to uphold his win.

“The first inning, he looked a little lethargic but then he picked it up in the second and got back to normal,” Thomson said. “He was really efficient, which was something we needed today. We should, for the most part, have a full bullpen tomorrow.”

Thomson used the same top half of the order as in Friday’s series opener, leading off Bryson Stott, followed by Trea Turner, Harper, Schwarber and Castellanos. J.T. Realmuto was back after a night off, so Alec Bohm moved from seventh down to eighth. Bohm struck out looking and grounded out sharply in his first two at-bats before finally finding a hole in the seventh with an infield hit between short and third.

Stott, 0-for-4 on Friday in his first game out of the leadoff spot, made better contact on Saturday, lining out to begin the game and doubling home Brandon Marsh in the top of the fifth. Stott has hit .344 this season against right-handed pitchers and will likely continue to lead off against them. Marsh’s run came after a two-out walk and had to feel good given his recent lack of production. He also sacrificed Bohm to second base in the seventh inning, enabling him to score two batters later on a Turner single.

It will be interesting to see how the Phillies set the lineup Sunday against left-hander Matthew Liberatore. The top four could be Turner, Harper, Schwarber, Castellanos in that order. Bohm will likely move up a couple of spots, and Edmundo Sosa could start for Stott.

With Zack Wheeler on the mound for the rubber match, the 9-5 Phillies have a good chance to make it a .500 road trip and win their fourth series out of five.

“It gives us a lot of confidence knowing we don’t have to get it done the first time through the lineup, even second time through the lineup, that we’re still in the game,” Castellanos said of the Phillies’ top-tier rotation. “I think it also helps us relax a little bit because we do have an explosive group of guys that can put up runs pretty quick.”

Maple Leafs' Craig Berube Unsure If He'll Use A Forward On Defense Against Canadiens But Mitch Marner Is The Obvious Candidate

Toronto Maple Leafs head coach Craig Berube has not decided if he will use a forward on defense as the club dresses an undermanned lineup against the Montreal Canadiens and Scotiabank Arena on Saturday. However, he did say it was a possibility.

Apr 9, 2025; Tampa, Florida, USA; Tampa Bay Lightning right wing Oliver Bjorkstrand (22) and Toronto Maple Leafs right wing Mitch Marner (16) fight to control the puck during the third period at Amalie Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kim Klement Neitzel-Imagn Images

"I don't have a lot of guys with experience that have played back there other than Mitch (Marner)," Berube said following the club's optional morning skate.

The Maple Leafs will be forced to dress only five defensemen due to a combination of injuries and a lack of salary cap space. With a long-term injured reserve exception not possible due to how late injuries to Jake McCabe and Oliver Ekman-Larsson occurred and with no salary cap space, Toronto has to play one game short before they are allowed a call-up exception under article 50.10 of the NHL's collective bargaining agreement.

Why The Maple Leafs Will Dress 5 Defensemen Against The Canadiens On SaturdayWhy The Maple Leafs Will Dress 5 Defensemen Against The Canadiens On SaturdayThe Toronto Maple Leafs will likely dress one player short when they host the Montreal Canadiens at Scotiabank Arena on Saturday.

Marner is the obviously choice to play some minutes on defense given, that the player occupies the role on the club's top power-play unit.

 "I heard he's played it a couple of times throughout and looked pretty good. So, yeah, I think he would be the pick," Maple Leafs forward Scott Laughton said.

During the club's pre-game meeting there appears to be no shortage of volunteers that would move up to play on the back end.

"It seems like they want to play D," Steven Lorentz revealed. " I've played some D in my career too over the years, just trying to, again, fill in at times. And I think I've been exposed a few times, so hopefully I'm not back there for too long. But, no, if that were to come up, then I'd feel comfortable doing that. But there are a few guys that are more incapable of filling in for a few shifts, I think."

Marner is the only player who played in NHL games on defense via a true experiment.

Following the training camp discussions ahead of the 2022-23 NHL season, then-head coach Sheldon Keefe he had indeed used Marner on defense late in games when the team was chasing a lead.

While Marner did help on the offensive end of things, there was one instance when Marner lost a one-on-one battle with New Jersey Devils forward Nico Hischier, resulting in a quality scoring chance against.

He stated that Marner "delivered as good of a scoring chance and puck delivery to the net as we had all period" and that his puck touches were crucial in breaking out of the defensive zone. Keefe explicitly noted, "He's not out there to defend; he's out there to spark our offense". While acknowledging a defensive breakdown occurred on Marner's shift (a one-on-one against Nico Hischier). Keefe attributed it mistake more to a lack of backchecking support from the other forwards rather than Marner's individual defending. 

On Feb. 29, 2024, veteran defenseman Mark Giordano suffered an injury, leaving the Maple Leafs with only five defensemen. To manage the workload, Marner was called upon to take shifts on the blueline. Keefe revealed post-game that the possibility of using Marner on defense had been discussed before Giordano's injury. The Leafs had dressed a lineup with six left-shot defensemen due to Timothy Liljegren being out, creating an imbalance. The pre-game consideration involved using Marner, a right shot, to provide a different look on the back end even before the injury forced their hand.

