Debate the rotations all you want, firing Jordan Ott isn’t the answer

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - APRIL 14: Head coach Jordan Ott of the Phoenix Suns reacts during the second half of an NBA play-in tournament game against the Portland Trail Blazers at Mortgage Matchup Center on April 14, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Portland Trail Blazers defeated the Suns 114-110. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, user is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Christian Petersen/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Phoenix Suns’ loss to the Portland Trail Blazers in the 7–8 Play-In game was disappointing. In a season where the team overachieved, defied expectations, and rarely let you down, this one didn’t feel good. You can point to a lot of things that make your blood boil, even if it’s two days later. Devin Booker disappearing in the fourth. Deni Avdija getting downhill whenever he wanted. The Suns struggling at the point of attack. Jordan Ott going small against a team with size and length. All of it is fair. All of it played a role.

None of it means you fire the coach.

There’s a cycle to this. It happens every year. The team falls short, emotions spike, and the search for blame begins. In Phoenix, that cycle feels familiar. 58 seasons and no championship will do that to you. There is one thing we all share: every year ends with some level of disappointment. Then comes the reaction. The frustration. The need to point at something and say, “That’s the reason”.

I’m not immune to it. None of us are. You watch, you process, you try to explain why it didn’t work. And more often than not, that conversation lands on the head coach. That’s the easy target. That’s the normal cadence.

But this season, it doesn’t track.

Booker has a rough fourth quarter. Fire Ott. The rotations don’t match what you want to see. Fire Ott. Avdija cooks whoever is in front of him. Fire Ott. It becomes reflexive. It becomes lazy.

There have been times when moving on from a coach made sense. When the locker room is gone. When adjustments never come. When expectations aren’t met in a meaningful way. This isn’t that. What you’re seeing now, after one frustrating loss and a team that hovered around average after the All-Star break, doesn’t justify that kind of reaction. It doesn’t hold up. Calling for a reset here isn’t measured. It’s noise.

And the people pushing for it need to take a step back and let it breathe.

There are some people I wish didn’t have opposable thumbs and therefore couldn’t run to social media to give us their brain-rotting opinions. Go on a walk. Hug a friend. Move to the Austrian Alps, climb atop a grassy hillside, and sway your arms as you sing about the sound of music. Seriously people, fucking relax.

Have I agreed with Jordan Ott and his rotations late in the season? No. The team has consistently struggled at the point of attack and protecting the rim, and I believe the roster has pieces that could help address that. I’m not convinced that putting Jordan Goodwin on Deni Avdija is the best approach. There’s also an argument for leaning into the youth, letting them try to solve some of these issues while gaining experience.

But it’s not simple. It never is. If you play the rookies more to fix defensive gaps, other issues show up. The offense can stall. The balance shifts. Every decision comes with trade-offs. Ott and his staff are navigating that in real time, and even if I don’t agree with the choices, that doesn’t mean you move on from the coach.

Take a step back. Think it through. Look at the bigger picture. 

The head coach position in Phoenix has been unstable for years. If you want to build something, stability matters. Ott is a rookie head coach, learning on the job, and it’s something we all understood coming into the season. This team was projected to win 30.5 games. They won 45. That’s a massive jump. That’s 50% better than expected.

This is a team finding its direction and building an identity with a young coach who understands the modern game and is laying a foundation. And the response is to want him gone because of rotation choices or the fact Fleming isn’t playing?! I’m worried about you if this is your conclusion.

I get the frustration. I feel it too. The tactics haven’t always worked, and the results haven’t always followed. But jumping back on the cycle, searching for the next coach you’ll eventually disagree with, that’s not a solution. That’s spinning your wheels.

Yes, I understand the thought exercise. That’s what we do at Bright Side. That’s what every fan base does. We look for ways to make the teams we care about better. But again, this isn’t that. This isn’t a real exercise. It’s futility. It’s wasted energy, wasted space, and pointless pixels on a screen. Because no matter what happens Friday against the Golden State Warriors, no matter what rotations Jordan Ott rolls out, the idea of moving on from him shouldn’t even be on the table.

This team took two steps forward this season. That part matters. Walking away from that now, after one game or one stretch, isn’t a pivot. It’s regression. It’s taking eight steps back.

Milwaukee Bucks Final Player Grades

Apr 3, 2026; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Milwaukee Bucks head coach Doc Rivers reacts in the second quarter against the Boston Celtics at Fiserv Forum. Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-Imagn Images | Benny Sieu-Imagn Images

After each game, Brew Hoop evaluates each Buck’s individual performance with a letter grade. At this season’s 25% mark, we decided to check the Bucks’ grades as a progress report. We also had a midseason report and a 75% point. Now it is time to see the final grades. Given I’m the tenured professor who is on his way out, I decided that some grades didn’t tell the whole story and added some factors to the final grade. Based purely on the game-by-game scores, some had grades that were far too generous, while others felt unfair.

Giannis Antetokounmpo: B+

  • Q1 average: A-
  • Midseason average: B+
  • Q3 average: Incomplete since he missed the majority of the quarter due to injury
  • Final grade: B+
  • Most common grade: A (nine games)
  • Best grade: A+ on October 26 (Cavaliers), November 17 (Cavaliers), March 15 (Pacers)
  • Lowest grade: D on January 15 (Spurs)

Myles Turner: C

  • Q1 average: B-
  • Midseason average: C+
  • Q3 average: C+
  • Final grade: C
  • Most common grade: B- (eleven games)
  • Best grade: A on November 7 (Bulls) and December 29 (Hornets)
  • Lowest grade: F on January 15 (Spurs), March 19 (Jazz), and April 3 (Celtics)

Ryan Rollins: B+

  • Q1 average: B+
  • Midseason average: B
  • Q3 average: B-
  • Final grade: B+
  • Most common grade: B (twelve games)
  • Best grade: A+ on October 28 (Knicks), October 30 (Warriors), December 27 (Bulls), and March 21(Suns)
  • Lowest grade: F on March 2 (Celtics)

Kevin Porter Jr.: B-

  • Q1 average: Incomplete
  • Midseason average: B-
  • Q3 average: B-
  • Final grade: B-
  • Most common grade: A (eight games)
  • Best grade: A+ on December 6 (Pistons)
  • Lowest grade: F on January 15 (Spurs)

