Bo Bichette signing with Mets: $126M contract gets NY back in the game

The New York Mets' largely moribund off-season took a dramatic turn for the better Jan. 16, as the club agreed to terms with All-Star shortstop Bo Bichette on a three-year, $126 million deal, according to a baseball official with direct knowledge of the deal.

The person spoke to USA TODAY Sports on condition of anonymity because the deal has not been finalized.

Bichette's stay in New York could be a brief one: He has opt-out clauses after each of the first two seasons, and can reenter the free agent market at 28 next winter, unencumbered by draft-pick compensation.

Bichette was the last premier free agent available and his agreement with the Mets comes just hours after slugger Kyle Tucker, the consensus No. 1 player on the market, spurned them for a four-year, $160 million deal. Now, the Mets have an admirable infield alignment and, once again, a daunting lineup, with Bichette likely to play third base, All-Star Francisco Lindor at shortstop, trade acquisition Marcus Semien at second and a combination of Jorge Polanco and Mark Vientos at first.

Bichette, the former Toronto Blue Jays' shortstop, played a pivotal role in the team's trip to the 2025 World Series, posting a .311/.357/.483 slash line in 139 regular season games before sitting out the first two rounds of the playoffs due to a knee injury. He returned and had eight hits and a key home run in the Blue Jays' seven-game World Series loss to the Dodgers.

Here's everything to know regarding Bichette's new contract.

Bo Bichette contract details

Bichette agreed to a three-year, $126 million deal, likely with opt-out clauses.

Bo Bichette 2025 stats

Bichette played in 139 games in 2025, tallying 18 home runs while posting a .311/.357/.483 triple-slash, and an .840 OPS, the highest of his career for a full season.

Much of that success came in the form of increased plate discipline. In 2025, Bichette struck out in just 14.5% of his plate appearances, the lowest mark of his career by over 4%. Bichette also walked in 6.4% of his plate appearances, his best rate since his rookie season in 2019.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Bo Bichette Mets contract details as NY signs top free agent remaining

Reports Suggest Canucks' Elias Pettersson Could Be Good Fit In Detroit

The Detroit Red Wings are becoming a regular mainstay when it comes to the NHL rumor mill with the team being involved in several trade rumors as well as being regularly named as a likely fit for certain players due to how advantageous a spot like the Red Wings is these days. 

A renewed winning culture, a strong young core blending seamlessly with a solid group of veterans, and a pipeline of blue chip prospects that can either accelerate the rebuild or be used as valuable trade assets have positioned the Red Wings as a major topic of conversation around the league.

They have surfaced in even more trade discussions toward the end of the week, centering on a player recently made available by the Vancouver Canucks. Around the league, teams are closely monitoring whether the Canucks will move star center Elias Pettersson, as the former 102-point scorer has experienced a significant drop-off since his career-best season.

Pettersson was reportedly involved in a rumored conflict with former teammate J.T. Miller during their time in Vancouver, with the two said to have clashed frequently. Many believe it was Miller's unsatisfaction with Pettersson's play and his work ethic following signing his current large contract with a heavy $11.6 million cap hit for six more seasons after this one. 

The team tried to resolve the issue by dealing Miller to the New York Rangers but still no resolution has been found in Pettersson's game as he's sitting with 29 points in 39 games this season with the Canucks sitting in last place in the NHL.

TSN's Chris Johnston spoke to the rumors of the Canucks open to trading Pettersson saying that many teams believe he just needs a fresh start elsewhere to find that 100-point player once again. 

Everything started up with Pettersson trade rumors once again when The Province's Patrick Johnston spoke with Vancouver GM Jim Rutherford, who told the reporter “It’s our duty to take calls on everyone,” in a statement that echoed throughout the entire hockey media landscape. 

This quote also builds off a report made by TSN’s Darren Dreger who said that the Canucks management team has been starting to look more into the idea of a complete rebuild and that they are "open for just about anything, and that might include finally trading Elias Pettersson."

Johnston finished off his talk on Pettersson by naming some teams that could be a fit for the Swedish center with the final team mentioned being the Red Wings.

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There is a potential spot for Pettersson in the Motor City considering they could immediately put him in a favorable spot on the team's second line and have him play with star talents like Patrick Kane and Alex DeBrincat, who could hopefully get a quick turnaround out of Pettersson. His contract would be a heavy one but the Red Wings would be able to work around it quite well compared to other teams. 

Detroit’s most significant upcoming contract decision involves Simon Edvinsson, who is expected to land a deal comparable to St. Louis defenseman Philip Broberg. Broberg recently signed a six-year extension carrying an $8 million annual cap hit. Given their similar playing styles, it is reasonable to project a comparable contract for Edvinsson, though he is two years younger and could potentially command a seven-year term.

The Red Wings currently have more than $27.4 million in available cap space and could see even more flexibility next season, with several contracts set to expire. Patrick Kane and James van Riemsdyk may come off the books if they choose not to re-sign, while defensemen Travis Hamonic, Ben Chiarot, and Erik Gustafsson, along with goaltender Cam Talbot, are also scheduled to become free agents.

With so much available space, adding a second center with a heavy cap hit like Pettersson isn't the worst idea plus as the cap continues to grow the $11.6 million will take up less of the overall cap and will start to look like a bargain if they can turn Pettersson's game around. 

It's a gamble for the Red Wings as they will likely need to sacrifice some meaningful assets, most likely Nate Danielson among others but if they want to possibly acclurate their chances at contending for a Stanley Cup, getting a stable second line center could be a great move.

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Jagger Firkus And Tyson Jugnauth Selected As Firebirds’ 2026 AHL All-Star Game Representatives

Winger Jagger Firkus and defenseman Tyson Jugnauth have been selected to represent the Coachella Valley Firebirds at the 2026 AHL All-Star Game.

Firkus is skating in his second AHL season, and he’s been the offensive force the Seattle Kraken predicted he would be when they selected him in the second round (35th overall) in the 2022 NHL draft. He had a strong rookie season, posting 15 goals and 36 points in 69 games, but the focus was on improving the other aspects of his game.

Now that he is honing in on those skills, his offensive game has been given the room to shine, and it’s doing so. In 35 games, Firkus has scored 14 goals and 35 points, one back of his rookie totals in nearly half of the games. He ranks sixth in the AHL in points while leading the Firebirds and ranking second on the team in goals. He’s been as impressive as any player on the Firebirds, and it won’t be long before we see the 21-year-old skate in the NHL.

Jugnauth is taking part in his rookie AHL campaign, and there hasn’t been much of an adjustment period needed for the left-handed defenseman. In 35 games, the 21-year-old has scored four goals and 26 points, ranking third on the team in points. 

