On This Date: June 24th, 2000 – Columbus Blue Jackets Make First NHL Draft Pick

The Columbus Blue Jackets took part in their first Entry Draft on June 24th, 2000, in Calgary, Alberta. They left Calgary after drafting 11 players; how did it go?

They took, with the 4th overall pick, Rostislav Klesla from the Brampton Battalion of the OHL. The big defenseman played in 8 games in the 2000-01 season before being sent back to his junior team in Brampton. 

Klesla made the team full-time the next season, playing in 75 games. He scored 8 goals and had 16 points. Klesla played with the Jackets until 2011 when he was traded to the Phoenix Coyotes. He would go on to play 3 more seasons in Phoenix, until on November 26, 2013 he was placed on waivers by the Coyotes. On March 4, 2014 he was traded to the Washington Capitals. One day later he was traded to the Buffalo Sabres. On March 8th, he refused to report to the Sabres, and was later suspended. He went back to Europe to his home country of the Czech Republic to play, and then retire in 2016.

Klesla finished his NHL career with a stat line of 48 goals and 159 points in 659 games. Rusty, as his teammates and fans called him, was beloved during his time in Columbus.

The rest of the 2000 Entry Draft for the CBJ did not do so well. Only two other players they picked that year ever played in the NHL. Petteri Nummelin, a defenseman from Finland, played in 139 career NHL games. Slovakian center Andrej Nedorost played in 28 career NHL games. 

The 2000 draft class is stacked with stars. From Rick DiPietro, Dany Heatley, and Niklas Kronwall to Ilya Bryzgalov, Justin Williams, and newly elected Hall of Famer Henrik Lundqvist. 

But the crazy thing about this draft is how many players found their way to Columbus and played for the Blue Jackets. Besides Rusty Klesla (4), Marion Gaborik (3), Raffi Torres (5), Scott Hartnell (6), and Ron Hainsey (13) all played for the CBJ, and all were first-round picks. Antoine Vermette (55) and Mike Rupp (76) also played for the CBJ. Some of these guys had really good years playing for the Jackets too.

Oh what could have been.

Next Up For Columbus: The NHL Draft is on June 26 and 27 in Buffalo, where the CBJ will own pick #14.   

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Former Maple Leafs Goalie Joseph Woll Posts Emotional Message Following Trade To Flyers

For the first time since a stunning trade that sent him packing to the City of Brotherly Love, former Toronto Maple Leafs goaltender Joseph Woll has broken his silence.

Taking to Instagram, the 27-year-old goaltender posted a heartfelt farewell to the city that drafted him a decade ago, expressing deep gratitude for his time in Blue and White while signaling he is ready for a fresh start with the Philadelphia Flyers.

“From the bottom of my heart, thank you to the organization, the city, my friends and especially, my teammates for helping make my time in Toronto so special. I have enough memories to last a lifetime. I’ll forever be proud and grateful for my time with the Leafs. 🍁Philly, get ready.”
- Joseph Woll on Instagram.

“The trade, the first by newly appointed Maple Leafs general manager John Chayka, caught many by surprise. Toronto sent Woll alongside fan-favourite, hard-hitting defenseman Simon Benoit to the Flyers. In return, the Maple Leafs acquired goaltender Samuel Ersson, 24-year-old Swedish blueliner Emil Andrae, and a third-round selection in the 2026 NHL Draft.  

For Woll, the move marks the end of a highly scrutinized tenure in Toronto. Selected 62nd overall by the Leafs in the 2016 draft, “The Brick Woll” showed flashes of brilliant, elite-level goaltending but battled inconsistencies and untimely injuries. He departs Toronto with a career regular-season record of 63-43-9, a 2.94 goals-against average,  a .906 save percentage, and four shutouts across 117 games. In the postseason, he went 6-6 with a 2.73 GAA and a .906 save percentage over 14 appearances.  

However, the 2025-26 campaign was a grueling one for both Woll and the Maple Leafs, who missed the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the first time in ten years. Tasked with anchoring the crease alongside Anthony Stolarz, Woll struggled behind a porous Toronto defense that surrendered the second-most goals per game in the league (3.60). He posted a 15-16-7 record, and while he recorded a career-high two shutouts, his 3.34 GAA and .899 save percentage over 39 games were the lowest marks of his NHL career.  

With two seasons left on the three-year, $10.98 million contract ($3.67 million AAV) he signed in 2024, Chayka ultimately decided it was time to pivot, leveraging Toronto’s goaltending depth to accumulate future assets and roster flexibility. 

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Is AJ Dybantsa finally the player who ends the Wizards’ rebuild?

BROOKLYN, NY - JUNE 23: AJ Dybantsa poses for a portrait after being drafted by the Washington Wizards during the 2026 NBA Draft - Round One on June 23, 2026 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Steve Freeman/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Happy Wednesday everyone. In case you haven’t heard, the Washington Wizards selected AJ Dybantsa No. 1 overall in the 2026 NBA Draft. So after one entire month of spamming you this guy’s name (and even a few other prospects), we finally know what the Wizards are moving in with their young roster.

The last time the Wizards selected a No. 1 overall pick, it was in 2010. John Wall was the selection, he was the franchise player, but he was also the first player for Washington’s rebuild at the time. Unlike 2010, the Wizards have been rebuilding for three seasons. They only very recently have acquired two All-Stars in Trae Young (who will be a Wizard for the next four seasons) and Anthony Davis. Now that Dybantsa is in the mix, there’s a lot of optimism right?

First, let’s look at where people put their money. How good do they expect the Wizards to be? Unfortunately, according to FanDuel as of 6 a.m. ET on June 25, 2026, the Wizards are the 11th most likely team to win the Eastern Conference with +20000 odds. Based on that number alone, NBA fans nationwide (and beyond) would say no. They expect the Wizards to still be rebuilding, even if they are no longer expected to be the absolute doormat.

That said, betting markets can’t be the only way we look at this kind of stuff. How do the fans think? Let’s go to the Wizards’ Draft Party last night at The Anthem, a concert venue at The Wharf.

Let’s also get some schadenfreude from looking at how Salt Lake City reacted while we’re at it.

How about the Wizards front office when they called him? (I still wonder how NBA teams get the phone numbers of players … it’s probably an agent phone and it’s probably a scripted call for social media. But still.)

How about player reactions?

And to make this full circle? How about Wall himself?

Sometimes, you have to go off of vibes when you’re talking about a “rebuilding” vs. a “contending” era. And my vibes give me a clear answer: Yes, AJ Dybantsa is the player who ends the Wizards’ rebuild. Sure, the Wizards will change their roster over the next few years. Sure, the Wizards are NOT NBA championship contenders. Hell, they probably won’t contend for the Southeast Division in 2026-27 because the Miami Heat (as usual) are bringing in superstars.

