Hawks play the Knicks on 4-game win streak

New York Knicks (50-28, third in the Eastern Conference) vs. Atlanta Hawks (45-33, fifth in the Eastern Conference)

Atlanta; Monday, 7 p.m. EDT

BOTTOM LINE: Atlanta will look to keep its four-game win streak going when the Hawks take on New York.

The Hawks are 26-22 in conference play. Atlanta ranks second in the Eastern Conference with 18.4 fast break points per game led by Jalen Johnson averaging 4.1.

The Knicks are 32-16 in Eastern Conference play. New York has an 8-4 record in games decided by less than 4 points.

The Hawks' 14.6 made 3-pointers per game this season are only 0.8 more made shots on average than the 13.8 per game the Knicks allow. The Knicks are shooting 47.6% from the field, 0.4% higher than the 47.2% the Hawks' opponents have shot this season.

The teams play for the third time this season. The Hawks won the last matchup 111-99 on Jan. 3. Onyeka Okongwu scored 23 points to help lead the Hawks to the victory.

TOP PERFORMERS: Nickeil Alexander-Walker is averaging 20.6 points and 3.7 assists for the Hawks. CJ McCollum is averaging 19.7 points over the last 10 games.

Karl-Anthony Towns is averaging 20.1 points and 11.9 rebounds for the Knicks. Jalen Brunson is averaging 18.9 points and 6.4 assists over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Hawks: 8-2, averaging 124.0 points, 42.6 rebounds, 30.2 assists, 10.2 steals and 5.1 blocks per game while shooting 49.6% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 111.5 points per game.

Knicks: 7-3, averaging 116.8 points, 44.3 rebounds, 27.7 assists, 8.2 steals and 3.6 blocks per game while shooting 50.0% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 108.9 points.

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

Knicks: Karl-Anthony Towns: day to day (elbow).

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

Washington plays Brooklyn, looks to end road losing streak

Washington Wizards (17-60, 15th in the Eastern Conference) vs. Brooklyn Nets (18-59, 14th in the Eastern Conference)

New York; Sunday, 3:30 p.m. EDT

BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Nets -3.5; over/under is 230.5

BOTTOM LINE: Washington travels to Brooklyn looking to break its four-game road losing streak.

The Nets are 12-34 in Eastern Conference games. Brooklyn is the worst team in the league with just 39.5 rebounds per game led by Nic Claxton averaging 6.9.

The Wizards are 11-36 against Eastern Conference opponents. Washington is 8-47 in games decided by 10 points or more.

The Nets' 13.2 made 3-pointers per game this season are only 0.4 fewer made shots on average than the 13.6 per game the Wizards allow. The Wizards' 46.2% shooting percentage from the field this season is 3.3 percentage points lower than the Nets have given up to their opponents (49.5%).

The teams square off for the fourth time this season. The Nets won the last meeting 127-113 on Feb. 7, with Michael Porter Jr. scoring 23 points in the win.

TOP PERFORMERS: Noah Clowney is averaging 12.3 points for the Nets. Josh Minott is averaging 9.6 points over the last 10 games.

Bilal Coulibaly is shooting 41.6% and averaging 11.4 points for the Wizards. Jaden Hardy is averaging 3.3 made 3-pointers over the last 10 games.

LAST 10 GAMES: Nets: 1-9, averaging 101.4 points, 35.1 rebounds, 23.2 assists, 10.0 steals and 4.1 blocks per game while shooting 43.6% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 117.0 points per game.

Wizards: 1-9, averaging 115.1 points, 37.4 rebounds, 25.0 assists, 8.1 steals and 4.1 blocks per game while shooting 47.6% from the field. Their opponents have averaged 131.3 points.

INJURIES: Nets: Ziaire Williams: out (foot), Noah Clowney: day to day (ankle), Nic Claxton: out (hand), Danny Wolf: out for season (ankle), Egor Demin: out for season (foot), Day'Ron Sharpe: out for season (thumb), Michael Porter Jr.: out for season (hamstring), Terance Mann: day to day (achilles), Ben Saraf: day to day (back).

Wizards: Anthony Davis: out (finger), Tristan Vukcevic: day to day (knee), Cam Whitmore: out for season (shoulder), Alex Sarr: day to day (toe), Kyshawn George: out for season (elbow), D'Angelo Russell: out (not injury related), Trae Young: out (quad).

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

Takeaways from the Ducks 5-3 Loss to the Flames

For their second game of a back-to-back, the Anaheim Ducks hosted the Calgary Flames on Saturday night at Honda Center.

The Ducks were looking to quickly rebound from a disappointing 6-2 loss to the St. Louis Blues on Friday and return to the win column after going 0-3-1 in their previous four games. Coming into Saturday, the Ducks were tied at the top of the Pacific Division standings with the Edmonton Oilers, but Edmonton held the tiebreaker.

Ducks Recall Tyson Hinds to NHL, Assign Lucas Pettersson, Damian Clara to AHL

Takeaways from the Ducks 6-2 Loss to the Blues

The Flames were coming off two high-scoring affairs against the Colorado Avalanche and Vegas Golden Knights, losing both games by a combined score of 15-5.

The Ducks remained without defensemen Radko Gudas and Pavel Mintyukov, along with forward Cutter Gauthier. Defenseman Tyson Hinds was recalled from the San Diego Gulls of the AHL prior to the game, and he made his NHL debut in this one.

Here’s how the Ducks lined up in this game:

Killorn-Carlsson-Sennecke

Kreider-Granlund-Terry

McTavish-Poehling-Viel

Washe-Gaucher-Moore

LaCombe-Trouba

Hinds-Carlson

Zellweger-Helleson

Ville Husso got the start in the Ducks’ net and saved 15 of just 19 shots. He was opposed by Devin Cooley in the Calgary cage, who stopped 36 of 39.