Selected in the fourth round (100th overall) by the Kraken in the 2022 NHL draft, Jugnauth’s development has skyrocketed, and he’s continuing to fly up the depth chart. He was impressive in pre-season this year, skating in two games while scoring a goal, but showing his two-way prowess. He’s not the biggest player on the ice, listed at 5-foot-11, 183 pounds, but he skates well and uses his hockey IQ to position himself.

Tyson Jugnauth (Perry Nelson-Imagn Images)
Tyson Jugnauth (Perry Nelson-Imagn Images)

The 2026 AHL All-Star Classic will be held on Feb. 10-11 in Rockford, Ill. 12 players will represent each of the AHL’s four divisions. Committees of AHL coaches determined rosters, and at least one All-Star is selected from each of the 32 AHL teams.

Joining Firkus and Jugnauth on the Pacific Division roster are Filip Bystedt, Matvei Gridin, Quinn Hutson, Kirill Kudryavtsev, Andree Lee, Carl Lindbom, Jacob Megna, Isak Posch, Dmitri Simashev, and Tim Washe.

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Raptors host Kawhi and the Clippers as week of familiar faces continues

First there was a back-to-back against the Philadelphia 76ers, coached by Nick Nurse and featuring the G.R.O.A.T himself, Kyle Lowry, in what was likely his last appearance in a game in Toronto. Then there was Wednesday’s game against Pascal Siakam and the Indiana Pacers.

Now, the Raptors’ week of familiar faces culminates in a contest at Scotiabank Arena against Kawhi Leonard, the franchise’s only ever Finals MVP (to date), and the Los Angeles Clippers.

While the Clippers’ 17-23 record isn’t anything to write home about, they are currently on a four-game winning streak, and have won 11 of their last 13 games. As the Clippers continue their steady ascent into the middle of the Western Conference pack, they face a Raptors team that is just one game out of second in the East.

Tip-off is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. on Sportsnet.

Here are some storylines to consider ahead of the matchup:

Everybody flex

With Immanuel Quickley, RJ Barrett and Ja’Kobe Walter all out, plus Jamison Battle leaving mid-game, Gradey Dick was afforded an opportunity on Wednesday night to play an increased role coming off the bench. Dick was fairly pedestrian from three, shooting just 1/5 from beyond the arc — and yet it was one of his best games of the season.

Dick registered his first career double-double, playing 30 minutes and putting up 21 points, 11 rebounds and three assists on 9/15 shooting. His effort earned him the Raptors’ chain, and led to the post-game photo we’ve all been waiting for: the whole team doing the customary Gradey Dick flex. Tonight, with the Raptors still short-handed, Dick will look to build off his recent success, which has involved finishing strong at the bucket and playing well as a roller. Now the key question is whether he can get out of his shooting funk.


Klawing back

The Clippers have won 11 of their last 13 games, and Kawhi Leonard has been the engine behind their turnaround. Leonard is averaging 32.7 points per game across that 13-game span, including a 55-point performance against the first-place Detroit Pistons. His dominance is a familiar sight for Raptors fans (apparently it’s been six years??!!) — but now the Raptors will need to throw everything they can to slow down the surging 34-year-old forward. Look for a mix of sturdy wings like Scottie Barnes, Ochai Agbaji and even the rookie Collin Murray-Boyles to have a go at defending him.

Next man up

The Raptors’ stretch of playing shorthanded will continue tonight, with Barrett, Poeltl and Walter all being ruled out with their respective injuries. The team is also likely to miss the spacing that Battle affords them, as he’s doubtful with an ankle injury, and Quickley and Mamukelashvili are both questionable. While All-Star voting is now closed, Barnes and Ingram can continue to make their cases for the team by carrying the load for the shorthanded squad. Players like Agbaji and A.J. Lawson also figure to play “next man up” roles for the team.

But the biggest revelation from the team’s shorthanded stretch has been the rookie, Collin Murray-Boyles. Poeltl’s absence has given CMB a runway to establish himself as an impressively stout defender — he’s 99th percentile in the league in deflections — and a promising offensive player who’s just scratching the surface of his upside. Over his last six games, Murray-Boyles is averaging 11.1 points, 9.3 rebounds and 3.8 assists per game on 57% shooting.

Mets signing Bo Bichette to three-year deal

In an emphatic pivot, the Mets are signing infielder Bo Bichette to a three-year deal, per multiple reports.

The contract is worth $126 million, contains two opt-outs, and does not have any deferrals.

New York's agreement with Bichette comes less than 24 hours after Kyle Tucker chose to sign with the Dodgers for four years and $240 million after turning down the Mets' offer of four years and $220 million.

Before signing with the Mets, Bichette had been heavily linked to the Phillies and a possible reunion with the Blue Jays. The Yankees had also reportedly checked in.

With the Mets adding Bichette to play third base, there are plenty of ways they can go with the rest of the infield.

One possibility has Brett Baty sliding to first base and Jorge Polanco serving as the primary DH.

It's also possible the Mets explore the trade market for Baty, possibly in an effort to fill a need in the outfield.

Bichette, who turns 28 in March, had let interested teams know he was willing to move off shortstop, which opened the door for the Mets (and other teams who had the middle infield filled) to pounce.

Nov 1, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Blue Jays designated hitter Bo Bichette (11) hits a three run home run against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the third inning during game seven of the 2025 MLB World Series at Rogers Centre
Nov 1, 2025; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Blue Jays designated hitter Bo Bichette (11) hits a three run home run against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the third inning during game seven of the 2025 MLB World Series at Rogers Centre / John E. Sokolowski-Imagn Images

In 139 games last season for the Jays, Bichette slashed .311/.357/.483 with a 129 OPS+. He had 18 home runs, 44 doubles, and 94 RBI.

As far as his advanced numbers via Baseball Savant, Bichette was near the top of the league in xBA, xwOBA, xSLG, average exit velocity, hard hit percentage, sweet spot percentage, whiff percentage, and strikeout percentage.

During his seven-year career -- all with Toronto -- Bichette has hit .294/.337/.469 over 748 games.

A two-time All-Star, Bichette has finished in the top 20 in AL MVP voting four times.

Regarding what comes next for the Mets after inking Bichette, it's likely they'll continue to look for an outfielder and a pitcher who can slot in near the top of their rotation.

Possible outfield targets via trade include Jarren Duran of the Red Sox, Brendan Donovan and Lars Nootbaar of the Cardinals, and Ramon Laureano of the Padres.

Potential starting options include free agent Framber Valdez and trade option Freddy Peralta, who is being dangled by the Brewers.

Bucks Trade Candidate: Miles Bridges

Now for another Bucks trade candidate! So far, we have mulled over Jerami Grant, Zach LaVine, Dejounte Murray, and Michael Porter Jr. This time, we analyse Charlotte Hornets wing/forward Miles Bridges.