AJ Green: C+

  • Q1 average: B-
  • Midseason average: C+
  • Q3 average: C+
  • Final grade: C+
  • Most common grade: B+ and B (nine games)
  • Best grade: A on October 26 (Cavaliers), November 29 (Nets), December 3 (Pistons), January 19 (Hawks), and February 12 (Thunder)
  • Lowest grade: F on December 21 (Timberwolves), January 4 (Kings) and 15 (Spurs), March 2 (Celtics) and 4 (Hawks)

Gary Trent Jr.: D+

  • Q1 average: C+
  • Midseason average: C
  • Q3 average: Incomplete
  • Final grade: D+
  • Most common grade: C+ (six games)
  • Best grade: A- on February 3 (Bulls)
  • Lowest grade: F on October 26 (Cavaliers), December 21 (Timberwolves), January 2 (Hornets), January 15 (Spurs), and February 1 (Celtics)

Bobby Portis: B-

  • Q1 average: C+
  • Midseason average: C+
  • Q3 average: C+
  • Final grade: B-
  • Most common grade: B (twelve games)
  • Best grade: A+ on March 15 (Pacers)
  • Lowest grade: F on February 11 (Magic)

Kyle Kuzma: C+

  • Q1 average: B
  • Midseason average: C+
  • Q3 average: C+
  • Final grade: C+
  • Most common grade: B+ (four games)
  • Best grade: A+ on November 14 (Hornets)
  • Lowest grade: F on November 15 (Lakers) and January 13 (Timberwolves)

Jericho Sims: B-

  • Q1 average: C+
  • Midseason average: C+
  • Q3 average: C+
  • Final grade: B-
  • Most common grade: C and C+ (two games each)
  • Best grade: A+ on December 3 (Pistons), February 11 (Magic), April 8 (Pistons)
  • Lowest grade: D- on February 27 (Knicks)

Gary Harris: C-

  • Q1 average: B-
  • Midseason average: C+
  • Q3 average: C
  • Final grade: C-
  • Most common grade: C (six games)
  • Best grade: A- on November 14 (Hornets) and January 7 (Warriors)
  • Lowest grade: F on March 2 (Celtics)

Pete Nance: B

  • Q1 and midseason averages: Incomplete
  • Q3 average: B-
  • Final grade: B
  • Most common grade: A- (four games)
  • Best grade: A on January 19 (Hawks), January 30 (Mavs), March 17 (Cavaliers)
  • Lowest grade: F on March 19 (Jazz)

Ousmane Dieng: B

  • Q3 average: C+
  • Final grade: B
  • Most common grade: C- (two games)
  • Best grade: A+ on February 12 (Thunder)
  • Lowest grade: D on February 27 (Knicks), and March 29 (Clippers)

Taurean Prince: C+

  • Q1 average: B-
  • Q2 and Q3 averages: Incomplete (injured)
  • Final grade: C+
  • Most common grade: B-, C+, and C- (four games each)
  • Best grade: A+ on April 5 (Grizzlies)
  • Lowest grade: D on March 28 (Spurs)

Andre Jackson Jr.: C-

  • Q1 through Q3 averages: Incomplete (too much garbage time)
  • Final grade: C-
  • Most common grade: C+ (three games)
  • Best grade: A- on March 23 (Clippers)
  • Lowest grade: D- on April 7 (Nets)

Thanasis Antetokounmpo: C-*

Alex Antetokounmpo: B-*

Cormac Ryan: B+

  • Q1 through Q3 averages: Incomplete (not with team)
  • Final grade: B+
  • Most common grade: B+ and A (two games each)
  • Best grade: A+ on April 5 (Grizzlies)
  • Lowest grade: C+ on April 3 (Celtics)

Doc Rivers: D+

  • Q1 average: B-
  • Midseason average: C+
  • Q3 average: C
  • Final grade: D+
  • Most common grade: D (eight games)
  • Best grade: A on October 30 (Warriors), November 7 (Bulls), February 20 (Pelicans), and March 10 (Nets)
  • Lowest grade: F on December 14 (Nets), January 13 (Timberwolves), January 15 (Spurs), and March 1 (Bulls)

Released or traded players’ final grades

  • Mark Sears: D-*
  • Cole Anthony: D+
  • Amir Coffey: D+
  • Cam Thomas: D

*only graded for one game

Final grades had three parts. The first part is just the overall grade from the writers in all 82 games, averaged out. That resulted in the following:

PlayerGames
Giannis AntetokounmpoB+
Myles TurnerC+
Ryan RollinsB-
Gary Trent Jr.C
AJ GreenC+
Bobby PortisC+
Kevin Porter Jr.B-
Kyle KuzmaC+
Gary HarrisC
Jericho SimsB-
Pete NanceC+
Ousmane DiengC+
Taurean PrinceC+
Andre Jackson Jr.C+
Thanasis AntetokounmpoC+
Cormac RyanB+
Alex AntetokounmpoA
Mark SearsD
Cole AnthonyC-
Amir CoffeyC
Cam ThomasC-
Doc RiversC

Yes, I know what you’re thinking: how in the world did Alex Antetokounmpo receive an A? Well, it was simple; he was only graded for one game (since we typically don’t give out grades when someone plays under 10 minutes), and it was an A. But this, along with some other grades, didn’t feel as though it told the full story. So there were two more portions that made up the final grade: expectations and their availability. The reason for this was that in the comments on the progress reports, some wondered how some players received a better-looking grade despite underwhelming, and in our grading scale, a DNP was treated the same as being out due to injury, which wasn’t fair. Here are their availability grades:

PlayerAvailability
Giannis AntetokounmpoB
Myles TurnerB
Ryan RollinsA+
Gary Trent Jr.D
AJ GreenA+
Bobby PortisA
Kevin Porter Jr.C+
Kyle KuzmaB
Gary HarrisD
Jericho SimsB
Pete NanceA
Ousmane DiengA
Taurean PrinceA
Andre Jackson Jr.D-
Thanasis AntetokounmpoF
Cormac RyanA-
Alex AntetokounmpoF
Mark SearsD
Cole AnthonyD-
Amir CoffeyD-
Cam ThomasD

Guys like Gary Trent Jr., Thanasis Antetokounmpo, and Andre Jackson Jr. were docked because they were primarily collecting DNP-CD or garbage-time minutes for most of the season. Others like Ryan Rollins, AJ Green, and Ousmane Dieng were mostly available and were rewarded. Players like Myles Turner, Bobby Portis, and Kyle Kuzma got the benefit of the doubt from being shut down at the end of the season, but were available before tanking efforts began. Taurean Prince earned an A because coming back from neck surgery in the same season feels like an extraordinary feat that should be lauded.