Games Notes

Offensively, this was one of the Ducks’ better efforts in recent memory and their best on this recent skid. They were maintaining possession and generating above-average looks, at times, shift after shift.

Overaggression, high turnovers, and even bad bounces would spring Calgary’s wingers into the neutral zone on an odd-man rush or breakaway, where all four of their goals against Husso came from.

At 5v5, the Ducks predictably controlled the numbers, winning the shots-on-goal battle 34-18, the shot-attempts battle 72-39, and the expected-goals battle 3.74-2.75.

“Definitely better than last night’s game. The breakaways and the odd-man breaks were preventable by basically knowing that’s what they’re going to do,” Ducks head coach Joel Quenneville said following the game. “With a shot from our end, they take off, and all of a sudden, it’s free. That’s what got them going.

“Our first period wasn’t bad. They get breakaway after breakaway, and that was the big thing. And then we got going in the third with some possession, zone time, and opportunities. Something we’ve been fortunate with all year, it didn’t happen.”

Rush Defense: There was a clear concerted effort from forwards to play more aware and diligent when retreating back into their zone to defend a rush. Mistakes came from eager-to-pinch defensemen failing to read whether they had a high F3, or puck-carrying forwards failing to read whether their far-side defenseman had activated.

If the scouting report suggested Calgary preferred to fly their wingers when pucks were turned over, or battles were created, as Quenneville stated postgame, defensemen would have benefited from playing a bit more conservatively on pucks they were unsure they could get to.

Tyson Hinds: Hinds played a whopping 23:22 TOI in his NHL debut, all at 5v5. From the drop of the puck, he was confident, active, and involved. He refused to allow opponents to remain in dangerous ice uncovered, and he refused to allow seams to open.

He made smart, efficient decisions on breakouts, which led to him and his partner, John Carlson, not having to spend much time deep in the defensive zone. For his play style, one couldn’t ask for a better debut, and he was a true impact player in every zone.

Cycle: Early, the Ducks were determined to funnel pucks toward Cooley from every angle, and when they didn’t make their way there, Anaheim was aggressive with their pinches and were first to several pucks that found their way to the perimeter.

When Cooley was forced to make a save on those perimeter shots, his rebound control was impeccable. Pucks stuck to him, and he didn’t allow any flurries in tight. As the game wore on, the Ducks began controlling play with clever connecting passes, and at times, even forwent potential high-danger shot attempts. The majority of their truly dangerous 5v5 chances came off the rush.

The Ducks will have a couple of days off before their next game on Tuesday, when they’ll host the hungry Nashville Predators, who will be fighting for their playoff lives.

Takeaways from the Ducks 4-3 Loss to the Sharks

Ducks Sign Roger McQueen to ATO, Will Report to AHL with San Diego Gulls

Ducks, Coaching Staff Shortening Leashes for Young Impact Players

Yaxel Lendeborg is best player out there. Toughest, too.

INDIANAPOLIS — Yaxel Lendeborg kept it together, barely, as he limped away from the court in the first half.

He'd worked so hard. Come so far. And now he feared it was all over, his hopes for a national championship ruined by an injured left knee and once-again throbbing ankle.

"As soon as I got in the tent, I started crying," Lendeborg said, his left knee heavily wrapped. "... I definitely felt like I did all this for nothing in the moment. I definitely had to calm down for a little bit, speak with myself, get out of my thoughts.

"The training staff, they were being very nice to me, just being genuine, assuring me that I'm going to be OK."

OK? If Lendeborg isn't the best player in the country, he is for sure the toughest.

As his Michigan teammates got up a couple last shots before halftime ended, Lendeborg returned to the court with a trainer. He walked on his tip toes. He ran the width of the court. He hopped on both feet. And when the second half began, Lendeborg was on the floor with the rest of Michigan's starters.

Despite spraining his left MCL and aggravating the ankle injury he suffered in the Big Ten tournament, Lendeborg would play nine minutes in the second half. He made two 3-pointers in an 80-second span and grabbed two rebounds as Michigan routed fellow No.1 seed Arizona, 91-73.

At one point, Lendeborg had more points (11) than minutes played (10).

"We know what type of guy Yaxel is. If he can play, he's going to play," Elliott Cadeau said. "He told us when he got on the court, he was going to give it his all."

As for the national title game on Monday, April 6, Lendeborg laughed when asked if he would play. So long as he can walk, he said, he's playing.

"(The trainers) say they've got my back," he said. "They're going to make me feel good and we're going to spend a lot of time together tomorrow and Monday before the game."

Michigan has scary depth — of the eight players in its main rotation, all but two had nine or more points against Arizona — but Lendeborg is what transforms the Wolverines from a good team into a great one. He was the Big Ten player of the year and a first-team All-American. He also was on the Big Ten's all-defensive team.

A 6-foot-9 guard, Lendeborg is the basketball equivalent of a Swiss Army knife. He can score around the basket and make 3s from the logo. He can get rebounds and run the offense. He can shut down guards and big men.

He's unselfish, too. If Michigan needs him to score, he'll do it. If one of his teammates is on a heater, he's happy to help make their spotlight.

"Yax is about winning. And from day one, he's always just been one of the guys," Michigan coach Dusty May said. "When you have a first-team All-American potential player of the year that just wants to be one of the dudes, it helps everyone else fall in line and just accept their role."

So, too, when they see Lendeborg playing through the pain to make sure Michigan extended its season for one more game. The game that's been their goal since last summer.