The Player

Miles Bridges, 27, 6’7”, 225 lb, forward

Season averages: 19.5 PPG, 6.4 RPG, 3.7 APG, 0.6 SPG, 0.6 BPG, .445/.335/.842

Miles Bridges has been a serviceable wing/forward for some time now after the Hornets selected him in the lottery back in 2018. He’s another one who fits into the “more of a power forward than a small forward” category; however, he floats my boat a tad more than another player we’ve applied that term to, Jerami Grant, because he has a slightly more well-rounded arsenal. I think Bridges is much more capable of toggling between the SF and PF than Grant is.

Over Miles’ last four seasons, he has scored the rock at a decent level, averaging 20.3 PPG, though it’s not as if he’s done it on great efficiency (45.9% from the field and 33.1% from deep). Where Bridges separates himself from Grant, though, is in his passing and rebounding. As a secondary playmaker, Miles has been able to get his teammates more involved, boasting an assist-to-turnover ratio very close to 2/1. Additionally, Bridges isn’t afraid to get his nose dirty and rebound, hauling in 7.1 boards per game.

On the defensive end, I was unable to find much on the trusty NBA Reddit, so I have nothing to give you guys other than what I know firsthand: he’s athletic, got good size, and has been the designated “Giannis guy” in most Bucks-Hornets matchups. He’s obviously very powerful and seems to have decent feet; I have no clue where he’s at as an off-ball player. He does average 1.5 stocks per game, though, which is a decent sign that he’s at least active off the ball. And so here we are, the Bucks need help on the wing, and Miles seems as good a bet as any. Thus, it makes sense that Milwaukee is showing interest in the former Michigan State Spartan, per Matt Moore’s latest reporting:

“Speaking of Bridges, the Hornets forward— who should absolutely not be in the NBA and who has a -2.5 on-court net rating and -8.5 on/off split— has drawn interest from Milwaukee as they continue to try and troll for an upgrade to magically unlock some version of the team that keeps Giannis from leaving.”

The Trade

Look, the mechanics of acquiring Bridges in a trade that would satisfy the Hornets are not simple. We have looked at a few trade candidates in which the other team would be expected to send Milwaukee assets to acquire their player. But in the case of Miles—considering his relatively cheap contract and the fact that he is a clear upgrade on the likely outgoing salary of Kyle Kuzma—the Bucks would need to send assets the other way. The problem is that the Bucks don’t really have the “right assets” to trade. Put simply, Bridges is not worth a first in general, let alone one five years out, which is all the Bucks have to offer; what he’s worth is some second-round picks, and the Bucks have none! The only guy on the Bucks roster that might equate to the value of a second-round pick (or two) would be Andre Jackson Jr. Ergo, the deal would have to look something like this:

If you’re the Bucks, I think you’d do this deal in a heartbeat. I’ll try my best to make the case for why the Hornets might do it, though. You could argue that, with their new influx of young talent—namely Brandon Miller and Kon Knueppel—Charlotte might be looking to turn over a new leaf and leave the old(er) players from yesteryear behind. It’s also worth noting that they might be looking to move on from Miles, in particular, because of his off-court transgressions (people can Google those themselves if they aren’t aware). Additionally, they’d get to take a flyer on a gifted defender in Jackson, who the Bucks simply don’t have the time to give a real shot. Also, if Charlotte wasn’t interested in AJax, he wouldn’t have to be included; they’d still shave $2.6m off their books just trading for Kuzma (who has the exact same contract length as Bridges).

The Fit

As I alluded to above, I’d feel much better starting Miles Bridges at the three than I would Jerami Grant. Do I think he’s some perfect fit? Absolutely not. Sidenote: Michael Porter Jr. would be my first choice, though the price of a future first is simply off the table for me. Teams would sag off Bridges in the half-court and force him to make threes, which makes me nervous. However, this team just needs firepower in general, and although Miles isn’t some elite shooter, he’s a 20-PPG scorer who also gets his teammates involved. Put simply, he can be a key primary cog in Milwaukee’s offence, and the Bucks need more key cogs if nothing else but to replace certain guys who don’t deserve that title.

I also want to mention that Bridges would have learnt a lot playing with LaMelo Ball in how to play off a special player like that, which might help him play with Giannis. I’m talking about when to set the screen, when to slip out, when to cut, when to stay spaced, etc. Miles seems to have a decent mind for the game, and I think he’d work through how to impact the game next to the Greek Freak. Additionally, I think Bridges would be a solid fit next to Ryan Rollins and KPJ (especially in the non-Giannis minutes), playing the two-man game with those guys.

Arguably, though, the biggest impact he’d have would be on defence and rebounding, both of which the Milwaukee struggles with. The Bucks play smaller lineups a lot of the time and have gotten monstered by dominant wings and centres. Bringing in the 225-pound Bridges would immediately assist in those two areas. Moreover, Miles is durable. He’s averaged 34.7 minutes over his last four seasons and hasn’t played fewer than 64 games in his seven-year career; the Bucks would be able to count on him being on the court. All in all, I think Bridges is one of the best fits of all the candidates we’ve looked at so far. The issue is the mechanics that would go with acquiring him.


Are people with me on Miles Bridges, or am I overrating him? Let us know, as well as if there are any other guys we should cover!

What will Austin Riley produce in 2026?

Prior entries:

The Braves haven’t had too fun of a time lately. Neither has Austin Riley. This isn’t a pure coincidence — a thermonuclear Austin Riley can carry a team for a month, and the Braves haven’t gotten that, for one reason or another, for a while. While the team has maneuvered to be different in terms of coaching and roster construction in 2026, Riley’s production is going to be a big part of whatever the team’s fortune will be going forward.

Career-to-date, status

2026 will be Riley’s eighth MLB season; he’ll turn 29 right around Opening Day. For his career, he has a 122 wRC+ and below-average defense. He’s solidly in well-above-average territory with a career 3.5 fWAR per 600 PAs to date, but that’s very much an average, as he had three straight 5+ fWAR seasons from 2021-2023 but has managed just 4.1 fWAR in his last two seasons combined.

A substantial xwOBA underperformance, like most of his teammates, made Riley’s 2024 look worse than it was. Consistently maligned by defensive metrics, Riley had a bit of a defensive breakout in 2023, but didn’t really sustain it in 2024. Still, it was better than getting worse as he aged.

Riley holds the most lucrative contract in Braves history, signing a $212 million, ten-year deal that includes a club option for an eleventh season in August 2022. He’s due to make $22 million annually in 2026 and every year onward through 2032; his club option has a $20 million salary with no buyout.

Recent performance

As noted, Riley’s production took a dip in 2024 and then again in 2025. The former was not “really” his fault, as his .361 xwOBA in 2024 was in line with his .365 xwOBA in 2023. After a slow start to 2024 outputs-wise, he was hitting really well (not thermonuclear on outputs, but definitely beautiful inputs) in the summer before a hit-by-pitch ended his season.