The other part of the final grade was performance relative to expectations. This was also part of the grades from our recaps, but with the season over, we can do some reflection. We can all agree Myles Turner did not play up to the contract. Some of that is on Doc Rivers and his inability to utilize him, but there were games where Turner’s rim protection simply wasn’t good enough. Ryan Rollins was obviously the star and the only A+ given, but others like Bobby Portis, Kyle Kuzma, and Pete Nance deserved some praise as well.

PlayerExpectations
Giannis AntetokounmpoA-
Myles TurnerD
Ryan RollinsA+
Gary Trent Jr.F
AJ GreenC+
Bobby PortisA-
Kevin Porter Jr.B
Kyle KuzmaB
Gary HarrisC-
Jericho SimsB
Pete NanceA+
Ousmane DiengB+
Taurean PrinceC-
Andre Jackson Jr.F
Thanasis AntetokounmpoC
Cormac RyanA
Alex AntetokounmpoF
Mark SearsF
Amir CoffeyF
Cole AnthonyF
Cam ThomasD-
Doc RiversF

Weighing those two portions with the game grades gives you their final grades as seen above. In the end, the season was a disaster, though different players had different peaks and valleys. Sometimes there were games in which most players received high grades, but one failed to make an impact. Others could see a team lose badly but have a silver lining. Jericho Sims struggled early in the season but blossomed in the final quarter of games. AJ Green had stretches of struggling and not justifying his extension, but then had games where he sparked the Bucks’ offense; such is the role of a shooter. Even Doc Rivers had moments this season when he wasn’t a bad coach; the issue was that when the games mattered, and the team was reasonably healthy, more often than not, he couldn’t get the job done.

We appreciate you being along for the ride this season, and feel free to provide your own player grades below. You can base it on expectations, their play in general, or simply vibes—whichever works best for you. Enjoy your summer break, and come back next season when we’ll provide the syllabus.

Game #18 GameThread: Jays @ Brewers

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - OCTOBER 13: A general view of the exterior of the stadium before game one of the National League Championship Series between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on October 13, 2025 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Game three of three with the Brewers. This will take them through their sixth series of the season. So will be starting to see what the Jays are by now. Of course, I’m writing this before the season starts.

Let’s see….I’ve said everything I need to about Milwaukee in the first two GameThreads. And, as you read this, I’m still somewhere in Japan. Hopefully seeing a baseball game. My wife has us going to watch sumo wrestling. I’m totally not interested in it, but she does a lot of things that I like and she’s not interested in.

I’m looking forward to the food though. Tasting different things than I have at home is one of the appeals of travel. I’m not a big fan of sake, but we are going to a tasting and I’m interesting in tasting different types. There are a number of good Japanese Whiskeys and I’m hoping to taste some of those too.


Go Jays Go.

Hornets vs Magic Same-Game Parlay for Friday's NBA Game

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The Charlotte Hornets were one of the hottest teams in the home stretch of the schedule and are one win away from securing the No. 8 seed in the East when they take on the Orlando Magic in the NBA Play-In Tournament.

If you’re cheering on Charlotte Friday night, I’ve got a pro-Hornets same game parlay to add a little buzz to your betting action.

Here are my best NBA SGP picks and predictions for Hornets vs. Magic on April 17.

Our best Hornets vs Magic SGP for April 17

The Charlotte Hornets were 18-9 SU in the second half of the season and showed grit in their Play-In win over Miami on Tuesday. Charlotte has been one of the best two-way teams since the All-Star break and boast a 13-3 SU mark as road favorites this season.

Rookie sensation Kon Knueppel would like to put his postseason debut in the past. While he couldn’t connect from deep Tuesday – and may not get much more versus the Magic’s defense – Knueppel’s playmaking is being undervalued. His projections flirt with four assists Friday.

Brandon Miller is a constant offensive engine for Charlotte. He dropped 25 and 20 points in his last two run-ins with Orlando and Friday’s forecasts call for as many as 22.5 points from the Hornets small forward.

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When do NHL playoffs start? 2026 standings, bracket and tiebreaker scenarios

Six of the NHL's eight playoff series are set, and the last two will be determined on the final day of the 2025-26 regular season.

The Edmonton Oilers, Anaheim Ducks and Los Angeles Kings, who are playing other opponents, can finish in either the second or third seed in the Pacific Division or the second wild card spot in the West.

The second-place team would host the third place team in the first two games of the first round, while the second wild team would visit the No. 1 overall Colorado Avalanche.

There's a possibility that the Oilers and Kings would face each other for the fifth year in a row in the first round.

Here's what to know about the NHL standings, including the latest playoff bracket, Wednesday's clinching scenario 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, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Buffalo, Montreal, Tampa Bay, Boston, Ottawa

Western Conference: Colorado, Dallas, Minnesota, Vegas, Edmonton, Anaheim, Utah, Los Angeles

Who can clinch an NHL playoff seed today?

Here are some of the permutations for determining the final Pacific Division seedings:

  • The Edmonton Oilers would clinch second in the Pacific if they beat the Vancouver Canucks or if they get one point and the Ducks and Kings lose. They would finish third if they lose in regulation, the Ducks win and the Kings lose. They would finish in the second wild card if they lose in regulation and the Ducks and Kings win.
  • The Anaheim Ducks would clinch second place if they beat the Nashville Predators and the Oilers lose in regulation. They would finish third if the Oilers get at least one point and Anaheim gains one more point than the Kings during the night. They would get the second wild card if they lose and the Kings win.
  • The Kings would clinch second place if they beat the Calgary Flames, the Oilers lose in regulation and the Ducks lose. They would finish third if they win, the Oilers get a point and the Ducks lose. They would stay in the second wild-card spot if they lose in regulation or if they gain the same number of points or fewer points than the Oilers and Ducks during the course of the night.

