James shines for Lakers while Wembanyama concussed

LeBron James reaching for the ball while playing for the Los Angeles Lakers against the Houston Rockets in game two of their 2026 NBA play-off series
LeBron James is a four-time NBA champion and has been the league's Most Valuable Player four times [Getty Images]

LeBron James shone as the Los Angeles Lakers took charge of their NBA play-off series while Victor Wembanyama was concussed during a San Antonio defeat.

The Lakers were without leading scorers Luka Doncic (hamstring) and Austin Reaves (oblique), but 41-year-old James continued to show his class.

The 22-time All Star claimed 28 points, eight rebounds and seven assists to lead the Lakers to a 101-94 win over the Houston Rockets on Tuesday.

Fellow veteran Kevin Durant returned for Houston after missing the opening game of the series and scored a team-high 23 points but turned the ball over nine times and claimed just three points after half-time.

The Lakers now lead 2-0 in the first round of the post-season, with the Rockets hosting the next two games in the best-of-seven series.

Wembanyama had scored five points for the San Antonio Spurs when he was injured midway through the second quarter against the Portland Trail Blazers.

The 7ft 4in France international, who has been named this season's defensive player of the year, hit his face on the floor after being knocked off his feet during a drive to the basket.

The Spurs said he had entered the concussion protocol and would not return to the game. They confirmed after Portland's 106-103 win that he had sustained a concussion.

Scoot Henderson scored a game-high 31 points for the Trail Blazers, who levelled the series at 1-1 and are at home on Friday and Sunday.

NBA guidelines state that Wembanyama must remain inactive for at least 24 hours and cannot resume full participation for 48 hours.

San Antonio - the Western Conference's second seed - won 12 of the 18 games the 22-year-old missed during the regular season.

VJ Edgecombe and Tyrese Maxey combined for 59 points as the Philadelphia 76ers bounced back from a dismal game one to level their series with the Boston Celtics.

Edgecombe claimed 30 points in a 111-97 win at the Eastern Conference's second seed Boston and the 76ers host the next two.

Jaylen Brown scored a game-high 36 points for the Celtics, with Jayson Tatum (19) the only other Boston player to reach double figures.

Giants introduce Yoshinobu Yamamoto to Cainings

Ryan Walker being interviewed while splashed with yellow and purple Powerade.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 21: Ryan Walker #74 of the San Francisco Giants celebrates a win against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Oracle Park on April 21, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Suzanna Mitchell/San Francisco Giants/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The San Francisco Giants have not developed a reputation for intelligence early this season, but on Tuesday they did something very, very smart. They jumped on Yoshinobu Yamamoto early.

You’re familiar with Yamamoto. You hoped he was as good as everyone said he was when the Giants appeared determined to not be outbid for his services two years ago. You feared that he was as good as everyone said he was when he instead signed with the Los Angeles Dodgers. You confirmed that he was as good as everyone said he was when did his best Madison Bumgarner impression last fall while leading the Dodgers to a second consecutive championship, collecting a World Series MVP award and a top-three Cy Young finish along the way.

So the Giants did the sensible thing. They pounced before Yamamoto had time to realize where he was.

Willy Adames led off the bottom of the first inning with an infield single, and took second on an error by shortstop Hyeseong Kim. Luis Arráez followed by doing the one thing he does better than anyone on the planet: hitting a single.

Yamamoto was just seven pitches in, and found himself both in trouble and unsure what had happened. Lost in a haze of confusion and crisp Bay Area fog, he proceeded to walk Matt Chapman, loading the bases with no outs.

The Giants are not always prepared to capitalize on these situations. You might go so far as to say that they’re rarely prepared to capitalize on these situations.

But they capitalized on this situation.

On the very next pitch, Rafael Devers looked nothing like his old self, as he barely made contact on a get-it-in fastball, ever so lightly dusting a foul tip into Dalton Rushing’s glove.

But on the pitch after that, Devers looked very much like his old self, dipping below the zone to grab a sinker and still smacking it loudly into the outfield, scoring a run.

The Giants had achieved the rare act of capitalizing, and had a rarer act left in their back pocket: adding on.

Casey Schmitt hit next and flew a ball into left field, scoring a run on a sacrifice fly which, it turns out, was the absolute best-case scenario for the Dodgers. Despite it being a fairly routine fly ball for Teoscar Hernández, center fielder Alex Call flew full speed after it, robbing his teammate of catch and instead gifting him a head-on collision. Miraculously, Call hung onto the ball. Even more miraculously, neither player was injured on the type of play that catches an entire stadium’s collective breath.

After the dust from that had settled, Jung Hoo Lee wisely seemed to predict that Yamamoto would be a little out of sorts, and so he jumped on a first pitch curveball that hung up in the zone, and toasted it into right field, scoring a third run.

Just like that, the Giants had put a three-spot on Yamamoto and forced 26 pitches out of him. The ref was counting to 10, and the star pitcher was wobbling his way back to his feet and falling against the ropes.

And then Yamamoto retired the next 10 batters he faced, quickly and with almost dismissive ease, and went around the lineup two full times before giving up another hit.

Things got entertaining when he did finally give up another hit, though. In the sixth inning, the Northern California rain started to come down in droves. But being the grandson of one adverse weather condition apparently gets you in with all adverse weather conditions, as Lee was utterly unbothered by the large amounts of water falling on his face, and again hit a single to right field, this time with two outs and nobody on, giving him his sixth multi-hit game in the last 10 contests.

Heliot Ramos followed and, I’m pleased to report, the swing that he found in Washington D.C. appears to have made the trip back to the West Coast, as he worked the count full before blasting a 108.5-mph single right back up the middle.

Which is where the fun — and pain — began.

Lee, who had a two-out jump, who knew that the wet baseball would be hard to throw, and who had watched for innings on end as none of his teammates could get a hit off of Yamamoto, decided to try to score.

From first.

On a single.

A hard-hit single that was directly to the center fielder.

More accurately, Héctor Borg took all of that into consideration, saw the speed at which Lee was flying at, and watched Call lazily get the ball back in, and decided what the hell, let’s get funky.

Funky indeed.

It didn’t work, but it was fun. And in Borg’s defense, it took a wonderfully-thrown relay by Alex Freeland and a perfect tag by Rushing to retire Lee, and I’d put the odds of that not happening as higher than the odds of Drew Gilbert getting a rain-soaked hit off of the second-best pitcher in the National League when they’re in a flow state that we sports mortals simply cannot relate to.

But Lee was out indeed, and in more than one sense of the word. He walked off the field gingerly, and was replaced two innings later by Jerar Encarnación. Thankfully, the Giants did not sound concerned about the injury, which Tony Vitello described as a banged-up right quad. Unfortunately, the Giants do not have a great track record with expressing a lack of concern in an injury. But that’s an issue for another day.

Yamamoto returned for the seventh inning and struck out Gilbert, Patrick Bailey, and Adames, in order, all looking, capping an exceptional night that had felt impossible just six innings earlier: seven frames, six hits, no extra-base hits, two walks, and seven strikeouts.

But the Giants had not only jumped on him early, but stacked more than half of their baserunners in one inning, using sequencing to get a few runs on the board. And now all that was left was to rely on the pitchers, and hope that they could teach Yamamoto about the glorious and dreadful (but today just glorious) art of The Caining.

It’s funny. When you watch sports with a rooting interest, you inherently see everything through the lens of your team. The old adage that hitters don’t hit home runs, but rather that pitchers throw them, is emphatically true when your team is pitching. And it’s a crock of manure when your team is at bat.

Such it is that when we think of a Caining — or a Webbing, to use the parlance of the youths — we associate it with the Giants hitters being feckless numbskulls incapable of the teensiest shred of offensive life. We never really frame it as a great pitcher showing off their talents at the Giants’ expense. But really, it’s both.

Enter Landen Roupp.

