Former Canucks In The 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs: Eastern Conference

The 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs are officially underway. While the Vancouver Canucks will not be taking part in the post-season — unsurprisingly — there are quite a few former Canucks who will look to make their mark as they pursue the Stanley Cup with their current teams. Here are the former Canucks taking part in the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs in the Eastern Conference. 

Atlantic Division 

Elias Lindholm, Boston Bruins 

Lindholm is one of four former Canucks who now play for the Boston Bruins. Having signed with the Bruins in free-agency after his 26 regular-season games with the Canucks in 2023–24, Lindholm appears to have found his footing with Boston. The centre put up 17 goals and 31 assists in 69 games with the Bruins this season, eclipsing his total from the year prior in 13 less games. 

A Canuck for less than 30 regular season games, Lindholm put up six goals and six assists with Vancouver but was sidelined for parts of his stint due to injury. Where he really turned things up was in the post-season, during which he scored five goals and five assists in 13 games. This was Lindholm’s most recent playoff experience, predated by three separate runs with the Calgary Flames in 2018–19, 2019–20, and 2021–22. 

Lukas Reichel, Boston Bruins 

Reichel’s tenure with the Canucks was an interesting one. The forward was acquired back in October, sent down to Abbotsford full-time by mid-December, and moved to the Bruins at the 2026 NHL Trade Deadline for a sixth-round pick. While he has yet to play for them in the post-season, he did end up skating with Boston in 10 regular-season games, scoring a goal and two assists in this span of time. 

Though whether he plays during playoffs or not is currently unknown, Reichel is currently on Boston’s roster. In his time with their AHL affiliate, the Providence Bruins, he scored a goal and five assists in four games. 

Nikita Zadorov, Boston Bruins 

Zadorov, a fan favourite in his 54 regular-season games with the Canucks, tied a career-high in points this season with 22 in 81 games. The defenceman has hit this plateau two other times in his career — last season with the Bruins and in 2021–22 with the Flames. He did, however, register a different career-high this season by logging 152 penalty minutes. 

Like his current Bruins teammate and former Canucks and Flames teammate Lindholm, Zadorov’s last playoff appearance came with Vancouver in 2023–24. Not only did the defenceman step up physically with his trademark big hits, he also stepped-up offensively, scoring four goals and four assists in 13 games. 

Luke Schenn, Buffalo Sabres 

Joining Pearson in Buffalo’s quest for a Stanley Cup is none-other than Schenn. Schenn and Pearson were teammates for nearly three seasons in Vancouver, though they did not compete in the post-season together as members of the Canucks. They did, however, both take part in playoffs as members of the Kings back in 2015–16. Both Schenn and Pearson were also traded from the Winnipeg Jets to the Sabres this season. 

An 18-year veteran of the NHL, Schenn has participated in seven post-seasons throughout his career. His most notable are the two he spent with the Tampa Bay Lightning, during which he won the Stanley Cup back-to-back. Along with the Jets, Kings, and the Lightning, he has also represented the Philadelphia Flyers, Toronto Maple Leafs, and Nashville Predators in the playoffs. 

Tanner Pearson, Buffalo Sabres 

This year’s playoffs will mark the seventh post-season run Pearson has been on throughout his NHL career, though it will be his first with the Buffalo Sabres as he was traded to the team during the 2026 NHL Trade Deadline. The former Canuck won the Stanley Cup with the Los Angeles Kings in 2013–14 and will look to help the Sabres accomplish this feat for the first time in their franchise’s history. 

During his time with Vancouver, Pearson and the Canucks made the post-season once — in 2019–20. The forward put up four goals and four assists in 17 games while facing the Minnesota Wild, St. Louis Blues, and Vegas Golden Knights. 

Mar 27, 2026; Buffalo, New York, USA; aBuffalo Sabres left wing Tanner Pearson (70) during a stoppage in play against the Detroit Red Wings at KeyBank Center. Mandatory Credit: Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images
Mar 27, 2026; Buffalo, New York, USA; aBuffalo Sabres left wing Tanner Pearson (70) during a stoppage in play against the Detroit Red Wings at KeyBank Center. Mandatory Credit: Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

Metropolitan Division 

Jalen Chatfield, Carolina Hurricanes  

Chatfield has found ample success with the Carolina Hurricanes since leaving Vancouver back in 2021. The defenceman has carved himself out a full-time NHL spot on Carolina’s blueline, even playing in over 70 games each season since 2022–23. Though he was a part of the Canucks organization from 2017 to 2021, Chatfield only ended up playing in 18 NHL games for Vancouver during the 2020–21 season. 

Chatfield has joined the Hurricanes for three of their post-season runs since becoming part of the organization, with their most recent being last season’s trip to the Eastern Conference Finals. The defenceman suffered an injury during this run, however, resulting in him only playing in nine games and scoring one goal. 

Noah Juulsen, Philadelphia Flyers 

Former Canuck Noah Juulsen joins former Canucks Head Coach Rick Tocchet and the Philadelphia Flyers in the playoffs in their first season with the team. Though he didn’t play in every game with the Flyers this season, Juulsen did post a goal and nine assists in 52 games for Philadelphia, marking a new career-high in points and assists for the defenceman. 

Juulsen’s lone post-season experience comes from Vancouver’s 2023–24 playoff run, during which he skated in two games. He has yet to suit-up for the Flyers through the current post-season, though Philadelphia has only played in one game thus far. 

Artūrs Šilovs, Pittsburgh Penguins  

One year after backstopping Abbotsford to their first Calder Cup in franchise history, Šilovs will look to help his new NHL club, the Pittsburgh Penguins, make some noise during the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs. Šilovs’ history of clutch performances runs deep, with the goaltender having been named Playoff MVP in last year’s Calder Cup run with five shutouts as well as going 7–3–0 to help Latvia win their first-ever medal at the 2023 IIHF World Championship. 

This is, of course, not Šilovs’ first time taking part in the Stanley Cup Playoffs. The goaltender played hero for the Canucks in 2024 when both Thatcher Demko and Casey DeSmith were unavailable, bringing Vancouver to Game 7 of the Pacific Division Finals. When Vancouver eyed a first-round series-clinching win, Šilovs delivered by stopping all 28 shots he faced. 

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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Bright Side Wonders, Week 26: Do the Suns have any hope?

Apr 19, 2026; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA; Phoenix Suns guard Devin Booker (1) reaches for a loose ball between Oklahoma City Thunder center Isaiah Hartenstein (55) and guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (2) in the second half during game one of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Paycom Center. Mandatory Credit: Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images | Alonzo Adams-Imagn Images

The Phoenix Suns began their playoff journey by getting routed by the Oklahoma City Thunder 119-84 on Sunday. Down 1-0 in the First Round of the Western Conference Playoffs, the team has three days to recalibrate before they play again.

Here are the main questions for Week 26, we want your thoughts on as the Suns start their postseason run:


Is there a path for the Suns to win this series?

Oklahoma City didn’t just win on Sunday; they throttled the Suns. Phoenix shot below 35% from the field, committed 17 turnovers, and only had 16 assists. After the Suns got out to an early 12-9 lead, the Thunder went on a 37-12 run and handled business with ease the rest of the way. The closest the Suns got to breaking into the Thunder’s lead was in the third quarter when they cut it to 15, but Oklahoma City responded the rest of the quarter with a 29-13 run.

With how dominant the Thunder have been this season and against the Suns in recent history, (they’re 2-9 the last three seasons) does Phoenix have a path to pulling off the upset?

More Even Shot Distribution

Collin Gillespie was the only Sun outside of Devin Booker, Dillon Brooks and Jalen Green to take more than five shots in Game 1. Oklahoma City forced the Suns’ top scorers into deeply contested shots; the trio shot 20/55 from the field, 36% from the field. The three scorers were clearly the focal point in the Thunder’s defensive game plan and they did a good job from preventing them from being efficient scorers, while not giving the chance for any other Phoenix players to get too involved.

Do the Suns need to switch up their offensive approach in Game 2 or trust that their top scorers will have better games? Who else needs to step up? How much is the team missing Grayson Allen right now?

No Mark, No Paint Protection

Without Mark Williams in the lineup, the Suns surrendered 52 points in the paint, and allowed the Thunder to attempt 23 free throws. Still nursing a foot injury he suffered against the Portland Trailblazers in the 7/8 game last Tuesday, if Williams can’t go again, Oso Ighodaro is set to control starting center duties with Khaman Maluach backing him up.

Phoenix generally plays small and has opted to play even smaller as the season has gone on, but it bit them in Game 1 with OKC winning the matchups inside and collecting 19 offensive rebounds.

Should Jordan Ott and company look to play with more size the rest of the series?


On the Suns’ Plate this Week

Game 2 comes on Wednesday at 6:30 Arizona time in Oklahoma City on ESPN, then the Suns will host the Thunder on Saturday at 12:30 on NBC and Peacock for Game 3.