2025 was more of a struggle for various reasons. His xwOBA dipped to .328, and it was right around that range in both June and July before he succumbed to a series of abdominal strains that necessitated season-ending core surgery. His struggles were very generic: more swing and miss in the zone, but ostensibly without any conscious attempt to do so in order to increase power output — in other words, more swing and miss, worse contact quality. Not what you want to see.

There’s not too much to say beyond that — Riley was just worse, but not really in a way that his teammates were worse in terms of trading power for walks or anything. Whether that bodes well or poorly for him going forward is an open question. Defensively, he rebounded a bit relative to 2024 and looked similar to 2023. At this point, Riley probably won’t be a good defender at third base, but his hard work seems to have moved him from outright bad to okay.

Forecasting

Same brief disclaimer: once upon a time I built a projection system to try to mirror/get at the workings of Steamer and ZiPS. I called it IWAG. You can figure out what that means, maybe. I’m bringing it back for this series of posts. Here’s Riley, for 2026.

You can see the injuries being priced in a bit here, and IWAG forecasts Riley’s wRC+ considerably below his career mark of 122. That latter phenomenon occurs because, well, there’s no good or simple explanation for his 2025 offensively — he just looked kind of broken, even leaving the xwOBA underperformance aside.

This aligns almost exactly with Steamer (3 WAR in 601 PAs, 116 wRC+); ZiPS is the “outlier” as it seems to push his career line forward moreso than any debit for 2025.

The probability distribution from IWAG here is a bit silly due to Riley’s recent injuries — you can see that the distribution of talent is a reasonably normal-looking curve that probably aligns with what you expect, but IWAG figures “injured and ineffective” is more likely than “injured and effective” or “fully healthy and effective,” based on our lived experience of Braves trying to play through injury to no good outcome recently, hence the dip in the middle.

Your turn

Alright, I’ve given you the info. Well, some info. You may have your own info. With that, I ask you:

  • Rounded to the nearest fWAR, how much will Austin produce in 2026? (I am once again seriously inveighing that if you ignore this and provide a partial fWAR, I will round it for you, and your scoring will not be based on 1 WAR around your point estimate, but 1 WAR around the rounded number. Just a pick whole number and don’t make me round.)
  • How confident are you in your choice? Go with a scale from 1-5, where 3 is “I dunno, reasonably confident,” 5 is certain, and 1 is “I am participating but have no confidence in my choice and don’t want the fact that it will likely be incorrect to affect my place in any theoretical standings all that much.”

Michael Lorenzen is ready to be a problem solver at Coors Field

The Colorado Rockies officially signed 34-year-old RHP Michael Lorenzen to a one-year, $8 million deal on Thursday morning after the signing was first reported last Wednesday. Lorenzen met with the media over Zoom on Thursday afternoon to discuss his ties to the Rockies and his excitement about working with this team.

“One of the things [that drew me to Colorado] is just that I feel like it’s untapped, and I don’t think you could say that about anywhere else in Major League Baseball,” Lorenzen said. 

“It feels like there’s a lot of new information to be learned, and that’s kind of right up my alley. I enjoy problem solving. Failure is going to happen; trials are going to happen; you’re going to get your teeth kicked in. But it’s the problem solving and how to make the adjustments that I really enjoy. And Colorado, I feel like, presents that opportunity.”

“We didn’t have to convince him of anything,” PBO Paul DePodesta added in a separate Zoom meeting earlier in the day. 

“He ran toward this challenge. Michael actively wanted to pitch here. He’s done a lot of different things in his career – he was an outfielder, he’s been a reliever, he’s been a starting pitcher. I don’t think he’s afraid of anything. He’s also got some history with some of our staff members, so I think there was some appeal there as well.”

Lorenzen’s ties to the new Rockies pitching staff were definitely an extra enticer to sign with the team, and he’s known a lot of them for a long time.

“I’ve known Alon [Leichman] since 2017, I want to say, before he was in pro ball. I’ve known him for a really long time, and he and I have kept in touch throughout the years,” Lorenzen said. “So when he told me he was interviewing for the job, I was stoked for him, and he mentioned that he was going to try and bring me in if he ended up getting the job, which is pretty cool that we’re able to work together.

And as far as the other coaches go, Lorenzen mentioned that he knew pitching coordinator Matt Daniels from his time at Driveline in 2017; he knew assistant pitching coach Gabe Ribas from their time together with the Detroit Tigers in 2023; he knew Jeff Pickler from their time together with the Cincinnati Reds, where Pickler was the bench coach; and he knew Brett Pill from their time at Cal State Fullerton.

Lorenzen brings a six-pitch arsenal to Coors Field (though according to Baseball Savant, he has seven, and Lorenzen says he’s planning to bring out another one next year). 

And it was actually the pitching coach of the Philadelphia Phillies, Caleb Cotham, who helped Lorenzen understand pitch shapes to expand his repertoire.

“[He] helped me understand in detail what causes a pitch to do certain things, and I kind of made it my own,” Lorenzen said. 

“I was able to create a consistent sweeper; I was able to create a consistent gyro (sweeper); and I know what I’m trying to do with the cutter. So all of a sudden, I feel like I own my shapes and when I’m trying to manipulate the ball, I can. I just know what I’m trying to do. I know what I’m looking for. I know the feel I’m trying to create. But obviously being in Colorado is going to have its challenges, so I’ll be making my way up there soon to throw some bullpens and see exactly how these shapes are going to move. 

“And that’ll give me an idea of how I can use each one,” he continued. “Do I pick three of them? Do I lean on certain three more than others when I’m pitching in the altitude? So we’ll see. But I would say I’ve got three fastballs and two different changeups. Now I’ve got the sweeper, the slider, and the curveball.”

Lorenzen’s intensity intrigues DePodesta.

“I’d say part of the appeal for him is that he’s a very good strike thrower and pitches with an aggressive mentality,” DePodesta added. “He’s going to go after the hitter, he’s going to make the hitter beat him, he’s going to attack the strike zone, and he has a deep arsenal of pitches. Here at Coors in particular, we need to find different ways to keep hitters off balance, and I think having a deep arsenal is at least one of those ways.”

That all being said, Lorenzen is excited to be in Colorado for this next chapter of his career and to help this team get back in the thick of things.

“I don’t care how many games were lost last year,” he continued. “Every guy is one adjustment away from being one of the best in the game, and there’s a lot of low-hanging fruit that can be changed. We’ll see performance increase, and so I think there’s a lot of easy ways to get better and I’m really excited.”


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50 Most Notable Yankees Free Agent Signings: Gary Sheffield

The mid-2000s were a strange time for the Yankees. The dynasty of the ‘90s engineered a hangover that lasted almost ten years, where the team regularly returned strong lineups but lacked the pitching depth or that elusive “clutch” gene. In some ways, Gary Sheffield might be the poster boy for this period — he never had a bad regular season for the Yankees, but his first campaign with the team ended in the disaster that was 2004, and the club never got closer than that while he was in pinstripes.