Roupp’s season has been a revelation, and with every start he inches a little further away from “encouraging start to the season” and a little closer to “wait a dang minute, this guy might be really, really good.” But he hadn’t faced a team like the Dodgers this year, and this felt like the test. And it felt like he knew it was a test, and was screaming the answer when he opened the game by striking out Shohei Ohtani, something he would do twice on the day.

It also felt like Roupp was yelling his answer when, after ceding a two-out first-inning walk to Freddie Freeman when Bailey chose not to challenge a pitch that probably was strike three, Roupp calmly took his spot on the mound, glared at the opposing hitter, and needed just two more pitches to end the inning.

But it was the third inning where Roupp really stated his top-of-the-rotation case, when he struck out Freeland swinging, then struck out Ohtani swinging, then struck out Kyle Tucker swinging. That’s a whole lot of hundreds of millions of left-handed dollars (a few even not deferred!) that Roupp mowed down easily, with both a demeanor and a talent that look more and more like Bumgarner with every passing day.

Yet while Roupp’s excellence was the main story of LA’s stuck-in-first offense, it was the fourth inning where the Caining really transpired. That’s the inning where the Dodgers and their fans shook their heads and questioned how this could happen to them, while Yamamoto sat somewhere on the bench wondering why his own teammates hate him so much.

Freeman opened the inning by drawing a walk. Hernández worked three balls before rolling over a pitch, hitting it softly into a fielder’s choice. Max Muncy walked. And then the play that briefly shifted momentum: Rushing took a 3-1 curveball, called for strike two. He challenged, and won by what could generously be described as an eyelash. Suddenly the bases were loaded, and there was just one out.

And then Roupp walked Kim, putting the Dodgers on the board and doing nothing to ease the danger of the situation. But after falling behind to Call 2-0, Roupp battled back and, thanks to an infield defense that lived up to its potential and paycheck, got a gorgeous inning-ending double play.

Roupp’s fifth inning was much cleaner, as he took down the side in order, sandwiching an Ohtani fly ball with Freeland and Tucker strikeouts. It was an outing that, true to the Bumgarner comparisons, was as steeped in grit as it was in talent. He needed a career-high 106 pitches to get through just five innings. He threw just 58 of those pitches for strikes. He walked five batters, including a run home.

But he gave up just one hit — a soft two-out line drive by Kim — and that one run was the only one he would allow.

Against the Dodgers.

Baseball enthusiasts and keen eyes alike will note that Roupp pitching five innings still left four innings unaccounted for, and the Giants were legally required to give those innings to the bullpen, which really added to the Caining/Webbing of the Yamamotoing. No Dodgers fan will sleep well tonight with the thought that the Giants bullpen preserved a lead for four innings, and, armed with that knowledge, you should sleep well tonight.

But Vitello pressed the right buttons, and, more importantly, the arms delivered.

Against an almost entirely left-handed lineup, Vitello turned to lefty killer/killed by righties southpaw Ryan Borucki for the sixth, and it was the perfect time to go in that direction. Borucki easily dismissed of three lefties — Freeman, Muncy, and Rushing — and did so with such comfort that you barely noticed that a righty (Hernández) snuck in there to bop a double that went nowhere (righties are now hitting 8-15 with four extra-base hits against Borucki this season).

Vitello stacked his lefties, turning to Matt Gage in the seventh, who got two quick outs before walking Freeland.

That brought up what was, at the time, the most intriguing bullpen decision by Vitello, and one that you rarely ever see. With his lefty reliever cruising, looking good, and having thrown just 14 pitches, and with a trio of left-handed hitters up next, the Giants skipper trudged out to the mound, took the ball, and brought in a different lefty. The oh-so-rare lefty-replacing-lefty.

But if you know anything about Erik Miller, it’s that no one on earth has proven as capable of getting Ohtani out, and so Vitello turned to his secret weapon. And in a cruel twist of fate, Ohtani hit a soft infield single to keep the inning going.

Just long enough for Tucker to strike out swinging.

Vitello’s decision to turn to Miller was unconventional, but it was both savvy and analytically sound. What happened in the ninth, however, was a bit more controversial.

After a smooth eighth — Miller retired two batters, and left one runner on for Keaton Winn, who absolutely obliterated pinch-hitter Will Smith, with a nasty sequence of sinkers and splitters — Vitello had a choice to make. I assumed it would be a four-out save opportunity for Winn, who has had perhaps the most electric stuff of anyone in the bullpen this year.

But no. Vitello turned to Ryan Walker. The same Walker who was fresh off a blown save in a similar opportunity. The same Walker who has flirted with disaster enough recently that you can hear — even through the TV — the reaction in the stands as the nerves kick in.

Arguably the biggest selling point of Vitello was his ability to manage players and get the most out of them. Bob Melvin lost his job because once the Giants started slumping they simply couldn’t stop, and that wasn’t just a team issue: it happened at the team level because it happened so frequently at the individual level.

That’s why Vitello is in San Francisco where, he admitted before the game, he finally stepped out to enjoy the local culture on Monday night.

I don’t want to give all the credit for good baseball plays to one of the few people in uniform who wasn’t making baseball plays, but I had to wonder: had Vitello’s motivational ways worked some magic on Walker?

He looked fantastic striking out pinch-hitter Andy Pages, who has been one of the best hitters in baseball this year, on just four pitches. Perhaps Vitello’s show of trust was helping him settle in.

He looked excellent getting Call to fly one out to left field, never falling behind in the count. Maybe Vitello, who has refused to name a closer publicly, has said the perfect things privately.

He looked dynamic striking out Freeland with an other-worldly sinker, then unleashed the roar of someone who felt like himself for the first time in a while. Like someone who has made no attempts to hide that they want to be the closer, and that they believe they should be the closer.

The buttons correctly pressed. A Caining on the other foot. Another data point suggesting Roupp is That Guy. Some timely hits. And a bullpen that maybe isn’t so bad, after all.

Most importantly, LA beaten. By a delightful 3-1 margin.

3 takeaways from Lakers’ Game 2 win vs. Rockets

LOS ANGELES, CA - APRIL 21: LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers drives to the basket during the game against the Houston Rockets during Round One Game Two of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 21, 2026 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California. 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 Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

With Kevin Durant back in the fold and the Rockets desperate to push as hard as possible to take a split back to Houston, the Lakers were able to match the Rockets’ physicality and fend them off down the stretch to hold on for a 101-94 victory and take control of the series with a 2-0 lead.

This was a classic grind-it-out playoff affair, with both teams content to slow the pace and steer the game in their direction. But it was the Lakers who found a stronger foothold throughout the contest, seizing control early with a 9-0 run to close the first period and then pushing their lead out to 15 halfway through the second quarter to really put the clamps to Houston.

But just like in Game 1, the Rockets made a push of their own to close the half, feasting on Lakers turnovers and fouls to climb back into the game and trail by just three at the intermission. But in the final two frames, the Lakers were able to keep the Rockets at arm’s length, ultimately closing out the game with heady defensive stops and enough offense to seal the victory.

Here are the biggest takeaways from the big win…


A huge night from the starting backcourt

You’d never mistake Marcus Smart and Luke Kennard for Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves, but the Lakers starting guards came up huge all the same with the type of production both Luka and Austin would be proud of.

Smart was second on the team in scoring with 25 points and tied for team lead with seven assists, while also racking up five steals and a block. He connected on eight of his 13 shot attempts, including going 5-7 from behind the arc. Smart set the tone early on both sides of the ball, dropping 11 points in the 1st quarter while doing his best to hound Kevin Durant all over the court.

But even though his defense was typically disruptive, it was Smart’s scoring that provided a huge boost to the Lakers’ offense overall. On a night that the Rockets switched more defensively and did a much better job in holding their ground to not give up the sorts of drives, deep post ups and dives out of the pick and roll that they surrendered in Game 1, Smart’s ability to hit jumpers and get downhill to either score, make a play for a teammate or just draw a foul was critical.