Lendeborg had to take a seat after picking up two fouls in the first 90 seconds of the game. He came back in after sitting for about almost six minutes and quickly made a 3-pointer. But with 8:51 left in the first half, Lendeborg and Motiejus Krivas collided and Lendeborg stepped on Krivas' foot.

The pain, and the fear, was immediate.

"I tried my best to get up as quickly as possible to try to not dwell with the pain, try to walk it off," Lendeborg said. "It didn't get walked off."

Lendeborg made his free throws and then headed back to the locker room. When he returned to the Michigan bench six minutes later, he had a towel on his head and looked downcast. He didn't stay on the bench for long, returning to the locker room to get more treatment.

Though Michigan had things under control without Lendeborg, thanks in large part to Aday Mara's career night, Lendeborg knew he wanted to play in the second half. He owed it to his teammates.

More importantly, he wanted to prove to himself he could play before the title game.

"I told them I was going to stay to the 3-point line and not go into paint," he said, smiling. "I want to get a feel for the rim and try as best as I can because I want to play Monday. So those two shots going in were big-time for me and my confidence."

Lendeborg wasn't at 100% in the second half. Nowhere close. He won't be Monday, either. But nothing is going to stop him from playing.

Not when there's only 40 minutes standing between him and a national title.

"Watching the game back here in the locker room, it's like, man, we can really do this," Lendeborg said. "This is what we talked about all year, and we're really one step away from getting that goal."

Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Yaxel Lendeborg didn't come this far to miss national title game

Oilers Lay Egg on Easter Weekend But Ready If They Meet Vegas Again

It felt inevitable that the Edmonton Oilers' run of solid wins would, sooner or later, come to an end. 

With a prime opportunity to create some separation from the Vegas Golden Knights in the standings—and with the Anaheim Ducks falling to the Calgary Flames—the hope was that the Edmonton Oilers wouldn’t stumble on Easter weekend.

Instead, they laid an egg.

The Golden Knights handed Edmonton a 5–1 loss in a game head coach Kris Knoblauch said was largely lost off the rush.

The Oilers understood the assignment. Trent Frederic asked, "I mean, they could have been, what, a five-point difference? Now it's probably what, one? Is that right?. So, yeah, pretty big."

Despite understanding the stakes, Knoblauch called the team merely adequate. "... the story of the way we lost it was off the rush, giving up chances off the rush, whether it was a bad pinch, forwards not coming back... all four of their goals, and pretty much most of their chances off that," he said. 

"We've Never Wavered:" Oilers Defend Belief In Their Group"We've Never Wavered:" Oilers Defend Belief In Their GroupWe should've believed them.

When asked if losing Leon Draisaitl and Zach Hyman was a game-breaker, he responded that they clearly miss those guys, but added, "I don't think the chances we talked about giving up off the rush, Zach Hyman, Draisaitl, like any player should be able to do the responsibilities that we had tonight."

McDavid and the Oilers lose 5-1 to the Golden Knights Photo by: 

© Perry Nelson Imagn Images
McDavid and the Oilers lose 5-1 to the Golden Knights Photo by:  © Perry Nelson Imagn Images

But, yes, the Oilers could have used two 50-goal scorers.

Edmonton's power play was 0-3, and the Golden Knights got their fourth goal (the dagger) at the end of a missed chance to capitalize on the man advantage. The Oilers couldn't and didn't outscore their mistakes. 

"I think we probably got away from the way that we know how to play," said Jake Walman. "I thought it was a little... we were slow tonight, and that's the result against a team like that." 

Curtis Lazar looked on the bright side when he noted that the winning streak had ended: "But we get a chance to start a new one." 

The Oilers and the Golden Knights may meet again. "I think more importantly, we're going against a team we're probably going to see later down the line," noted Walman.  It won't be in the regular season, but these are two teams that feel destined to see each other in the playoffs. If that happens, the intensity that popped at the end of the game and the 5-1 score shouldn't sit well with the Oilers. 

There weren't many positives coming out of this game. Perhaps the only silver lining is that, should these two teams play each other again this season, this game will serve as a reminder about what happens when you don't bring your A-game. 

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Mookie Betts leaves game with back pain, sent for MRI

WASHINGTON, DC - APRIL 04: shortstop Mookie Betts #50 of the Los Angeles Dodgers rounds third base during a baseball game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park on April 4, 2026 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Ben Hsu/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The Dodgers got their second straight blowout win over the Washington Nationals on Saturday, but will be without shortstop Mookie Betts for a little bit. Betts left the game with lower right back pain in the first inning, and will be sent for an MRI exam to determine the severity.

Betts walked and scored in the top of the first inning on a double by Freddie Freeman, then didn’t take the field for defense in the bottom of the frame, replaced by Miguel Rojas at shortstop.

“It was running the bases, scoring on that double,” Dodgers manager Dave Roberts told reporters at Nationals Park, as shown on SportsNet LA. “He’s going to get some testing right now, and we’ll know more later. It’s certainly more moderate than significant.”

Betts won’t play Sunday, and might be out for at least a few days, regardless of whether an injured list stint is needed. From Bill Plunkett of the Orange County Register:

“I don’t want to get too far ahead of what we’re gonna do. But we’ll see,” Roberts said. “We’ll huddle up and see if we need to get a player here to protect us, depending on how the MRI comes. But yeah, he certainly won’t be playing the next couple days, I would assume.”

Hyeseong Kim, who would be the logical call-up should the Dodgers decide they need extra infield depth, did not play for Triple-A Oklahoma City on Saturday night in Las Vegas.

Betts had played every inning this season prior to leaving Saturday’s game. He’s hitting .179/.281/.429 with a 103 wRC+ through all of 32 plate appearances so far this season.

Michigan-Arizona was supposed to be game of the year. What happened?

INDIANAPOLIS — We thought it would be the game of the year.

