St. Louis Cardinals Hit ‘Symphony of Homers’ to Beat the Cubs 6-5 Friday

ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - MAY 15: Iván Herrera #48 of the St. Louis Cardinals hits against the Kansas City Royals at Busch Stadium on May 15, 2026 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Joe Puetz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

There’s nothing quite as heartwarming as letting your former team know what they gave up on. Nelson Velázquez greeted the Chicago Cubs by slamming the first pitch he saw into the visitor’s bullpen helping the St. Louis Cardinals win Friday night. He was joined in the home run parade by Ivan Herrera and Thomas Saggese, but more on that later.

Andre Pallante struggled and that’s putting it kindly. In the top of the first inning, Andre was able to get Pete Crow-Armstrong and Nico Hoerner out, but then allowed Chicago to do a lot of two out scoring. Michael Busch singled and Alex Bregman both singled before Cardinal killer Ian Happ greeted a Andre Pallante 4-seam meatball by sending it 407 feet into the stands giving Chicago an early 3-0 lead.

Fortunately, it did not take long for the Cardinals to respond. In the bottom of the 1st, Iván Herrera had a ball glance off of his toe and then Jordan Walker lived up to his name and walked which brought up Nelson Velázquez who played his first Major League game as a Chicago Cub in May of 2022 until he was traded to Kansas City the following year. Nelson celebrated his call-up from Memphis by destroying a Shota Imanaga 4-seam fastball giving it a 411 foot ride tying the game at 3-3. Yo Nelly indeed.

Andre Pallante looked uncomfortable in the top of the 2nd inning as he gave up a single to Dansby Swanson and then walked Nico Hoerner with two outs. Michael Busch punished him by singling in Swanson allowing Chicago to jump back in the lead 4-3.

The resilient Cardinals answered that challenge again in the bottom of the 4th inning when Thomas Saggese homered to left-center tying the game again 4-4.

Andre Pallante would only last 3 innings giving up 8 hits and 4 earned runs while striking out 3 and walking 1. Justin Bruihl would come in for relief in the 4th inning before handing the ball to Gordon Graceffo who entered the game in the top of the 5th inning, but only being allowed to throw 10 pitches. George Soriano pitched the top of the 6th inning. They were able to keep the Cubs off of the scoreboard in the middle of the game giving St. Louis a chance to grab the lead for the first time which they did thanks to Ivan Herrera slamming his 7th home run of the season. At that point, it was 5-4 Cardinals.

The late innings were handled by JoJo Romero who took over in the top of the 7th inning and had the honor of being the first Cardinals pitcher to get Michael Busch out Friday night as he was 3 for 3 before JoJo struck him out. He also struck out Ian Happ which proves it’s possible for a St. Louis pitcher to accomplish this. Ryne Stanek was tasked with the top of the 8th inning. He gave up a leadoff single to Seiya Suzuki, but struck out Michael Conforto with a nasty split finger third strike. After Carson Kelly grounded out in front of the mound, Stanek appeared to tweak his knee a bit, but he stayed in the game. Ryne was able to close out the Cubs in the top of the 8th by getting Dansby Swanson to fly out to Walker in right field.

The Cardinals would add some badly-needed insurance in the bottom of the 8th inning when Nelson Velázquez reached on an infield single. After Alec Burleson struck out, Masyn Winn (who had 2 hits on the night) went the other way with a pitch into right field giving St. Louis a scoring chance that was delivered on when José Fermín singled into left upping the Cardinals lead to 6-4.

Riley O’Brien was brought in to lock down the game for St. Louis in the top of the 9th inning. He was rudely greeted by Pete Crow-Armstrong who knocked the 2nd pitch he saw off of the right field wall for a double. Nico Hoerner then nailed Riley in the back of the leg with a ball back up the middle, but he was able to recover and get the first out at first. O’Brien got Michael Busch to ground out scoring Armstrong from third, but the Cardinals were still clinging to their 6-5 lead. Alex Bregman grounded out to Masyn Winn to end the game and give St. Louis a very important early season victory.

Game 2 of the rivalry will happen Saturday night at Busch Stadium as Kyle Leahy will make the start for the St. Louis Cardinals while the Chicago Cubs will ask Ben Brown to take one for the team. Saturday night’s game will be a national broadcast on Fox with first pitch scheduled for 6:15pm.

Hurricanes fans mock Canadiens with 'Olé' chant during Game 5 blowout

With their team up 4-0 and seemingly on the cusp of the Stanley Cup Final, Carolina Hurricanes fans took a playful shot at the struggling visitors.

Fans at Raleigh's Lenovo Center broke out into a boisterous "Olé" chant during the second period — the same chant that is frequently heard during Montreal Canadiens games at the Bell Centre.

Carolina fans have plenty to celebrate. Up 3-1 in the series, the Hurricanes appear poised to book their first Stanley Cup Final ticket since they won it all in 2006.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Hurricanes fans mock Canadiens with Olé chant during Game 5 blowout

Braves bats stay hot as they take first game against Reds

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - MAY 26: Michael Harris II #23 of the Atlanta Braves hits a two-run home run against the Boston Red Sox during the eighth inning at Fenway Park on May 26, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Brian Fluharty/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Atlanta Braves have scored the second most runs MLB so far this season and had plans of continuing this trend while facing the Reds an their started Chris Paddack and his 6.86 ERA.

The first inning started off with a bang. Ronald Acuña Jr. hit the fourth pitch he saw for a solo shot in the first inning to set the tone with a solo shot to make the score 1-0. The interesting part is he saw three four-seam fastballs and then took a curveball deep. Notoriously this season he has struggled against four-seamers.

