Dodgers snap three-game losing streak behind early burst, seventh-inning rally

Los Angeles Dodgers Shohei Ohtani hits a single during the first inning of a baseball game against the Washington Nationals, Wednesday, April 9, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/John McDonnell)
The Dodgers' Shohei Ohtani hits a single to lead off the game Wednesday against the Nationals. He would score on a triple by Tommy Edman. (John McDonnell / Associated Press)

Dave Roberts had a feeling as he walked around the clubhouse on Wednesday afternoon.

Over the previous five days, his once-unbeaten Dodgers team had lost four times. The night before, they did so embarrassingly on a frigid night in the country’s capital, striking out 15 times in a six-run loss to the rebuilding Washington Nationals.

In that defeat, Roberts was particularly perturbed by the club’s quality of at-bats — or lack thereof.

“The at-bats collectively haven’t been ‘team’ at-bats, and the results are showing,” Roberts said Tuesday night.

"I just don’t think 15 strikeouts with our ballclub should happen,” he reiterated in his pregame media scrum Wednesday.

Read more:Without Blake Snell, Dodgers' highly touted pitching depth falters in loss to Nationals

By then, however, Roberts had noticed a renewed intensity from the group in their afternoon preparation — hopeful that Tuesday’s blowout, and an overall frustrating first trip in which they’d already clinched back-to-back series losses, would serve as the catalyst for a much-needed getaway day win.

“You don’t want to get swept by these guys. That wouldn’t be a good thing,” Roberts said, with the Dodgers having already lost twice this week at Nationals Park. “I think our guys have a good look today. There’s a sense of pride … I think you’ll see a different focus today. I expect us to perform today.”

In a 6-5 win over the Nationals, the Dodgers performed just enough; building, then blowing, an early four-run lead before finally prevailing behind a go-ahead seventh-inning rally.

With the sun finally out, and this week’s freezing East Coast temperatures finally warming up, the Dodgers got off to a blistering start Wednesday.

Shohei Ohtani hit a leadoff single. Mookie Betts put two aboard with a walk. Tommy Edman drove them both in with a triple into the right-field corner. Then Teoscar Hernández left the yard for a two-run shot.

Four batters in, it was 4-0.

The lead, however, wouldn’t last.

Nationals starter Jake Irvin found a groove, retiring 18 of the 21 batters he faced the rest of the way in what turned into a decent six-inning start.

Dodgers starter Landon Knack, on the other hand, faltered in his return to the big-league roster, giving up three runs in the bottom of the first (it would have been more if not for an inning-ending play Betts made deep in the hole at shortstop) then two more while getting pulled in the third.

The Nationals’ 5-4 lead lasted until Irvin exited the game at the start of the seventh — opening the door for the Dodgers to finally answer back.

Andy Pages started the rally by whacking his second home run in two nights, busting out of his early-season slump with a game-tying drive to left in an 0-and-2 count.

Then, Ohtani reached on a booted grounder to second. Edman drew a two-out walk. And with runners on the corners, Hernández lifted a bloop single just over the head of second baseman Luis García Jr. in shallow right field, plating the go-ahead run with his 16th RBI of the season (tied for most in the National League).

The Dodgers’ offense wouldn’t tack on again, finishing the day with nine more strikeouts.

But that was enough on a day the team’s lockdown bullpen combined for 6 ⅔ scoreless innings — avoiding what would have been their first three-game series sweep since last July, and validating Roberts’ pregame confidence.

Freddie Freeman expected back Friday

When the Dodgers return to Los Angeles for the start of a six-game homestand Friday, they’ll get an important boost to the lineup.

As was initially expected, injured first baseman Freddie Freeman is on track to be back on the field Friday night, after missing the team’s last nine games after re-aggravating his surgically repaired right ankle slipping in the shower earlier this month.

Read more:After 'honor' of White House visit, Shohei Ohtani picking up where he left off in 2024

Freeman stayed back in California during the team’s trip this week, taking live batting practice at-bats against minor-league pitchers the last several days. More encouraging, according to Roberts, has been the way Freeman looked in baserunning drills the major-league coaching staff watched via video.

"Just looking at his gait running yesterday, I would say that it's better than it was when he started the season,” Roberts said.

“If nothing changes, he'll be in the lineup on Friday."

Freeman has played just three games so far this season. He sat out during the team’s season-opening series in Tokyo after feeling discomfort in the same area of his ribs he suffered torn cartilage during last year’s playoffs. And even before his shower mishap, his right ankle had not yet returned to 100% from the severe sprain he played through last October; an injury that led to a December debridement surgery to remove loose bodies.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Kvaratskhelia, PSG’s joyous throwback, delivers moment of old-school delight | Barney Ronay

PSG’s winger makes up his own moments – and he scored a beauty to set Luis Enrique’s side on course for victory

It took three minutes of the second half for Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, perhaps the most watchable footballer in Europe right now, to confirm the way this game was going.

Unai Emery had sent on Axel Disasi for Matty Cash at the break, with the score 1-1 and PSG hugely dominant on every metric. Cash was effectively doomed in this game from the moment he was booked pulling Kvaratskhelia back, just trying to stop the pain on Aston Villa’s right side, and already facing a case of terminal neck-crick from staring down at those shuffling feet. That was Cash’s fourth foul with just 17 minutes gone. Tick tock.