No. 1 seed Michigan vs. No. 1 seed Arizona. Two of the most dominant teams of the season meeting in the Final Four. Unstoppable force vs. immovable object. A box office attraction that billed heavyweights duking it out in what could be one of the all-time games in tournament history.

Instead, it was atomic bomb vs. ant.

An expected thriller ended up being a 40 minute snoozer, with Michigan soundly beating Arizona in dominant fashion to deliver an absolute statement in the semifinal.

“No one's been able to do that to us all year,” said Arizona coach Tommy Lloyd. “It was an impressive performance.”

It wasn’t one of the largest blowouts in Final Four history, but the 18-point differential doesn’t fully grasp how much of a beatdown this was. The Wolverines blitzed Arizona out of the game with a 10-1 run to open the game and never looked back in the wire-to-wire win.

“We came out, and we really knew how high the stakes were,” said Michigan guard Trey McKenney.

It took just less than 10 minutes for Michigan to hand Arizona its largest deficit of the season at 14 points, stunning the Wildcats. When Yaxel Lendeborg suffered an injury, Arizona cut the deficit and it felt like we had a game. Then the depth of Michigan flexed its muscle to show it’s far more than the Big Ten player of the year.

For as ugly as the first half was for Arizona, it had a knack for being a second half team. Before Saturday, the Wildcats were 6-0 when they trailed at halftime. Sure, the 16-point deficit was quite large, but Arizona had shown all season it was never out of games. Plus, Michigan didn't shoot the ball that great. There was a chance to come back.

Instead, it only got worse.

Michigan gave a dose of deja vu out of the break, once again unleashing a full assault while Arizona was already clinging onto the ropes. The only drama left was how much more Lendeborg would play.

The lead only ballooned from there, with the Wolverines up by as much as 29 points. The Maize and Blue inside Lucas Oil Stadium were already celebrating by singing “Mr. Brightside” midway through the second half. It made the final 10 minutes just a formality, the game already well decided and Arizona just trying to not make it as ugly as it was.

In the end, it was a disastrous showing for Arizona. 

“Michigan just did a great job, and we weren't able to kind of catch up,” said Arizona guard Jaden Bradley.

So how did it happen? Despite the physicality and size Arizona brought to Indianapolis, Michigan coach Dusty May felt his team matched up extremely well to the Wildcats. The interior battle was going to be a key point, and the size of Michigan’s bigs made it tough for Arizona to drive downhill in the paint.

If Michigan could establish a hold inside early and make some perimeter shots, it was going to quickly force Arizona into an uncomfortable position, and the plan unfolded to near perfection.

“Once they get on a good start, (May) kind of really knows how to control the game,” Lloyd said. “When you're controlling the game and you're running your actions and you're getting some open shots or semi-open shots, you knock them down, it makes it really tough to come back, and that's what they were able to do.”

The Wildcats were ninth in the country in shooting percentage, and it shot a season-worst 36.6% from the field. One of the best fast break teams just had two points on breakaways. Michigan’s 91 points was the most Arizona allowed this season, and the 47.8% shooting percentage was the third-best an opponent had against the Wildcats this season.

All of it resulted in a sudden end to one of the best seasons Arizona has had in decades. When it finally broke the spell that cast a 25-year Final Four drought, it felt like these weren’t the same old Wildcats, and this one had a real good shot of winning it all.

Instead, their season ends in another March disappointment. It does sting to have another disappointing March Madness ending. It doesn’t take away it’s still a season worth celebrating in Tucson, and the game said a lot more about Michigan than it did Arizona, with the Wolverines becoming the first team to score at least 90 points in five straight NCAA Tournament games.

“Michigan gets all the credit today. I mean, it wasn't our night, but it probably had a lot to do with them,” Lloyd said.

If anything, it showed Connecticut another weapon of mass destruction is on the way, and it better be prepared – or Michigan will drop it again.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Michigan-Arizona went from game of the year to blowout. What happened?

Michigan overcomes Yaxel Lendeborg injury in Final Four demotion of Arizona

INDIANAPOLIS — For a moment there, Michigan looked in trouble.

All-America forward Yaxel Lendeborg picked up his first foul 72 seconds into the Final Four matchup against Arizona and then was whistled for another just five seconds later, sending the senior to the bench.

Worse yet, Lendeborg began favoring his left leg after landing awkwardly with nine minutes left in the half, which forced him to enter the locker room for treatment. After returning to the Michigan bench with five minutes left in the first half, Lendeborg was again escorted through the tunnel. He ended up playing a season-low 14 minutes, though he poured in 11 points in this limited duty.

“I had to calm down a little, speak to myself, get out of my thoughts,” Lendeborg said of the injury. “I didn’t feel like I was going to be OK. I was definitely really worried.”

Losing your star and your leader early in the national semifinals would be a doomsday scenario for nearly anyone in college basketball — just not these Wolverines.

Even without Lendeborg making his usual impact, the Wolverines rolled to an impressive 91-73 win against the Wildcats and will meet Connecticut in Monday night’s championship game.

The win is proof of a key point about this team: Michigan is more than the sum of its parts, with a powerful supporting cast that more than overcame Lendeborg’s absence and could clearly do the same if he’s limited against the Huskies.

“We’re an unselfish team,” forward Joe Tschetter said. “It can be anybody’s night on any night. That’s what we’ve showed all year.”

Five players scored in double figures. Six of the seven players who logged the most-significant minutes outside of garbage time scored at least nine points. The Wolverines assisted on 22 of their 33 made field goals. They forced 14 turnovers. A lengthy and aggressive defense held Arizona in check from start to finish, stymieing what was one of the nation’s top-scoring offenses.