After a Harris fly out Olson hit a ball to the wall and tried for a sliding double but got thrown out in a bang-bang play. Albies then flied out to end the top of the first. Grant Holmes looked good in the first, outside of a walk to Mosley High School graduated JJ Bleday, he sat down every other batter to include a strikeout.

In the second inning the Braves started to blow the game open, Smith singled followed by a Riley walk and a Yastrzemki walk and the bases loaded. Jorge Mateo then hit a chopper to short in which he got out, but a run scored to make it 2-0. Tromp then came to the plate and did his job by hitting the ball deep to right to get a sac fly and make it 3-0. After a walk, Harris hit a single to score Mateo from second to make the score 4-0. Olson grounded out, but the damage had been done.

Holmes then did what he does best early in a game and sat the Reds down in order in the second inning picking up two groundouts and a strikeout. To not be outdone, the Braves were also sat down in order in the third. In the third fr Holmes his rival Freidl who already has two HRs against him singled, but then Holmes struck back with back-to-back strikeouts and a groundout from De La Cruz.

The only offense in the fourth for the Braves was a single by Yastrzemski. The fourth for the Red was very different. Bleday hit a shot to to RF to make the score 4-1. After a pop up and Stewart being caught try ing to steal third, Lowe hit a solo shot to make the score 4-2 Braves. Steer then singled, but after a mound visit Holmes got the last out.

In the fifth, Harris singled, but was caught stealing second. He was initially called safe, but after a challenge it was overturned. That was the only offense for the Braves in the inning. The Reds got to Holmes again. This time with two singles After the hits Didier Fuentes came in the game. Holmes finished the game going 4.2 innings with seven hits (two HRs), three earned runs, one walk and five strikeouts. Solid work.

Fuentes allowed a runner to score that he inherited, but then he got the strikeout to end the inning. After a single by Smith and a HBP from Riley, Yastrzemski hit a double to make the score 5-3.

Mateo then singled to keep the scoring going and make it 6-3. Harris came in clutch after an intentional walk and singled to make the score 8-3, which would end up being the final score.

The Braves started the series off with a statement. They are the best overall team in MLB. After Fuentes the Braves pitched Lee, then Suarez, and finally Kinley who combined for 3.0 innings and allowed two hits, zero walks, zero runs, zero walks, and five strikeouts.

The Braves showed out tonight and look to do it again when they face the Reds again tommorow. Harris and Smith had three hit nights and Ronald Acuña had a HR.

Kevin Harlan had touching Knicks playoff gesture for Mike Breen

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Tim Legler and Mike Breen look on during the game between the Cleveland Cavaliers and the Detroit Pistons  during Round Two Game Five of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 13, 2026 at Little Caesars Arena in Detroit, Michigan, Image 2 shows Kevin Harlan and Stan Van Gundy speak on the Amazon Prime broadcast before tipoff at the Paycom Center on April 2, 2026 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

Mike Breen had a chance to call last year’s Eastern Conference finals, even though the series was on TNT.

The longtime Knicks play-by-play announcer on MSG Network has been a prominent fixture in the NBA as the lead play-by-play caller on ESPN.

But last year, TNT’s Kevin Harlan offered Breen a chance to call the Knicks ECF series against the Pacers despite Breen’s status with the Worldwide Leader.

Tim Legler and Mike Breen look on during the game between the Cleveland Cavaliers and the Detroit Pistons during Game 5 of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on May 13, 2026. NBAE via Getty Images

Breen explained the situation with The Post’s Dexter Henry on a recent episode of “New York Got Game.”

“We had the West and TNT had the East,” Breen recalled, citing that he’d be calling the series between the Thunder and Timberwolves. “Kevin Harlan, the great Kevin Harlan, who is a dear friend, they’re calling the Knicks-Pacers [series].”

Kevin Harlan and Stan Van Gundy speak on the Amazon Prime broadcast before tipoff at the Paycom Center on April 2, 2026, in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Getty Images

Breen continued: “He calls me couple of days before the series and he says, ‘You know what?’ He goes on, ‘You’ve been waiting almost three decades for the Knicks to be in a conference final because it was the first in 25.’ He goes, ‘I want you to call the games for TNT. I’m going to go to my bosses. I’m going to tell them you should do it, and I’ll go do the West for ESPN.'”

Breen, when asked by Henry, confirmed that Harlan was serious.

“‘I know my bosses would love to have you, you deserve it,'” Breen remembered. “‘This is the team you’ve followed all this, you deserve it.’ And he goes, ‘”And even if ESPN doesn’t want to use me, and they want to use one of their announcers, whether it was Dave Pasch or Mark Jones, I’m fine, I’ll sit it out.’ That’s the kind of man Kevin Harlan is. I was so touched by that.”

Breen added that he thought about it overnight, and Harlan called him the next day, but acknowledged they both decided it might not have been the best for their employers, ESPN and TNT, respectively.

Red Sox star Roman Anthony hits another setback in injury rehab

Roman Anthony, on the disabled list, watching a baseball game from the dugout.
Boston Red Sox's Roman Anthony, who is on the injured list, watches from the dugout rail during a baseball game against the Atlanta Braves, Thursday, May 28, 2026, in Boston.

The Red Sox will likely have to wait a little longer for their young star’s return to the diamond.

Outfielder Roman Anthony suffered a setback during his rehab process on Thursday and is now reportedly shut down, according to Boston manager Chad Tracy.

Tracy told reporters on Friday that Anthony “felt discomfort hitting off a tee” and that the 22-year-old “has been shut down from swinging…at least for a few days,” according to MassLive.