Sheffield’s one of the great mercenaries in the history of baseball, an uber-talented hitter who walked around with a king-sized chip on his shoulder. He made the All-Star team nine times and won five Silver Sluggers during stints with eight teams, winning a ring with the 1997 Florida Marlins. That was already his third team in MLB, and he would be dealt away in ‘98 to the Dodgers, although I’ll attribute that decision more to the infamous post-World Series fire sale than anything to do with his personality. Shef did publicly state how embarrassed he was by the team’s teardown, but that’s not an attitude problem — that’s a statement of fact.

LA and Atlanta followed, and by the time December 2003 rolled around, Sheffield had logged 13 consecutive seasons of excellent hitting, with his worst year being a 123 wRC+ in 1993, split between the Padres and Marlins. The less said about his defense the better, but if you were looking to add a bat and some headlines, you could do a lot worse than Gary Sheffield.

Gary Sheffield
Signing Date: December 19, 2003
Contract: Three years, $39 million

Signed one year to the day after Hideki Matsui, the Yankees were clearly leaning into the bat-first approach — they had Derek Jeter at shortstop Opening Day instead of the shiny new toy Alex Rodriguez. GM Brian Cashman wanted the team to add erstwhile Montreal Expos standout Vladimir Guerrero and reportedly had an agreed-upon contract. But owner George Steinbrenner picked Sheffield, won over by his buggy-whip power swing and close ties to Steinbrenner’s adopted home of Tampa (not to mention a relation to uncle/former New York star Dwight Gooden).

That first season was a tear for Sheff, as he finished runner-up for AL MVP, walloping 36 homers and leading the Yankees in RBI, runs scored, and OPS+. That ugly defense meant he posted just 3.8 fWAR, and the man who actually won MVP was none other than Guerrero. Nonetheless, Sheffield was the offensive force the club was hoping for. He was shuffled between third, fourth, and fifth in the Yankee lineup, producing wherever Joe Torre set him.

His first taste of October in the Bronx went well enough too, on the personal production side anyway. A 134 wRC+, .904 OPS line should be more than enough to placate even the toughest Yankee fans, but of course the end result of that postseason push left a bad taste in everyone’s mouth. Sheffield managed just a single base hit in 17 plate appearances in those doomed four games against Boston, just one of many Bombers who became duds on arguably the biggest stage in baseball history.

The kicker to all this was the season was played while Sheffield worked through a shoulder tear, one that would require surgery in the offseason. Herein lies maybe the most interesting thing about Gary — his attitude questions were real, and he had an ejection history a mile long:

The man was expelled from his Little League team for chasing a coach around at practice with a bat!

Despite that, he would unquestionably chew through concrete to perform at the highest level. He was the best fulltime hitter for the Yankees in his first season while playing with one-and-a-half arms. How much of that was sheer willpower and how much was pharmaceutically driven we’ll never know, but having a bat like Sheffield’s in your lineup would make any team better.

That first season would be Gary’s best, but 2005 was no off-year. A 137 wRC+ came in a year where he once again walked more than he struck out, but an ill-timed magazine story quoted him as possibly shading Jeter and A-Rod as “two players [covered] in a positive light, and everyone else is garbage” hung over yet another run toward October. Against the Angels that fall, Sheffield’s rather interesting defensive instincts were on full display in a fifth concsecutive disappointing postseason for the Yankees.

Poor Bubba Crosby.

That and a 65 wRC+ in an abbreviated October meant the funk was truly setting in for the Yankees, who were roundly becoming the uber-regular season team that fell on its face come playoff time. It wouldn’t get better the next year for Sheffield or the team either, as the slugger was laid low with a wrist injury and appeared in just 39 games. Sidelined for months, the win-now Yankees had to pivot and traded for a new right fielder in the more well-rounded Bobby Abreu. So when Sheffield returned, the Yankees got creative and stuck him at the open first base position with Jason Giambi at DH (primarily because of a wrist injury, but also because the Giambino was far from Don Mattingly on defense). He had never appeared at first before but was a good team sport about it adapting over the final nine games of the regular season. But Sheffield went 1-for-12 in yet another dreadful postseason run and that sealed the end of Gary’s time in New York.

The club did pick up his 2007 team option but sent the disgruntled star to the same team that had just eliminated them in the 2006 ALDS, the Detroit Tigers. Sheffield spent three more years in the bigs, coming to Queens sitting on 499 career home runs:

Gary Sheffield’s Yankee tenure was the epitome of George Steinbrenner’s leadership style. The Yankees outbid anyone they wanted for the biggest star available, even if the fit wasn’t exactly right, the player wasn’t as complete as he could be, or the team wasn’t as well-rounded as it should be. Excellent lineups, bad defense, and shaky pitching was the calling card of those mid-2000s teams, and Sheffield supplied two of those three.

Sheffield probably has a Hall of Fame resume, but his connections to BALCO, listing in the Mitchell Report, and productivity in his later years are all in concert with challenges other PED-linked players have found on their incomplete trips to Cooperstown. He’ll likely never have a plaque there, and his time in New York never got past the finish line, but he remains one of the most unique and feared hitters in baseball history. If I were to compile a list of players I’d most want modern Statcast data on, most want to dig into those underlying hitting tools like exit velocity, Babe Ruth, Ted Williams, and Barry Bonds would be at the very top, but Gary Sheffield wouldn’t be far behind.


See more of the “50 Most Notable Yankees Free Agent Signings in 50 Years” series here.

Dominique Wilkins reflects on first MLK Day games 40 years ago, honor of playing on day

It was 40 years ago this week that the United States first officially paused to remember and celebrate the life and achievements of Martin Luther King Jr. with a day in his honor.

On that first Martin Luther King Jr. Day, in the city where King was born, Dominique Wilkins and the Atlanta Hawks took to court as part of the celebration — and it's a day the Hall of Famer will never forget.

"Being in Atlanta and having that first MLK game, I don't think people understand how big and how blessed we were to play in the first game on his birthday," Wilkins told NBC Sports, reflecting on a game where he dropped 33 on the Bucks in a Hawks win.

Two years later on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, the Human Highlight Reel lived up to his nickname dropping 45 points on the Knicks in Madison Square Garden.

"It's a huge night. Just being from the birthplace of Martin Luther King, how you just wanted to represent and have a great night, just to celebrate what he's done for all of us," Wilkins said. "So that was, that was out there."

When basketball is at its best, it connects people — players on the court, fans with their team, even entire cities. Martin Luther King Jr. understood that power of connection — and he loved to play the game. He was known to get on the court with young men and play pick-up as a way connect with them on one level so he could open the door to talk about so many things bigger than basketball. (You can learn more about that in an upcoming documentary on Hulu called Hoops, Hopes & Dreams.)