Yankees Birthday of the Day: Don Mattingly

Baseball: ALDS Playoffs. New York Yankees Don Mattingly (23) in action after hitting home run vs Seattle Mariners. Game 2. Bronx borough of New York City 10/4/1995 CREDIT: Chuck Solomon (Photo by Chuck Solomon /Sports Illustrated via Getty Images) (Set Number: X49303 )

The New York Yankees have obviously had many successful decades in their history, but despite winning more games than anyone in baseball in the ’80s, it ranks among their lowest-achieving. After losing the World Series in 1981, the Bombers wouldn’t play postseason baseball for well over a decade, not playing meaningful October ball again until 1995. Though that stretch was rough on the organizational level, they were fortunate enough to at least enjoy a player who would be one of the franchise greats during that stretch, Don Mattingly.

The Captain of the Yankees, despite having his career cut short by injuries, was a six-time All-Star, won nine Gold Gloves, three Silver Sluggers, and an MVP award. In a so-so stretch in the Bronx, Mattingly provided excitement by reaching heights few players do.

Donald Arthur Mattingly
Born: April 20, 1961 (Evansville, IN)
Yankees Tenure: 1982-95

Drafted out of an Indiana high school in the 19th round of the 1979 MLB Draft, Mattingly absolutely tore up minor-league pitching from the beginning, and ascended to the big leagues within just a few years. After a solid season in Triple-A in 1982, Mattingly earned a call-up late in that season to join the big club in the Bronx. Wearing No. 46 at the time rather than the number that he would soon make famous, Mattingly recorded a pair of hits in seven games that season.

The future star earned himself a roster spot in 1983, but was unable to find much playing time on the veteran-laden team before returning to Triple-A Columbus. He once again destroyed the minors with an OPS over 1.000, and when a roster spot opened up due to Bobby Murcer’s retirement, Mattingly was called to fill it. Donnie Baseball would never look back.

That season, he showed he could at least survive in the big leagues with a 107 OPS+ in 305 plate appearances. As the years to come would show, Mattingly could do a far more than just survive — as he would enter more than a half-decade as one of the game’s better position players.

1984 was Mattingly’s first chance at a full-time role out of camp, and the lefty took full advantage of it. In 153 games, Donnie Baseball led the league in hits, doubles, and batting average (edging out teammate Dave Winfield in a memorable battle), while topping 20 homers and posting an astute 156 OPS+. That first All-Star season was only a sign of things to come, as Mattingly continued to blister American League pitching throughout the 1980s.

1985 saw Mattingly hit a different level, as he was now paired with speedster Rickey Henderson at the top of the lineup. The combination worked out as well as it could, as Henderson led the league with 146 runs, and Mattingly in RBI with 145. It was another step forward in the power department as well, as he swatted 35 homers, including 26 in the final 76 games. He led the league again in doubles, as well as RBI and total bases, while collecting another All-Star selection, a Silver Slugger, and the first of five straight Gold Gloves. His monster season was capped off with his selection as the 1985 American League MVP.

The following year was debatably even better for Mattingly. In 1986, the Yankees’ first baseman played in all 162 games, leading the league with a franchise-record (!) 238 hits and 53 doubles, also leading the majors at 388 total bases while swatting 30-plus homers once again en route to an AL-best (and career-best) 161 OPS+. He placed second in MVP voting, behind Cy Young Award winner Roger Clemens, but he continued to build on his trophy case, in the middle of what continued to be a stellar run.

As Mattingly entered his late-20s, he continued to produce as the leader of the Yankees. From 1987-89, the team captain averaged well over 20 homers, hit to the tune of a 136 OPS+, and collected an All-Star selection and a Gold Glove Award in each of those three years, as well as a Silver Slugger for good measure. The first of those seasons was one for the record books in two different ways, as Mattingly tied a record with homers in eight consecutive games from July 8th through the 18th and set a new standard with six grand slams in one year (a mark since tied by Cleveland’s Travis Hafner in 2006). It was a bit of a quirk, as he never hit a slam before ’87 and never hit another one after that year, but it was impressive nonetheless.

At the very beginning of the 1990 season, Mattingly signed a five-year $19.3 million deal, making him the highest-paid player in baseball. Despite the big price tag, this was also the time that Donnie Baseball’s career took a turn for the worse. By mid-season, he was hitting under .250, with essentially no power in the bat. It was not without reason, as the back he injured a few years prior was acting up again, and it was enough to force him to miss most of the season from July onward. It was the worst year of his career, as he hit just five homers with a 72 wRC+ in 428 plate appearances.

1991 was a subpar offensive year again, as Mattingly had a 99 wRC+ and hit just nine home runs in 152 games. He would experience a couple of bounce-back seasons in 1992 and ‘93, hitting 14 and 17 home runs respectively, and posting a 114 OPS+ in that span. He was no slouch, but his career was slowing down awfully fast for a 32-year-old former superstar.

Mattingly played well in the 1994 season, in what looked to be a prime chance for him to make his postseason debut with the Yanks leading the AL at 70-43, but it was a year that was cut short due to the strike. Although play resumed in ‘95, it was another disappointing year for Mattingly, now 34, and his worst in a few years with just six homers and a .754 OPS. Despite all this, he turned on the jets down the stretch as the Yankees just barely secured the first AL Wild Card with a 22-6 finish, Mattingly batting .321 with a .472 slugging percentage in his final month of regular-season play. He knew that he was probably jeopardizing any playing future due to severe wear and tear on his back through this kind of play, but his long wait for meaningful October baseball was over.

Although their postseason run only lasted through the Division Series thanks to a furious comeback by Seattle, Mattingly hit .417 with four doubles and a homer in his first postseason experience. It was a run that included one of the most thrilling moments in Yankees history, which literally made the old Yankee Stadium shake.

That postseason would come to stand as the end of Mattingly’s playing career at the age of 34. The Yankees would, of course, go on to win four World Series in the next five years.

Despite the lack of team success during his tenure, Mattingly’s impact on the franchise is impossible to deny. Not only did he help to usher in that new era of success, but there is something to be said for being the statistical and emotional leader of a team through forgettable times. Mattingly was also simply one of the game’s best at the peak of a career that was unfortunately cut short. The ripple effects of his leadership were felt during the dynasty that followed, as his character was held in the highest reverence by the likes of Derek Jeter, Bernie Williams, and Paul O’Neill.

After his playing days were over, Mattingly went on to a successful career in the dugout, beginning as a hitting coach with the Yankees from 2004-06. He was bumped up to bench coach in 2007 and interviewed to succeed Joe Torre as Yankees skipper, but the club elected to go with Joe Girardi. So Mattingly joined Torre when he took the job as Dodgers manager, and he ended up succeeding him in LA in 2011. He was there at the ascendance of the Dodgers’ dynasty, winning the first three of their dozen division titles since 2013 before Dave Roberts replaced him. Mattingly then went on to lead the Marlins and garnered NL Manager of the Year honors for a surprise Wild Card berth with the Fish in the shortened 2020. He got his first taste of World Series play as the bench coach of the 2025 Blue Jays, but a ring continues to elude him. He currently serves as the bench coach for the Phillies, where his son Preston is the GM under Dave Dombrowski.

Although Mattingly has made a fair mark in the dugout for other franchises, it obviously pales in comparison to his impact on an otherwise dark period for the Yankees. His excellent play was poorly timed as far as the team goes, but that does not diminish its significance.


See more of the “Yankees Birthday of the Day” series here.

The end is near for Carlos Mendoza, even if it isn’t entirely his fault

Apr 17, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; New York Mets manager Carlos Mendoza (64) speaks before a baseball game against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images | Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

As another former Mets’ skipper, Yogi Berra, once famously opined: “It’s getting late early”.

Fair or not, the writing is on the wall for current Mets’ manager Carlos Mendoza: His time with the club is approaching its end.

It felt somewhat inevitable with last year’s collapse, and it appears all but etched in stone as the team’s losing streak reached an unfathomable, incomprehensible eleven games. The Mets haven’t lost 11 straight since the 2004 season—incidentally, the team fired Art Howe about a week after that losing streak ended. If they lose on Tuesday, their losing streak will reach 12 games, their longest since 2002. Bobby Valentine was fired at the end of that season. It’s simply hard to survive that much prolonged failure, whether it’s directly your fault or not.

The current Mets’ situation calls to mind another skipper who faced the ax. In 2006, the Mets seemed poised for a World Series run, and their season was cut short in the NLCS (sound familiar?) In 2007, the Mets suffered a monumental collapse which concluded with a loss to the Marlins on the final day of the regular season (again, familiar?) In 2008, a lethargic start with sky-high expectations led to the team firing Willie Randolph in one of the most embarrassing (and inappropriate) ways imaginable, in the middle of the night after a win at the start of a June West Coast trip. While these two situations are not entirely mirror images, they do bear striking resemblances, and will likely end the same way—did I mention the Mets also poached Randolph from the Yankees, much like Mendoza?

I think the current Mets regime knows well enough not to repeat the same mistakes of the past regime—I will add, for no reason in particular, that the Mets do have a trip to Anaheim Los Angeles coming up in a couple of weeks, so Mendoza may want to book a back-up return flight, just in case. Hell, Mendoza may not even have a job by Tuesday, let alone two weeks from now. But the greater point is that, when captaining a ship that goes down the way the 2007 and 2025 Mets, it’s hard to recover in the court of public perception, unless everything goes right (and everything has, decidedly, gone wrong).