The Leafs quickly rectified this by acquiring right-handed defenseman Ilya Lyubushkin ahead of the trade deadline.

Report: Maple Leafs to Re-Acquire Defenseman Ilya Lyubushkin From Ducks For Draft PicksReport: Maple Leafs to Re-Acquire Defenseman Ilya Lyubushkin From Ducks For Draft PicksAccording to Sportsnet's Elliotte Friedman, the Leafs are acquiring the Russian defenseman with 75 percent of his salary cap hit retained in exchange for third and sixth-round draft picks.

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Could John Tortorella Coach The New York Rangers Once Again?

John Tortorella behind the New York Rangers bench during the 2011-12 regular season. (Matt Kartozian-Imagn Images)

With the New York Rangers on the verge of missing the Stanley Cup playoffs entirely, the already deafening noise around head coach Peter Laviolette is beginning to reach a fever pitch.

Laviolette’s Rangers had led the Philadelphia Flyers 1-0 and 4-3 on Wednesday night before eventually falling 8-5, virtually eliminating them from playoff contention.

One individual, a name that the Rangers are already intimately familiar with, appears to be gaining traction as a potential Laviolette replacement.

When on the topic of Flyers interim head coach Brad Shaw, with just over a minute left in the first period of Wednesday night’s Rangers game, broadcaster John Davidson subtly dropped a key piece of information regarding former Flyers head coach John Tortorella, who was relieved of his duties on March 27.

“By the way, John Tortorella said he wants to coach again because he’s got energy, he loves teaching,” Davidson said. “So, good luck, Torts! We had him in Columbus, and he did a great job for us.”

When Tortorella first took the Flyers’ head coaching job in 2022, he claimed that Philadelphia would be his last stop as an NHL head coach.

But, the 66-year-old likely did not have getting axed with less than a dozen games remaining in his third season on his bingo card. That was sure to leave a sour taste in Tortorella’s mouth, especially knowing the amount of pride he has in his work.

Taking Davidson’s comments one step further, one NHL insider already believes that a Rangers reunion makes the most sense for both Tortorella and the team.

Making a guest appearance on the FlamesNation podcast, TSN NHL insider Darren Dreger says he feels the Rangers are the only logical option for the stoic American coach.

"For me, the New York Rangers are the only team that, right now, makes sense. And the reason I feel like that, and no disrespect to Peter Laviolette, it's because I know that James Dolan, the owner of the New York Rangers, loves John Tortorella,” Dreger postulated.

"That owner has a ton of clout. Let's see what happens. If they miss the playoffs in New York, all bets are off. Maybe Chris Drury has some vote of confidence that he's coming back as general manager, but I can't be sure of that. I don't know that to be certain.

"What I do know is you've got a very hands-on, volatile owner who is not going to sit back and say 'Yeah, okay, status quo, that works. I'm comfortable with the way things are.' He does like John Tortorella, so that would be a scenario that does make some sense."

Tortorella, of course, began his NHL head coaching career with a four-game stint as an interim head coach with the Rangers in 2000, and previously coached parts of five seasons in New York as a full-time head coach, guiding the Rangers to a 171-118-1-29 regular-season record and an Eastern Conference Finals appearance during his time.

If the two-time Jack Adams Award winner is looking for a veteran team with established stars and a full-circle moment to close out his career, there’s no better place to do it than in New York with the Rangers.

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Jets Conclude Regular Season Road Schedule With Duel Against Blackhawks

Winnipeg Jets center Vladislav Namestnikov (7) moves the puck past Chicago Blackhawks left wing Tyler Bertuzzi (59) during the second period at the United Center. Mandatory Credit: Matt Marton-Imagn Images

The Winnipeg Jets will play their final road game of the regular season against the 31st-ranked Chicago Blackhawks.

The Jets have defeated the Blackhawks in their two previous meetings this season, winning the first matchup 2-1 in overtime and the second 4-2. The Central Division foes haven't played one another since Dec. 7, 2024.

The Jets enter tonight's game after dominantly beating the Dallas Stars and are now just a point away from clinching the Central Division and first place in the Western Conference. A win or an overtime loss will confirm their spot. 

If the Jets can clinch their spot at the top, they likely won't know their opponent until the final game of the regular season. The St. Louis Blues and the Minnesota Wild are tied with 93 points, each with two games remaining. The Wild currently hold the tiebreaker with two more regulation wins, meaning if the standings do not change, the Jets will face the Blues in the opening round of the playoffs. 

The Blackhawks are once again one of the worst teams in hockey. They have the second-worst goal differential (-71) and the second-fewest wins. Tonight's opportunity is one that needs to be taken by the Jets. 

Puck drop is at 6:00 PM CST at the United Center.