The NBA also understands the power of connection, too, which is why for 40 years the league has celebrated Martin Luther King Day with a slate of its best players and teams. This year, those games are on NBC and Peacock all day Monday, starting in the birthplace of King himself — Atlanta. The four games are:

• Milwaukee at Atlanta, 1 p.m. ET (Peacock, NBCSN)
• Oklahoma City at Cleveland, 2:30 p.m. ET (NBC, Peacock)
• Dallas at New York, 5 p.m. ET (NBC, Peacock)
• Boston at Detroit, 8 p.m. ET (NBC, Peacock)

Players will be wearing special Martin Luther King Jr. Day T-shirts during warmups. As part of the broadcast on NBC and Peacock, Donovan Mitchell will talk about the impact of Dr. King in Cleveland. Then Karl-Anthony Towns will do the same for New York and Isaiah Stewart for Detroit.

Those players understand the sacrifices Dr. King made and the impact he had. However, Wilkins is concerned we are losing some of that understanding over time. For a younger generation of players, many know that playing on MLK Day is a huge stage — one of the biggest days on the NBA calendar — but Wilkins added that those players have grown up in a United States that is better because of the changes Dr. King brought. Because of those changes, they may not fully grasp his sacrifices.

"I don't know if they do, to be honest with you," Wilkins said. "A lot of young people don't know or don't understand the significance and the sacrifice that he made for all of us. I don't think they really realized. I think they then inherit a different type of existence, and don't realize the struggle that people before them went through to give us a quality of life…

"The sacrifice that he made for us… man, to give his life to make sure that everybody else had a quality of life. I don't think these young guys or young people today understand that sacrifice."

Wilkins understood, because he grew up in a very different time and in many ways a different world. He is old enough to remember Dr. King being assassinated. And when an 18-year-old Wilkins, growing up in North Carolina, announced he was going to play his college ball at Georgia, he said he got death threats and his family had a cross burned on their lawn. Wilkins saw firsthand the changes Dr. King helped bring about.

Players who spend time with the Hawks organization in Atlanta get an understanding — not just from the Martin Luther King, Jr. National Historical Park & Preservation District, but from the way his presence is still felt throughout the city.

"I think with guys are playing Atlanta, they get a chance to see it all the time," Wilkins said. "And so it's right there in front of them. I won't say you forced to understand it and see it, but it's right there, where you're going to be a part of it — if you want to or not — because it's right there in your face."

Wilkins, a Hall of Fame player for the Hawks who has been the franchise's Vice President of Basketball as well as color analyst on broadcasts since 2004, maintains a personal connection to the King family.

"I've been friends of the family for a very long time," Wilkins said. "Martin [Luther King III], his eldest son, Dexter King, before he passed. And the sisters. I've been around the family, and so it was just surreal to be with the family and hear the stories and what they've been through. Man, this is priceless."

Is the King family filled with basketball fans?

"Oh yes," Wilkins said. "Still, to this day, Martin King and I, we still communicate with each other to this very day."

The King family will be at the heart of the celebrations and remembrances around the nation that day — and that will include a little basketball in Atlanta.

Dodgers won’t have as many draft picks in 2026, after signing Kyle Tucker

The Dodgers signed Kyle Tucker, landing the top free agent on the market with an eye-popping four-year, $240 million contract. After setting competitive balance tax records in each of thelast two seasons, this move ensured they will stay in that area for at least two more years, if not longer.

But along with the pure financial cost of signing Tucker — $60 million per year on average, or $57.1 million AAV for competitive balance tax purposes accounting for deferrals — comes another penalty.

Tucker was one of nine free agents to reject a qualifying offer in November. Any new team that signs such a player faces a draft-pick loss. As a competitive balance tax payer, the Dodgers’ penalty for signing a qualifying-offer free agent is forfreiting their second- and fifth-highest draft picks. If this sounds familiar, it’s because the Dodgers already signed a qualifying-offer free agent by adding Edwin Díaz in December.

Signing free agents with a qualifying offer isn’t new for the Dodgers, having brought in A.J. Pollock (2019), Trevor Bauer (2021), Freddie Freeman (2022), and Shohei Ohtani (2024) previously. But this is the first time they’ve signed two in the same offseason.

Because the Dodgers gave up their second and fifth-highest picks for signing Díaz, their penalty for adding Tucker will be losing their third and sixth-round selections this July. That leaves a relatively bare cupboard at the top of their draft board for 2026.

The Dodgers’ first-round pick would normally be 30th overall, at the end of the first round after winning the World Series. But because they surpassed the third competitive balance tax threshold last season — they also blew past the fourth (highest) threshold, too — the Dodgers will see their first pick drop 10 slots to 40th overall. We saw this in both 2022and 2024 as well.

The 2026 draft order isn’t yet finalized, as there are still three qualifying-offer free agents remaining on the market — Framber Valdez, Bo Bichette, and Zac Gallen. But we have at least a general idea of when the Dodgers will pick in July.

RoundPick No.2025 equivalent slot value
140$2,443,600
4137$534,100
7226$248,700
8256$210,900
9286$195,300
10316$187,300
Totalbonus pool$3,819,900
pick numbers after 1st pick are estimated

A team’s draft bonus pool is comprised of the recommended slot values of every pick that team has in the first 10 rounds. Every signing bonus from the first 10 rounds is counted against the pool, as is any amount over $150,000 for picks after the 10th round. Teams are allowed to exceed the bonus pool, with a 75-percent tax on any overage up to five percent over the pool. Any overage above five percent would result in the loss of draft picks. In the 15 years of this system, no MLB team has spent enough to incur this draft-pick penalty.

But the bottom line is the Dodgers will have less to spend than probably any other year of the draft slotting system. If we use the 2025 slot values for each estimated Dodgers pick in 2026, that comes to $3,819,900. The slots and bonus pools increased by 8.7 percent from 2023 to 2024, but only went up by 4.8 percent from 2024 to 2025. If those total Dodgers slot values increase by 4.8 percent this year, they’ll have $4,003,255 to spend. If it goes up by 8.7 percent, they’ll have $4,152,231 to spend.

Either way, it’ll be their lowest bonus pool in the 16 years of the draft slotting system. Their previous low was in 2022 with $4,223,800 to spend, a little below 2021 when their bonus pool was $4,646,700. The Dodgers had a higher bonus pool even in 2020 ($5,928,500) when the draft was truncated to only five rounds.

Clippers vs Raptors Prediction, Picks & Odds for Tonight’s NBA Game

The Los Angeles Clippers look to pick up their fifth straight win, but they’ll have to go through the Toronto Raptors at Scotiabank Arena tonight.

Scottie Barnes has been a jack of all trades for the Raps this season, but it’s his playmaking that’s really caught my attention.

