2026 MLB All-Star Game: Dylan Cease vs. Cristopher Sánchez

PHILADELPHIA, PA - JULY 13: Ben Rice #22 of the New York Yankees hugs Cody Bellinger #35 after batting during the 2026 T-Mobile Home Run Derby at Citizens Bank Park on Monday, July 13, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

This week’s All-Star Week festivities got off to a bombastic start on Monday night at Citizens Bank Park, with outstanding performances from established sluggers and burgeoning stars alike in the Home Run Derby. The spectacle of Jordan Walker silencing a partisan Philadelphia crowd with six consecutive bombs to snatch the title from Kyle Schwarber will be hard to top in terms of pure theatre, but let’s see what the Midsummer Classic itself has to offer!

Tonight, the Yankees will have both Ben Rice and Cody Bellinger representing them in the American League’s starting lineup; they’ll take on Philadelphia ace Cristopher Sánchez on his home mound as the Senior Circuit seeks to claim their second straight victory in the main event. The AL had mounted a late-inning comeback to erase a 6-0 lead, but Schwarber ultimately led the NL to victory by winning a Derby-esque swing-off challenge which replaced extra innings.

Of course, two other Yankees were named All-Stars this season: Aaron Judge and Cam Schlittler. Judge is still working his way back from the rib fracture he sustained in the first week of June. Schlittler was about as deserving as any pitcher to get the starting nod for the AL, but owing to his start this past Saturday, opted not to participate. Strangely, Blue Jays manager John Schneider, who will be leading the American League on the field tonight, said he was always planning to tap the Blue Jays’ Dylan Cease as the starter—even if Schlittler was available to pitch. Weird move, but all right.

Bellinger and Rice will hit consecutively in Schneider’s lineup, at the sixth and seventh spot respectively. (Everybody get those jokes out of the way now.) They were not voted into starting spots, but they will each get the nod regardless due to injuries to Judge and Byron Buxton in Bellinger’s case and the combination of Vladimir Guerrero Jr.‘s withdrawal from the event and replacement Nick Kurtz’s recent addition to the IL.

Rice participated in last night’s Home Run Derby, but failed to advance to the next round. He’ll still get a chance to show off the impressive game power which has brought him to the precipice of 30 home runs at the season’s intermission. Bellinger was slumping mightily ahead of the season’s final week, but finished strong with five hits in the last four games ahead of the break. He gets a chance to keep that momentum going against…well, somebody in the NL’s pitching staff. Since it tends to be a new face pitching every inning, and all. Just one big hit from either of them however, and they could join Derek Jeter (2000), Mariano Rivera (2013), and Giancarlo Stanton (2022) as the only All-Star Game MVPs in Yankees history.

The AL’s lineup is quite front-loaded for pure power, with Mike Trout leading off ahead of Yordan Alvarez, A’s backstop Shea Langeliers and Junior Caminero hitting cleanup. Bobby Witt Jr. and Bellinger provide a more contact-oriented lane in the middle; though both are plenty capable of muscling up themselves. After Rice comes Detroit’s Riley Greene and, yes, the AL’s leading vote-getter, Ernie Clement. To my eye, the NL’s starting lineup is more balanced, but there’s a Ship of Theseus quality to these batting orders, of course.

How to watch

Location: Citizens Bank Park — Philadelphia, PA

First pitch: 8:00 pm ET

TV broadcast: FOX

Radio broadcast: ESPN Radio

Online stream: MLB.tv (internationally)

For updates, follow us on BlueSkyTwitter, and Instagram, and like us on Facebook.

Gamethread: MLB All-Star Game, 8:00 p.m. ET

DETROIT, MI - JULY 12: Justin Verlander #35, Kevin McGonigle #7 and Riley Greene #31 of the Detroit Tigers pose with President and CEO of Ilitch Sports + Entertainment Ryan Gustafson during an event to honor their selection for the All-Star game before a game against the Philadelphia Phillies at Comerica Park on July 12, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Duane Burleson/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Time/Place: 8:00 p.m., Citizens Bank Park, Philadelphia, PA
Media:
FOX Sports, ESPN Radio (Pre-Game coverage begins at 6:30 p.m. ET)
Pitching Matchup: AL- RHP Dylan Cease (6-4, 2.56 ERA) NL- LHP Cristopher Sánchez (11-4, 2.62 ERA)

Dodgers, Mike Trout prepare for California MLB All-Star Game takeover

The Los Angeles area teams will be well represented at the 2026 MLB All-Star Game at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, on Tuesday, July 14.

The event serves as a homecoming of sorts for Los Angeles Angels star Mike Trout. The three-time MVP is a New Jersey native but has deep ties to Philadelphia, which is located 45 miles south of his hometown.