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Even In Passing, Shero Leaves Legacy On Penguins Organization

January 31, 2012; Pittsburgh,PA, USA: Pittsburgh Penguins general manager Ray Shero (left) and Pittsburgh Penguins center Sidney Crosby at a press conference to update the status of Crosby's health before the game against the Toronto Maple Leafs at the CONSOL Energy Center. (Charles LeClaire-USPRESSWIRE)

It's hard to talk about the Sidney Crosby-era Pittsburgh Penguins without talking about former general manager Ray Shero.

Sadly, Shero died Wednesday at the age of 42. And he leaves behind a legacy in Pittsburgh that won't soon be forgotten. 

The organization brought Shero on in 2006, and he made a pretty immediate impact in his first season. His very first draft selection was Jordan Staal (2nd overall), and he took the pieces already in place with Crosby, Evgeni Malkin, Kris Letang and Marc-Andre Fleury to take a lottery team to the Stanley Cup playoffs in year one. 

From there, the Penguins only skyrocketed to new heights. The following season, the young team found themselves vying for the top spot in the Eastern Conference leading up to the NHL trade deadline. Wanting to go all-in, Shero took the initiative to approach ownership about accelerating the timeline for the team's "five-year plan."

And, with the blessing of then-majority owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle, he did just that. His trade for the biggest name on the market that season - forward Marian Hossa - propelled the Penguins to the Stanley Cup Final and set the precedent for all the years to follow with the organization. 

Former Penguins GM Shero Passes Away At 62Former Penguins GM Shero Passes Away At 62Just days after the Pittsburgh Penguins mourned the loss of former netminder and sports reporter Greg Millen, news broke on Wednesday morning that former Stanley Cup-winning General Manager Ray Shero had passed away at 62. 

The Penguins won Shero's only Stanley Cup just one year later in 2009, but his "big move" in 2008 is what catapulted the organization into being the perennial contender that it is. From that point on, the Penguins solified the all-in, win-now approach that they became known for in all the years to follow - something that made them a model franchise for the better part of two decades. 

With a very young core, he knew how to balance that youth and inexperience with valuable veteran acquisitions such as Gary Roberts, Bill Guerin, Chris Kunitz, Pascal Dupuis, and Petr Sykora. He prioritized development and wanted the Penguins' AHL and ECHL teams to be vying for championships, not simply acting as a farm for the big club.

He put Pittsburgh on the map, and - although he was fired by the Penguins in the summer of 2014 - he was a huge reason why the Penguins had the foundation in place for sustained success, even after he moved on to the New Jersey Devils and Minnesota Wild

Ray Shero is synonymous with the Crosby-era Penguins. And his contributions to the franchise - and to hockey - will continue to live on beyond his passing.


Bookmark THN - Pittsburgh Penguins on your Google News tab to follow the latest Penguins news, roster moves, player features, and more!      

Yankees’ Devin Williams ‘still figuring stuff out’ as early-season struggles continue

The Yankees went into the ninth inning of Wednesday’s game against the Detroit Tigers feeling pretty good about themselves.

After the offense was held in check for most of the last three days, the Yankees were three outs away from salvaging the final game of the series after scoring four late runs. Manager Aaron Boone tasked closer Devin Williams with sealing the win, but it didn’t go as planned.

After getting two of the first three batters Williams faced out, the Tigers loaded the bases. A wild pitch and a two-run single later, and the Yankees’ four-run lead was cut to one.

The Yankees skipper, not wanting to risk the win, pulled his closer for Mark Leiter Jr., who got the final out in the 4-3 win, ending New York’s three-game losing streak.

It’s alarming to see Williams, who was dominant last season pitching to a 1.25 ERA in 22 appearances with the Milwaukee Brewers after returning from injury, struggle so mightily.

But the Yankees skipper isn’t concerned with his closer’s performance so far this season.

“I don’t think it’s far off,” Boone said of Williams’ pitches after the game. “I thought we saw more velocity in there when he needed it. It’s just that next level of execution. He’ll get there. Credit to [the Tigers] too for laying off a lot of tough pitches but just being more in the zone.”

In four appearances this season, Williams has allowed four earned runs in just 3.0 innings pitched. We had the nail-biter on Opening Day when he allowed one run on two hits and a walk before ultimately completing the save.

And then we had the series finale in Pittsburgh this past Sunday when he allowed the ghost runner to score the winning run in the 11th, before nearly blowing the save on Wednesday.

Williams admitted he is still figuring things out this season and there’s nothing physically wrong with him, but he's still "figuring stuff out," and just needs more game reps and to better execute his pitches.

"I haven't felt like 100 percent myself up to this point, but I would say I'm getting closer," Williams told the media including the NY Post’s Greg Joyce after the game.

Entering Wednesday, Williams has a career 3.03 ERA in the months of March and April, by far the highest for any month in his career.