Boston Red Sox’s Roman Anthony, who is on the injured list, watches from the dugout rail during a baseball game against the Atlanta Braves, Thursday, May 28, 2026, in Boston. AP Photo/Charles Krupa

Anthony is recovering from an injury he suffered in a game against the Tigers earlier this month, with this being the second time he’s been shut down during his rehab. The first time occurred last week.

He last played on May 4, when he hurt his wrist while swinging a bat, and the Red Sox placed him on the 10-day injured list three days later.

The affliction has since been reclassified as a finger injury, with Anthony calling it a partially torn right ring finger ligament. But there is still some confusion about what exactly he is suffering from.

“I know stuff came out yesterday about ‘tear vs. sprain vs. strain’ and all these things. I don’t know what else to say other than a strain/sprain, it is a tear,” Tracy said. “If you strain a hamstring, that’s a partial tear.

“Fibers let go a little bit and they’ve got to heal. I don’t think anything was portrayed differently or wrongly.”

Tracy added that although Anthony’s time away from the field hurts his club, the best thing they can do is just wait and see.

Roman Anthony of the Boston Red Sox has his hand examined by trainer Brandon Henry (R) as interim manager Chad Tracy (C) looks on during the first inning of a game against the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park on May 4, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. Getty Images

“The fact of the matter still remains that he’s got something in there and if there’s discomfort, we just have to wait,” he said. “Did we want it to go quicker? Yeah, but we can’t control the healing. If he’s got discomfort, we’ve got to wait.

“Is it going to go longer than we had originally hoped and thought? Yeah, but that’s just how it goes.”

Anthony was off to a slow start to his sophomore season before his injury, putting up a slash line of .229/.354/.321 with just one home run through 30 games.

He burst onto the scene during his rookie year, batting .292 with 18 doubles through 71 games in 2025, prompting the Red Sox to sign him to an eight-year, $130 million contract midway through his impressive campaign.

Arizona Diamondbacks Gameday Thread, #56: 5/29 @ Mariners

A tourist observes used chewing gum decorating Post Alley brick walls in downtown Seattle on June 24, 2025. (Photo by Pablo PORCIUNCULA / AFP) (Photo by PABLO PORCIUNCULA/AFP via Getty Images) | AFP via Getty Images

Today’s Lineups

DIAMONDBACKSMARINERS
Ketel Marte – 2BJ.P. Crawford – SS
Corbin Carroll – RFJulio Rodriguez – CF
Geraldo Perdomo – SSJosh Naylor – 1B
Gabriel Moreno – CRandy Arozarena – LF
Adrian Del Castillo – DHLuke Raley – RF
Ryan Waldschmidt – CFCole Young – 2B
Ildemaro Vargas – 1BDominic Canzone – DH
Jose Fernandez – 3BJhonny Pereda – C
Tommy Troy – LFColt Emerson – 3B
Zac Gallen – RHPGeorge Kirby – RHP

I hope we all enjoyed our two-week vacation, enjoying the lightest of thrills resulting from the D-backs going 11-2 against the Rockies and Giants. Things will likely be a bit tougher now, facing the division leading Mariners, who just came off a three-game sweep of the [THIS SPACE FOR RENT] Athletics. However, I’d be more impressed if the Mariners weren’t still actually below .500, despite being on top of the AL West. It is arguably the most competitive division in the game so far, with just 2.5 games covering the top four. The NL Central is the only other division where you need less than double digits for that, and even they are still at a five-game spread.

The D-backs come in, having used only eighteen pitchers to this point. No team in the majors has needed fewer arms. The rotation has been particularly stable, with just the late arrival of Merrill Kelly disrupting things, bumping Brandon Pfaadt to the bullpen. The Cleveland Guardians are the only more stable team than Arizona, having used the same five guys since Opening Day. At the other end, the Astros are already up to thirteen different starting pitchers. Out of the bullpen, the Diamondbacks have been very stable too: thirteen relievers used is just one man above the MLB low to date, in San Diego and St. Louis.

A good series here could see the D-backs’ ERA for the year drop below four – it’s currently at 4.02. Been a while: to find the last time Arizona had a sub-four ERA through 55 games, you need to got back to 2018, when it was 3.40 to this point in the season. We’d used twenty pitchers, and only one – Kris Medlen, in a single appearance – had an ERA of five or worse. Patrick Corbin anchored the rotation in the way E-Rod is doing this year, having made twelve starts with a sub-three ERA. Out of the bullpen, T.J. McFarland, Yoshihisa Hirano, Brad Boxberger and Andrew Chafin, had thrown 19-35.1 innings, all with sub-two ERAs. Those were the days…

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Mariners Game #58 Preview and Discussion: SEA vs ARI, 5/28

SEATTLE, WASHINGTON - MAY 29: Ketel Marte #4 of the Arizona Diamondbacks throws the ball before the game against the Seattle Mariners at T-Mobile Park on May 29, 2026 in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Jack Compton/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Mariners are in first place.

Dan Wilson said the team today is a bit “lighter in the step” following their sweep in Sacramento over the midweek slate. The team is now in first place (even if they’re still a game below .500) and looking to build some positive momentum against the Diamondbacks this weekend. The Diamondbacks enter with a strong 31-24 record. For more on them, Jake Mailhot has you covered. Justin Hollander provided some injury updates before the game. Brendan Donovan is running in zero-G, and Cal Raleigh is taking some swings. There’s no timeline for a return for either. Kate Preusser has further details.

Lineups

Game Information

First Pitch: 7:10 p.m. PDT (because * fireworks *)

TV:Mariners.TV

Radio: 710 AM Seattle Sports

Lefty-heavy Yankees eagerly await Giancarlo Stanton to bring lineup balance

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Yankees Giancarlo Stanton in the dugout during the fifth inning against the Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium, Wednesday, May 20, 2026, in Bronx, NY. , Image 2 shows New York Yankees designated hitter Giancarlo Stanton (27) hits a double during the third inning

WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. — By the time he landed on the injured list last month, Giancarlo Stanton was not exactly lighting the world on fire.

