Mets at Marlins: How to watch on SNY on April 1, 2025

The Mets face the Marlins in Miami on Tuesday at 6:40 p.m. on SNY.

Here's what to know about the game and how to watch...


Mets Notes

  • Kodai Senga gets the start in what will be his season debut
  • Francisco Lindor will be back in the lineup after getting the night off on Monday following the birth of his son
  • Juan Sotohas a 1.115 OPS in his first four games as a Met
  • Huascar Brazoban has excelled early on, firing 4.1 scoreless innings over two appearances while allowing two hits, one walk, and striking out four

METS
MARLINS

Francisco Lindor, SS

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Juan Soto, RF

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Pete Alonso, 1B

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Brandon Nimmo, LF

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Mark Vientos, 3B

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Jesse Winker, DH

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Luis Torrens, C

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LuisangelAcuña, SS

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Jose Siri, CF

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What channel is SNY?

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How can I stream the game?

The new way to stream SNY games is via the MLB App or MLB.tv. Streaming on the SNY App has been discontinued.

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How can I watch the game on the MLB App? 

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  • Type in your MLB.com credentials and tap “Log In.”  
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For more information on how to stream Mets games on SNY, please click here

Exciting Blues Forward Is Hitting New Level

Zack Bolduc (© Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images)

Everything is going right for the St. Louis Blues at the perfect time. After winning each of their last nine games, the Blues now have a five-point lead over the Calgary Flames for the final wild card spot in the Western Conference. As a result, their playoff odds are certainly increasing.

Several players have stepped up for the Blues over the last month, and forward Zack Bolduc is undoubtedly among them. 

Bolduc, 22, has been solid for the Blues this campaign, but he has hit a new level offensively down the stretch. In his last 17 contests, the 2021 first-round pick has scored 10 goals and recorded 13 points. This includes four goals and five points in his last six contests. 

With his ongoing hot streak, Bolduc now has 16 goals, 15 assists, 31 points, and a plus-19 rating in 65 games this season. The Trois-Rivieres, Quebec native has been improving as he continues adjusting to the NHL level and is showing off his offensive potential. 

From here, it will be interesting to see how Bolduc builds on his strong stretch of play. He is not showing any signs of slowing down, and it is hard not to be impressed by what he's providing for the Blues right now. 

Recent Blues News 

Blues Star Is Absolutely Thriving Right Now

Blues Reveal Number For Top Prospect Jimmy Snuggerud

Blues' Dylan Holloway Nearing Impressive Milestone

Blues Sign 2 Promising Prospects To Entry-Level Deals

St. Louis Blues Top Prospect Has Great Opportunity

Blues Big Winger Getting Hot At Right Time

NBA suspends 5 players for roles in Pistons-Timberwolves altercation

NBA suspends 5 players for roles in Pistons-Timberwolves altercation originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Detroit’s Isaiah Stewart was suspended for two games and four other players from the Pistons and Minnesota Timberwolves drew one-game suspensions for their roles in an on-court altercation between the teams earlier this week, the NBA said Tuesday.

Stewart got two games “based in part on his repeated history of unsportsmanlike acts,” the league said.

The NBA handed the one-game bans to Detroit’s Ron Holland II and Marcus Sasser along with Minnesota’s Naz Reid and Donte DiVincenzo. All five of those players were ejected from Sunday’s game, as were Detroit coach J.B. Bickerstaff and Minnesota assistant Pablo Prigioni.

“Obviously things went too far,” Bickerstaff said after that game. “But what you see is guys looking out for one another, guys trying to protect one another, guys trying to have each other’s backs. … Those are nonnegotiables in our locker room.”

The incident began when Holland fouled Reid with 8:36 left in the second quarter of the Timberwolves’ 123-104 victory over the Pistons in Minneapolis. Reid confronted Holland, who then pushed DiVincenzo, who then shoved Holland — and they wound up falling into spectators seated along the baseline.

Stewart and Sasser then entered the altercation, “which resulted in a continued escalation of the situation,” the league said.

Reid and DiVincenzo will serve their one-game suspensions Tuesday when the Timberwolves visit Denver. Stewart will begin serving his suspension Wednesday when the Pistons visit Oklahoma City, and Holland and Sasser also will serve their suspensions in that game.

ICYMI in Mets Land: Key injury updates; how likely is a Dylan Cease trade?

Here's what happened in Mets Land on Monday, in case you missed it...


The Fowler Wait is the Hardest Part

Jacob Fowler hasn't signed with the Montreal Canadiens so maybe it has to do with burning that year of the ELC. Guess what, that's what you do when you sign a potential NHL star who plays college. That's the deal and if the Canadiens don't do that, he will stall. This is expected.