Boone pointed to Williams’ recent absence when he went on the paternity list as a part of his closer’s early-season struggles and thinks once the team gets into a “flow” the Williams of old will emerge.

“I’m confident this is going to be a distant memory as we continue to move forward,” Boone said. “He’s not far off. Just a little better strike-throwing. Once he starts doing that and dictating counts, then you’re going to see it because his stuff is not far off. This is his fourth outing. He’ll be fine, he’ll get through this. Just early part of the season."

The Yankees return home after a 3-3 road trip and will host the San Francisco Giants in the Bronx this weekend starting Friday.

Perhaps returning home, in warmer weather than Detroit, will help Williams come out of hibernation.

Yankees’ Bellinger says he won’t eat chicken wings for years after suspected case of food poisoning

DETROIT — New York Yankees outfielder Cody Bellinger is swearing off chicken wings.

“I will not eat wings for five years,” Bellinger told reporters on Wednesday, a day after he was scratched from the lineup with a suspected case of food poisoning.

Bellinger said he had chicken wings at the team’s hotel in the Motor City while watching the NCAA men’s basketball championship game on Monday night and had an adverse reaction.

Yankees manager Aaron Boone said Bellinger started dealing with an upset stomach after the Yankees lost the series-opening game in Detroit, and the ailment lingered long enough that he didn’t play Tuesday.

Bellinger was 0 for 4 with three strikeouts in New York’s 4-3 win against the Tigers that avoided a three-game sweep.

Nashville Predators Sign Goalie To Multi-Year Extension

Matt Murray (© Taya Gray/The Desert Sun / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images)

The Nashville Predators have announced that they have signed goaltender Matt Murray to a two-year, two-way contract extension. At the NHL level, he will carry a $775,000 cap hit.

Murray, 27, signed a one-year deal with the Predators this past off-season. Now, with this extension, he will continue to be a part of the Predators' goalie depth.

Murray has spent the entirety of this season down in the AHL with the Milwaukee Admirals. The St. Albert, Alberta native has been excellent for Milwaukee, posting a 25-10-5 record, a .930 save percentage, a 2.15 goals-against average, and two shutouts in 40 appearances. He was also named to the AHL All-Star Classic because of his strong play. 

With numbers like these, it is understandable that the Predators wanted to keep Murray around. Overall, there is no risk in the Predators signing Murray to this extension, and he will continue to be a key part of the Admirals' roster from here.

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White Sox dealt another early blow with outfielder Andrew Benintendi placed on 10-day injured list

CLEVELAND — Andrew Benintendi was placed on the 10-day injured list by the White Sox before Wednesday’s game against the Cleveland Guardians because of a left adductor strain, a blow in what has been another rough start to Chicago’s season.

Benintendi said before the game that he might have been able to play in a couple of days but wanted to give the injury more time to heal because it is early in the season. Benintendi left Sunday’s game at Detroit during the fifth inning.

The 30-year-old outfielder thinks the injury occurred during the first inning of Saturday’s game when he made a leaping catch into the left-field wall to rob Jake Rogers of a hit.

The IL move was retroactive to Monday. Chicago recalled Greg Jones from Triple-A Charlotte to take Benintendi’s spot. Jones was claimed off waivers from Colorado on March 26.

Benintendi is leading the White Sox in many offensive categories, including batting average (.290), total bases (15) and RBIs (six). He also is tied for the team lead in home runs with two.

“He’s a big part of our offense. I mean, he’s right there in the heart of our order every day,” manager Will Venable said. “He’s a guy that I think everyone looks to and has that kind of stability and presence in our lineup that we’re definitely going to miss.”

The White Sox (2-8) dropped six straight going into Wednesday’s game and were batting .199, the second-lowest average in the majors.

“I think right now you’re seeing some quality at-bats and we’re just not having the results,” said Venable, who is in his first season as manager. “There’s a process in play here that we’ve gone through. We’re really happy about some of the underlying stuff. We look forward to that bringing results on the field with runs and wins.”

Flyers beat Rangers in high-scoring game at MSG, improve to 4-1-0 under Shaw

Flyers beat Rangers in high-scoring game at MSG, improve to 4-1-0 under Shaw originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

NEW YORK — The Flyers topped the Rangers, 8-5, in a back-and-forth game Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden.

Tyson Foerster, Garnet Hathaway, Travis Sanheim, Jakob Pelletier, Sean Couturier and Owen Tippett all scored goals for the Flyers.

Foerster had a hat trick. His second turned out to be the game-winner. His third was an empty-netter.

“He’s a real diligent young man, a real pro, mature beyond his years,” interim head coach Brad Shaw said. “It shows in his game and I couldn’t be happier for him to get that hat trick tonight.”

Tippett added an empty-netter, as well. Twelve differed Flyers recorded at least a point. Nick Seeler had three assists.

“This building’s pretty sweet to play in,” Foerster said. “Anytime you can score a bunch of goals, it’s obviously nice.”

Couturier scored a go-ahead 5-4 marker off a rebound from a Matvei Michkov shot. Pelletier netted the game-tying 4-4 goal after New York surged ahead with back-to-back goals in the third period.