But is the worst stretch of Wizards basketball in franchise history over? Do we know WHO the Wizards WILL have five years from now? Yes. And that means the rebuild (at least from a tanking perspective) is finally over.

NBA Draft: Round Two 2026 Open Thread

BROOKLYN, NY - JUNE 23: An overall photo of 2026 NBA Draft stage before the 2026 NBA Draft - Round One on June 23, 2026 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Hannah Ally/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

In case you missed it, the NBA draft has been turned into a two-day affair since 2024. After a relatively tame day one yesterday, teams are now on the clock for the second round today.


Draft Info

What: 2026 NBA Draft Round 2
When: Wednesday, June 24, 2026 @7:00 pm CT
Where: Barclays Center (Brooklyn, NY)
TV: ESPN


Wolves Notes

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA – MARCH 13: RoccoZikarsky of Timberwolves warms up before the NBA game 34 between Minnesota Timberwolves and Golden State Warriors in San Francisco at Chase Center on March 13, 2026 in San Francisco, California, United States. (Photo by Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu via Getty Images) | Anadolu via Getty Images

What to Expect in Round Two

A year ago, the Minnesota Timberwolves were in the most enviable spot in the second round, holding the first pick. However, the result was an uninspiring thud, as President of Basketball Operations, Tim Connelly, ended up moving down 14 spots, getting two future second picks, and some sweet cash considerations along the way. Rocco Zikarsky was the resulting pick, a relatively mysterious giant. Nothing wrong with that.

The most disappointing part, though, was when Connelly came out and publicly stated post-draft that the second round was difficult for them as it was “largely agent-driven.” This essentially confirmed that the Wolves’ front office wasn’t fully prepared for what unfolded that day.

Will his group be better prepared this year?

After the Randle trade on Monday, Minnesota now holds the 33rd and 59th picks in the second round. I mentioned yesterday that some view second round picks as more valuable asset chips compared to late first round picks. It really comes down to the flexibility of deals that second rounders can sign. They can sign two-way contracts, “Gupta Special” non-guaranteed deals, etc. First rounders, in contrast, are given guaranteed deals for two years plus two more years of team options.

Will Connelly turn these minor assets into some more considerations of the greenback variety? Or will he pull another rabbit out of his hat as he did in 12 years ago, drafting a three-time MVP with the third or 41st pick in the second round?

For reference, some notable players drafted early in the second round in the last five drafts: Ryan Kalkbrenner (34), Kyle Filipowski (32), Ajay Mitchell (38), Jaylen Wells (39), Andrew Nembhard (31), Jaylin Williams (34), Max Christie (35), Herb Jones (35), Ayo Dosunmu (38).

Here are some names of guys from late in the second round: Quinten Post (52), Cam Spencer (53), Ariel Hukporti (58), Jaylen Clark (53), Trayce Jackson-Davis (57), Gui Santos (55), Jabari Walker (57), Sandro Mamukelashvili (54), and Aaron Wiggins (55).


Draft updates

Selection board:

Round 2

  1. NYK
  2. MEM
  3. MIN
  4. CLE
  5. DEN
  6. LAC
  7. OKC
  8. CHI
  9. HOU
  10. BOS
  11. MIA
  12. SAS
  13. BKN
  14. SAS
  15. SAC
  16. ORL
  17. NYK
  18. DAL
  19. DEN
  20. TOR
  21. WAS
  22. LAC
  23. HOU
  24. GSW
  25. NYK
  26. CHI
  27. ATL
  28. NOP
  29. MIN
  30. WAS

Which injured Orioles can provide a spark in the second half?

Apr 18, 2026; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Baltimore Orioles starting pitcher Dean Kremer (64) throws a pitch during the first inning against the Cleveland Guardians at Progressive Field. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-Imagn Images | Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

It’s impossible to tell the story of the 2026 Orioles without mentioning injuries. The same can be said about the 2025 Orioles, the 2024 Orioles, and really every other team. Injuries are always part of baseball, but sometimes they play a larger role than others.

Jordan Westburg will miss the entire 2026 season after undergoing Tommy John surgery on May 13. Zach Eflin made only one start before undergoing the same procedure on May 8. These two will not recover in time to make an impact this year, but other Baltimore players will. Can any of those players give this team the boost it needs to make a real playoff push?

There’s a few banged up players that (hopefully) do not fall into the long term category. Adley Rutschman made his way to the 7-day injured list after a freak play in Seattle. Rutschman will be eligible to return this weekend. It’s unclear whether he’ll come of the injured list as soon as possible, but the Orioles obviously need a healthy Rutschman to achieve any of their goals this season.

Blaze Alexander has been red hot since May 1. Alexander and Jackson Holliday are both considered day-to-day but have yet to hit the IL.

The true candidates for this exercise have missed a significant chunk of the first half. Dean Kremer and Cade Povich qualify, and both started rehab appearances last weekend.

In a surprising move, the Orioles left Kremer off the Opening Day roster to make room for Eflin and Chris Bassitt in the rotation. Kremer made his season debut on April 13, and he delivered a quality start against Cleveland in his second outing. Unfortunately, Kremer went down with a right quad strain. The righty eventually made his way to the 60-day IL and remained on the shelf for two months. Kremer limited his opponent to one run on two hits, two walks and five strikeouts over 3.2 innings for Triple-A on Sunday.

Povich also failed to make the roster out of camp, but the Orioles recalled the lefty in early April after Eflin and reliever Yaramil Hiraldo went down. Povich made his first appearance out of the bullpen with 5.2 innings of bulk relief in Pittsburgh, but he tossed a gem a week later. Povich held San Francisco to one run over 6.2 innings before returning to Norfolk. He rejoined the Orioles at the beginning of May and made two short starts before suffering from elbow inflammation.

Povich tossed 3.1 innings of one-hit ball for Double-A Chesapeake on Sunday.

Could either of these two be our guy? Shane Baz, Kyle Bradish and Trevor Rogers are all cemented in the rotation. Brandon Young has pitched his way into some job security with a phenomenal first half, but there’s still room in the rotation right now. Trey Gibson appears to have the chops to make it as a major league pitcher, but the rookie holds a 5.81 ERA through six appearances. Gibson has yet to complete six innings in a big league start, and it feels like the Orioles are treading water on days that he takes the mound.

When healthy, Kremer should replace Gibson as the fifth starter. Kremer holds a career 4.26 ERA over seven seasons. He may not wow anyone, but he’ll raise the floor of the rotation. With the Orioles currently sitting under .500, every game counts. Kremer should provide stability and some much needed length to help a struggling bullpen.

Speaking of the ‘pen, the Orioles could use Povich down there. The front office may decide to keep Povich in Norfolk’s rotation, but don’t rule out the club working the lefty into its mix of relievers.