Image

Fowler has his NHL dream and he should get at least one game and then he should go to Laval for the playoffs.  He has great ability but he is 20. He is mature and plays like an older goalie but this isn't the time to throw him into the soup. I'm sure that's part of this conversation they must be having as well. 

Fowler needs to play at least half a season in the AHL next year to make sure he is up to the task. Most need much more time to develop. There's a reason there aren't a lot of very young goalies in the NHL. There is a path to development that most teams follow especially with goalies because it's a hard position mentally.

The Canadiens don't have any bargaining power here. Fowler could go back and then watch Montreal sweat after that. I don't think that's going to happen but the longer this goes the more it makes you think about it.

Burn the first year of ELC. Give him all top bonuses. Give him a game and move on. He is your future. Trying to reinvent the wheel here can create bad feelings between the player and the organization and that's the last thing you want to do.

Pitino taps transfer portal as St. John’s lands Joson Sanon and Bryce Hopkins

St. John's coach Rick Pitino has already been busy replenishing his roster in the transfer portal. Coming off its most successful season in decades, the school announced two significant signings Monday — former Arizona State guard Joson Sanon and ex-Providence forward Bryce Hopkins. St. John's also loses seniors Kadary Richmond, Aaron Scott and Deivon Smith, meaning four of its top five scorers from 2024-25 won't be back next season.

The A’s settled into their new home in Sacramento. The result was familiar

Fans arrive at Sutter Health Park for on Monday for the team’s home opener. Photograph: Godofredo A Vásquez/AP

It could have been worse for the Athletics. Before they headed west to Oakland in 1968, their characterful former owner, Charlie Finley, threatened to move them from Kansas City to a cow pasture in the tiny town of Peculiar, Missouri.

Now they are in a place you might call Limbo, California – also known as the home of the Pacific Coast League’s Sacramento River Cats. It’s a staging post for Major League Baseball’s most contentious franchise after the burning of their Bay Area bridges left them needing somewhere to play ahead of a planned relocation from Oakland to Las Vegas.

The A’s evoke 70s nostalgia thanks to three successive World Series titles from 1972 to 1974, their distinctive green and gold colours and icons such as Reggie Jackson, Catfish Hunter and Rollie Fingers. And they are admired by analytics obsessives for the Moneyball innovations in the 2000s under the front-office leadership of Billy Beane.

Now they are symbols of executive dysfunction and geographical confusion. The brand plays on – but don’t call them the Oakland Athletics anymore. They’re not officially the Sacramento Athletics, either. Just the Athletics or the A’s. Players don’t have a city name emblazoned on the front of their shirts but wear a patch with an image of Sacramento’s Tower Bridge on their right sleeve and a Las Vegas emblem on the left arm. With an outfield hoarding promoting Las Vegas near a banner hailing the team’s nine World Series championships dating back to 1910 – when they were the Philadelphia Athletics – and a handful of fans in suddenly-retro Oakland gear, it feels like this is a franchise in flux, its identity addled by ownership’s wanderlust.

Related: Baseball’s last dive bar: Farewell to the crumbling Oakland Coliseum

Sutter Health Park is the site they will share for at least the next three seasons with the River Cats, the Triple-A affiliate of the San Francisco Giants. The River Cats are run by Vivek Ranadivé, who also controls the NBA’s Sacramento Kings. Sacramento, an often-overlooked city that was close to acquiring an MLS team but brought down in 2021 when seemingly clear on goal, would like another major-league outfit to boost its profile.

Though the A’s do not want to stick around for long, the 25-year-old venue has been upgraded, with bigger dugouts and clubhouses, better video and sound systems and facilities in the bullpens so that relievers can, well, relieve themselves. But it clearly remains a minor-league stadium, pleasant but petite, with its low-slung stand, grassy tree-lined picnic slope, kids’ playground and clubhouses accessed via the outfield.

Still, the buzz from crowded concourses and crammed seating areas in Monday’s home-away-from-home opener was palpable; and, for this team, unusual. With a capacity of about 13,000 and evident enthusiasm in the Californian capital, an 80-mile drive from Oakland with a regional population of about 2.5m, the A’s are very likely to better last year’s league-worst average attendance of 11,528.

In 2028 the A’s intend to move to a new $1.75bn ballpark on the site of the former Tropicana Hotel on the Las Vegas Strip. The club released renderings last year of a 33,000-capacity ballpark. With the razzle-dazzle the location demands, the design boasts swooping silver curves and shimmering green illuminations, resembling the Gateway Arch on St Patrick’s Day or the Sydney Opera House if it were slathered in pesto.