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Eastern Conference playoffs set: Cavaliers, Celtics, Knicks earn top three seeds

It's going to be a lazy Sunday for Eastern Conference stars.

With one game to go, the Eastern Conference playoffs are locked in place. Here is how the standings shook out:

That sets up these postseason matchups:

EAST PLAY-IN

Atlanta (8) at Orlando (7) – winner is the No. 7 seed and will face Boston.
Miami (10) at Chicago (9) – winner to face loser of the 7/8 seed game to see who is the No. 8 seed and faces Cleveland.

EAST PLAYOFFS

Cleveland (1) vs. No. 8 seed
Boston (2) vs. No. 7 seed
New York (3) vs. Detroit (6)
Indiana (4) vs. Milwaukee (5)

The Pacers vs. Bucks in the first round should be an entertaining series, which will ultimately be won by the team that plays the better defense in an offensive showdown (since the All-Star break the Pacers have had the better defense, but by less than a point per 100 possessions).

Detroit, in the playoffs for the first time since 2019, will push New York.

Severino set to face former teammates in Athletics’ series finale against Mets

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Athletics right-hander Luis Severino greeted some of his former New York Mets teammates Friday before the teams opened a three-game series at Sutter Health Park.

“I was really happy to see those guys. They’re like family to me,” the 31-year-old pitcher said. “Even (though) it was one year, I feel like I was there for a long time.”

Severino (0-2, 4.74 ERA) is scheduled to face the Mets in the series finale on Sunday.

In December, Severino signed a two-year, $45 million deal with the Athletics with a player option for 2027. He went 11-7 with a 3.91 ERA with the Mets in 2024. Severino said he had hoped to remain with them.

“I actually asked for less money to stay there,” Severino said, “but I was not in their plans. At the beginning, I was shocked, but at the end, I knew that it was a business and it needs to take care of itself.”

Severino began his career with the New York Yankees and spent nine years with them before joining the Mets for last season. He is now with an Athletics team that is sharing a ballpark with the Sacramento River Cats, the San Francisco Giants’ Triple-A club. The A’s spent 57 years in Oakland before leaving after last season. They hope to begin play in Las Vegas in 2028.

Severino was asked what it’s like to be at Sutter Health Park after previously playing at Yankee Stadium and Citi Field.

“What do you think? It’s way different,” Severino said. “The situation we have right now is not good, but this is what we have right now. So, we have to just adjust to what we have and try to do the best job we can.”

He went 54-37 with a 3.79 ERA with the Yankees, including All-Star selections in 2017 and ’18. Mets manager Carlos Mendoza was a coach for the Yankees from 2018-23.

“I had a really good relationship with (Severino) even when we were both with the Yankees,” Mendoza said. “He’s proud of the fact that he got a nice contract. The hard work paid off and I’m proud of him.”

And on Sunday, Mendoza and the Mets will take on Severino, who will be looking for his first win with the Athletics.

“It’s going to be fun facing those guys,” Severino said. “I’m going to bring my best, and best of luck to them.”

On Saturday, J.T. Ginn will start for the Athletics against New York. The 25-year-old right-hander was selected by the Mets in the second round of the 2020 draft before being traded to the Athletics as part of the Chris Bassitt deal.

Freddie Freeman returns to Dodgers’ lineup after missing nine games with shower ankle injury

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles Dodgers slugger Freddie Freeman came off the injured list Friday after missing nine games with a right ankle injury that resulted from slipping in the shower at home.

Freeman said an MRI showed fraying of the scar tissue in his surgically repaired ankle, but he was back to running bases a few days ago.

“I hate to say it, but I might have needed the 10 days,” said Freeman, who loathes missing games. “I feel the best I’ve felt since I’ve gotten hurt.”

The 35-year-old first baseman went 0 for 3 with two strikeouts, was hit by a pitch and scored a run in the Dodgers’ 3-0 win over the Chicago Cubs, his first game since March 29.

“Got on base by way of hit-by-pitch and it was just his first game back,” manager Dave Roberts said. “He does a lot of great things, but this was a tough one. He’ll be back in there tomorrow.”

Fans chanted “Freddie! Freddie!” as he came to the plate for the first time in the series opener against the Chicago Cubs on his bobblehead night.

Freeman saw fans waiting outside the stadium when he arrived 6 1/2 hours before gametime. Not quite the madness of a Shohei Ohtani giveaway, but impressive nonetheless.

“That was kind of crazy,” he said. “I do appreciate it. I just want to say thank you. My family is really excited about this bobblehead, too.”

Charlie Freeman, the oldest of Freeman’s three sons, threw a ceremonial first pitch. The 8-year-old has a locker next to his father in the Dodgers clubhouse.

Charlie nonchalantly walked to the rubber on the pitcher’s mound and fired a strike, just like he did last year. The crowd cheered and he walked off and into the arms of his father, who scooped him up.

The Freeman family, including wife, Chelsea, and father, Fred, gave the traditional pregame call of “It’s time for Dodger baseball!”

