San Diego takes momentum into Cardinals series

BALTIMORE, MD - JUNE 14: Rodolfo Durán #48 of the San Diego Padres celebrates as he rounds the bases after hitting a two-run home run in the seventh inning during a baseball game against the Baltimore Orioles at Oriole Park at Camden Yard on June 14, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Mitchell Layton/Getty Images | Getty Images

The San Diego Padres haven’t won two consecutive series since April. They finally did so on Sunday against the Baltimore Orioles. After besting the Cincinnati Reds in a rubber match last week, they did the same against the O’s in the rubber match Sunday afternoon. They did so on the backs of some great pitching alongside some even better offense.

The Friars put up 17 runs in the series, including a nine-run romp of Baltimore in Game 2. They haven’t scored that many runs since they swept the Seattle Mariners in May. San Diego needs to ride that momentum into their series against a recently struggling St. Louis Cardinals ballclub.

Taking the mound

Dustin May (STL) v. Lucas Giolito (SD)

May has been off to a solid season with the Cards. He’s pitched to a 4.21 ERA through 72 2/3 innings. That was due to a difficult stretch to start the year, but he’s turned things around lately. May boasts a 3.43 ERA in his last seven starts.

He pitched well against the Friars last time they faced St. Louis. May pitched six innings but surrendered three runs (two earned) and failed to record a win for the Cards. He’ll look to improve this time around against San Diego.

Giolito has struggled with consistency in his Padres tenure thus far. He owns a 4.35 ERA through 20 2/3 innings pitched. His last few starts have been better, surrendering just three runs in his last 8 innings. Hoping to turn that around, the Friars will be using an opener for him today.

The right-hander has struggled with fastball command, but has looked better. Hopefully, Giolito can return to the form he had in his first two starts with the club (3 ER, 10.0 IP). If he can, the Padres should easily take Game 1 over St. Louis.

Batter up!

The sample size is getting bigger and bigger. Samad Taylor has been fantastic for the Friars. He’s batting .357 with a .919 OPS and went 5-for-13 with his first MLB home run in the series against Baltimore.

  1. Fernando Tatis Jr., 2B
  2. Jackson Merrill, CF
  3. Manny Machado, 3B
  4. Xander Bogaerts, SS
  5. Gavin Sheets, 1B
  6. Samad Taylor, LF
  7. Will Wagner, DH
  8. Jase Bowen, RF
  9. Rodolfo Durán, C

The star of the rubber match was Durán, who will be shouldering the catching weight with Freddy Fermin hitting the 7-day IL on concussion protocol. Durán slugged two homers in the last two games. Padres catchers have now combined for five home runs in the last week.

Relief corps

San Diego exhausted the majority of their high leverage relievers on Sunday afternoon. Bradgley Rodriguez, Jason Adam, Adrian Morejon and Mason Miller covered the final four innings of the game after Walker Buehler covered the first five and allowed just one run.

That will leave the Padres with options, though none of them have been fantastic. Ron Marinaccio, Yuki Matsui, David Morgan and Wandy Peralta will each be available in Game 1 against the Cards.

Arizona Cardinals fans think Jacoby Brissett deserves a slight increase

Jun 9, 2026; Tempe, AZ, USA; Arizona Cardinals Jacoby Brissett (7) during minicamp at Arizona Cardinals Training Center. Mandatory Credit: Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images | Joe Camporeale-Imagn Images

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across the NFL. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Cardinals fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.


Happy Monday one and all.

The Arizona Cardinals are on a slight break before training camp picks up in July, and the Arizona Cardinals get a couple days extra of work since they are part of the Hall of Fame Game this year in the preseason.

Now the question that is outstanding for the Arizona Cardinals, what is happening with Jacoby Brissett?

We know he has held out all of voluntary OTA’s and held-in during mandatory minicamp, meaning he was there and did nothing, while he waits for a new contract that pays him as the starter.

While the Cardinals have not publicly said he is the starter, it was reported by Josh Weinfuss and later John Gambadoro that the Cardinals are going with Brissett.

So, we asked, would how much would you change things contract wise for Brissett? The results really surprised me:

Fans are fine giving Brissett a slight bump, raise him up to $10 million(ish) and guarantee it, and let’s move foward.

I actually am shocked that fans would only want to slightly bump or keep Brissett at the same salary, but it makes sense.

He was given an opportunity and had a modicum of success statistically, but was also the quarterback of a team that went 1-11 with him starting and lost nine straight games.

Right now, our friends at FanDuel Sportsbook have the odds of Brissett starting game one at -350, with Gardner Minshew at +420 and Carson Beck at +700. The Cardinals are not favored in a single game this season either. What is that worth

Washington Nationals go for 4th straight series win against Royals

WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 14: Daylen Lile (4) of the Washington Nationals reacts after driving in a run with a double in the fourth inning during an MLB game against the Seattle Mariners on June 14, 2026 at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

After getting swept to open the month, it’s been smooth sailing for the Nationals as we hit the halfway mark in June. They won their last 2 games against the Seattle Mariners for a come-from-behind series victory, making that their 3rd in a row. With the gritty Tampa Bay Rays and division rival Philadelphia Phillies on the horizon, they get a chance to extend their winning streak against a Royals team that has been far from elite this season.

Kansas City sits firmly in last place in the AL Central, with a record of just 29-43. Their offense is in the bottom 10 of almost every statistical category, despite the MVP-level season that shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. has put together thus far. They have lost their last 2 series, and now head into Washington to attempt to right the ship.

Game 1 – Monday 6:45 PM EST

WSH: LHP Andrew Alvarez (1-0, 3.70 ERA)

KCR: RHP Mitch Spence (0-0, 13.50 ERA)

Alvarez’s two starts as a swingman have been about as advertised, going less than 5.0 innings both times out but limiting opposing offenses to 2 or fewer runs. The lefty is a true “get it done” pitcher, allowing a decent amount of baserunners but having enough putaway stuff to work his way out of jams. Commanding the strike zone remains a work in progress, although he has racked up just over 9 strikeouts per 9 innings, and the coaching staff will definitely be careful with him against the Royals’ top bats.

The right-hander is on his 3rd team in 3 MLB seasons, and his lone appearance with Kansas City was back in mid-April. Spence was hit for 6 runs across 4.0 innings in said outing, and his AAA ERA sat above 6.50 over the course of 10 starts. The Nats have a chance to absolutely feast on a pitcher the Royals are essentially forced to start, and it would be great to see the lineup get off to another hot start.

Game 2 – Tuesday 6:45 PM EST

WSH: LHP Foster Griffin (7-2, 3.46 ERA)

KCR: RHP Michael Wacha (4-5, 3.58 ERA)

The days of calling Griffin a reclamation project have come and gone, and he remains the steadiest pitcher in the Washington rotation entering his 15th start. He battled through another 6.0 strong innings the last time through the rotation, surrendering a single run to the San Francisco Giants and lowering his season ERA to 3.46. It’s hard not to have utmost confidence in the 30-year-old every time he takes the mound, and he faces another stable veteran on Tuesday night.