Hathaway put the Flyers ahead, 2-1, with a shorthanded marker in the second period before Artemi Panarin answered under two minutes later. Sanheim gave the Flyers a 3-2 lead early in the third period, but the Rangers quickly erased it.

The Flyers (32-37-9) are 4-1-0 under Shaw and have scored 25 goals. They have four games to go.

“I don’t know if it’s just the situation, that we’re not in the [playoff race] anymore, but guys seem to be a little more loose, aren’t afraid to make plays,” Couturier said. “The only thing that’s important when you play like that, you’ve got to make sure that you’re accountable for yourself, your teammates. When you turn pucks over, you’ve got to backcheck, work hard to get it back. But it’s nice to see guys not being afraid to make plays and getting rewarded.”

The Flyers went 2-1-0 against New York this season. The Rangers (36-35-7) have had a significant drop-off after winning the Presidents’ Trophy last season.

• A promising development for the Flyers has been Foerster putting up back-to-back seasons of 20 or more goals.

He has 22 this season after putting up 20 as a rookie.

There’s still a ton of upside with the 23-year-old winger. You’ve got to think next season the Flyers would love to see him push for 25 to 30 goals.

Foerster’s line with Noah Cates and Bobby Brink has been very effective this season.

“I think he has always been marked as an offensive guy, a scorer,” Shaw said of Foerster. “I’ve been impressed with how he has added to the defensive side with the penalty kill, with how responsible that line plays 5-on-5. We put them out there regularly against the other team’s top unit and they do a fantastic job.

“He’s a big part of that, he’s a big part of our defensive conscience, but tonight’s a good example of what he can do on the offensive side, as well.”

• Aleksei Kolosov made just his second start since the calendar turned to 2025 and his first since Jan. 2.

The 23-year-old rookie surrendered three goals in the third period. Kolosov hung in there over the first two periods. The Flyers gave him six goals of support in the final stanza.

“That was a crazy period,” Shaw said. “We come out on the right side of that one. I thought we made enough good plays to take advantage of what was a pretty wide-open period.”

Kolosov finished with 24 saves on 29 shots.

Panarin scored in close late in the second period to draw New York even at 2-2. After killing off a penalty, the Flyers appeared to have a bad line change, which left them with four in coverage.

Shaw wanted the Flyers to make the first period “as least chaotic as possible” for Kolosov.

“I’m hoping our guys can play smart in the first five, 10 minutes,” Shaw said pregame. “Minimize the shots and the quality of them so that he can sort of work his way into the game.”

The Flyers did not help Kolosov ease back into things. He had to face a penalty shot just 1:15 minutes into the action and then faced a shorthanded breakaway from Vincent Trocheck. The Rangers’ center buried his opportunity to hand the Flyers a 1-0 deficit at first intermission. Kolosov faced 12 shots in the opening stanza.

“I thought Koly was great in the first period,” Shaw said. “I talked about limiting chances against him and we give him a penalty shot and two other point-blank breakaways, so it wasn’t ideal. But maybe it was good for him to get right into the game like that. I thought he held us in, kept it 1-0 after one period where we were kind of struggling and kind of stuck in the mud a little bit. He gave us a chance to regroup and end up with the win.”

Rangers netminder Jonathan Quick stopped 22 of the Flyers’ 28 shots.

• With the win, the Flyers moved ahead of the Bruins via the tiebreaker of fewer games played. They now have the fifth-best odds for the 2025 NHL draft lottery. They entered Wednesday at No. 4.

The Flyers are one point back of the Kraken and three back of the Sabres, Ducks and Penguins.

“Credit to the group, I don’t think this locker room is ever going to quit and give up,” Sanheim said. “We show up every night, we’ve got a job to do. Our main goal right now is just to try to finish the season strong and end on a positive note.”

• The Flyers have a back-to-back set this weekend as they host the Islanders on Saturday (12:30 p.m. ET/NBCSP) and visit the Senators on Sunday (1 p.m. ET/NBCSP+).

Flyers beat Rangers in high-scoring game at MSG, improve to 4-1-0 under Shaw

Flyers beat Rangers in high-scoring game at MSG, improve to 4-1-0 under Shaw originally appeared on NBC Sports Philadelphia

NEW YORK — The Flyers topped the Rangers, 8-5, in a back-and-forth game Wednesday night at Madison Square Garden.

Tyson Foerster, Garnet Hathaway, Travis Sanheim, Jakob Pelletier, Sean Couturier and Owen Tippett all scored goals for the Flyers.

Foerster had a hat trick. His second turned out to be the game-winner. His third was an empty-netter.

“He’s a real diligent young man, a real pro, mature beyond his years,” interim head coach Brad Shaw said. “It shows in his game and I couldn’t be happier for him to get that hat trick tonight.”

Tippett added an empty-netter, as well. Twelve differed Flyers recorded at least a point. Nick Seeler had three assists.

“This building’s pretty sweet to play in,” Foerster said. “Anytime you can score a bunch of goals, it’s obviously nice.”

Couturier scored a go-ahead 5-4 marker off a rebound from a Matvei Michkov shot. Pelletier netted the game-tying 4-4 goal after New York surged ahead with back-to-back goals in the third period.

