Washington Nationals Aim to Carry Momentum From Weekend Sweep as They Face Pittsburgh

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - APRIL 12: CJ Abrams #5 of the Washington Nationals scores a run during the eighth inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on April 12, 2026 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images) | Getty Images

A 1-7 skid entering Milwaukee on Friday had the Nats’ fanbase looking for answers, and the team gave them exactly that with a major 3-game weekend sweep of the Brewers.

Gritty baseball powered Washington to a Game 1 win, with 2 RBI bunts flipping a 3-3 game on its head in the 9th inning as they secured a 7-3 win in the series opener. Foster Griffin was once again as advertised in Game 2, with a 5th inning 2-run double by Jacob Young the difference in a comfortable 3-1 win. The bullpen reared its ugly head in the finale, but timely hitting from Keibert Ruiz in the 8th inning broke a 6-6 tie and got the brooms out to begin the Nats’ road trip.

Washington has quickly gotten itself back within a game of the .500 mark, and now has to take on the NL Central leader Pittsburgh Pirates in a 4-game series. The Pirates, winners of 7 of their last 10 games, have lost just 2 series to this point in 2026. They fell just short of sweeping the Cubs on Sunday in a 7-6 loss, but are emerging as a formidable opponent with a stable pitching staff and much-improved lineup.

Monday – 6:40 PM EST

PIT: RHP Paul Skenes (2-1, 5.25 ERA)

WSH: RHP Cade Cavalli (0-0, 2.51 ERA)

Seeing a 5 at the start of Skenes’ ERA is certainly not a common occurrence, as he’s still attempting to work past his dreadful season debut against the New York Mets. He’s looked much more like his 2025 Cy Young winner self in his 2 recent outings, throwing a combined 11.1 innings with just 2 earned runs allowed. It’s never an easy task facing a pitcher as good as Skenes, and the Nats will have to capitalize on every opportunity they can create.

Cavalli wasn’t able to match the length of his 2nd start, but he still turned in a solid 4.2 innings of work against the St. Louis Cardinals in his last appearance. An error by CJ Abrams extended his 1st inning, leading to the early hook, although he was able to bear down and deliver an adequate line. Holding down the Pirates’ hitters will be pivotal with Skenes as the opposing pitcher, and continuing his streak of sub-3 earned run outings would go a long way toward accomplishing that goal.

Tuesday – 6:40 PM EST

PIT: RHP Mitch Keller (1-0, 1.00 ERA)

WSH: RHP Miles Mikolas (0-3, 12.41 ERA)

Keller has yet to eclipse 5 strikeouts in a game this season, but that hasn’t damaged his effectiveness whatsoever. The righty has only allowed 2 earned runs in 18 innings, with 3 straight quality starts to kick off his 2026 campaign. Hitters have rarely been able to make any hard contact against him, especially in the air, and the Nats will look to be the first team to get to the 30-year-old this season.

It has to get better at some point, right? Mikolas’ time in the rotation could be coming to an end if he can’t turn things around, and there aren’t many under-the-hood metrics that point to improvement being on the horizon. Something has to give, whether it’s the veteran figuring it out or manager Blake Butera making a rotation change, but this could be a pivotal game toward deciding Mikolas’ role with the team.

Wednesday – 6:40 PM EST

PIT: RHP Carmen Mlodzinski (0-0, 2.51 ERA)

WSH: RHP Jake Irvin (1-1, 7.07 ERA)

Mlodzinski has been a consistent swing starter for the Pirates since his debut in 2023, and has continued that trend through his first 3 starts in 2026. He’s yet to go 6 innings, which is to be expected, but opposing batters haven’t been able to lift the ball with authority, allowing him to put together 3 solid outings. He’s dealt with considerable traffic in each of his appearances, something the Nats jumped all over in Milwaukee and would benefit from replicating on Wednesday night.

The veteran right-hander settled in against the Brewers after getting hit around by the Los Angeles Dodgers, but had issues with his command throughout. With how the Pirates have been swinging the bat so far this season, walking another 5 hitters might not be a hole he can dig his way out of again. Relying on his offspeed is a probable game plan for Irvin, who has shown flashes this season but needs to put it all together.

Thursday – 12:35 PM EST

PIT: RHP Braxton Ashcraft (1-1, 2.12 ERA)

WSH: LHP Foster Griffin (2-0, 1.76 ERA)

Ashcraft transitioned into a full-time starter to begin this season after bouncing between the rotation and bullpen in 2025, and early returns have been fantastic. With 4 offerings sitting above 90 MPH and all of which grading out as above average pitches, he’s cruised to a 2.12 ERA with an impressive 30.3% strikeout rate. His arsenal during his last start versus the Chicago Cubs was lethal, generating 16 total whiffs in just 5 innings. The one crack in his armor so far has been his 21st percentile average exit velocity, something that could play into the hands of the Nationals’ power bats.

Griffin just keeps getting better and better. He registered his best start of 2026 against the Brewers, relinquishing just 1 hit and 0 runs in 5.1 innings en route to his 2nd win of the season. He’s beaten teams both by the way of the strikeout and by limiting hard contact, forming a return to MLB that has already surpassed most preseason expectations. Offenses can’t seem to get a beat on him, and Washington will hope to keep that pattern alive in the series finale.

Keep the good times rolling

The Nats walked into Milwaukee and took down one of the top teams in baseball in 3 straight games, and are now right in the thick of the early NL East race. Sitting just 2.5 games back of the 1st place Atlanta Braves, they are now given a prime opportunity to take advantage of a division that has gotten off to an incredibly slow start. Pittsburgh is playing some great baseball so far, but as shown during their last series, the Nats can match up with anyone when they play their style of game.

Living with the danger, I am always on the edge now: Phillies vs. Cubs series preview

Mar 13, 2026; Houston, TX, United States; United States right fielder Aaron Judge (99), second baseman Brice Turang (13), shortstop Bobby Witt Jr. (7) and third baseman Alex Bregman (2) celebrate after defeating Canada during a quarterfinal game of the 2026 World Baseball Classic at Daikin Park. Mandatory Credit: Troy Taormina-Imagn Images | Troy Taormina-Imagn Images

With the loss to the Diamondbacks on Sunday, the Phillies fell to a game under .500. They’ll now welcome another would-be contender who is off to an uneven start to the season that has left them a game under .500.