Wacha is seemingly entering “ageless wonder” territory and has been a lock for an ERA in the mid-3.00s every year since 2021. The Nats are seeing him amidst a rough patch, though, with his ERA rising almost a full point in his last 3 starts, giving up 14 runs in 17.2 innings. His offspeed pitches are where hitters have found the most success against him, making the plan for success fairly clear.

Game 3 – Wednesday 1:05 PM EST

WSH: RHP Zack Littell (6-5, 5.32 ERA)

KCR: RHP Luinder Avila (1-3, 6.19 ERA)

Littell had been cruising in his recent starts, but that run of dominance came to a screeching halt against the Seattle Mariners on June 12th. He was tagged for 5 runs over just 1.2 innings, with the long ball getting him once and forcing him out of the game abruptly. There is something to be said about how he had to deal with an impromptu rain delay before his start, making this next appearance an important watch for Nats coaches and fans alike.

The story for Avila’s 2026 campaign is nearly identical to Littell’s, despite the 6-year age difference. His sophomore season got off to a dreadful start out of the bullpen, but he put together a fine month of May. He was moved to the rotation and had 2 impressive starts to begin June, but got absolutely shelled by the Astros for 8 runs, failing to make it out of the 1st inning. This game will come down to whichever starter can rebound better, and whether or not Littell’s experience can outlast Avila’s youthful energy.

Nationals series preview: Happy 250th birthday, America!

WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 14: George Washington edges out Abraham Lincoln during the President's Race mascot run in between innings during an MLB game between the Washington Nationals and Seattle Mariners on June 14, 2026 at Nationals Park in Washington, D.C. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The Nationals won their first championship in 2019, and after stumbling to a losing record in 2020, they began rebuilding. They traded Trea Turner and Max Scherzer in 2021, and Juan Soto in 2022. That brought several years of bad baseball, as the team struggled to develop good players. But the prospects from those trades are starting to bear fruit – three of them are in the regular starting lineup for this year’s Nationals – and the team is enjoying a winning season.

Kansas City Royals (29-43) vs. Washington Nationals (37-35) at Nationals Park, Washington, DC

Royals: 4.00 runs scored/game (29th in MLB), 4.68 runs allowed/game (20th)

Nationals: 5.44 runs scored/game (1st), 5.26 runs allowed/game (29th)

The Nationals have scored the most runs in baseball, with three games this month where they have scored 10+ runs. Only five teams have hit more home runs, and only the Marlins have stolen more bases. James Wood broke through last year with a 31-home run season and an All-Star appearances. He leads the National League in runs scored (66) and walks (58) this year, and is tied for fourth in MLB in home runs (20). Daylen Lile is hitting .333/.400/.511 in 12 games this month. Catcher Keibert Ruiz is hitting .366/.386/.648 at home. CJ Abrams is hitting .297/.395/.555 against lefties.

Jacob Young is fifth in baseball in taking called strikes at 22.8 percent. Nasim Nuñez leads the National League with 25 steals and has only been caught three times. The Nats lead all of baseball in most outs on the bases. Young grades as one of the best defenders in baseball, by Outs Above Average, while Abrams rates as one of the worst.

The Royals have announced Mitch Spence will be called up to start Monday to replace Seth Lugo, who is on the 7-day IL with a concussion. He’ll face Andrew Alvarez, who has made seven career MLB starts. Alvarez walked five, but allowed just two runs in four innings in his last start against the Giants. He had a 5.29 ERA in seven starts for Triple-A Rochester. He throws mostly breaking balls and has a 54 percent groundball rate.

Former Royals first round pick Foster Griffin went to Japan and has returned to become an effective MLB starter. He has given up just five runs in 22 innings (2.05) over his last four starts. Lefties are hitting .172/.250/.322 against him. He throws his cutter 30 percent of the time, and gets by with a 91 mph fastball, but his sweeper has a 32.5 percent whiff rate.

Zack Littell had a 3.3 rWAR season last year, but found few free agent offers and signed with the Nationals. He retired just 5 of the 10 hitters he faced in his last start, giving up five runs, including a home run to the Mariners. Opponents are hitting .315 against his 91 mph fastball, but he throws his slider 28.6 percent of the time.

Nationals relievers have a 4.69 ERA with the lowest strikeout rate of any bullpen. Gus Varland and Clayton Beeter have each gotten closing duties this year. Nationals relievers allow 43 percent of inherited runners to score, most in baseball. Former Royals reliever Richard Lovelady has a reverse split, with lefties hitting .333/.433/.431 against him.

The National score a lot of runs, but allow a lot of runs. The Royals have won their last two series against the Nationals, including a sweep in DC in 2024. With a decimated roster, they’ll need to raise their game against an improved Nats squad this week.

MLB Home Run Predictions Today: Best HR Prop Bets, Picks, Parlay & Odds for Monday, June 15

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We nearly swept on Friday, so let's try that again with today's MLB home run predictions

I'm backing Junior Caminero, Juan Soto, and Ian Happ to go deep in my favorite MLB player props on Monday, June 15. 

Best MLB home run props today

Player to hit a HROdds
Rays Junior Caminero+241
Mets Juan Soto+294
Cubs Ian Happ+344
💲Today's HR parlay+5865

Home run pick: Junior Caminero (+241)

I am in love with Tampa Bay Rays slugger Junior Caminero to leave the yard this evening. The budding star draws Los Angeles Dodgers left-hander Eric Lauer, who enters today with one of the worst pitcher ratings on the slate. He also grades poorly in matchup ISO, strikeout rate, and ground ball rate.

Lauer has been struggling against right-handed hitters at home this season, allowing a 71% elevation rate. Overall, right-handed bats have posted a .504 xSLG and .349 xwOBA against him, while also producing a 12% barrel rate against the lefty. In addition, 54% of Lauer’s pitch mix is valued below league average, per FanGraphs. Caminero also brings the highest arsenal coverage in this matchup, covering 72.5% of Lauer’s pitch mix.

On top of that, over his last 30 plate appearances against southpaws, Caminero is hitting .304 with a .902 OPS, while generating nearly 60% hard contact and a 12% barrel rate in that span.

  • Time: 10:10 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: ESPN

Home run pick: Juan Soto (+294)

New York Mets slugger Juan Soto has finally snapped out of that cold streak he was dealing with over the last few weeks, and I think it is time we can trust him again. 

In his last 30 plate appearances against right-handed pitching, he owns an .868 OPS, with 59% hard contact and a 9.1% barrel rate. Soto also carries the highest arsenal coverage among elite-rated bats this evening, covering 99.3% of Cincinnati Reds starter Chase Burns’ pitch mix.