Hathaway put the Flyers ahead, 2-1, with a shorthanded marker in the second period before Artemi Panarin answered under two minutes later. Sanheim gave the Flyers a 3-2 lead early in the third period, but the Rangers quickly erased it.

The Flyers (32-37-9) are 4-1-0 under Shaw and have scored 25 goals. They have four games to go.

“I don’t know if it’s just the situation, that we’re not in the [playoff race] anymore, but guys seem to be a little more loose, aren’t afraid to make plays,” Couturier said. “The only thing that’s important when you play like that, you’ve got to make sure that you’re accountable for yourself, your teammates. When you turn pucks over, you’ve got to backcheck, work hard to get it back. But it’s nice to see guys not being afraid to make plays and getting rewarded.”

The Flyers went 2-1-0 against New York this season. The Rangers (36-35-7) have had a significant drop-off after winning the Presidents’ Trophy last season.

• A promising development for the Flyers has been Foerster putting up back-to-back seasons of 20 or more goals.

He has 22 this season after putting up 20 as a rookie.

There’s still a ton of upside with the 23-year-old winger. You’ve got to think next season the Flyers would love to see him push for 25 to 30 goals.

• Aleksei Kolosov made just his second start since the calendar turned to 2025 and his first since Jan. 2.

The 23-year-old rookie surrendered three goals in the third period. Kolosov hung in there over the first two periods. The Flyers gave him six goals of support in the final stanza.

He finished with 24 saves on 29 shots.

Panarin scored in close late in the second period to draw New York even at 2-2. After killing off a penalty, the Flyers appeared to have a bad line change, which left them with four in coverage.

Shaw wanted the Flyers to make the first period “as least chaotic as possible” for Kolosov.

“I’m hoping our guys can play smart in the first five, 10 minutes,” Shaw said pregame. “Minimize the shots and the quality of them so that he can sort of work his way into the game.”

The Flyers did not help Kolosov ease back into things. He had to face a penalty shot just 1:15 minutes into the action and then faced a shorthanded breakaway from Vincent Trocheck. The Rangers’ center buried his opportunity to hand the Flyers a 1-0 deficit at first intermission. Kolosov faced 12 shots in the opening stanza.

“I thought Koly was great in the first period,” Shaw said. “I talked about limiting chances against him and we give him a penalty shot and two other point-blank breakaways, so it wasn’t ideal. But maybe it was good for him to get right into the game like that. I thought he held us in, kept it 1-0 after one period where we were kind of struggling and kind of stuck in the mud a little bit. He gave us a chance to regroup and end up with the win.”

Rangers netminder Jonathan Quick stopped 22 of the Flyers’ 28 shots.

• With the win, the Flyers moved ahead of the Bruins via the tiebreaker of fewer games played. They now have the fifth-best odds for the 2025 NHL draft lottery. They entered Wednesday at No. 4.

The Flyers are one point back of the Kraken and three back of the Sabres, Ducks and Penguins.

“Credit to the group, I don’t think this locker room is ever going to quit and give up,” Sanheim said. “We show up every night, we’ve got a job to do. Our main goal right now is just to try to finish the season strong and end on a positive note.”

• The Flyers have a back-to-back set this weekend as they host the Islanders on Saturday (12:30 p.m. ET/NBCSP) and visit the Senators on Sunday (1 p.m. ET/NBCSP+).

Pedro Martinez says he has family members unaccounted for in Dominican nightclub roof collapse

MLB: World Series-Los Angeles Dodgers at New York Yankees

Oct 28, 2024; New York, New York, USA; MLB Hall of Fame player Pedro Martinez before game three of the 2024 MLB World Series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Vincent Carchietta/Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Dominican-born Hall of Fame pitcher Pedro Martinez said Wednesday he has family members unaccounted for who were inside the Santo Domingo nightclub when its roof collapsed.

The 53-year-old Martinez was born in Manoguayabo, about 10 miles west of the Dominican Republic’s capital city. At least 124 people were killed and hundreds more injured when the roof collapsed early Tuesday.

“We are all affected,” he said. “I still have family members who are still in the rubbles and we don’t know what happened to them. But we just want to be strong, like we have always been. We’re a country that prays a lot and remains united all the time, so I just hope everybody has the same courage.”

Authorities confirmed former major league pitcher Octavio Dotel and former major league utility player Tony Blanco were among the dead. Also killed was Nelsy Cruz, the governor of the Monte Cristi province in the country and sister of seven-time MLB All-Star Nelson Cruz.

Dozens of people clad in black and white streamed into a funeral home Wednesday to pay their respects to Dotel.

“This has been devastating for our country,” former sports minister Danilo Díaz told TV station CDN. “He was always positive, a collaborator, a friend.”

Among those attending the funeral was Hall of Fame inductee David Ortiz, formerly of the Boston Red Sox baseball team.

The Jet Set club was packed with musicians, professional athletes and government officials when dust began falling from the ceiling and into people’s drinks early Tuesday. Minutes later, the entire roof collapsed. Concrete slabs killed some instantly and trapped dozens of others on a dancefloor where hundreds had been dancing to a lively merengue concert.