The World Series MVP has played in just three games so far. He missed the opening series against the Cubs in Tokyo with left rib discomfort and sat out last week’s three-game series against his old team, the Atlanta Braves. Freeman has batted .250 with two home runs and four RBI.

Then came the shower incident.

Freeman slipped and fell on March 30 in what he called a “freak accident.”

It was another mishap involving the same ankle Freeman sprained on a play at first base in late September. He struggled in the first two rounds of the postseason, but it was hardly evident during the World Series. He homered in the first four games and had 12 RBIs as the Dodgers beat the New York Yankees in five games.

He had debridement surgery in December to remove loose bodies in the ankle.

Utilityman Kiké Hernández filled in at first during Freeman’s absence.

“When you lose Freddie to have a backfill like Kiki has been huge for us,” Roberts said. “Certainly in preventing runs and making plays defensively.”

Freeman said he feels good enough to steal a base.

But he doesn’t have the green light.

“No,” Roberts said. “It’s as red as it can be, fire engine red.”

Marcus Stroman goes to hospital for knee tests after getting chased in five-run first inning

NEW YORK — Yankees pitcher Marcus Stroman went to a hospital for tests on his left knee after he gave up five runs before getting chased in the first inning of a 9-1 loss to the San Francisco Giants on a cold and rainy Friday night.

New York manager Aaron Boone had just about finished his postgame news conference when he revealed Stroman was not in the clubhouse to speak with reporters.

“He came out. His knee was bothering him, so he went to get some tests done on his knee, so we’ll see what we have from there,” Boone said. “He said his left knee was bugging him so he got some X-rays here and I think he went to the hospital to get some more testing, and so we’ll see what we have tomorrow.”

Jung Hoo Lee hit a three-run homer and LaMonte Wade Jr. a two-run double in the first inning as the Giants won for the ninth time in 11 games. The game was played on a cold night with rain throughout and was called in the top of the sixth inning after conditions deteriorated.

New York has lost four of five following a 6-2 start and its starting rotation has a 5.46 ERA, worst among the 30 teams. While Max Fried has a 1.56 ERA, Carlos Rodón is at 5.19, Will Warren at 6.00, Carlos Carrasco at 7.71 and Stroman at 11.57.

“We got to do better,” Boone said. “Obviously we’re coming off a great start with Max. But we’ve struggled to this point. ... It’s 13 games in, but we’ve got night in and night out to pitch a little bit better to put us in a good situation.”

Stroman lasted nine batters, throwing 46 pitches and getting two outs while allowing four hits and three walks.

Clarke Schmidt is slated to rejoin the Yankees on Tuesday or Wednesday after recovering from right rotator cuff tendinitis that has sidelined him since spring training, Boone wouldn’t address who would be dropped from the rotation.

Stroman’s ERA would be the highest in the major leagues if he had enough innings to qualify.

“He’s dotting off the plate,” Boone said, “and then when he came into the zone he got hurt.”

A right-hander who turns 34 on May 1, Stroman (0-1) is in the second season of a two-year contract guaranteeing $37 million. His deal includes a $16 million conditional player option for 2026 that could be exercised if he pitches in at least 140 innings this year.

He skipped the Yankees’ first two spring training workouts at a time when he didn’t have a projected rotation role behind Gerrit Cole, Fried, Rodón, Luis Gil and Schmidt. He arrived on Valentine’s Day, eight days ahead of the mandatory reporting date.

“I won’t pitch in the bullpen. I’m a starter,” Stroman said, repeating ”I’m a starter” seven times in a 13-second span. Injuries to Cole, Gil and Schmidt created an opportunity.

A two-time All-Star, Stroman hasn’t pitched through the fifth inning this season and has a 2.04 WHIP. Batters are hitting .467 (7 for 15) against him in the first inning with four walks.

“The movement qualities are there. Again, it’s less margin for error and there’s probably some adjustments we can all make,” Boone said. “The stuff’s not much different than the first half of last season to the second half to now, so just we got to execute a little better.”

Cardinals reserve C Yohel Pozo making most of first trip back to majors since 2021

ST. LOUIS — Reserve catcher Yohel Pozo will remember his first time being in St. Louis.

Pozo came off the bench in the second inning against the Philadelphia Phillies on Friday night after teammate Masyn Winn left after one inning with lower back spasms, sliding into the shortstop’s No. 9 position in the batting order.

And, he played a big role helping the Cardinals to a 2-0 victory over the Phillies. Pretty amazing stuff for a player who recently returned to the major leagues for the first time since 2021.

“When I played in the big leagues in ’21, I was in the American League,” said Pozo, who was with the Texas Rangers. “I have never been to St. Louis before. This is beautiful here. It feels great to play in front of a lot of people. It’s really nice.”

Getting into the game unexpectedly didn’t bother Pozo, who had never caught winning pitcher Andre Pallante previously.