Trout recently returned from the injured list last week before hitting a two-run home run in the Angels' 13-1 victory over the Texas Rangers on July 8. The home run came on the 15th anniversary of his major league debut.

He had missed 17 games after he suffered a right hamstring strain while running the bases during a game against the Arizona Diamondbacks on June 17.

The Los Angeles Dodgers tied for the most selections with six. Four of the six players will be starters for the National League, which is a league-best. First baseman Freddie Freeman, third baseman Max Muncy, outfielder Andy Pages and designated hitter Shohei Ohtani were also named as starters.

Los Angeles Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy (13) warms up before the All-Star Game at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on July 14, 2026.

Ohtani was the league's leading vote-getter but withdrew from the game due to inflammation and irritation in his left knee. The discomfort in the knee impacted his pitching mechanics, and he was recently pulled from a scheduled start for the Dodgers.

Ohtani has 98 hits, 65 runs, 22 home runs and 58 RBIs in 88 games played. On the mound, he's produced an 8-2 record in 14 starts, allowing 55 hits, 21 runs (17 earned runs) and four home runs. He has struck out 95 and walked 26.

Pages is one of 26 first-time All-Stars. He joins Atlanta Braves catcher Drake Baldwin and Philadelphia Phillies outfielder Brandon Marsh. Pages has complemented his defensive play for the Dodgers in center field with 16 home runs and an .808 OPS.

Right-handed pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto and left-hander Justin Wrobleski will represent the Dodgers as NL pitchers.

Dave Roberts will serve as the National League manager for the game. He is serving as an All-Star Game skipper for the fifth time in his career.

Phillies interim manager Don Mattingly will serve on Roberts' staff. Mattingly was previously the manager for the Dodgers from 2011 to 2015.

When is 2026 MLB All-Star Game?

The game’s first pitch is scheduled for 8 p.m. ET (5 p.m. PT). It will be broadcast on FOX.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Dodgers, Mike Trout prepare for California MLB All-Star Game takeover

NBA investigation into Kawhi Leonard, Aspiration deal reportedly expands to second endorsement, more

The NBA’s investigation into Kawhi Leonard and possible salary cap circumvention through a "no-show" endorsement deal started in September and has now dragged on as long as the Warren Commission's investigation into the John F. Kennedy assassination. The sense among league executives NBC Sports spoke to in Las Vegas is that it has to be nearing an end, as it is now holding up multiple teams' free-agent business, including a potential Leonard trade to Toronto.

Now we may now know one key reason this is taking so long: The investigation has expanded to a second sponsorship deal as well, plus potentially other things of Leonard's that the Clippers paid for, reports Mike Vorkunov at The Athletic. As a reminder, the league hired the law firm of Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz to handle the investigation.

Not only has Wachtell Lipton, the league's go-to law firm hired to conduct the inquiry, inspected if the Clippers circumvented the NBA salary cap by facilitating a sponsorship deal for Leonard with Aspiration, it has also looked into whether the Clippers improperly covered expenses for Leonard but were not reimbursed for them, those sources said. And the firm has examined if Leonard had a previously unreported endorsement deal with another company, those sources said.

The Clippers continue to deny any wrongdoing, something they reiterated last week when the Raptors put the Leonard trade to Toronto on hold after the league warned they would be on the hook for any punishment Leonard could face in the investigation.

"For the past 10 months, our organization has fully cooperated with an NBA investigation, participating in dozens of interviews, providing tens of thousands of documents, and facilitating access to our staff..." The Clippers said in a statement released to NBC Sports. "At the heart of this investigation are Joe Sanberg and Aspiration. We did not funnel money to Kawhi Leonard through Aspiration. Like many sophisticated investors, financial institutions, and business partners, we were victims of a fraud initiated by Sanberg, who has been convicted and sentenced to 14 years in prison."

It is expected that this trade will eventually go through, both sides want it, but Toronto just didn't want to take on undue risk.

The sense from executives around the league is that the investigation found enough that NBA Commissioner Adam Silver is expected to come down hard on the Clippers and Ballmer, but that Leonard likely just faces a slap on the wrist.

The NBA’s original investigation

The initial investigation into this began after the Pablo Torre Finds Out podcast investigated Leonard's endorsement deal with Aspiration, a green bank company that has since gone bankrupt, and its founder, Sanberg, has been convicted and jailed.

The situation dates back to September 2021, when Clippers owner Steve Ballmer made a $50 million personal investment in Aspiration. A few weeks later, after Leonard signed a four-year, $176 million contract extension with the Clippers, it was announced that Aspiration would be a $300 million sponsor of the Clippers, and Leonard signed a $28 million endorsement deal with the company.