Today's NHL games

  • St. Louis at Utah, 7:30, ESPN
  • Anaheim at Nashville, 8
  • San Jose at Winnipeg, 8
  • Los Angeles at Calgary, 9
  • Vancouver at Edmonton, 9
  • Seattle at Colorado, 10, ESPN

NHL playoff standings

NHL Eastern Conference standings 2025-26

After April 15 gamesx-clinched playoff spot. y-clinched division. z-eliminated.

Metropolitan Division

  • y-Carolina Hurricanes (113) Eastern Conference winner
  • x-Pittsburgh Penguins (98)
  • x-Philadelphia Flyers (98)

Atlantic Division

  • y-Buffalo Sabres (109)
  • x-Tampa Bay Lightning (106)
  • x-Montreal Canadiens (106)

Wild card

  • x-Boston Bruins (100)
  • x-Ottawa Senators (99)

Out of the playoffs: z-Washington Capitals (95), z-Detroit Red Wings (92), z-Columbus Blue Jackets (92), z-New York Islanders (91), z-New Jersey Devils (87), z-Florida Panthers (84), z-Toronto Maple Leafs (78), z-New York Rangers (77)

NHL Western Conference standings 2025-26

After April 15 games. x-clinched playoff spot. y-clinched division. z-eliminated.

Central Division

  • y-Colorado Avalanche (119) - Presidents' Trophy winner
  • x-Dallas Stars (112)
  • x-Minnesota Wild (104)

Pacific Division

  • y-Vegas Golden Knights (95)
  • x-Edmonton Oilers (91)
  • x-Anaheim Ducks (90)

Wild card

  • x-Utah Mammoth (92)
  • x-Los Angeles Kings (90)

Out of the playoffs: z-Nashville Predators (86), z-St. Louis Blues (84), z-San Jose Sharks (84), z-Winnipeg Jets (82), z-Seattle Kraken (79), z-Calgary Flames (75), z-Chicago Blackhawks (72), z-Vancouver Canucks (58)

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 15:

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

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 15.

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

In the Pacific Division, the Oilers have the most regulation wins, followed by the Ducks and Kings.

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 will begin on Saturday, April 18. There are three openers on Saturday, four on Sunday and one on Monday.

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

Canucks Will Play A Role In Helping Decide Oilers 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs Opponent

Thursday marks the conclusion of the Vancouver Canucks' disappointing 2025-26 season. Regardless of what happens in the final game of the campaign, Vancouver will finish 32nd overall and have the best odds at first overall for the 2026 NHL Entry Draft. A campaign that no one saw coming, 2025-26 will go down as one of the worst seasons in franchise history. 

Just because Tuesday's game will not impact the Canucks' place in the standings doesn't mean it has no stakes. In fact, the result will determine how the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs will look. Simply put, the Edmonton Oilers desperately need to collect points; otherwise, it could create a less-than-ideal matchup in the first round. 

If Vancouver beats Edmonton in regulation, the Oilers will finish the season with 31 regulation wins at 91 points. As of writing, that would leave them as the second seed in the Pacific. The problem is that the two teams below them in the standings, the Anaheim Ducks and the Los Angeles Kings, would have the chance to leapfrog the Oilers and push them into the Wild Card. 

For this scenario to happen, the Ducks and Kings would both have to win while Edmonton would have to lose in regulation. Anaheim faces the Nashville Predators in their season finale, while Los Angeles takes on the Calgary Flames. Both the Predators and Flames are out of the playoff race and are currently fighting for draft lottery position. 

If both the Ducks and Kings pick up wins while the Oilers fall in regulation, that would mean Edmonton goes from facing a California team to the Colorado Avalanche. Yes, the Presidents' Trophy-winning, 119-point Avalanche. Sounds less than ideal for an Oilers team that is already dealing with a key injury to Leon Draisaitl. 

The Canucks will wrap up their season on Thursday against Edmonton. This season, Vancouver has beaten Edmonton just once in three attempts. Game time is scheduled for 6:00 pm PT. 

Jan 17, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks defenseman Filip Hronek (17) stick checks Edmonton Oilers forward Connor McDavid (97) in the third period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images
Jan 17, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Vancouver Canucks defenseman Filip Hronek (17) stick checks Edmonton Oilers forward Connor McDavid (97) in the third period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images

Make sure you bookmark THN's Vancouver Canucks site and add us to your favourites on Google News for the latest news, exclusive interviews, breakdowns, and so much more. Also, don't forget to leave a comment at the bottom of the page and engage with other passionate fans through our forum. This article originally appeared on The Hockey News.

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Alex Ovechkin is ‘pretty sure’ about his Capitals retirement decision

Alex Ovechkin of the Washington Capitals wearing his hockey helmet and jersey.
Alex Ovechkin #8 of the Washington Capitals skates on the ice during the third period of the game against the Columbus Blue Jackets.

The Russian Machine isn’t ready to shut it down just yet.

Alex Ovechkin, the NHL’s all-time leading goal scorer, gave a peek into his mindset at the end of his 21st NHL season as rumors swirl around potential retirement for the Capitals winger.

“To be honest with you, I’m pretty sure it’s not my last game. I hope it’s not my last game, against Columbus,” he said Thursday, two days after Washington’s season finale, a 2-1 loss to the Blue Jackets.

“I have to make a decision to see where we’re at. The team, family. The kids are already asking me, ‘Dad, are you staying or no?’ And I tell them, ‘We’ll see.’ They want me to come back. They love the city, they love the team, they love the boys.”

Alex Ovechkin #8 of the Washington Capitals skates on the ice during the third period of the game against the Columbus Blue Jackets. NHLI via Getty Images

Ovechkin, 40, completed the final season of a five-year, $47.5 million extension, and proved he can still contribute. While he may no longer be the consistent 50-goal scorer of earlier in his career, he posted 32 goals and 64 points over 82 games for the Caps (43-30-9) as they finished three points shy of the second wild card spot in the East.

The Russian superstar, the No. 1 overall pick in the 2004 NHL Draft, broke Wayne Gretzky’s record of 895 goals against the Islanders on Apr. 6, 2025, and currently stands alone atop of the NHL’s leaderboard with 929 of his own in 1,572 games.