“I sitting on the bench talking to Willson (Contreras), and (Daniel) Descalso came over to me and said you’re going to catch next inning. You don’t have time to do anything,” Pozo said. “If you’re mind is right, you’re ready to go anytime.”

He hit an RBI double in the fifth inning that ended a scoreless game. It was the first of his three hits, just the second in his 22-game big league career. He scored five batters later on a bases-loaded walk by Aaron Nola.

“He takes a really good at-bat,” St. Louis manager Oliver Marmol said. “He does a nice job behind the plate. He’s done a nice job for us.”

Pallante agreed.

“I mean, it’s not easy,” Pallante said. “He wanted to know what we’re doing. I just went over everything really briefly and he learned it really fast. He hit great. He was great back there.”

Pozo’s wife, Paola, and his two sons were in St. Louis to see him, as they are every game.

“My family is in the stands and I’m happy for that,” Pozo said.

The 27-year-old Pozo, a native of Venezuela, joined the Cardinals to replace injured catcher Ivan Herrera, who is out with a bone bruise on his left knee.

He made his debut with the Cardinals — and return to the major leagues — on Monday in Pittsburgh after being called up from Triple-A Memphis.

In that game — his major league debut — in front of 15 family members, Pozo hit a home run in the 8-4 loss. The home run came three years, seven months and 25 days since his last MLB homer on Aug. 13, 2021, against Oakland.

Foerster buries a few more goals as Flyers beat Islanders in shootout

Foerster buries a few more goals as Flyers beat Islanders in shootout originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Tyson Foerster stayed hot with two goals and the Flyers picked up a 4-3 shootout win Saturday afternoon over the Islanders at the Wells Fargo Center.

Bobby Brink won it in the skills competition after four Flyers came up empty.

The Flyers lost a 3-2 lead when Bo Horvat scored with 1:01 minutes left in regulation.

Jakob Pelletier also found the back of the net for the Flyers. His goal tied the game at 2-2 in the third period. The 24-year-old has recorded a point in six of the last seven games.

Foerster then delivered the go-ahead 3-2 goal. He has five markers through the last two games after scoring a hat trick Wednesday night in the Flyers’ 8-5 win at Madison Square Garden.

“You can tell he’s a goal scorer,” Samuel Ersson said. “You see that he’s one of the toughest guys to stop in practice.”

Owen Tippett collected assists on the two third-period goals.

“I thought we had a good team effort there in the third,” Foerster said.

The Flyers (33-37-9) improved to 5-1-0 under interim head coach Brad Shaw, a stretch in which they’ve scored 28 goals. They have three games to go.

“I think for everybody, we’re still trying to work on our own games, trying to get better, I think that’s a huge part of it,” Ersson said. “As a team, having some pride, playing for the Flyers’ logo and knowing that we’re trying to do something good here with the games we have left.”

The Flyers went to overtime for the 21st time this season. They’re 12-9 after regulation.

They split their four-game regular-season series with the Islanders (34-33-12).

• Foerster’s first goal was on the power play and it opened the game’s scoring in the second period.

The 23-year-old winger has eight markers in the last six games and 24 on the season after putting up 20 as a rookie last year.

“I like how he earns his success, I like how he doesn’t cheat to get his success,” Shaw said. “That’s not an easy thing to do on a regular basis. A real good sign from a young guy that’s showing he’s going to be a good pro and a good player for a long time.”

Matvei Michkov registered an assist on Foerster’s power play tally, giving him a 60-point rookie season.

More: How Michkov embraced a ‘boring process’ to become an even greater scorer

• Ersson saw his first start since last Saturday and converted 37 saves on 40 shots.

The 25-year-old denied Horvat, Maxim Tsyplakov, Simon Holmstrom, Tony DeAngelo and Kyle Palmieri in the shootout.

“I thought he was good all game,” Shaw said. “I loved him in the shootout, he had a little bit of swagger. I like that, when we see that from Sam, it usually bodes well for how many pucks he’s going to stop.”

New York erased a 1-0 deficit with second-period goals from Anders Lee and Noah Dobson. Lee’s marker came on the power play as Cam York was hit with a high-sticking penalty. Dobson’s tally was after the Flyers turned the puck over entering the offensive zone.

Islanders netminder Marcus Hogberg stopped 19 of the Flyers’ 22 shots.

• With the win, the Flyers moved a point ahead of the Kraken and into No. 6 for the 2025 NHL draft lottery odds. Seattle has two games left, with one late tonight at home against the Blues.

The Flyers are one point back of the Sabres, who visit the Panthers tonight.

• The Flyers are right back at it Sunday when they visit the Senators (1 p.m. ET/NBCSP+).

They’ve had a nightmarish time in the second game of back-to-back sets, going 1-10-1 while being outscored 52-29. 

Foerster buries a few more goals as Flyers beat Islanders in shootout

Foerster buries a few more goals as Flyers beat Islanders in shootout originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Tyson Foerster stayed hot with two goals and the Flyers picked up a 4-3 shootout win Saturday afternoon over the Islanders at the Wells Fargo Center.

