Knicks' Jalen Brunson out for Thursday's game against Warriors due to ankle injury
Knicks star Jalen Brunson, who suffered a right ankle sprain in the first quarter of Wednesday's 112-101 loss to the Sacramento Kings, is out for Thursday's matchup against the Warriors.
Brunson is listed as day-to-day.
While Brunson is out, Landry Shamet has been upgraded to questionable.
According to multiple eyewitness accounts, including from The Athletic's James Edwards, Brunson left the locker room after Wednesday's game without a boot or crutches.
The incident occurred with 7:45 remaining in the first quarter when Brunson tried to cross up Maxime Raynaud on the wing, but slipped and fell, appearing to turn his ankle.
Brunson tried to remain in the game, but checked out with 7:01 on the clock and headed to the locker room.
The Knicks guard missed two games last November when he sprained the same ankle against the Orlando Magic.
Kings Come Up Short Despite Late Push Against Golden Knights
The Los Angeles Kings (19-16-11) played host to the Vegas Golden Knights (22-11-12) in a battle between two playoff hopefuls from the Pacific division. After a rough loss to the Dallas Stars on Monday, the Kings were in desperate need of two points as they are start to slip out of the playoff picture in the West.
Unfortunately, two points isn't easy to come by in the National Hockey League as the Los Angeles was unable to finish the job on home ice and fall to Vegas by a score of 3-2 in overtime.
The silver lining in all of these heart wrenching defeats is that they continue to walk away with the loser point, which could be seen as both a bad, and a good thing. The Kings now have the second most loser points in the NHL with 11, funnily enough, only Vegas has more with 12.
Kings Fail to Capitalize Early
In perhaps one of the biggest games of the season so far, the Kings needed to get off to good start early in order to compete with a Vegas team that has found their footing lately.
Los Angeles did control the majority of the play in the opening frame, while Vegas looked incredibly sloppy and were unable to get virtually anything going, as they struggled to even enter the Kings zone cleanly.
Unfortunately, the Golden Knights were able to weather the storm and get out of the first period with a 0-0 tie. The Kings outshot the Knights 9-5 to end the period but just couldn't beat Akira Schmid.
Golden Knights Get on the Board
After successfully escaping an ugly first period, the Golden Knights looked like an entirely different hockey team in the second period. Clearly, head coach Bruce Cassidy voiced his frustration because it didn't take long for Vegas control the game.
Just under four minutes into the middle frame, rookie forward Braeden Bowman gave his team the lead with his sixth of the season. After a defensive mishap by Brian Dumoulin, Jack Eichel scooped up the loose puck and found a wide open Bowman who ripped the puck past Darcy Kuemper.
Both teams had an opportunity on the power play in the latter half of the period, but neither could capitalize. After 40 minutes Vegas was outshooting L.A. 19-17.
Fiala Finds Twine
Just like Vegas did in the first period, Los Angeles weathered the storm in the second period and were lucky to be down just 1-0 after 40 minutes.
Through the early stages of the third period the Kings began to look desperate as they were pushing hard to even things up. They were able to generate some quality chances but just couldn't finish.
That was until Kevin Fiala buried his team-leading 17th goal of the season past Akira Schmid was in the midst of a shutout bid. Fiala earned this one as he was stopped on his initial shot, the puck then came to Alex Turcotte in the slot who fired it on goal which led to a juicy rebound right on the tape of the Kings sniper who wasted no time firing it into the back of the net. Fiala, who was probably the most notable Kings prior to his goal gets rewarded for sticking with the play and crashing the net. Turcotte and Andre Kuzmenko register the assists.
Marner Puts Vegas on Top
After a strong first 10-12 minutes of the final frame, the Kings were tested after Adrian Kempe was sent off for hooking.
Just over 40 seconds into their man advantage, Vegas took the lead right back as Mitch Marner scored his 11th of the year with a blistering wrist shot. At this point it looked like Marner shoved the dagger into the heart of the Kings.
Clarke Sends the Game to Overtime
When all hope seemed to be lost after yet another Kings third period fumble, the team didn't give up and continued to fight for the game tying goal.
It came down to the final 90 seconds but Brandt Clarke made the building erupt as he slid home his 5th of the season past Schmid to tie the game at 2-2 which meant extra time was needed.
CLARKIE TIES IT pic.twitter.com/zUAP0kK3rY
— LA Kings (@LAKings) January 15, 2026
Stone Wastes No Time
After an electric finish to regulation, the Golden Knights silenced the Kings crowd as they scored just 25 seconds into the overtime period.
In a somewhat broken play that had Kuemper facing the wrong way, Jack Eichel was able to find Mark Stone all alone who was able to put the puck in the wide open cage, giving Vegas the win in a hard fought battle between two divisional foes.
Final from Overtime in LA. #GoKingsGo | @twiliopic.twitter.com/10dPsp58rX
— LA Kings (@LAKings) January 15, 2026
For action-packed issues, access to the entire magazine archive and a free issue, subscribe to The Hockey News at THN.com/free. Get the latest news and trending stories by subscribing to our newsletter here. And share your thoughts by commenting below the article on THN.com or creating your own post in our community forum.
Knicks struggle offensively, miss 33 three-pointers in 112-101 loss to Kings
The Knicks had one of their worst shooting games of the season and lost to the Sacramento Kings, 112-101, on Wednesday night.
Here are the takeaways...
-- New York found themselves down 16-8 early in the first quarter and then things got even worse with Jalen Brunson leaving the game with a right ankle injury. Brunson slipped and fell with 7:45 remaining in the first quarter while trying to cross up Maxime Raynaud. He tried to stay in the game but left for the locker room with 7:01 on the clock and did not return.
-- It didn't get better for Mike Brown's new squad against his former team as NY trailed 32-17 at the end of the first quarter. The Knicks went 0-for-9 from three-point range and shot just 35 percent from the field compared to the Kings' 63 percent. Former Knick Precious Achiuwa, DeMar DeRozan, and Zach LaVine all scored 10 points in the first. Karl-Anthony Towns tried to carry the load for New York with seven points.
-- New York missed their first 12 three-point attempts before Josh Hart hit one to make it a 41-24 game in the second quarter. The Knicks slowly tried to mount a comeback despite their struggles from beyond the arc. Offensive rebounds and second-chance points were a big factor as Mitchell Robinson dominated the glass (11 total offensive rebounds in the first half, Robinson with six).
The Knicks outscored the Kings, 25-24, in the second quarter but trailed 56-42 at halftime. It's tied for their lowest scoring first half of the season. The team shot an abysmal 1-for-19 from three and 34 percent from the field. Towns was the go-to scorer with Brunson out (13 points on 5-for-11 shooting), but no one else was in double figures.
-- Sacramento scored seven quick points to open the third quarter before Mikal Bridges made the Knicks' second three-pointer of the night (2-for-21 at the time), making it a 63-46 game. The Kings continued to get to the foul line and extend their lead. Hart made the team's third three-pointer (3-for-25) and then Robinson picked up his seventh offensive rebound, scoring on a tip-in as the Knicks trailed, 79-57, with 4:47 left in the third quarter.