The same can be said for Bassitt whenever he returns. Bassitt didn’t exactly ingratiate himself to Orioles fans in his first season with the club. The 37-year-0ld holds a 5.27 ERA through 12 appearances, and the O’s have yet to provide a timetable for the veteran after he went down with back tightness on June 5. Bassitt played a significant relief role for the Blue Jays team on their way to a World Series appearance last season. A healthy Bassitt would bump Gibson from the rotation, but the team could decide to roll with Kremer moving forward.

What about the offense? The Orioles are somehow carrying three catchers right now even without Rutschman. With respect to Sam Huff and Chadwick Tromp, there’s room for some better bench bats.

Dylan Beavers is working his way back from a right oblique strain. The rookie began a rehab assignment at Double-A last week and is currently at Triple-A. Beavers holds a career .354 on-base percentage over his first 213 at bats. Colton Cowser has come on over the last month, but Leody Taveras is trending down. There’s definitely room for Beavers bat in this lineup, and the 27-year-old could provide a spark from the bottom half of the order.

While we’re mentioning struggling outfielders, the Orioles used Tyler O’Neill as its designated hitter last night. O’Neill is slashing .186/.276/.271 this season, and he’s the guy the Orioles designated to hit. With respect to O’Neill and his 55 OPS+, almost any healthy player would represent an improvement.

Ryan Mountcastle fits that profile. The Orioles kept Mountcastle around after signing Pete Alonso, but the first baseman broke his foot on April 11. Mountcastle isn’t expected back until July or later, but the slugger could make an impact as a bench bat and occasional DH after the All Star break.

The real wild card is Félix Bautista. The Orioles closer underwent surgery last August to repair a torn rotator cuff and torn labrum last August. Bautista was scheduled to throw his first bullpen yesterday, but confirmation had yet to be provided by the time of this writing. The Mountain has a long way to go before rejoining the team, but it’s incredibly exciting to think about what Bautista could add to the bullpen late in the season.

Bautista holds the highest ceiling of any of the injured players, but don’t underestimate what shoring up the rotation could do for this team. The offense could benefit from another quality bat, and the bullpen could use some help with middle relief.

Which injured Orioles player do you think will make the biggest impact this season? Let us know in the comments below.


Cubs 9, Mets 6: Edward Cabrera injured and Pete Crow-Armstrong homers again

After waiting since Saturday to play baseball. the Cubs had themselves an eventful game in the opener of a four-game series against the Mets at Citi Field.

The Cubs won the game 9-6 (and the game wasn’t really that close), but now have apparently lost starter Edward Cabrera for an extended period due to a leg injury suffered while covering first base.

I’ll get to that, but let’s begin at the beginning.

After a quiet first inning, the Cubs put five on the board in the second. Seiya Suzuki walked, Ian Happ singled and Matt Shaw was hit by a pitch. Bases loaded, nobody out. Now I know what you’re thinking here: “In what soul-crushing yet entertaining fashion will they fail to score in this situation?”

Friends, the Cubs did a lot better than that in this inning. After Nico Hoerner struck out, Carson Kelly drew a bases-loaded walk to make it 1-0. Dansby Swanson followed with this sacrifice fly [VIDEO].

Pete Crow-Armstrong was next. Boom! It’s 5-0 [VIDEO].

If you’re counting, the five runs scored over a span of just seven pitches. Efficient!

For PCA, that was his 17th home run of the year, his sixth in his last eight games, and his 10th in June (with eight games remaining).

Edward Cabrera had a rough second inning in which he threw 40 (!) pitches and gave two of the five runs back to the Mets. It could have been worse, as the Mets had the bases loaded with two out and Bo Bichette at the plate. Cabrera struck out Bichette to end the inning.

The Cubs got those two runs back in the fourth. With one out, Kelly walked and Swanson hit his ninth home run of the season [VIDEO].

Swanson is showing signs of coming out of his horrific slump. Last four games: .429/.500/1.000 (6-for-14) with two doubles, two home runs — and NO strikeouts. Let’s hope this continues.

The game was still at 7-2 Cubs going to the bottom of the fifth. With Cabrera over 90 pitches it was pretty clear he’d be lifted after five innings. With two out and two on, this happened [VIDEO].

That was Cabrera’s 99th pitch of the game. He stretched to take Nico’s throw and this was the result:

I’m pretty sure we all knew that about the pitching staff. That injury looked pretty bad — I’d think this will put Cabrera out at least a month, perhaps more. So, once Matthew Boyd returns to the rotation, Colin Rea will have to step up yet again. And this makes Jed Hoyer’s quest to find a starter by trade even more urgent.

That’s a topic for another time, though. Back to the game: Phil Maton was touched up for a Mets run in the seventh, but the Cubs put two more on the board in the eighth. Matt Shaw singled with one out but was picked off (after a review). Hoerner then doubled, and that was followed by a Kelly double to make it 8-3 [VIDEO].

Swanson then had his second extra-base hit of the game, a double, that made it 9-3 [VIDEO].

With a six-run lead in the ninth, Craig Counsell turned to newcomer Jayden Murray and it did not go well. Murray threw 26 pitches and allowed three runs, including a two-run homer by Bichette. Finally he struck out Mark Vientos to end the game [VIDEO].

Before I wrap this one up, I wanted to talk about a weird play involving PCA. He led off the top of the seventh with a walk.

One out later, he took off for second as Michael Busch was drawing a walk. Then this happened [VIDEO].

The call here isn’t wrong. Even on a walk with a runner on, the runner isn’t automatically entitled to second base. He’s got to hold the base. The ruling, apparently, is that PCA was tagged when he wasn’t in contact with second. The thing is, I don’t really see that in the clip.

You might remember a nearly identical play from 19 years ago involving Ronny Cedeno. This video should be cued to the right place but if not, scroll to 3:29:25:

That was a much more important play in context. The Cubs trailed the Cardinals 2-1 in the bottom of the ninth. Cedeno clearly came off the base and was tagged. The Cubs would have had the tying run in scoring position with one out; instead they had one on and two out and lost the game 2-1. In the situation Tuesday night in New York, the Cubs led by five at the time of the play and it didn’t have any real impact of the game. The call Tuesday was probably correct, though it wasn’t as clear as the one from 2007.

Anyway, here’s PCA talking after the game — but not about that play, mostly about his home run and his recent hot streak [VIDEO].

Here are Craig Counsell’s postgame comments, including remarks about Cabrera [VIDEO].

Here’s Cabrera on the injury [VIDEO].

One last note on Cabrera’s game from BCB’s JohnW53:

Edward Cabrera’s final pitching line was 5.0 innings, two runs, three hits, four walks and four strikeouts.

No previous Cubs starter since 1901 had fashioned that exact line.

Eight had two runs, three hits and four walks, but a different number of strikeouts: Kerry Wood, 10, in 2002; Don Cardwell, six, in 1960; Rich Harden, five, in 2008; Rich Nye, in 1967, and Rich Hill, in 2008, three; Steve Trout, two, in 1984; and Ed Reulbach, in 1907, and George McConnell, in 1916, one.