The MLB commissioner, Rob Manfred, has made progress in speeding up games but stadium negotiations roll at their own pace: however long it takes billionaire team owners and property developers to persuade politicians to fork out taxpayer funding for new venues.

Or not: this transfer completes a devastating triple don’t-play for the city of Oakland: the NFL’s Raiders left for Vegas in 2020 and the Golden State Warriors relocated across the water to San Francisco in 2019.

The A’s are not the only MLB team in a minor-league park this year, with the Tampa Bay Rays borrowing the New York Yankees’ spring-training facility because Tropicana Field was damaged by Hurricane Milton. While that was a natural disaster, this problem was man-made.

The club has been owned since 2005 by John Fisher, heir to the Gap retail fortune and accused of wilfully making the A’s unfashionable in order to make the switch to Nevada more palatable as their 60s-era multi-purpose stadium in Oakland, the Coliseum, crumbled and no deal was reached with city officials. He denies that claim and has insisted that “we worked as hard as possible for six years to find a solution in Oakland.” Fisher asserted to reporters on Monday that his hand was forced because “our lease was ending … and there was not really a legitimate offer on the table to extend”.

Still, last year the A’s payroll was $66.5m, the lowest in MLB by more than $20m. The New York Mets led the league with $333m. The A’s last made the playoffs in 2020 and have endured a losing record for the past three seasons. This year’s payroll is $75m, above only the Chicago White Sox and Miami Marlins.

The club hopes to begin ballpark construction by the middle of this year. Until the new palace is finished, what happens in Vegas stays in Sacramento. A short walk from downtown, Sutter doesn’t have under-seat cooling like the planned new climate-controlled arena. That feature would surely be appreciated in Sacramento in July when the average daily high is 35C (95F). Monday, though, was chilly and blustery, and the A’s were embarrassingly crushed 18-3 by the Chicago Cubs following a tribute to the late Hall of Famer, Rickey Henderson. This was the most runs allowed by a team in a home opener for a hundred years, according to Sportradar.

Many fans left long before the end, though the atmosphere remained upbeat. A man hawking “F*** Fisher” T-shirts on the sidewalk seemed to find few takers; nor was much dissent evident inside the ballpark save for a “sell the team” chant that briefly erupted after the contest became a blow-out. Most attendees were more interested in celebrating the team’s arrival in Sacramento than mourning its exit from Oakland. Among the loudest cheers were in praise of the bat boy when he thwarted a drone.

Some 175 years ago, fortune-seekers flocked to Sacramento to chase the gold rush. These A’s are only passing through in the hope of finding more glittering rewards elsewhere. But for the next few years the city with a landmark bridge may prove an adequate home for a club in transition.

“I think we recognise the need for a temporary home until we get to where we’re going and I think we are fully ready and fully prepared to embrace this as our home for the next three years, both this stadium and this city, and to make the very best of it. It’s going to be a unique environment,” outfielder Brent Rooker told reporters.

“I thought the energy [from fans] was great,” A’s manager Mark Kotsay said after the game. A sustained run of bad performances, however, would surely curdle the mood. “Not a good showing on our first night,” Kotsay conceded.

How one of Celtics' rivals made White a better 3-point shooter

How one of Celtics' rivals made White a better 3-point shooter originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

Isaiah Thomas set the Boston Celtics record for most 3-pointers made in a season with 245 during the 2016-17 campaign. Three Celtics players are expected to break that record, and Derrick White became the first Monday night.

The veteran point guard needed two 3-pointers to pass Thomas, and he ended up going 3-for-11 in Boston’s 117-103 road win against the Memphis Grizzlies.

Jayson Tatum needs six more 3-pointers to surpass Thomas, while Payton Pritchard needs nine.

“We talked about it on the plane and it’s pretty cool that there’s three of us so close to doing something special,“ White told reporters after Monday’s win, as seen in the video player above.

”Honestly, looking back at my career, never thought I’d be in this position. Just thankful for the coaching staff, thankful for the guys on this team. I know I wouldn’t be able to do it without them. I’ll hold it for now until one of them breaks my record, so that’s cool.”

White breaking this record would have seemed pretty unrealistic when the C’s acquired him from the San Antonio Spurs shortly before the 2022 NBA trade deadline. White was a decent 3-point shooter with the Spurs but not prolific by any means. He never shot better than 36.6 percent from beyond the arc in San Antonio. He hasn’t shot below 38.1 percent in any of his full seasons with the Celtics.