As for Kennard, he carried over his great play from Saturday with another 23 points in Game 2, matching Marcus with 8-of-13 shooting from the field to go along with six rebounds, two assists and three steals. Kennard knocked down half of his six three-point attempts as well as all four of this free throws, and continued to flash a level offensive versatility to go along with a competency of shot creation and burden sharing I, for one, simply did not know was there back when he was acquired at the trade deadline.

What stood out again, though, was the general confidence he’s playing with possession-to-possession. With all the injuries, Kennard has graduated into a much bigger role for sure. And just like he did in Game 1, he took those opportunities and shed any hesitancy in exchange for pure aggression in hunting ways to exploit the defense, often leading to him taking the type of shot he almost certainly would have turned down just a couple of weeks ago — and knock it down too.


Adjusting to Durant’s return

Just as Smart started the game hot and looking for his own shot, so did Kevin Durant. In what felt like him making up for missing Game 1, Durant came out looking to set the tone for Houston’s offense, finding the creases in the Lakers’ defense to get to his spots where he could rise up and take his silky jumper. Durant scored 11 points in the first quarter, hitting four of his five shots from the field and both of his free throws.

As the game went on, though, the Lakers started to mix up their coverages on Durant, often sending multiple defenders at him to simply get the ball out of his hands. After his big first quarter, Durant would take just seven shots the rest of the game, connecting on three of them.

He did get to the line and scored 23 points on the night, but he also finished with nine turnovers, many on possessions where the Lakers blitzed him with multiple defenders and forced him to pass into tight windows.

LOS ANGELES, CA – APRIL 21: Kevin Durant #7 of the Houston Rockets looks to pass the ball during the game against the Los Angeles Lakers during Round One Game Two of the 2026 NBA Playoffs on April 21, 2026 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California. 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 Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

This is the sort of ratio the Lakers were more than okay living with and was clearly their game plan from the get-go. Durant may have slipped free early in the game to get his and keep the Rockets’ offense afloat, but over the course of the night, they found ways to harass him, forcing him into the sorts of mistakes that the Lakers could then turn into offensive chances going the other way.


LeBron continues to defy all reason

His numbers may not pop to the same degree we have seen in the past — 28 points on 8-20 shooting from the field and 10-14 from the foul line, along with eight rebounds and seven assists — but LeBron was once again the best and most important player on the floor for both teams.

On a night where Houston tried its best to physically wrest control of the contest and set the terms of engagement, it was LeBron who allowed the Lakers to not only stand up to the Rockets’ strength, but to beat it with force of their own.

Whether through his post-ups, power drives or when he absorbed double teams at the top of the floor later in the game and picked out teammates to play with advantage on the other side of the court, LeBron was brilliant in giving the Lakers a pathway for offensive success whenever he was on the court.

Beyond the forcefulness he brought and the offensive load he carried, though, what stood out most was his mental fortitude and understanding of what was required for nearly every moment of the nearly 40 minutes he spent on the court.

Whether it was a critical defensive rebound early in the game when Houston was trying to conjure a repeat of their Game 1 dominance, him making early rotations out of the team’s traps vs. Durant to ensure Alperen Şengün or Amen Thompson didn’t just get a free lane to the rim or him commandeering possessions by going into the post for no other reason than to ensure the Lakers would get a shot up at the basket, LeBron did so many things to keep his team’s head above water and in the lead.

Just another great playoff performance from a player who has literally been doing this exact thing for decades.

You can follow Darius on BlueSky at @forumbluegoldand find more of his Lakers coverage on the Laker Film Room Podcast.

Golden Knights Lose Home Ice, As Mammoth Win Game 2, 3-2

LAS VEGAS -- The wide-growing theme across the NHL this season - youth, speed and skill - caught up with the Vegas Golden Knights in Tuesday's 3-2 loss to the Utah Mammoth in Game 2 of the opening round.

Mark Stone and Ivan Barbashev scored for the Knights, while Carter Hart stopped 26 shots.

The veteran-laden Knights chased the game for much of the second and third periods, while Utah's youngsters shone brightly to help the Mammoth steal home-ice advantage in the best-of-seven series.

Meanwhile, Vegas' big guns Jack Eichel and Mitch Marner couldn't find the back of the net, perhaps a cause for concern with the team shifting to Salt Lake City for Games 3 and 4.

Eichel hasn't scored in either of the first two games and has been limited to two goals in his last 10 games. Since March 14, he has three goals.

Marner hasn't scored in this series either and has just one goal in his past eight games.

Utah, which has the 13th youngest team with an average age of 28.15 years old, got its game-winning goal from Logan Cooley, the team's youngest active player, with six minutes left in the game.

Also scoring for the Mammoth was Dylan Guenther, the second-youngest active player on the ice last night. Veteran MacKenzie Weegar gave Utah its first goal of the game.

Karel Vejmelka made 19 saves to earn the win for Utah.

KEY MOMENT

Vegas was a perfect 4 for 4 on the penalty kill, but it might have been a Knights penalty that set them back a step early in the second period. Nic Dowd was called for tripping Cooley just 2:27 into the period, and the Knights appeared to be on their heels to rest of the game. After being outshot by Vegas in the first period, 10-6, the Knights were outshot by Utah in the second and third periods, 13-4 and 10-7, respectively.

KEY STAT

1 ... Carrying over from their aforementioned scoring droughts, Eichel and Marner each had just one shot on goal in the game. That's not going to cut it in the postseason. Eichel, who averaged 3.1 shots per game during the regular season, had three in Game 1. Marner averaged 2.0 shots per game in the regular season and had just one in Game 1. For the Golden Knights to steal home ice while the series is in Utah, and win this series, these two not only have to put more on net, but also find a way to put more shots in the net.

WHAT A KNIGHT

Barbashev now has a goal in each of the first two games and has scored in three of the past four games. He's scored six times in the last 14 games. Barbashev's consistency will be key when the series moves to the Delta Center, which hosts its first playoff game on Friday, in what should be a frenzied atmosphere.

UP NEXT

The Golden Knights continue their best-of-seven playoff series with the Mammoth as the scenery changes to Salt Lake City for Game 3 on Friday.

PHOTO CAPTION

Vegas Golden Knights left wing Ivan Barbashev (49) looks to deflect the puck towards Utah Mammoth goaltender Karel Vejmelka (70) during the first period of game two of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at T-Mobile Arena.

MORE

READ The Hockey News' Hannah Kirkell's recap from Game 2

Mammoth Take Game 2 After Golden Knights Can’t Mount Yet Another Third Period ComebackMammoth Take Game 2 After Golden Knights Can’t Mount Yet Another Third Period ComebackHistorically, teams that have gone up 2-0 in the Stanley Cup Playoffs went on to win their series&nbsp;<a href="https://champsorchumps.us/records/nhl-series-odds-up-2-0">87.5</a>% of the time. After <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/vegas-golden-knights/latest-news/game-one-game-won-golden-knights-kick-off-postseason-with-third-period-comeback">winning Game 1</a> by a score of 4-2, the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/vegas-golden-knights">Vegas Golden Knights</a> entered Tuesday’s matchup with the <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/utah">Utah Mammoth</a> desperate to grab a stranglehold over the series.&nbsp;

Mariners go down with a whimper, drop game and series to A’s

Apr 21, 2026; Seattle, Washington, USA; Seattle Mariners first baseman Josh Naylor (12) avoids a pitch in front of Athletics catcher Shea Langeliers (23) at T-Mobile Park. Mandatory Credit: John Froschauer-Imagn Images | John Froschauer-Imagn Images

For my first recap at Lookout Landing, I signed up for a Tuesday Night Against the A’s, and Tuesday Night Against the A’s I got. The Mariners fell 5-2 on Tuesday night in what can only be described as a “tough one.”

The bats just never got going for the hometown nine against Jacob Lopez, who entered the day with an ERA north of six. He went 5.1 innings, allowing two runs on seven hits, despite only generating three whiffs in 35 swings. His first and only strikeout of the day came against J.P. Crawford in the sixth — the final hitter he faced on the evening.