And one more on this win from John:

The Cubs’ win improved their record to just 10-26 on anniversaries of The Sandberg Game of June 23, 1984 — and only 5-20 on the road.

They had lost their last three, two of them on the road, and eight in a row on the road overall, since a 2-1 win at the South Side over the White Sox in 2007.

They had dropped 13 straight on June 23 outside Chicago, since a 3-0 win at St. Louis in 1997.

The Cubs, as you know, have a split doubleheader today. The first game will be at 12:10 p.m. CT. The game preview here will post at 10:30 a.m. CT. The Cubs do not yet have pitchers officially listed for the doubleheader, though it should be Shōta Imanaga for one game and Javier Assad for the other. The Mets are going with Nolan McLean for the day game and Sean Manaea for the night game, which will be at 6:10 p.m. CT. Both games will be on Marquee Sports Network.

As usual, the Cubs will be allowed a 27th man for the doubleheader, and I’m guessing that will be the just-optioned Gavin Hollowell. As always, we await developments.

What’s your early impression of Derek Hill?

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - JUNE 16: Derek Hill #49 of the Philadelphia Phillies runs off the field after a game against the Miami Marlins at Citizens Bank Park on June 16, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Phillies won 8-2. (Photo by Hunter Martin/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s been just under two weeks since Derek Hill left the Windy City and joined the City of Brotherly Love. Since then, he’s played in nine games for the Phillies. That’s not enough to get a particularly accurate picture of his performance. But it is enough to get a first impression, and you know what they say about those: you only get one, and also they are absolutely as valid as the more statistically precise impressions formed by larger sample sizes.

Well, nobody actually says that second part, and with good reason.

Still, it’s worth an early check-in. Today’s question is: what’s your early impression of Derek Hill?

Are the Braves done chasing wins?

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 22: Manager Walt Weiss #22 of the Atlanta Braves looks on from the dugout before the game against the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on June 22, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

To set some context: the Braves have a 5.5-game lead in the division, playoff odds north of 96 percent, and MLB’s third-best record. They don’t need to chase wins.

But, in the same vein, they didn’t need to chase wins in 2025 (although it wasn’t ever quite as comparable, as playoff odds dipped below 90 percent after their poor start), with playoff odds well above 50 percent through much of April and May. Except, eventually, that period of not needing to ran out, and by the time they did need to, they were playing catchup while the roster was depleted from injuries and the like.

So, you’d think they wouldn’t make this mistake again. And maybe they think the difference is that they aren’t the ones playing catchup, at least not right now. But, we’ve seen this story before. We saw it at times in 2022-2023, though the team was so good that it didn’t matter, which perhaps informs the current feelings of potential overconfidence. We saw it in 2024, in which the Braves were ultimately vindicated, albeit on a bit of a razor’s edge. And then we saw it last year, with awful results.

Which, I thought, informed the new philosophy we saw in April and May of this year. Walt Weiss even said, “chasing wins.” Last night, Walt Weiss said they had to get through the entire game with four pitchers, two of whom were JR Ritchie and Carlos Carrasco. That’s apparently why Ritchie was left in for 100 pitches despite another mediocre outing that actually improved after he and the defense turned a four-run lead into a one-run deficit, and why Carrasco was left in to blow a lead in the seventh… but to be very clear: when you are in a position that you’ve decided that only four pitchers, including Ritchie and Carrasco, are available to help you win a game, you have already decided, before first pitch, that you aren’t chasing this particular win.

On the flip side, we got to see the ultimate in win chasing from the other dugout. The Padres used three pitches to get their first six outs of the game. They used an opener, something the Braves just don’t care about doing despite their unsettled rotation situation and a bunch of guys that could probably use the help. When their listed bulk guy struggled, they just pulled him, and put in a different guy. To be very clear: the Padres went to another pitcher already down 3-0, while leverage was still medium-high, because they presumably wanted to try to win this game. And then, they used Mason Miller for two innings — something they hadn’t done since acquiring him, because again, they presumably actually wanted to win this game.

So, are the Braves done chasing wins? We know they were chasing them earlier, both from what we saw and from the things they actually said. But these days, we’re seeing the 2022-2025 approach to pitching management, and the post-game sound bites are all about availability instead of, “Hell yeah, let’s try to win a game.”

Last year, I kept having to add text like, “Even if it’s not right now, the Braves are eventually going to try to win as hard as they can, or else their margin for not doing so will completely evaporate.” And then I stopped, because they imploded with a bunch of close losses in June and that was that. I don’t want to do that again, but if they keep acting this way, there won’t be much of a choice.

Who is the most interesting player on the Red Sox right now?

Jun 4, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Red Sox center fielder Ceddanne Rafaela (3) looks back after scoring a run against the Baltimore Orioles during the sixth inning at Fenway Park. Mandatory Credit: Eric Canha-Imagn Images | Eric Canha-Imagn Images

The playoffs are nothing more than a distant dream. But most of us sickos who follow this team aren’t going anywhere. It’s summer, it’s the Red Sox, we’ll be watching.

This morning, Mike makes a great case that Nate Eaton of all people is giving us a reason to watch, and that he’s arguably the most interesting player in the lineup right now. The question of what’s interesting about this team is, uhh, interesting. So as we embark on three months of meaningless baseball, what player on this roster intrigues you the most? Who are you tuning in to see every night? Ceddy as he battles to develop into a complete player? Caleb Durbin as he battles to prove he belongs in an MLB starting lineup? One of the young arms?

For me, Payton Tolle is an easy answer, but that only applies every five days. Otherwise it’s Ceddy. I don’t think he’ll ever consistently figure it out at the plate; he’s going to battle his chase rate for his whole life. But I do think he’ll figure it out often enough that he’s going to put up a monster, top-15-player-in-all-of-baseball type season at some point in his career, and I want to be able to say that I saw it coming.

Talk about whatever you want and be good to one another.