What led to White’s huge improvement as a 3-point shooter? Well, it started after the 2022 NBA Finals loss to the Golden State Warriors, which he admits was a real low point in his career.

“After the Finals, I feel like that was the biggest summer of my life,” White told reporters in Memphis. “What happened in the Finals and how I was being guarded on that stage, it was one of my lowest points. I told Draymond (Green) after the (2024) Olympics, he kind of changed my life because they weren’t guarding me. So I had to go in that summer and me and my trainer, Marcus Mason, just focused on being consistent. And I think from that point, I just got better and better.”

White attempted 25 3-pointers in the 2022 Finals, and he made 10 of them. But five of those 3-point makes came in Game 1, and White shot 0-for-8 from beyond the arc in Games 3, 5 and 6 combined. He scored a total of three points on 1-for-10 shooting (0-for-5 from 3-point range) over the final two games (both losses).

White shot 30.6 percent on 3-pointers in 26 regular season games with the Celtics after the 2022 trade deadline. He improved to 38.1 percent in 2022-23, which was his first full season in Boston, and then he shot a career-high 39.6 percent last season to help lead the C’s to their 18th championship.

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In fact, White’s 3-point shooting was a huge reason why the Celtics beat the Dallas Mavericks in the 2024 NBA Finals. In two years, White went from a player the Warriors dared to shoot to a player the Mavericks didn’t want to shoot.

White’s improvement as an outside shooter has been quite impressive. His scoring, defense and reliability have made him one of the most valuable players on this Celtics team.

Three takeaways from Lakers 104-98 win over Rockets

LOS ANGELES — It felt like a playoff game in many ways. It was defensive, grinding, at points feeling more like a throwback to a 2003 game. It certainly wasn't always pretty.

But it was illuminating.

Monday night, the Lakers beat a Rockets team on the second night of a back-to-back 104-98. While we don't want to read too much into one game, this one shed some light on these teams heading into the playoffs because of its intensity. Here are my three takeaways.

West playoffs will be bloodbath

We say that every year. We REALLY mean it this year.

This Rockets/Lakers showdown was a perfect example: Two of the top four teams in the West locked in a physical game filled with little chess matches. For example, the Lakers went small with Dorian Finney-Smith as the center to space the floor and pull the Rockets' bigs out from the paint; the Rockets countered by playing two seven-footers — Alperen Sengun and Steven Adams — to try and overpower the smaller Lakers. And then there was Dillon Brooks trying to get under LeBron James' skin. Just like old times.

Now imagine all that and more with the added urgency and intensity of the playoffs.

The West is a conference where the current No. 8 seed is 11 games over .500 (43-32), has a top-three defense in the league, and those Clippers feature future Hall of Famers Kawhi Leonard and James Harden. (For comparison, all four teams headed to the play-in in the East are below .500.)

Lakers’ small lineup can defend

When was the last time you saw Luka Doncic hustle like this on defense?

"They emptied the tank on the defensive end," Lakers coach J.J. Redick said, not just of Doncic but his team. It's that defensive effort that should give Lakers fans hope.

The knock on the Lakers' chances at a deep playoff run is directly tied to their defense — Austin Reaves and Doncic are below-average defenders who will be targeted in a playoff series, and there's no traditional big man providing rim protection behind them to clean up the mess.

Except, the Lakers' defense is thriving anyway (at least when LeBron James is healthy). For a couple of nights now (against Memphis and Houston), the Lakers have shown these smaller lineups are very active and aggressive defensively. It threw the Rockets off for stretches.

"Well, defensively it's just packing the paint and gang rebounding. I think we did that tonight," Redick said of the defense. "LeBron [James] eight rebounds, Austin [Reaves] eight rebounds, Luka [Dončić] six rebounds, Doe (Dorian Finney-Smith) six rebounds, Gabe [Vincent] four rebounds and Vando (Jarred Vanderbilt) six rebounds. That's how we have to control the glass is by committee."

What makes it all work is LeBron's versatility. He was fantastic much of the night, particularly covering Sengun, using his physicality to slow one of the key hubs of the Rockets' offense. He didn't do it alone, the Lakers did a great job fronting Sengun at points, bringing the double-teams and taking away what he wanted to do.

"I thought defensively we were very locked in with our gameplan and what we wanted to do…" LeBron said. "We understood that we had to key in on our keys defensively in order to win the game."

LeBron seemed to be everywhere, and he had the key block late for Los Angeles.

With Jaxson Hayes his only traditional big, Redick is going to go small during the playoffs and the Lakers' defense will be tested. However, with wings like Dorain Finney-Smith and Jared Vanderbilt, the Lakers defense might be good enough.