Burns has been allowing a ton of elevation to left-handed hitters this season. At home, those hitters have been elevating the ball nearly 70% of the time. Over his last 60 lefties faced, he has allowed a 12.9% barrel rate and a 70.9% elevation rate, while also carrying a .347 xBA and .679 xSLG against.

With the cold stretch seemingly behind him, this looks like a spot where Soto can do damage tonight in Great American Small Park.

  • Time: 7:10 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: CINR, SNY

Home run pick: Ian Happ (+344)

Colorado Rockies right-hander Michael Lorenzen has been getting tormented by left-handed hitters this season, especially on the road. In that split, they are batting .418 with a .716 SLG and a .499 wOBA. On top of that, they are producing 45.5% hard contact and nearly a 70% fly ball rate.

I think it is a must that we back Chicago Cubs outfielder Ian Happ to go yard this evening. Why Happ? Not only does he have an elite rating in this matchup over on Batters-Box, but he also owns the highest arsenal coverage with an elite rating.

He is batting .296 with a 1.054 OPS and .704 SLG, while posting 47.5% hard contact and a 10% barrel rate over his last 60 plate appearances against right-handed pitching.

With Happ sitting at 76.3% arsenal coverage against a pitcher with every single pitch in his mix graded below average, he looks like a must-back to leave the yard this evening on the North Side.

  • Time: 8:05 p.m. ET
  • Where to watch: Marquee, COLR
Colby Marchio's 2026 Transparency Record
  • HR picks: 58-189-15, +20.60 units

Today’s HR parlay

Rays Junior CamineroBet Now
+5865
Mets Juan Soto
Cubs Ian Happ

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Mets to place Christian Scott on injured list

NEW YORK, NY - JUNE 11: Christian Scott #45 of the New York Mets pitches during the second inning against the St. Louis Cardinals at Citi Field on June 11, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Adam Hunger/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Mets are planning to place Christian Scott on the injured list, according to Will Sammon of the Athletic. Scott’s previous start against the Cardinals was pushed back a day. Jon Heyman adds that he’s heard that Scott has a hip issue that does not seem to be a major setback for Scott, who is returning this year after Tommy John surgery.

Removing Scott from the rotation, though, is yet another blow to the already-fragile group. Tobias Myers was already recalled on Sunday evening to serve as a starter (more likely an opener) for tonight’s game, but the Mets had already been relying more and more on bullpen games due to injury and performance problems.

After losing Clay Holmes to a fractured fibula and Kodai Senga to back and nerve issues, they have been forced to rely on David Peterson for more innings than seems advisable at this point. While Sean Manaea has started to find his best self, losing Scott reduces the starting rotation to two additional pitchers beyond Manaea: Nolan McLean and Freddy Peralta. With luck, Senga will return soon from his rehab assignment.

This season, Scott has posted a 3.10 ERA in nine games started and 40.2 innings pitched. He has been reliable arm for the Mets in the majority of his starts. In his last start against the Cardinals on June 11, he allowed four runs (three home runs) off seven hits, walked one, and struck out six.

MLB Expert Picks & Baseball Predictions June 15

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Let's kick off a new week with a collection of MLB picks from our team of baseball experts.

Our headline attraction involves getting the Tampa Bay Rays at +156 to win straight up against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Polymarket.

With Nick Martinez on the bump, you might think L.A. has the edge. But dig a little deeper, and you'll see that's not necessarily the case on Monday, June 15.

MLB expert picks for today

PickOdds
Jon Metler Jon Metler: TB ML+156
Neil Parker Neil Parker: CIN ML-133
Joe Osborne Joe Osborne: LAA ML+117

Prices courtesy of Polymarket.

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    Jon Metler's expert pick: Rays moneyline

    Price: 39¢ (+156) at Polymarket

    The Tampa Bay Rays are trading at 39 cents on the moneyline, and that's simply too big a number. I make them closer to 45-cent underdogs in this matchup.

    At first glance, Nick Martinez appears to be in a difficult spot against a Los Angeles Dodgers lineup loaded with left-handed hitters. However, his elite circle changeup is built to combat left-handed bats and negate a significant on-paper platoon advantage. 

    The pitch currently carries a +9 run value and features a sharp fade down and away from lefties, making it difficult for hitters to pull the ball with authority. That movement helps suppress power, generate weak contact, and neutralize one of the Dodgers' biggest strengths.

    Because Martinez has the perfect weapon to attack this type of lineup, I believe this matchup is much closer than the market suggests, making the Rays a valuable underdog at the current price.

    • Time: 10:10 p.m. ET
    • How to watch: ESPN

    Neil Parker's expert pick: Reds moneyline

    Price: 57¢ (-133) at Polymarket

    There’s a sizable pitching edge for the Cincinnati Reds tonight, with Chase Burns establishing himself as an elite righty and sporting a tidy 2.95 xERA and 3.21 xFIP across 13 starts.

    He’s held opposing hitters to the fifth-lowest squared-up swing rate among qualified starting pitchers, and the New York Mets rank 28th in wOBA against righties for the season.

    Of course, New York is sending Tobias Myers to the bump for just his third start of the year after primarily working as a reliever, so the Mets will rely on a bullpen that’s been tasked with 58 1/3 innings over the past six days.

    • Time: 7:10 p.m. ET
    • How to watch: SNY, Reds.TV

    Joe Osborne's expert pick: Angels moneyline

    Price: 46¢ (+117) at Polymarket

    The Los Angeles Angels look like a rare live road underdog in this matchup.

    Walbert Urena has been outstanding to begin his career, allowing one earned run or fewer in six of his last eight starts since the beginning of May. That sets up well against an Arizona Diamondbacks lineup that has struggled versus right-handed pitching lately, ranking near the bottom of the league in OPS over the last two weeks.

    The Angels are in much better form offensively and should capitalize against Ryne Nelson, who owns a 5.19 ERA and is coming off a pathetic seven-earned-run outing against Miami.

    • Time: 9:40 p.m. ET
    • How to watch: ABTV, Diamondbacks.TV

    More MLB best bets for today

    PickOdds
    Tigers moneyline+110
    Read analysis in our Tigers vs. Astros predictions
    Cubs -1.5-105
    Read analysis in our Rockies vs. Cubs predictions
    Nationals moneyline-130
    Read analysis in our Royals vs. Nationals predictions

    Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
    Not intended for use in MA.
    Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

    This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

    Chicago Bulls instant grade for Tiago Splitter hire as franchise’s next head coach

    PHOENIX, ARIZONA - APRIL 14: Interim head coach Tiago Splitter of the Portland Trail Blazers reacts during the first half of an NBA play-in tournament game against the Phoenix Suns at Mortgage Matchup Center on April 14, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. 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. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

    The Chicago Bulls are in a new era, and Tiago Splitter will be leading it as the franchise’s next head coach. The Bulls hired Splitter on Monday after an impressive stint as the Portland Trail Blazers’ interim head coach this past season, where he led the team to its first playoff berth in five years after taking over for Chauncey Billups following his arrest as part of a sprawling FBI probe into illegal gambling. Splitter did well under tough circumstances, and now he’s earned a new job.