Thoughts on a 6-4 Rangers loss

MIAMI, FLORIDA - JUNE 23: Brandon Nimmo #24 of the Texas Rangers dives into third base after hitting a triple against the Miami Marlins during the ninth inning at loanDepot park on June 23, 2026 in Miami, Florida. (Photo by Sam Navarro/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Rangers 6, Marlins 4

  • This was not a game one was feeling terribly optimistic about beforehand.
  • And it was a game that the Rangers lost.
  • It was a winnable game. The offense had three baserunners in the first, and the bases loaded with no one out in the second, and scored just one run.
  • Combined with the late comeback, which saw Texas bring the tying run to the plate in the ninth, it was an opportunity lost.
  • The middle innings were the Rangers’ downfall.
  • Cal Quantrill started what was effectively a bullpen game for the Rangers, facing nine batters over two innings and allowing a single run, to former Ranger farmhand, and key piece in the Nathaniel Lowe trade, Heriberto Hernandez.
  • Hernandez is one of five former Rangers (or Ranger minor leaguers) who is a member of the Marlins, along with John King, Tyler Phillips, Liam Hicks, and the Accountant, Pete Fairbanks.
  • The funny thing about it is that Miami didn’t acquire any of those players directly from the Rangers. Some other team acquired each of those five players from the Rangers, and then the Marlins ended up getting them for, essentially, nothing.
  • The Marlins got Phillips from the Philadelphia Phillies for cash. Hicks was a Rule 5 selection, taken from the Tigers. King, Fairbanks and Hernandez were all free agent signings.
  • King and Hernandez were traded by the Rangers in trades that worked out very well for Texas, and contributed to their World Series title.
  • Fairbanks and Hicks were traded by the Rangers in trades that did not work out for Texas. The Fairbanks for Nick Solak swap was a coup for the Rays, though the Nathaniel Lowe deal more or less balanced that out.
  • Hicks was traded, along with Tyler Owens, to the Detroit Tigers at the deadline for Carson Kelly in 2024. The 2024 team finished below .500 and Kelly didn’t play well for the Rangers. That said, the Rangers weren’t going to add Liam Hicks to the 40 man roster that offseason, and so would have been lost to the Marlins in the Rule 5 Draft anyway, unless there was something very Tigers-specific that happened once Hicks got to Detroit that wouldn’t have happened if he were playing the final month and a half of the 2024 season with the Roughriders that prompted Miami to want to select him.
  • Hicks has been a very good 1B/DH/third catcher for the Marlins this season, and you know, the Rangers could use someone like that on their roster right about now.
  • That said, I don’t think anyone expected Hicks to hit like he has this year (or even last year, when he had a 693 OPS in 390 plate appearances). Certainly Detroit didn’t, or else they wouldn’t have left him exposed in the Rule 5 Draft.
  • I’d probably be more irked about losing Hicks if he’d been with the Rangers when the Marlins took him in the Rule 5 Draft. I’m not sure that makes sense logically, but then, what’s logical about sports fandom?
  • Getting back on topic, Quantrill was followed by Jose Corniell, newly called up and making his second major league appearance.
  • In Corniell’s first major league appearance, in the final game of the 2025 season, he pitched a scoreless inning against the Guardians, and then gave up a walkoff homer in the next inning, resulting in the Rangers going 81-81 instead of 82-80 on the year.
  • Corniell, I regret to inform you, now has two major league appearances and two “L”s. The second batter he faced, catcher Joe Mack, homered off of him, giving the Marlins the lead.
  • He then had a Very Unfortunate Fifth Inning. Two outs, a runner at first, Xavier Edwards hits a grounder up the middle that you think is a ball that will be the third out, but instead goes into center for a base hit.
  • Thus setting the stage for Owen Caissie to thump a ball over the fence in right field for the most momentum shifting play in baseball.
  • At that stage, it was 5-1, Marlins, and the game felt over. Hernandez doubled and Mack singled to make it 6-1, and this felt like the kind of game that would result in double digit runs being given up and Nicky Lopez pitching the bottom of the eighth.
  • That didn’t happen, though. Corniell got out of the inning with no more damage being done, allowed a double and got a fly out to start the sixth, and then was replaced by Joe Ross, who went the rest of the way and kept the Marlins off the scoreboard.
  • And it almost mattered! The Rangers threatened late, got back into the game, could’ve made Joe Ross a hero!
  • Or, at least, the winning pitcher.
  • That said, the Rangers played a game in June in the Year of Our Lord 2026, and the three pitchers they used were Cal Quantrill, Jose Corniell, and Joe Ross.
  • If you were a time-traveler and came back from the past and looked at the box score and saw that, you’d say…
  • But no, someone killed that fish. You know who you are.
  • On the positive side, Quantrill, Corniell and Ross allowed the rest of the bullpen to have the day off. Jakob Junis and Robby Ahlstrom were probably not available after pitching the previous two days, and Jacob Latz had thrown 31 pitches the day before and so ideally would not have been used, which meant the Rangers’ pen was pretty thin for the game to start with.
  • The offense had opportunities, but did little with them until it was late. An underwhelming 1 for 11 with runners in scoring position. That’s not going to win you many games.
  • A pair of singles in the first were followed up by a Brandon Nimmo double play ball. Josh Jung walked to put runners on the corners, but an Ezequiel Duran pop out ended things.
  • The second featured an Alejandro Osuna single, a Jarred Kelenic walk, and a Kyle Higashioka bunt single to load the bases with no one out. And with offensive catalyst Nicky Lopez coming to the plate, we were feeling good.
  • We were getting hyped. We were getting crunk. We were on fleek.
  • Lopez did get a run home, on a U3 groundout that put runners on second and third. Osuna was thrown out at home on a Pederson fielder’s choice for the second out, and Wyatt Langford flew out to end the inning and lead ominous posts about how the Rangers were going to regret their misses opportunities.
  • Texas did a whole bunch of nothing until the late innings, after Sandy Alcantara left the game. Brandon Nimmo homered to start the eighth to make it 6-2. Then in the ninth, against the Accountant, whose debits and credits have been out of balance this season, Pederson hit a two out homer, Langford reached on a HBP, and Nimmo tripled…
  • And suddenly it was 6-4! And Josh Jung, who has been great this season, was at the plate as the tying run!
  • Alas, twas not to be. Jung flew out. The game was over. The Rangers had lost.
  • Cal Quantrill reached 95.7 mph with his fastball. Jose Corniell topped out at 95.9 mph with his fastball. Joe Ross’s fastball touched 95.2 mph.
  • Brandon Nimmo had a 110.5 mph triple and a 105.9 mph home run. Joc Pederson’s homer was 106.7 mph. Kyle Higashioka had a 103.8 mph groundout. Ezequiel Duran had a 101.6 mph ground out. Josh Jung had a 101.1 mph groundout, a 101.0 mph groundout and a 100.0 mph groundout, with his ninth inning fly out being 97.1 mph.
  • Two down, eight to go.

Mets vs. Cubs: How to watch Game 2 of doubleheader on June 24, 2026

The Mets continue a four-game series against the Chicago Cubs in Game 2 of a doubleheader at Citi Field on Wednesday at 7:10 p.m.


Mets Notes

  • Since moving back into the rotation, Sean Manaea has a 3.18 ERA in 11.1 innings while striking out 11
  • Following the conclusion of their series against the Cubs on Thursday, the Mets host the Phillies for a three-game series

Today's Lineups

CUBS
METS
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How can I watch the game online?

To watch Mets games online via PIX11, you will need a subscription to a TV service provider and live in the New York City metro area, or you can now purchase an in-market subscription package via MLB and Amazon This will allow fans to watch the Mets on their computer, tablet or mobile phone browser.