DeRozan made his first three-pointer in three games with just under a minute remaining in the third quarter as the Kings grew their lead to 23 points. They led 96-76 heading into the fourth as Achiuwa's revenge game continued, getting up to a season-high 20 points already. New York made a total of four three-pointers (4-for-10) in the third, improving to 17 percent from deep.
-- Jordan Clarkson gave the Knicks a spark with six straight points in the fourth quarter and then Bridges sank his second three-pointer to cut the Sacramento lead to 15 points. Brown emptied the bench with 2:34 left, down 108-94. They made it a nine-point game after a Tyler Kolek three and Guerschon Yabusele layup before Russell Westbrook banked in a three to have fans chanting to "light the beam."
-- The Knicks shot 39 percent overall and 20 percent from three, missing 33 attempts (8-for-41). Towns didn't score in the second half, finishing with 13 points and four rebounds, while Bridges led the team with 19 points. OG Anunoby finished with 15 points, Clarkson had 11 points, and Hart and McBride each had 10 points.
Sacramento made 32 free throws (84 percent from the foul line) and shot 47 percent from the field. The Kings won the rebound battle, 48-43. DeRozan had 27 points and LaVine added 25 points.
Game MVP: Precious Achiuwa
The former Knick and five-star recruit out of high school had his best game of the season, scoring 20 points on 7-for-14 shooting with 14 rebounds (six offensive), two assists, two blocks, and two steals.
Highlights
cap gets us on the board first.
— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) January 15, 2026
vote JB for #NBAAllStar starter ⭐️ https://t.co/Ov3esq1i8zpic.twitter.com/xzljbG4H9O
impacting offense AND defense.
— NEW YORK KNICKS (@nyknicks) January 15, 2026
vote KAT for #NBAAllStar starter ⭐️ https://t.co/Ov3esq1i8zpic.twitter.com/MOAIthOTNF
What's next
The Knicks will make a quick trip to the Bay Area to face Steph Curry and the Golden State Warriors on Thursday at 10:00 p.m. ET.
Watch Bulls' insane game-winning play to beat Jazz
This looked like it was going to be Brice Sensabaugh night. The forward scored 21 points off the bench in the first quarter alone and went on to score a career-high 43.
But the Bulls pulled out the victory on a Nikola Vucevic game-winner that came on the most improbable of plays.
CLUTCH BUCKET BY NIKOLA VUČEVIĆ.
— NBA (@NBA) January 15, 2026
BULLS WIN AT HOME! pic.twitter.com/oUNtXMOpVS
Utah's Keyonte George missed a 3-pointer with 1.5 seconds left and that was the ball game, the Bulls got the 128-126 win.
Sensabaugh shot 15-of-22 overall and hit five 3-pointers on the way to his record night. George added 25 for the Jazz.
Vucevic scored 35 to lead the Bulls, but the real story was their bench, which scored 61 points and had five players in double figures.
Fantasy baseball dynasty rankings: Rotoworld's Top 500 players for 2025 MLB season
Dynasty leagues are unique because they ask us to predict the future with a confidence we rarely apply to our real lives. We convince ourselves we know which 19-year-old prospect will blossom into a superstar, which 31-year-old slugger will age gracefully, and which team context will still matter two seasons from now — even though the sport keeps reminding us that everything is temporary and nothing is linear. And that’s exactly why it’s so addicting.
Rotoworld’s Top 500 Dynasty Rankings exist at that intersection of certainty and delusion: a snapshot of what feels true right now, calibrated against what history keeps telling us we’re probably wrong about. Whether you’re chasing a title or tearing it down to the studs, this list evaluates long-term fantasy value through talent, trajectory, stability, volatility, and opportunity — all wrapped in the understanding that the dynasty landscape can transform overnight.
If you’re looking for a compass in a universe built on chaos, this is it — at least until everything changes again.
⚾️ Coming soon: MLB returns to NBC and Peacock in 2026! In addition to becoming the exclusive home of Sunday Night Baseball, NBC Sports will broadcast MLB Sunday Leadoff, “Opening Day” and Labor Day primetime games, the first round of the MLB Draft, the entire Wild Card round of the postseason, and much more.
Note: Rankings updated as of January 15
| Rank | Player | Position | Team | Age | Level | ETA | MiLB |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Shohei Ohtani | UT, SP | LAD | 31 | MLB | ||
| 2 | Bobby Witt Jr. | SS | KC | 25 | MLB | ||
| 3 | Juan Soto | OF | NYM | 27 | MLB | ||
| 4 | Elly De La Cruz | SS | CIN | 23 | MLB | ||
| 5 | Ronald Acuña Jr. | OF | ATL | 28 | MLB | ||
| 6 | Corbin Carroll | OF | AZ | 25 | MLB | ||
| 7 | Aaron Judge | OF | NYY | 33 | MLB | ||
| 8 | Tarik Skubal | SP | DET | 29 | MLB | ||
| 9 | Gunnar Henderson | SS | BAL | 24 | MLB | ||
| 10 | Paul Skenes | SP | PIT | 23 | MLB | ||