Chicago Cubs

Record: 7-8, Fifth place in National League Central (Two games back)

The last time they met

The Phillies hosted the Cubs in early June 2025 and won the first game on an eleventh inning RBI by Brandon Marsh. Poor pitching doomed them in the middle game, but a strong start by Jesus Luzardo carried them to victory in the finale.

What’s the deal with the Cubs?

The Cubs made the playoffs as a Wild Card in 2025, and after winning their first-round playoff series, fell to the Brewers in the NLDS. The Cubs tried to build on that in the offseason by signing Alex Bregman and Edward Cabrera, though they did lose Kyle Tucker to the Dodgers. They also remade their bullpen by bringing in Phil Maton and Hunter Harvey.

The new additions have been a mixed bag. Cabrera has been excellent in the early going, but Bregman has disappointed (more on him next). And both Harvey and Maton are on the IL.

The Cubs’ offense hasn’t been where they expected it to be. In addition to Bregman, both Dansby “thoroughly stupid name” Swanson and Pete Crow-Armstrong are off to slow starts at the plate. Both are excellent fielders, but in the past, they’ve been much better hitters than they’ve shown so far this season.

Featured Cub: Alex Bregman

There’s no denying that Alec Bohm is playing poorly this season, and vindicating those who thought the team needed to move on from him. However, the two big names that most people wanted to replace him with are also playing poorly on their new teams. Bo Bichette has the Mets experiencing buyer’s remorse, and Alex Bregman hasn’t been much better.

It was unlikely that Bregman would ever regain the highs he hit in Houston where he was the MVP runner-up in 2019. But after he had an OPS of .821 and made the All-Star team for the Red Sox in 2025, the Cubs surely expected more than they’ve seen from him early on. He’s batting .213 with two home runs, and perhaps most surprisingly, his defense has not graded out well either.

As I’ve mentioned when talking about the slumping Phillies players, it is still very early in the season. Given Bregman’s track record, there’s a good chance that the next time we see him, his numbers will be around where we expect. Let’s just hope that his early season struggles can continue for at least three more games.

What about the Phillies?

Is it more frustrating when your team loses because they’re getting beat by a superior team, or because they’re just playing poorly? Looking at the rosters, it’s difficult to say that the Arizona Diamondbacks have a superior roster than the Phillies. but the Phillies lost the series because they made a lot of mistakes.

And no, I don’t think Rob Thomson needs to bench Bryce Harper for his poor decision to try to stretch a single into a double. Harper was clearly trying too hard in that situation, and he needs to be smarter. On the other hand, I’d rather see mistakes like that rather than a team that looks moribund. Mistakes of aggression are usually better than mistakes of passivity.

Pennant year song battle

Everybody Wants You by Billy Squier defeated Take the Long Way Home to hold on to the title for another series.

The next contender comes from 1983. In honor of the Phillies’ many mistakes on Sunday, we have It’s a Mistake by Men at Work:

Vote now:

Closing thought

Neither of these teams are playing great baseball at the moment. The series might come down to which team plays the less not great.

How do the Lakers match up against the Houston Rockets entering their playoff series?

Los Angeles, CA - April 10: Lakers head coach JJ Redick, left, congratulates Lakers forward LeBron James, #23, after making a basket in the second half against the Suns at Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles Friday, April 10, 2026. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)
Lakers coach JJ Redick, left, congratulates LeBron James after making a basket against the Phoenix Suns at Crypto.com Arena. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times)

The Lakers got a taste of a playoff atmosphere against the Houston Rockets only a month ago. They can recreate the moment again, this time with real postseason stakes, but the No. 4 seed in the Western Conference will be missing a key component from those thrilling wins.

Luka Doncic, still getting specialized treatment in Europe for his Grade 2 left hamstring strain, is a long shot to return during the first round of the playoffs, which begin Saturday at 5:30 p.m. at Crypto.com Arena.

Between Doncic and Austin Reaves, who is out with a Grade 2 left oblique strain, the Lakers have lost their two leading scorers and an average of 56.8 points per game. They lost the No. 3 seed. But by finishing the season with three consecutive wins to maintain home-court advantage in the first round of the playoffs, they haven’t lost their fight.

Read more:Lakers beat Jazz in finale, will host play-in game against Timberwolves

They'll need it against the Rockets.

“The playoffs, to me, are all about resiliency,” Lakers coach JJ Redick said. “... You're playing one opponent in the playoffs and there's a bunch of things that are gonna happen, some good, some bad. You may get down in a series. You may get down in the game, you may get down in the game on the road. And just, you have to play with resiliency.”

Here’s how the teams match up:

Key team stats

Lakers

Record: 53-29

Offensive rating (OFF RTG): 117.0 (10th)

Defensive rating (DEF RTG):115.5 (20th)

Net Rating (NET RTG)*: 1.5 (14th)

Rockets

Record: 52-30

Offensive Rating (OFF RTG): 117.5 (8th)

Defensive Rating (DEF RTG): 112.1 (6th)

Net Rating (NET RTG)*: 5.4 (6th)

(*Net rating subtracts defensive rating from offensive rating for a projected margin of victory.)

Players to watch

Lakers

LeBron James: 20.9 ppg, 6.1 rpg, 7.2 apg, 51.5 fg%/31.7 3-pt. fg%/73.7 ft%

Deandre Ayton: 12.5 ppg, 8.0 rpg, 1 bpg, 67 fg%/64.5% ft%

Marcus Smart: 9.3 ppg, 2.8 rpg, 3.0 apg, 39.5 fg%/33.1 3-pt. fg%/82.2 ft%

Rockets

Kevin Durant: 26 ppg, 5.5 rpg, 4.8 apg, 52 fg%/41.3 3-pt. fg%/87.4 ft%

Alperen Sengun: 20.4 ppg, 8.9 rpg, 6.2 bpg, 51.9 fg%/30.5 3-pt. fg%/69.1 ft%

Amen Thompson: 18.3 ppg, 7.8 rpg, 5.3 apg, 53.4 fg%/77.9 ft%

How the Lakers fared

Season Series: 2-1

Dec. 25, 2025, in Los Angeles

Rockets 119, Lakers 96

The Rockets looked like a championship-contending team early in the season behind the generational rebounding force of Sengun and Steven Adams. They bullied the Lakers in a nationally televised, Christmas Day showcase, and to add injury to insult, Reaves re-aggravated a calf injury that kept him out for six weeks.