Who is Houston’s go-to option?

It's the question posed by many in league circles about the Rockets and their potential for a deep playoff run: Who is their go-to guy to get a bucket in the clutch? Reggie Miller brought it up on the broadcast.

In the moments when the Lakers' defense gave Houston fits, that lack of a clear number one guy who could be a relief valve stood out. The Rockets don't have one guy they trust to just bail them out, get a bucket and change the game's momentum. Houston does it by committee — Jalen Green, Amen Thompson, Sengun — all with their veteran (and the guy with the ring) Fred VanVleet as the table setter. It can work, this is a deep team, but that approach lets them down at points. One of those points was against the Lakers, when the Rockets didn't break 100 against an aggressive Lakers D.

To be fair, the Rockets were on the second night of a back-to-back and tired legs may have been behind some of the missed 3-pointers. Then there were the turnovers.

"The difference is just making shots and limiting turnovers," Amen Thompson said. "We had two turnovers at the end that we didn't need. Without those, it could have been a different game. I think our defense was pretty good, but we just needed to score more."

Which comes back to who is the go-to person on the offense. It's one thing the playoffs will tell us about the Rockets — or it will tell the front office they need to go get a player like that.

Notes on every Phillies pitcher through 4 games

Notes on every Phillies pitcher through 4 games originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Off to a 3-1 start, the Phillies have a great chance to win a second consecutive series Wednesday or Thursday when they resume play against the Rockies at Citizens Bank Park. Zack Wheeler will be on the mound for his second start against one of the majors’ worst offenses, one that struggles even more on the road.

Here’s a note on all 13 pitchers so far:

Zack Wheeler

The only run the Nationals scored off Wheeler came on a Keibert Ruiz home run on a 96 mph fastball in and off the plate to conclude a 12-pitch at-bat.

Wheeler has made 65 regular-season starts since 2023. In 39 of them, he’s pitched at least six innings and allowed two runs or fewer — five more such starts than any pitcher in baseball.

Shadows gave Nationals and Phillies hitters even less of a chance on Opening Day than they’d have usually had vs. Wheeler and Mackenzie Gore, but while Gore outdueled Wheeler that afternoon, the Phillies’ ace didn’t make many, if any mistakes.

Jesus Luzardo

Luzardo’s four-seam fastball averaged 96.9 mph in his first start, the highest velocity of any left-handed starter in the majors so far this season.

His sinker averaged 96.0, second in the majors among lefty starters to Cristopher Sanchez (96.5). Luzardo struck out 11 over five innings.

This is going to be a special rotation if the Phillies can keep at least four of the five guys healthy.

Aaron Nola

Nola has allowed 36 home runs in his last 36 starts, including playoffs. With how frequently he is around the plate and how much he challenges hitters, it seems this will always be a thing.

It isn’t such a big deal when nobody is on base. Allowing a solo home run is the same as allowing three straight singles, in fact it’s probably better because of the fewer baserunners and high-stress pitches. Nola has always done a good job of limiting walks and hits. His .287 career opponents’ on-base percentage is more than 30 points lower than the league average over that decade. He obviously has not always done a good job of limiting longballs.

Cristopher Sanchez

It’s not just that his sinker velocity is up 2 mph, his slider is as well, giving hitters less time to judge and react to it. Since June 2023, the changeup has been one of the best in baseball, not just from the eye test but statistically. Sanchez’ sinker already generates a high level of groundballs but at 97 has a chance to miss many more bats than at 94-95. His slider hasn’t been nearly as consistent as the changeup but has been a plus pitch at times. All three offerings could be better than ever this season if the command doesn’t vanish.

Taijuan Walker

While his velocity was closer to the 2023 range in spring training, Walker still struck out only eight batters in 17 innings. He isn’t going to miss many bats and will be reliant on pinpoint fastball command and the success of his splitter. Last season, he couldn’t command the splitter well enough to give hitters a reason to offer at it and they instead wailed away at an upper-80s fastball. At 92 mph, he would have slightly more room to breathe, though still not a ton.

This is a crucial month for Walker’s baseball future. If he pitches well in Ranger Suarez’ absence for three, four, five starts, it could increase his appeal to a more starter-needy team. It could also give the Phillies confidence that he’d serve a purpose as a long man in Year 3 of 4 under contract.

Jordan Romano

Good to see a quick, 11-pitch, two-strikeout bounceback performance to end the home opener after a two-run appearance in the eighth inning on Opening Day.

It seems like Romano and Jose Alvarado will be the right-handed and left-handed closing options, though Orion Kerkering and Matt Strahm could pick up a few saves as well.