    Splitter is 41 years old. As a player, he was a member of the San Antonio Spurs’ 2014 championship team, and he moved directly into coaching after retiring in 2018. Splitter was an assistant for the Brooklyn Nets from 2019-2023, then spent a season with the Houston Rockets, then became head coach at Paris Basketball, where he led his team to a French Cup championship and qualified for the EuroLeague playoffs. Splitter left Paris Basketball after one season to take a job on Billups’ staff in Portland, and he was unexpectedly thrust into the head coaching seat in the second game of the season after Billups’ arrest. He’s the second tallest head coach in NBA history at 6’11.

    Why didn’t the Blazers retain Splitter as head coach? New owner Tom Dundon reportedly wanted to cut costs on his next head coach well below league standards. Dundon’s cheapness turned into an opportunity for the Bulls.

    The Blazers had not make the playoffs since 2021, but Splitter helped get them back there despite not having his starting point guard Scoot Henderson for much of the season due to injury. Deni Avdija made an All-Star leap under Splitter as he took on a more heliocentric role as an offensive creator by spamming pick-and-rolls as the handler. The Blazers closed the regular season with a 32-20 record over their final 51 games, and posted a top-10 defense over that time. Portland earned its way into the playoffs through the play-in tournament, and they were knocked out by the San Antonio Spurs in five games in the first-round of the playoffs.

    Splitter is taking over a Bulls organization in flux. Chicago fired Arturas Karnisovas and replaced him with former Atlanta Hawks exec Bryson Graham earlier this offseason. Hiring Splitter is Graham’s first big decision, and there are more to come. The Bulls pick at No. 4, No. 15, No. 38, and No. 56 in next week’s 2026 NBA Draft, and the Bulls are projected to have the most cap space in the NBA with just shy of $60 million available.

    It will be fascinating to see how Graham puts his stamp on the roster. Chicago is projected to take Caleb Wilson at No. 4 in our latest 2026 NBA mock draft. Wilson would be a best player available selection, but he does have some overlap with the existing roster. Chicago’s lottery picks the last two years, Matas Buzelis and Noa Essengue, both have similar size and skill sets to Wilson. The team enters the offseason needing a rim protecting center, and a lot of shooting. There’s two solid point guards already on the roster in Josh Giddey and Tre Jones, which will be a welcomed sight for Splitter after he had terrible ball handling in Portland.

    It feels safe to project Buzelis at the three, and very likely Wilson at the four in next year’s lineup. Jalen Smith had a terrific year as a hybrid big man, and could be the team’s starting stretch five in 2026-27. Will Graham trade Giddey or Jones? What will he do with his cap space? Graham and Splitter will now work to create a shared vision to shape the next iteration of the Bulls.

    Chicago hired Splitter over Timberwolves assistant Micah Nori, Hawks assistant Ryan Schmidt, and incumbant Wes Unseld Jr. as the other finalists for the job. Under Splitter, the Blazers finished No. 20 in offensive efficiency and No. 14 in defensive efficiency. Portland chucked threes without good shooters, finishing third in three-point rate despite being No. 28 in three-point percentage. The Blazers turned the ball over more than any team in the league, but that was due to talent more than scheme. Portland was an elite offensive rebounding team (No. 2 in o-board percentage), and it finished No. 7 in turnover percentage defensively.

    I thought Portland needed to crank up the pace and aggression defensively given their lifeless halfcourt offense. The Blazers ended 21st in seconds per possession after a defensive rebound, and 23rd after a turnover. Granted, Portland’s ball handling was so bad that it’s possible Splitter just didn’t trust his team to push it on the break.

    The Blazers ranked No. 29 in the halfcourt offense points per play. Is that because of talent or scheme? Splitter put the ball in Avdija’s hands and let him be a battering ram going to the rim. The offense was bland, but they didn’t really have the creators to do much more. Splitter also ranked dead last in ATOs — after timeout plays — according to Steph Noh.

    Will Splitter try to make Giddey or Buzelis his new Avdija? Will Giddey be traded? How will he use Wilson, assuming he’s the pick at No. 4, early in his career? There are so many questions for the Bulls going forward that it’s hard to make any big takeaways from this hire yet. Chicago would be wise to prioritize the future over the present, and put a heavy emphasis on development of its young pieces, rather than relying on veterans who can immediately help them win games. Graham talked about taking the long-view in his opening press conference, but the NBA’s new lottery changes take tanking off the table for all teams.

    I thought Portland’s offense was dull under Splitter, but not having your point guard will do that to a team. He’s a young head coach, and coaches can improve over time like players. Splitter definitely did a nice job in guiding the team to the playoffs under tough circumstances. Given the other finalists, this seems like a totally acceptable hire. The Bulls just have a lot more work to do.

    Bulls grade for Tiago Splitter hire: B

    MLB Player Props & Best Bets for Today, June 15

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    Looking to start the week with a winner?

    Tonight's MLB player props feature a pair of hitters in favorable matchups and one of baseball's premier strikeout artists at plus money.

    From a high-upside K prop to two bats poised to make an impact, here are my favorite MLB picks for Monday, June 15.

    Best MLB player props today

    Player PickOdds
    Mets Zack WheelerOver 6.5 Strikeouts+109
    Mets Juan SotoOver 1.5 Hits, Runs, RBI-115
    Mets Junior CamineroOver 1.5 Total Bases-113

    Zack Wheeler Over 6.5 Strikeouts (+109)

    It has been a minute since a strikeout prop has grabbed my attention enough to back it, but Philadelphia Phillies right-hander Zack Wheeler finds himself in a great spot to shove against a struggling Miami Marlins lineup that punched out 10 times on Sunday. Some may view this as a clear bounce back spot for Miami, but I see plenty of reasons to expect another swing-happy performance.

    For starters, five Marlins hitters own a strikeout rate of at least 27.9% on the road this season, with four of those bats sitting north of 30.6%. Wheeler's trends are just as enticing. According to Batters-Box, he has recorded 7+ strikeouts in 68.75% of his 32 elite-rated matchups. When carrying an elite strikeout rating, that number jumps to 76% across a 25-game sample.

    At home this season, Wheeler owns a 26.6% strikeout rate and a 36.1% chase rate outside the zone. At plus money, this is worth a play. I would take it down to even money, but do not pay juice for it.

    • Time: 6:40 p.m. ET
    • Where to watch: NBCSP, MIAM

    Juan Soto Over 1.5 Hits, Runs, RBI (-115)

    An extremely tough price to pass up for one of the most dangerous bats in baseball, a hitter who is always on base, always a threat to score, and always a threat to collect a hit. New York Mets star Juan Soto to go over 1.5 HRR at -115 is a steal in my opinion.