However, several former Aspiration employees told Torre that this was a "no-show" endorsement, and there is no evidence that Leonard made any public appearances for the company, appeared in its marketing or posted anything on social media about Aspiration. It's circumstantial evidence, but worth noting, that this kind of no-work endorsement was something that Leonard's adviser, business partner and uncle, Dennis Robertson, reportedly had requested of the Raptors during Leonard's 2019 free agency (he allegedly made other wild requests of the Lakers and other interested teams, all of which was quietly discussed in league circles after Leonard signed with the Clippers).

The NBA investigation is into whether the Clippers knowingly used Aspiration to circumvent the league's salary cap to funnel more money to Leonard (and Robertson). The investigation may have found other avenues where that took place.

It's unclear how much longer the investigation will last, but with free-agent business now held up, the league will pressure Wachtel Lipton to wrap things up quickly.

All-Star Game Open Thread

DETROIT, MI - JULY 12: A detailed view of a 2026 MLB All Star Game logo patch worn on the jersey of Bryce Harper #3 of the Philadelphia Phillies during the game against the Detroit Tigers at Comerica Park on July 12, 2026 in Detroit, Michigan. The Phillies defeated the Tigers 5-0. (Photo by Mark Cunningham/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

I’m not the target market for the All-Star game. I’ll likely watch until Clement bats. And I’m interested in watching how Dylan Cease does. I’m happy for him getting the starting role.

The lineups:

I did watch the World Cup game today and was surprised that Spain beat France so easily. Tomorrow, I have more skin in the game, my parents were from England and so I cheer for them (as well as Canada, who had a terrific run this time).

And there is this, which is absolutely stupid:

Gamethread 7/14: The All-Star Game

PHILADELPHIA, PA - JULY 13: A general view of the All-Star Game logo cut into the outfield grass of Citizens Bank Park prior to the 2026 T-Mobile Home Run Derby on Monday, July 13, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Brian Garfinkel/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Here are the lineups. For the National League and the American League:

Let’s talk about it.

LeBron James next team odds: Warriors emerge as favorites for the King

LeBron James might be inching closer to a decision on where he'll play his 24th NBA season.

ESPN's Shams Charania reported on Tuesday, July 14 that " there's a focus on Cleveland, Miami and Philadelphia," with the Cavaliers emerging as a top suitor for a potential third and final chapter to bookend James' storied career.

"My understanding is right now as we speak, LeBron James has the information that's needed to make a decision," Charania said on a segment of NBA Today. "It's decision time right now for LeBron James. Team presidents, GMs, they're all talking to Rich Paul here again this week; they've made all their pitches. LeBron James has listened to multiple voice notes delivered to him by Rich Paul from other owners and presidents from teams that are trying to give him their best pitch."

Other teams in the mix for James have included the Denver Nuggets, Minnesota Timberwolves and Golden State Warriors, with Front Office Sports reporting that several front office executives within the league expect James to sign with the Warriors over his hometown Cavs. The gambling industry has reflected that sentiment with the Warriors surging all the way up to odds-on favorites, according to BetMGM.

Charania also reported that the monetary value of the offers teams have made to James vary from mid-level exceptions to the league minimum.

"He's made it clear he wants to be a part of a team where he has a chance to compete for a championship," Charania said. "A new team environment and culture he can be a part of. … This is not a money driven decision."

With the LeBron James sweepstakes looking like it's down to two or three teams, here's the latest on the King's free agency odds:

LeBron odds: Latest betting odds for likely landing spots

According to the latest odds from BetMGM, the Warriors are the most likely team to secure the services of James at -250 with the Cavaliers a close second at +300. The gap widens significantly from there, with the next-best odds belonging to the Miami Heat (+800) followed by the San Antonio Spurs (+1600).

Are Warriors close to landing LeBron James?

Vegas isn't the only one who sees the Bay Area as a strong possibility for James. Front Office Sports reported on Tuesday that several NBA front office executives expect LeBron to sign with the Warriors over the Cavs, citing the proximity to his family in Los Angeles and the on-court fit alongside Steph Curry compared to Cleveland, which has  James Harden, Donovan Mitchell, Jarrett Allen and Evan Mobley.

"I would be stunned if he picked a team that wasn’t Golden State or Cleveland<' an anonymous Western Conference executive said in the report.

If James and Curry were to unite, it would represent one last push for a title by the NBA's old guard. The two previously joined forces in the 2024 Olympics, where they led Team USA to a gold medal while coached by Steve Kerr, who signed a two-year contract extension to remain with Golden State earlier this offseason.

Curry was once James' biggest on-court rival. They met in the NBA Finals four consecutive years from 2015-18 with the Warriors winning three times. James led the Cavs to the greatest comeback in NBA history in 2016, rallying from a 3-1 deficit to beat the Warriors in seven games. It was James' third ring and it broke Cleveland's 52-year pro sports title drought in the process, fulfilling his promise to bring a championship to his hometown team when he returned in 2014.