One could argue that, in both instances, the Mets should have never let it get to the point it did. The collapse of 2007 greatly overshadowed the success of 2006, to the point that Randolph entered 2008 a dead man walking. Similarly, the failures of 2025 all but erased the good will built up during the 2024 OMG/Grimace/Rally Pumpkin playoff run. With the Mets jettisoning basically every coach besides Mendoza after last season, it seemingly made sense to just clean house entirely. In failing to do so, Mendoza entered 2026 on a short leash, one that has all but run out with a disastrous start nobody, not even the most pessimistic in the fanbase or in the media, could have seen coming.

So that brings us to the $64,000 question (or, more accurately, the $381 million question): What should the Mets do with Mendoza? In times like this, when expectations are what they are and results are…well, this…something has to be done, and as we’ve all come to learn, you can’t fire or trade an entire team. The torches are getting hotter, the pitchforks are getting sharper, and the screams are getting louder, so much so that Steve Cohen and David Stearns cannot ignore it for that much longer. This failure, to be clear, falls squarely on the shoulders of the players, and while Mendoza is far from a great manager, he is the easiest target to do something and show the outside world that they are taking this seriously.

I’m of the belief that most managers don’t really have much of an impact on the day-to-day results, especially in modern baseball. I can’t even really point to much he could do differently in this exact scenario to make things better. I don’t think firing Mendoza will functionally change anything, and I’m not a huge believer of firings to “light a fire under the players’ asses” or whatever phrase you want to use. If nothing else, the players, led by Francisco Lindor, have given Mendoza a vote of confidence, but the way they’re playing, that means less than nothing. At the end of the day, Mendoza is the public face of this mess, and there’s enough criticism of his work that it won’t seem like a desperation move and people will come to understand the rationale.

Mendoza has two things strongly working against him: a) the aforementioned collapse, and b) an expiring contract. The Mets have fired managers with many more years left on their deal, so parting with a manager with a few months left to go anyway will not phase them. If anything, it makes a decision much easier, allowing them to review an interim—Kai Correa? Carlos Beltran? Probably the former more than the latter—and make a determination on the future direction they want to go in.

We can’t close this discussion without addressing the elephant in the room: David Stearns. Fans are extremely split, to put it mildly, on the job he has done here, with some praising his focus on modernizing the organization and improving the farm system, and others blasting the choices he’s made to field a competitive major league roster. Many fans already entered this season ready to throw hands with Stearns for letting some fan favorites go, and that was before these results. Stearns, it stands to reason, should face as much criticism as anyone for the early-season struggles, but let’s make one thing clear (and I say this without any inside knowledge whatsoever): Stearns is under no threat to be fired, this year or likely in many future years. Steve Cohen has put a lot of trust into Stearns, and letting go of him this early will torpedo any trust the organization may have in searching for his replacement, and make the organization a laughingstock—well, more of one, anyway. Moreover, Cohen would have to return to making the baseball decisions, and he does not seem eager to do so. Love him or hate him, Stearns is here to stay, to make the decision on both the Mets manager and future player and personnel moves for the foreseeable future.

So that brings us back to Mendoza. The Mets ultimately face two choices: Fire Mendoza or do nothing at all. There are no player moves to be made and no front office decisions to be had. As such, Mendoza is probably gone, if not in April, then before Memorial Day. Aside from the brief boost that inevitably follows a move like this—a warning to the players, an improvement in performance, a reprieve of negative public perception—the team will likely continue to underwhelm and miss the playoffs. Very few teams have lost 11 straight and rebounded, and this one, while loaded with talent, doesn’t inspire confidence that it can buck that trend.

This is the time for decisive action, not waffling from the team’s leadership. Stearns and Cohen currently have the media and weight of the fanbase breathing down their necks, and are facing harsh economic blowback (an empty stadium, fewer merch and concession sales, etc.) if they do nothing. If this is the decision the team is currently leaning towards, then the firing should probably happen before tomorrow’s game, because if the team builds up any momentum between now and, say, when they decide to fire him, it’ll look even worse. Mendoza’s time is clearing ticking, so the best (and perhaps most humane) thing to do would be to not let it drag on any longer and relieve him of his duties. It’s not entirely fair, but as we’ve learn, baseball isn’t always that fair.

Opposition research: Nico Hoerner

Apr 17, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago Cubs second baseman Nico Hoerner (2) rounds the bases after hitting a two-run home run against the New York Mets during the second inning at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images | Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn Images

In 2023, I thought it would be fun to title my series previews using lyrics from Beastie Boys songs. It seemed like a fine idea until the Phillies found themselves seven games under .500 in early June. I decided that they no longer deserved me making the effort to find an appropriate song lyric. Once I stopped, the team promptly began to play better.

As you may have noticed, I had been using Guns N’ Roses lyrics for my series preview titles, and just like in 2023, it hasn’t been going very well for the team. Therefore, GNR is being shelved, and I am switching back to the player-focused opposition research previews from last season. If the team’s fortunes turn around, feel free to thank me.

After a dreadful homestand, the Phillies will head to Wrigley Field to face the Cubs. Despite the Phillies’ success at home in recent seasons, it is probably for the best that they get away from the understandably irate hometown fans for a little bit.

After a slow start, the Cubs enter the series on a five-game winning streak, partly because they’ve had the good fortune of playing the Phillies and the Mets. One of their hottest hitters in second baseman Nico Hoerner, who appears to be adding top offensive performance to his elite defensive game.

Hoerner spent the first seven years of his career as an excellent defender (two Gold Gloves) and adequate hitter. You can do far worse than a Gold Glove middle infielder putting up an OPS over .700. But this season, he has been far more than adequate. He’s batting .325 with three home runs (his career high for a season is ten) and leads the NL with 21 RBIs.

There’s a good chance the Hoerner won’t be able to keep it up and he’ll slowly regress closer to the numbers we’re used to. But if he can find a way to continue this performance for a full season, he’ll likely find himself in MVP discussions at the end of the year.

Pennant year song battle

It’s a Mistake by Men at Work defeated Clumsy to hold on to the title.

The next contender comes from 2022 and describes how most Phillies fans feel about the team right now: I Hate U by SZA:

Vote now:

Additional thought about the series

Maybe the team really has collapsed, and the future is as bleak as some want to believe. But I still have trouble looking at the roster and seeing a bad team, despite what the on-field results indicate. It would be one thing if the older players were showing a drastic drop off, but that hasn’t really been the problem. It just seems to be a team-wide malaise in which they’ve been a special combination of unlucky and bad.

This core has gone through other awful stretches in recent seasons (Think May 2023 and July 2024) and eventually came out of it, so there’s reason to believe they will do so again. But darned if this hasn’t been painful to watch.

Where to watch Toronto Raptors vs. Cleveland Cavaliers Game 2 NBA playoffs: Live stream, start time, TV channel, odds for Monday, April 20

The Toronto Raptors will try to even their first-round NBA playoff series with the Cleveland Cavaliers on Monday. The Cavalies won the series’ opener 126-113 on Saturday behind 32 points from Donovan Mitchell and 22 points and 10 assists from James Harden. The Game 2 spread sits at -8.5 in favor of the Cavaliers, with the over/under set at 222.5.

  • Spread: Cavaliers -8.5

  • Moneyline: Cavaliers -375 (75.5%) / Raptors +290 (24.5%)

  • Over/Under: 222.5

Game 1:Cavaliers 126, Raptors 113
Game 2: Mon., April 20 at Cleveland (7 p.m., Peacock)
Game 3: Thu., April 23 at Toronto (8 p.m., Prime)
Game 4: Sun., April 26 at Toronto (1 p.m., ESPN)
Game 5: Wed., April 29 at Cleveland (TBD)
Game 6: Fri., May 1 at Toronto (TBD)
*Game 7: Sun., May 3 at Cleveland (TBD)

*if necessary

Assigning blame for Mets' shockingly bad stretch: David Stearns, Carlos Mendoza, and the players

This past Friday, amid the Mets' then-eight-game losing streak, president of baseball operations David Stearns spoke with reporters in the dugout ahead of the team's three-game series with the Cubs at Wrigley Field.

Stearns, who regularly makes himself available to reporters once per homestand and also speaks to provide updates on big injuries or big player moves, does not ordinarily have the kind of press gaggle that he did on Friday.

The Mets were on the road. There was no injury to announce. There was no move to discuss.

Stearns was simply being accountable, given the Mets' rough stretch.

That day, Stearns expressed confidence in manager Carlos Mendoza, talked about the team's offensive difficulties, and said that urgency was not the issue.

Then, the Mets went out and got swept by the Cubs, extending their losing streak to 11 games while falling to 7-15 on the year.

The season is by no means lost, but it's getting to a point where the Mets are flirting with digging a hole that might be too big to climb out of.