    Especially when he clears this prop nearly 60% of the time when sporting an elite rating. That comes across a 220 elite rating sample size. Soto was in a bit of a slump over the last two weeks, but has since turned it around. In his last 30 plate appearances against right-handed pitching, he owns an .868 OPS with a 23.3% walk rate, 59% hard contact, and a 9.1% barrel rate. Not to mention, he has a 99.3% arsenal coverage against Cincinnati Reds starter Chase Burns.

    Burns has been allowing a ton of elevation to left-handed hitters this season. At home, those hitters have been elevating the ball nearly 70% of the time. Over his last 60 lefties faced, he has allowed a 12.9% barrel rate and a 70.9% elevation rate, while also carrying a .347 xBA and .679 xSLG against.

    Burns does not walk a lot of lefties, but he also is not facing Soto-level hitters every day. I prefer the built-in safety of the HRR prop over the bases market here. Comfortable taking this up to -130.

    • Time: 7:10 p.m. ET
    • Where to watch: CINR, SNY

    Junior Caminero Over 1.5 Total Bases (-113)

    The very first prop I locked in today was for Tampa Bay Rays slugger Junior Caminero to go over 1.5 total bases, as he draws Los Angeles Dodgers left hander Eric Lauer, who enters today with one of the worst pitcher ratings on the slate. He also grades poorly in matchup ISO, strikeout rate, and ground ball rate.

    Lauer has been struggling against right handed hitters at home this season, allowing a 71% elevation rate. Overall, right handed bats have posted a .504 xSLG and .349 xwOBA against him, while also producing a 12% barrel rate against the southpaw. In addition to that, 54% of Lauer's pitch mix is valued below league average, per FanGraphs. 

    Caminero has been handling left handed pitching well this season, hitting .271 with a .457 SLG and .871 OPS. Over his last 30 plate appearances, he is hitting .304 with a .902 OPS, while generating nearly 60% hard contact and a 12% barrel rate in that span.

    I am not the biggest fan of paying juice for bases props, but I would take this down to minus 120 at the most.

    • Time: 10:10 p.m. ET
    • Where to watch: ESPN
    Colby Marchio's 2026 Transparency Record
    • Prop picks: 218-376-35, +9.10 units

    Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
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    Tigers vs. Astros prediction: Odds, recent stats, trends, and best bets for June 15

    The Tigers (29-42) open a three-game set in Houston against the Astros (33-40) tonight with both clubs sitting in fourth place and trying to stay at least within eyeshot of the leads in their respective division.

     

    The Tigers remain 9.5 games behind AL Central-leading Chicago. They lost two of three at Cleveland over the weekend but have gone 6-4 in their last ten games to keep hope alive. The Astros are 5-5 in their last ten including taking two of three at Kansas City over the weekend. They are four games back of Seattle in the AL West.

     

    Houston’s strength has been their hitting, but their pitching has been bad on its best days. Detroit’s pitching has been solid, but their offense has been less than reliable. The good news is each is getting the ace of their respective staff back in the near future as both Hunter Brown and Tarik Skubal are finishing rehab assignments.

     

    Tonight, the Tigers send Troy Melton (3-0, 2.81 ERA) to the bump against Houston’s Kai-Wei Teng (3-5, 3.71 ERA). Whereas Melton has been at times dominant for the Tigers, Teng has been steady at best.

     

    The hottest bats for each team include Gleyber Torres who is 14-for-40 over his last 10 games for the Tigers and Houston’s Triple Crown threat, Yordan Alvarez (.326, 24 HR, and 54 RBI).

     

    Lets dive into tonight’s matchup and find a sweat or two.

     

    We’ve got all the info and analysis you need to know ahead of the game, including the latest info on the how to catch first pitch, odds, recent team performance, player stats, and of course, our predictions, picks & best bets for the game from our modeling tools and staff of experts.

     

    Follow Rotoworld Player News for the latest fantasy and betting player news and analysis all season long.

    Game Details and How to Watch: Tigers vs. Astros

    • Date: Monday, June 15, 2026
    • Time: 8:10PM EST
    • Site: Daikin Park
    • City: Houston, TX
    • Network/Streaming: MLB.TV, Tigers.TV, SCHN

     

    Never miss a second of the action and stay up-to-date with all the latest team stats and player news. Check out our day-by-day MLB schedule page, along with detailed matchup pages that update live in-game with every out.

    The Latest Odds: Tigers vs. Astros

    The latest odds as of Monday courtesy of DraftKings:

    • Moneyline: Detroit Tigers (+102), Houston Astros (-123)
    • Spread: Tigers +1.5 (-198), Astros -1.5 (+162)
    • Total: 9.0 runs

    Probable Starting Pitchers – Tigers vs. Astros for June 15

    • Tigers: Troy Melton
      Season Totals: 25.2 IP, 3-0, 2.81 ERA, 1.01 WHIP, 14K, 6 BB
    • Astros: Kai-Wei Teng
      Season Totals: 51.0 IP, 3-5, 3.71 ERA, 1.27 WHIP, 49K, 24 BB

    Who’s Hot? Who’s Not! Tigers vs. Astros

    • Yordan Alvarez has hit safely in 5 straight games (10-20)
    • Christian Walker has hit safely in 4 straight games (4-18)
    • Isaac Paredes is 0-12 over his last 4 games
    • Riley Greene is 3-24 over his last 7 games
    • Kevin McGonigle is 2-19 over his last 5 games

    Rotoworld still has you covered with all the latest MLB player news for all 30 teams. Check out the feed page right here on NBC Sports for headlines, injuries and transactions where you can filter by league, team, positions and news type!

     

    Top Betting Trends & Insights: Tigers vs. Astros

    • The Tigers are 34-37 on the Run Line this season
    • The Astros are 34-39 on the Run Line this season
    • The OVER has cashed 32 times in Detroit’s 71 games this season (32-35-4)
    • The OVER has cashed 39 times in Houston’s 73 games this season (39-31-3)

    Expert picks & predictions: Tigers vs. Astros

    Rotoworld Bet Best Bet

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    Our model calculates projections around each moneyline, spread and over/under bet for every game on the MLB calendar based on data points like past performance, player matchups, ballpark information and weather forecasts.

    Once the model is finished running, we put its projection next to the latest betting lines for the game to arrive at a relative confidence level for each wager.