I’ll break down why Barnes should stack up plenty of dimes in my Clippers vs. Raptors predictions and NBA picks for Friday, January 16. 

Clippers vs Raptors prediction

Clippers vs Raptors best bet: Scottie Barnes Over 4.5 assists (-135)

The Toronto Raptors have been dealing with injury issues for a few weeks now, and three starters remain out or questionable for tonight’s game against the Los Angeles Clippers.

Toronto has managed to stay afloat, though, and that’s largely due to Scottie Barnes’ ability to play a variety of roles.

Need 25 points? Barnes is there.

Need someone to clean up the glass? Scottie’s got it.

However, perhaps his most important skill for the Raptors has been his playmaking.

Barnes is averaging 6.7 assists per game since December 28 — that’s the seventh-best mark in the NBA among all forwards over that span.

The Raptors star is also averaging 50.2 passes made per game, second only to starting point guard Immanuel Quickley (56.1), who may be out tonight with a back injury.

Barnes is coming off a 13-assist game on Wednesday, while topping 4.5 dimes in six of his last 10. He hits that number with ease against the Clippers tonight.

Clippers vs Raptors same-game parlay

Just like Barnes, Brandon Ingram has had to step up into other roles to help his team down the stretch. The Raptors forward has snagged Over 5.5 boards in six of his last seven contests, and they’ll need him to be a factor on the glass with Poeltl sidelined.

The Raptors may be banged up, but so are the Clippers, who could be without three starters of their own in Kawhi Leonard, John Collins, and Ivica Zubac. Toronto is 5-2 in its last seven home games and appears somewhat undervalued as the underdog here.

Clippers vs Raptors SGP

  • Scottie Barnes Over 4.5 assists
  • Brandon Ingram Over 5.5 rebounds
  • Raptors moneyline

Our "from downtown" SGP: Zub Cleans the Glass

Zubac missed LA’s last game, but the 7-foot center is undeniable on the glass.

He’s posted Over 10.5 rebounds in three of his last five outings and is averaging 10.7 rpg this season — tied for 10th in the NBA.

Clippers vs Raptors SGP

  • Scottie Barnes Over 4.5 assists
  • Brandon Ingram Over 5.5 rebounds
  • Raptors moneyline
  • Ivica Zubac Over 10.5 rebounds

Clippers vs Raptors odds

  • Spread: Clippers -2 (-110) | Raptors +2 (-110)
  • Moneyline: Clippers -130 | Raptors -115
  • Over/Under: Over 216 (-110) | Under 216 (-110)

Clippers vs Raptors betting trend to know

The Under is 9-4 in the last 13 meetings. Find more NBA betting trends for Clippers vs. Raptors.

How to watch Clippers vs Raptors

LocationScotiabank Arena, Toronto, ON
DateFriday, January 16, 2026
Tip-off7:30 p.m. ET
TVFDSN Southern California, Sportsnet

Clippers vs Raptors latest injuries

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Roster improvements paying off for the Penguins

It’s been a little over a month since the trade with Edmonton sent Tristan Jarry for Brett Kulak, Stuart Skinner and a second round pick. To add a little more commentary on what was touched on earlier on this website today, the trade has been aging better by the day for the Penguins. What started out as a nice escape to clear the troubling contract of Jarry (who went back to the IR soon after the trade) turned out to enhance the Pens quite nicely so far on the ice.

There’s the future second round pick, which has no short-term relevance besides beefing up the reserves. Kulak’s addition to Pittsburgh has finally provided them with a second top-four caliber left-side defenseman and served to make Kris Letang look the best he has looked in…quite a while. Much has been made of Letang’s decline — and to be fair, time waits for no one and the 38-year old has looked every bit of his age recently. Then again, last season Letang’s most common defense partner was Matt Grzelyck, this season it was Ryan Shea prior to Kulak joining the team. It’s about 14 months overdue, but finally Pittsburgh has a partner for Letang with an above-average defensive impact, so it’s probably no wonder that the results the Pens have seen on the ice out of Letang have drastically improved once the blueline was addressed.

That alone would probably make the Edmonton trade enough of a success, but the headline-grabbing focus is naturally going to be on the goalie-for-goalie swap. It’s not every day in the NHL these days that you see two teams exchange starting goalies for one another. Skinner can a polarizing figure, although so far the Pens have to be thrilled. Skinner has five quality starts out of eight per hockey-reference, so far easily out-pacing Jarry’s one quality start for Edmonton. Jarry does have that IR stint working against him there, but as Beau Bennett taught us the best ability is availability and that’s another point in favor of the deal working out favorably.

Skinner can tend to ride extreme highs and lows, right now he’s caught a groove with a 4-1-0 record since the Christmas break that features a .941 save% and only allowing seven goals in those five games. In that stretch, the Penguins have commanding wins over three division rivals (Philadelphia last night, New Jersey last week, Carolina back on 12/30). In all of those games Skinner was not only one of their best players on the ice, he was a driving factor in every victory.

Trades often live on in relitigation for months and years afterwards so it surely is early to plan a parade or anything, but what a short-term boost that deal has provided for the Penguins to this point. The Oilers, despite Jarry’s injury, are 9-5-2 since the deal in their own right, so they’re probably not too mad about how things have gone lately either — since in an indirect way the move served to open a path for Connor Ingram’s return to the NHL where he has looked fairly sharp.

Speaking of decisions paying instant dividends, Kyle Dubas has to feel assured about locking Blake Lizotte up for three more seasons earlier this week, not that he likely had many doubts about it in the first place. The length of the term isn’t back-breaking but it’s still a sizeable and notable one for a 28-year old with fourth line upside. It’s well-worth the commitment when a player is as capable as Lizotte to make an imprint on a game like he did last night against Philadelphia.

Lizotte scored a goal that ended up standing as the game winner and later threw a massive clean hit that triggered a response fight where he handled himself nicely (albeit, against a non-fighter in Matvei Michkov).

The supporting cast players for the Pens has been a massive issue dating back to the start of this decade. In 2021, perhaps Pittsburgh’s last best season where they won their division, Pittsburgh saw a +18 mark in goals for vs goals against at 5v5 when neither Sidney Crosby or Evgeni Malkin were on the ice. By 2022-23, the first time they missed the playoffs, the Ron Hextall built team had slumped to -24 in that same category.

This season, the Pens are back strongly in the playoff hunt over halfway through the season and thanks to players like Lizotte and his frequent fourth linemates of Noel Acciari and Connor Dewar who have been on the ice for more goals for than against. When a team’s fourth line is not getting outscored despite the harsh defensive starts, that’s a good sign that they are going to be doing at least alright. Overall in the 5v5 category the Pens still have some work to do to with the performance of their mid-lines (players like Ben Kindel, Justin Brazeau, Kevin Hayes, Rutger McGroarty and Ville Koivunen have all been out-scored at 5v5) but so far they’ve definitely found something to work with and some major improvements from their depth, to which Lizotte will continue to be a key piece for the foreseeable future.