“It is with a heavy heart that it is my turn to actually send condolences to all our family members and the people here in the United States who have family over there,” Martinez said. “We’re all sad.”

What we learned as Zach LaVine's 27 points not enough in Kings' loss to Nuggets

What we learned as Zach LaVine's 27 points not enough in Kings' loss to Nuggets originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

BOX SCORE

SACRAMENTO – Zach LaVine continued to rip it up offensively, pouring in 27 points with 11 assists in the Kings’ 124-116 loss to the Mike Malone-less Denver Nuggets on Wednesday at Golden 1 Center.

Malone, who previously coached the Kings, was fired by Denver on Tuesday, less than two years after guiding the Nuggets to their first and only NBA championship.

That might have lit a fire under the Nuggets, who had been spiraling down the Western Conference standings over the previous five weeks.

Denver led by 16, then held off a late Kings surge in the fourth quarter to complete the season-series sweep of Sacramento.

DeMar DeRozan had 22 points. Domantas Sabonis added 27 points and 11 rebounds while Keon Ellis had 20 points off the bench.

The Kings entered the day on a three-game winning streak. They conclude the regular season with home games against the Los Angeles Clippers on Friday and the Phoenix Suns on Sunday.

Sacramento is locked into the Western Conference’s 9 vs. 10 play-in game against the Dallas Mavericks. The Kings hold a one-game lead in the standings and have the head-to-head tiebreaker.

The Nuggets shot nearly 57 percent in the first half and had four players in double figures by halftime. Conversely, the Kings didn’t have anyone reach double figures in the first half but had four players with nine points apiece and went into the break trailing 66-58.

Here are the takeaways from Wednesday’s game:

It’s getting hot in here

With two regular-season games remaining, the Western Conference standings are tighter than a fat guy in skinny jeans.

Five teams are within two games of one another for the No. 4 seed in the playoffs. That is the final spot for homecourt advantage in the first round.

The Kings are locked into a play-in game and will play the Mavericks. The only remaining question is whether the game will be in California or Texas.

Keep it going, Z

It took a little while to find his rhythm, but LaVine got going once he warmed up and continued his recent scoring surge.

Since joining the Kings, LaVine has been a scoring machine. That was particularly true over Sacramento’s previous five games when he averaged 20.8 points while shooting a solid 47 percent from the floor. That included the last two games before Wednesday, when LaVine had 80 total points in wins over the Cleveland Cavaliers and Detroit Pistons.

The veteran guard started slow against the Nuggets, who limited LaVine to eight points in the first half. He finished minus-eight.

Doing the Dougie

Doug McDermott has played well off the bench this season and has had a few games where he provided instant and quick offense.

Wednesday was one of those games.

During a span of 150 seconds in the second quarter, McDermott canned a pair of deep 3-pointers and made a stellar alley-oop pass to LaVine from behind the 3-point arc.

The No. 11 overall pick in the 2014 NBA Draft, McDermott has proven capable of getting things done quickly during his first season in Sacramento. He had a memorable night against the Utah Jazz in December when he dropped a season-high 18 points on six 3-pointers in eight and a half minutes. He also had 15 points in 11 minutes against the Nuggets in January.

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What we learned as Warriors suffer brutal loss on Barnes buzzer-beater

What we learned as Warriors suffer brutal loss on Barnes buzzer-beater originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area

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SAN FRANCISCO – The San Antonio Spurs are not the Phoenix Suns. 

Despite having nothing to play for in the standings, the Spurs weren’t going to back down. They also weren’t going to give up when Golden State led by as much as 14 points in the first quarter. What looked to be a blowout was a battle for all four quarters. 

Thursday night at Chase Center was a game of runs that wasn’t decided until former Warrior Harrison Barnes made a fadeaway game-winning 3-pointer to beat the buzzer as Golden State lost 114-111. In a season that has featured a handful of bad losses, this one tops them all for the Warriors.

With the Warriors’ NBA playoff hopes coming down to the final day of the regular season, they couldn’t afford such a back-breaking loss. After outscoring the Spurs by 16 points in the third quarter, the Warriors were outscored by 15 points, 38-23, in the fourth.

Multiple miscues cost the Warriors down the stretch, including two turnovers in the final minute.

Steph Curry (30 points) and Jimmy Butler (28 points) carried the Warriors offensively, particularly in the second half. Draymond Green was one rebound and two assists shy of a triple-double, but two mental lapses defensively in the end were impossible to ignore. 

Curry was a plus-14, and no other starter had a positive plus/minus. The only other Warriors player to even have a positive plus/minus was Trayce Jackson-Davis, who was a plus-3 in three minutes.

Here are three takeaways from an inexcusable loss.

Up-And-Down Start

Playing the lifeless Suns one night prior, Warriors coach Steve Kerr commended his veteran stars – Curry, Butler and Green – for sending a message and setting a tone from the jump. On the second night of a back-to-back, the trio once again was locked in following the opening tip. 