    Here are the best bets our model is projecting for tonight’s game between the Tigers and the Astros:

    • Moneyline: Rotoworld Bet is recommending a play on the Astros on the Moneyline.
    • Spread: Rotoworld Bet is staying away from a play on the Run Line.
    • Total: Rotoworld Bet is leaning towards a play on the Game Total OVER 9.0

     

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    This summer should include the next Cincinnati Reds sell-off

    CINCINNATI, OHIO - MARCH 31: Cincinnati Reds mascot, Mr. Redlegs, on the field prior to a game against the Texas Rangers at Great American Ball Park on March 31, 2025 in Cincinnati, Ohio. (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images) | Getty Images

    It’s going to be 97 degrees where I live on Wednesday. The dog days of summer are officially here.

    In the world of baseball, transaction season heats up with the weather. Such is the nature of establishing a trade deadline around the end of July – this season it’s on August 3rd – as teams become forced to classify the first 100 or so games of their season into one of two distinct evaluations.

    Is this team good enough to invest in further? Should we give them the best chances to win as many games as possible this year?

    Or, is this team the Cincinnati Reds?

    Joking aside, that’s not completely true. While teams get lumped into the buyers or sellers categories as the trade deadline approaches, the Reds often don’t even do enough to qualify for either. And just last summer, they pulled off the remarkable feat of being a buyer at the deadline for a player who actively made them so bad in 2026 that it’s been a net negative investment.

    This is a different Reds club than last year, obviously. This time around, their April magic has been replaced by hell from the injury gods, their record in close games having now been turned on its head by a threadbare bullpen. Across the entire sport’s highest level, only the Colorado Rockies have a worse run differential than these Reds, who once again reside in the cellar of the National League Central division.

    So, it’s unsurprising that when asked at the end of last week whether or not this club should be a buyer, or a seller as trade season heats up this summer, roughly 3 out of 5 of you responded that they needed to start selling off players.

    Digging themselves out of this hole is going to be difficult when Hunter Greene is still several weeks away. It’ll be difficult without half their bullpen, without Elly De La Cruz for another week or so.

    The problem is, what Cincinnati has on the fringes of its long-term plan is a handful of players who haven’t exactly stacked up a ton of value on the trade market.

    Eugenio Suarez is the biggest name of the bunch, but he’s having the single worst season of his career and will turn 35 years old this summer. The veterans signed to anchor the bullpen – Emilio Pagan, Pierce Johnson, Caleb Ferguson – are either injured or have been already this year, limiting the significance of any return if they are moved. Nate Lowe has hit well for most of the year, but there’s a reason why his market this offseason was so poor the Reds got him on a minor league deal in the first place. And pending free agent Brady Singer has the fourth lowest fWAR of the 130 pitchers who have thrown at least 50 IP so far this season.

    So, selling at the fringes here doesn’t even do much to improve the future, aside from saving a few million bucks that the owners likely wouldn’t pour back into the team 100% anyway. The question I should probably have asked – and likely will again soon – is whether there are pieces that still have more team control than that group who don’t look like they fit the future of this franchise’s next window to compete who should be marketed this summer. That’s the kind of move that could bring back something of significance, a move that could shake the foundation of a franchise that’s found a way to stumble through this rebuild almost as badly as it stumbled through the last two.

    Regardless, it sure looks like this club has no business being a buyer this summer. And if that’s the case, they might as well end up sellers.

    Rafael Devers won’t get much better than this

    Jun 14, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; San Francisco Giants designated hitter Rafael Devers (16) reacts after flying out against the Chicago Cubs during the second inning at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: Robert Edwards-Imagn Images | Robert Edwards-Imagn Images

    Oh well. You win some, you lose some. Or, in the Giants’ case, you mostly lose. It has been a year since the Giants traded for Rafael Devers, and like most of their big swings since allowing Buster Posey to take the reins of the front office, the team has come up empty and looked bad in the attempt. It turns out that the critics of the deal were spot on. Devers’ contract was underwater from the moment the Red Sox signed him to it and the collapse of his skillset came even faster than the projection. Do the Giants inspire failure or does everything they touch turn to garbage by sheer coincidence? In any case, there’s nothing that can be done to improve Devers’ hitting.

    He’s hitting .235/.293/.413 on the season while playing every game. He has 9 homers and is tied for the lead league in doubles with 21; so, you know, it’s not all bad. But the underlying metrics affirm what we’ve seen throughout the year: a hitter who’s a mess at the plate. At the end of May, I looked at Matt Chapman’s hitting metrics and came away with the thought that he’s not in an age-related decline but instead a focus or talent disruption. I see a vaguely similar situation for Devers, too.

    He still hits the ball hard. That counts for something. His 49.5% Hard Hit rate is 88th percentile and average exit velocity of 91.9 mph is 87th. His 9.5% Barrel rate is the only other category where he measures as above average (61st percentile); but, these are all still big declines from last year, and especially his heyday of 2021-2024 (.279/.354/.519 — 126 HR 384 RBI — +17.0 fWAR).

    He’s also whiffing on pitches at the same rate over the past several years. It’s 31.6% this year (10th percentile), but compare that back to 2021:

    2021: 27.7% (29th)
    2022: 28.2% (25th)
    2023: 26.1% (45th)
    2024: 30.9% (14th)
    2025: 31.6% (10th)
    2026: 30.8% (17th)

    The big line of demarcation in his career was going from 2023 to 2024 when the big problem cited for why the contract was already underwater first asserted itself: that’s his contact rate in the strike zone. From 21-23 it was 79.2% on average. In 2024, it dropped to 74.9% and last year it fell to 73.9%. This year, it’s at 74.2%. The league average in this stat is between 76-77% every year. Just to give you some more context, going back to 2021, here are the 10 worst zone contact rate guys who got enough at bats to qualify for the batter leaderboards:

    10. Luke Raley, 76.8%
    9. Patrick Wisdom, 76.8%
    8. Zack Gelof, 76.0%
    7. Chris Taylor, 75.1%
    6. Christopher Morel, 74.7%
    5. J.D. Davis, 74.3%
    4. Gabriel Arias, 74.0%
    3. Matt Wallner, 73.2%
    2. Jose Siri, 72.6%
    1. Joey Gallo, 72.3%

    Because of his outstanding 21-23, Devers winds up ranking just the 13th-lowest; however, if we adjust the years to 2024-present, Devers experiences a dramatic reranking.

    10. Kyle Schwarber, 80.3%
    9. Ryan McMahon, 80.3%
    8. Adolis Garcia, 80.2%
    7. Teoscar Hernanez, 79.9%
    6. Mark Vientos, 79.9%
    5. Jazz Chisholm, 79.1%
    4. Randy Arozarena, 78.4%
    3. Oneil Cruz, 77.9%
    2. Nolan Gorman, 76.6%
    1. Rafael Devers, 74.6%

    All this to say that Devers’ continued inability to make consistent contact in the strike zone is now crashing into his other declined skill: pitch recognition. From 21-23 he had a called strike percentage of 10.7%. In 2024 it rose to 12.3% and last year it was 13.2%. This year, it’s 15%. Now, this rate has maybe a lot to do with ABS. Called balls have been turned to strikes against Rafael Devers 7 out of 9 times. He’s won just 1 challenge out of 6.