Bobby Brink won it in the skills competition after four Flyers came up empty.

The Flyers lost a 3-2 lead when Bo Horvat scored with 1:01 minutes left in regulation.

Jakob Pelletier also found the back of the net for the Flyers. His goal tied the game at 2-2 in the third period. The 24-year-old has recorded a point in six of the last seven games.

Foerster then delivered the go-ahead 3-2 goal. He has five goals through the last two games after scoring a hat trick Wednesday night in the Flyers’ 8-5 win at Madison Square Garden.

Owen Tippett collected assists on the two third-period goals Saturday.

“I thought we had a good team effort there in the third,” Foerster said.

The Flyers (33-37-9) improved to 5-1-0 under interim head coach Brad Shaw, a stretch in which they’ve scored 28 goals. They have three games to go.

The Flyers went to overtime for the 21st time this season. They’re 12-9 after regulation.

They split their four-game regular-season series with the Islanders (34-33-12).

• Foerster’s first goal was on the power play and it opened the game’s scoring in the second period.

The 23-year-old winger has eight markers in the last six games and 24 on the season after putting up 20 as a rookie last year.

“I like how he earns his success, I like how he doesn’t cheat to get his success,” Shaw said. “That’s not an easy thing to do on a regular basis. A real good sign from a young guy that’s showing he’s going to be a good pro and a good player for a long time.”

Matvei Michkov registered an assist on Foerster’s power play tally, giving him a 60-point rookie season.

More: How Michkov embraced a ‘boring process’ to become an even greater scorer

• Samuel Ersson saw his first start since last Saturday and converted 37 saves on 40 shots.

The 25-year-old denied Horvat, Maxim Tsyplakov, Simon Holmstrom, Tony DeAngelo and Kyle Palmieri in the shootout.

“I thought he was good all game,” Shaw said. “I loved him in the shootout, he had a little bit of swagger. I like that, when we see that from Sam, it usually bodes well for how many pucks he’s going to stop.”

New York erased a 1-0 deficit with second-period goals from Anders Lee and Noah Dobson. Lee’s marker came on the power play as Cam York was hit with a high-sticking penalty. Dobson’s tally was after the Flyers turned the puck over entering the offensive zone.

Islanders netminder Marcus Hogberg stopped 19 of the Flyers’ 22 shots.

• With the win, the Flyers moved a point ahead of the Kraken and into No. 6 for the 2025 NHL draft lottery odds. Seattle has two games left, with one late tonight at home against the Blues.

The Flyers are one point back of the Sabres, who visit the Panthers tonight.

• The Flyers are right back at it Sunday when they visit the Senators (1 p.m. ET/NBCSP+).

They’ve had a nightmarish time in the second game of back-to-back sets, going 1-10-1 while being outscored 52-29. 

Blue Jackets Stay Alive, But Face Elimination Once Again Today

© Russell LaBounty-Imagn Images

The Columbus Blue Jackets have been getting a lot of help from the hockey gods lately.

The first time they faced elimination, they pulled out a 3-2 win over the Buffalo Sabres to stay alive. Then last night, they got the help they needed—thanks to the Ottawa Senators beating the Montreal Canadiens, they're still in it.

But staying alive another day also means facing elimination again.

Here’s the scenario for today:

The Canadiens will clinch a playoff spot and eliminate the Blue Jackets if any of the following happen:

(a) They beat the Toronto Maple Leafs in regulation (b) They win in overtime or a shootout and the Blue Jackets lose to the Washington Capitals (c) They collect a point and the Blue Jackets lose (d) They win in overtime or a shootout and the Blue Jackets lose in overtime or a shootout

There’s a lot of moving parts here, but the simplest path is this: the Blue Jackets need to beat the Capitals, and hope the Maple Leafs beat the Canadiens.

If everything goes their way, they'll live to fight another day—and get a rematch with the Capitals tomorrow with their season still alive.

Columbus Blue Jackets (81 pts) vs. Washington Capitals (109 pts) Game PreviewColumbus Blue Jackets (81 pts) vs. Washington Capitals (109 pts) Game PreviewThe Columbus Blue Jackets and the Washington Capitals play the first of back-to-back games this weekend, today at 12:30 PM. Columbus Blue Jackets Lines, Defensive Pairings, & Scratches For Tonight's Game vs. Washington Capitals Columbus Blue Jackets Lines, Defensive Pairings, & Scratches For Tonight's Game vs. Washington Capitals The Columbus Blue Jackets and the Washington Capitals play the first of back-to-back games this weekend, today at 12:30 PM. Columbus Blue Jackets Injury UpdateColumbus Blue Jackets Injury UpdateJust when the Columbus Blue Jackets thought they had turned the corner in terms of injuries, the injury bug has bitten again. 