He brought a Stanley Cup to the Capitals — and followed it with an epic summer-long party — and if he calls it a day stateside, would retire with 12 All-Star nods, three Hart Trophies and three Pearson trophies as league MVP, nine Rocket Richard trophies as the NHL’s leading goal scorer, one Art Ross as the top point-getter and Rookie of the Year honors for 2005-06.

As for his other options, Ovechkin made it clear the Capitals would be his only North American team — a possibility he said he’ll have to discuss with Washington GM Chris Patrick — or potentially return home to play in Russia’s KHL.

Capitals left wing Alex Ovechkin (8) battles for the puck against Pittsburgh Penguins defenseman Erik Karlsson (65). AP

The in-and-out grind will be a determining factor.

“In the summer, you have to work your ass off to get better and be in shape,” he said. “When you’re 20, it’s no big thing. When you’re 40, it’s harder and harder.”

Teams hedged their bets down the stretch, with players and fans attempting to say goodbye in what might’ve been their last glimpse of the man known as “Ovi.”

In what was a potentially telling sign, when longtime rival Sidney Crosby had his Penguins teammates ready to give him a handshake line sendoff, Ovechkin simply waved them off.

“Because I don’t decided yet,” he said . “I don’t know. Thanks for them to wait out there, but I’m going to see Sid right now after interview and [Penguins forward Evgeni Malkin]. We’ll talk.”

Doncic & Cunningham eligible for NBA awards after appeal

Luka Doncic smiles (left) and Cade Cunningham smiles (right)
Luka Doncic (left) scored a game-high 32 points as the Los Angeles Lakers lost 113-110 to Cade Cunningham's (right) Detroit Pistons in March [Getty Images]

Los Angeles Lakers' Luka Doncic and Detroit Pistons' Cade Cunningham are eligible to win NBA end-of-season awards after successful appeals.

Traditionally, players must feature in a minimum of 65 regular season games to be eligible, but Cunningham played 63 and Doncic played 64.

Doncic, 27, and Cunningham, 24, both lodged challenges to the rule due to "extraordinary circumstances".

Cunningham missed 12 games with a collapsed lung, while Doncic missed two for the birth of his daughter in Slovenia - both reasons were cited by the NBA as part of the exemptions.

The ruling means that they are now in contention for awards including MVP and All-NBA teams.

Doncic has scored a league-high 2,143 points during the regular season to help the Lakers reach the play-offs and was recently named as the player to sell the most shirts across Europe and the Middle East.

Cunningham ranks second in the league for assists (634), with the Pistons also through to the play-offs as they sit top of the Eastern Conference.

Meanwhile, Anthony Edwards of the Minnesota Timberwolves played 60 games but was denied his appeal to be given allowance.

The one stat that could decide Celtics vs. Sixers: can Boston avoid the clutch?

Close your eyes and think about the kid you always matched up against growing up. Little League, Pee Wee hoops, doesn’t matter. Just picture that little stinker and that matchup.

Physical. Annoying. A little chippy. Probably would give you wet willies when you weren’t looking.

And no matter how many times you played them, it never really got less personal.

That’s Celtics vs. Sixers.

Not in the “classic rivalry” sense — in Joel Embiid’s words, “this is not a rivalry, they always kick our ass.” But in the sense that these two teams just keep running into each other. Over and over again. More than any other matchup in playoff history, in fact.

For the 23rd time in NBA history, it’ll be Boston vs. Philadelphia in the playoffs. It’s familiar. It’s layered. And even when one team is clearly better, the games don’t always cooperate with that reality.

Which brings us to the question that might actually decide this series: what happens if these games are still tight late?

The Sixers need to keep things close

The Philadelphia 76ers had the #1 clutch-time defense in the NBA this season. Not top five. The best. They held teams to a 98.6 defensive rating in 174 total minutes of clutch situations. In the NBA, a clutch situation is officially defined as any time during the final five minutes of the fourth quarter or overtime, where the score differential between the two teams is five points or less.

They’ve already shown what that clutch-time defense looks like against Boston.

Both of their wins over the Celtics this season came down to the final possessions. If you rule out the Celtics 114-98 blowout win versus Philly on March 1st, the other three games were decided by a total of four points. Four! Two of those resulted in losses for Boston, falling in the regular-season opener 117-116, and losing again in Philadelphia on November 11, 102-100. Those two losses were the exact kind of games where everything slows down and every decision gets magnified.

That’s where this series can drift into something it probably shouldn’t be.

The Celtics don’t need to be perfect.

Here’s the thing with this Celtics team. When they look like themselves, the game usually ends before it ever becomes a “clutch” game.

Ball moves. Shots fall. Defense travels. You look up midway through the fourth and it’s a 15-point game that never really felt in doubt.

That’s the version of Boston that wins this series in five and we all get to start thinking about Round 2.

But for Boston, every now and then, the game tilts a little. And if it tilts long enough in this series, it could be closer than we’re hoping for.

We’ve seen the version of Boston that gets a little too comfortable with isolation play, whether it’s Brown or Tatum holding on to the ball until the shot clock hits nine before they decide to start the action. This shows up most in games where Boston builds a big early lead. Complacency and standing still are the demons of this team. When they get away from playing their game, the threes stop falling. The offense gets a little sticky. Possessions start ending in tougher shots than they probably should. Nothing catastrophic — just enough to keep the other team hanging around.

BOSTON, MA – MARCH 1: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics drives to the basket during the game against the Philadelphia 76ers on March 1, 2026 at TD Garden in Boston, Massachusetts. 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. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Brian Babineau/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

You look at the scoreboard, now it’s eight. Then six. Then four.

And suddenly you’re playing the Sixers’ game.

For a team that was pretty average for most of the season, the math changes for Philly when games get tight late. And for whoever they’re playing, the focus shifts from who generated better shots over 40 minutes to who executes over the next eight.

A big part of this series will be determined by whether the Celtics can still get clean looks when everything tightens.

For the Sixers, it’ll be determined by whether they can turn the game into a half-court grind, where their guards can pressure the ball, switch across actions, and force Boston into late-clock decisions. And if guys like Tyrese Maxey and VJ Edgecombe can create just enough offense while the defense does its elite thing, look out.