“With our depth, it allows us to be able to pick up where he left off, especially being able to plug in other guys in different areas,” guard Roddy Gayle Jr. said. “And everyone feels comfortable in that.”

Taking on a beefier role, center Aday Mara scored a career-best 26 points while making 11 of his 16 attempts. Forward Morez Johnson Jr. had 10 points, 7 rebounds and 4 assists. Point guard Elliot Cadeau had 13 points, 10 assists and 4 steals. Despite dealing with foul trouble of his own, guard Trey McKenney had 16 points and was a team-best plus-22 across his 27 minutes of playing time off the bench.

Michigan guard Trey McKenney (1) drives to the basket against Arizona guard Anthony Dell'orso (3) during the national semifinals the men's 2026 NCAA Tournament at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis.

“That shows how much versatility we have in this group,” said Lendeborg. “Aday's been dominating all year. So I'm super happy that he did his thing today, tonight. Trey had a big game, man. We talked about this a lot. We spent a lot of time together, so I'm really happy for the (freshman). As long as we continue to keep playing team basketball, we should be in good shape.”

On the defensive end, Mara keyed a suffocating effort that held Arizona to a season-worst 36.6% shooting and forced 14 turnovers, leading to 19 second-chance points.

“Aday was sensational,” coach Dusty May said. “He was at the rim, catching lobs. He was a force down low. He was a pressure release up top. I mean, he's such a smart basketball player.”

Teammates didn’t realize the extent of Lendeborg’s injury until halftime; for one, Gayle thought he’d just been taken out because of his foul trouble and remained out of the rotation as Michigan built a double-digit lead.

Clued into the situation in the locker room, the Wolverines rallied around their senior leader: Let’s do this for Yaxel, Gayle said to the team.

But when Michigan exited for the second half with a 16-point lead, there was Lendeborg back on the court, in the lineup despite the double-digit advantage and the possibility that he could further aggravate his injury — causing him to not only miss the championship game but also potentially damage his NBA draft stock.

He drilled a 3-pointer to push Michigan’s edge to 53-32 with 17:47 to play, and then added another a minute later. That put the Wolverines in front 56-34 and sent a pro-Michigan crowd at Lucas Oil Arena into a frenzy.

“I think it just shows the guy who Yaxel is,” McKenney said. “I mean, he just wants to put it all on the floor for Michigan, and he wants to give the fans what they came here for. I'm just really grateful to have him as a teammate. He's one of the best players in the country and he showed that tonight. But he's selfless as well.”

Lendeborg would be removed from the game with 13:30 to play but asked to be reinserted about six minutes later after Arizona had gone on a 15-4 run. When he was taken out with 5:19 left, Michigan had an 86-64 lead and was on cruise control into Monday’s final.

“I felt like they were making sort of a run and I wanted to kind of neutralize it,” he said. “I wanted to be the guy who helps out. I didn’t want to sit out when my teammates needed me.”

Whether Lendeborg plays against Connecticut will be the dominant storyline heading into the championship game. “I want to play on Monday,” he said.

Even if Lendeborg is available, there will be questions about his ability to produce on one healthy leg against an opponent that’s allowing just 65 points per game in this tournament and held Illinois to just 19 of 56 shooting from the field in a 71-62 win.

But few teams — maybe the Huskies in 2024, but not many others — will enter the championship with this much confidence. Facing a fellow No. 1 seed with an equal amount of NBA talent and an equally explosive offense, the Lendeborg-less Wolverines advanced out of the national semifinals with ease.

“This game was very indicative of how this group has played throughout the season, unselfish basketball,” May said. “A connected group who defends, gets out in transition and then shares the basketball.”

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Yaxel Lendeborg injury doesn't stop Michigan domination of Final Four

Carter Hart Stymies Oilers In 5-1 Win, Golden Knights Make It Three Straight Under Tortorella

LAS VEGAS -- Three up, three down.

The Golden Knights improved to 3-0 under new coach John Tortorella after an impressive 5-1 win over the Edmonton Oilers.

Brett Howden and Jeremy Lauzon each had a goal and an assist for the Knights, while Colton Sissons, Mark Stone and Rasmus Andersson also scored for Vegas. Jack Eichel finished with three assists and Ivan Barbashev added two helpers.

Goalie Carter Hart was spectacular in stopping 31 of the 32 shots he faced to pick up his second straight win in as many starts.

The Knights opened a 3-0 lead by the middle of the second period, on goals from Howden, Sissons and Lauzon, before Evan Bouchard scored with 34 seconds left in the stanza.

Stone and Andersson iced the game with third-period goals.

With the win, Vegas moved within one point of the Anaheim Ducks and Edmonton Oilers, who both have 87 points atop the Pacific Division.

KEY MOMENT

Howden's goal was the key moment for this one, as the Golden Knights did something they rarely do, and that's take the early lead. Howden was streaking down the left side when he was able to get his stick on a rebound after Jack Eichel entered the zone down the right wall and fired a shot that was saved. Vegas came into the game with a -20 goal differential in the first period, having been outscored, 79-59.

KEY STAT

50% ... The Golden Knights were 1 of 2 on the power play, as they scored with a man advantage for the sixth time in eight games. Vegas ranks tied for sixth in the NHL with the power-play conversion rate (54 for 221, 24.4%). Andersson's power play goal in the third period was his 16th score of the season.

WHAT A KNIGHT

Starting for the second straight game for Vegas, Hart was the star of the night, being able to go into Edmonton and shut down one of the most potent offenses in the NHL. Hart's 31 saves were his third-most of the season. Hart improved to 5-5-0 in 10 starts against the Oilers, who had scored three or more goals in each of their five victories during their win streak.