Luis Castillo walked the first hitter off the game in Nick Kurtz, and it did, in fact, haunt. Kurtz got a massive jump to steal second base and move into scoring position. Then, with two outs in the inning, Tyler Soderstrom took advantage of a slider left in the middle of the plate, lacing it into the right field corner for an RBI double to make it 1-0.

“I always say the leadoff walk is like a free base, because for me it’s a 70-75% chance they’re going to score,” Castillo said. “They made me battle, and unfortunately, the run scored. But it was really important to get back to myself, attack with first pitch strikes, attack every batter and get ahead, and we were able to do that.”

Castillo still gave up some hard contact, but he settled in and seemed to go as his slider did, saying himself that the pitch felt better tonight. He generated eight whiffs with that pitch alone, and 14 in total. He struck out six — five of them were the first batters he retired. The A’s had trouble stringing together hits against him to do any damage.

The Mariners got the first couple of hitters on in the third, with Rob Refsnyder and Cal Raleigh singling. A Julio Rodríguez flyout was able to advance Refsnyder to third, setting up a Josh Naylor sacrifice fly to tie the game up at one.

Castillo’s night was over after five innings, allowing two runs on five hits. The only other run allowed came on a solo shot to right by Jeff McNeil in the fourth. Though they weren’t able to do much tackling on in the early going, the A’s were pesky as usual at the plate, managing to spoil many of Castillo’s potential put-away pitches.

“The pitches were were I wanted them to be, but when you have an aggressive team like that that makes a lot of contact, they like to swing,” Castillo said. “But for me, what I took from that is those pitches they fouled off were exactly where I wanted them to be. Sometimes those are fouls, and sometimes they go for pop ups or roll outs, but for me, I knew those pitches were where I wanted.”

Raleigh showed another flash that he may be beginning to heat up, depositing a solo shot of his own into the ‘Pen — his fourth of the year — to once again tie the game at two. It was his second homer in as many days.

Every time the A’s jumped out in front, the Mariners had an answer. Well, until the third time. Then they didn’t.

Eduard Bazardo entered in the sixth inning to make his 11th appearance on the season. Back-to-back doubles from Soderstrom and Jacob Wilson to lead off the inning gave the A’s the lead right back, and this time they wouldn’t relinquish it. Bazardo would take the first regular season loss of his career.

On the brighter side of things, Mitch Garver continued to flex his ABS challenge muscles behind the plate. He notched three more successful challenges for his pitchers on Tuesday, but also lost his first appeal of the season, in the words of Aaron Goldsmith on the broadcast: “by the width of a credit card.” It registered on ABS as missing by less than a tenth of an inch.

The A’s would tack on in both the seventh and ninth, with a Shea Langeliers solo homer and a Wilson RBI single, respectively.

The Mariners failed to mount a late rally and went down quiet in the ninth. They’ll return to T-Mobile Park tomorrow afternoon for a Wednesday matinee, looking to preserve a game from the series before heading to St. Louis.

Game 2 Recap: Colorado comes back to take 2-1 win in overtime

DENVER, COLORADO - APRIL 21: Gabriel Landeskog #92 of the Colorado Avalanche celebrates after a goal against the Los Angeles Kings during the third period in Game Two of the First Round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Ball Arena on April 21, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Michael Martin/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

Another game at Ball Arena in this first round series against the LA Kings where the Colorado Avalanche hoped to sweep the home portion of the opening schedule. While it took until just before the clock struck midnight, the Avalanche achieved just that with a 2-1 overtime victory.

The Game

The first period was defined with cheap shots and fruitless power plays as seven minor penalties were called and the teams combined went through five power plays. No score was put on the board but Colorado did hold a 14-6 shot advantage through the first frame. Martin Nečas was the recipient of one of those cheap shots on a high hit to the head. He had to sit out for a bit but returned to the ice by the end of the period.

The start of the second period saw the Avalanche take a penalty on Quinton Byfield whilst on their own power play which was deemed worthy of a penalty shot. Scott Wedgewood stonewalled the young forward and the game remained scoreless. Right after that a pane of glass shattered behind the Kings bench and there was a lengthy delay. That loss of momentum didn’t help as it was an ugly period with only eight shots apiece and still a scoreless game after 40 minutes of play.

Some urgency that developed at the end of the second period carried over to the third as suddenly this game was ripe for either team to claim it. With under seven minutes to go in the game a goal finally found its way into the back of the net — just unfortunately it counted for the Kings. Artemi Panarin broke through on the power play just like he did late in the contest in Game 1.

Of course this game wouldn’t end quietly as Gabe Landeskog tied the score with just over three minutes to go. As the Kings are no stranger to overtime having been a NHL record 33 times in the regular season, an extra frame was needed to settle the 1-1 tie at the end of regulation. After half a period of back-and-forth action Nic Roy broke through on Colorado’s second shot in overtime to give the Avalanche the 2-1 victory.

Takeaways

It will be interesting to see if Jared Bednar chooses to ride the momentum and decline to make any lineup changes leaving Ross Colton and Mackenzie Blackwood out of action as the Avalanche hope to wrap up the series on the road.

Upcoming

The series shifts to Los Angeles with the first game on Thursday night. Puck drop is at 8 p.m. MT televised on TNT.

Mammoth Take Game 2 After Golden Knights Can’t Mount Yet Another Third Period Comeback

Historically, teams that have gone up 2-0 in the Stanley Cup Playoffs went on to win their series 87.5% of the time. After winning Game 1 by a score of 4-2, the Vegas Golden Knights entered Tuesday’s matchup with the Utah Mammoth desperate to grab a stranglehold over the series. 

Or, at least, the Golden Knights entered the first period desperate to grab a stranglehold over the series. They controlled play and outshot the Mammoth 10-7. They generated 12 scoring chances while holding Utah to four.

The Golden Knights broke the ice on the power play at 11:42 in the first. Mark Stone threw a centering pass towards the net, and it went off of Mikhail Sergachev’s skate and in past Karel Vejmelka. 

The Mammoth responded at 16:59 in the first. Noah Hanifin blocked MacKenzie Weegar’s shot on goal, but the puck took a bounce into Rasmus Andersson’s shin and into the net.

All of that first period urgency slipped away in the second. As the parade to the box continued, the Golden Knights struggled to find rhythm. The stats reflect it— the Mammoth outshot them 13-4, generated 16 scoring chances while holding Vegas to just three, and controlled 88.76% of the expected goal share.  

The Mammoth took their first lead of the night at 14:56 in the second. Kailer Yamamoto jumped to glove down Noah Hanifin’s flip-pass and found Dylan Guenther above the left circle; Guenther ripped a one-timer past Carter Hart short-side for his first career playoff goal.

The Golden Knights found the equalizer just 1:02 later. Jack Eichel got a stick on Mikhail Sergachev’s stretch-pass attempt, and Ivan Barbashev corralled the puck at the blue line. Barbashev entered the zone, split the defense, and beat Karel Vejmelka on the backhand.

In the third period, the Golden Knights were largely unable to generate any kind of offense. Shots were 10-7 in favor of the Mammoth, and Utah controlled 70.79% of the expected goal share.

The Mammoth regained the lead at 14:00 in the third. Kailer Yamamoto backhanded a pass to Dylan Guenther, who entered the zone with speed, flew past Shea Theodore, and snapped a shot on goal. When Carter Hart made the save, Guenther got his own rebound and put it off the post. Undetected, Logan Cooley cut to the middle and scored on the third attempt.

The Golden Knights pulled Carter Hart for the extra attacker with 2:51 remaining in regulation and tried to mount yet another third-period comeback. They generated their looks, but managed only two shots on goal, and the Mammoth held on for a 3-2 win.