In previous early years of Dubas’s stint with Pittsburgh, a veteran on an expiring contract like Lizotte would have been traded away by the deadline. Whether this re-signing indicates a significant step into a phase of retaining key contributors or is a one-off remains to be seen, though it certainly is a strong piece of evidence that the Penguins are looking to hold what they can instead of defaulting into strictly selling off all parts when the time comes.

Furthering the theme of improving the current roster, the acquisition of Egor Chinakhov has shown promise as an upgrade as well. Chinakhov’s stat-line with Pittsburgh isn’t overwhelming (three goals and an assist in eight games), his impact has been notable with his speed, shot and even a contribution of a shootout goal. Chinakhov is still something of a reclamation project coming off his stint in Columbus (he only manufactured three goals in 29 games at the start of the season with the Blue Jackets) yet there’s been encouraging early returns with the change of scenery.

In some ways, Dubas and the Pens have to hope this could be a case of “you get what you pay for” when comparing Chinakhov to a similar last year acquisition of Philip Tomasino. Chinakhov cost a fair bit more (a second+third round pick, compared to just a fourth rounder for Tomasino) and that is due to having a little bit more to work with. Last night’s short-side goal on the rush demonstrates an example – Chinakhov has the tools to generate game-breaking ability. Whether or not he has the consistency will be a lingering open question for a while. Finishing ability like this is worth the price, now it’s just about seeing how often he can deliver.

Fit in the frame of the big picture, it might also be pointed out that the move from adding second round picks — which Pittsburgh did under Dubas in every year in a stretch for the 2024-29 drafts (besides jockeying for draft positioning in 2025) — into now sending out a second round pick to bring in an NHL caliber player is some evidence of a sea change in the current organizational strategy. Whether it was trading away Jake Guentzel, Conor Timmins, Anthony Beauvillier, Luke Schenn, Tristan Jarry and Reilly Smith or taking on the bad contracts of Kevin Hayes and Matt Dumba, the Penguins operated for a couple years in a way of strictly accumulating second round picks. Now, in one instance at least, the worm turned the other way and Dubas acted on previously stated intentions to turn a pick into a current contributor.

The takeaway at this point shouldn’t be a drastic shift into an expectation of full-on spending, though it does seem notable that the tide could be starting to change in this regard depending on the inputs of the team. In the end, Dubas might get the best of both worlds where his ample cap space allows him to scour the league for future 22-25 year old players with potential while retaining more draft capital than just about everyone else in the league to use to select more than his fair share for the future too.

Because, ultimately, responding to the team’s inputs has been Dubas’s role in the past few years. He threw some caution to add/retain players like Erik Karlsson, Ryan Graves and Tristan Jarry in year one, when that didn’t work out in the standings, management shifted gears accordingly to pare down on players like Guentzel and Marcus Pettersson who needed new and expensive contracts, without dealing away quality performers like Bryan Rust and Rickard Rakell who didn’t. The Pens got younger and suffered a bit to take lumps in losing key contributors without immediate replacement. Now that the team is in the hunt, it makes the situation appropriate for the manager to make moves that dovetail as good for the present while being good for the future, a fitting category for all three of the team’s transactions of the last month.

Kyren Wilson wards off Neil Robertson fightback to reach Masters semi-finals

  • Englishman sees out victory in final frame

  • Wu wipes the floor with Xiao in 6-0 rout

Kyren Wilson edged into the semi-finals of the Masters after fending off a Neil Robertson comeback to win 6-5.

Wilson had taken a three-frame lead, hitting two century breaks along the way, and took a 4-1 advantage before Robertson fought back, winning four straight frames and recording breaks of 110 and 107 to lead 5-4.

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Crucial Rivalry Weekend Provides A Golden Opportunity For The Ottawa Senators

The Ottawa Senators have pivotal back-to-back games this weekend, with the Montreal Canadiens visiting the Canadian Tire Centre on Saturday night and a quick turnaround to a road game against the Detroit Red Wings on Sunday.

With their backs against the wall in the Eastern Conference playoff race, two wins would do wonders to get back in the mix and push for a wildcard spot. But these matchups are about more than getting points to climb the standings.

The Senators need to prove that they have another gear.

THN Ottawa's Jack Richardson says the pressure is rising on Ottawa Senators GM Steve Staios.

A somewhat nail-biting 2-1 victory over the reeling Vancouver Canucks at home on Tuesday snapped a 4-game losing streak, and the Senators followed it up a night later with a dominant 8-4 beatdown at Madison Square Garden over the lifeless New York Rangers.

They were expected to do exactly what they did and deserve credit for doing so, but most fans likely have a “wake me up when you beat a good team” mentality after a despondent stretch of games. 

That is why these games against the Canadiens and Red Wings are on a platter for the Senators to make a statement. 

Entering play Friday night, Detroit and Montreal are 2nd and 3rd in the Atlantic division, respectively. The Senators are dead last and 7 points out of the second wildcard spot.

Typically, a back-to-back scenario against top teams in the division would be daunting for a team fighting to get back into the playoff hunt. But given the Senators’ recent history with both teams, the expectation this weekend should be 4 points. 

For the last five years, the Senators have built feisty rivalries with the Canadiens and Red Wings. It’s a result of the young cores the teams have been assembling during their respective rebuilds. Each franchise has been desperate to take the next steps to become Stanley Cup contenders, especially after watching an Atlantic division team win it all in four of the last six seasons.

Montreal and Detroit have each taken a significant step so far this season, pacing the East with consistent play and leaving Ottawa in the rearview mirror.

But head-to-head, the Senators have done well against the Habs and Wings.

Ottawa has made two visits to the Bell Centre this season, the first was an overtime loss on a brainfart turnover by Drake Batherson in November, and the second was a convincing win in December to wrap up a 7-game road trip, punctuated by a signature Brady Tkachuk goal on a feed from Tim Stützle.

Saturday will be the first matchup in Ottawa and gives the Senators a chance to take a stranglehold on the season series with the Canadiens.

Sunday will be the second of four games against the Red Wings this season. The first was just last week in Ottawa, in which the Senators dominated but could not buy a save.

Both the Canadiens and Red Wings play a fast and skilled game, but the Senators’ defensive identity should allow them to thrive in both games. All eyes will be on Tkachuk, Stützle and Jake Sanderson, who all seem to step up their games against Montreal and Detroit.

These are good matchups for the Senators on paper. But results trump the process at this point in the season. They desperately need points, and this weekend is a great opportunity to gain significant momentum in the standings while making a statement against two budding rivals.

Jack Richardson
The Hockey News - Ottawa

This story is from The Hockey News Ottawa. You can visit the site here or click on one of their latest articles below:

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