The Warriors began the game on a 9-0 run, prompting a timeout from Spurs interim coach Mitch Johnson. Their lead was extended to 11-0 after the timeout. When Johnson first pressed pause and tried to collect his team, Green already had two points, four rebounds, three assists and a steal as he swiped down and knocked the ball away from veteran center Bismack Biyombo. 

At the end of the first quarter, the Warriors led by nine points. Curry and Butler each had seven points, and Steph also swiped two steals. Green stuffed the stat sheet with five points, four rebounds, five assists and a steal. Their movement and precision highlighted how important this game was.

Then, a lackluster start to the second quarter saw Green put an end to a 7-0 Spurs run with a three at the top of the arc. But the Warriors couldn’t get going. The Spurs held a 12-3 advantage when Curry came back in, and then moved to 19-3. Golden State got outscored 32-19 in the second quarter, turning a nine-point lead into a four-point deficit.

While the Spurs turned the heat up, the Warriors went ice-cold in the second quarter, shooting 27.3 percent from the field (6 of 22) and going just 4 of 15 (26.7 percent) on threes.

Third-Quarter Switch Flipped

Remember what a staple the third quarter used to be for the Warriors? It’s where dreams became nightmares for opposing teams. Well, those 12 minutes might not be as dominant as they once were, but they do remain a strength of the Warriors. 

They came into the day having the seventh-best third-quarter point differential in the NBA, and found whatever boost was required at halftime in the locker room. The Warriors raced out to a 6-0 run in the third quarter and never slowed down, enjoying a 37-21 advantage for the quarter. Feeding Curry certainly helped. 

Curry scored 10 points on 4-of-9 shooting and only connected on one of his five 3-point attempts in the first half. He found his rhythm in the third quarter. 

In just under 10 minutes, Curry scored 14 points, going 5 of 9 from the field, including 4 of 6 on threes. Rookie Stephon Castle was called for an off-ball foul from how much he held onto Curry, only for the greatest shooter the game has seen to then drain a trey right in front of him following the whistle.

End Of An Era? 

As Castle did his best to stick with Curry’s every move, Curry on the other side of the ball was in a matchup he has known his entire 16-year NBA career. He faced off against Chris Paul for the 40th time in the regular season, dropping to 23-17 in this rivalry between two point guards bound for the Hall of Fame. 

Paul is labeled as the pure pass-first point guard, as Curry’s unique style off the ball and shooting prowess makes him a whole other animal to handle. Through the first half, it actually was Paul who was the leading scorer of the two, 12-10, going a perfect 4 of 4 overall and 3 of 3 on threes. Curry’s huge third quarter, in which Paul went scoreless, seemed like it was going to change the script of this latest 48-minute movie. 

There were scenes of Paul goading Brandin Podziemski into an offensive foul and coaching his guys on the fly, as well as Curry igniting the home crowd with every 3-pointer that splashed through the nets. Some moments felt like flashbacks, others were a reminder of their long standing greatness to the game. Kerr said pregame he doesn’t expect Paul to retire after the season, and it’s easy to see why a team still would sign an undersized point guard who turns 40 years old in under a month. 

Just like when Curry plays LeBron James or any other legend, it was easy to appreciate what these two have meant to basketball for nearly two decades. And there’s another reason for Dub Nation to remember the days of loathing Paul.

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Reporting from a strong Mets homestand on Brett Baty, Mark Vientos, Clay Holmes, Hayden Senger, and velocity dips

The Mets completed a 5-1 homestand on Wednesday that solidified their early weeks of the 2025 season as successful. Here is reporting from their first six games at Citi Field in 2025:

Brett Baty has to hit to stay; Luisangel Acuña, not as much

The Mets are not close to optioning Brett Baty back to Triple-A, according to sources, and that’s probably the right call. Why not take Baty on the road, away from the booing fans at Citi Field, and see if he can start to hit as he did in spring training? With the Mets' offense mostly clicking, they can carry a player who needs to dig for confidence, and who might be crushed by another demotion.

But the plain truth about Baty as a second baseman is that he must hit in order to stay. Mets people know that Baty is a corner infielder playing out of position, without the experience or the physicality to be a middle infielder. They understand that the transition to a new spot will bring errors like the one Baty made in Wednesday’s 5-0 loss to Miami and can’t blame him for it.

But the bat is a bigger issue. The idea last year in giving Baty reps at second base was to see if he could become the type of bat-first middle infielder prominent a decade or more ago. In the contemporary game, agility and defense are once again essential – and none other than Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns places a high value on up-the-middle glove work.

Because of this, the rangier Luisangel Acuña can win playing time without major offensive contributions, but Baty cannot. His bat is his carrying tool, period.

One of the factors helping to buy Baty more time is that potential replacements Donovan Walton and Luis De Los Santos are struggling offensively in Triple-A. But when Jeff McNeil returns from the injured list, Baty could go down without having proven he can hit in a big league regular season – unless, that is, he heats up soon.

For now, the Mets plan to give him time to do that.

The Clay Holmes transition is moving forward

An observation from talking to Clay Holmes after his first start with the Mets and then after his third: Holmes is already more confident in how to deploy his expanded repertoire in the new role than he was on Opening Day.