Lastly, if Joel Embiid somehow appears at any point in this series — even in a limited role — that dynamic gets even more pronounced. Slower pace, more physicality, more chances to drag things into the mud.

That’s not where Boston wants to live.

The stat just tells the story

Yes, the clutch defensive rating matters. It tells you Philly is elite in those moments. But the real takeaway is simpler than that. 

The Sixers need these games to stay close. The Celtics don’t.

If Boston does what it’s done all season — moves the ball, avoids self-inflicted mistakes, and builds real separation — this matchup probably ends without much drama. If they don’t, and they keep letting Philly hang around late, then all of a sudden you’re playing a different kind of series.

The kind where one bounce, one possession, one weird stretch decides things.

The kind of game you remember from growing up.

The one against that kid.

Let’s not get it twisted, the Celtics are the better team in this series. But being the better team doesn’t always equate to advancing to the next round. Don’t tell me you’ve already forgotten the ‘06-’07 We Believe Warriors, or the ‘10-’11 Mavericks taking down the first version of the Heatles? I can still hear The Jet flying overhead.

Again, playoff series don’t always reward the better team in a straight line. They reward the team that controls what the game (and the series) becomes.

Right now, there are two versions of this series sitting right in front of us. One where Boston plays its game and moves on, and one where things get just uncomfortable enough, just often enough, that Philly gets exactly what it wants.

That’s the margin. And it might come down to whether the Celtics can stay far enough away from the exact kind of game the Sixers have already proven they’re built to win.

If you never got the best of that rival twerp of yours growing up, you should feel pretty good about this matchup. The Sixers aren’t bringing their usual firepower to the table, and if Boston handles its business, they should be the ones handing out the wet willies all series long.

Bruins-Sabres series to begin on Sunday

BUFFALO, NEW YORK - MARCH 25: Linesman James Tobias #61 drops the puck for a face-off between Jason Zucker #17 of the Buffalo Sabres and Pavel Zacha #18 of the Boston Bruins during an NHL game on March 25, 2026 at KeyBank Center in Buffalo, New York. (Photo by Bill Wippert/NHLI via Getty Images) | NHLI via Getty Images

While we continue to wait for the release of the full first round schedule, the NHL announced this afternoon that the Bruins and Sabres will begin their series on Sunday in Buffalo.

Sunday afternoon? Maybe. Sunday evening? Could be! Sunday night? Anything is possible.

But hey, at least we know: Sunday.

The league didn’t announce any broadcast information along with that date, so their news release was about as little help as it could possibly be, but it’s something.

If you follow the usual cadence for these series, we’d probably be looking at something like Sunday-Tuesday-Friday-Sunday, but there are occasionally extra days in between some of these games depending on availability.

The Celtics already have home playoff games scheduled for TD Garden on Sunday, Tuesday, and (if necessary) Tuesday, April 28, and Sunday, May 2.

With those dates in mind, the B’s home schedule for Games 3 and 4 shouldn’t conflict with the NBA at all.

At this point, it’s a little strange that the league hasn’t released a full schedule, especially in the Eastern Conference, when all of the match-ups are set.

I can understand maybe not releasing a full schedule with exact times and broadcast channels, as that will likely depend on how the Western Conference match-ups shake out.

However, you know who is playing who in the East, so it really shouldn’t be that hard to fill those dates.

I guess it’s easy to get impatient when you’ve waited a year to get back in the playoffs, eh?

If you’re interested in the other teams’ schedules for their respective series openers:

Saturday, April 18

  • Senators at Huricanes, 3 PM
  • Wild at Stars, 5:30 PM
  • Flyers at Penguins, 8 PM

Sunday, April 19

  • WC2 at Avalanche, TBD
  • Canadaiens at Lightning, TBD
  • Bruins at Sabres, TBD
  • Mammoth at Golden Knights, TBD

Monday, April 20

  • Pacific #3 at Pacific #2, TBD

The first round of the playoffs is always fun, as there seem to be two or three games on every night for like a week, so we’ll have a chance to get our hockey fix.

New York Yankees vs. Los Angeles Angels: Max Fried vs. Brent Suter

NEW YORK, NY - APRIL 15: Trent Grisham #12 of the New York Yankees looks on from the on-deck circle during the game against the Los Angeles Angels at Yankee Stadium on April 15, 2026 in New York, New York. (Photo by New York Yankees/Getty Images) | Getty Images

After Monday night’s heavyweight fight, Tuesday’s dud, and Wednesday’s pull-a-“W”-out-of-the-hat magic trick, this wacky and often less-than-fun series with the Angels wraps up this afternoon. The Yankees get to hand the ball to their ace, Max Fried, while the Angels appear ready to take the opener approach in this getaway game.

Both of New York’s victories in this series have felt more exhausting than celebratory. They have been the kind of games that leave the dugout, and the fanbase, relieved more than triumphant. Between swings in momentum, defensive miscues, and the emotional whiplash of close finishes, the Yankees have still managed to take two of the first three despite Mike Trout going full 2019, blasting four home runs and driving in eight runs through the opening three games.

The good news for the Yankees is that the ball is in the exact hands they want for a game like this. Ace Max Fried will try to reel Trout back in and keep the rest of the Halos in the clouds long enough for New York to take the series and finally exhale.

Fried enters at 2-0 with a 1.93 ERA and 20 strikeouts, giving the Yankees their most stabilizing presence on a day when the bullpen could certainly use a cleaner path to the late innings. After three consecutive games that have forced the Yankees to grind through relief arms—including a couple who aren’teven on the active roster anymore—and with this being the club’s 10th straight day of games, Fried’s ability to provide length may matter almost as much as the result itself. A deep outing would not only help secure the series, but also better position the Yankees for the Royals, who arrive in the Bronx this weekend for a three-game set.

The Angels will hope the opener allows them to fly home with a split, as they have chosen veteran lefty Brent Suter to take the ball first. Suter started his career with the Brewers before short stints in Colorado and Cincinnati, eventually landing with the Angels this past offseason. In the early going, he has appeared in six games and allowed three earned runs across 13 innings, with his last outing coming on April 11th when he worked 3.2 scoreless innings against the Reds in Cincinnati.