Read more:'Mr. 82.' How Jake LaRavia became the injury-plagued Lakers' iron man

March 16, in Houston

Lakers 100, Rockets 92

Part of their season-long nine-game winning streak, the Lakers came back from a 10-point third-quarter deficit behind 36 points, six rebounds and four assists from Doncic. The Rockets committed 24 turnovers, a season-high for a Lakers opponent, including seven turnovers from Durant. The Rockets were without Sengun, who missed the game with low back pain.

March 18, in Houston

Lakers 124, Rockets 116

Doncic and James combined for 70 points to lead the Lakers to their seventh consecutive win. Doncic scored 40 with 10 assists and nine rebounds while James was 13 for 14 from the field, including an alley-oop dunk from Doncic with 1:22 remaining that contributed to a 13-2 Lakers run that put the game away. While the Lakers were one of the league’s best in clutch time — going 22-8 in games within five points in the last five minutes — the Rockets were 16th with a 22-23 clutch time record.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Walk-off grand slam gives Toledo series win

Toledo Mud Hens 11, St. Paul Saints 8 (box)

Toledo took the series, 4-3, against the St. Paul Saints on Sunday with an 11-8 win that ended on a walk-off grand slam.

The Mud Hens scored seven runs in the ninth to rally back from a four-run deficit. Ben Malgeri led off with a solo home run, Max Clark walked and Gage Workman hit a double to bring the tying run to the plate. Workman had two home runs earlier in the game — a solo shot in the fourth and a two-run bomb in the fifth — giving him 11 total bases on the day.

Eduardo Valencia singled in Clark and Workman, bringing the go-ahead run to the dish. Jace Jung walked, and Trei Cruz tried to move the runners into scoring position with a bunt. He ended up sending it back to the pitcher, Marco Raya, who got the lead runner at third, but Tomas Nido walked to load the bases.

St. Paul brought in Dan Altavilla to try to stop the bleeding, but Cal Stevenson ended the game with one swing. (Also, the admin who runs the Mud Hens Twitter account was having a blast using Justin Bieber lyrics.)

Outside of the ninth, Toledo was 0-7 with runners in scoring position. Workman’s first homer got the Mud Hens on the board after falling behind 6-0 over the first four innings, and Stevenson grounded into an out for the second run of the fourth. Workman’s second homer came with Malgeri on first in the next frame.

Lael Lockhart got the start for Toledo. Things started fine for him with six outs in a row, but things spiraled in the third for a five-run frame. St. Paul started squaring things up for some hard contact, including three balls that came off the bat over 101 mph. Kyler Fedko homered off him twice, both with a 106-mph exit velocity. His sinker and four-seam were extremely hittable today, but Lockhart had some good numbers with the splitter (54% CSW).

Jack Little relieved Lockhart in the fifth. He got through two innings with little trouble, but Fedko went yard for a third time on the day in the sixth. Sometimes, a guy is just locked in at the plate. Fedko also tripled in the eighth, giving him 15 total bases, five RBIs and four hits on the day. Little didn’t record a strikeout in his outing.

Drew Sommers threw a clean seventh for Toledo. He came back out for the eighth and got two quick outs, but Fedko’s RBI triple knocked him out of the game. Tyler Mattison closed out the inning and worked around two walks in the ninth. Mattison ended up earning the win, thanks to Stevenson’s heroics.

Malgeri: 3-4, HR (1), BB, K

Clark: 0-4, R, BB

Workman: 4-5, 2 HR (3), 2B (4), 3 R, 3 RBI,

Lockhart: 4.0 IP, 6 H, 6 R, 6 ER, 2 BB, 5 K

Coming Up Next: Toledo is in Louisville next week. The series starts on Tuesday at 6:05 p.m. ET.

Chesapeake Baysox 4, Erie SeaWolves 1 (box)

Erie dropped the final game of the series against Chesapeake, 4-1, on Sunday, finishing the week with a 1-5 record.

It was another five-hit day for the SeaWolves, two of which came in the first inning to score Erie’s only run. Seth Stephenson led off the game with a double down the left-field line, and John Peck singled him. Izaac Pacheco led off the second with a bloop single to left, but he was tagged out at third after taking off on a grounder to the left side.

Erie didn’t record another hit until the sixth, when Peck singled to right with two outs. Sebastian Gongora was really good for the Baysox. He needed just 66 pitches to get through 5 2/3 innings. Erie was chasing his heater and secondary stuff all day. Peck’s second hit came off Eric Torres, but that’s all he’d give up. Stephenson got a single off Jeisson Cabrera in the eighth, but nothing came of it.

Dariel Fregio was effective despite allowing five walks in his second start of the season. He gave up just one hit over 3 1/3 shutout innings. That lone hit was a blooper into left that Justice Bigbie probably could have gotten to with a better jump. It was a windy day, though. Fregio got nicked by a comebacker in the third, but he stayed in the game after a couple of throws to check his mobility.

Trevin Michael took over for Fregio with one out and one on in the fourth. He struck out all five batters he faced. The slider worked really well today, drawing plenty of checked swings that went too far. Luke Taggart was not nearly as good in the sixth. He walked four batters, giving up a free run, and recorded just one out before turning things over to Johan Simon.

Simon couldn’t hold the 1-1 tie through the seventh. He was on his way to working around a pair of singles, but a balk with a man on third gave Chesapeake the lead. Wandisson Charles gave up two runs in the eighth before ending the inning with a double play.

Stephenson: 2-4, 2B (3), R, K

Peck: 2-4, RBI, 2 K

Michael: 1.2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 0 BB, 5 K

Coming Up Next: Erie is back at home next week for a series with Harrisburg, starting on Tuesday at 6:05 p.m. ET.

West Michigan Whitecaps 4, Great Lakes Loons 3 (box)

West Michigan finished the six-game series against Great Lakes with a victory, holding off a ninth-inning rally to win 4-3. The Loons took the series 4-2.

The Whitecaps were outhit 9-6, but both teams went 2-6 with runners in scoring position. West Michigan scored three in the fourth to take a 3-1 lead and added a very important insurance run in the following frame.

Five of the nine Whitecaps baserunners on the day reached in the fourth. Roberto Campos, Garrett Pennington and Andrew Sojka singled, with Sojka driving in the other runners. Ricardo Hurtado walked and scored on a balk, and Cristian Santana walked as well.