In 24 games, the veteran DH had three home runs, a 102 OPS+ (100 being average) and 14 RBIs.

But the Yankees have sorely missed him beyond his production. His absence has been noticeable, with their left-handed heavy lineup losing an important righty bat in the middle of it, giving opponents a slightly easier task in how they attack the Yankees.

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“That’s huge,” manager Aaron Boone said before the Yankees opened a series against the vagabond Athletics on Friday at Sutter Health Park. “And that’s more on the nights where we’re facing a righty, where I got six or seven lefties in there. Having him in that middle, his presence is massive. Hopefully not too much longer. Obviously we want him back in there. But his presence is real.”

Stanton was finally cleared to start an outdoor running progression this week after yet another MRI exam showed enough improvement in his right calf for him to advance to the next step of his rehab.

The 36-year-old has been hitting all along, which should help expedite his return, but he will still have to check off more boxes, all the way up through running the bases, before he is able to return.

If the past is any indication, Stanton may not end up needing to go out on a rehab assignment because he is not playing the field, so taking live batting practice — which Boone indicated he might be able to do at some point next week — and at-bats off the Trajekt pitching machine may be enough.

Yankees Giancarlo Stanton in the dugout during the fifth inning against the Toronto Blue Jays at Yankee Stadium, Wednesday, May 20, 2026, in Bronx, NY. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Still, it figures to be another week or two, at least, before Stanton is ready to be activated.

In the time between Stanton’s injury and both Anthony Volpe and José Caballero being on the active roster together, the Yankees only had two right-handed bats guaranteed to be in the lineup when they were facing a right-handed starter — Aaron Judge and Caballero or Volpe.



That was not a problem when facing the starter, but once that pitcher was out of the game, teams with multiple lefties in their bullpens could better line up for tough matchups for the Yankees.

In general, when he has three right-handed hitters in his lineup, Boone likes to slot them batting second, fifth and eighth, or third, sixth and ninth — guaranteeing that if a lefty comes in, he has to face at least one of those right-handed bats.

But without Stanton, if the Yankees only had two righty bats in the lineup — say, Judge batting third and Caballero batting seventh — the lanes were easier for teams to match up well with left-on-left at-bats, even with the right-handed hitting Paul Goldschmidt and Amed Rosario looming on the Yankees bench.

New York Yankees designated hitter Giancarlo Stanton (27) hits a double during the third inning. Jason Szenes for the New York Post

That was mitigated some by the switch-hitting Jasson Domínguez being called up in Stanton’s absence, with the ability to flip around (especially as he was starting to hit lefties better), but that only lasted until Domínguez sprained the AC joint in his left shoulder May 7. He, like Stanton, could also begin facing live pitching next week as he has started to ramp up his baseball activities.

In the five games after the Yankees optioned the lefty-hitting Spencer Jones to Triple-A to make room for Caballero to come off the injured list, Goldschmidt had started all of them at first base, with Ben Rice moving to DH. Only two of those games came with a lefty on the mound, but the presence of Goldschmidt’s right-handed bat in the middle of the lineup has somewhat mimicked Stanton.

“Huge,” Boone said. “Just giving us that little bit of balance in the order, and obviously what he does with lefties, usually when I lead him off, he’s been so good in that role and in that spot. He’s playing really well and we need it right now.”

Dodgers on Deck: Saturday, May 30 vs. Phillies

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MAY 26: Roki Sasaki #11 of the Los Angeles Dodgers is seen during the game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Colorado Rockies at Dodger Stadium on May 26, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Yuichi Masuda/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dodgers and Phillies are back at it on Saturday, with Roki Sasaki on the mound for the home team, for his final start of May. In his first four start of the month, the right-hander has a 3.52 ERA and 3.94 xERA with 21 strikeouts against five walks in 23 innings.

Left-hander Jesús Luzardo starts for the Phillies, so expect to see starts for Santiago Espinal — now back — at third base and Miguel Rojas at second base in the middle game of the series.

Saturday game info
  • Teams: Dodgers vs. Phillies
  • Ballpark: Dodger Stadium
  • Time: 7:10 p.m.
  • TV: SportsNet LA, MLB Network (out of market)
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

NBA approves sweeping lottery reform intended to curb tanking

Feb 14, 2026; Los Angeles, CA, USA; NBA commissioner Adam Silver speaks to the media during a press conference before 2026 NBA All Star Saturday Night at Intuit Dome. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images | Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

The NBA Board of Governors met on May 28 and passed a comprehensive lottery reform intended to stop tanking that will take effect starting with the 2027 draft, the league announced. Only the Memphis Grizzlies voted against the proposal, commonly referred to as the “3-2-1” model, which significantly alters how the lottery will work going forward and has some retroactive effects.

It’s not a surprise the proposal passed, as there have been rumors outlining the model and suggesting it had broad approval. Here’s all you need to know.

How the new lottery works

  • The lottery will be expanded to include 16 teams.
  • One of the reform’s main goals is to dissuade teams from bottoming out. To do so, the league will punish the teams with the three worst records by awarding them only two lottery balls each, out of a total of 37. Teams from fourth to 10th will receive three balls each. The ninth and 10th seeds will receive two balls, just like the bottom three. The losers of the seventh vs. eighth play-in will receive one each.
  • Previously, only the top four picks would be decided by the lottery. Now, the order of all 16 picks will be decided by the lottery, but the bottom three teams can’t pick lower than 12th. Picks from 12th to 15th can’t be protected in trades.
  • In hopes of deterring long rebuilding processes and preventing anyone from getting too lucky, teams won’t be able to get the top pick in consecutive drafts or to pick in the top five three times in five years. The rule starts counting from the 2025 draft and includes traded picks.
  • The commissioner will have more power when it comes to curbing tanking, up to changing lottery odds or where teams pick.
  • The reform includes a sunset provision, which means the changes will be in place until the 2028/29 season. After that, the league will decide whether to stick to it or make other tweaks.