With that as the backdrop, who is to blame for what has gone wrong this season?

Let's assess it, from least responsible to most...

Carlos Mendoza

Managers are often the fall guys when teams underperform. And Mendoza, who is in the final guaranteed year of the three-year contract he signed when he was hired by Stearns in November of 2023, is a lame duck of sorts.

The Mets hold a club option on Mendoza for the 2027 season, but just overhauled most of his coaching staff and jettisoned a big chunk of the roster's core.

Apr 4, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; New York Mets manager Carlos Mendoza watches his team take on the San Francisco Giants during the ninth inning at Oracle Park.
Apr 4, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; New York Mets manager Carlos Mendoza watches his team take on the San Francisco Giants during the ninth inning at Oracle Park. / D. Ross Cameron-Imagn Images

Still, there's seemingly not much Mendoza could be doing that would change what has befallen the Mets.

During their 11-game losing streak, the Mets have lost nine times because they couldn't score more than a few runs, and lost twice because Kodai Senga got shellacked.

This entire streak has also come without Juan Soto, which should add an asterisk to it -- especially when assessing the manager.

Meanwhile, already without Soto, the Mets recently lost Jorge Polanco to the IL.

That has left Mendoza to insert players who would either be backups or in Triple-A into a lineup that was already drastically underperforming.

If there's one thing that is fair to partially lay at the feet of Mendoza, it's the alarming amount of mental errors the team has made, including forgetting how many outs there are and being out of position. But it's unfair to blame him for whatever has been going on with Francisco Lindor, who has been in a bit of a fog in the field at times.

With all that said, it's fair to wonder what the Mets will do if their losing streak reaches 13 or 14 games, or if they have a brutal nine-game homestand against the Twins, Rockies, and Nationals.

David Stearns

As the person responsible for assembling the roster, it is Stearns who shoulders much more of the blame for what is happening.

That these struggles are going on a few months after Stearns really put his stamp on the team by moving on from Pete Alonso, Brandon Nimmo, Jeff McNeil, and Edwin Diaz has put an even bigger magnifying glass on the situation.

However, it's fair to point out that most people who cover baseball for a living (and most projection systems) had the 2026 Mets being a very good team. And after the 2025-26 offseason started slowly for New York, Stearns pounced late, turning the Mets into a team many thought would win the NL East.

Apr 9, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor (12) on the field before the game against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Citi Field.
Apr 9, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor (12) on the field before the game against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Citi Field. / Vincent Carchietta - Imagn Images

But paper doesn't always translate to the field. And while Stearns brought in players whose additions were lauded (including Bo Bichette), his plan also meant that a big portion of the roster would be adjusting on the fly to a new team, a new market, and -- in some cases -- a new position.

About the positional situation...

Bichette being at third base (where he's looked much more smooth lately), a revolving door of players who aren't natural first basemen manning that position, and some others who are natural infielders being in right field with Soto out (including Brett Baty) hasn't helped. But it has also been blown out of proportion. Specifically, fielding issues haven't cost the Mets any games during this losing streak.

It should also be noted that Stearns' infamous "run prevention" term had just as much to do with pitching as it did with defense. It's strange that many seem to have forgotten that.

In any event, the early on-field returns on Stearns' offseason are poor. Aside from Luis Robert Jr., all of the key offensive additions have performed poorly at the plate. That includes Bichette (54 OPS+, uncharacteristically high strikeout rate), Jorge Polanco (who had a 52 OPS+ before landing on the IL) and Marcus Semien, who was brought in mostly for his glove, but whose struggles have been a tough juxtaposition with how Brandon Nimmo is performing for the Rangers -- slashing .311/.386/522 with four homers.

While Nimmo has excelled, the three other core pieces who are no longer Mets are not performing well. Alonso (92 OPS+, two homers), McNeil (94 OPS+), and Edwin Diaz (10.50 ERA, 2.33 WHIP, diminished velocity, possible health issue) have all had their own issues.

Devin Williams, Diaz's replacement, got off to a great start before getting tagged last week in the first game he had pitched in eight days, and blowing the save in Sunday's loss. So the jury is still very much out on that move.

The players

There have been some unforeseen circumstances thrown in the players' way to start the season.

The most crippling was the injury to Soto, which has taken an MVP-level bat out of the middle of the lineup.

Apr 5, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; The New York Mets infield celebrates their 5-2 victory over the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park.
Apr 5, 2026; San Francisco, California, USA; The New York Mets infield celebrates their 5-2 victory over the San Francisco Giants at Oracle Park. / D. Ross Cameron - Imagn Images

Another is the fact that Lindor could still be dealing with the after-effects of surgery on his hamate bone.

The Mets have also played in some truly awful weather conditions over the first three-plus weeks of the season, and have been handed a schedule that borders on the absurd (including the fact that they've already made two separate trips to the West Coast).

But good teams persevere through obstacles, and this Mets team has not done so.

The most alarming thing on the offensive side has been the performance of Bichette. And while Lindor's bat has start to come around, others -- including Baty and Mark Vientos -- haven't done much. Carson Benge has been better lately, but still needs to do a lot more.

There's also the approach, which has been in between far too often, with hitters expanding the zone, failing to work deep counts, hitting the ball on the ground too much, and watching hittable fastballs go by.

On the pitching side of things, Nolan McLean, Clay Holmes, and Freddy Peralta have been formidable in the rotation. But both Senga and David Peterson have struggled so badly lately that their spots in the rotation came into question. 

The bullpen performed well out of the gate, but has stumbled lately, including poor performances by Williams, Luke Weaver, and Brooks Raley -- who were all terrific for the first few weeks of the season.

As has been noted already multiple times, though, this tailspin has been mostly on the offense. And it will be on that group to turn this around before it's too late.

Golden Knights rally past Mammoth 4-2 in Game 1 as Nic Dowd nets the winner

Vegas Golden Knights

Apr 19, 2026; Las Vegas, Nevada, USA; Vegas Golden Knights center Nic Dowd (26) celebrates with center Colton Sissons (10) after scoring a goal against the Utah Mammoth during the third period of game one of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at T-Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

Stephen R. Sylvanie/Stephen R. Sylvanie-Imagn Images

LAS VEGAS — Nic Dowd redirected Noah Hanifin’s shot from the point to put Vegas ahead at 7:20 of the third period and the Golden Knights beat the Utah Mammoth 4-2 in Game 1 of their first-round series.

“I didn’t do a lot, to be honest,” Dowd said. “It’s probably better if it gets on and off my stick that quick. ... I just found a little bit of space. Everywhere across the league, there’s limited space out there. Guys are playing their best hockey defensively because everything matters that much more. It was a bang-bang play.”

Game 2 is in Las Vegas.

The Golden Knights, who twice trailed before scoring three third-period goals, have not lost in regulation since John Tortorella (8-0-1) took over as coach.

The Mammoth lost in the franchise’s first playoff game since 2020. They are in their second season in Utah after leaving Arizona.

“It was a hard-fought game,” Mammoth coach Andre Tourigny said. “It was physical. It was intense. Every inch was contested.”

Colton Sissons had a goal and assist for the Golden Knights and Mark Stone and Ivan Barbashev also scored. Carter Hart stopped 32 shots. Hanifin had two assists.

Logan Cooley and Kevin Stenlund scored for the Mammoth. Karel Vejmelka, playing in his first playoff game after five years in the Utah/Arizona organization, made 27 saves. Captain Clayton Keller, who closed the regular season with 16 assists over a 10-game streak, failed to record one in this game.

The Golden Knights took the fight to the Mammoth from the beginning and finished with 52 hits to 29 for Utah. Vegas’ high in the regular season was 36 against Los Angeles in the Oct. 8 opener.

Both teams breaking into several fights including one after the final buzzer.

“We played physical,” Tortorella said. “We have some things to work on, but it was good to see us bang around a little bit. It’s a long series. You just keep on trying to do the things you think you need to grind away.”

Former Golden Knight Nate Schmidt delivered a tremendous cross-ice pass to Cooley, whose one-timer from the right circle put the Mammoth on the scoreboard first with just 11 seconds left in the first period.

Sissons scored the equalizer at 3:44 of the second period, jamming in the puck after a backhand pass from Cole Smith. Utah retook the lead not even two minutes later when Hart found himself out of position and Vegas defenseman Kaeden Korczak knocked the puck into his own net, though it was officially credited to Stenlund.

“We didn’t really pay attention to it,” Barbashev said. “Our guys did a really good job to get one back on the power play.”

That happened when the Golden Knights again tied the game when Stone put a rebound into the open net for a power-play goal 5:33 of the third period. They then soon had the lead when Utah defenseman MacKenzie Weegar turned over the puck in his zone, and Dowd knocked in Hanifin’s shot.

Barbashev closed the scoring with an empty-netter.

NBA playoff bracket: Scores from opening weekend, upcoming schedule

The 2026 NBA playoffs began with a few blowouts, a few games decided in the fourth quarter and one Sunday surprise over the weekend. All of the home teams won Game 1 except for the No. 1 seed Detroit Pistons, who lost in their Eastern Conference first-round opener to the No. 8 seed Orlando Magic. But there's potential for more drama based on the initial results.