Woody Hadeen led off the bottom of the fifth with a double and scored on a throwing error after Jackson Strong legged out a single. Hurtado was hit by a pitch later in the inning, and Campos walked in the seventh. It wasn’t a strong day for the offense, but it was enough.

Gabriel Reyes got the start for West Michigan, giving up one run on six hits and a walk over three innings. He got double plays to end the first two frames, but three consecutive singles in the second gave Great Lakes a brief lead.

Seth Chavez earned the win, taking over for Reyes in the fourth. He threw two innings of one-hit ball, but nothing was too exciting there. Ryan Harvey held the lead over the next two frames. He didn’t give up any hits and walked just one batter while striking out three.

Zack Lee closed out the win over the final two frames, but there was some trouble in the ninth. A leadoff error led to a run being doubled in, and a one-out single made it a one-run game. Lee finished things off, though, striking out four along the way.

Kind of a boring game, but it’s a good win to send the crowd home happy.

Sojka: 1-4, 2 RBI, 2 K

Hadeen: 1-4, 2B (2), R, 2 K

Reyes: 3.0 IP, 6 H, 1 R, 1 ER, BB, 2 K

Harvey (H, 1): 2.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, BB, 3 K

Coming Up Next: West Michigan is in Lansing next week. The series starts at 6:05 p.m. ET on Tuesday.

Daytona Tortugas 14, Lakeland Flying Tigers 0 (box)

Lakeland lost its second game of the season on Sunday, and this one was much uglier than the first day before. The Dayton Tortugas shut out the Flying Tigers, 14-0. Woof. Lakeland still won the series, however, 4-2.

Cincinnati’s No. 10 prospect, Sheng-En Lin, threw five no-hit innings for the Tortugas, and the bullpen allowed just one hit. Jack Goodman was the only one who saw the ball well for Lakeland. He had three hard-hit balls (95 mph exit velocity or higher), including the lone Flying Tigers hit of the day, a single to right.

Alistair Tanner got the start after impressing through 3 2/3 innings last week. He only recorded two outs this time around. The mid-90s fastball still drew five whiffs on 11 swings (45%), but he left in the first inning after hitting 35 pitches. It was a bit odd to see him get pulled with two outs and a full count, but that’s Single-A ball (I guess).

Xiomer Guacache didn’t help Tanner out. He threw a ball to give Tanner a walk and an earned run. Guacache walked in another run before getting out of the inning. A leadoff walk in the second got the bullpen active, and Jatnk Diaz took over with one out.

Diaz pitched through the fourth, but he gave up four runs on six hits while striking out just one batter. His stuff wasn’t particularly good, and Daytona put a lot of balls in play. Yendy Gomez was next. He was solid, going two scoreless innings with just one hit allowed. The sinker-slider combo worked well.

Andrew Pogue got the seventh and started the eighth. It didn’t go well. He gave up six runs (four earned) on six hits, two walks and an error. Five straight batters reached off him in the eighth, including four consecutive hits. Outfielder Nolan McCarthy finished up the game, as it was already 14-0. McCarthy didn’t give up a hit, though!

Rainer: 0-3, 2 K

Goodman: 1-4, HR (2), R, 2 RBI, 2 K

Gomez: 2.0 IP, H, 0 R, 0 BB, 2 K

McCarthy: 2.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, BB, K (POSTION PLAYER PITCHING!)

Coming Up Next: Lakeland is in Fort Myers next week, starting on Tuesday at 7:05 p.m. ET.


Mets option Ronny Mauricio to make room on roster for Tommy Pham

In order to make room on the active roster for Tommy Pham, the Mets are optioning Ronny Mauricio to Triple-A Syracuse. 

The move is not surprising, given how open manager Carlos Mendoza was about the situation when Mauricio was called up to replace the IL'd Juan Soto.

"Coming off the bench, lefty bat, the versatility, defensively, pinch-running if we need to," Mendoza said about Mauricio. "But also understanding that the playing time part is gonna be limited. But we're not talking about having a case here like last year, where he kind of sat on the bench for a long time."

With regular at-bats not available at the big league level, Mauricio -- who delivered a walk-off hit during the Mets' most recent win -- will be able to play nearly every day for Syracuse.

As far as Pham, he gives the Mets another outfield option.

Luis Robert Jr. and Carson Benge have been starting most days, with Brett Baty, Tyrone Taylor, and Jared Young also getting time in the outfield with Soto out.

On days when Pham doesn't start, he'll be a valuable bat off the bench.

Pham, who signed a minor league deal on Opening Day, had been getting into game shape in the minors.

In 449 plate appearances over 120 games for the Pirates last season, Pham slashed .245/.330/.370 with 10 homers and 17 doubles.

Hornets 110, Knicks 96: “Can already hear the ‘F*** Trae Young’ chants”

Apr 12, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns, far left, and Josh Hart, center-left look on with center Ariel Hukporti (55) and guard Miles McBride (2) during the second half against the Charlotte Hornets at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images | Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

The most anticipated yet anticlimactic Knick regular season in years concluded its preamble with a 110-96 loss to the Charlotte Hornets, though it didn’t feel like an L. Both teams got what they wanted: New York rested their starting five and Mitchell Robinson (somewhere in Connecticut, a worried friend injects thorazine into the red, raging Tom Thibodeau); the Hornets earned the right to host their Play-In game against the Heat. Before nostalgia became commodity, it was once a pretty sweet fruit. I’m old enough to look back on and look forward to raucous Carolina playoff crowds. If Charlotte makes it to the playoffs, they’ll face Detroit. Please make it, Charlotte.

11 Knicks suited up, with 10 playing between 12 and 35 minutes, led by Mo Diawara; ironically, iron man Mikal Bridges played just 23 seconds, long enough to extend his consecutive games streak for yet another year. There’ll be a whole heaping host of playoff previews and player retrospectives the next few months, but before we all go into playoff mode, a few reflections on the 2025-26 Knicks season.