“I thought our first period was one of our better first periods in a while,” said Golden Knights head coach John Tortorella postgame. “We lost any type of flow in the second period. The way everything was going on, we had a good start to the third period and had some opportunities. We couldn’t score, and they found a way with some of their speed.”

Three Takeaways of the Knight

1. In Game 1, the Golden Knights were the more physical team by a wide margin and out-hit the Mammoth 51-31. For whatever reason, they just didn’t have that same edge in Game 2. It was a less intense affair, but the Mammoth had the edge tonight, 39-33.

“Being physical and playing hard… when you go out searching for it, that’s when you get burned,” said Brett Howden postgame.

2. Carter Hart was excellent tonight against the initial shot, but struggled to control the rebound. For the most part, the team in front of him did a good job of boxing the Mammoth out and preventing any second-chance opportunities. But on Utah’s game-winner, no one caught Logan Cooley crashing the net, and it cost them.

3. It’s been a long time since Hertl has scored a goal. He’s had his fair share of chances, but he just can’t seem to finish one. He’s not playing poorly– Hertl is doing the little things right, and he’s  recorded eight hits over the first two games of this series.

But he’s not scoring. And that, more than anything, continues to haunt the Golden Knights. With a chance to go up 2-0 in their second power play of the night, Hertl stared down an empty net… and sent it wide. 

Fantasy Hockey Rankings: Way-too-early top-12 mock draft for the 2026-27 NHL season

The 2025-26 regular season is over, and the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs have just begun. However, it's never too early to start planning for 2026-27 fantasy hockey drafts. Changes to rosters via the NHL Draft, free agency and trades could alter the rankings. There may also be injuries in the playoffs, offseason or training camp that force adjustments. Still, this can serve as a starting point for first-round possibilities. 

McDavid led the league with 90 assists and 138 points in 82 games in 2025-26, capturing his sixth Art Ross Trophy. He has reached the 100-point plateau in six consecutive campaigns and has topped the NHL in points four times during that span. McDavid also led the pack with 43 multipoint performances and 54 power-play points in 2025-26. 

MacKinnon, surprisingly, has not topped the league in points yet, but he did claim his first Maurice Richard Trophy in 2025-26 after netting a career-high 53 markers. He also topped the NHL with a plus-57 rating, 42 even-strength tallies and 350 shots on goal. MacKinnon has paced the league in shots on target in each of the past three seasons. 

Kucherov comfortably surpassed the 100-point threshold for a fourth straight campaign in 2025-26, finishing second in the league with 130 points across 76 appearances. He also potted 44 goals for the second time in the last three seasons. Kucherov was second in the NHL with 40 multipoint efforts in 2025-26. Over the last three seasons, he has led the way with 395 points and 136 power-play points in 235 outings. However, his shots per 60 minutes have dropped in each year during that span. 

Draisaitl suited up in only 65 games during the 2025-26 campaign, but he still made a significant impact. He amassed 35 goals on 186 shots and 97 points. Draisaitl was fourth in the league in points before missing the final 14 contests of the homestretch. He also tied for third overall with 42 power-play points. Draisaitl should get back on track in 2026-27 after posting five consecutive 100-point performances before last season.

Celebrini took the next step into superstardom thanks to a remarkable sophomore season. He generated 45 goals, 115 points, including 33 on the power play, and 287 shots on net over 82 appearances. He ranked fourth in the league in points and nearly willed the rebuilding Sharks into a playoff spot. The 19-year-old phenom will be high on draft boards going into 2026-27. 

Makar had 90 points in 2023-24 and a career-high 92 points in 2024-25, but he slipped to 79 points across 75 appearances last season. Still, he scored at least 20 goals for a third straight year while posting 199 shots and 117 blocks. Makar also ranked third among blueliners with 29 power-play points. He leads all defenders with 261 points and 103 power-play points over the past three seasons. 

Pastrnak achieved the 100-point milestone for a fourth straight season in 2025-26. He had just 29 goals after scoring at least 40 in his previous four campaigns, but he dished out a career-high 71 assists while posting 261 shots, 86 hits and 33 power-play points. His shooting percentage (11.1) also dropped below his career average (13.6) and should improve in 2026-27. 

Necas has been a superb addition for the Avalanche since being acquired from the Hurricanes in 2024-25. In 108 regular-season contests with Colorado, he has 49 goals and 79 assists. The 27-year-old winger established personal bests in goals (38), assists (62), points (100) and hits (85) across 78 appearances in 2025-26. He also had 24 power-play points.

Rantanen was productive in his first season with Dallas despite being limited to 64 appearances. He registered 22 goals and a team-high 55 assists while picking up 139 shots and 34 power-play points. Still, operating at a 99-point pace over a full 82-game season should keep his fantasy stock high, especially since he didn't miss much time in his previous three campaigns.  

Kaprizov collected his fourth season with at least 40 goals, scoring 45 times while adding 44 assists in 78 games. He tied for third in the league with 19 power-play tallies and had 268 shots. His dip in offensive production during the fourth quarter put a damper on what was a solid bounce-back showing for the 28-year-old. However, his scoring potential makes him a worthwhile first-round selection. 

Robertson came close to returning to his 2022-23 form, when he recorded 46 goals and 109 points. He lit the lamp 45 times on 294 shots and had 96 points last campaign. Robertson placed fifth in the league with 41 power-play points, including a career-high 15 goals. His durability and 100-point ceiling give him plenty of fantasy value going into 2026-27. 

Bouchard led all defensemen with 74 assists and 95 points in 82 games during the 2025-26 campaign. He achieved personal bests in goals (21), assists and points. He also earned 33 power-play points, 221 shots and 101 blocks. Bouchard sits tied for the second-most points among blueliners over the last three seasons. If he returns to the 20-goal and 90-point marks in 2026-27, then he enters Makar territory in terms of offensive prowess and category coverage. 

Auston Matthews, C, Toronto Maple Leafs: Matthews struggled offensively in 2025-26, notching only 27 goals and 53 points in 60 games. However, the 28-year-old has led the league in goals in three of the last six seasons and has considerable bounce-back potential if he stays healthy and his deployment improves. 

Nick Suzuki, C, Montreal Canadiens: Suzuki has been steadily improving and surpassed the 100-point plateau for the first time in his NHL career in 2025-26. He also recorded personal bests in helpers (72) and power-play points (43). He is tied for the sixth-most points in the league over the last two campaigns. 

Quinn Hughes (D, Minnesota Wild), Zach Werenski (D, Columbus Blue Jackets): Hughes and Werenski are likely to go high in fantasy drafts because of their offensive acumen from the blue line. 

Jack Hughes, C/LW, New Jersey Devils: Hughes' offensive prowess is unquestionable, but his inability to stay healthy holds back his fantasy value. Still, the upside is there for 100-plus points if he can finally put those concerns to rest. 

Kings let late Game 2 lead slip away and lose to Avalanche in overtime

Colorado Avalanche defenseman Brett Kulak (27) knocks Los Angeles Kings left wing Trevor Moore (12) off his skates and into goaltender Scott Wedgewood (41) during the third period of Game 2 in the first round of the NHL hockey Stanley Cup playoffs, Tuesday, April 21, 2026, in Denver. (AP Photo/Jack Dempsey)
Colorado defenseman Brett Kulak knocks Kings left wing Trevor Moore into Avalanche goaltender Scott Wedgewood. (Jack Dempsey / Associated Press)

The Kings haven’t won an NHL playoff series since the last time they won the Stanley Cup, which is to say it’s been a while.

They’re halfway to another early exit after a 2-1 overtime loss to the Colorado Avalanche on Tuesday, a result that gave the Avalanche a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven series. The winning goal came from Nicolas Roy 7:44 in the extra period.

The Kings’ lone goal came from Artemi Panarin while captain Gabriel Landeskog had the other Colorado goal.

“We did play really well,” interim coach D.J. Smith said. “We’ve got to find a way to win a game. Clearly, good isn't enough. We’ve got to win a game and keep taking a piece of them and keep playing physical and give ourselves a chance to keep lengthening the series.”