    But the increased called strike rate parallels with a trend of him simply swinging less. Prior to 2024, he was swinging at around 53.5% of pitches thrown. That rate has dropped to 50% the past few seasons. His 30.3% strikeout rate is the highest of his career by far — 22% for his career, 25.5% for 2024-2025. So, what’s happening? He’s swinging less often but getting more called strikes (ABS is a partial culprit, of course) and still swinging and missing a lot when he does pull the trigger.

    That bat speed doesn’t look good.

    Statcast only tracks bat speed back to 2023, but take a look at this decline:

    2023: 73.4 mph (68th percentile)
    2024: 72.5 mph (61st)
    2025: 71.6 mph (42nd)
    2026: 71.7 mph (44th)

    This is getting down to around LaMonte Wade Jr.’s at the start of last season, when he looked so bad I wondered if it was a portent of doom (it was!). LWJ’s wound up falling all the way down to 70 mph last year, but in a very small sample with the Astros this season (13 PA, where he has a 1.135 OPS) it’s up to 73.2 mph.

    So, it’s not impossible that Devers makes some adjustments and optimizes his skills, some of which are working for him this season. But it’s hard to envision him making that turnaround… at least this season.

    Luis Arraez was a free agent who set out to prove himself as a second baseman. Yes, Ron Washington has been there to give him some very relevant support, but it started with his tenacity. Jung Hoo Lee’s hitting seems to have improved because he’s been studying Luis Arraez. So, whatever turnaround to his career that might happen will have to come from Rafael Devers himself. Hitting coaches rarely get credit for fixing hitters and the Giants’ current coaching staff seems a lot more hands off or outright bad as any in recent memory.

    But before you go thinking that I’m calling Devers’s character into question, let me put it this way: I think he’s taken to first base just fine, and that doesn’t happen if he doesn’t put in the work. When I watch him play the field, I see a goofy guy with a baseball-only body doing his best to field… and he’s okay. Definitely closer to terrible than great, but I wouldn’t characterize the play as outright bad. He’s also playing every day, which I think is a credit to him for having a degree of focus that would keep him interested in doing exactly that.

    So, the focus is there, which only leaves buy in. Does he think he needs to make some changes to his swing or approach?

    The Giants probably don’t feel like they know him well enough to have that conversation either. The coaching staff turnover being part of that and the green-ness of the current staff the other part. But also, as much as we’d like to think that the data revolution brought Apple Store-level service to every player, where a quant with an iPad just scoots up next to a player and is able to help them with a few graphics and optimized phrasing, I think it still comes down to the player seeking out what they need and doing the important work of actually incorporating changes into their approach. That’s why the headline reads as it does. Athletes aren’t often able to remake themselves on the fly in part because it’s hard to accept that the usual way of doing things has stopped working.

    So, I guess in a way, this post is a lot like that Matt Chapman post. Unlike Chapman, though, Devers is definitely experiencing a physical decline of some sort (he’s not hitting the ball as hard), but the decline from a good player to a practically useless one appears to be entirely self-engineered. It’s unlikely that a 29-year old goes out like this based on aging alone. But, as Buster Posey is fond of saying, baseball is hard.

    The situation isn’t hopeless, especially since Devers wound up having a good year after a rough time following the trade last year. It’s just that nothing the Giants have done this year and most of the last decade should give anyone hope for a better future.

    Mets place Christian Scott on IL with right hip impingement

    The Mets are dealing with yet another injury, with right-hander Christian Scott hitting the IL.

    The club announced that Scott has been placed on the 15-day IL, retroactive to June 12, with right hip impingement. Right-handers Tobias Myers and Jonathan Pintaro have been called up, and righty releiver Daniel Duarte has been optioned to Triple-A Syracuse.

    Additionally, the Mets claimed infielder Zack Short off waivers from the Detroit Tigers and transferred infielder Jorge Polanco to the 60-day IL.

    Scott pitched 4.2 innings against the St. Louis Cardinals on Thursday in his most recent outing. 

    Overall, Scott has made nine starts this season, pitching to a 3.10 ERA over 40.2 innings. 

    The Mets already have Kodai Senga on the IL, and with Sean Manaea and David Peterson pitching out of hybrid starter/bulk reliever roles, Scott, Freddy Peralta, and Nolan McLean were the only three definitive starters. 

    While Scott’s next start likely would have fallen on Tuesday, the Mets have left things vague with their rotation plans for the upcoming series in Cincinnati. 

    Myers will start on Monday night, but the team did not announce starters for the following two games.

    There would seem to be a strong possibility that Jonah Tong will eventually get recalled to take Scott’s place in the rotation. Tong made three appearances for the Mets earlier this season, posting a 3.60 ERA. Since being optioned back to Triple-A, Tong has allowed eight earned runs in 9.0 innings over two starts.

    Left-hander Zach Thornton is also on the 40-man roster, making him a possibility as well. 

    Meanwhile, moving Polanco to the 60-day IL doesn't seem to be any reason for concern, as he hasn't played since April 14, making this more of a paper move than anything else. 

    The 31-year-old Short played 10 games with Mets in 2024 and spent this year's spring training with the Yankees. He played 23 games with the Tigers this season, hitting .167.

    Rockies hit jackpot with 23 runs in steamy Vegas as Athletics finish wild stretch in future home

    LAS VEGAS — All those home games at hitter-friendly Coors Field, and the Colorado Rockies never rang up the scoreboard the way they did in steamy Las Vegas.

    If this is what big league baseball looks like in Sin City, pitchers might run for cover in a couple of years under every craps table in town.

    Willi Castro had seven RBIs, Hunter Goodman got a career-high five hits and the Rockies set a franchise record for runs with a 23-9 victory over the Athletics on a 101-degree afternoon at Las Vegas Ballpark.

    “You’ve just got to make contact and the ball’s gonna go,” Goodman said.

    Castro and Goodman each hit two of Colorado’s six homers. Troy Johnston and TJ Rumfield also went deep for the last-place Rockies (27-45), who ended a three-game losing streak.

    Scheduled to move to Las Vegas full time in 2028, the A’s got a taste of the city this week with a six-game homestand against Milwaukee and Colorado at the site of their top minor league affiliate.

    The teams involved combined to score 102 runs in a stretch that began with a wild slugfest when the Brewers outlasted the Athletics 15-14 in a 12-inning game that featured 11 homers and 34 hits.

    Colorado’s lineup provided an exclamation point, but Goodman is going to reserve judgment about major league baseball in Vegas.

    Because while the Triple-A Las Vegas Aviators of the Pacific Coast League play outdoors, the A’s are gearing up to move into a new $2 billion stadium under construction on The Strip. That building will be enclosed.