The intrigue could really build when Game 2 begins around the NBA starting on Monday, April 20. There are three games on the schedule on Monday and Tuesday, with two more Game 2s on the docket for Wednesday.

The Eastern Conference leads off the action with the No. 5 seed Toronto Raptors trying to even their series against the fourth-seeded Cleveland Cavaliers. The No. 6 seed Atlanta Hawks get another shot to knock off the third-seeded New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden.

Monday's nightcap features the No. 3 seed Denver Nuggets hosting the No. 6 seed Minnesota Timberwolves after Nikola Jokic and company erased an early deficit and pulled away in the fourth quarter during Game 1.

Here are all the scores from every Game 1 around the NBA playoffs, as well as the schedule moving forward for every first-round series:

NBA playoffs: Sunday, April 19 scores

NBA playoffs: Saturday, April 18 scores

NBA playoff bracket: First-round series

NOTE: Not all games have been given an official start time or viewing options yet. All listed times are Eastern:

*- if necessary

Eastern Conference

No. 1 Detroit Pistons vs. No. 8 Orlando Magic

Magic lead series 1-0

  • Game 1 at Detroit: Magic 112, Pistons 101
  • Game 2 at Detroit: Wednesday, April 22 at 7 p.m. | ESPN
  • Game 3 at Orlando: Saturday, April 25 at 1 p.m. | Peacock
  • Game 4 at Orlando: Monday, April 27 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 5 at Detroit: Wednesday, April 29 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 6 at Orlando: Friday, May 1 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 7 at Detroit: Sunday, May 3 | Time and TV TBD

No. 2 Boston Celtics vs. No. 7 Philadelphia 76ers

Celtics lead series 1-0

  • Game 1 at Boston: Celtics 123, 76ers 91
  • Game 2 at Boston: Tuesday, April 21 at 7 p.m. | Peacock
  • Game 3 at Philadelphia: Friday, April 24 at 7 p.m. | Prime Video
  • Game 4 at Philadelphia: Sunday, April 26 at 7 p.m. | NBC, Peacock
  • *Game 5 at Boston: Tuesday, April 28 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 6 at Philadelphia: Thursday, April 30 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 7 at Boston: Saturday, May 2 | Time and TV TBD

No. 3 New York Knicks vs. No. 6 Atlanta Hawks

Knicks lead series 1-0

  • Game 1 at New York: Knicks 113, Hawks 92
  • Game 2 at New York: Monday, April 20 at 8 p.m. | NBC, Peacock
  • Game 3 at Atlanta: Thursday, April 23 at 7 p.m. | Prime Video
  • Game 4 at Atlanta: Saturday, April 25 at 6 p.m. | NBC, Peacock
  • *Game 5 at New York: Tuesday, April 28 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 6 at Atlanta: Thursday, April 30 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 7 at New York: Saturday, May 2 | Time and TV TBD

No. 4 Cleveland Cavaliers vs. No. 5 Toronto Raptors

Cavaliers lead series 1-0

  • Game 1 at Cleveland: Cavaliers 126, Raptors 113
  • Game 2 at Cleveland: Monday, April 20 at 7 p.m. | Peacock
  • Game 3 at Toronto: Thursday, April 23 at 8 p.m. | Prime Video
  • Game 4 at Toronto: Sunday, April 26 at 1 p.m. | ESPN
  • *Game 5 at Cleveland: Wednesday, April 29 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 6 at Toronto: Friday, May 1 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 7 at Cleveland: Sunday, May 3 | Time and TV TBD

Western Conference

No. 1 Oklahoma City Thunder vs. No. 8 Phoenix Suns

Thunder lead series 1-0

  • Game 1 at Oklahoma City: Thunder 119, Suns 84
  • Game 2 at Oklahoma City: Wednesday, April 22 at 9:30 p.m. | ESPN
  • Game 3 at Phoenix: Saturday, April 25 at 3:30 p.m. | NBC, Peacock
  • Game 4 at Phoenix: Monday, April 27 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 5 at Oklahoma City: Wednesday, April 29 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 6 at Phoenix: Friday, May 1 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 7 at Oklahoma City: Sunday, May 3 | Time and TV TBD

No. 2 San Antonio Spurs vs. No. 7 Portland Trail Blazers

Spurs lead series 1-0

  • Game 1 at San Antonio: Spurs 111, Trail Blazers 98
  • Game 2 at San Antonio: Tuesday, April 21 at 8 p.m. | NBC, Peacock
  • Game 3 at Portland: Friday, April 24 at 10:30 p.m. | Prime Video
  • Game 4 at Portland: Sunday, April 26 at 3:30 p.m. | ESPN
  • *Game 5 at San Antonio: Tuesday, April 28 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 6 at Portland: Thursday, April 30 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 7 at San Antonio: Saturday, May 2 | Time and TV TBD

No. 3 Denver Nuggets vs. No. 6 Minnesota Timberwolves

Nuggets lead series 1-0

  • Game 1 at Denver: Nuggets 116, Timberwolves 105
  • Game 2 at Denver: Monday, April 20 at 10:30 p.m. | NBC, Peacock
  • Game 3 at Minnesota: Thursday, April 23 at 9:30 p.m. | Prime Video
  • Game 4 at Minnesota: Saturday, April 25 at 8:30 p.m. | ABC
  • *Game 5 at Denver: Monday, April 27 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 6 at Minnesota: Thursday, April 30 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 7 at Denver: Saturday, May 2 | Time and TV TBD

No. 4 Los Angeles Lakers vs. No. 5 Houston Rockets

Lakers lead series 1-0

  • Game 1 at Los Angeles: Lakers 107, Rockets 98
  • Game 2 at Los Angeles: Tuesday, April 21 at 10:30 p.m. | NBC, Peacock
  • Game 3 at Houston: Friday, April 24 at 8 p.m. | Prime Video
  • Game 4 at Houston: Sunday, April 26 at 9:30 p.m. | NBC, Peacock
  • *Game 5 at Los Angeles: Wednesday, April 29 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 6 at Houston: Friday, May 1 | Time and TV TBD
  • *Game 7 at Los Angeles: Sunday, May 3 | Time and TV TBD

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NBA playoff bracket, scores, schedule for 2026 first-round games

Crochet concerns, and more takeaways from series split with Tigers

Crochet concerns, and more takeaways from series split with Tigers originally appeared on NBC Sports Boston

The Boston Red Sox offense woke up Monday to help salvage their four-game series against the Detroit Tigers with an 8-6 victory.

Boston mustered only four runs across the first three games of the series. Left-hander Ranger Suarez carried the load in Friday’s 1-0 win with eight scoreless innings, but Brayan Bello and Garrett Crochet failed to make up for the lack of offense in Games 2 and 3. The Red Sox finally broke through with timely hitting — despite a glaring lack of power — in the series finale.

Now 9-13 on the season, the Red Sox will welcome the first-place New York Yankees (13-9) to Fenway Park for a pivotal three-game set. First, let’s get into our instant takeaways from the series split with Detroit:

Garrett Crochet’s struggles continue

After allowing 11 runs (10 earned) in just 1.2 IP in a nightmare start vs. the Minnesota Twins, Crochet had another rough outing against Detroit. The left-handed ace allowed five earned runs on seven hits, including two homers, in his third loss of the season. His ERA climbed to 7.88, effectively killing his American League Cy Young hopes after his runner-up finish last year.

A disastrous fifth inning spoiled what appeared to be a bounce-back start for Crochet on Sunday. He let up a Jahmai Jones solo homer before walking Gleyber Torres, allowing a single to Matt Vierling, and giving up a three-run homer to Dillon Dingler.

“Last one, it was so bad that you can’t really even have any emotion about it,” Crochet said after Sunday’s 6-2 loss. “This one, I felt like I was just dominating until I wasn’t.”

The good news is Crochet is fully healthy. His velocity returned to normal on Sunday as his 35 fastballs averaged 95.8 mph, up from his 94.9 mph on 13 fastballs in Minnesota. He’ll hope to rebound when Boston heads to Baltimore after its three-game series against the Yankees at Fenway Park.

Ranger Suarez has returned to form

Suarez has settled in after struggling through spring training, the World Baseball Classic, and his first two starts of the campaign. After tossing six scoreless innings against the St. Louis Cardinals, Boston’s prized offseason acquisition didn’t allow a run in eight innings of work vs. Detroit.

With Crochet going through a rough patch, the Red Sox needed Suarez to step up and perform like the No. 2 starter he was expected to be when he signed a five-year, $130 million deal in free agency. He has done just that in his last two starts, and he’ll be counted on to continue that trend when he takes the hill against the Yankees on Wednesday.

Still no pop in the lineup

The Red Sox hit just one homer — a solo shot by Willson Contreras — in the four-game series against Detroit. They’re tied with the San Francisco Giants for the fewest homers (13) in MLB.