  • Jalen Brunson led the team in scoring at 26 per game. This was his third straight year scoring at least that many while being named an All-Star, the first Knick ever to do so. Patrick Ewing, Carmelo Anthony and Bernard King did so two years in a row, and Richie Guerin once. Bob McAdoo did twice, technically, with one in his split season between Buffalo and New York.
  • Brunson averaged six more points a game than Karl-Anthony Towns. The last time the Knicks had a gap that large between their leading scorers was 2021, when Julius Randle scored 6.5 more than RJ Barrett.
  • Despite a career-low in minutes per game and the fewest field goals made and attempted averages since his rookie year, KAT had a career-best year on the glass, leading the league in defensive rebounds while finishing seventh on the offensive boards.
  • Another encouraging number from Towns: seven. As in seven games missed this year, 17 total since becoming a Knick. The five years prior in Minnesota, he missed 29, 22, 8, 53 and 20. KAT is one of God’s creatures, equal parts ineffable and effed up. One day when you’re looking back, much older than now, and the world is smaller and crueler and hotter, and the number of people who remember you keeps plummeting, the number who care even less, you will remember these as the good times. You will. Because the Knicks were a welcome distraction. One big reason why: Towns, simply showing up. Lotta good in life comes down to that.
  • The Knicks managed to be more available while being less available this season. In 2025 nine Knicks played 500+ minutes; this year, Ariel Hukporti was two minutes away from making it a dozen. And while more Knicks played more, the more essential ‘bockers all played less: KAT played 195 fewer minutes, Mikal Bridges 344, OG Anunoby 482 and Josh Hart 903. Brunson played more total minutes because he played nine more games then last year; if he’d played the same number of games, he’d have played 30 less total minutes. Hopefully them legs pay off come playoff time.
  • I always loved baseball players who would keep changing up their batting stance or delivery. Josh Hart is that kind of baseball player, a Cal Ripken Jr., a David Cone. Every year Hart does something pretty radically different, almost always for the better. In 2025 he shot 10% better from the field than he did in 2024 while dishing 45% more assists per game. This year he’s scoring like he hasn’t since his split 2022 season with the Pelicans and Trail Blazers. Per 36 minutes, he’s taking and making 40% more 3s than he did last season, all while going from the league leader in minutes last year to 54th this year. Hart remains the league leader among Joshes, comfortably ahead of both Okogie (197th) and Green (210th).
  • You’re probably aware OG had more than 100 dunks and 100 3s, which is really cool. Can you guess who the Knick top-five in dunks were? By which I mean “Can you without looking it up?” You, the person reading this. You’re a miracle. Use your imagination. Googling is like masturbation: it has a time and a place, but don’t make it a crutch. I’ll confirm/reveal the answer in the comments. Don’t get any ideas.
  • Bridges attempted 98 free throws this year. How rare is it for a starter to take fewer than 100 in a season? I went back over the past decade and could only find five. Four played far fewer minutes than Bridges, and would’ve broken the century mark if they’d played as often: Quentin Grimes, Damyean Dotson, Jarrett Jack and Courtney Lee. Essentially, there is only one Knick in the last 10 years who drew the whistle as rarely as Mikal.
  • The Knicks finished 53-29, their third straight season of 50+ wins. Don’t sleep on that! Pat Riley won that many all four years he coached in New York. In the 27 seasons between Riley and Brunson, the Knicks did only three times. In the 18 seasons between their last title and the arrival of Ewing, they did twice. The NBA started playing 80 games in 1961-62 before settling on 82. In the dozen seasons from 1962 to 1973, the last Knick title, they won 50+ four times. To sum it all up: this franchise wins this many games a quarter of the time. So three straight times? Told you: these are the good times.

DollarBill24: “ I can already hear the ‘F*** Trae Young’ chants.” I never once liked those chants before, but if they break out in this series I am going to die laughing. Knicks got a week to rest and prepare for their series against Atlanta. There’ll be plenty of roundtables, previews and pods between now and then, so for a couple days let yourself marinate in the mellow.

Could the NBA’s new tanking rules harm the Rockets?

“They say they want you successful, but then they make it stressful, you start keeping pace, they start switching up the tempo.”

– Mos Def

Can’t print the name of the song. Realistically, the comparison is arguably offensive. The Mighty Mos Def is talking about racial inequality in America. This article is going to be about the NBA’s draft pick economy. Dear reader, just know that the quote comes from a place of unadulterated reverence.

Adam Silver’s tenure as a commissioner has been…busy. By now, one could describe him as a busybody. The NBA is like a single-celled organism in a petri dish. There are two scientists in the room. One thinks they’ve introduced enough conditions, and ought to see how it grows organically. Silver is the other, and he wants to add more:

And more, and more, and more.

He won’t stop until the NBA is perfect. Problematically, the NBA will never be perfect. Silver seems unfamiliar with the law of unintended consequences.

For example, he flattened the lottery odds to discourage tanking. So, more teams started tanking. If they didn’t land “their guy”, they tanked for longer. Flattening the odds made tanking a bigger problem, so naturally, Silver is set to flatten them even more.

The Houston Rockets are major stakeholders.

Rockets could be impacted by new lottery odds

Specifically, the new proposal would expand the lottery to 18 teams. Without knowing what the new odds would specifically look like, that might be a wash for the Rockets.

In the 2027 Draft, the Rockets have swap rights with the Brooklyn Nets. The Nets are not necessarily on pace to escape the lottery, so if the rules are implemented this summer, that pick depreciates. That said, they also own the Suns’ pick with no protections. Phoenix is likely to land just inside that bottom 18 mark, so the Rockets may have lottery odds on that pick that they weren’t expecting.

In 2029, the Rockets own the best of their own, Phoenix, and Dallas’ picks. It’s difficult to project so far out. In a vacuum, flatter odds should capture more lottery potential here, but a Phoenix implosion would suddenly be less beneficial for Houston than it would have been before.

So, it’s hard to say how this would impact the Rockets. It could help, and it could hinder.

That’s not entirely the point here.

Rockets acquired picks under certain conditions

I’ll be frank: This boils my blood.

The NBA is a multilayered competition. There’s competition at the immediate, on-court level, but there’s competition between boardrooms as well. Imagine the league eliminates the corner three: How is that fair to teams that built their offense around generating corner threes?

So what’s the difference? Silver is trying to enhance competition, but he’s going directly against the league’s competitive spirit in the process.

These acquisitions were made with certain rules in mind. If the league wants to implement change, it should take hold starting in 2032, when no team owns another team’s picks yet.

That won’t happen. Tanking is apparently a catastrophic emergency that needs to be fixed immediately. It feels like a strange stance from a man who recently described basketball as a “highlight sport”. If I were a betting man…

I’d bet that sports betting has something to do with it.

Anyone who’s cheered for a tanking team is likely to disagree. It wasn’t so bad, was it? Speaking personally, I’ve preferred the experience of watching these young guys grow over, say, the Louis Scola / Kevin Martin years. Perpetual mediocrity is the real basement for the NBA fan experience, and you’ll see a lot more Chicago Bulls team building with these rules.