To get started on your computer, go to the PIX11 live stream website and follow the site's steps. For more FAQs, you can go here.

How can I watch the game on my computer via MLB?

To get started on your computer, click here and then follow these steps:

  • Log in using your provider credentials. If you are unsure of your provider credentials, please contact your provider.
  • Link your provider credentials with a new or existing MLB.com account.
  • Log in using your MLB.com credentials to watch Mets games on PIX11.

How can I watch the game on the MLB App?

MLB App access is included for FREE with SNY. To access a PIX11 game on your favorite supported Apple or Android mobile device, please follow the steps below.

  • Open “MLB” and tap on “Subscriber Login” for Apple Devices or “Sign in with MLB.com” for Android Devices.
  • Type in your MLB.com credentials and tap “Log In.” 
  • To access live or on-demand content, tap on the "Watch" tab from the bottom navigation bar. Select the "Games" sub-tab to see a listing of available games. You can scroll to previous dates using the left and right arrows. Tap on a game to select from the game feeds available. 

Pirates Ryan O’Hearn remains under the radar from national spotlight

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 17: Ryan O'Hearn #29 of the Pittsburgh Pirates walks to the dugout before the game against the Athletics at Sutter Health Park on June 17, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Lachlan Cunningham/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Pittsburgh Pirates made waves in the offseason when they signed Ryan O’Hearn to a 2-year $29 million contract in January. That signing was the largest ever handed out to a free-agent hitter in franchise history and was the first free-agent signed to a multi year contract by the club in a decade. Despite the big splash signing that it was at the time and what the left-handed hitter has done to this point in the season, O’Hearn finds himself on the outside looking in with regards to All-Star voting.

O’Hearn has quietly been exactly what the Pirates needed for their young team. O’Hearn provides a veteran presence for what is a very young clubhouse and has gracefully embraced that role since signing with Pittsburgh. Although his role in the clubhouse is usually attached to a player that’s over the hill, this couldn’t be further from the truth in the case of O’Hearn.

Not only does O’Hearn provide the steady mindset as a veteran player off the field, he also provides that on the field. The 32-year-old lefty has been one of the consistent performers in manager Don Kelly’s lineup that has completely transformed this offense. 2025 saw Pittsburgh as bottom dwellers for homers and runs scored, but 2026 has seen the club completely flip the script and suddenly the bats have awakened. O’Hearn has been a catalyst in that way. It hasn’t been flashy or over the top, but it’s been a steady driving force. On the year O’Hearn is slashing .274/.333/.447 with a .780 OPS. At the plate O’Hearn has gathered 11 homers, 65 total hits and 41 RBIs. He knocked in a career high six runs against the Athletics on June, 17.

Despite the model of consistency that O’Hearn has been, he finds himself not in the top percentage of players receiving All-Star votes. He’s made significant impacts for the team at first base, right field and as a designated hitter, but still is not receiving the votes that teammates like Oneil Cruz (outfield) and Spencer Horwitz (first base) are receiving. Even with the time Cruz has spent on the injured list, he’s still in the top 20 of votes for outfielders while O’Hearn is nowhere to be seen.

O’Hearn has been named to the All-Star team once in his career. Last season as a member of the Baltimore Orioles, O’Hearn was named to the American League All-Star team as the starting designated hitter. O’Hearn is currently on pace to replicate those same numbers that made him an All-Star just a season ago.

At the time of his signing, Kelly was very impressed with O’Hearn’s career path and said he could be a game changer for the Pirates.

“The resiliency that he showed in that moment of going from being DFA’d to starting in the All-Star Game, that’s what Pittsburgh is all about, is that toughness and that grit,” Kelly said. “Really excited to add him to the organization.”

Pittsburgh and O’Hearn seem to already be a match made in heaven as he really seems bought in to changing the organization and delivering a winner to the city. Even if he doesn’t make it on the National League’s All-Star roster, O’Hearn has more than impressed to this point as a Pirate and could end up being one of those special signings that the Buccos have made in recent history. O’Hearn has made his confidence in the team known since the minute he was signed.

“I couldn’t be anymore excited to be a Pirate,” O’Hearn said. “I love the stadium, I love the city, what it’s about. I did my research before I made a decision, and it’s a team that can pitch and just seemed like one or two pieces away from being a legit contender.”

Grading Blackhawks Trade With Sabres Involving 4th Overall Pick & Bowen Byram

The Chicago Blackhawks and Buffalo Sabres completed a borderline blockbuster trade. Chicago sent the 4th & 45th overall picks, along with Louis Crevier, to Buffalo in exchange for Bowen Byram and Jordan Greenway. 

Byram is an incredible defenseman who comes to Chicago hoping to be their number one. He feels that after a career year, it is time for him to get the ice time and paycheck that he deserves. With Rasmus Dahlin, Mattias Samuelsson, and Owen Power already established in Buffalo, Byram felt overshadowed. 

As a Blackhawk, Byram will be the number one guy on defense. On most nights, he will lead the team in time on ice, and should be their top offensive producer from the back-end. The team will be better with him on it. 

The catch is that Byram has one year left on his deal, which carries a cap hit of $6.25 million. After that, he will require a substantial pay upgrade on a long-term extension. His salary will likely double. He is just 25 years old, which means he has some great hockey ahead of him, but it will still be a hard contract to live up to. 

Jordan Greenway is not a game-changer. He will be a fourth-line option for Jeff Blashill, bringing a physical presence to the game, but you can't point to him as a reason the team will be better. 

Early in the life of the trade, it has the makings of a legitimate disaster for the Chicago Blackhawks. They gave up a top-five pick and a second-round pick, along with a solid defenseman in Louis Crevier, for Bowen Byram without an extension and a fourth-line forward. 

The outlook of the trade will improve if they get Byram signed, but there will also be worry about it becoming an albatross. They gave up a lot, including their most valuable asset, and Connor Bedard still has a huge hole on his wing. 

In the likely event that they are unable to get Bedard a true top-line winger, that will make it four years in a row to start his career. That's terrible asset management. 

Byram is a really good player, and the Blackhawks should have taken him 3rd overall in 2019, but this is a massive overpay for him 7 years later. 

Blackhawks Trade Grade: D+ 

The trade grade will become a C if Byram signs a fair extension, and it will become an A if he is the true number one defenseman that the Blackhawks need for a large portion of the Connor Bedard era. For now, there are way too many question marks. 