Why the reform could be good

Tanking has always been a controversial topic in the NBA, where a single player can change the fate of a franchise, and the draft is the best way to secure elite talent at a cheap price and have control over it for years. The league has seen extreme versions of it before, but it was getting worse lately.

Not only were there teams that built their roster with as little proven talent as possible, but also some that had talent but were either holding healthy players out from games or sitting them in second halves to secure losses, which was even worse for optics. Something had to be done to prevent the regular season from being completely meaningless and from having games that became farces. Change was needed, and decentivizing teams from being the worst in the league should at least help avoid the most embarrassing tank jobs.

The worst teams still have a chance of getting the top pick, so anyone who tries to win but simply can’t is not automatically doomed, and the teams that were previously stuck in mediocrity because they were too good to get the best odds but not good enough to make the playoffs have a path to finding a centerpiece without having to bottom out. The draft should still provide fan bases hope, but now full teardowns won’t be as enticing, which could help with parity.

The changes are drastic, but the sunset provision shows that the league is not committed to them. If they don’t work, they can reverse them or find another solution.

Why the reform could be bad

The plan might have been discussed for years, but there wasn’t a lot of time between the news coming out that change was likely and this sweeping reform. Teams made moves thinking something similar to the now old lottery system would remain in place. The best example is the Grizzlies, which traded Jaren Jackson Jr. to the Jazz for a pick that now has zero chance of landing in the top five, because Utah has picked there twice already in the past two drafts.

As for the future, even if some of the changes might deter tanking at the lowest spots, it might incentivize it near the play-in range, as it might be better for teams to finish just below the 10th seed and get an extra lottery ball. That’s just one of many potential unintended consequences of a plan that might implement some good changes, but it is so comprehensive that it could alter how the league works in unpredictable ways, at least for the next few years. A more gradual approach might have been better.

Ultimately, even if someone agrees with all the changes in a vacuum, there should have been reforms to free agency and trading to go with them. The reason franchises in small or non-glamorous markets were more likely to tank is that it was the best and arguably the only way they could land foundational stars. Restricted free agency keeps young players with the team that drafted them, and established superstars normally dictate where they land. Tanking isn’t a good thing, and it provided no guarantees, but it at least gave franchises that can’t normally attract top-tier talent a plan on how to get it.

The changes don’t really matter for the Spurs

The Spurs already had their top three picks in five years and have a core in place that should keep them in contention for a while. The Hawks’ pick they own in 2027 seemed unlikely to land in the lottery now that Atlanta has reshaped its roster. The swap right to the Celtics’ pick in 2028 is the only one that falls into the window where the changes are guaranteed to be in place, but Boston was never expected to be a bottom-three team, and that hasn’t changed.

If anything, the reform helps the Spurs. No one will be able to land near the top of the draft consistently in the next few years and build a core that could rival San Antonio’s. The Silver and Black will be fine with these changes. Whether they are good for the rest of the league remains to be seen.

New York Yankees @ The Athletics: Carlos Rodón vs. Luis Severino

KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - MAY 26: Trent Grisham #12 of the New York Yankees celebrates his home run with Aaron Judge #99 of the New York Yankees in the seventh inning against the Kansas City Royals at Kauffman Stadium on May 26, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Ed Zurga/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After an up-and-down homestand, the Yankees opened this week with a quite successful series in Kansas City against the Royals. Now, it’s time for them to go even further west as they take on the Athletics in West Sacramento.

The A’s come into this series just half a game back in the AL West standings, although with a 27-29 record, that says more about the division than anything. Even so, they did take two of three over the Yankees back in the Bronx in April. They have an interesting offense, as while they’re about league-average, they do have the third-most hits in the Junior Circuit. Shea Langeliers, Nick Kurtz, and the surprising Carlos Cortes are their best hitters thus far, all with an OPS+ over 145. Brent Rooker has disappointed so far, but he can’t be overlooked thanks to his 106 homers and two All-Star appearances since the start of 2023.

As the Yankees look to get the weekend off to a good start, Carlos Rodón will take the mound. While his time since coming back from the injured list has been iffy, Rodón is coming off his best appearance so far. The lefty went five innings with three hits, three walks, and one run allowed, striking out a third of the batters he faced (seven in total). His main issue has been walks; if he can get that under control he’d be set. Elsewhere in the lineup, there are no major surprises.

On the mound for the A’s will be our old friend Luis Severino. Sevy’s numbers on the whole this year are a bit above average, but it should be noted that his splits in road games are much better than at home, where he sports a 5.55 ERA. The man has made his distaste for this facility well-known.

Here’s everything you need to know to catch the action, and we hope you’ll come join us in the game thread!

How to watch:

Location: Sutter Health Park — West Sacramento, CA

First pitch: 9:40 pm EDT

TV Broadcast: YES Network (NYY) | NBCSCA (ATH)

Radio Broadcast: WFAN 660/101.9 FM, WADO 1280 (NYY) | Talk 650 KSTE, KVMX 92.1/105.5, A’s Cast (ATH)

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Mets' Jorge Polanco smashes home run in second rehab game with Double-A Binghamton

Playing in just his second rehab game with Double-A Binghamton, Jorge Polanco made his presence felt on Friday night.