| 11 | Julio Rodríguez | OF | SEA | 25 | MLB | ||
| 12 | Fernando Tatis Jr. | OF | SD | 27 | MLB | ||
| 13 | Kyle Tucker | OF | FA | 29 | MLB | ||
| 14 | Junior Caminero | 3B | TB | 22 | MLB | ||
| 15 | Nick Kurtz | 1B | ATH | 23 | MLB | ||
| 16 | Jackson Chourio | OF | MIL | 22 | MLB | ||
| 17 | Vladimir Guerrero Jr. | 1B | TOR | 26 | MLB | ||
| 18 | Roman Anthony | OF | BOS | 21 | MLB | ||
| 19 | José Ramírez | 3B | CLE | 33 | MLB | ||
| 20 | Konnor Griffin | SS | PIT | 19 | AA | 2026 | 1 |
| 21 | Garrett Crochet | SP | BOS | 26 | MLB | ||
| 22 | James Wood | OF | WSH | 23 | MLB | ||
| 23 | Wyatt Langford | OF | TEX | 24 | MLB | ||
| 24 | Jazz Chisholm Jr. | 2B, 3B | NYY | 27 | MLB | ||
| 25 | Zach Neto | SS | LAA | 25 | MLB | ||
| 26 | Yordan Alvarez | OF | HOU | 28 | MLB | ||
| 27 | Pete Alonso | 1B | BAL | 31 | MLB | ||
| 28 | Francisco Lindor | SS | NYM | 32 | MLB | ||
| 29 | Cal Raleigh | C | SEA | 29 | MLB | ||
| 30 | Yoshinobu Yamamoto | SP | LAD | 27 | MLB | ||
| 31 | Kevin McGonigle | 3B, SS | DET | 21 | AA | 2026 | 2 |
| 32 | Pete Crow-Armstrong | OF | CHC | 24 | MLB | ||
| 33 | Ketel Marte | 2B | AZ | 32 | MLB | ||
| 34 | Jackson Merrill | OF | SD | 22 | MLB | ||
| 35 | Logan Gilbert | SP | SEA | 28 | MLB | ||
| 36 | Hunter Brown | SP | HOU | 27 | MLB | ||
| 37 | CJ Abrams | SS | WSH | 25 | MLB | ||
| 38 | Rafael Devers | 1B | SF | 29 | MLB | ||
| 39 | Cristopher Sánchez | SP | PHI | 29 | MLB | ||
| 40 | Manny Machado | 3B | SD | 33 | MLB | ||
| 41 | Trea Turner | SS | PHI | 32 | MLB | ||
| 42 | Eury Pérez | SP | MIA | 22 | MLB | ||
| 43 | Kyle Schwarber | UT | PHI | 33 | MLB | ||
| 44 | Jesús Made | 2B, SS | MIL | 18 | AA | 2027 | 3 |
| 45 | Bryce Harper | 1B | PHI | 33 | MLB | ||
| 46 | Riley Greene | OF | DET | 25 | MLB | ||
| 47 | Corey Seager | SS | TEX | 31 | MLB | ||
| 48 | Matt Olson | 1B | ATL | 31 | MLB | ||
| 49 | Hunter Greene | SP | CIN | 26 | MLB | ||
| 50 | JJ Wetherholt | 2B, SS | STL | 23 | AAA | 2026 | 4 |
| 51 | Logan Webb | SP | SF | 29 | MLB | ||
| 52 | Josh Naylor | 1B | SEA | 28 | MLB | ||
| 53 | Mookie Betts | SS, OF | LAD | 33 | MLB | ||
| 54 | Samuel Basallo | C | BAL | 21 | MLB | - | 5 |
| 55 | Bryan Woo | SP | SEA | 26 | MLB | ||
| 56 | Mason Miller | RP | SD | 27 | MLB | ||
| 57 | Chase Burns | SP | CIN | 23 | MLB | - | 6 |
| 58 | Jeremy Peña | SS | HOU | 28 | MLB | ||
| 59 | Brent Rooker | OF | ATH | 31 | MLB | ||
| 60 | Joe Ryan | SP | MIN | 29 | MLB | ||
| 61 | Jacob deGrom | SP | TEX | 37 | MLB | ||
| 62 | Chris Sale | SP | ATL | 36 | MLB | ||
| 63 | Freddie Freeman | 1B | LAD | 36 | MLB | ||
| 64 | Leo De Vries | SS | ATH | 19 | AA | 2026 | 7 |
| 65 | Cody Bellinger | OF | FA | 30 | MLB | ||
| 66 | George Kirby | SP | SEA | 28 | MLB | ||
| 67 | Bo Bichette | SS | FA | 28 | MLB | ||
| 68 | Blake Snell | SP | LAD | 33 | MLB | ||
| 69 | Spencer Schwellenbach | SP | ATL | 25 | MLB | ||
| 70 | Nolan McLean | SP | NYM | 24 | MLB | - | 8 |
| 71 | Trey Yesavage | SP | TOR | 22 | MLB | - | 9 |
| 72 | Austin Riley | 3B | ATL | 28 | MLB | ||
| 73 | Jacob Misiorowski | SP | MIL | 24 | MLB | ||
| 74 | Sebastian Walcott | SS | TEX | 20 | AA | 2026 | 10 |
| 75 | Jarren Duran | OF | BOS | 29 | MLB | ||
| 76 | Brice Turang | 2B | MIL | 26 | MLB | ||
| 77 | Edward Florentino | OF | PIT | 19 | A- | 2027 | 11 |
| 78 | Luke Keaschall | 2B | MIN | 23 | MLB | ||
| 79 | Cole Ragans | SP | KC | 28 | MLB | ||
| 80 | Walker Jenkins | OF | MIN | 21 | AAA | 2026 | 12 |
| 81 | Ben Rice | C, 1B | NYY | 27 | MLB | ||
| 82 | Oneil Cruz | OF | PIT | 27 | MLB | ||
| 83 | William Contreras | C | MIL | 28 | MLB | ||
| 84 | Max Clark | OF | DET | 21 | AA | 2026 | 13 |
| 85 | Randy Arozarena | OF | SEA | 31 | MLB | ||
| 86 | Freddy Peralta | SP | MIL | 29 | MLB | ||
| 87 | Seiya Suzuki | OF | CHC | 31 | MLB | ||
| 88 | Aidan Miller | SS | PHI | 21 | AAA | 2026 | 14 |
| 89 | Tyler Soderstrom | 1B, OF | ATH | 24 | MLB | ||
| 90 | Maikel Garcia | 3B | KC | 26 | MLB | ||
| 91 | Geraldo Perdomo | SS | AZ | 26 | MLB | ||
| 92 | Vinnie Pasquantino | 1B | KC | 28 | MLB | ||
| 93 | Jackson Holliday | 2B | BAL | 22 | MLB | ||
| 94 | Max Fried | SP | NYY | 32 | MLB | ||
| 95 | Jordan Westburg | 3B | BAL | 27 | MLB | ||
| 96 | Michael Busch | 1B | CHC | 27 | MLB | ||
| 97 | Byron Buxton | OF | MIN | 32 | MLB | ||
| 98 | Edwin Diaz | RP | LAD | 32 | MLB | ||
| 99 | Zack Wheeler | SP | PHI | 35 | MLB | ||
| 100 | Luis Peña | 2B, 3B, SS | MIL | 19 | A+ | 2027 | 15 |
| 101 | Cam Schlitter | SP | NYY | 25 | MLB | ||
| 102 | Lawrence Butler | OF | ATH | 25 | MLB | ||
| 103 | Dylan Cease | SP | TOR | 30 | MLB | ||
| 104 | Michael Harris II | OF | ATL | 25 | MLB | ||
| 105 | Emmet Sheehan | SP | LAD | 26 | MLB | ||
| 106 | Dylan Crews | OF | WSH | 24 | MLB | ||
| 107 | Bryce Eldridge | 1B | SF | 21 | MLB | - | 16 |
| 108 | Shea Langeliers | C | ATH | 28 | MLB | ||
| 109 | Kyle Bradish | SP | BAL | 29 | MLB | ||