Following the opener in Houston, the always open and insightful Holmes admitted that he could have found spots to work in his new changeup. But when he found himself in competition, Holmes reverted to the comfort zone that made him an All-Star reliever: sinker/slider. Suddenly it was no longer spring training, the red light was on, and he did what he had to do to retire a heavily right-handed Houston lineup.

Contrast that to Tuesday’s win against Miami, when Holmes realized in the first inning that he did not have a feel for his sinker. In the second, he switched to heavy usage of a four-seam fastball. Mid-game, he went with a slew of sliders and sweepers.

Were these the type of in-game adjustments that Holmes would not have had time to employ as a short reliever?

“I think so,” Holmes said. “Part of it is just having the arsenal and the awareness to pivot. Instead of trying to force a sinker on a day like today when it was kind of tough early. … I kind of went with the four seamer and let that play up and away to the lefties. And I started getting some good counts. So, yeah, have few more pitches and especially after the first it’s like, what can I start doing a little different here? And I was able to pivot.”

That pivot is a strong sign that he is settling in. Consider this quote from Holmes, also after Tuesday’s game: “You try to get strike one, and then you build off it.”

That sounds like a jazz musician comfortable enough to learn the basic framework of a song and confident enough to improvise from there. And quite a difference from not even two weeks ago, when Holmes couldn’t quite nail down when to throw which pitch.

Mark Vientos will be fine

Any fears of a sophomore slump for Mark Vientos appear premature. The third baseman is just 5-for-42 on the season, but his at-bats have steadily improved.

One evaluator noted that Vientos was briefly out front lunging at pitches last week in Miami, but has already made the adjustment to allow the ball to travel to him. He walked five times on the homestand, repeatedly made hard contact, and does not look lost in his at-bats.

Hayden Senger might have answered a huge question about himself

For several years, folks in the Mets organization, not least among them catching instructor Glenn Sherlock, have viewed Hayden Senger as a big league defender.

The question following Senger was whether he could hit enough to serve as an MLB backup, or whether a .684 OPS in six minor league seasons ticketed him for life as an “org guy,” a non-prospect who helps the affiliates and might one day make a good coach. There is no shame in this; Sherlock himself was once an org guy with the Yankees before a long and distinguished coaching career.

But Senger, who has received more playing time than expected with Luis Torrens banged up, is 4-for-18 and does not look overmatched.

“What we're seeing is pretty impressive,” manager Carlos Mendoza said. “His ability to manipulate the barrel [Tuesday] with a runner on second base, nobody out, and having the awareness of the situation: ‘You know what, I got to get the guy over.’ And getting the head out and driving the ball. Controlling the strike zone and walking. Getting a bunt down. Offensively, he's been really, really good.”

Senger is ticketed back to the minors once Francisco Alvarez returns from the injured list. But now the Mets know that they can call on Senger again, and opposing scouts know that he can be a viable backup to acquire. Count this as a pleasant silver lining of Alvarez’s and Torrens’ injuries.

Cold and stiff

Several Mets pitchers, including Holmes, Edwin Diaz, and Tylor Megill, saw their fastball velocities down a tick on Tuesday and Wednesday, but the Mets are not concerned. Mendoza attributed the group slowdown to the extreme cold, not any health issues.

Celtics post best road record in franchise's history

Celtics post best road record in franchise's history originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Celtics fell to the Orlando Magic in their final road game of the 2024-25 season Wednesday night, but the defeat won’t keep them out of the franchise’s record books.

Their 33-8 road record this season is the best in franchise history. They came just one win shy of tying the 2015-16 Golden State Warriors for the best road record in the history of the NBA.

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That’s quite a feat, especially when you consider that Warriors team won a league-record 73 games in the regular season before ultimately losing to LeBron James’ Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 7 of the 2016 NBA Finals.

The Celtics also set a franchise record for the most road wins and best road win percentage in a season in franchise history.

  1. 2024-25: 33-8, .805 win percentage
  2. 1972-73: 32-8, .800
  3. 1974-75: 32-9, .780
  4. 2007-08: 31-10, .756
  5. 1959-60: 23-9, .719

In addition to the records explained above, the Celtics also finished with a plus-9.3 scoring margin on the road, which currently ranks No. 3 all-time behind the 1971-72 Los Angeles Lakers and this season’s Oklahoma City Thunder. The Thunder have three road games remaining, so Boston could jump back to No. 2 all-time by season’s end.

  1. LA Lakers, 1971-72: 11.3 road scoring margin
  2. Oklahoma City Thunder, 2024-25: 9.6
  3. Boston Celtics, 2024-25: 9.3
  4. New York Knicks, 1969-70: 9.1
  5. Chicago Bulls, 2007-08: 8.2

The Celtics did not secure homecourt advantage throughout the 2025 NBA playoffs. They’ll finish the regular season with the second-best record in the Eastern Conference and the third-best record in the league. The C’s wouldn’t have homecourt advantage if they met the Cavs in the Eastern Conference Finals and/or the Thunder in the NBA Finals.

So it’s encouraging for the Celtics that they are such a good road team and can play at a high level without the tremendous boost the TD Garden crowd provides. They might need to lean on their road dominance at some point in the postseason.