Is that what Silver wants? He wants three contenders, and 27 teams with no chance to win, and minimal avenues to improve? If so, he’s on his way:

Even if it means changing the rules of a game that’s still ongoing.

Flyers Get Huge News Ahead of Critical Game vs. Hurricanes

The Philadelphia Flyers won't get a better opportunity to clinch a spot in the 2026 Stanley Cup playoffs than this.

With the season on the line, the Flyers are recipients of a huge favor from the Metropolitan Division rival Carolina Hurricanes, who have little left to play for this late in the season.

On Monday afternoon, Hurricanes team reporter Walt Ruff shared that Carolina is likely resting many of its top players, including leading scorers Sebastian Aho and Andrei Svechnikov, No. 1 defenseman Jaccob Slavin, and captain Jordan Staal.

Shayne Gostisbehere and Seth Jarvis were also among the Hurricanes not on the ice to start the team's morning skate on Monday.

Flyers Set Up For Win-And-In Scenario vs. HurricanesFlyers Set Up For Win-And-In Scenario vs. HurricanesThe <a href="https://thehockeynews.com/nhl/philadelphia-flyers">Philadelphia Flyers</a> got all the help they could have possibly asked for, and now it's up to them to seal the deal and book their place in the 2026 Stanley Cup playoffs.

Carolina's lines, according to Ruff, were as follows:

Hall - Stankoven - Blake,
Ehlers - Kotkaniemi - Nadeau,
Carrier - Jankowski - Deslauriers,
Robinson - Brind'Amour - Martinook, 
Miller - Chatfield,
Nikishin - Walker,
Reilly - Legault, 
Bussi (S)

And, yes, that is former Flyers tough guy Nick Deslauriers, who was virtually traded away for free--a conditional seventh-round pick--playing his off-wing on the third line for the Hurricanes.

As for the Flyers, they figure to be at full strength for Monday night's game.

Unsurprisingly, Dan Vladar will start in goal for the Flyers; defenseman David Jiricek joined the team for practice and has taken Egor Zamula's old No. 5 as his number with the NHL club.

Without question, the Flyers need to pounce on this Hurricanes team that is far from full strength.

If they win, they're in.

Rangers' Jonathan Quick announces Monday's matchup with Panthers will be his final NHL game

Rangers goaltender Jonathan Quick told reporters that Monday night's matchup against the Florida Panthers will be the final game of his distinguished NHL career.

"Obviously, the past few years, very lucky to be part of this organization and wear this jersey, but tonight will be my last game in the league," Quick said, via Mollie Walker of the New York Post. "You know, I'm looking forward to it. Very fortunate. Wife flew down with the kids. So they'll be here in attendance tonight. My parents will be here. So looking forward to this last one and try to get one more win here.”

Quick, 40, is a three-time Stanley Cup champion (2011-12, 2013-14, 2022-23), winning the Conn Smythe Trophy as the most outstanding player of the Stanley Cup Final for the Kings in 2012.

After spending 16 years in Los Angeles and one year with Las Vegas, Quick has played the past three seasons with the Rangers. In 69 games as a Ranger, Quick has a 2.94 GAA and a .900 save percentage.

"In a career that spanned close to two decades in the National Hockey League, Jonathan Quick became not just the winningest American-born goaltender of all-time, but also one of the best goaltenders in hockey history," Rangers president and GM Chris Drury said in a statement.

"A three-time Stanley Cup Champion, he earned the utmost respect of teammates, coaches, and staff members through his work ethic and dedication to his craft.

"Jonathan is a special person and player, and the entire Rangers organization wishes him - along with his wife Jackie and three children, Madison, Carter, and Cash - all the best in retirement."

Quick's 410 career wins rank 12th in NHL history.

‘Disgraceful’: anger as World Aquatics allows Russia to compete under flag again

  • Restrictions have been in place since 2022 invasion

  • Ukrainian athlete says move will spread propaganda

Swimming has agreed to allow Russian and Belarusian athletes to compete without restrictions under their own flag and anthem for the first time since 2022, prompting joy in Russia and outrage in Ukraine.

The decision by World Aquatics, which also oversees diving and water polo, adds further momentum to Russia’s bid to be allowed back for the Los Angeles Olympic Games in 2028 following judo’s decision to do the same last year.

Continue reading...

Angels vs Yankees Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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The New York Yankees will look to end a five-game losing streak when they begin a series with the Los Angeles Angels tonight.

The Bombers' offense has struggled to generate runs recently, but I like their bats to come alive this evening with a favorable pitching matchup.

My Angels vs. Yankees predictions and MLB picks break down why the Yankees and the Over have value on Monday, April 13. 

Who will win Angels vs Yankees today: Yankees -1.5 (+105)

Yusei Kikuchi has spent a ton of time in the AL East, so most New York Yankees players have a decent sample size of plate appearances against tonight's Los Angeles Angels starter.

For the most part, they’ve lit him up, too. That shouldn’t be much of a surprise, either.

Kikuchi's Bottom 8th-percentile fastball run value means his primary pitch is getting crushed, and the Yankees rank among the league's best in chase rate suppression, meaning they will lay off the off-speed stuff and sit on the heater.

Hard-hit numbers that have generally hung in the Bottom 30% of the league aren’t good issues to have against the Bronx Bombers either. Give me the Yankees to snap a losing streak in convincing fashion.

Covers COVERS INTEL: Ben Rice has posted a .476 xwOBA with a 75% hard-hit rate across 35 plate appearances vs. Kikuchi.

Angels vs Yankees Over/Under pick: Over 9.5 (-105)

I’ve already lamented this season why I’m more down on Will Warren than the market seems to be. I also believe there’s a decent chance that Kikuchi not only struggles tonight, but is crushed. Either way, the convergence of angles makes me lean towards the Over. 

Warren’s Bottom 7th-percentile chase rate means the Angels will sit in the zone and make contact. They struggle against great chase-inducing pitchers, but when they can avoid them, the underrated power of the lineup shows up.

The Yankees have more paths to scoring, but the Angels should do their part, too. I’d play this up to 10. 