So far this season, Suter has not allowed an earned run against any team other than the Mariners, which is exactly the kind of oddly specific baseball note that should make Yankees fans a little nervous. Make no mistake about it, the Angels waiting until the last minute to announce their starter did little to inspire confidence in a Yankees offense that has spent much of this series making mystery arms look more dangerous than they are.

Yes, Ben Rice has been excellent, yet the Yankees keep sitting him. Aaron Judge has been good, but not yet Judge good (albeit nearly matching Trout with three homers of his own in this series), while Giancarlo Stanton has drifted into single-merchant territory and Cody Bellinger currently looks like he is swinging a pool noodle at the plate.

I could keep going and pile on, but the rest of the regulars will not get any extra baggage from me until they are hitting above .200. For the record, five regulars currently sit below that mark, at .119, .164, .185, .186, and .191. For a lineup with this much talent, today would be a nice day for the bottom of the order to stop letting opposing pitchers look and post numbers like prime Randy Johnson.

Speaking of the lineup, after last night’s sprint home to score the winning run, Austin Wells gets the day off, and the second-hottest hitter on the Yankees right now, Amed Rosario, gets the start at third. Rosario will bat sixth behind Rice, and the lineup as a whole makes a lot more sense than some of the previous configurations, even if one still has to wonder if Rice and Bellinger will eventually be flipped to better protect Judge in the three-hole.

The Yankees have already proven they can survive messy baseball against the Halos. Cleaning it up and taking the series behind their ace, though, would allow them to sleep a little easier in their own beds tonight before a makeshift offday—or at least a true night off—arrives after the final out. In a long season, getaway games often reveal how good teams convert survival into momentum, and this feels like one of those afternoons. Taking a series after surviving Trout in full shark mode, with two walk-off wins and a gem from your ace, might be exactly what this team needs to start playing better baseball.

Here’s to hoping for a less wild ride this afternoon. If nothing else, let’s all enjoy getting to watch a little Yankees matinee baseball on a beautiful spring day in the best city in the country.

How to watch

Location: Yankee Stadium — Bronx, NY

First pitch: 1:35 pm ET

TV broadcast: Yankees – YES | FanDuel Sports Network West

Radio broadcast: WFAN 660/101.9 FM, WADO 1280, KLAA 830

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He’s Not Even at His Best… and JJ Wetherholt Is Still Producing

ST LOUIS, MISSOURI - APRIL 14: JJ Wetherholt #26 of the St. Louis Cardinals rounds the bases after hitting a two-run home run against the Cleveland Guardians at Busch Stadium on April 14, 2026 in St Louis, Missouri. (Photo by Joe Puetz/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It’s been an up and down season so far for the St. Louis Cardinals. It’s entirely reasonable to expect that it will be an up and down season from here on out. We’re all hoping for an outcome that’s special and unexpected, but the likelihood is that we’ll have to live through growing pains. In some ways, JJ Wetherholt’s (very, very) early season results are a microcosm for the roller coaster nature of this team as a whole. This is fitting in a lot of ways, as we all hope JJ Wetherholt will be in St. Louis for a very long time. (Unless you’re somehow anti-Wetherholt?! Please, go ahead and identify yourself so we can turn up our noses at you and cross the street to the other side. Thanks!)

Wetherholt, of course, is an uber prospect. Everybody who ranks prospects (including your pet dog), had Wetherholt as a consensus top prospect in all of the minor leagues. This designation is a bit of a catch-22 for Cardinals prospects. Wetherholt descends from a shaky Cardinals prospect tree that includes names like Carlson, Reyes, Taveras (RIP – a true sliding doors moment for the franchise), and Walker (WOW JORDAN WALKER SO FAR). I’m fine staking my non-existent Cardinals reputation on the fact that Wetherholt is absolutely not going to be a failure. While I’m here giving takes, let me just bring up the spice level. I’d happily bet money that Wetherholt will be in a red jacket someday. How’s that for confidence?

In our last episode of Redbird Rundown, we ranked the top three most untradeable major leaguers on the Cardinals roster and despite Jordan Walker’s thermonuclear start (let’s do it again – WOW JORDAN WALKER SO FAR), Wetherholt remains the top of the heap for me. You may disagree, and that’s part of being an observer! Check out that list and so much more if you’re into audio content – Apple and Spotify!

If you’ve watched any of the games thus far, you’ve seen why I have such confidence in Wetherholt. The guy is a quintessential high-floor player. His approach is elite – maybe even beyond elite? Wetherholt is a one man wrecking crew for opposing hurler’s pitch counts. As such, he’s running a walk rate that is in the 76th percentile. While spitting on balls outside the zone, Wetherholt is hacking at pitches in the zone. In the very early going (Yes, I’m still aware it’s early. Thanks for checking.), Wetherholt is displaying an aggressiveness that he’s never shown as a professional. As of this writing, he’s swinging at 5% more pitches in the zone and 3% more pitches outside the zone. 

This newfound aggressiveness, while probably explained by a little rookie pressing to produce at the big league level, does not appear to be serving him well. His bat speed is exactly league average, so to leverage the surprising power he showed last year at Memphis, he’s going to have to swing at exactly the right pitches. Naturally, Wetherholt just had a two homer game two days ago, so there’s all the proof any of us need. 

For the season though, his batted ball data is strikingly average. He’s the Michael McGreevy of batted balls so far? Not sure. May need to workshop that. He’s almost exactly 50th percentile in barrel %, hard hit %, average exit velo, and squared up %. All of these numbers last year were much closer to the top of the MiLB system. Obviously, MLB hitters on average are better than MiLB hitters, but this suggests to me that Wetherholt is making contact with pitches he just can’t do as much with. In short, he’s swinging too much right now.

The biggest plague on Wetherholt’s offensive production so far is the sharply hit ball to second base. Now, before you get visions of Victor Scott II dancing in your head, don’t. In general, just don’t do that to yourself. But, Wetherholt is pulling so many more balls than last year. It’s shocking really. Last year he pulled 42.5% of his batted ball events in the minors, this year it’s up to 53.8%. What gives? His opposite field contact has fallen a full 14%. The best version of Wetherholt anyone has ever seen in his very short career (Wetherholt himself is a bit of a short king, no?) has a spray chart that looks like a shotgun blast. It’s all over the field. Right now, he’s pulling far more pitches and suffering from a .245 BABIP. Many of these hard grounders are right at the first and second basemen.