UP NEXT

The Golden Knights continue their four-game road trip on Tuesday, when they'll visit the Vancouver Canucks.

PHOTO CAPTION: Vegas Golden Knights goaltender Carter Hart (79) makes a save on Edmonton Oilers forward Connor McDavid (97) during the first period at Rogers Place. 

Playoffs? You Better Believe It! Silver Knights Clinch After Dramatic 5-4 Win

Heading into this weekend’s back-to-back, the Henderson Silver Knights needed two regulation wins to clinch a spot in the Calder Cup Playoffs. On Friday, they faced a three-goal deficit halfway through the second period; on Saturday, they trailed 4-3 with less than two minutes left in the third.

They won both games in regulation.

With a 5-4 regulation win over the Tucson Roadrunners on Saturday, the Silver Knights officially punched their ticket to the Calder Cup Playoffs for the first time since the 2021-22 season.

“We’re not cruising to a victory. The belief that we’re never out of a game, you want to make sure we put that in our pocket,” said Silver Knights head coach Ryan Craig. “If we’re learning lessons while we’re winning, and while we’re having success, while guys individually are having success, it’s only going to boost our morale. And as the games get higher and higher stakes, we can use that to our advantage.”

After the first period, the teams were tied with two goals apiece. Tucson struck first on two separate occasions; both times, Henderson responded quickly. Raphaël Lavoie struck on the power play, and Jonas Røndbjerg tipped home a shot from Braedan Bowman.

Henderson led 3-2 after two periods of play. However, after two third-period goals from Tucson’s Sammy Walker, they trailed 4-3 with less than two minutes remaining in regulation.The Silver Knights pulled Carl Lindbom for the extra attacker, and Dylan Coghlan scored the equalizer with 1:26 remaining in the third period.

And then, chaos.

The Silver Knights entered the attacking zone as seconds ticked off the clock. Braedan Bowman’s shot went wide, but the puck took a bounce off the end boards and ended up on the stick of Matyas Sapovaliv. Sapovaliv chipped it back in front to Bowman, who banged it in for his second goal of the game.

“I was pretty fired up,” said Bowman postgame. “I went to [Dylan Coghlan] and just started screaming. It’s cool to be back with these guys… Obviously, to clinch a playoff berth, that was pretty special.”

Stats of the Knight

Jonas Røndbjerg, the longest-tenured Silver Knight, scored in the first period to take the franchise lead in goals (81).

The AHL’s rookie of the month of March, Trevor Connelly, provided an assist on Henderson’s first goal of the game.

Braedan Bowman, who recently rejoined Henderson after playing 54 games with the Golden Knights, led the way tonight. He scored two goals, including the game-winner, and recorded two primary assists.

Golden Knights beat Oilers 5-1 to tighten Pacific Division race

EDMONTON, Alberta (AP) — Carter Hart made 31 saves and the Vegas Golden Knights tightened the Pacific Division race, beating the Edmonton Oilers 5-1 on Saturday night to remain perfect in John Tortorella's first three games as coach.

Vegas moved a point back of Edmonton and Anaheim for the division lead, snapping the Oilers' season-best, five-game winning streak.

Brett Howden and Jeremy Lauzon each had a goal and an assist, Colton Sissons, Mark Stone and Rasmus Andersson also scored and Jack Eichel had three assists.

Evan Bouchard scored for Edmonton, and Connor Ingram made 28 saves.

Hart was activated off injured reserve and backstopped Vegas to a 6-3 home victory over Calgary on Thursday night. He had been out since injuring his left leg Jan. 8 against Columbus.

Tortorella, who replaced the fired Bruce Cassidy, coached Hart in Philadelphia from 2022-24.

Up next

Golden Knights: At Vancouver on Tuesday night.

Oilers: At Utah on Tuesday night.

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Third Period Push Elevates Nashville Predators Past San Jose Sharks

After building up a three-goal lead and losing it, the Nashville Predators scored three unanswered goals in the third period for a 6-3 victory over the San Jose Sharks on Saturday at SAP Center. 

Sitting at 81 points, the Predators have the regulation wins (26) tiebreaker over the Los Angeles Kings for the final Wild Card spot in the Western Conference.  

Ryan O'Reilly scored the game-winning goal off a feed from Luke Evangelista from behind the net into the left face-off circle. O'Reilly snapped it past Yaroslav Askarov for his 25th goal of the season. 

A delay of the game call on Roman Josi with four minutes left gave the Sharks some momentum, but Erik Haula was able to halt it, scoring shorthanded and giving the Predators a two-goal lead late.

Jost added an empty net goal with 1:15 left in the game for insurance. 

The Predators jumped into the driver's seat early as Filip Forsberg scored twice, 1:16 apart in the first 10 minutes of the game. He is creeping up on 40 goals, sitting at 37 with six games left. 

Steven Stamkos notched his 11th power-play goal of the season and 38th of the year to put Nashville up 3-0 at the end of the first period. The Predators outshot the Sharks, 12-5, in the first 20 minutes of the game. 

The game slipped away from the Predators in the second as they allowed goals from Nick Leddy and Macklin Celebrini to cut their lead down to one. A little over a minute into the third period, Alexander Wennberg scored to tie the game for San Jose. 

It is the second straight game in which Nashville has surrendered a three-goal lead and still won. On Thursday, it held a 4-1 lead over the Kings before LA forced overtime, 4-4. Nashville ended up winning in a shootout. 

Juuse Saros picked up his 27th win of the season, making 24 saves on 27 shots. He is 6-1-1 in his last eight starts. 

The Predators faced off against former goalie Askarov for the first time this season. He was drafted 11th overall in the 2020 NHL Draft, but requested to be traded in the 2024 offseason after the Predators extended Saros and signed Scott Wedgewood. 