Chris Hatfield's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 5-4, +0.92 units
  • Over/Under bets: 6-4, +1.95 units

Angels vs Yankees odds

  • Moneyline: Angels +165 | Yankees -190
  • Run line: Angels +1.5 | Yankees -1.5
  • Over/Under: Over 9 | Under 9

Angels vs Yankees trend

The Yankees have hit the F5 moneyline in 22 of their last 35 games at home (+9.20 Units / 14% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Angels vs. Yankees.

How to watch Angels vs Yankees and game info

LocationYankee Stadium, Bronx, NY
DateMonday, April 13, 2026
First pitch7:05 p.m. ET
TVFDSN West, YES
Angels starting pitcherYusei Kikuchi
(0-2, 6.75 ERA)
Yankees starting pitcherWill Warren
(1-0, 3.07 ERA)

Angels vs Yankees latest injuries

Angels vs Yankees weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here and view our best betting sites or check out our top sportsbook promos.

Oneil Cruz stays hot at the plate, extends his hit streak to 11 games

CHICAGO, IL - APRIL 11: Oneil Cruz #15 of the Pittsburgh Pirates celebrates a win after the game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field on Saturday, April 11, 2026 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by George Gaza/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

Pittsburgh Pirates’ centerfielder Oneil Cruz had a massive series against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field. Sunday afternoon’s game started with a leadoff home run by Cruz to begin, a game that ended in a 7-6 Pittsburgh loss. The 422-foot blast extended his hitting streak to 11 games, which ties his career high which happened in 2024.  

Cruz also collected four hits, stole three bases, drew a walk and scored a run in Saturday’s 4-3 win. In the series opener on Friday, he singled, walked and stole a base.

The results have been so far so good for the 27-year-old, as his homer off of former Pirate Jameson Taillon on Sunday was his fifth of the season. His career high in home runs (21) came in 2024. His five home runs are tied for the most on the team with Brandon Lowe who hit two in the same game Sunday afternoon. 

There has been a lot of talk about Cruz defensively and how he might be a liability but there is no question that the lefty is one of the best hitters on the team. He leads the team with 20 hits and leads the team with 13 RBIs.

The last two games the center fielder was at the leadoff spot in the batting lineup and I think that is exactly where he should be. There were a handful of games this season where he batted at the six spot or elsewhere in the lineup but I think having that extra pop at the top of the order is a good thing for the lineup. 

Cruz’s hot streak is a very positive sign for the Bucs, as the 27-year-old struggled at the plate in 2025. If he can maintain this level of production, it could be a major boost for the team as they look to improve on their 2025 campaign.

The Pirates start a three-game series back at home against the Washington national Monday night with Paul Skenes on the mound. 

The Cavaliers are the greatest uncertainty in the postseason

TORONTO, ON - NOVEMBER 24: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers dribbles the ball as Ja'Kobe Walter #14 of the Toronto Raptors defends during second half action at Scotiabank Arena on November 24, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. 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 Andrew Lahodynskyj/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Toronto Raptors might look like one of the worst matchups for the Cleveland Cavaliers based on the sweep they conducted, but there are a lot of asterisks at play.

For one, the starting lineups they used in those games aren’t exactly the ones we’ll be seeing when the series starts next week.

The main talking point is that the Cavaliers were sending out makeshift lineups against Toronto. However, something that is not attached to this sentiment, as far as I have seen, is that this was going to be brought up no matter who Cleveland’s first-round opponent was.

The Cavaliers have donned 41 unique lineups in 82 games this season. These changes weren’t inspired by testing out different methodology. The Cavaliers have been snake bitten by the injury bug for the entirety of the regular season. Even on the opening tip in October, they started the season without Darius Garland and Max Strus.

The wave of injuries continued throughout the whole season. Mitchell is the Cavaliers’ so-called “iron man” with 70 games played. The fluctuation has impacted this roster from top to bottom.

The greater point is less about the Cavaliers against the Raptors individually as there is no basis to go off of, and more so how that the Cavaliers are arguably the biggest question mark of any team in the postseason.

It is hard to figure out what a fully healthy version of the Cavaliers looks like. Especially one that has undergone the personnel changes the Cavaliers did at the deadline. Whether it’s swapping James Harden in for Garland, Dennis Schroeder and Keon Ellis for Lonzo Ball and De’Andre Hunter, or even Jaylon Tyson or Max Strus at the three, the Cavaliers have a ton of open-ended questions that were never cemented in certainty.

The postseason is usually when a team commits to what has worked and sticks true to this identity made over 82 games. The Cavs don’t have that luxury.

The Cavaliers had just two five-man lineups that played at least 80 minutes together. One of them involves two players not currently with the team. Even the most used lineup isn’t available for the playoffs.

It makes the Cavaliers a blank canvas, unlike anything we’ve seen in recent years. Usually, it is that a team is hampered by injuries by the time the postseason rolls around. Look at the Lakers, they are starting a series possibly without two of their best three players on the team in Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves. The Cavaliers are actually at their healthiest at the most optimal time; we just don’t know how good they can be.

We’ll soon find out whether they can reach their ceiling as title contenders or if their lack of continuity will cause them to falter.

When do NHL playoffs start? 2026 bracket, standings, clinching scenarios

Every NHL team could have a "clinched" or an "eliminated" symbol by its name in the standings by the end of the night on Monday, April 13.

Then the rest of the season will come down to determining seeding.

Thirteen of the 16 NHL playoff spots have been filled, and the Philadelphia Flyers, Anaheim Ducks and Los Angeles Kings can clinch the remaining three on Monday.

The Flyers can it do it outright, setting up a first-round matchup with the Pittsburgh Penguins, and the Kings and idle Ducks will need help. The Ducks and Flyers have been out of the playoffs a combined 12 seasons.

Also Monday, the Carolina Hurricanes can wrap up the Eastern Conference title and the Buffalo Sabres can clinch the Atlantic Division title. The Pacific Division lead and the Western Conference's second wild card seed could change hands.

Here's what to know about the NHL standings, including the latest playoff bracket, Monday's clinching scenarios and the tiebreaker procedures for the 2025-26 season before the postseason begins on April 18:

Who's in the 2026 NHL playoffs?

Eastern Conference: Carolina, Buffalo, Tampa Bay, Montreal, Pittsburgh, Ottawa, Boston

Western Conference: Colorado, Dallas, Minnesota, Utah, Edmonton, Vegas

Who could clinch an NHL playoff berth today?