| 110 | Josue De Paula | OF | LAD | 20 | AA | 2026 | 17 |
| 111 | Agustín Ramírez | C | MIA | 24 | MLB | ||
| 112 | Jesús Luzardo | SP | PHI | 28 | MLB | ||
| 113 | Sal Stewart | 1B, 3B | CIN | 22 | MLB | - | 18 |
| 114 | Gerrit Cole | SP | NYY | 35 | MLB | ||
| 115 | Andy Pages | OF | LAD | 28 | MLB | ||
| 116 | Spencer Strider | SP | ATL | 27 | MLB | ||
| 117 | Christian Yelich | OF | MIL | 33 | MLB | ||
| 118 | Pablo Lopez | SP | MIN | 30 | MLB | ||
| 119 | Jose Altuve | 2B, OF | HOU | 35 | MLB | ||
| 120 | Drake Baldwin | C | ATL | 24 | MLB | ||
| 121 | Tyler Glasnow | SP | LAD | 32 | MLB | ||
| 122 | Andrés Muñoz | RP | SEA | 27 | MLB | ||
| 123 | Isaac Paredes | 3B | HOU | 27 | MLB | ||
| 124 | Jhoan Duran | RP | PHI | 28 | MLB | ||
| 125 | Carson Benge | OF | NYM | 23 | AAA | 2026 | 19 |
| 126 | Framber Valdez | SP | FA | 32 | MLB | ||
| 127 | Thomas White | SP | MIA | 21 | AAA | 2026 | 20 |
| 128 | Rainiel Rodriguez | C | STL | 19 | A+ | 2028 | 21 |
| 129 | Alex Bregman | 3B | CHC | 31 | MLB | ||
| 130 | Eduardo Quintero | OF | LAD | 20 | A+ | 2027 | 22 |
| 131 | Colt Emerson | SS | SEA | 20 | AAA | 2026 | 23 |
| 132 | Willy Adames | SS | SF | 30 | MLB | ||
| 133 | Michael King | SP | SD | 30 | MLB | ||
| 134 | Jacob Wilson | SS | ATH | 23 | MLB | ||
| 135 | Ozzie Albies | 2B | ATL | 29 | MLB | ||
| 136 | Bryce Rainer | SS | DET | 20 | A- | 2028 | 24 |
| 137 | Bubba Chandler | SP | PIT | 23 | MLB | - | 25 |
| 138 | Iván Herrera | UT | STL | 25 | MLB | ||
| 139 | Nick Lodolo | SP | CIN | 28 | MLB | ||
| 140 | Dylan Beavers | OF | BAL | 24 | MLB | - | 26 |
| 141 | Will Smith | C | LAD | 30 | MLB | ||
| 142 | Caleb Bonemer | SS, 3B | CWS | 20 | A+ | 2028 | 27 |
| 143 | Payton Tolle | SP | BOS | 23 | MLB | - | 28 |
| 144 | Noelvi Marte | 3B, OF | CIN | 24 | MLB | ||
| 145 | Kyle Stowers | OF | MIA | 28 | MLB | ||
| 146 | Jasson Domínguez | OF | NYY | 23 | MLB | ||
| 147 | Ceddanne Rafaela | 2B, OF | BOS | 25 | MLB | ||
| 148 | Joshua Baez | OF | STL | 22 | AA | 2026 | 29 |
| 149 | Jac Caglianone | OF | KC | 23 | MLB | ||
| 150 | Roki Sasaki | SP | LAD | 24 | MLB | - | 30 |
| 151 | Addison Barger | 3B, OF | TOR | 26 | MLB | ||
| 152 | Zyhir Hope | OF | LAD | 21 | AA | 2026 | 31 |
| 153 | Cade Smith | RP | CLE | 26 | MLB | ||
| 154 | Jonah Tong | SP | NYM | 22 | MLB | - | 32 |
| 155 | Matt Shaw | 3B | CHC | 24 | MLB | ||
| 156 | Nick Pivetta | SP | SD | 33 | MLB | ||
| 157 | Cam Smith | OF | HOU | 23 | MLB | ||
| 158 | Kevin Gausman | SP | TOR | 35 | MLB | ||
| 159 | Hunter Goodman | C | COL | 26 | MLB | ||
| 160 | Nico Hoerner | 2B | CHC | 28 | MLB | ||
| 161 | Luis Robert Jr. | OF | CWS | 28 | MLB | ||
| 162 | Carlos Rodon | SP | NYY | 33 | MLB | ||
| 163 | Jonathan Aranda | 1B | TB | 27 | MLB | ||
| 164 | Tatsuya Imai | SP | HOU | 27 | MLB | 2026 | 33 |
| 165 | Cade Horton | SP | CHC | 24 | MLB | ||
| 166 | Royce Lewis | 3B | MIN | 26 | MLB | ||
| 167 | Travis Bazzana | 2B | CLE | 23 | AAA | 2026 | 34 |
| 168 | Shane Bieber | SP | TOR | 30 | MLB | ||
| 169 | Gavin Williams | SP | CLE | 26 | MLB | ||
| 170 | Jo Adell | OF | LAA | 26 | MLB | ||
| 171 | MacKenzie Gore | SP | WSH | 27 | MLB | ||
| 172 | Ryan Waldschmidt | OF | AZ | 23 | AA | 2026 | 35 |
| 173 | Josue Briceño | C | DET | 21 | AA | 2026 | 36 |
| 174 | Brandon Woodruff | SP | MIL | 33 | MLB | ||
| 175 | Teoscar Hernández | OF | LAD | 33 | MLB | ||
| 176 | Mike Trout | OF | LAA | 34 | MLB | ||
| 177 | George Springer | OF | TOR | 36 | MLB | ||
| 178 | Josuar Gonzalez | SS | SF | 18 | DSL | 2029 | 37 |
| 179 | Adley Rutschman | C | BAL | 28 | MLB | ||
| 180 | Josh Hader | RP | HOU | 31 | MLB | ||
| 181 | Brandon Nimmo | OF | TEX | 32 | MLB | ||
| 182 | Yandy Díaz | 1B | TB | 34 | MLB | ||
| 183 | Devin Williams | RP | NYM | 31 | MLB | ||
| 184 | Ian Happ | OF | CHC | 31 | MLB | ||
| 185 | Jordan Lawlar | 3B | AZ | 23 | MLB | - | 38 |
| 186 | Francisco Alvarez | C | NYM | 24 | MLB | ||
| 187 | Kyle Manzardo | 1B | CLE | 25 | MLB | ||
| 188 | Carter Jensen | C | KC | 22 | MLB | - | 39 |
| 189 | Eugenio Suarez | 3B | FA | 34 | MLB | ||
| 190 | Chase DeLauter | OF | CLE | 24 | MLB | - | 40 |
| 191 | Marcelo Mayer | 3B | BOS | 23 | MLB | - | 41 |
| 192 | Robbie Ray | SP | SF | 34 | MLB | ||
| 193 | Liam Doyle | SP | STL | 21 | RK | 2026 | 42 |
| 194 | Matt Chapman | 3B | SF | 32 | MLB | ||
| 195 | JoJo Parker | SS | TOR | 19 | RK | 2029 | 43 |
| 196 | Drew Rasmussen | SP | TB | 30 | MLB | ||
| 197 | Tanner Bibee | SP | CLE | 27 | MLB | ||
| 198 | Ryan Pepiot | SP | TB | 28 | MLB | ||
| 199 | Jett Williams | SS, OF | NYM | 22 | AAA | 2026 | 44 |
| 200 | Kristian Campbell | 2B | BOS | 23 | MLB | ||
| 201 | Munetaka Murakami | 3B | CWS | 26 | MLB | 2026 | 45 |
| 202 | Chandler Simpson | OF | TB | 25 | MLB | ||
| 203 | Willson Contreras | 1B | BOS | 33 | MLB | ||
| 204 | Anthony Volpe | SS | NYY | 24 | MLB | ||
| 205 | Jakob Marsee | OF | MIA | 24 | MLB | ||