The Mets veteran was in as the DH and had walked in his first two at-bats before coming up with in the fifth inning with runners on first and second base. 

Polanco made the most of the scoring opportunity, blasting a three-run home run over the right field wall against Portland Sea Dogs RHP Cade Feeney, giving the Rumble Ponies a 3-0 lead.

It's Polanco's first HR and second hit during his rehab assignment, having gone 1-for-2 with a single on Wednesday. He was pinch-hit for in the bottom of the seventh inning by TT Bowens, finishing the day 1-for-1 with three RBI and two walks.

The DH/1B will play again with Binghamton on Saturday and then get an off day on Sunday as nears a return to the majors, Mets president of baseball operations David Stearns said earlier Friday. The team will then take it day-by-day and he could be back for the next road trip, mostly playing DH.

Polanco has been out with Achilles bursitis and a wrist issue since April 14 and is hitting just .179 with one home run and two RBI through 14 games.

Dodgers call up Ryan Ward, re-sign Santiago Espinal with Teoscar Hernández on injured list

LOS ANGELES, CA - MAY 13: Santiago Espinal #21 of the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrates after hitting a home run during the game between the San Francisco Giants and the Los Angeles Dodgers at UNIQLO Field at Dodger Stadium on Wednesday, May 13, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Nicole Vasquez/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

LOS ANGELES — Dodgers outfielder Teoscar Hernández was placed on the 10-day injured list on Friday with a left hamstring strain, which he suffered during Wednesday night’s win over the Colorado Rockies. Ryan Ward got called up from Triple-A Oklahoma City to help fill in in left field with Hernández out. That was the expected move, but it wasn’t all.

Santiago Espinal also re-signed with the Dodgers, after getting designated for assignment on Monday and cleared waivers on Wednesday. Hyeseong Kim was optioned to Triple-A Oklahoma City, giving Alex Freeland more of a runway at second base, especially against right-handed pitchers.

Hernández suffered the injury in the third inning on Wednesday running out a groundout, and expressed frustration in the dugout before finally retreating to the clubhouse. There’s never a good time for an injury, but the timing was especially rough for Hernández, who found his hitting stroke of late after a three-week stretch with no extra-base hits. Hernández in his last 16 games hit .364/.419/.600, with three home runs, four doubles, and a 186 wRC+.

It’s a Grade 1 hamstring injury for Hernández, manager Dave Roberts said, the mildest severity, though there is not yet a timetable for his return.

With Hernández out, left field will likely be split between Alex Call, a right-handed hitter, and the lefty-batting Ward. After playing two games for the Dodgers in April while Freddie Freeman was on paternity leave, Ward in Triple-A struggled, hitting .211/.346/.312 with an 80 wRC+ and only six extra-base hits in his last 29 games. While Ward has played more first base this season in Oklahoma City — 27 starts, compared to nine in left field — he’s played plenty of corner outfield in Triple-A with 122 starts in left field and 92 starts in right field since the start of 2023.

Call this season has started 11 games in a fill-in capacity all over the outfield — six starts in left, four in right, and once in center field — hitting .294/.413/.373 with four doubles and a 132 wRC+ in 63 plate appearances.

“It’s not a complete platoon,” Roberts said. “I see Ryan Ward taking some at-bats versus right, I see Alex Call taking some at-bats versus left. But today, where Wheeler is just a really good pitcher, I want Alex to be in there, and feel that Alex can manage him and take some good at-bats.”

Ward will likely start on Sunday against right-hander Andrew Painter, Roberts said.

When Espinal was jettisoned on Monday, he left a Dodgers roster that had both Kiké Hernández and Teoscar Hernández. But within three days they lost both players, depleting the right-handed depth. The other right-handed option already on the 40-man roster is Tyler Fitzgerald, who has played third base, shortstop, second base, left field, and right field in Triple-A Oklahoma City. The Dodgers opted instead for the familiarity of Espinal, who played sparingly in his previous stint on the roster, with only 44 plate appearances in his 53 games active, and had just four hits in 26 at-bats against left-handed pitchers, against whom he has a career 104 wRC+.

“With a star-studded team, you also have to have guys that know their roles. Espy is a guy that is good on the team, understands his value, is ready when called upon, and I trust him defensively,” Roberts said. “I like him versus left-handed pitching. I think having him back is pretty seamless too, because we only lost him for a few days.”

Look for Espinal to start on Saturday against left-hander Jesús Luzardo, likely at third base as the Dodgers ease Max Muncy back in after getting hit by a pitch on his wrist.

Kim was the odd man out, after just eight hits in 46 at-bats (.174/.250/.174) with 17 strikeouts over the last three weeks.

“I think his swing has changed, I think he’s losing his legs a little bit, and he’s coming around the ball a little. There’s a lot more swing and miss than there was early. I think he is just playing a little bit more tentative, to my eyes, and not as free and easy as he was in some parts of last year and early on,” Roberts said. “Getting him back to playing everyday [in Triple-A] in a little bit less of a hotbox, he’ll perform back to where he can and will. That’s kind of what we were hoping for.”

To make room on the 40-man roster for Espinal, Blake Snell was transferred to the 60-day injured list. Snell, who had arthroscopic surgery to remove loose bodies in his left elbow on May 19, isn’t eligible to return until July 11 — just two days before the All-Star break — at the earliest.

Nebraska Kicks Off Regional with 4-1 Over Jackrabbits

Jett Buck does it in the field and at the plate today | Nebraska Athletics

They showed up!  Nebraska fans turned out in mass to cheer on their Cornhusker baseball team on a day that flipped back and forth from light rain to beautiful sunshine.  Hosting a regional for the first time in 18 years, the seats were full in the stadium with an announced sell out and the berms were full.  Along the rails around the field people were standing three-deep trying to get a glimpse of the action on the field.  