Jose Alvarado

Averaged 100.0 mph with his sinker on Monday and unsurprisingly leads all lefty relievers in average velocity thus far. Looks ridiculously good, it’s just a matter of maintaining confidence and control. So much of Alvarado’s game is about confidence and he’s never felt better, physically or stuff-wise.

Orion Kerkering

Is this guy no-nonsense or what? Kerkering has worked out of two jams with two men aboard by going right after hitters with a top-tier slider-fastball combination. On Opening Day, he survived two jam-job bloop hits by inducing more soft contact.

In the home opener, he struck out power-hitting Michael Toglia with a 97 mph fastball that probably caught too much plate, but Toglia wasn’t on time because the at-bat had been all sliders and that’s what hitters must prepare for first vs. Kerkering, especially with two strikes.

Kerkering turns 24 on Friday. There’s quite a future in front of him as a closer or high-leverage reliever. He was drafted in the fifth round in 2022 and no pitcher drafted before him has been more impactful, with Kerkering, Ben Joyce and Jonathan Cannon the top three so far.

Matt Strahm

He’s averaged 92 mph with his fastball and sinker through two outings after missing time in camp with a left shoulder impingement, then cutting the top of a finger as the Phillies were leaving Clearwater. Last season, he averaged 93.5. It would not be surprising to see that average creep up as the month progresses, and Strahm has a deep enough mix of pitches and deception that he’s not wholly reliant on velo anyway.

Tanner Banks

Banks would be a solid second lefty in a lot of bullpens but is the Phillies’ third. They like his ability to go more than an inning if needed. He has a 3.42 ERA as a Phillie but oftentimes for a reliever the more important number is his rate of scoreless appearances. Banks has avoided an earned run in two-thirds of his — ideally that would be closer to 75%. (An example of an elite rate would be 2024 Jeff Hoffman at 87%).

Joe Ross

Curious to see who the Phillies turn to first when they need a long man after a short start. Ross has started plenty in his career and was signed to both provide rotation depth and another experienced right-handed relief option. He had a 1.78 ERA last season as a reliever. Ross, Banks and Carlos Hernandez are the three relievers the Phillies feel most comfortable using for more than an inning.

Jose Ruiz

Came out of nowhere to deliver a solid 2024 season, though it remains to be seen whether he can be the third-best right-handed reliever in a contending bullpen.

Carlos Hernandez

Legitimately one of the largest men in the sport. Listed at 6-4/255 but looks closer to 6-6/280. Did not pitch well in his first outing and is likely a guy Rob Thomson wants to get into another non-leverage situation soon for a chance to rebound.

Notes on every Phillies pitcher through 4 games

Notes on every Phillies pitcher through 4 games originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

Off to a 3-1 start, the Phillies have a great chance to win a second consecutive series Wednesday or Thursday when they resume play against the Rockies at Citizens Bank Park. Zack Wheeler will be on the mound for his second start against one of the majors’ worst offenses, one that struggles even more on the road.

Here’s a note on all 13 pitchers so far:

Zack Wheeler

The only run the Nationals scored off Wheeler came on a Keibert Ruiz home run on a 96 mph fastball in and off the plate to conclude a 12-pitch at-bat.

Wheeler has made 65 regular-season starts since 2023. In 39 of them, he’s pitched at least six innings and allowed two runs or fewer — five more such starts than any pitcher in baseball.

Shadows gave Nationals and Phillies hitters even less of a chance on Opening Day than they’d have usually had vs. Wheeler and Mackenzie Gore, but while Gore outdueled Wheeler that afternoon, the Phillies’ ace didn’t make many, if any mistakes.

Jesus Luzardo

Luzardo’s four-seam fastball averaged 96.9 mph in his first start, the highest velocity of any left-handed starter in the majors so far this season.

His sinker averaged 96.0, second in the majors among lefty starters to Cristopher Sanchez (96.5). Luzardo struck out 11 over five innings.

This is going to be a special rotation if the Phillies can keep at least four of the five guys healthy.

Aaron Nola

Nola has allowed 36 home runs in his last 36 starts, including playoffs. With how frequently he is around the plate and how much he challenges hitters, it seems this will always be a thing.

It isn’t such a big deal when nobody is on base. Allowing a solo home run is the same as allowing three straight singles, in fact it’s probably better because of the fewer baserunners and high-stress pitches. Nola has always done a good job of limiting walks and hits. His .287 career opponents’ on-base percentage is more than 30 points lower than the league average over that decade. He obviously has not always done a good job of limiting longballs.