| 206 | Alejandro Kirk | C | TOR | 27 | MLB | ||
| 207 | Brenton Doyle | OF | COL | 27 | MLB | ||
| 208 | Nathan Eovaldi | SP | TEX | 36 | MLB | ||
| 209 | Lazaro Montes | OF | SEA | 21 | AA | 2027 | 46 |
| 210 | Zebby Matthews | SP | MIN | 25 | MLB | ||
| 211 | Sonny Gray | SP | BOS | 36 | MLB | ||
| 212 | Trevor Story | SS | BOS | 33 | MLB | ||
| 213 | Jarlin Susana | SP | WSH | 22 | AA | 2027 | 47 |
| 214 | Masyn Winn | SS | STL | 24 | MLB | ||
| 215 | Mike Sirota | OF | LAD | 22 | A+ | 2027 | 48 |
| 216 | Edward Cabrera | SP | CHC | 27 | MLB | ||
| 217 | Brody Hopkins | SP | TB | 24 | AA | 2026 | 49 |
| 218 | Mark Vientos | 3B | NYM | 26 | MLB | ||
| 219 | Heliot Ramos | OF | SF | 26 | MLB | ||
| 220 | Brandon Lowe | 2B | PIT | 31 | MLB | ||
| 221 | Gleyber Torres | 2B | DET | 29 | MLB | ||
| 222 | Steven Kwan | OF | CLE | 28 | MLB | ||
| 223 | Ranger Suárez | SP | BOS | 30 | MLB | ||
| 224 | Yainer Diaz | C | HOU | 27 | MLB | ||
| 225 | Shota Imanaga | SP | CHC | 32 | MLB | ||
| 226 | Jack Flaherty | SP | DET | 30 | MLB | ||
| 227 | Kade Anderson | SP | SEA | 21 | RK | 2026 | 50 |
| 228 | Brett Baty | 2B, 3B | NYM | 26 | MLB | ||
| 229 | Kaelen Culpepper | 2B, 3B, SS | MIN | 23 | AA | 2026 | 51 |
| 230 | Robby Snelling | SP | MIA | 22 | AAA | 2026 | 52 |
| 231 | Shane Baz | SP | BAL | 26 | MLB | ||
| 232 | Andrew Painter | SP | PHI | 22 | AAA | 2026 | 53 |
| 233 | Michael Arroyo | 2B | SEA | 21 | AA | 2026 | 54 |
| 234 | Spencer Torkelson | 1B | DET | 26 | MLB | ||
| 235 | Connelly Early | SP | BOS | 23 | MLB | - | 55 |
| 236 | Braden Montgomery | OF | CWS | 22 | AA | 2026 | 56 |
| 237 | Dansby Swanson | SS | CHC | 32 | MLB | ||
| 238 | Ryan Sloan | SP | SEA | 20 | A+ | 2027 | 57 |
| 239 | Emmanuel Rodriguez | OF | MIN | 23 | AAA | 2026 | 58 |
| 240 | Jared Jones | SP | PIT | 24 | MLB | ||
| 241 | Alfredo Duno | C | CIN | 20 | A- | 2028 | 59 |
| 242 | Corbin Burnes | SP | AZ | 31 | MLB | ||
| 243 | Bryce Miller | SP | SEA | 27 | MLB | ||
| 244 | Sandy Alcantara | SP | MIA | 30 | MLB | ||
| 245 | Kerry Carpenter | OF | DET | 28 | MLB | ||
| 246 | Alec Burleson | 1B, OF | STL | 27 | MLB | ||
| 247 | Justin Steele | SP | CHC | 30 | MLB | ||
| 248 | Kyle Teel | C | CWS | 24 | MLB | ||
| 249 | Shane McClanahan | SP | TB | 28 | MLB | ||
| 250 | Jaxon Wiggins | SP | CHC | 24 | AAA | 2026 | 60 |
| 251 | Dax Kilby | SS | NYY | 19 | A- | 2029 | 61 |
| 252 | Ezequiel Tovar | SS | COL | 24 | MLB | ||
| 253 | Matt McLain | 2B | CIN | 26 | MLB | ||
| 254 | Grayson Rodriguez | SP | LAA | 26 | MLB | ||
| 255 | Taylor Ward | OF | BAL | 32 | MLB | ||
| 256 | Eli Willits | SS | WSH | 18 | RK | 2029 | 62 |
| 257 | Wilyer Abreu | OF | BOS | 26 | MLB | ||
| 258 | Colson Montgomery | SS | CWS | 24 | MLB | ||
| 259 | Travis Sykora | SP | WSH | 21 | AA | 2027 | 63 |
| 260 | Owen Caissie | OF | MIA | 23 | MLB | - | 64 |
| 261 | Kris Bubic | SP | KC | 28 | MLB | ||
| 262 | Trevor Rogers | SP | BAL | 28 | MLB | ||
| 263 | Jeff Hoffman | RP | TOR | 33 | MLB | ||
| 264 | Bryan Reynolds | OF | PIT | 31 | MLB | ||
| 265 | Luis Castillo | SP | SEA | 33 | MLB | ||
| 266 | Colton Cowser | OF | BAL | 26 | MLB | ||
| 267 | Seth Hernandez | SP | PIT | 19 | RK | 2029 | 65 |
| 268 | Colt Keith | 2B, 3B | DET | 24 | MLB | ||
| 269 | Moises Ballesteros | C | CHC | 22 | MLB | - | 66 |
| 270 | Jhostynxon Garcia | OF | PIT | 23 | MLB | - | 67 |
| 271 | Luis Perales | SP | WSH | 22 | AAA | 2026 | 68 |
| 272 | Aaron Nola | SP | PHI | 32 | MLB | ||
| 273 | Charlie Condon | 1B, 3B, OF | COL | 22 | AA | 2026 | 69 |
| 274 | Matt Wallner | OF | MIN | 28 | MLB | ||
| 275 | Xander Bogaerts | SS | SD | 33 | MLB | ||
| 276 | Triston Casas | 1B | BOS | 26 | MLB | ||
| 277 | Aiva Arquette | SS | MIA | 22 | A+ | 2027 | 70 |
| 278 | Hurston Waldrep | SP | ATL | 24 | MLB | ||
| 279 | Sal Frelick | OF | MIL | 25 | MLB | ||
| 280 | Jorge Polanco | 2B | NYM | 32 | MLB | ||
| 281 | Ryan Helsley | RP | BAL | 31 | MLB | ||
| 282 | Carlos Correa | SS, 3B | HOU | 31 | MLB | ||
| 283 | Logan O’Hoppe | C | LAA | 26 | MLB | ||
| 284 | Zac Gallen | SP | FA | 30 | MLB | ||
| 285 | Otto Lopez | 2B, SS | MIA | 27 | MLB | ||
| 286 | Gage Jump | SP | ATH | 22 | AA | 2026 | 71 |
| 287 | Trent Grisham | OF | NYY | 29 | MLB | ||
| 288 | Salvador Perez | C, 1B | KC | 35 | MLB | ||
| 289 | David Bednar | RP | NYY | 31 | MLB | ||
| 290 | Jonny Farmelo | OF | SEA | 21 | A+ | 2027 | 72 |
| 291 | Xavier Edwards | 2B, SS | MIA | 26 | MLB | ||
| 292 | Dalton Rushing | C | LAD | 25 | MLB | ||
| 293 | Joe Musgrove | SP | SD | 33 | MLB | ||
| 294 | Luis Gil | SP | NYY | 27 | MLB | ||
| 295 | Alec Bohm | 3B | PHI | 29 | MLB | ||
| 296 | Daulton Varsho | OF | TOR | 29 | MLB | ||
| 297 | Andrew Abbott | SP | CIN | 26 | MLB | ||
| 298 | Evan Carter | OF | TEX | 23 | MLB | ||
| 299 | Anthony Santander | OF | TOR | 31 | MLB | ||
| 300 | Kazuma Okamoto | 3B | TOR | 29 | MLB | 2026 | 73 |