James' final decision appears to be imminent. The only question remains is whether the King will return home once more, or if he'll put on the jersey of the team that he's been intertwined with for the past decade of his career.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: LeBron James next team odds: Warriors emerge as favorites for the King

Bucks linked to sought-after free agent wing

DENVER, COLORADO - JANUARY 11: Peyton Watson #8 of the Denver Nuggets drives against AJ Green #20 of the Milwaukee Bucks in the second half at Ball Arena on January 11, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. 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 Jamie Schwaberow/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Jon Horst might not be done wheeling and dealing, with reports that the Bucks are interested in restricted free agent Peyton Watson of the Denver Nuggets. According to The Stein Line, the Bucks are joining the Clippers and Hawks on the list of teams trying to pry Watson away from the Nuggets via sign-and-trade.”

Watson, a 6’8” wing, is coming off a breakout season with the Nuggets in which he shouldered the heaviest offensive load of his young career, finishing the season averaging 14.6 PPG, 4.9 RPG, 2.1 APG, and 2.0 stocks (0.9 SPG, 1.1 BPG) across 54 contests. He also had a career year from three-point range, converting 41% of his 3.6 attempts per game.

While Watson’s breakout was a blessing for the 2025-26 Nuggets, it has put them in a financial bind, as they look to avoid astronomical luxury tax penalties and navigate the restrictive second tax apron. This comes after they signed Christian Braun to a 5-year, $125m extension in October—a precedent Watson’s representatives are almost certain to cite in negotiations—only to see Braun regress during the season and then again in the playoffs.

Of course, the Nuggets won’t willingly let Watson go—he’s a restricted free agent after all—and are reportedly seeking significant compensation in any sign-and-trade scenario. According to The Stein Line’s Jake Fischer, “sources maintain that the Nuggets are seeking compensation on par with what Utah received from the Lakers in their recent sign-and-trade swap that made Walker Kessler a Laker.” As a reminder, that trade saw the Lakers send unprotected first-round picks in 2031 and 2033, as well as first-round swaps in 2028 and 2030, for Kessler.

While such a price suggests a move for Watson is unlikely for the Bucks, there are at least two interesting wrinkles that make it possible. One, Milwaukee has a massive $25.5m trade exception created in the Giannis trade, which also replenished their draft capital. Two—and much less grounded in reality—Watson is represented by none other than Klutch Sports, the same agency that helped secure Gary Trent Jr.’s lucrative new deal with the Bucks just a few days ago.

Yet, even with the trade exception, a deal would be difficult to execute. Denver is unlikely to take back salary in any deal and Milwaukee already has 17 players under contract. Still, Trader Jon has earned his nickname—and history tells us he likes an unexpected move.


What do you think, Bucks fans, should Horst pursue Watson? At nearly 24 years old, he aligns with Milwaukee’s youth movement, fits a positional need, and is yet to reach his prime. But is it worth the biscuit?

Wizards vs. Bulls discussion

LAS VEGAS, NEVADA - JULY 12: Darius Acuff Jr. #5 of the Sacramento Kings drives against Seth Trimble #55 of the Washington Wizards in the third quarter of a 2026 NBA Summer League game at the Thomas & Mack Center on July 12, 2026 in Las Vegas, Nevada. (Photo by Ian Maule/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Today is actually a doubleheader.

First, the Washington Mystics play the Toronto Tempo tonight at 7 p.m. ET. Watch on Monumental Sports Network. Then, the Washington Wizards play the Chicago Bulls in Summer League an hour later or so. Go DC!

2026 MLB All-Star Game Discussion

Jun 12, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Brewers pitcher Jacob Misiorowski (32) soaks it all in as he walks off the field with catcher William Contreras (24) after a nine innings 6-0 win over the Philadelphia Phillies at American Family Field. Misiorowski (32) pitched all nine innings of the game. Mandatory Credit: Michael McLoone-Imagn Images | Michael McLoone-Imagn Images

Tonight is the MLB All-Star Game in Philadelphia, and many of the best players from around the league will be in the game. For the Brewers, only two players were named to this year’s team: Jacob Misiorowski and William Contreras.

The only player who will appear in tonight’s game is Contreras. It has been another solid season for him, who has posted a .282/.344/.398 batting line with nine home runs and 53 RBIs. He will appear as a reserve during the game in the later innings.

The other Brewer on this year’s team is Jacob Misiorowski. This is his second straight season where he has been named an All-Star. However, he will not appear in this year’s game as he rests up due to some fatigue that he was feeling before the break.