This was the expected consequence of failing to add another slugger to the lineup over the winter. Contreras, their lone significant offensive addition, leads the group with four homers this season. Wilyer Abreu (three) and Trevor Story (two) are the only Sox hitters with more than one homer thus far.

Ceddanne Rafaela stepping up

Rafaela was the hero in the series finale, coming through with a pinch-hit two-run double to put the Red Sox ahead in the seventh inning. It was a nice piece of hitting as he poked an 0-2 pitch down the right field line.

Rafaela has quietly been one of Boston’s most consistent bats. He ranks second among qualified Red Sox hitters in batting average (.286) and on-base percentage (.366), and third in OPS (.747).

It might be Payton Tolle time

Red Sox right-hander Sonny Gray exited Monday’s start in the third inning due to right hamstring tightness. Manager Alex Cora stated after the game that the veteran will undergo an MRI on Tuesday to determine the severity of the injury, but it isn’t expected to be serious.

Even if it’s a minor issue, Gray could miss at least one start. That may open the door for top Red Sox prospect Payton Tolle to rejoin the rotation. The hard-throwing left-hander already joined the club after being scratched from his scheduled Triple-A start on Saturday, in case a weather postponement forced Boston to play a doubleheader on Monday. It’s unclear how Tolle would fit into the Red Sox’ plans once Gray returns (if he’s even placed on the IL), but he has to be considered the clear frontrunner to replace Gray for a spot start if necessary.

Rays Minor League Roundup: Week 2

PORT CHARLOTTE, FL - MARCH 18: Caden Bodine (18) of the Tampa Bay Rays bats during a minor league spring training game against the Baltimore Orioles on March 18, 2026 at Charlotte Sports Park in Port Charlotte, Florida. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

This week’s minor league roundup will only feature the numbers accumulated prior to the start of play on Monday.

This was the 1st a week of full minor league play.

According to FanGraphs (which factors in age and proximity to the big leagues), 22-year old backstop Caden Bodine the top hitter in the Rays system; the Rays acquired the former 1st round pick in the Shane Baz deal. Bodine is currently hitting .407/.475/.630 with 2 HR over 63 PA; notably, he has only struck out twice.

Meanwhile, Aidan Cremarosa is the team’s top minor league pitcher. The 22-year old was taken by the Rays in the 8th round of the 2025 draft out of Fresno State. Thus far in three starts, Cremarosa has a 4.50 ERA | 1.51 FIP with a 42.9 K% & 1.8 BB% over 14 IP.

RUMBLINGS

  • Infielder Jader Areinamo made his debut after opening the year on the Injured List with a hamstring issue. He is hitting .222/.263/.556 with 2 HR over 19 PA.
  • Homer Bush began a rehab assignment with Single-A Charleston. Once his rehab is complete, he should take a starting job in Triple-A Durham
  • Theo Gillen hasn’t played since going 0-4 with 3 strikeouts on April 14th

TEAM LEADERS

  • Must currently be assigned to that team
  • Baseball America’s top ten prospects are featured below each team they’re currently assigned to.
  • (minimum of 30 TBF for pitchers)

Tampa Bay Rays

Top 10 Prospects

  • None currently on active roster

Durham Bulls

Team Offensive Leaders:
AVG: .323, Victor Mesa Jr
OBP: .417, Victor Mesa Jr
SLG: .565, Victor Mesa Jr
HR: 4,Justyn-Henry Malloy and Dom Keegan
wRC+: 157, Victor Mesa Jr
SB: 14, Jacob Melton

Team Pitching Leaders:
ERA: 0.00, Evan Reifert & Trevor Martin
FIP: 1.94, Andrew Wantz
K%: 35.3%, Logan Workman
BB%: 7.5%, Andrew Wantz
WHIP: 1.13, Evan Reifert
AVG: .080, Evan Reifert
WHIFF%: 17.8%, Kodi Whitley

Top 10 Prospects

  • #1 Brody Hopkins
    • AAA: 2.45 ERA | 5.46 FIP | 26.3 K% | 21.3 BB% | .194 AVG | 12.7 WHIFF% | 18.1 IP
  • #3 Jacob Melton
    • AAA: .207/.319/.397 | 41.1 K% | 15.1 BB% | 1 HR | 14 SB | 85 wRC+ | 73 PA

Montgomery Biscuits

Team Offensive Leaders:
AVG: .341, Cooper Kinney
OBP: .453, Cooper Kinney
SLG: .591, Cooper Kinney
HR: 3, Will Simpson
wRC+: 171, Cooper Kinney
SB: 16, Austin Overn

Team Pitching Leaders:
ERA: 2.00, Michael Forret
FIP: 4.63, Jack Kartsonas
K%: 28.3%, Santiago Suarez & Garrett Edwards
BB%:  6.5%, Jack Kartsonas
WHIP: 0.95, Garrett Edwards
AVG: .138, Michael Forret
WHIFF%: 16.3%, Santiago Suarez

Top 10 Prospects

  • #4 T.J. Nichols
    • AA: 1.80 ERA | 2.12 FIP | 25.0 K% | 0.0 BB% | .300 AVG | 12.3 WHIFF% | 5 IP
      • 4/7: Placed on Injured List
  • #6 Santiago Suarez
    • AA: 6.08 ERA | 5.48 FIP | 28.3 K% | 8.3 BB% | .241 AVG | 14.3 WHIFF% | 13.1 IP
  • #8 Michael Forret
    • AA: 2.00 ERA | 7.09 FIP | 27.0 K% | 21.6 BB% | .138 AVG | 16.3 WHIFF% | 9 IP

Bowling Green Hot Rods

Team Offensive Leaders:
AVG: .317, Nathan Flewelling
OBP: .404, Nathan Flewelling
SLG: .683, Nathan Flewelling
HR: 4, Nathan Flewelling & Connor Hujsak
wRC+: 185, Nathan Flewelling
SB: 7, Tony Santa Maria

Team Pitching Leaders:
ERA: 1.29, Andres Galan
FIP: 2.71, T.J. Fondtain
K%: 29.5%, Trevor Harrison
BB%: 2.6%, Jacob Kisting
WHIP: 0.70, Jacob Kisting
AVG: .162, Jacob Kisting
WHIFF%: 15.6%, Andres Galan

Top 10 Prospects

  • #2 Theo Gillen
    • A+: .290/.371/.774 | 28.6 K% | 5.7 BB% | 4 HR | 3 SB | 194 wRC+ | 35 PA
  • #5 Anderson Brito
    • A+: 3.72 ERA | 2.94 FIP | 25.6 K% | 7.0 BB% | .237 AVG | 13.8 WHIFF% | 9.2 IP
  • #10 Aidan Smith
    • A+: Hasn’t played in 2026
      • 4/2: Placed on the Injured List

Charleston River Dogs

Team Offensive Leaders:
AVG: .407, Caden Bodine
OBP: .475, Caden Bodine
SLG: .630, Caden Bodine
HR: 3, Brendan Summerhill and Daniel Pierce
wRC+: 196, Caden Bodine
SB: 4, Derek Datil & Daniel Pierce

Team Pitching Leaders:
ERA: 2.00, Trey Pooser
FIP: 1.51, Aidan Cremarosa
K%: 42.9%, Aidan Cremarosa
BB%: 1.8%, Aidan Cremarosa
WHIP: 0.73, Alex Wallace
AVG: .147, Alex Wallace
WHIFF%: 20.2%, Aidan Cremarosa

Top 10 Prospects

  • #7 Daniel Pierce
    • A: .286/.364/.510 | 34.5 K% | 7.3 BB% | 3 HR | 4 SB | 134 wRC+ | 55 PA
  • #9 Brendan Summerhill
    • A: .188/.235/.375 | 23.5 K% | 3.9 BB% | 3 HR | 0 SB | 61 wRC+ | 51 PA

Orioles vs Royals Prediction, Picks & Odds for Today's MLB Game

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The Baltimore Orioles and Kansas City Royals begin a three-game set tonight at Kauffman Stadium, with first pitch scheduled for 7:40 p.m. ET. 

With the reliable Seth Lugo on the hill, I’m eyeing Kansas City to end their seven-game skid in my Orioles vs. Royals predictions

Read more for my MLB picks for Monday, April 20. 

Who will win Orioles vs Royals today: Royals moneyline (+102)

The Kansas City Royals are struggling, sitting eight games below .500, and scoring just four runs across their last two games. However, right-hander Seth Lugo takes the ball in the series opener, and he’s compiled a 1.48 ERA across four starts.

Kyle Bradish takes the mound for the Baltimore Orioles, and he owns a 5.49 ERA. He sports a middling fastball that has been hit hard, and he's got an 11.4% walk rate, which ranks in the 33rd percentile.

It's a great opportunity for Bobby Witt Jr. and Jac Caglianone to break out. Both rank among baseball's best in hard-hit rate, and average exit velocity, so their power outages to start the season are screaming positive regression.

KC has won two of its last three at Kauffman Stadium. While the Royals didn’t score a ton of runs in those games, they will capitalize on Bradish's uneven performance to eke out a win.

Covers COVERS INTEL: Lugo is one of seven qualified starters not to allow a home run in 2026.