| 301 | Justin Crawford | OF | PHI | 22 | AAA | 2026 | 74 |
| 302 | Daylen Lile | OF | WSH | 22 | MLB | ||
| 303 | Coby Mayo | 1B | BAL | 24 | MLB | ||
| 304 | Franklin Arias | SS | BOS | 20 | A+ | 2027 | 75 |
| 305 | Spencer Jones | OF | NYY | 24 | AAA | 2026 | 76 |
| 306 | Kodai Senga | SP | NYM | 33 | MLB | ||
| 307 | Josh Lowe | OF | TB | 28 | MLB | ||
| 308 | Gabriel Moreno | C | AZ | 26 | MLB | ||
| 309 | Luis García Jr. | 2B | WSH | 25 | MLB | ||
| 310 | Ethan Holliday | SS | COL | 19 | A- | 2028 | 77 |
| 311 | Matthew Boyd | SP | CHC | 35 | MLB | ||
| 312 | Carson Williams | SS | TB | 22 | MLB | - | 78 |
| 313 | Adolis García | OF | PHI | 33 | MLB | ||
| 314 | Ryne Nelson | SP, RP | AZ | 28 | MLB | ||
| 315 | Emil Morales | SS | LAD | 19 | A- | 2028 | 79 |
| 316 | Steele Hall | SS | CIN | 18 | RK | 2029 | 80 |
| 317 | Merrill Kelly | SP | AZ | 37 | MLB | ||
| 318 | Daniel Palencia | RP | CHC | 26 | MLB | ||
| 319 | Bryson Stott | 2B | PHI | 28 | MLB | ||
| 320 | Cooper Pratt | SS | MIL | 21 | AA | 2026 | 81 |
| 321 | Brayan Bello | SP | BOS | 26 | MLB | ||
| 322 | Caleb Durbin | 3B | MIL | 26 | MLB | ||
| 323 | Jacob Reimer | SS | NYM | 22 | AA | 2026 | 82 |
| 324 | C.J. Kayfus | OF | CLE | 24 | MLB | - | 83 |
| 325 | Jack Leiter | SP | TEX | 25 | MLB | ||
| 326 | Trevor Megill | RP | MIL | 32 | MLB | ||
| 327 | Max Muncy | 3B | LAD | 35 | MLB | ||
| 328 | Jackson Jobe | SP | DET | 23 | MLB | ||
| 329 | Kyson Witherspoon | SP | BOS | 21 | RK | 2027 | 84 |
| 330 | Raisel Iglesias | RP | ATL | 36 | MLB | ||
| 331 | Nate George | OF | BAL | 19 | A+ | 2028 | 85 |
| 332 | Logan Henderson | SP | MIL | 24 | MLB | - | 86 |
| 333 | Aroldis Chapman | RP | BOS | 38 | MLB | ||
| 334 | AJ Smith-Shawver | SP | ATL | 23 | MLB | ||
| 335 | Abner Uribe | RP | MIL | 25 | MLB | ||
| 336 | Ryan Clifford | 1B, OF | NYM | 22 | AAA | 2026 | 87 |
| 337 | Carlos Estévez | RP | KC | 33 | MLB | ||
| 338 | Jurickson Profar | OF | ATL | 33 | MLB | ||
| 339 | Theo Gillen | SS | TB | 20 | A- | 2027 | 88 |
| 340 | Tommy Edman | 2B, OF | LAD | 30 | MLB | ||
| 341 | Ha-Seong Kim | SS | ATL | 30 | MLB | ||
| 342 | Pete Fairbanks | RP | MIA | 32 | MLB | ||
| 343 | Quinn Priester | SP, RP | MIL | 25 | MLB | ||
| 344 | Austin Wells | C | NYY | 26 | MLB | ||
| 345 | Casey Mize | SP | DET | 28 | MLB | ||
| 346 | George Lombard Jr. | SS | NYY | 20 | AA | 2027 | 89 |
| 347 | Josh Jung | 3B | TEX | 28 | MLB | ||
| 348 | Marcus Semien | 2B | NYM | 35 | MLB | ||
| 349 | Arjun Nimmala | SS | TOR | 20 | A+ | 2027 | 90 |
| 350 | Jamie Arnold | SP | ATH | 22 | RK | 2027 | 91 |
| 351 | Reynaldo López | SP | ATL | 32 | MLB | ||
| 352 | Esmerlyn Valdez | 1B, OF | PIT | 22 | AA | 2026 | 92 |
| 353 | Brandon Pfaadt | SP | AZ | 27 | MLB | - | 93 |
| 354 | Grant Taylor | RP | CWS | 23 | MLB | - | 94 |
| 355 | Troy Melton | SP | DET | 25 | MLB | - | 95 |
| 356 | Spencer Steer | 1B | CIN | 28 | MLB | ||
| 357 | Taj Bradley | SP | MIN | 25 | MLB | ||
| 358 | Ralphy Velazquez | 1B | CLE | 20 | AA | 2027 | 96 |
| 359 | Kumar Rocker | SP | TEX | 26 | MLB | ||
| 360 | Andrew Vaughn | 1B | MIL | 27 | MLB | ||
| 361 | Bo Davidson | OF | SF | 23 | AA | 2027 | 97 |
| 362 | Marcell Ozuna | UT | FA | 35 | MLB | ||
| 363 | Reese Olson | SP | DET | 26 | MLB | ||
| 364 | Luis Morales | SP | ATH | 23 | MLB | - | 98 |
| 365 | Lars Nootbaar | OF | STL | 28 | MLB | ||
| 366 | Christian Walker | 1B | HOU | 34 | MLB | ||
| 367 | Griffin Jax | RP | TB | 31 | MLB | ||
| 368 | Jonathon Long | 1B | CHC | 24 | AAA | 2026 | 99 |
| 369 | Giancarlo Stanton | OF | NYY | 36 | MLB | ||
| 370 | Noah Cameron | SP | KC | 26 | MLB | ||
| 371 | Jung Hoo Lee | OF | SF | 27 | MLB | ||
| 372 | Brendan Donovan | 2B | STL | 29 | MLB | ||
| 373 | Ricky Tiedemann | SP | TOR | 23 | AAA | 2026 | 100 |
| 374 | José Soriano | SP | LAA | 27 | MLB | ||
| 375 | Carlos Lagrange | SP | NYY | 22 | AA | 2028 | 101 |
| 376 | Kenley Jansen | RP | DET | 38 | MLB | ||
| 377 | A.J. Ewing | 2B, OF | NYM | 21 | AA | 2027 | 102 |
| 378 | TJ Friedl | OF | CIN | 30 | MLB | ||
| 379 | Ryan Weathers | SP | NYY | 26 | MLB | ||
| 380 | Jordan Beck | OF | COL | 24 | MLB | ||
| 381 | Cam Caminiti | SP | ATL | 19 | A- | 2028 | 103 |
| 382 | Jameson Taillon | SP | CHC | 34 | MLB | ||
| 383 | Parker Meadows | OF | DET | 26 | MLB | ||
| 384 | Aroon Escobar | 2B, 3B | PHI | 21 | AA | 2027 | 104 |
| 385 | Jhonny Level | SS | SF | 18 | A- | 2028 | 105 |
| 386 | Will Warren | SP | NYY | 26 | MLB | ||
| 387 | Clay Holmes | SP | NYM | 32 | MLB | ||
| 388 | Tyson Lewis | SS | CIN | 20 | A- | 2028 | 106 |
| 389 | Nick Castellanos | OF | PHI | 34 | MLB | ||
| 390 | Hagen Smith | SP | CWS | 22 | AA | 2026 | 107 |
| 391 | Jorge Soler | OF | LAA | 34 | MLB | ||
| 392 | Emilio Pagan | RP | CIN | 34 | MLB | ||
| 393 | Tyler O’Neill | OF | BAL | 30 | MLB | ||
| 394 | Ramón Laureano | OF | SD | 31 | MLB | ||