Here are the starting lineups for tonight’s game. Cristopher Sánchez will start the game for the National League, and Dylan Cease will get the ball first for the American League. The full rosters for each team can be found here. First pitch is at 7 p.m. on FOX.

Open Thread: 2026 All-Star Game

Juan Soto #22 of the New York Mets smiles during the 2026 All-Star Workout Day presented by Gatorade at Citizens Bank Park on Monday, July 13, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

American League lineup

Mike Trout – CF (Los Angeles Angels)

Yordan Alvarez – DH (Houston Astros)

Shea Langeliers – C (Athletics)

Junior Caminero – 3B (Tampa Bay Rays)

Bobby Witt Jr. – SS (Kansas City Royals)

Cody Bellinger – RF (New York Yankees)

Ben Rice – 1B (New York Yankees)

Riley Greene – LF (Detroit Tigers)

Ernie Clement – 2B (Toronto Blue Jays)

SP: Dylan Cease – RHP (Toronto Blue Jays)

National League lineup

Kyle Schwarber – DH (Philadelphia Phillies)

Juan Soto – LF (New York Mets)

Freddie Freeman – 1B (Los Angeles Dodgers)

CJ Abrams – SS (Washington Nationals)

Max Muncy – 3B (Los Angeles Dodgers)

Ozzie Albies – 2B (Atlanta Braves)

Brandon Marsh – RF (Philadelphia Phillies)

Andy Pages – CF (Los Angeles Dodgers)

Drake Baldwin – C (Atlanta Braves)

SP: Cristopher Sánchez – LHP

Broadcast info

First pitch: 8:00 PM EDT
TV: FOX
Radio: ESPN Radio

2026 MLB All-Star Game Thread

Citizens Bank Park will host the 2026 MLB All-star game for the first time since it opened in 2004.

Major League Baseball’s night to celebrate its own has finally arrived. The 96th Midsummer Classic begins at 8 p.m. EDT (5 p.m. PDT) tonight at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia. This is the fifth time an All-Star Game has been held in Philly, but the first time at Citizens Bank Park.

The A’s are represented by two deserving All-stars, Shea Langeliers who will be the American League (AL) starting catcher, batting third in the lineup and Nick Kurtz who unfortunately can’t play due to his thumb injury. Both were seen reveling in the excitement of the Home Run Derby last night.

Starting for the AL is Toronto’s ace Dylan Cease. Cease is currently 6-4 with a 2.56 ERA in seventeen starts. The 30-year-old righty has notched 148 strikeouts in 98.1 innings for the Jays this season. It’s his first All-star game appearance.

Taking the ball for the National League (NL) is Philadelphia’s own, Cristopher Sánchez. He’s the first Phillies pitcher to get the nod since Roy Halliday in 2011. This year, Sánchez is 11-4 with a 2.62 ERA in twenty starts. He’s struck out 144 batters in 127.1 innings. The 29-year-old lefty was an NL All-star in 2024.

Managing the team for the American League is John Schneider of the defending AL champion Blue Jays.  He’ll start this lineup for the visiting team:

Dave Roberts, skipper of the World Series champion Dodgers, will present this lineup to start the game for the National League:

Here are the full rosters for both leagues: https://www.mlb.com/news/2026-all-star-game-rosters.

Follow the Game:
Watch:
National – FOX

Listen:
ESPN Radio, TUDN


2026 MLB All-Star Game Thread

Mar 26, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Fans stand under a 2026 All Star Game sign during a game between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Texas Rangers at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Bill Streicher-Imagn Images | Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

First Pitch: 7:00 PM CDT

TV: FOX

Radio: ESPN Radio, TUDN

Hey now, you’re an All Star:NL & AL Rosters

Cristopher Sanchez from the Phillies gets to start on his home mound at Citizens Bank Park, with the AL sending out Dylan Cease from the Blue Jays. This is the first time the ASG has been hosted at this park, but Philly has hosted the contest four times prior.

The Twins have two players selected as All Stars this year, Byron Buxton and Joe Ryan. Buxton is unfortunately injured, so we can only hope that Joe will pitch at some point. If we expand our definition of “Twin” to include former Twins, Louis Varland (TOR) is out there in the bullpen for the AL and Jhoan Duran (PHI) for the NL.