Cristopher Sanchez

It’s not just that his sinker velocity is up 2 mph, his slider is as well, giving hitters less time to judge and react to it. Since June 2023, the changeup has been one of the best in baseball, not just from the eye test but statistically. Sanchez’ sinker already generates a high level of groundballs but at 97 has a chance to miss many more bats than at 94-95. His slider hasn’t been nearly as consistent as the changeup but has been a plus pitch at times. All three offerings could be better than ever this season if the command doesn’t vanish.

Taijuan Walker

While his velocity was closer to the 2023 range in spring training, Walker still struck out only eight batters in 17 innings. He isn’t going to miss many bats and will be reliant on pinpoint fastball command and the success of his splitter. Last season, he couldn’t command the splitter well enough to give hitters a reason to offer at it and they instead wailed away at an upper-80s fastball. At 92 mph, he would have slightly more room to breathe, though still not a ton.

This is a crucial month for Walker’s baseball future. If he pitches well in Ranger Suarez’ absence for three, four, five starts, it could increase his appeal to a more starter-needy team. It could also give the Phillies confidence that he’d serve a purpose as a long man in Year 3 of 4 under contract.

Jordan Romano

Good to see a quick, 11-pitch, two-strikeout bounceback performance to end the home opener after a two-run appearance in the eighth inning on Opening Day.

It seems like Romano and Jose Alvarado will be the right-handed and left-handed closing options, though Orion Kerkering and Matt Strahm could pick up a few saves as well.

Jose Alvarado

Averaged 100.0 mph with his sinker on Monday and unsurprisingly leads all lefty relievers in average velocity thus far. Looks ridiculously good, it’s just a matter of maintaining confidence and control. So much of Alvarado’s game is about confidence and he’s never felt better, physically or stuff-wise.

Orion Kerkering

Is this guy no-nonsense or what? Kerkering has worked out of two jams with two men aboard by going right after hitters with a top-tier slider-fastball combination. On Opening Day, he survived two jam-job bloop hits by inducing more soft contact.

In the home opener, he struck out power-hitting Michael Toglia with a 97 mph fastball that probably caught too much plate, but Toglia wasn’t on time because the at-bat had been all sliders and that’s what hitters must prepare for first vs. Kerkering, especially with two strikes.

Kerkering turns 24 on Friday. There’s quite a future in front of him as a closer or high-leverage reliever. He was drafted in the fifth round in 2022 and no pitcher drafted before him has been more impactful, with Kerkering, Ben Joyce and Jonathan Cannon the top three so far.

Matt Strahm

He’s averaged 92 mph with his fastball and sinker through two outings after missing time in camp with a left shoulder impingement, then cutting the top of a finger as the Phillies were leaving Clearwater. Last season, he averaged 93.5. It would not be surprising to see that average creep up as the month progresses, and Strahm has a deep enough mix of pitches and deception that he’s not wholly reliant on velo anyway.

Tanner Banks

Banks would be a solid second lefty in a lot of bullpens but is the Phillies’ third. They like his ability to go more than an inning if needed. He has a 3.42 ERA as a Phillie but oftentimes for a reliever the more important number is his rate of scoreless appearances. Banks has avoided an earned run in two-thirds of his — ideally that would be closer to 75%. (An example of an elite rate would be 2024 Jeff Hoffman at 87%).

Joe Ross

Curious to see who the Phillies turn to first when they need a long man after a short start. Ross has started plenty in his career and was signed to both provide rotation depth and another experienced right-handed relief option. He had a 1.78 ERA last season as a reliever. Ross, Banks and Carlos Hernandez are the three relievers the Phillies feel most comfortable using for more than an inning.

Jose Ruiz

Came out of nowhere to deliver a solid 2024 season, though it remains to be seen whether he can be the third-best right-handed reliever in a contending bullpen.

Carlos Hernandez

Legitimately one of the largest men in the sport. Listed at 6-4/255 but looks closer to 6-6/280. Did not pitch well in his first outing and is likely a guy Rob Thomson wants to get into another non-leverage situation soon for a chance to rebound.

Canadiens: The Final Showdown With The Panthers

Brendan Gallagher celebrates with his teammates after sealing the win with an empty net goal on Sunday - Photo credit:  Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

The Montreal Canadiens had a disastrous road trip last week, but they still managed to redeem themselves by winning their duel with the Florida Panthers on Sunday afternoon in Sunrise. It was the third time the Habs beat the Stanley Cup champions this season, this time by a score of 4-2. The Cats appeared frustrated at the end of the game, as evidenced by Niko Mikkola's slapshot at the buzzer that nearly hit David Savard in the head.