Panarin gave the Kings a 1-0 lead on a wrister from the inside edge of the right circle with less than seven minutes left in regulation. It was his second power-play goal of the series and it came on the Kings’ fifth power play of the night.

It also came after the Kings got a fortunate break, with a Colorado clearing pass striking a linesman, leading to a faceoff in the Kings’ offensive end.

Read more:D.J. Smith is leading Kings in playoffs, but it's bittersweet because of who he replaced

Landeskog evened things for Colorado 3 1/2 minutes later, escaping Kings forward Scott Laughton to skate to a Martin Necas pass through the crease before pushing the puck inside the left post to send the game to overtime.

For the Kings, it marked their 34th overtime in 84 games this season, an NHL record. They lost 21 of them but Tuesday’s was the most painful, with Roy scoring on a deflection in the crease.

“We had every opportunity,” Smith said. “You’ve got to be able to close it out.”

The teams now head to Crypto.com Arena for games Thursday and Sunday with the Kings needing at least one win to extend their season.

“I expect that we'll be better at home,” Smith said.

To do that, the Kings are going to have to stop wasting the kind of opportunities they had in Denver, where they converted just two of nine power-play chances and failed to score on a penalty shot in the first two games.

The physical series turned chippy in late in Game 1 and that carried over to the start of Game 2 with a pair of scuffles, each involving more than a half-dozen players, breaking out 12 seconds apart midway through the first period. The teams combined for seven penalties in a fast-paced opening 20 minutes played with a lot of open ice.

Quinton Byfield had two chances to put the Kings on the board just more than three minutes into the second period but Colorado goalie Scott Wedgewood came up big both times.

Kings goaltender Anton Forsberg makes a save during overtime of Game 2.
Kings goaltender Anton Forsberg makes a save during overtime of Game 2. (Jack Dempsey / Associated Press)

The first came when Byfield charged Wedgewood on a breakaway, only to have the goalie stop his wrister from in close. But Avalanche defenseman Cale Makar was called for hooking Byfield from behind on the play, setting up a penalty shot. Wedgewood stopped that too.

An over-excited group of fans celebrated the two saves by breaking a pane of glass behind the Kings bench, sending the coaches scurrying and pausing the game for several minutes as workmen repaired the damage. But 16 seconds after play resumed, the Avalanche took another penalty, their sixth of seven on the night.

The Colorado penalties left the Kings with a man advantage for nearly a quarter of the game’s first 25 minutes, but their power play couldn’t take advantage against a Colorado penalty kill that ranked No. 1 in the NHL during the regular season.

“Obviously, you just want the opportunities,” forward Trevor Moore said. “Now we’ve just got to make the most of them.”

Colorado’s best scoring chance in the first two periods came on a three-on-one rush less than five minutes before the second intermission, but Kings defenseman Mikey Anderson reached in to break up the play and keep the game scoreless.

Colorado celebrates its Game 2 victory over the Kings.
Colorado celebrates its Game 2 victory over the Kings. (Jack Dempsey / Associated Press)

Sam Malinski appeared to give the Avalanche the lead on a slap shot from above the left circle 10 seconds into the final period, but after the horn sounded and the goal was put in the scoreboard, the officials correctly ruled the puck had struck the outside of the net.

Five minutes later Byfield fanned on a loose puck in the crease, allowing Wedgewood to roll over and clear it from in front of the open net.

Now the Kings come home, where they won six of their final seven regular-season games, the only loss coming in a shootout. But they haven’t beaten the Avalanche anywhere this season and if they have to at least once in the next two games to avoid their seventh straight first-round playoff exit.

“Thought we played better tonight,” Moore said. “So we’ve to to try to just take the positives and get to L.A. and play a good game.”

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Kings’ Defensive Gem Wasted As Avalanche Steal Game 2 In Overtime

In what was one of the wildest games we've seen so far in the postseason, the Los Angeles Kings entered Game 2 in Denver in what was as big a game for the Kings, looking to tie the series 1-1.

As it turns out, LA suffered a heartbreaking road overtime defeat after a back-and-forth effort, resulting in a 2-1 loss. The Kings were exceptional on defense, led by Anton Forsberg, Mikey Anderson, and Mathieu Joseph, holding the Avs to two goals, but once again couldn't score on offense, leaving the door open for Colorado to strike. 

Arguably, it was the greatest defensive performance we've seen from the Kings this season, with 23 hits, 26 blocked shots, and Colorado going 0/3 on the power play. LA was making all the plays on defense to try to steal this game, but they couldn't hold on late.

 Late Push Not Enough As Kings Fall To Avalanche In Game 1 Late Push Not Enough As Kings Fall To Avalanche In Game 1The Kings did enough defensively to hang around, but a lack of offensive support and Colorado’s scoring down the stretch proved to be the difference in a tight Game 1 loss.

The Kings wanted to play physical, and we got it against the Presidents' Trophy winners. The game had no flow in the first period, several minor penalties, and scrums in the first 14 minutes of regulation. 

Once again, both teams were very slow offensively, especially on the power play, missing easy shots that should have gone in. LA and Colorado combined for five power plays in the first period and converted on zero of them. 

The physical play and hits were there, making it hard for either team to generate good looks. Trevor Moore had a very good look early in the game after finding himself alone for a chance to give LA the lead, but Avs goaltender Scott Wedgewood made a nice save to stop the goal. 

Both goaltenders did an excellent job in the first period, especially on the power play, killing the opposing team's scoring chances. Even with the Avalanche having more shots on goal, the Kings had plenty of chances to score, but once again were struggling to capitalize after getting timely stops. 

For the second straight game, we ended the first period scoreless. LA did a good job of increasing its physicality and taking big hits against the Avalanche, despite being outshot 14-6 after 20 minutes. 

To open the second period, at the 16:48 mark, Colorado was on the power play, and Quinton Byfield stole the puck for a breakaway rush by himself against Wedgewood, but came up short after an extended glove save to stop the breakaway goal. 

LA continued to miss opportunities on offense, with its defense coming up big; the offense needs to start capitalizing on those key turnovers and stops at some point. 

The game continued to get physical. LA did a good job getting hits, especially Mathieu Joseph, who already had six hits midway through the second. Certainly, it was his best game with the Kings this season. 

LA's defense continued to make big stops, especially on the 3-on-1 with the Avs having a chance to score, but Mikey Anderson got a stick on Martin Necas to kill the play. In the last few minutes of the period, the Avs had good chances to score, but credit Anton Forsberg, Drew Doughty, and Mikey Anderson for playing their role on defense.

After 40 minutes, the game remained 0-0. Great effort from the Kings defensively in that period to keep the Avs off the scoreboard, but LA still was struggling to capitalize on offense. 

At the 19:50 mark of the final period, Colorado thought they had scored a goal, but the puck landed on the outside of the net, overturning the goal. LA kept dodging serious bullets with the Avs struggling to score, but so was LA, leaving the door wide open for Colorado to score. 

The tension was so high that the referees were just letting both teams play, without calling penalties. 

Finally, at the 6:56 mark, LA scored the first goal of the game to take a 1-0 lead. It was the breadman, Artemi Panarin, scoring the power play goal on a one-timer goal, the biggest goal of Panarin's time with the Kings. 

Definitely the best all-around game we've seen from the Kings this season, especially in a hostile playoff environment on the road. 

But it was clear at one point the Avs would strike back, and they did. At the

But it was clear at one point the Avs would strike back, and they did. At the 3:35 mark, Colorado got a very good look at the net after great puck movement. The open look secured a goal for captain Gabriel Landeskog to tie it 1-1. 

After a gritty last two minutes of regulation, we were headed to overtime in Denver for extra periods. Credit LA for the effort on defense, holding the No. 1 offense in hockey to just one goal.  