Malachi Moreno walks his own, throwback path to Kentucky, Nike Hoop Summit

PORTLAND — Youth basketball can be more business than game, especially at the highest levels. Top players jump high schools — sometimes moving across the country, sometimes from another country — to find perceived better development opportunities. Top AAU programs are expensive. The best players have NIL money pouring in and people — not always trustworthy people — in their ear telling them how to monetize their social media or make a quick buck another way. It can be disorienting for teenagers making life-altering decisions.

Malachi Moreno is a welcome throwback.

The 6'11" center never left his home, his family and friends in Georgetown, Kentucky, population 37,000. There were offers to move, go anywhere and everywhere, and chase the almighty dollar (and potential future dollars). He chose home. From that comfort zone, Moreno won the state championship with the guys he grew up with, was named 2024-25 Kentucky Mr. Basketball — plus earned an invite to the Nike Hoop Summit this weekend in Portland.

" It was the place that built me and made me who I was," Moreno told NBC Sports about Georgetown. "Being given opportunities like [Nike Hoop Summit], it gives me an opportunity to represent where I'm from, and just to show like you can be from a small town and still accomplish great things."

Family and Friends

The ties that bound Moreno to Kentucky — and will continue to bind him as he is committed to play for Mark Pope and the Kentucky Wildcats next season, just 15 miles down the I-75 — are friends and family.

"I'm glad Malachi stayed home," his mother, Sarah, said. "It allowed him to actually enjoy his senior year, and it allowed him to be a kid for his final year of high school experience. All those high school things that's a lost art, sometimes, when you get into these high elite things."

"He wasn't ready to let go of going to prom, being with his childhood best friends, to try and chase the dream they've all had for so long," Malachi's brother Michael (who played at Eastern Kentucky, 2019-2024) added. "So ultimately, he's proven to himself that things can be done from Kentucky."

"It's a lot of fun just being with kids you grew up with," Moreno said. "You just get to enjoy life and just enjoy high school with them... and not feel pressured to perform every day.

"Like, I can go play a game and the next day go to school and I'll be fine. Nobody's coming up to me talking about, 'You need to work on this, this and this.' They're like, 'Oh, how's your day going? Let's hang out this weekend,' some kind of things like that. Those are things I enjoy really well."

Moreno's foundation is built on a rock of a family.

"They've been with me every step of the journey," Moreno said. "Through the hard times, through the good times, they've always been with me. They've always stuck with me. And every time, say, I have a bad game, they're the first ones to come talk to me and lift me back up. I mean, there's no reason to leave that. They always give me motivation. They give me confidence every single day."

While Moreno —the No. 3 ranked high school center in the nation per 247Sports — had offers from any number of national powers, where to play in college wasn't much of a debate for him.

"Kentucky was always a dream school for me," Moreno said. "You grow up, you live in Kentucky, you grow up watching them. Once I got the opportunity to play for them, it was kind of a first thing, keeping in the back of your mind, 'This is where you want to be.' The more games I went to, the more of the feel I got for just the University of Kentucky, just the fan base, and just being on the floor, it's just somewhere, like, you can't pass up that opportunity."

Nike Hoop Summit opportunity

While Moreno has played with and against many of the other stars at the Nike Hoop Summit at various events such as the McDonald's All-American game, this is the first time he's playing a game wearing the USA across his chest and playing for USA Basketball.

"It's a lot of pride, just being able to represent my country," Moreno said. "My family, we're a military family, I had my grandparents and they were influential in my life. Just being able to wear this across my chest, I feel like I'm kind of representing them and them, and also representing the greatness that came before me. And it's just a it's an honor and a blessing."

Playing for USA Basketball, and particularly for head coach Frank Bennett, has been the kind of challenge Moreno savors.

"Just the level of intensity we have in the practices, and just the intensity of the coach, the attention to detail, everything's very sharp, everything's very poised," Moreno said. "And I think that's a really good opportunity for everybody, just playing against guys and we know, but also keeping that competitive edge, it makes a lot of fun."

Confidence took time

Moreno is a throwback in more ways than just staying near home at Kentucky, his game is more old-school center — the kind of drop big, rim protector and vertical spacer coming back in vogue around the NBA. Moreno also has shown a deft passing touch in the practices in Portland.

"As a five man, I kind of want to dominate the paint first, and then, that sucks everybody in, and it opens it up for my teammates…" Moreno said." I'm more of a 'we over me' kind of player. I prefer for my teammates to eat, get their confidence going, and that gets my confidence going."

Some players are born with the confidence it takes to play high-level basketball. Moreno was not one of those guys.

"He wasn't necessarily too interested in basketball as a young kid, then he sprouted up and was always the biggest kid in his class," and that's when things started to change, Michael said of his brother.

"I can be brutally honest, the skill was not always there," Moreno said. "But once I got to high school and, I think it was more so my freshman summer, I got a couple of Big 10 offers, and that's when the drive really came to me — like this is really what you can do. You can make a living out of this. And that drive just kept me motivated. And then every day, I just wanted to get better and better and better."