Nashville was without defenseman Nic Hague for the majority of the game, as he left in the second period after getting hit awkwardly. There is no update on his status following the game.

The Predators' road trip continued into Monday as they will face the Los Angeles Kings again at 9:30 p.m. CST. 

Blackhawks End 5-Game Losing Streak With Road Win Over Kraken

The Chicago Blackhawks took on the Seattle Kraken in the Pacific Northwest on Saturday night. This was the middle game of a three-game road trip out west. 

Going into the game, the Blackhawks were looking to bounce back from a tough loss to the Edmonton Oilers a couple of nights prior. Before ending the season, the Blackhawks are working on finishing the year with strong habits that they can build on over the summer. 

The Blackhawks played a strong game early on. In the first period as a whole, the Blackhawks outshot the Kraken 10-4. Nobody was able to find the back of the net, however, and the scoreless tie held into the first intermission. 

In the second period, the Blackhawks finally broke through at 9:15. Teuvo Teravainen ended a 15-game goal drought to give the Blackhawks a lead. This was a power play goal. 

With under a minute remaining in the middle frame, Tyler Bertuzzi scored to make it 2-0 Blackhawks. He extended his team lead and career high with his 32nd goal of the season. 

10 minutes into the third period, Jaden Schwartz got the Kraken on the board. Under three minutes later, however, the Blackhawks restored the two-goal lead thanks to Sacha Boisvert's first in the NHL. 

Blackhawks First-Round Pick Sacha Boisvert Has His First Career NHL GoalBlackhawks First-Round Pick Sacha Boisvert Has His First Career NHL GoalSacha Boisvert of the Chicago Blackhawks has scored his first career NHL goal.

It turned out to be an important goal, as it stood as the game-winner because Kaapo Kakko got the Kraken back within one just over a minute later. The late stages of the third period certainly had some fireworks. 

Ilya Mikheyev sealed the win for the Blackhawks with an empty netter to make it 4-2, which stood as the final. 

Connor Bedard earned an assist on the empty-netter by Mikheyev, which extended his career high in points to 71. They are also points 198 and 199 in the career of Bedard. The next one is obviously a really special milestone to reach before even turning 21. 

Arvid Soderblom made the start for Chicago in goal, and he was excellent. Soderblom made 25 saves on 27 shots in what turned out to be a much-needed gem to end the five-game losing streak. 

This is the type of win that every player on the roster helped earn. These are the key to having sustained success in the NHL, and they did it against a team fighting for their playoff lives. 

Watch Every Chicago Goal

What’s Next For The Blackhawks?

The Chicago Blackhawks will be back in action on Monday night. They will be in Northern California taking on the San Jose Sharks. This will be another chance for Macklin Celebrini and the San Jose Sharks to match up against Connor Bedard and the Chicago Blackhawks, which could be a great player-led rivalry for years to come. 

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Mets 9. Giants 0: Holmes away from home

Apr 4, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; New York Mets starting pitcher Clay Holmes (35) delivers a pitch against the San Francisco Giants during the seventh inning at Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: D. Ross Cameron-Imagn Images | D. Ross Cameron-Imagn Images

The Mets have been a little uneven to start the 2026 campaign, putting it on Paul Skenes on Opening Day but struggling to hit in the subsequent games; before last night’s ten run breakout that is. The Mets kept the momentum going tonight, winning 9-0 over the Giants, with a funky lineup that lacked Juan Soto, Luis Robert Jr. or Francisco Alvarez. It also featured a starting outfield of Jared Young in left, Carson Benge in center, and Brett Baty in right, which is what you imagined coming into Spring Training.

The Mets fifth win of the season was arguably their most complete, and that started with starting pitcher Clay Holmes. Holmes was excellent on the day, stymieing the Giants offense over seven scoreless innings. He only walked two, perhaps the most important part of his performance, considering walks have taken him out of games quicker than you would want from time to time. He only struck out four, but he was consistently around the strike zone, throwing 61 of his 90 pitches for strikes. The Giants simply could not square him up; according to the Statcast data, they did not barrel a single ball against him.

The offense did their fair share of the hard work, especially in the middle innings. They did get out to the 3-0 lead after the second inning, but it was more misplays by the Giants than anything else. A Mark Vientos double, Jared Young walk, and Marcus Semien infield single (that honestly probably should have been an out if Jerar Encarnacion was a more experienced first baseman) loaded the bases with one out in the aforementioned second inning. Carson Benge hit a weak ground ball to Literally Platinum Glover Matt Chapman, who failed to field the ball cleanly and subsequently threw it away, chasing two runs home. The next batter, Luis Torrens, grounded out productively, making it 3-0 without the ball leaving the infield.

Landon Roupp, despite the bad luck, looked pretty good for stretches of the game, generating ten whiffs and seven strikeouts. He kept the score 3-0 until the fifth inning, where the Mets got to him again. Torrens singled, was moved over to second on a Francisco Lindor ground out, and was driven home by Bo Bichette (who is still good at baseball despite the five game slump to open the season), making it 4-0. A Brett Baty single moved Bichette to second, and the red hot Vientos drove him home with a single of his own to make it 5-0, chasing Roupp from the game.

Left-hander Ryan Borucki came in, and Jared Young was lifted for Tyrone Taylor. Taylor rewarded the newly bespectacled Carlos Mendoza with an absolute rocket of a three-run home run, traveling 419 feet with a 105.1 exit velocity.

At 8-0, the game was elementary from there. Holmes coasted through the seventh inning, Taylor added a superfluous insurance run to make it 9-0, and Tobias Myers finished the game with two perfect innings. It was a wonderful performance all around.