| 395 | Gage Wood | SP | PHI | 22 | A- | 2027 | 108 |
| 396 | Mickey Moniak | OF | COL | 27 | MLB | ||
| 397 | Héctor Rodríguez | OF | CIN | 21 | AAA | 2027 | 109 |
| 398 | Juneiker Caceres | OF | CLE | 18 | A- | 2029 | 110 |
| 399 | J.T. Realmuto | C | FA | 35 | MLB | ||
| 400 | Max Meyer | SP | MIA | 27 | MLB | ||
| 401 | Jacob Melton | OF | TB | 25 | MLB | - | 111 |
| 402 | Reid Detmers | RP | LAA | 26 | MLB | ||
| 403 | Gavie Fien | SS | TEX | 19 | A- | 2029 | 112 |
| 404 | Ethan Conrad | OF | CHC | 21 | RK | 2027 | 113 |
| 405 | Zach McKinstry | 3B, SS, OF | DET | 30 | MLB | ||
| 406 | Juan Sanchez | 3B | TOR | 18 | DSL | 2029 | 114 |
| 407 | Jake Burger | 1B | TEX | 29 | MLB | ||
| 408 | Kyle Finnegan | RP | DET | 34 | MLB | ||
| 409 | Jesús Sánchez | OF | HOU | 28 | MLB | ||
| 410 | Demetrio Crisantes | 2B, 3B | AZ | 21 | A+ | 2027 | 115 |
| 411 | Esteban Mejia | SP | BAL | 19 | A- | 2028 | 116 |
| 412 | Sean Manaea | SP | NYM | 34 | MLB | ||
| 413 | Rhys Hoskins | 1B | FA | 33 | MLB | ||
| 414 | Cade Cavalli | SP | WSH | 27 | MLB | ||
| 415 | Slade Caldwell | OF | AZ | 19 | A+ | 2027 | 117 |
| 416 | Lenyn Sosa | 1B, 2B | CWS | 26 | MLB | ||
| 417 | Robert Suarez | RP | ATL | 35 | MLB | ||
| 418 | Angel Genao | SS | CLE | 21 | AA | 2026 | 118 |
| 419 | Dillon Dingler | C | DET | 27 | MLB | ||
| 420 | Felnin Celesten | SS | SEA | 20 | A+ | 2027 | 119 |
| 421 | Eduardo Tait | C | MIN | 19 | A+ | 2028 | 120 |
| 422 | Nolan Schanuel | 1B | LAA | 24 | MLB | ||
| 423 | Caden Scarborough | SP | TEX | 20 | A+ | 2027 | 121 |
| 424 | Justin Wrobleski | SP | LAD | 25 | MLB | ||
| 425 | Elmer Rodriguez | SP | NYY | 22 | AAA | 2026 | 122 |
| 426 | Seth Lugo | SP | KC | 36 | MLB | ||
| 427 | Ryan Mountcastle | 1B | BAL | 29 | MLB | ||
| 428 | Chad Patrick | SP | MIL | 27 | MLB | ||
| 429 | Spencer Horwitz | 1B | PIT | 28 | MLB | ||
| 430 | Kayson Cunningham | SS | AZ | 19 | A- | 2029 | 123 |
| 431 | Chase Meidroth | 2B, SS | CWS | 24 | MLB | ||
| 432 | Andrew Fischer | 1B, 3B | MIL | 21 | A+ | 2027 | 124 |
| 433 | Colby Thomas | OF | ATH | 25 | MLB | - | 125 |
| 434 | Aidan Smith | OF | TB | 21 | A+ | 2027 | 126 |
| 435 | Joey Ortiz | SS | MIL | 27 | MLB | ||
| 436 | Noah Schultz | SP | CWS | 22 | AAA | 2027 | 127 |
| 437 | Luis Arraez | 1B | FA | 28 | MLB | ||
| 438 | Ronny Mauricio | 3B | NYM | 24 | MLB | ||
| 439 | Bailey Ober | SP | MIN | 30 | MLB | ||
| 440 | Jack Perkins | SP | ATH | 26 | MLB | - | 128 |
| 441 | Ryan O’Hearn | 1B, OF | PIT | 32 | MLB | ||
| 442 | Shane Smith | SP | PIT | 25 | MLB | ||
| 443 | Brock Wilken | 3B | MIL | 23 | AA | 2026 | 129 |
| 444 | Cody Ponce | SP, RP | TOR | 31 | MLB | ||
| 445 | Brandon Sproat | SP | NYM | 25 | MLB | - | 130 |
| 446 | Josh Bell | 1B | MIN | 33 | MLB | ||
| 447 | Brooks Lee | 2B, 3B, SS | MIN | 25 | MLB | ||
| 448 | Alejandro Rosario | SP | TEX | 24 | A+ | 2027 | 131 |
| 449 | Rhett Lowder | SP | CIN | 24 | AAA | - | 132 |
| 450 | Andres Gimenez | 2B | TOR | 27 | MLB | ||
| 451 | Miguel Vargas | 1B, 3B | CWS | 26 | MLB | ||
| 452 | Bo Naylor | C | CLE | 26 | MLB | ||
| 453 | Elian Peña | 2B, SS | NYM | 18 | DSL | 2029 | 133 |
| 454 | Christian Oppor | SP | CWS | 21 | A+ | - | 134 |
| 455 | JR Ritchie | SP | ATL | 22 | AAA | 2026 | 135 |
| 456 | José Caballero | 2B, 3B, SS, OF | NYY | 29 | MLB | ||
| 457 | Tanner Scott | RP | LAD | 31 | MLB | ||
| 458 | Harry Ford | C | WSH | 23 | MLB | - | 136 |
| 459 | David Hagaman | SP | AZ | 22 | A+ | - | 137 |
| 460 | Parker Messick | SP | CLE | 25 | MLB | - | 138 |
| 461 | Ian Seymour | SP | TB | 27 | MLB | ||
| 462 | Harrison Bader | OF | FA | 31 | MLB | ||
| 463 | Cole Young | 2B | SEA | 22 | MLB | ||
| 464 | Austin Hays | OF | FA | 30 | MLB | ||
| 465 | Alex Freeland | SS | LAD | 24 | MLB | - | 139 |
| 466 | Cam Collier | 1B | CIN | 21 | AA | 2027 | 140 |
| 467 | Ike Irish | C | BAL | 22 | A- | 2028 | 141 |
| 468 | Slade Cecconi | SP | CLE | 26 | MLB | ||
| 469 | Brady House | 3B | WSH | 22 | MLB | ||
| 470 | Josh Adamczewski | 2B | MIL | 20 | A+ | 2028 | 142 |
| 471 | Trey Gibson | SP | BAL | 23 | AAA | 2026 | 143 |
| 472 | Xavier Isaac | 1B | TB | 22 | AA | 2027 | 144 |
| 473 | Dauri Fernandez | 3B | CLE | 19 | A- | 2029 | 145 |
| 474 | Joey Cantillo | SP | CLE | 26 | MLB | ||
| 475 | Kevin Alcantara | OF | CHC | 23 | AAA | - | 146 |
| 476 | Callan Moss | 1B | PIT | 22 | A+ | 2028 | 148 |
| 477 | Lucas Giolito | SP | FA | 31 | MLB | ||
| 478 | Luke Dickerson | SS | WSH | 20 | A- | 2028 | 148 |
| 479 | Leonardo Bernal | C | STL | 22 | AA | 2027 | 149 |
| 480 | Ernie Clement | 2B, 3B, SS | TOR | 30 | MLB | ||
| 481 | River Ryan | SP | LAD | 27 | MLB | - | 150 |
| 482 | Brady Singer | SP | CIN | 29 | MLB | ||
| 483 | Tyler Bremner | SP | LAA | 21 | RK | 2028 | 151 |
| 484 | Kruz Schoolcraft | SP | SD | 18 | A- | 2029 | 152 |
| 485 | Kendall George | OF | LAD | 21 | A+ | 2028 | 153 |
| 486 | Kemp Alderman | OF | MIA | 23 | AAA | 2027 | 154 |