In overtime, the Kings once again had an opportunity to seal this game and tie it 1-1 after forward Samuel Helenius had an easy shot with Wedgewood losing his stick, but another clutch save by Wedegwood killed the chance.  

The Avalanche sealed the game in the extra periods, capitalizing on LA's missed chances to win and take a 2-0 series lead. Center Nicolas Roy cleaned up the rebound and put the puck just under the legs of LA to win a gritty game. 

Key Stats

Despite the loss, credit the Kings' defense for playing an excellent game throughout regulation. To hold the league's best offense to just two goals was special. 

Anton Forsberg, starting in his second playoff game, was exceptional, finishing with 34 saves on 36 shots. Artemi Panarin, for the second straight game, scored a goal, the only King so far to score in the playoffs. 

Mikey Anderson and Mathieu Joseph were also great in this game defensively, combining to finish with eight hits and eight blocked shots. 

Tough loss for the Kings and an opportunity to secure the split, now they're headed home trailing 2-0. 

Game 3 will be on Thursday, 7:00 PM PT at Crypto.com Arena. 

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Atlanta, New York tied 1-1 heading to game 3

New York Knicks (53-29, third in the Eastern Conference) vs. Atlanta Hawks (46-36, sixth in the Eastern Conference)

Atlanta; Thursday, 7 p.m. EDT

LINE: Hawks -1.5; over/under is 216.5

EASTERN CONFERENCE FIRST ROUND: Series tied 1-1

BOTTOM LINE: The Atlanta Hawks and the New York Knicks are in a 1-1 series tie in the Eastern Conference first round. The Hawks defeated the Knicks 107-106 in the last matchup on Tuesday. CJ McCollum led the Hawks with 32 points, and Jalen Brunson led the Knicks with 29.

The Hawks are 27-25 against Eastern Conference opponents. Atlanta is 20-26 against opponents over .500.

The Knicks have gone 35-17 against Eastern Conference opponents. New York ranks fourth in the Eastern Conference with 45.6 rebounds per game led by Karl-Anthony Towns averaging 11.9.

The 118.5 points per game the Hawks average are 8.4 more points than the Knicks give up (110.1). The Knicks are shooting 47.8% from the field, 0.4% higher than the 47.4% the Hawks' opponents have shot this season.

TOP PERFORMERS: Jalen Johnson is averaging 22.5 points, 10.3 rebounds and 7.9 assists for the Hawks. Nickeil Alexander-Walker is averaging 20.2 points and 3.4 assists over the last 10 games.

Brunson is averaging 26 points and 6.8 assists for the Knicks. OG Anunoby is averaging 2.6 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Hawks: 6-4, averaging 117.7 points, 43.6 rebounds, 27.6 assists, 8.7 steals and 5.0 blocks per game while shooting 48.1% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 111.7 points per game.

Knicks: 6-4, averaging 110.7 points, 43.0 rebounds, 25.8 assists, 8.1 steals and 3.5 blocks per game while shooting 48.8% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 106.2 points.

INJURIES: Hawks: Jock Landale: out (ankle).

Knicks: None listed.

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Cleveland visits Toronto with 2-0 series lead

Cleveland Cavaliers (52-30, fourth in the Eastern Conference) vs. Toronto Raptors (46-36, fifth in the Eastern Conference)

Toronto; Thursday, 8 p.m. EDT

LINE: Cavaliers -3; over/under is 219.5

EASTERN CONFERENCE FIRST ROUND: Cavaliers lead series 2-0

BOTTOM LINE: The Cleveland Cavaliers visit the Toronto Raptors in the Eastern Conference first round with a 2-0 lead in the series. The Cavaliers won the last matchup 115-105 on Monday, led by 30 points from Donovan Mitchell. Scottie Barnes led the Raptors with 26.

The Raptors have gone 33-19 against Eastern Conference opponents. Toronto is 7-4 in one-possession games.

The Cavaliers are 33-19 against Eastern Conference opponents. Cleveland is seventh in the Eastern Conference with 44.4 rebounds per game led by Evan Mobley averaging 9.0.

The Raptors average 114.6 points per game, 0.8 fewer points than the 115.4 the Cavaliers give up. The Cavaliers are shooting 48.2% from the field, 1.5% higher than the 46.7% the Raptors' opponents have shot this season.

TOP PERFORMERS: Brandon Ingram is averaging 21.5 points, 5.6 rebounds and 3.7 assists for the Raptors. RJ Barrett is averaging 19.4 points over the last 10 games.

James Harden is averaging 23.6 points and eight assists for the Cavaliers. Mitchell is averaging 20.0 points over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Raptors: 4-6, averaging 115.8 points, 38.9 rebounds, 29.8 assists, 8.3 steals and 4.0 blocks per game while shooting 51.8% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 112.4 points per game.

Cavaliers: 8-2, averaging 120.7 points, 43.2 rebounds, 27.3 assists, 8.5 steals and 4.2 blocks per game while shooting 51.1% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 116.0 points.

INJURIES: Raptors: Immanuel Quickley: day to day (hamstring).

Cavaliers: Thomas Bryant: day to day (calf).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

Minnesota, Denver meet with series tied 1-1

Denver Nuggets (54-28, third in the Western Conference) vs. Minnesota Timberwolves (49-33, sixth in the Western Conference)

Minneapolis; Thursday, 9:30 p.m. EDT

LINE: Nuggets -1.5; over/under is 234

WESTERN CONFERENCE FIRST ROUND: Series tied 1-1

BOTTOM LINE: The Minnesota Timberwolves host the Denver Nuggets in game three of the Western Conference first round with the series tied 1-1. The Timberwolves defeated the Nuggets 119-114 in the last matchup on Tuesday. Anthony Edwards led the Timberwolves with 30 points, and Jamal Murray led the Nuggets with 30.

The Timberwolves are 9-7 against the rest of their division. Minnesota ranks eighth in the Western Conference with 50.3 points per game in the paint led by Edwards averaging 11.0.

The Nuggets are 11-5 against the rest of their division. Denver scores 122.1 points and has outscored opponents by 5.2 points per game.

The Timberwolves are shooting 48.1% from the field this season, 1.3 percentage points higher than the 46.8% the Nuggets allow to opponents. The Nuggets average 14.2 made 3-pointers per game this season, 2.1 more made shots on average than the 12.1 per game the Timberwolves allow.

TOP PERFORMERS: Julius Randle is averaging 21.1 points, 6.7 rebounds and five assists for the Timberwolves. Ayo Dosunmu is averaging 13 points and 3.2 assists over the past 10 games.

Murray is averaging 25.4 points and 7.1 assists for the Nuggets. Nikola Jokic is averaging 23.4 points over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Timberwolves: 5-5, averaging 117.9 points, 40.9 rebounds, 25.9 assists, 8.3 steals and 5.8 blocks per game while shooting 48.3% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 116.8 points per game.

Nuggets: 9-1, averaging 127.5 points, 48.1 rebounds, 31.0 assists, 7.2 steals and 4.2 blocks per game while shooting 49.4% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 117.3 points.

INJURIES: Timberwolves: None listed.

Nuggets: Peyton Watson: out (hamstring).

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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

White Sox slugger Munetaka Murakami putting on historic HR show

PHOENIX — Well, maybe Munetaka Murakami won’t have a difficult time making that transition from Japan to Major League Baseball after all.

In the meantime, is he ever making a whole lot of teams look foolish for ignoring him in free agency.

Murakami made more history Tuesday night by homering for the fourth consecutive game in the Chicago White Sox’s 11-5 rout over the Arizona Diamondbacks — a 434-foot shot —going where no Japanese player has ever gone before.

He is not only the first Japanese-born player to hit nine homers in his first 23 games, but also the first player since at least 1900 to produce nine homers and more than 20 walks in the first 23 games of a career.

The only Japanese players who have ever homered in four consecutive games at any juncture in their career are three-time MVP Shohei Ohtani of the Los Angeles Dodgers and Chicago Cubs All-Star outfielder Seiya Suzuki.