On Monday, the NHL Player Safety announced Mikkola had been fined $5,000 for unsportsmanlike conduct. This came as a surprise to some, but it was a reckless act, and the Canadiens took it as an act of aggression. The referees quickly intervened and sent Mikkola back to the dressing room, but it wouldn’t be shocking if there were some repercussions on Tuesday night.

Canadiens: The Jacob Fowler Watch Is On
Three Takeaways From The Canadiens' Excellent Display On Sunday
Canadiens: Is Xhekaj Facing The Axe?

The Canadiens had a day off on Monday, so there’s been no indication of possible lineup changes, but generally speaking, Martin St-Louis is of the “if it’s not broken, don’t fix it” school of thought. It would, therefore, be surprising if he did make some changes.

I fully expect Samuel Montembeault to be back in the net; he has a 3-4-1 record with a 3.95 goals-against average and a .889 save percentage against Tuesday’s visitors, while Jakub Dobes has blanked them in his only start. Sergei Borbovsky is 16-9-1 against Montreal with a 2.47 GAA and a .918 SP. Meanwhile, backup Vitek Vanecek is 3-1-0, with a 2.74 GAA and a .894 SP.

The numbers up front haven’t changed much since our last preview. Brendan Gallagher is still the Canadiens’ point leader against the Panthers; he now has 24 points in 39 games, having added one on Sunday. Patrik Laine still comes second with 23 points in 22 games, but Nick Suzuki is closing in. Thanks to his three-point outing, he’s got 18 points in as many games.

As for the Cats, Aleksander Barkov is now the leader of the pack in points as well. His two-point performance Sunday gives him 49 points in 38 games. Brad Marchard is now in second place with 48 points in 58 games, having been held off the scoresheet last weekend, and Sam Reinhart padded his total to 23 points in 33 games.

The Habs are still holding the second wild card spot in the eastern conference, but the race is tight and the Columbus Blue Jackets could catch them up tonight if they win and St-Louis' men lose. 

The game is set for 7:00 PM, and the first 8,000 fans to come to the Bell Centre will receive a free Juraj Slafkovsky bobblehead. Montreal now has six home games remaining, with the Boston Bruins and Philadelphia Flyers set to visit this week, the Detroit Red Wings next week, and the Chicago Blackhawks and Carolina Hurricanes closing the regular season.


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White credits Draymond, Warriors for changing his life after Finals

White credits Draymond, Warriors for changing his life after Finals originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

Derrick White made Boston Celtics history Monday night, and he had the Warriors in part to thank for that.

White passed Isaiah Thomas’ record for most 3-pointers made in a season after reaching his 247th trey in Boston’s 117-103 win over the Memphis Grizzlies. But his confidence from behind the arc wasn’t always there.

Until … Boston’s 2022 NBA Finals loss against Golden State.

White admitted that was a pivotal point of his career that fueled his massive 3-point shooting improvement.

“After the Finals, I feel like that was the biggest summer of my life,” White told reporters in Memphis. “Obviously what happened in the Finals and how I was being guarded on that stage. It was like one of the lowest points. I told Draymond [Green] after the [2024] Olympics that he kind of changed my life because they weren’t guarding me.

“So I had to go in that summer and me and my trainer, Marcus Mason, just focused on being consistent. I think from that point, I just got better and better.”

To put it lightly.

Before being dealt to the Celtics at the 2022 NBA trade deadline, White never shot better than 36.6 percent from 3-point land in nearly five seasons with the San Antonio Spurs. He shot 30.6 percent from deep on 4.3 attempts in his first 26 regular-season games with Boston.

In the Finals, he shot 18 of 55 from the field (32.7 percent) and 10 of 25 from downtown (40 percent), but five of those 3s came during a breakout Game 1 performance. He shot 29.4 percent from 3-point range the rest of the six-game series.

He took the loss hard that summer, but took his frustrations out in the gym. Adjustments were made, and the results are clear.

White shot 38.1 percent on 4.8 attempts and 39.6 percent on 6.8 attempts over the following two seasons, respectively, including shooting nearly 40 percent in Boston’s NBA Finals win over the Dallas Mavericks last year.

This season, he’s shooting 38.1 percent from beyond the arc on a career-high 9.1 attempts.

Despite the budding rivalry between the Celtics and Warriors that grew heated during that Finals matchup, there’s a level of respect between the two teams, and especially between White and Green.

“There’s a lot of mutual respect,” White said of Green. “He just sees the work that I put in to change how I play and I’ve always had a lot of respect for him.”

Sometimes, a little disrespect is all the fuel you need to turn things around.

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