Social Media Reacts To Sabres Trading Byram, Greenway To Blackhawks For No. 4 Pick And MoreSocial Media Reacts To Sabres Trading Byram, Greenway To Blackhawks For No. 4 Pick And MoreSome posts on social media described the Chicago Blackhawks sending picks Nos. 4 and 45 and Louis Crevier to the Buffalo Sabres for Bowen Byram and Jordan Greenway as one of the worst trades ever. Others defended the deal.
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2026 NBA Draft: First Round Review

Jun 23, 2026; New York, NY, USA; NBA commissioner Adam Silver under the board showing the 2026 NBA draft first round results at Barclays Center. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

Though the stakes weren’t as high as recent drafts for the San Antonio Spurs, it was a consequential one due to the glaring roster holes revealed during the recently concluded NBA Finals loss. They made an attempt to address them last night by drafting two big, defensive-minded centers using their own pick at 20th and trading for the Denver Nuggets 26th pick:

  • 20th selection: Jayden Quaintance (Kentucky) – 6’10” 255 lb.
  • 26th selection (via trade with Denver) Tarris Reed, Jr. (UConn) – 6’11” 265 lb.

Below is a review of the entire first round, but first, a few quick observations:

  • Gratitude: That the Giannis trade happened (no more speculation on the sports networks and interwebs, AND we only have to play that team twice a season!)
  • It was really nice to have them formally introduce the entire draft class (well, the ones that they anticipated would go in this first round) in alphabetical order by last name from A-Z before the festivities began.
  • Did not realize that University of Houston’s Chris Cenac, Jr.’s last name was pronounced “SEH-NACK“.”
  • Santa Clara’s Allen Graves came in noticeably trimmer than what his highlights showed.
  • Coolest names: Labaron Philon, Jr., Dailyn Swain, Anicet Dybantsa (not AJ!)
  • Was anyone surprised that Julius Randle was moved so quickly after the Western Conference semis?
  • Surprisingly undrafted players: Isaiah Evans (Duke), Ja’Kobi Gillespie (Tennessee)

And now onto the picks! (For the Spurs-specific comparisons, the following players were not eligible for actual considerations: Tim Duncan, Victor Wembanyama, and Manu Ginobili.)

1. Washington Wizards

PLAYER: Anicet Dybantsa (BYU)

OBSERVATION: He looked genuinely happy to be taken here and especially to end up with the Wiz!

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: early Tracy McGrady / Spurs: springy Sean Elliott


2. Utah Jazz

PLAYER: Darryn Peterson (Kansas)
OBSERVATION:
It feels like this whole rookie campaign for him will be a vendetta against not being the top selection.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Dwyane Wade with a jumpshot / Spurs: Dylan Harper with a reliable outside shot


3. Memphis Grizzlies

PLAYER: Cameron Boozer (Duke)

OBSERVATION: If he can have a career mimicing fellow Dukie Elton Brand, that would be great.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Carlos Boozer with better hair / Spurs: Terry Cummings with playmaking skills


4. Chicago Bulls

PLAYER: Caleb Wilson (UNC)

OBSERVATION: An excellent young man who pours into his community? Future Spur in 2035!

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Antonio McDyess before the knee injuries / Spurs: early David Robinson before he refined his offensive repertoire


5. LA Clippers (via Indiana)

PLAYER: Keaton Wagler (Illinois)

OBSERVATION: I can’t help but to keep thinking of Tyrese Haliburton. It doesn’t seem like he gets rattled.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Tyrese Haliburton / Spurs: Derrick White (after his Austin stints)


6. Brooklyn Nets

PLAYER: Mikel Brown, Jr. (Louisville)

OBSERVATION: Exudes confidence and I’m hopeful that he remains injury-free.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: 3rd year Cade Cunningham / Spurs: Rookie year Stephon Castle


7. Sacramento Kings

PLAYER: Darius Acuff, Jr. (Arkansas)

OBSERVATION: So. many. point. guards. in. this. franchise’s. history.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Damian Lillard / Spurs: What I think San Antonio wanted to turn Dejounte Murray into.


8. Atlanta Hawks (via New Orleans)

PLAYER: Kingston Flemings (Houston)

OBSERVATION: It seems like the University of Houston keeps churning out these tough defensive-minded guards over the last decade.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: a merge of VJ Edgecombe and Tyrese Maxey / Spurs: running out of excellent point guards here – 2014 Cory Joseph?


9. Dallas Mavericks

PLAYER: Morez Johnson, Jr. (Michigan)

OBSERVATION: Dusty May hired. Morez Johnson, Jr. selected!

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Taller Shawn Marion / Spurs: if Malik Rose were fully realized on defense


10. Milwaukee Bucks

PLAYER: Brayden Burries (Arizona)

OBSERVATION: Best son / father interaction in terms of meaningfulness.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Sacramento-era Harrison Barnes / Spurs: George Hill


11. Golden State Warriors

PLAYER: Yaxel Lendebourg (Michigan)

OBSERVATION: His well-traveled journey woud seem to indicate him ‘getting over himself.’

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Detlef Schrempf with range / Spurs: Boris Diaw (with the weight-based contract conditions)


12. Oklahoma City Thunder (via LA Clippers)

PLAYER: Aday Mara (Michigan)

OBSERVATION: Goodbye Chet Holmgren AND Isaiah Hartenstein! The highlight dunks for Castle and Harper will look that much more convincing.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Scared that he ends up like Zach Edey (injuries) / Spurs: Futuristic-version of Boban Marjanovic


13. Milwaukee Bucks (via Miami Heat)

PLAYER: Nate Ament (Tennessee)

OBSERVATION: He looks like he can easily fill out to about 235 lb. in several years.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Scottie Pippen / Spurs: early Kawhi Leonard with a jumper


14. Charlotte Hornets

PLAYER: Hannes Steinbach (Washington)

OBSERVATION: It seems like Charlotte has the guy that can pick up after the starting lineups wealth of shooters.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Mo Wagner (now) -> Franz Wagner (later) / Spurs: 2007 Fabricio Oberto


15. Chicago Bulls (via Portland)

PLAYER:Dailyn Swain (Texas)

OBSERVATION: Used his NIL money to pay off his mother’s college loans. That is a good son.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Rip Hamilton / Spurs: Derek Anderson (oof)


16. Memphis Grizzlies (via Phoenix)

PLAYER:Bennett Stirtz (Iowa)

OBSERVATION: He was later traded to Oklahoma City for 2 second round picks (and swapped first round picks). Perhaps a replacement for Cason Wallace?