The Mets next match up is a fun one, with Kodai Senga squaring off against Logan Webb in the final game of the series.

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Win Probability Added

What’s WPA?

Big Mets winner: Clay Holmes, +20.0% WPA
Big Mets loser: Francisco Lindor, -4.9% WPA
Mets pitchers: +20.1% WPA
Mets hitters: +29.9% WPA
Teh aw3s0mest play: Carson Benge reaching on a fielding error in the second, +15.4% WPA
Teh sux0rest play: Matt Chapman’s single in the bottom of the second. -5.8% WPA

Very bad!

Apr 4, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; San Francisco Giants manager Tony Vitello (left) takes the ball from starting pitcher Landen Roupp (65) as he makes a pitching change during the fifth inning at against the New York Mets Oracle Park. Mandatory Credit: D. Ross Cameron-Imagn Images | D. Ross Cameron-Imagn Images

Did you think Friday was tough? Well, let me introduce you to Saturday — it was so much worse! Bad defense, no offense, frustrated pitching.

Sound familiar?

Believe it or not, there was a point at the beginning of the Giants’ 9-0 loss to the Mets when things were actually going pretty swell. 

Landen Roupp started the evening with four strikeouts on the first four batters he faced. He flashed everything in his arsenal: Curve, sinker, change-up, curve. Check, check, check. One out in the 2nd, the sun was shining, the Mets were whiffing. Everything was going just fine.

But good things don’t last — at least, not for the 2026 San Francisco Giants. 

The Mets hitters — rather abruptly — figured out how to put the bat on the ball, and everything got so much worse. Mark Vientos found a seam along the third base line for a one-out double. Marcus Semien followed by lunging at a curveball, rolling it so softly towards short that Willy Adames had to rush his throw to first. Of course, it sailed wide, Semien was safe, the bases were loaded, and that was when the flashbacks started. The terrible recollections of weak choppers, wayward throws, missed catches from earlier in the week. Poorly struck grounders in the most inconvenient places, like grains of sand in the infield gears, grinding them to a halt.

Jerar Encarnacion did the right thing on Adames’s throw and left the bag to secure the ball — but the bigger problem remains. That lack of sharpness, especially from their veterans, has exposed the lack-of-expertise of others. It haunted them in their finale against San Diego, and it bit them big time here. 

Next batter, in an 0-2 count, Carson Benge threw his bat at a change-up and somehow put it in the most annoying place possible. The grounder dragged Chapman’s momentum away from the plate, making the force out there unlikely. But it was just likely enough for Chapman to consider it. That brief glance towards the plate split his concentration on the exchange. The ball fell out of his glove, somehow recovered it in mid-air, and now desperate to get one out, whipped the baseball in first base’s general direction.

Looking back at the replay, the throw was surprisingly accurate, and Encarnacion, perhaps shocked that Chapman actually managed to get a throw off, botched the easy part. The “catch the f***ing ball” part.

Next batter, another 70 MPH grounder hit just slow enough, just far enough away from the infield positioning, to take away the possibility of Luis Arraez starting an inning-ending double play and preventing another run from scoring.

A double, three grounders that didn’t leave the infield, and three runs for New York in the 2nd. Landen Roupp was understandably steamed. And he only got hotter by the 5th. After a lead-off single, Encarnacion fell on a grounder, blocking it like a hockey goalie, rather than fielding it like a normal baseball player would. The misplay, though redeemed by Roupp coming over to pick up the loose ball and get the out first, cost the starter another chance at a two-fer. This proved costly when Luis Torrens, advancing to second on the play, promptly scored on Bo Bichette’s RBI single up the middle. That ball too skipped within range of an infielder’s glove, and while it would’ve been an impressive play by Adames, Roupp couldn’t help but tamp down his frustrations that another grounder had made its way through to the outfield. 

The right-hander tried to refocus. He battled through nine pitches to eventually strike out Jorge Polanco for his seventh K, but at that point, Roupp was gassed physically and emotionally. A shell of a his former self way back in the 1st inning. Tough breaks coupled with lack-of-execution will do that to a man. But even though Roupp was clearly broken, the Mets refused to let up. Brett Baty rolled another grounder through the right-side of the infield to extend the inning, then Vientos sent a single through the same hole to plate New York’s fifth run, and…yeah, that was it. Roupp was done. Tony Vitello released him from the mound, and he slumped back to the dugout where he had the pleasure of watching Tyrone Taylor launch a hanging curve ball from Ryan Borucki over the wall in left-center, mercifully closing the book on the starter’s outing.

7 runs, 6 earned, and Roupp maybe deserved half of them. A small consolation: the bad defense wasn’t personal. It continued after he left the mound. Luis Arraez missed a tag at second. Keaton Winn didn’t back up home properly on a relay, and a subsequent wild pitch gave Taylor a free trip to third after his RBI single. 

I suppose none of these defensive shenanigans really mattered considering the offense amounted to three singles and a pair of walks against Clay Holmes. In the words of Mike Krukow, the bats have been living in the castle or the outhouse so far this season — and this was another night in the shitter. Early opportunities presented themselves too. The leadoff man reached base in each of the first three innings. They had a chance to get back in the game and capitalize on a defensive miscue too when a throwing error by Bichette put Chapman in scoring position in the 2nd. But Jung Hoo Lee waved through three straight breaking balls from Holmes, and the next two hitters were dutifully retired.

And I use that word “dutifully” without embellishment — there was an odd air of obedience when the Giants were at the plate. They knew their roles, and with heads down, they fulfilled them quickly and with little fight. Routine fly out to center. A grounder to short. Any spark, like Patrick Bailey’s well-struck line drive, was promptly snuffed out.

Another forgettable game. Hasn’t there been a couple of those already?