Lineups

John Schneider’s American League:

  1. Mike Trout (LAA), CF
  2. Yordan Alvarez (HOU), DH
  3. Shea Langeliers (ATH), C
  4. Junior Caminero (TB), 3B
  5. Bobby Witt Jr. (KC), SS
  6. Cody Bellinger (NYY), RF
  7. Ben Rice (NYY), 1B
  8. Riley Greene (DET), LF
  9. Ernie Clement (TOR), 2B

Dave Roberts’ National League

  1. Kyle Schwarber (PHI), DH
  2. Juan Soto (NYM), LF
  3. Freddie Freeman (LAD), 1B
  4. CJ Abrams (WSH), SS
  5. Max Muncy (LAD), 3B
  6. Ozzie Albies (ATL), 2B
  7. Brandon Marsh (PHI), RF
  8. Andy Pages (LAD), CF
  9. Drake Baldwin (ATL), C

2026 All Star Game Thread

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS - JULY 12: Shea Langeliers #23 of the Athletics hits a solo home run in the first inning of a game between the Athletics and the Chicago White Sox at Rate Field on July 12, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Griffin Quinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s arrived folks! The 2026 version of the Midsummer Classic, pitting the best of the National League against the best of the American League. The Junior Circuit currently leads the all-time series 48-44-3, with the Senior Circuit riding a one-year winning streak after taking last year’s All Star Game. Can the AL bounce back and get the victory, or will the NL make it two straight years taking home the All Star Game trophy?

For A’s fans, we’ll have the treat of watching Shea Langeliers making the start behind home plate this evening. He’ll be catching Blue Jays right-hander Dylan Cease. ‘Bangeliers’ will also be occupying a spot of honor in the starting lineup, batting third between Astros slugger Yordan Alvarez and Rays third baseman Junior Caminero. Langeliers is guaranteed one at bat but could end up with a couple trips to the plate, depending on how AL manager John Schneider decides to go with him. What are the chances the first-time All Star comes away with the MVP tonight?

Langeliers should have had one of his teammates take the field with him tonight. Alas, a right thumb sprain will prevent Nick Kurtz from taking part in his first All Star game, with Yankees first baseman Ben Rice taking his spot. Kurtz wasn’t elected the starter at first base but after Vladimir Guerrero Jr. decided not to take part Kurtz was named the replacement at first by Schneider. A well-deserved honor, but unfortunately the injury will keep him out tonight. At least he’s still gotten to be around his fellow stars and take part in this week’s festivities.

Here’s how the American League will line up for tonight’s exhibition contest:

And here’s how the National League’s lineup will look, courtesy of Dodgers manager Dave Roberts:

First pitch is at 5:00 but the festivities are just getting underway now. Enjoy the game everyone!

Carter Bryant and the Sound of Silence

If the name Thilo Widder sounds familiar, you have a good memory! Thilo is a contributor at our Minnesota Timberwolves sister site Canis Hoopus, and he participated in the second round of Fraternizing with the Enemy with J.R. Wilco during their playoff series against the Spurs. He also enjoys contributing to other blogs, and we have the great honor of him providing this amazing piece on Carter Bryant and his contributions to the deaf community to Pounding the Rock. We hope you enjoy. -the Editors


What’s the first thing you think of when you think basketball? Do you see the sight of the ball dropping through the net? Can you just feel the excitement burst into your bloodstream, a memory turned physical with a moment’s notice?

Or, do you hear it?

Because I hear basketball. I hear its presentation when Mike Breen yells “bang.” I hear the sound of shoes squeaking up and down the court, of Mark Cuban’s speaker system bafflingly installed inside the hoop itself.

I hear it all. I live for it. It’s essential to how I have fallen in love with basketball.

But what if it hadn’t been? What if I, like thousands of fans, could not hear the game? Deafness continues to be a more and more common disability. Over 430 million people world-wide already deal with some sort of hearing loss with the WHO estimating that number to rise to over 700 million by 2050, approximately 10% of the world’s population by that time.

There’s an ESPN story about “Invisible Disabilities” faced by sports fans that has stuck with me many years after it was originally posted just about two years ago. There’s one section about a deaf fan, Amy Gomme, who said the following:

“These leagues, these teams are missing out on a new fan base, potential fans who would show up to games if the experience was inclusive enough.”

I wonder how Carter Bryant feels about that.

To be clear, Bryant is not deaf. Instead, he’s been molded by the community that still seems like such an afterthought to the NBA’s production. As a child in a non-hearing family, and a special advocate of Gallaudet University, a school for the hearing impaired, Bryant called himself the “face of their platform” in a pre-draft video. That seems more important than ever.

“For the longest time, I thought half the population was deaf and half the population was hearing,” Bryant said. “Because, just how I was brought up, half my day was spent with deaf people.”

Bryant is something called a GODA – or a grandchild of a deaf adult. The slightly less known acronym than its generationally separated CODA (child of a deaf adult) has fundamentally shaped the man he is today.

That G part of that set of four letters carries more than it seems. Bryant’s grandfather is Doc Torres, who few of you will know. Widely considered the brightest star of an 80s Gallaudet team, Torres was shunned from the NBA for his deafness. He would go on to play nearly 20 years in Puerto Rico and win two gold medals at the Deaflympics.