Orioles vs Royals Over/Under pick: Under 8.5 (+106)

Neither team is scoring a lot of runs this season. The Royals are 30th in runs scored, and they’ve cashed the Under in two of their last three. 

Baltimore has also hit the Under in two of its last four games, and is batting just .201 on the road in 2026. Three of the last four meetings between these teams have cashed the Under. 

While I expect the Royals to score some runs off the shaky Bradish, they’ve shown no ability to explode offensively. As for Lugo, he’s consistent, and he will limit the O’s.

Quinn Allen's 2026 Transparency Record
  • ML/RL bets: 6-3, +0.71 units
  • Over/Under bets: 7-2, +4.19 units

Orioles vs Royals odds

  • Moneyline: Orioles -104 | Royals +100
  • Run line: Orioles -1.5 (+150) | Royals +1.5 (-156)
  • Over/Under: Over 8.5 (-127) | Under 8.5 (+122)

Orioles vs Royals trend

The Kansas City Royals have hit the Game Total Under in 31 of their last 50 games (+10.40 Units / 19% ROI). Find more MLB betting trends for Orioles vs. Royals.

How to watch Orioles vs Royals and game info

LocationKauffman Stadium, Kansas City, MO
DateMonday, April 20, 2026
First pitch7:40 p.m. ET
TVMASN, Royals.TV
Orioles starting pitcherKyle Bradish
(1-2, 5.49 ERA)
Royals starting pitcherSeth Lugo
(1-1, 1.48 ERA)

Orioles vs Royals latest injuries

Orioles vs Royals weather

Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change.
Not intended for use in MA.
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Knicks Bulletin: ‘Sprinkled a little spice on him, man. Just a little magic’

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - APRIL 18: OG Anunoby #8 of the New York Knicks warms up before Game One of the Eastern Conference First Round NBA Playoffs against the Atlanta Hawks at Madison Square Garden on April 18, 2026 in New York City. 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 Elsa/Getty Images) | Getty Images

New York will see the Knicks play basketball against the Hawks inside the Garden one final time this season.

Next time the homies get back home, that’d be for Game 3 of the second-round series.

Here’s what has been said heading into G2 later today.

Mike Brown

On CJ McCollum’s Brodway comments:
“I didn’t see it. And a lot of guys are going to say a lot of things throughout the course of the playoffs. So whatever people want to say, that’s. That’s all. That’s up to them. But I didn’t see it.”

On defending Atlanta’s small-small actions:
“Their small-small pick-and-roll also is a problem. And our guys did a pretty good job of defending that the right way in the second half. It kind of got away from us early in the game, and they got some open looks from it, but our level of physicality without fouling was really good in the second half, as well as our communication with their small-small pick-and-roll.”

On Karl-Anthony Towns’ defensive ceiling:
“When KAT wants to, he can be a really, really good defender, especially at his size, he can cause some problems. I’ve kind of said it all year long: It’s a matter of whether or not he wants to do it that night. And as of late, he’s been really good on that end of the floor.”

On Towns’ pick-and-roll defense:
“I even told him today [during practice]: I said your pick-and-roll defense was at a pretty high level. And that’s something that we need for him to continue to do.”

On second-half defensive improvements:
“Our transition defense was better. Our ability to defend their small-small pick and roll was better. And then our ability to keep them off the glass during that time was a lot better and allowed us to go out and run and attack them in transition. So that’s something that we have to do while communicating for as close to 48 minutes as possible, because Atlanta is a good team and they can hurt you in a lot of different ways if you’re not present or in the moment every single possession.”

On trusting his assistants with matchup tweaks:
“We just wanted to see if we can cause a little confusion. Brendan O’Connor and Darren Erman, those two guys were the brains or the thought process of the matchup situation. Erman brought it to me and I said, ‘Yeah.’”

On preparing for Atlanta’s adjustments:
“All great teams, great players, make adjustments. So we have to continue watching it. And if we have to switch it up, we’ll switch it up.”

On Josh Hart’s value as a connector:
“For sure, he by far is one of the best connectors that I’ve been around, that I’ve seen just in general. Because he just does so many little things every time he steps on the floor. They go unnoticed or you can take for granted. The things he does, we definitely need, especially when you’re talking about a physical seven-game series.”

On Hart again as a connector:
“By far [Hart’s] one of the best connectors that I’ve been around, that I’ve seen just in general. Because he just does so many little things every time he steps on the floor. They [go] unnoticed or that you can take for granted. The things he does, we definitely need, especially when you’re talking about a physical seven-game series.”

On using Towns in different offensive spots:
“We want to put him in pick-and-roll situations so he can pick-and-pop and shoot the ball or take the ball off the dribble. And then we also wanna put him at the elbow so he can playmake for us, because we feel like we move very well (like that).”

Josh Hart

On guarding whoever he’s assigned:
“Nah, man, that’s not me. My job is to go out there and guard who they tell me to guard. So that’s what I try to do.”

On defending Jalen Johnson despite the size gap:
“I don’t know. Just trying to be physical. Obviously, he’s a really good player. He’s what, 6-8, 6-9? So I’m 6-4 — apparently I lost an inch. I used to be 6-5, so I’m even smaller this year. Just trying to be physical, try not to let him get to those spots where he can use his height and athleticism over me. He’s obviously a really good player, so just trying to do what I can.”

On honing rebounding as a key to his game:
“Since I can remember picking up a ball at 7 or 8. You want to win and you want to do everything it takes. Sometimes when people say I want to win, they just automatically think, ‘OK, he wants to score the most. He wants to do that.’ For me, you have to get stops, and when you force teams into contested shots, you have go out there and get a rebound, especially against a team like this who has good guys who can crash the glass, get offensive rebounds, get their shooters second shots. You have to make sure you put an emphasis on rebounding. That’s something I’ve always done. My dad always taught me to be a winning player.”

On communication defending guard-guard actions:
“I think we can get better on our communication, especially on guard-guard [actions]. For the first game, it was solid, but we have to be better. For sure, I think we can clean it up. That communication of small-smalls, not allowing them to get [McCollum] and [Alexander-Walker] open shots. They’re talented players. Obviously, you just try to get them to shoot as many contested shots as you can. So the communication’s got to be better. The physicality was good, but we have to ramp that up. I think they do a really good job of spreading into those screens and slipping out, those kinds of things.”

On the broader implications of small-small actions:
“That’s something that Boston does an amazing job of, and I feel — I won’t say they started it, but they really elevated it. And it’s a copycat league. And you see that and say, ‘OK, how can we figure that out? How can teams do that?’ So it’s a little unnatural. I think the best way to guard those and negate those open looks is communication.”

Jordan Clarkson

On helping OG Anunoby in-game:
“It’s just making sure my guy is right. We need OG out there so whatever’s whatever, and we’re gonna make it happen.”

On Anunoby coming to him on the bench looking for a magic healing:
“He came over to the bench and asked me to do it for his ankle. I sat over there. He checked back into the game. We need him on the floor, so whatever I gotta do to keep it going.”

On his healing powers:
“Sprinkled a little spice on him, man. Just a little magic, man. Made sure he was good for the second half. Come back here, sprinkle a little magic on them before I go out there.”

Jalen Brunson

On the bench unit in Game 1:
“They were unbelievable. And they came in and made plays on both sides of the ball. They made big shots, and they made plays that had a lot of attention to detail that may get overlooked, but they were focused and they got it done.”

On CJ McCollum’s performance:
“He played really well. He made a lot of tough shots, and he also got a lot of easy ones to get himself going in rhythm. So that’s just who he is. You know, he’s been able to be a big time performer in these situations. So we just gotta lock-in together.”

On the impact of his 2022 41-point playoff breakout in his career:
“I think it did a lot. Every day I was working on my game. I was getting better, doing all the stuff. When an opportunity like that comes around, there was no need to get ready when you’re staying ready. It’s crazy that it’s been four years since then.”

On Atlanta’s screen slipping and spacing:
“The way they do it, they got to the point where they mastered it, and they’re really good at it. Them being able to slip out of screens and get to the point where they’re ready to go and their feet are set and ready, they’re really good at it. We just gotta be ready to be more physical. At the same time, communicate a little better, just making sure we’re not giving them the space. I think a lot of teams that have multiple ball handlers do that because it’s a very unique action that can put one of the two in space.”

Miles McBride

On the need for setting the tone early in the series by going 2-0:
“It’s huge. I think it sets the tone for the rest of the series. Obviously, when you come out in a physical matchup like the Hawks are, they’re a great team, and we have a lot of respect, but you want to set the tone early, and know it’s going to be a long series.”

Braves at Phillies series recap: A sweeping statement

PHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA - APRIL 17: Austin Riley #27 of the Atlanta Braves celebrates a solo home run with Ozzie Albies #1 in the ninth inning against the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on April 17, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Atlanta Braves are now just about halfway through a 13-game stretch of facing nothing but NL East opponents — including this Philadelphia Phillies team twice. Naturally, this seemed like the trickier proposition for the Braves to deal with since this was taking place in Philadelphia and they were dealing with a Phillies club that was desperate to get their season going in the right direction while also making a statement that they’d be nipping at the heels of the Braves sooner rather than later.