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Marco Belinelli / Spurs: 1994-1995 Vinny Del Negro


17. Oklahoma City Thunder (via Philadelphia)

PLAYER:Ebuka Okorie (Stanford)

OBSERVATION: This pick was traded to Memphis, and then ultimately ended up in Detroit. Memphis received the 21st pick and 5 future second round draft picks.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Right-handed Jalen Brunson (throwing my keyboard out the window) / Spurs: Taller Patty Mills


18. Charlotte Hornets (via Orlando)

PLAYER:Christian Anderson, Jr. (Texas Tech)

OBSERVATION: I lost track of how many 6’1″ 180 lb guards there were in the top part of the draft by this point.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Daniss Jenkins / Spurs: Tre Jones by the time he left the team


19. Toronto Raptors

PLAYER: Allen Graves (Santa Clara)

OBSERVATION: “Just one selection before ours!” (Cried many Pounders)

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: ground-bound Jaime Jaquez, Jr. / Spurs: Phoenix-era Boris Diaw


20. San Antonio Spurs (via Atlanta)

PLAYER: Jayden Quaintance (Kentucky)

OBSERVATION: An athletic big 4 with a motor! A second unit of Quaintance and Bryant could help preserve some 2nd and 3rd quarter leads.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Kenneth Faried / Spurs: DeJuan Blair


21. Detroit Pistons (via Minnesota)

PLAYER: Karim Lopez (NZ Breakers)

OBSERVATION: This pick was part of the previous complicated trade and ultimately went to Memphis – essentially cementing Ja Morant’s departure.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: (ancestrally) Eduardo Najera / (stylistically) Ricky Rubio / Spurs: what they thought Kyle Anderson would turn out to be


22. Philadelphia 76ers (via Houston)

PLAYER:Labaron Philon, Jr. (Alabama)

OBSERVATION: Not sure of the fit alongside Maxey and Edgecombe – unless they want to have a closing line-up resembling Fox, Castle, and Harper.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Tyler Herro / Spurs: Tall Tony Parker


23. Atlanta Hawks (via Cleveland)

PLAYER:Zuby Ejiofor (St. John’s)

OBSERVATION: A really enjoyable player to watch.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Elton Brand with musculature / Spurs: what Charles Bassey could have become


24. New York Knicks

PLAYER:Cameron Carr (Baylor)

OBSERVATION: For all the fanfare that ESPN showed heading into the pick, it ended up being a pick swap with the Los Angeles Lakers (#25).

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Norman Powell / Spurs: I do see the resemblances to Devin Vassell.


25. Los Angeles Lakers

PLAYER:Sergio De Larrea (Spain)

OBSERVATION: I know nothing, but he seems like a decent spot-up shooter.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Reed Sheppard / Spurs: Doug McDermott


26. Denver Nuggets (traded to San Antonio)

PLAYER:Tarris Reed, Jr. (UConn)

OBSERVATION: San Antonio sent Denver a 2026 second round pick (and 2 future seconds) for the UConn big man. The fact that they went after Reed instead of Alex Karaban was an eye-opener.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Nene Hilario / Spurs: college-level LaMarcus Aldridge


27. Boston Celtics

PLAYER:Chris Cenac (Houston)

OBSERVATION: His shooting form looked fairly smooth from the highlights.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Naz Reid / Spurs: Portland LaMarcus Aldridge


28. Minnesota Timberwolves (via Detroit)

PLAYER:Joshua Jefferson (Iowa State)

OBSERVATION: This selection went to Brooklyn as part of the trade featuring Julius Randle earlier in the week. It is really cool to see when players not featured in the draft room come straight out of the crowd like Jefferson did.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Domantas Sabonis / Spurs: late career Rudy Gay


29. Cleveland Cavaliers (via San Antonio)

PLAYER:Alex Karaban (UConn)

OBSERVATION: Each draft typically fits an ‘ultimate winner’ type and this guy is it.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: Shane Battier / Spurs: Late career Robert Horry


30. Dallas Mavericks (via Oklahoma City)

PLAYER:Koa Peat (Arizona)

OBSERVATION: As with so many of the preceding picks, this one went to the Phoenix Suns.

UNOFFICIAL PLAYER COMP: Non-Spurs: / Spurs: regular season Keldon Johnson

I hope you all enjoyed tonight’s recap. I look forward to seeing how Round 2 plays out tomorrow night!

What Celtics fans need to know about draft pick Chris Cenac Jr.

What Celtics fans need to know about draft pick Chris Cenac Jr. originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Celtics did not trade the No. 27 overall pick in the first round of the 2026 NBA Draft and used it to select Houston big man Chris Cenac Jr.

Cenac started 36 games for a Houston team that finished with a 30-7 record and advanced to the Sweet Sixteen of the NCAA Tournament.

One of the most glaring roster weaknesses for the Celtics coming into the offseason was a lack of frontcourt depth and talent. Cenac has an exciting skill set and can play power forward or center.

Here’s a breakdown of what Celtics fans need to know about the team’s newest rookie.

Basic info

Age: 19

Position: Power forward or center

School: University of Houston

Height, weight: 6-foot-11, 240 pounds (7-foot-5 wingspan)

2025-26 Stats (with Houston): 9.5 ppg, 7.9 rpg, 33.3% 3PT 

How will he help the Celtics?

Cenac has an intriguing skill set at just 19 years old, and he improved a lot during his freshman season.

“He’s raw. That’s the first thing we have to mention,” CBS Sports’ Isaac Trotter said on NBC Sports Boston’s draft show Tuesday night. “He could only play (for Houston coach Kelvin Sampson) if he rebounded. Rebounding is literally the lifeblood of that program, and he was one of the best rebounders in this class. I put him up there near the top. He rebounds outside of his area, he chases offensive rebounds, he was a high-motor player all the time.”

Cenac also has the ability to shoot 3-pointers or attack from the midrange.

“I think what Boston’s idea here is — he has great measurables at 6-foot-11 with a 7-foot-5 wingspan,” Trotter added. “He plays really hard, so you don’t have to teach effort. He can stretch the floor. He made over 30 3-pointers this season and took a bunch of pull-up jumpers.”

Cenac played a little too much on the perimeter for Houston and didn’t get to the basket enough offensively, but with the athleticism and size he brings to the floor, the Celtics should be able to correct those weaknesses.

“Just a good young player, energetic, plays hard,” Celtics president of basketball operations Brad Stevens said after making the pick. “Excellent athlete, long, fits a position of need. Some things that we were a little short on this year from an athletic perspective, I think with this size and his strength.”

Can he make an impact right away?

Unless injuries crush the Celtics’ frontcourt depth, Cenac probably won’t be a consistent part of the rotation during the 2026-27 campaign.

He’s only 19 years old and needs to develop in a lot of ways, including adding some strength and muscle to his frame.

“I hope we’re good enough that it’s hard for any 19-year-old to come in here and be good right out of the gate,” Stevens admitted Tuesday night.

The Celtics, to their credit, have done a good job developing centers of late. They turned Neemias Queta into a Most Improved Player Award candidate and a legitimate starter. Luke Kornet made a meaningful impact in his time in Boston. Luka Garza had a productive 2025-26 season, too.

Cenac also should benefit from not being thrown into the fire too early. He should be able to develop his skill set at a pace that’s best for him and not be rushed.

“With his size and his length, when you play in the program he’s played for, he’s been taught well and been held to a high standard,” Stevens said. “I like that and he’ll undoubtedly come here and be eager … he’s got a lot to learn.”

Highlights