Nebraska’s top starter Carson Jasa took the mound for Nebraska against the familiar opponent from north of the border.  Jasa brought a 9-2 record to his matchup against SDSU starter Sam Schlecht (4-4).  Both of them are tall right handers, but their collection of pitches could not be any different with Jasa the flamethrower and Schlecht being the master of the change up and off-speed stuff.

Nebraska threatened early but could not muster a run, leaving two runners on base in each of the first two innings, and another one in the third.  They struggled with Schlecht’s change-up and were not able to put the barrel of the bat on the ball.

The Jacks put runners on the corners in the top of the third thanks to a walk and a hit, but a very slick double-play turned by Dylan Carey and Rhett Stokes bailed Jasa out of the inning with no damage done.

Jett Buck led off the bottom of the fourth ripping a liner off the glove of third baseman Nolan Grawe and ended up on second base as well as sparking the Cornhusker crowd.  Joshua Overbeek followed with a single to left, putting runners on the corners.  Up came Trey Fikes who hit a line-drive that tipped off the glove of a leaping second baseman Matthew Werk.  Buck scored for the first run of the game.

The Big Red added one more off reliever Ty Madison as Stokes bunted the baserunners up 90-feet bringing up the top of the order.  Mac Moyer put the ball in play on the right side allowing Overbeek to come home with the Cornhusker’s second run.  After four innings, Nebraska was up 2-0.

In the top of the sixth inning, Jasa plunked lead-off man Carter Taylor in the ribs and Dayton Franke followed with a single down the rightfield line to move him to third.  Wanting to take advantage of some momentum, the Jacks called on Keagan Jirschele to lay down a bunt to squeeze home a run.  Maybe a good idea, but poor execution as he sent the ball right back to Jasa, who flipped it to Worthley for the easy tag at the plate.  Run averted.

The Jackrabbits weren’t done trying to get that first run on the board.  Werk laced a single to leftfield with runners on first and second.  Franke was sent home and Jett Buck came up throwing.  He threw a laser home to Fikes, who did a brilliant job grabbing the ball and putting the tag on the runner before he reached the plate.  Second run averted.

SDSU would finally get a run in the inning when reliever J’Shawn Unger gave up his second single of the inning to Owen Siegert, who drove in Jirschele to make it 2-1 Nebraska.  Unger walked the next batter to load the bases, raising the tension in the ballpark, but then gave the red-clad masses a chance to release it as he struck out Nate Wachter swinging.  

Dylan Carey gave the crowd what they were waiting for in the bottom of the eighth.  He blasted a towering home run on a 2-2 pitch from Madison that brought the crowd to their feet once again.  It looked like Nebraska may be able to blow this one open as Madison walked Sanderson and Drew Grego came to the plate.  However, Grego’s bunt attempt flew into the glove of Grawe at third, who then fired across the diamond to double-off Sanderson.

All was not lost on the inning though as Jett Buck showed that opposite field power we saw earlier in the season as he homered to the party porch in right-centerfield.  Going to the ninth, Nebraska extended their lead to 4-2.

With Ty Horn tossing lightly in the bullpen, Unger came back out for his third inning of work and faced the bottom of the Jackrabbit order. Franke grounded out to Overbeek and then Unger stepped up to win it in style by striking Jirschele and Werk.  Ball game!  Nebraska 4, South Dakota State 1.

Carson Jasa sat down at least three of his strikeouts looking at a sneaky off-speed pitch on the inside black.  Of his eight strikeouts, six were called third strikes.  He went 6.1 innings, giving up five hits, walking two and hitting one with 92 pitches for the win.  J’Shawn Unger got his 13th save recording four strikeouts in 2.2 innings.

The ballpark was full so it is a little surprise that official attendance was 7828.  It appeared there would be more than that.

With rain in the forecast most of the day Saturday, it could be a mystery what time Nebraska will play.  They are scheduled for a 7:06 first pitch.


Notes:

  • Jett Buck’s throw-out at the plate brought the loudest roar in the stadium for quite some time.  Plus, you rarely get to see that play in a game.  
  • As always, there are a few upsets in the first round of the regional tournament.  One that matters to Nebraska is Milwaukee’s 13-7 win over 4th seeded Auburn.  This took place in the regional that Nebraska’s is paired with.  Yes, there is a lot of baseball to play!  We can’t ignore St. Mary’s 3-2 win over top-seeded UCLA.  That one has stolen the headlines.
  • While the Nebraska – South Dakota State matchup was not a really attractive one, it is interesting that it was relegated to streaming rather than carried on one of the many ESPN networks when they assigned their top college baseball broadcast team to the regional.  Karl Ravitch and Kyle Peterson are in the house for the weekend.  The Mothership apparently wanted to save some travel expenses as Peterson could just drive down from Elkhorn. 

What about Wagler … Lopez, Flemings, Mara, Ament?

CHICAGO, IL - MAY 12: Keaton Wagler participates in the pro lane drill during the 2026 NBA Draft Combine on May 12, 2026 at Wintrust Arena in Chicago, Illinois. 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 Jeff Haynes/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Nets, it would seem, are more than like to take one of two lead guards on the night of June 23 at Barclays Center, either Mikel Brown Jr. or Darius Acuff. The are the most mentioned candidates for the No. 6 pick by draftniks and assorted pundits. And indeed, both are worthy of such consideration.