There has only ever been one deaf NBA player. Lance Allred played for the Cleveland Cavaliers for three games in the 2007-08 season. He would spend 16 seasons bouncing around 17 different teams from the early 2000s to the mid-2010s.

During his time in the G-League, Allred faced discriminatory abuse from his coach while playing for his hometown Utah Flash.

It was clear that the NBA was not ready to empower deaf players. Whether it was for a lack of readiness or a lack of care, they simply did not set up Allred – or Torres for that matter – for success.

It is certainly not from a lack of talent. That much is very clearly certain.


Carter Bryant decided on Arizona, a university with an established pipeline to the NBA, for any number of reasons. They played the fast paced brand of basketball that would empower him. His aunt had played volleyball there and he knew the coaches well. They had a history of turning forwards with similar body types to his own into lottery picks and champions. From Aaron Gordon to Derrick Williams to the more recent Benedict Mathurin, the fit was clear.

Still, there was an option that must have tugged at Bryant’s heart-strings. Gallaudet University could offer him a third generation of his family, tied to a school and a community that he clearly cares about so strongly.

And yet, it never could’ve been in consideration. To go to Gallaudet would be to abandon the dream he had built in his parents’ home.

He understandably made the only real choice he had, the only choice that loving family would’ve allowed.

Still, at Gallaudet, his grandparents would be able to attend games and be treated as people first, not as their disabilities.

Instead, Arizona had an incredible season. Bryant was a blur in transition and his body rapidly took form as his defense did the same. Transfer Caleb Love joined him to lead the Wildcats to the Sweet Sixteen.

During that run, or even during his whole college season, Carter’s mind was on his family, as undoubtedly theirs was on him. Yet, despite their continued care for him, Bryant’s games were getting harder and harder to follow and watch for the people that he wanted there most.

It seems silly to say. Arizona’s games were all televised. There are gaggles of reporters doing write ups for these contests. Coverage was not too far out of reach.

And yet…

“I think basketball is unique, because it’s a live event, so I think ways I could relate to that would be theater, cinema, concerts. It’s really hard to find caption films when they come out live, and so there’s a lot of delay in access to information.” said Apolline Tardy, a Ph.D student at Berkley College and an advocate and researcher of accessibility technology.

“Movies will come out in theaters, they don’t have captions yet… even if something is coming out live, the captions often have a delay, especially if they’re manually typed, and it’s just.. it’s such bad of an experience that I don’t follow at all. I don’t want to, because it’s kind of incoherent. The timing is so important. I imagine basketball is so visual, like you don’t want to see someone shoot and then wait 40 seconds to, to know who did it”

Only four teams – the LA Clippers, the Phoenix Suns, the Portland Trailblazers, and the Brooklyn Nets – offer OneCourt, a disability aid for low vision individuals or the vision impaired. As far as whatever is publicly available, no teams offer any sort of support for deaf fans.

The assumption is that fans who need them will have their own cochlear implants, that all these fans need to do is to join the “hearing world.”

In 2021, Zach Lavine took a group of hard of hearing students to a Chicago White Sox game, continuing a commitment that started when he was in high school. The interpreter he includes in his messages are a stark reminder of what the NBA has not done.


What’s your favorite part of being a fan of the NBA? Or any sports league for that matter?

Is it the moments in play that remind you of when you first fell in love with the game, the nostalgia of remembering what it was like ten, fifteen, however many years ago?

Is it the transactions, the trades that promise endless debate and the thoughts of different universes? What if the Spurs had lost Tim Duncan to the Magic? What if they had drafted better players in the first few years of their rebuild?

Or, as it is for me, is it the community that comes with discussing these questions with peers, who decide to unite in their care for a sport that is slowly but surely becoming the world’s second most popular game?

Many of those who push back on accessibility claim that communities should be responsible for their own engagement. There hasn’t been much proof that the deaf community wants to engage with sports so why should we build out tools to help them?

The better question is: how many fans have we missed out on learning from because the league failed to invite them into the game.

Carter Bryant was invited to join the game that those fans shunned had made, a space they could play without the usual questions. Whereas hearing players, players who have been socialized yelling out orders on the basketball court, can communicate with ease, there is no place for signing in these runs.

“If I’m guarding the ball and I have four other people behind me, you kind of have no idea what’s going on,” Bryant told The Athletic in a February interview. “So being able to check out your peripherals, use your feet and just have a sense of natural feel for the game, it’s different. We take it for granted as players, and we don’t use our other senses as much, but we don’t have to.”

Bryant heard the same floor squeaks, the same sound of the swish we have all fallen in love with, but without the barking. He didn’t hear a screen called out, or a switch, it instead became a second instinct.

Schemes were internalized, matchups memorized, in a way that would not require communication but instead only the trust that his teammates would be there.