  • The Flyers will clinch a playoff berth if they beat the Hurricanes. If they do, they will open the first round in Pittsburgh.
  • The idle Ducks will clinch a playoff berth if the Predators lose to the Sharks.
  • The Los Angeles Kings will clinch a playoff berth if they beat the Kraken and the Nashville Predators lose in regulation.
  • The Hurricanes will clinch the Eastern Conference title if they get at least one point against the Flyers or if the Sabres lose to the Blackhawks.
  • The Sabres will clinch the Atlantic Division title if they beat the Chicago Blackhawks in regulation and the Tampa Bay Lightning do anything but beat the Detroit Red Wings in regulation.

NHL games today (Monday, April 13)

  • Detroit at Tampa Bay, 7
  • N.Y. Rangers at Florida, 7
  • Carolina at Philadelphia, 7
  • Dallas at Toronto, 7:30
  • Minnesota at St. Louis, 8
  • San Jose at Nashville, 8
  • Buffalo at Chicago, 8:30
  • Colorado at Edmonton, 9:30
  • Los Angeles at Seattle, 9:30, ESPN
  • Winnipeg at Vegas, 10

NHL playoff standings

NHL Eastern Conference standings 2025-26

After April 12 gamesx-clinched playoff spot. y-clinched division. z-eliminated.

Metropolitan Division

  • y-Carolina Hurricanes (110)
  • x-Pittsburgh Penguins (98)
  • Philadelphia Flyers (94)

Atlantic Division

  • x-Buffalo Sabres (106)
  • x-Montreal Canadiens (106)
  • x-Tampa Bay Lightning (104)

Wild card

  • x-Boston Bruins (98)
  • x-Ottawa Senators (97)

Sitting out of playoff position: Washington Capitals (93), Columbus Blue Jackets (92), z-Detroit Red Wings (91), z-New York Islanders (91), z-New Jersey Devils (87), z-Florida Panthers (80), z-Toronto Maple Leafs (78), z-New York Rangers (75)

NHL Western Conference standings 2025-26

After April 12 games. x-clinched playoff spot. y-clinched division. z-eliminated.

Central Division

  • y-Colorado Avalanche (115) - Presidents' Trophy winner
  • x-Dallas Stars (108)
  • x-Minnesota Wild (102)

Pacific Division

  • x-Vegas Golden Knights (91)
  • x-Edmonton Oilers (90)
  • Anaheim Ducks (90)

Wild card

  • x-Utah Mammoth (90)
  • Los Angeles Kings (87)

Sitting out of playoff position: Nashville Predators (86), Winnipeg Jets (82), San Jose Sharks (82), z-St. Louis Blues (80), z-Seattle Kraken (79), z-Calgary Flames (75), z-Chicago Blackhawks (70), z-Vancouver Canucks (56)

NHL playoffs if they started today

NHL Eastern Conference playoff bracket

Here is how the Eastern Conference playoff bracket would look if the season ended on April 12:

  • Carolina (M1) vs. Ottawa (WC2)
  • Pittsburgh (M2) vs. Philadelphia (M3)
  • Buffalo (A1) vs. Boston (WC1)
  • Montreal (A2) vs. Tampa Bay (A3)

The winner of the first series would play the winner of the second in the second round. The winner of the third series would play the winner of the fourth. Key: M - Metropolitan Division. A - Atlantic Division. WC - wild card

NHL Western Conference playoff bracket

Here is how the Western Conference playoff bracket would look if the season ended on April 12.

  • Colorado (C1) vs. Los Angeles (WC2)
  • Dallas (C2) vs. Minnesota (C3). This series is set
  • Vegas (P1) vs. Utah (WC1)
  • Edmonton (P2) vs. Anaheim (P3)

The winner of the first series would play the winner of the second in the second round. The winner of the third series would play the winner of the fourth. Key: C - Central Division P - Pacific Division. WC - wild card

NHL tiebreakers: What is the first tiebreaker in NHL standings?

If two teams are tied in points at the end of the regular season, here are the tiebreakers:

  1. Regulation wins
  2. Regulation and overtime wins (ROW)
  3. Total wins
  4. Most points earned in head-to-head competition: If teams had an uneven number of meetings, the first game played in the city that has the extra game is excluded. When more than two clubs are tied, the percentage of available points earned in games among each other (and not including any odd games) shall be used to determine standings.
  5. Goal differential
  6. Total goals

When does the NHL regular season end?

The NHL regular season is scheduled to end on Thursday, April 16, with six games.

When do the NHL playoffs start?

The NHL's Stanley Cup playoffs are scheduled to begin on April 18.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NHL playoff bracket, latest 2026 standings and clinching scenarios

Monday Morning Minnesota: The “Tristan Gray Appreciation Post” Edition

TORONTO, CANADA - APRIL 12: Tristan Gray #4 of the Minnesota Twins hits a three-run home run in the second inning of their MLB game against the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre on April 12, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Cole Burston/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The “American League-leading” Minnesota Twins are 9-7 after two straight series wins over the Tigers and the Blue Jays. It’s been certainly impressive to see the team fight back after three straight series losses, and doing so without needing the heroics of Byron Buxton or Luke Keaschall. Instead, infielder Tristan Gray has been a solid contributor. After hitting his first career grand slam against the Rays last week, he had another nice game yesterday against the Blue Jays, with a three-run homer. However, it can’t be all sunshine and daisies, as Royce Lewis has now hit the 10-day IL with a left knee sprain. The Red Sox and the Reds are coming to Target Field this week, and the Twins will hope to continue the good vibes at home.

The Past Week on Twinkie Town:

  • Check out The Feed, where you can add your discussions about the Twins!
  • We’re starting a new segment called Daily Questions! Provide your opinion on the Twins and debate with the community!
  • Game threads and recaps are back! Commiserate with your fellow fans as we experience the season together.
  • Zach Koenig checks on the Twins’ record against lefties over the past decade.

Elsewhere in Twins Territory:

In the World of Baseball:

  • As mentioned earlier, the Twins are leading the AL with a 9-7 record, tied with the Cleveland Guardians. The A’s, Orioles, Rangers, Rays, and Yankees are all right behind at 8-7, reminding us not to get THAT excited. The gap between first and last is just three games.
  • The National League has a bit of a bigger gap between teams, with the Dodgers (who else?) atop the league at 11-4 and the Braves, Padres right behind at 10-6. Probably the most surprising news is seeing the Pirates at 9-6.
  • Will Leitch at MLB.com provides his new power rankings. You might need to scroll down a bit before you see the Twins though.