    “I’ll be curious to see how it plays,” Goodman said. “I think time will tell. With it being indoors, I don’t know if it will play the same or not. I guess we’ll just have to wait and see.”

    Rockies manager Warren Schaeffer has participated in plenty of games similar to the series finale, especially at Triple-A Albuquerque.

    “This is a very, very tough environment to play baseball,” he said. “As you saw, obviously the ball flies in the thin air, the heat and the sun. It’s just a hard place to play.”

    Castro finished with four hits, including a grand slam off Scott Barlow in the eighth inning. Goodman drove in four runs and Kyle Karros also had four hits as the Rockies piled up 24 in all — one shy of the team mark established against Houston on Sept. 25, 2011.

    Max Muncy and Tyler Soderstrom homered for the A’s (35-36), who had won four straight. Lawrence Butler got three hits and Zack Gelof extended his hitting streak to 18 games.

    Tomoyuki Sugano (7-4) got the win despite giving up eight runs and nine hits in five innings. Eiberson Castellano tossed three scoreless innings to earn a save in his major league debut.

    Athletics starter Jeffrey Springs (3-7) allowed eight runs — six earned — and seven hits in four innings.

    Colorado scored six times in the fifth to build a 14-6 lead. Goodman homered to begin an outburst capped by Tyler Freeman’s run-scoring triple.

    A’s right fielder Carlos Cortes moved to the mound in the eighth and was their most effective pitcher, yielding one run and three hits in the final 1 2/3 innings.

    The Athletics went 4-2 on their Las Vegas homestand, winning a pair of three-game series. They return to their regular temporary home in West Sacramento, California, for a series against the Pittsburgh Pirates.

    Knicks’ magical NBA title run a once-in-a-lifetime event for New York fans

    In order to understand the street-shaking eruption and unified joy that enveloped New York when the Knicks won the NBA title on Saturday night, you have to consider everything that came before it. 

    Even though it became clear over the last several seasons that the Knicks winning it all for the first time since 1973 was at least a possibility, it actually happening has altered the brain chemistry of the city. 

    Despite the belief that it could happen, there were still looks of disbelief on many people's faces when it actually did.

    Now let's rewind for a bit to remember how the Knicks got here...

    There was triumph (twice) in the 1970s, some modest playoff success in the early 1980s, the arrival of Patrick Ewing that eventually made the Knicks a title contender again in the 1990s, and then two decades of near-irrelevance, with the only positive blip during that time being the Carmelo Anthony years that maxed out in the Eastern Conference Semifinals in 2013.

    As someone who grew up on the 90s Knicks, my early fandom was pockmarked by the near misses of a tough, resilient team, and the fact that Michael Jordan and the Bulls were almost always standing in the way.

    There was 1993-94, when the Knicks took a 3-2 NBA Finals lead to Houston but couldn't stop Hakeem Olajuwon (who got his hand on John Starks' potential title-winning shot at the end of Game 6).

    There were Reggie Miller's eight points at the end of Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Semifinals against the Pacers, and New York's loss in Game 7 of that series when Ewing's finger roll just wouldn't go down.

    I thought the 1996-97 Knicks would've had a real chance to take down Jordan's Bulls in the Eastern Conference Finals, but they didn't get there because their roster was decimated by suspensions after a fight P.J. Brown of the Heat started at the end of Game 5 in the semifinals. 

    The 1998-99 run to the Finals was incredible, but the Knicks never really stood a chance going up against the Spurs' Tim Duncan and David Robinson without the injured Ewing.

    From the point the Knicks lost the title in 1999 until their recent run of serious contention in 2022-23, New York bringing a title back to the Garden felt like a pipe dream.

    Then Jalen Brunson arrived and changed everything.

    Jun 10, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) reacts in the fourth quarter against the San Antonio Spurs during game four of the 2026 NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden.
    Jun 10, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks guard Jalen Brunson (11) reacts in the fourth quarter against the San Antonio Spurs during game four of the 2026 NBA Finals at Madison Square Garden. / Brad Penner - Imagn Images

    And when it started to feel possible that the Knicks had something special brewing, Brunson sacrificed $113 million dollars in order to help Leon Rose keep building around him.

    As the Brunson Knicks started to ascend, in came Josh Hart and OG Anunoby and Karl-Anthony Towns and Mikal Bridges. By the end of this regular season, with their core surrounded by a tremendous supporting cast and led by head coach Mike Brown, it felt like it could finally be the Knicks' time.

    But at the start of the playoffs, even after the Knicks proved over the last several seasons that they had what it took to be a serious contender, they were still doubted.

    The Celtics and Cavaliers had better NBA title odds than New York when the playoffs began, with it feeling especially absurd that Cleveland's odds were better.

    After the Knicks dispatched the Hawks in the first round, it was "the 76ers aren't Atlanta, how will the Knicks stop Tyrese Maxey?"

    After the Knicks swept the Sixers, it was "the Cavaliers are a different animal."

    After the Knicks steamrolled the Cavs, it was "the Eastern Conference was weak -- the Western Conference Finals are the real NBA Finals."

    But this Knicks team was deep, united, and super talented. Most of all, they were selfless and impossible to keep down. They had proven by the point they reached the Finals against the Spurs (and months before, really, as I wrote after covering their close loss to the Thunder on March 5) that they could beat anyone. 

    And they did.

    Jun 13, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) celebrates with his teammates after the Knicks defeat the San Antonio Spurs during game five of the 2026 NBA Finals at Frost Bank Center.
    Jun 13, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) celebrates with his teammates after the Knicks defeat the San Antonio Spurs during game five of the 2026 NBA Finals at Frost Bank Center. / Geoff Burke-Imagn Images

    During the Finals against the Spurs, anywhere you went in the city became a watch party. 

    It wasn't just the overflowing bars. It was the gas station/burger joint showing the game as hundreds of people gathered in the street. It was the game being projected onto the side of a building in the West Village as throngs filled the streets below.

    The partying, jubilation, and incredible scenes we've witnessed in every neighborhood in the city have been a sight to behold. But it's the togetherness and unity of the people celebrating that has been the most special aspect of all of this.

    It's the strangers hugging one another. Ecstatic fans helping the sanitation workers do their job after the clincher. People from all walks of life dancing with each other in an incredible spectacle of spontaneous community in the streets.

    In a way, it's like the city is holding up a mirror to this Knicks team and vice versa. There is a certain attitude and swagger about New York City, it's true. But there's also togetherness. And it's been on display these last few weeks as millions have rallied around a team like never before.

    That's because the Knicks are the only team that can truly unite the whole city.

    The Mets and Yankees can't, because the fan allegiances are split. The same goes for the Jets and Giants. As far as the Rangers, their fans greatly outnumber Islanders supporters, but hockey is the clear fourth sport in the city.

    The Knicks? They are New York City.

    This moment? Once in a lifetime.

    The Canyon of Heroes awaits.