Inherent, unthinking belief that someone would be there. That someone would reach out.


The priority of the NBA has been globalization.

They have, to their immense credit, found ways to build basketball from a game for fans all over the world to a worldly game, which is not an insignificant jump to make. Fans can now experience their favorite teams in Spanish, Japanese, French, and any of the other 60 languages offered.

If you’ll bear with me, Spanish broadcasts of NBA games first started in 1995 when the Miami Heat partnered with a local radio station and decided they would supply the local market with dubbed commentary of Heat games. For over a thousand straight games, Jose Pañeda sat in the booth and excited fans who had not been ignored entirely, but certainly also hadn’t been invited.

A few years later, the NBA greenlit a deal with Telemundo, leading to a 15 game trial period across three years, opening the door for ESPN Deportes and the ilk. Decades later and those are cornerstones of the ESPN network.

It is insane to argue that the league would never have sought out a way to communicate with fans outside of the English language. However, it took just one act of one franchise, 25 years ago, to make the league better, not just for Spanish speakers but for fans in China or Germany or Brazil.

Because they reached out. They assumed someone would be there if they opened their doors and they were right.

“I think an argument you should make is that deafness is very similar to a language barrier,” said Tardy, “If I only spoke French and I went to the NBA in the US, I wouldn’t know what was going on… Some deaf people just consider themselves a linguistic minority. They say ‘if everybody spoke ASL, then it wouldn’t be a problem at all for anyone, because everyone could just operate on other senses.’”

What would a broadcast for deaf fans even look like? It’s certainly not as easy as an option as for different non-English verbal languages. Would it be as simple as having an interpreter, as has been provided for concerts and films?

“My goal is that it doesn’t become secondary, that you know you have the primary source of information, that speech, for example, and then you have the secondary source, like it’s translated in another way, and then you become the second to hear it.”  continued Tardy, “I think what would make the experience so much smoother is if there was a primary way to access information… why can’t there just be a deaf commentator that’s not translating a hearing commentator?”

430 million people are deaf worldwide. That is more people than the population of all but two countries in the world.

They – and their potential fandom – are ignored.


Carter Bryant is being ignored.

It’s the middle of the season and the 15th pick has still not cracked the rotation. He has been sent back and forth from the G-League, and he is playing against the end of the bench guys that NBA fans so frequently forget are among the top 500 players in the world.

Worst of all, he’s missing dunks. What was once the easiest thing on the planet is now coming harder and harder. It’s like the court is screaming at him. Gone is the quiet, the focus on simply trusting and executing, here is the new reality.

At first, he gets loud. He plays the character he thinks he needs to. He becomes robotic. His movements are stiff. He falls further and further from a normal role.

He is transferred back down to the G-League again. However, this time it comes not with a focus. He is not told to practice his mechanics or on-ball creation, although I’m sure that was in the notes as well.

No, he’s told to find himself.

There’s a concept in accessibility circles called imagined needs. In Apolline’s words, “accessibility has a long history of being made by people who don’t experience the disability and who imagine what the needs might be, and then when they actually show their products… this is fun, but I won’t use it in my day-to-day life, because it’s impractical, or because I just feel embarrassed to use that in public.”

I think the same concept applies to development in the NBA. We assume we know the swing factors for players to succeed. We rave about whether a handle or a buffer frame or any number of things are the things that will take our favorite young players from prospect to star.

Maybe these two things are unavoidable. What did it take for Bryant to find a spot as the first forward to sub in for a Spurs team that would make their first final in 12 years? Was it a better shot? Was it a return to non-robot form?

No, it was finding home. And he found it in the fraternity that grew him.

Bryant would re-engage with the deaf community, although it’s more accurate to say he extended an open hand in a new place. He led events at the Sunshine Cottage School for the Hearing Impaired in San Antonio. He signed hello to deaf families when out and about, an act so simple that had become so foreign.

For Carter, silence is home. Not just the lack of sound, but the lack of outside input. He speaks sparingly. He is kind, yet soft spoken. He is looking out for obstacles that he does not expect to be announced. He is compared to dumplings on Twitter.

In a world full of invisible barriers to the league, those silent and those overwhelmingly, unendingly loud, he has focused on what is directly in front of him.

It’s a quiet journey. But it was never one without communication. Maybe the next step is helping to take the courts he grew up on, the ones without the relentless chatter, and shaping the NBA landscape with them in mind. Maybe it comes first in the form of a breakout sophomore season on the Western Conference Champion. Maybe it does not come at all.

But what is undeniably certain is the means he will use to pursue that journey, wherever it leaves him.

With silent growth, and ever open arms.

With words unheard but not unspoken.

With a future he is sure to grasp, and a community he has never stopped hearing.

Silence has never been quite this loud.