As it turned out, it was the Braves who made the statement. While Atlanta hadn’t dropped a series all season to this point, they still had yet to break out the brooms and establish real dominance over the course of a series. That changed after this weekend’s affairs, as the Braves picked a fantastic time to pick up their first sweep of the 2026 season. It’s one thing to sweep any other ballclub — it’s another to do it against the Phillies and in Philadelphia, no less. Let’s go ahead and take a look back at what ended up being a very lovely time for the Braves in Citizens Bank Ballpark.


Friday, April 17

Braves 9, Phillies 0

This was the perfect way for the Braves to start off this series, as Atlanta dominated this one from start-to-finish. The big story in this one was Austin Riley essentially picking up where he left off in that series win in Cobb County against the Marlins. He nearly had two dingers in that series finale, as one actually went over the fence and the other nearly went out but stayed in the stadium for a double. The ol’ bandbox in Philadelphia couldn’t contain Riley on this night, as he hit two bombs and plated four RBIs as he continued to make his presence felt for the Braves.

While the Braves were busy beating up on Taijuan Walker and the rest of Philadelphia’s pitching staff, the Phillies were unable to crack the code of Martín Pérez. The veteran hurler wrapped up a whirlwind week by going six innings and striking out four Phillies batters along the way. It was actually looking pretty shaky to start with for Pérez as he found himself in a bases-loaded situation in the very first inning but once he escaped that jam unscathed, it was relatively smooth sailing from there. Not even a one-out triple from Bryce Harper in the third could get Pérez to wobble.

Jose Suarez entered the game after Pérez was done and he ended up carrying the torch to the finish line as he covered the final three innings of this one. Winning a game 9-0 is very pleasing on its own merits. Winning 9-0, on the road, against a divisional rival and only having to use two pitchers in the process is worth its weight in gold, folks.

Saturday, April 18

Braves 3, Phillies 1

Right after the Braves got done shutting Philadelphia out with the unlikely-but-apparently-dynamic duo of Martín Pérez and Jose Suarez, it couldn’t have been a comforting thought for the Phillies knowing that their next trip to the ballpark meant that they’d have to contend with Chris Sale. Indeed, Sale ended up making life very difficult for Philadelphia’s lineup in this one as he finished up with just one run allowed on five hits while also striking out seven batters. The only blemish for Sale on the night came from Felix Reyes hitting a home run in the very fist at-bat of his major league career — outside of that, Sale did his job in ensuring that the misery continued for the Phillies.

That was as good as it got for the Phillies on the night, as they couldn’t figure out Sale and also had a devil of a time dealing with Dylan Lee and closer Robert Suarez — who closed this game out because Raisel Iglesias took the day off because he slept bad on his shoulder. As a 37-year-old, I can 100 percent relate to Raisel Iglesias being 36-years-old and having his day ruined because he slept funny. Brother, I feel you.

Anyways, the offense was delivered by Austin Riley (who is now on fire following his sluggish start to the season) and Mauricio Dubón. Riley’s luck has completely turned around because he plated one with an infield single that was hit basically in no-man’s land for the Phillies to effectively field. Mauricio Dubón continued to impress at the plate as his bloop RBI knock plated two runners in order to make it 3-1, which is how this game ended. If Chris Sale is on point, three runs is usually enough to get the job done and that was the case on Saturday.

Sunday, April 19

Braves 4, Phillies 2

We got another example of Walt Weiss putting his thumb on the scale when it comes to his bullpen decision-making. The Braves were clinging to the 4-2 lead (that eventually became the final score) in the fifth innings after they had pushed three runs across the plate in the top half of the inning in order to get to that point. Grant Holmes got into a situation where there was a runner on second with Kyle Schwarber set to come up to the plate. Instead of giving the Phillies a third crack at Holmes, Weiss made a shrewd decision to go to Aaron Bummer in order to get the final out of the fifth.

While Bummer did give up a double to Schwarber, he induced a ground ball that Austin Riley made a great play on in order to end the inning. Again, that decision ended up being crucial since the game ended up finishing 4-2. I’m not going to sit here and say that former manager Brian Snitker is a bad manager because that would be a lie but also I think we all know that this would’ve been handled differently if Snitker had been in charge. It’s likely that Snit would’ve kept Holmes in the game in order to let him get through five and qualify for the win. Instead of being loyal to a fault, Weiss decided to go with a fresh arm in that situation and the decision paid off. There are pros and cons to both approaches but if you’d rather see managers approach games with more of a sense of urgency then you had to have liked what you saw from Weiss in this moment.

Anyways. the fifth inning was certainly the decisive frame in this one. It started with the Braves loading up the bases down 2-1 (and running Andrew Painter from the game, who had been effective up until that point) and the game turned after Matt Olson collected an RBI on a groundout, Austin Riley legged out another infield RBI single to put Atlanta ahead and then Ozzie Albies delivered the double that gave them some cushion. The timely hitting and shutdown work from the bullpen helped ensure that Atlanta would leave Philadelphia with a satisfying sweep.


If last season’s start was the absolute nightmare scenario for the Atlanta Braves then this season’s start has been a dream start. Not only are they already eight games over .500 (as opposed to beginning the season seven games underwater), they’ve also gotten off to this hot start while everybody else in the division has been mediocre-to-bad. Having a five-game cushion already is pretty nice and being up 6.5 games on the Phillies and 8 games up on the Mets is pretty huge. I think we all know better than to start celebrating a divisional title in April but as far as opening up the season goes, the results couldn’t be more ideal for the Braves.

This might sound a bit silly or overcautious to say but the series-winning streak could very well be in jeopardy to begin this week. While the Nationals haven’t been in the best vein of form to get this season started (although it’s a pretty solid start for them relative to expectations), they have been hitting the ball pretty well so far and it’s always a tough ask of any road team to win a four-game series on the road. With that being said and when you consider how this Braves team is going at the moment, would you bet against them?

Either way, this is certainly an exciting start to the season for the Braves. Austin Riley is finally starting to heat up and look like himself, the pitching has continued to get the job done across the board, the defense has been lights-out (as you’ll see below) and there’s even help on the way in the form of Sean Murphy and Spencer Strider.

No matter how you slice it, the Braves are in a very good spot right now. They’ve started this 13-game NL East gauntlet with a 5-1 run and could potentially end this gauntlet by putting their divisional foes in a serious hole. We’ll see what happens going forward but for now, it’s time to have fun and enjoy this run. As we all know based on what happened last season, it certainly beats the alternative! Long may this strong run of form continue for the Braves, please.

Raptors vs Cavaliers Computer Picks: Our Best Player Prop Projections for Game 2

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The Toronto Raptors will look to even up the series against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Rocket Arena, and they'll need supporting players like Jakob Poeltl and Immanuel Quickley to be at their best if they want to do that.

They highlight our Raptors vs. Cavaliers predictions, NBA player prop projections, and NBA picks below.

Raptors vs Cavaliers computer picks for Game 2

Raptors RaptorsCavaliers Cavaliers
Poeltl o8.5 points 
+102
Mitchell u27.5 points 
-112
Ingram u21.5 points
-105
Allen o13.5 points 
+100
Quickley o11.5 points 
-125
Allen o1.5 assists 
+135

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Raptors Game 2 computer picks

Jakob Poeltl Over 8.5 points (+102)

Projection: 9.65 points

Jakob Poeltl scored just four points on two shots in Game 1, but this is still a guy who averaged 11.1 points per game in April and reached double figures in eight of 11 games to close the regular season. He'll be better tonight.

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Brandon Ingram Under 21.5 points (-105)

Projection: 19.94 points

Much was made about Brandon Ingram taking just nine shots in Game 1, and there's no guarantee his volume increases by much tonight. He fell short of this number in two of three regular-season meetings, too.

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Immanuel Quickley Over 11.5 points (-125)

Projection: 13.1 points

This is an overcorrection to Immanuel Quickley's injury and recent struggles. He averaged 13.7 points per game in March and reached double figures in all but one game. 

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Cavaliers Game 2 computer picks

Donovan Mitchell Under 27.5 points (-112)

Projection: 24.4 points

Donovan Mitchell's 32 points in Game 1 are high relative to the 24 points per game he averaged in March. The Cavs have enough advantages to win without needing a massive game from Mitchell.

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Jarrett Allen Over 13.5 points (+100)

Projection: 15.31 points

Jarrett Allen scored just 10 points in Game 1, but cleared this total in eight of his last 10 games in the regular season. 

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Jarrett Allen Over 1.5 assists (+135)

Projection: 1.69 assists

Allen is not piling up assists by any stretch, but this plus-money price is tough to overlook. If Cleveland's offense keeps rolling, he'll get his chances. 

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How to watch Raptors vs Cavaliers Game 2

LocationRocket Arena, Cleveland, OH
DateMonday, April 20, 2026
Tip-off7:00 p.m. ET
TVPeacock/NBCSN

Not intended for use in MA.
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