But, no one is claiming to know Sean Marks & co. thinking as we sit down a little more than three weeks away from the NBA’s big event. No one seemingly has the goods on who the Nets have had in HSS Training Center nor when they might work out and sit from interviews. There’s been no leaks from the annual May meeting of scouts that was featured in last year’s SCOUT docu-series.

So it shouldn’t come as much of a surprise that speculation about the Nets’ likes and dislikes is rising along with fan interest. On Friday, Brian Lewis profiled Keaton Wagler who most have penciled in at No. 5 to the Clippers, while ESPN’s Jeremy Woo added some intelligence on the full-range of prospective picks between Nos. 5 and 10, suggesting the Nets may have interest in Brown, Acuff and Wagler as well as the 6’9” Karim Lopez of the New Zealand Breakers, 6’4” Houston point guard, Adary May, the 7’3” center and anchor of Michigan’s NCAA champs and Nate Ament, the 6’10” wing whose draft stock has been up and down and now up again all year long.

Lewis highlights both Wagler’s positives — his height and wingspan plus his winning ways — as well as negatives — his lack of athleticism and whether he fits with Egor Demin.

There’s a very real possibility Wagler could be available for the Nets when they’re on the clock at Barclays Center. And as many non-Peterson guards as there are in this class, Wagler is confident he’s the best of the lot.

“I think I’m just super-versatile, being able to play multiple positions, not just a point guard or just shooting guard, but being able to play on or off the ball,” Wagler said. “And then also being able to play with other really good players is a skill that I think I have, knowing when it’s my time or when it’s someone else’s time.”

Despite middling athleticism and explosion, that versatility would be useful for the Nets.

Wagler met with the Nets at the NBA Combine and they’re expected to have him in, but there are issues, chief among them his athleticism. As our Collin Helwig reported after the Draft Lottery measurements were released, he not only finished fourth among the quarter in 3/4- court sprint but placed 50th among the 70 participants. He doesn’t worry about that hurting him. The rest of the game compensates, he says.

“I mean, I’ve heard it my whole life, that I’m not the most athletic, not the fastest,” Wagler told Lewis. “I think all last year I showed that you don’t have to be the most athletic to score the ball or be a really good player. And that’s kind of what I did. I just find different ways to use my body, even though I’m not the strongest, but being the aggressor, using my pace [of play] and then getting into the lane.

“I’m definitely super-versatile, can play multiple positions — the 1, 2 right now — and I continue to put on weight and get stronger, even the 3,” Wagler told Lewis. “So, my ability would also be my playmaking ability to be able to pass the ball, make the right play, take care of the ball.

“I definitely say my vision, going along with my height, being a tall guard, is something really good to be able to come off ball-screens and read defenders, see over defenses, and … make the right play.”

And he said all the right things about playing in the Big Apple.

Woo wrote about the Nets possible interest in Wagler as part of his top 100 rankings out Friday.

Wagler’s positional size, versatility and unique trajectory have continued to set him apart as a prospect worth investing in, with teams including the LA Clippers and Brooklyn Nets closely studying his case at No. 5 and No. 6 and his draft range unlikely to stretch far beyond those teams.

Wagler wasn’t the only prospect Woo linked to the Nets eith. Of Acuff, he wrote you have to consider the Nets as possibility as well.

Acuff’s range as relatively narrow, with his best-available case beginning with the Clippers at No. 5 and Nets at No. 6, and the Sacramento Kings at No. 7 considered by many to be his floor.

His ability to score at all three levels and increased willingness to involve teammates have greatly boosted his profile as a player potentially worthy of shouldering heavy responsibility and driving good offense.

And Flemings:

Although his mechanics aren’t textbook, he has continued to flash enough shooting growth to excite teams long term, drawing consideration from teams inside the top 10 after a breakout freshman season, with his range starting at No. 5 with the Clippers

And Ament:

He continues to draw looks throughout the lottery, with the Nets and Milwaukee Bucks viewed as possible destinations — two teams that could afford him time and minutes to develop immediately. Finding the right fit will be imperative for his long-term growth.

And Mara:

Rival teams consider him to be in play as high as No. 6 for Brooklyn, with the Hawks, Warriors and Thunder also viewed as potential landing spots in the lottery. Landing with a team that wants to lean into his playmaking skills will give him the best chance to maximize his impact.

And Lopez, assuming the Nets wind up with a pick lower than No. 6:

Lopez is drawing interest from a number of teams in the lottery, including the Clippers, Nets, Bucks and Warriors, with rival teams viewing him as more of a trade-back candidate later on in the case of the Clippers and Nets.

He was helped by his combine measurements, affirming his size to play both forward positions capably and massive hands. He continues to improve and has positioned himself as an intriguing development bet coming off a strong second season in the NBL.

That covers, it would seem, the range of Nets possibilities, but as a close reading of Wo0’s reporting shows, he’s not quoting anyone inside the Nets organization. The most common sourcing is “rival teams.”

Woo hints at the possibility of a Nets move out of No. 6 or finding a way to add another pick — OKC’s two picks at Nos. 12 and 17 have often been mentioned and certainly, the Nets have the assets to make a move with 32 picks, including nine tradeable first rounders. Moreover, the Thunder have some interesting decisions to make with the payroll and rotation. Remember, they’ll be adding two former first round picks next season who have been laid low by illness — point guard Nikola Topic — and injury — big man Thomas Sorber. Both are 20. So adding two more rookies might not be the most efficient development planning. They might want to move those picks back a year or more and the Nets have the bulk of their firsts starting in 2028.

It will take a while for things to work out or even come out. It’s a rare thing for the Nets to telegraph who they like, the two exceptions being Dzanan Musa in 2018 and Day’Ron Sharpe in 2021. So as we keep saying, stay tuned and be patient.