What’s the upshot? JJ Wetherholt is running a 109 wRC+ being a substandard version of his best offensive self. I’m going to chalk it up to rookie pressing. He also has an interesting habit of going through an adjustment period at each new level and then his baseball AI brain recalibrates and he dominates. I’m not sure we’ll see the lofty 154 wRC+ he ran last year in the minors, but I expect him to improve. It’s been an impressive start, even as it’s substandard for him. If that even makes sense.

As you watch him in the coming weeks, pay attention to how aggressive he is in the box. My hope is that he edges down towards his college and minor league seasons when it comes to swing rates. The track record of this more patient player is beyond impressive. I suspect that the Cardinals have a top of the order hitter that will be there for a long time just starting his adjustment period to major league pitching. We’ll see what the future brings.

As always, thanks for reading! It’s been a great experience at VEB so far. Thanks for that! You can usually find me during games hanging out on twitter @mksmith86. I honestly tweet more from our podcast handle @redbirdrundown2. Drop by and say hey!

GameThread: Tigers vs. Royals, 1:10 p.m.

Apr 15, 2026; Detroit, Michigan, USA; Detroit Tigers center fielder Wenceel Pérez celebrates in the dugout after hitting a solo home run against the City Royals in the eighth inning at Comerica Park. Mandatory Credit: Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images | Lon Horwedel-Imagn Images

Detroit Tigers (9-9) vs. Kansas City Royals (7-11)

Time/Place: 1:10 p.m., Comerica Park
SB Nation Site: Royals Review
Media: Detroit SportsNet, MLB.TV, Tigers Radio Network
Pitching Matchup: RHP Keider Montero (1-1, 1.74 ERA) vs. LHP Kris Bubic (2-1, 2.50 ERA)

PlayerGIPK%BB%GB%FIPfWAR
Montero210.126.35.338.51.790.4
Bubic318.033.810.342.13.200.4

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Ian Happ and Seiya Suzuki are both free agents after 2026. Who should the Cubs keep?

This spring, the Cubs have given contract extensions to two key players — Pete Crow-Armstrong and Nico Hoerner.

Other teams have done the same, primarily with young players, some even with players who have yet to play a MLB game.

The Cubs have two veteran players who don’t really fit either category above, but who have both been important contributors to the team in recent years — Ian Happ and Seiya Suzuki. Both are free agents after this season. They are almost exactly the same age, born 10 days apart (Happ, Aug. 8, 1994 and Suzuki, Aug, 18, 1994). So both turn 32 later this year.

Happ has been a consistent 4 bWAR player over the past four seasons. He’s won Gold Gloves each of those four seasons, and almost always posts an OPS near his career average of .790. You know you’re going to get around 22-23 home runs every year from him, a lot of walks that produce around a .340 OBP even with a BA in the .240s. He is a respected clubhouse leader. He’s already hit four home runs this year — last year he didn’t hit his fourth homer until June 5.

Suzuki has been a bit injury-prone, but had a breakout 2025 season in which he batted .245/.326/.478 with 32 home runs and 103 RBI. The latter two numbers were career highs, as were his runs total (75), his 31 doubles, and 75 walks. He began 2025 mostly as a DH, but when Kyle Tucker went down with various injuries, Suzuki played 48 games in the outfield and was at least competent. (Granted, he has shown little of the defensive form that had him win NPB’s Golden Glove Award five times.)

Suzuki is off to a somewhat slow start this year, .261/.393/.261 (6-for-23), with five walks giving him a decent OBP. But that’s only six games for Seiya, and I feel certain he’ll come close to matching his 2025 numbers in 2026.

So of these two, which one would you want the Cubs to extend? Or both? Or neither?

Personally, I think I’d rather keep Suzuki. It seems to me that he might provide a bit more power over the next few years than Happ, and he could slide into a DH role if needed.

What do you think?

Mariners Prospect Rankings #1, SS Colt Emerson

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - MARCH 20, 2026: Colt Emerson #85 of the Seattle Mariners runs out a ground ball during the first inning of a spring training Spring Breakout game against the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Fields of Phoenix on March 20, 2026 in Phoenix, Arizona. (Photo by Chris Bernacchi/Diamond Images via Getty Images) | Diamond Images/Getty Images

After 21 individual articles covering the best of what the Seattle Mariners have to offer in their minor league system, Colt Emerson has officially been crowned as Lookout Landing’s top prospect for the 2026 season, concluding our annual rankings. Having already signed a record-breaking extension earlier this season, Emerson exemplifies everything the Mariners want in a young shortstop and will be a key part of this team for the next decade or longer. His highly anticipated promotion is slated to be at some point this season, and though he’s already making major league money as a 20 year old, expect him to get some additional seasoning in Triple-A before he officially breaks through to the big leagues.

Emerson features premium bat-to-ball skills, budding power, and excellent plate discipline, a prototypical offensive approach of a young shortstop primed to excel at the next level. Perhaps even more important, however, is the fact he’s now a lock to stick up the middle, taking massive strides defensively and looking like a plus defender at the position on a nightly basis. He’s got a big time throwing arm and is fluid in his actions, showing off range that the Mariners have lacked for several years now. He’s a dynamic glove that doubles as an ideal table-setter atop a lineup.

As of now, the goal for Emerson is to polish his offensive approach against veteran pitchers in Triple-A. The lower levels of the minor league typically feature a decent spread of raw “stuff” and can give hitters a taste of how pitches are moving, but Double-A and up is where things really step up. With just north of 200 PA’s at or above Double-A, getting experience against superior stuff is the final step in Emerson’s development and ultimately is what’s keeping him in the minors for now. At just 20 years old, he’s obviously way ahead of schedule and should be given plenty of time to develop regardless of his contract status. The Mariners are in on Emerson for the long haul; messing with his development in order to get him on to a roster that doesn’t have a clear role for him makes little sense and could wind up doing significantly more harm than good.

Thank you to all who have read along with this series! Hopefully the past two and a half months were able to provide some good context on state of the farm system and shine a light on some guys that you hadn’t yet heard of. We’ll still have weekly farm system updates every Monday if your prospect fix hasn’t yet been satiated, providing active updates to your new favorite farm hands. Sound off in the comments and Go Mariners!