That drive has led him all the way to representing the USA at the Nike Hoop Summit.

However, wherever the game takes him, Moreno will always be representing Kentucky.

And home.

How to watch the Nike Hoop Summit 2025

The Nike Hoop Summit games take place Saturday, April 12, and will be broadcast on the USA Network as well as streamed on Peacock.

The broadcast begins at 7 p.m. Eastern, with the women's game tipping off at 7:30 p.m. and the men's game at 10 p.m. from the Moda Center in Portland (home to the NBA's Trail Blazers).

Canadiens Have Another Opportunity To Punch Their Playoff Ticket

A scene we should see often on Saturday night - Photo credit: Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images

After taking on the Ottawa Senators on Friday, the Montreal Canadiens will jump back into the action on Saturday night when they take on the Toronto Maple Leafs. The hosts should be well rested, as they played their last game on Wednesday night against the Tampa Bay Lightning. However, they will need all their energy since they may be forced to play with only five defensemen.

Three Takeaways From A Missed Opportunity
Canadiens: Demidov Has Landed And May Be Perfect For St-Louis
Canadiens: Where Does Demidov Slot In?

With Jake McCabe already injured, Craig Berube confirmed after practice on Friday that Oliver Ekman-Larsson would miss Saturday night’s game against the Habs. The Toronto outfit will be forced to play a defenseman down, thanks to roster limitations and cap rules.

Saturday night’s duel will be the fourth and final matchup between the two teams; the Canadiens won the first game 1-0 in October, while Toronto won 4-1 in November and 7-3 in January. The Leafs have also won seven of the last ten meetings and three of their previous four games, while the Canadiens are still reeling from their first loss in seven games.

Samuel Montembeault was in the net last night, and Martin St-Louis has already confirmed that Jakub Dobes will be facing the Leafs for the first time in his young career. In 15 games this season, the youngster has a 7-4-2 record with a 2.87 goals-against average and a .904 save percentage.

As for the Leafs, Anthony Stolarz is 3-2-0 in 5 games with a GAA of 2.78 and a .910 SP versus the Canadiens, while Joseph Woll has never lost against the visitors; he’s 3-0-0 with a 1.67 GAA and a .942 SP.

If you were still hoping to see Ivan Demidov take his first strides as a Canadiens against the Leafs, forget it. The coach has already said it’s not happening. It will be interesting to see if St-Louis does make some changes to his lineup, given Friday night’s 5-2 loss and the fact that this is the tail end of a back-to-back. He should, however, put on the Canadiens’ jersey for Saturday morning’s optional skate.

It will be interesting to see if St-Louis tinkers with his lineup. Michael Pezzetta had a tough fight on Friday night and looked worse for wear. Perhaps an opportunity to bring Emil Heineman back in the lineup if he’s ready to go after the injury that made him day-to-day. It could be a good idea for Arber Xhekaj to reintegrate the defense corps. The Leafs aren’t overly physical, and some of their forwards can think twice before engaging in brutal board battles.

The Canadiens will have another opportunity to book their playoffs spot on Saturday night, but if they hope to, they’ll need a better contribution from their top line. In 27 games against the Leafs, captain Nick Suzuki has 22 points to his name, second only to Brendan Gallagher, who has 23 in 46 duels. Josh Anderson takes the third spot with 17 points in 36 tilts, while Cole Caufield and Patrik Laine have 13 points in 15 and 14 games, respectively. Suzuki currently has a seven-game point streak; he’s put up 13 points in that span.

As for the Leafs, John Tavares leads in points production against Montreal with 51 points in 58 games, followed by captain Auston Matthews, who has 46 points in 36 games, Mitch Marner with 38 points in 39 games, and William Nylander, who has 31 in 35 duels. Needless to say, the Canadiens need to stop the big four to win.

Two players to keep in check - Photo credit: John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images 

Montreal will need to have a good start if they want to prevail. Toronto is quite stingy in the first period, allowing only 68 games this season. Their worst defensively is the third, in which they’ve given up 84 goals on the year, which is good news for Martin St-Louis’ men who usually have a strong third.

The Habs have played 384 games in Toronto and have a 139-194-45-6 record away from home against the old enemy. With an assist tonight, Suzuki could join Chris Chelios as the 36th most prolific passer in franchise history with 237. Speaking of the former blueliner, Lane Hutson remains on the verge of breaking his record for most points by a Canadiens rookie defenseman. Meanwhile, with three games left to play, sniper Cole Caufield is on 37 goals, while the team’s main objective remains to qualify for the playoffs, getting the right winger to 40 lamplighters would be quite the milestone, something Montreal hasn’t seen since Vincent Damphousse did it in 1993-94.

The Canadiens will head back home after the game. They have a date with the Chicago Blackhawks on Monday night for what should be Demidov’s NHL debut. Something tells me the Bell Centre crowd will be deafening for that rookie lap.


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