Murakami, 26, is looking just like the dude who was Nippon Professional Baseball’s premier slugger, breaking the legendary Sadaharu Oh’s single-season home run record with 56 homers as a 22-year-old, and winning two MVP awards.

Sure, the season is just three weeks old, but the strikeouts and swing-and-miss rates that spiked since his historic 2022 season, with teams concerned whether he’d make enough contact to even provide power, now are regretting that they allowed the White Sox to virtually steal Murakami with a modest two-year, $34 million contract.

Murakami is soft-spoken and humble about his early heroics, saying he simply is happy that he’s contributing, but his bat is doing a whole lot of talking.

Murakami is hitting .234 with nine homers — just one behind MLB leader Yordan Alvarez of the Houston Astros — with 17 RBI and a .978 OPS. He has struck out 33 times in 97 plate appearances, but he has also walked 22 times, giving him a .398 on-base percentage.

He is everything the White Sox could have imagined, and much more.

“He puts himself in a real good position every single pitch,’’ White Sox manager Will Venable said. “He’s on time. He sees the ball well.  … We’re seeing real good plate discipline. Obviously, the power is incredible. Continues to improve defensively. I think I may be slowing him down a little bit on the bases. He always wants to get out and steal some bases. But he’s just a guy that’s getting more and more comfortable every day.

“Obviously, he’s having a lot of success.’’

Murakami indeed is looking quite comfortable these days, hitting four homers for a combined 1,705 feet. He reached base four times Tuesday, including his 434-foot blast off Diamondbacks starter Merrill Kelly, his MLB-leading third homer this season traveling 113 mph or faster off his bat.

It certainly brought back memories of his 432-foot blast off Kelly in the 2023 World Baseball Classic championship game over USA.

“I was able to image the pitcher a lot better because I did face him in the WBC,’’ Murakami said. “The time I hit in the WBC was a fastball, but today was a [89-mph] changeup. But I was really happy that I was able to hit it for a home run.’’

What pleases Murakami more than anything, he says, is that his home runs have helped ignite the White Sox offense. They’ve scored 33 runs in their four games on this trip, winning three of them.

“We’re very much connecting from the top to the bottom in the lineup,’’ he said, “and I think it’s just really important that we really continue as a team to get good results. I hope we can keep doing that.’’

The Diamondbacks, one of several teams that had interest in Murakami but were not a finalist in the bidding, could only sit back and admire the show, feeling a tinge of jealousy.

“He was on a lot of people’s radar screens,’’ Diamondbacks manager Torey Lovullo said. “We knew there was a special player there. I’ve been watching him closely, and I’ve been a fan of his.

“He’s going to be a pretty special player.’’

Follow Bob Nightengale on X: @Bnightengale.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Munetaka Murakami homers in fourth consecutive game for White Sox

Murakami stays red hot as White Sox pour it on in 11-5 victory

Munetaka Murakami smashed his fourth home run in four games, kicking off a back-to-back-to-back homer parade in the second. | (Getty Images)

After a truly insane nine innings of baseball, the White Sox (9-14) won their second game in a row, taking the first game of the series against the Diamondbacks (13-10), 11-5. The South Side bats were on fire, the pitching was solid, and the defense was making diving plays all over the place — it would probably be easier if I told you what didn’t happen. It’s been a minute since I was this excited watching the Chicago White Sox play baseball, so bear with me as I am still slightly in shock.

Outhitting the D-backs 14-8, the Good Guys smashed six of those for extra bases: a double, triple, and four home runs. Although they exploded for 11 runs, they did still manage to go 2-for-12 with runners in scoring position and left nine on base, but we’re not talking about that right now. Nearly everyone got a hit, except for Everson Pereira and Reese McGuire, who still managed to drive in at least one run. There was so much offensive production from this team tonight that half of the lineup (five batters) produced multi-hit games.

Sean Burke mostly cruised through his start and was able to maintain control, though the same couldn’t be said for righthander Merrill Kelly. The Good Guys nearly batted through the order in the top of the first, and they wasted no time pouring runs on Kelly and the Diamondbacks, dropping a four-spot to give Burke plenty of cushion before he even threw a pitch. The Sox immediately caused trouble to start the game with consecutive base hits from Andrew Benintendi and Munetaka Murakami, and Miguel Vargas walked to load the bases. Keeping his momentum up from Sunday after mashing a long ball, Colson Montgomery squared one up and ripped a two-run double to center to give the South Siders a two-run lead, 2-0. They tacked on two more after a sacrifice fly from Everson Pereira, and Sam Antonacci drove in his first major league run with an RBI triple to make it 4-0, Good Guys.

If you thought the first inning was fun, the second was even better. Murakami continued to showcase his prowess at the plate and kicked off a two-out rally by smashing his fourth home run in as many games, joining some solid company as just the third Japanese-born player ever to homer four games in a row. Have a freaking week, Mune:

Tweet from Sarah Langs highlighting that Munetaka Murakami is the only player in MLB to have hit a home run at 113+ mph three times.

To really pour salt into Kelly’s gaping wound, Vargas followed up Mune’s moonshot with a line drive homer to left, and Montgomery clobbered a 440-foot tank to center to give the Sox a seven-run lead.

BACK.

TO BACK.

TO-BACK!

With seven runs to work with, Burke simply just had to lock in and throw strikes, and he pretty much did just that. It also helped that the South Siders added an eighth run in the top of the fifth on a Reese McGuire sacrifice fly. Burke had gotten into some hot water in the bottom of the first, but cleaned up after himself. Ketel Marte drove a leadoff base hit, making it to second a few moments later on a wild pitch to get into scoring position. A swinging bunt pulled Burke over to the first base line, and he was able to tag the runner and get the double play at the plate to end the inning as Marte was trying to sneak a run in.

Burke was otherwise scoreless through three and was efficient overall in his six innings. Geraldo Perdomo tripled to begin the fourth and subsequently scored on an RBI ground out for Arizona’s first run of the game. Just two runs allowed on five hits — including a solo home run from Alek Thomas in the fifth — and one walk while striking out three. Burke has now lowered his ERA from 4.43 to 4.10.

To help Burke and the pitching staff out, the defense was also excellent and definitely helped keep some Arizona runs from scoring, especially as the ninth inning got a little dicey. Antonacci had made a nice sliding catch out in left, and Pereira was all over the place, laying out twice for two different balls to rob a couple of base hits, making the catches flawlessly. This play, especially in the seventh, was key to shutting down any momentum that the Diamondbacks were building up, as this almost surely would have been a triple had Pereira not caught it:

Out of the bullpen, Lucas Sims tossed a hitless inning thanks to Pereira bailing him out, as the two baserunners reached base on balls, though he did strike out one. For the final two innings, righthander Osvaldo Bido made his first appearance in a White Sox uniform, picked up on waivers after being designated for assignment by the Atlanta Braves last week. Bido walked two batters but was otherwise decent in the eighth, and he fortunately didn’t have to worry too much about the lead since the South Siders tagged on three more runs in the ninth.

After checking his first MLB RBI off the list earlier in the game, Antonacci decided to cross off his first major league homer: an inside-the-park home run. The rookie ripped a ball down the left field line that ended up sort of hitting the ball boy, but Lourdes Gurriel Jr. gave up on the play, likely thinking that it would be called a ground-rule double or interference. Who knows.

Since the top of the inning was weird, the bottom half had to follow suit. Arizona started to rally, and it seemed like the game wasn’t ever going to end. Will Venable clearly didn’t want to go to the bullpen for a couple of outs with a nine-run lead, and I can not blame him for that, but Bido was struggling to throw strikes, and when he did, the D-backs were really starting to catch up to him. After two base hits, he gave up a garbage-time three-run bomb to Ildemaro Vargas, who extended his hitting streak to 19, right in the nick of time. Though Bido walked a couple more batters, he eventually was able to get out of it to close out the game, officially crediting Burke with his first win of the season.