| 487 | Christian Scott | SP | NYM | 26 | AAA | - | 155 |
| 488 | Tommy Troy | 2B | AZ | 24 | AAA | 2026 | 156 |
| 489 | Seaver King | SS | WSH | 22 | AA | 2027 | 157 |
| 490 | Jace LaViolette | OF | CLE | 22 | RK | 2027 | 158 |
| 491 | Bryce Cunningham | SP | NYY | 23 | A+ | 2027 | 159 |
| 492 | Brandon Clarke | SP | STL | 22 | A+ | 2027 | 160 |
| 493 | Ryan Johnson | SP | LAA | 23 | A+ | - | 161 |
| 494 | Daniel Espino | SP | CLE | 25 | AAA | 2026 | 162 |
| 495 | Luis De Leon | SP | BAL | 22 | AA | 2027 | 163 |
| 496 | Brad Keller | RP | PHI | 30 | MLB | ||
| 497 | Alejandro Osuna | OF | TEX | 23 | MLB | ||
| 498 | Braxton Ashcraft | SP, RP | PIT | 26 | MLB | ||
| 499 | Mike Burrows | SP | HOU | 26 | MLB | ||
| 500 | Victor Robles | OF | SEA | 28 | MLB | ||
| 501 | Tony Blanco Jr. | 1B | PIT | 20 | A- | 2028 | 164 |
Just Missed: Denzer Guzman, Christian Encarnacion-Strand, Max Anderson, Brice Matthews, Denzel Clarke, Jordan Walker, Félix Bautista, Tyler Mahle, Dennis Santana, Isaac Collins, Cedric Mullins, Riley O’Brien, Cristian Javier, Adrian Morejon, Joe Mack and Braylon Payne
All ages are as of Opening Day — March 25, 2026 —
Braden Smith leads 2nd-half charge in No. 5 Purdue's 79-72 comeback victory over Iowa
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) — Braden Smith scored all 16 of his points in the second half and tied the Big Ten record for assists in conference play, and No. 5 Purdue overcame a nine-point to beat Iowa 79-72 on Wednesday night.
Trey Kaufman-Renn added 12 points, Fletcher Loyer had 11 and Oscar Cluff 10 to help the Boilermakers (16-1, 6-0 Big Ten) win their eighth straight game. They have won their first six conference games for only the fifth time since 1940.
Smith finished the game with 478 assists in league games — the same number former Michigan State player Cassius Winston had.
Bennett Stirtz had 19 points to lead Iowa (12-5, 2-4). Kael Combs added 16 points as the Hawkeyes lost their third in a row overall, fell to 0-4 against ranked teams this season and extended their losing streak against top-10 opponents to 10 since 2021-22.
NO. 13 ILLINOIS 79, NORTHWESTERN 68
EVANSTON, Ill.(AP) — Keaton Wagler scored 20 of his 22 points in the second half, and Illinois beat Northwestern for their season-high sixth consecutive victory.
Tomislav Ivisic added 21 points and seven rebounds as Illinois (14-3, 5-1 Big Ten) won at Northwestern for the first time since Jan. 29, 2022. The Illini had dropped their last three games in Evanston.
Jayden Reid led Northwestern with a career-high 28 points, including 20 in the second half. Nick Martinelli had 20 points.
STANFORD 95, NO. 14 NORTH CAROLINA 90
STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — Freshman Ebuka Okorie had 36 points and nine assists and Stanford rallied from 12 points down in the second half to beat North Carolina.
Okorie outdueled Tar Heels freshman star Caleb Wilson and helped the Cardinal (14-4, 3-2 ACC) knock off the Tar Heels (14-3, 2-2) for the second straight season as conference opponents. North Carolina had won all 13 meetings between the schools before coach Kyle Smith took over last season in Stanford’s first year in the ACC.
Jeremy Dent-Smith hit a go-ahead 3-pointer with 1:04 to play for his sixth long ball of the night to make it 88-87. After Wilson turned it over at the other end, Ryan Agarwal hit another 3 to but the Cardinal up by four points with 32 seconds to play.
The Cardinal held on from there for their second win over a ranked opponent this month after beating No. 16 Louisville at home on Jan. 2. That matches the most wins against ranked wins in a season for Stanford since the Cardinal had five in 2013-14 in the last season when they made the NCAA Tournament.
Dent-Smith and Agarwal each finished with 20 points as Stanford won despite playing without second-leading scorer Chisom Okpara, who is out with a lower-body injury.
Wilson and Henri Veesaar each scored 26 points for North Carolina.
NO. 15 TEXAS TECH 88, UTAH 74
LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) — JT Toppin had 31 points and 13 rebounds for his sixth consecutive double-double and Christian Anderson had his own with 26 points and 10 assists as Texas Tech beat Utah.
It was Toppin’s 11th double-double this season, his 30th in 49 games over two seasons with Tech since transferring from New Mexico, and his 42nd overall. The 6-foot-9 junior forward also had seven assists and five blocked shots while making a career-high three 3-pointers.
Donovan Atwell added 12 points on four 3-pointers for the Red Raiders (13-4, 3-1 Big 12), who shot 51.4% overall from the field (36 of 70) while improving to 9-0 at home this season. Anderson had six of their 13 made 3-pointers.
Keanu Dawes and Don McHenry each had 18 points, and Terrence Brown 17 for Utah (8-9, 0-4). The Utes have lost 11 consecutive true road games.
NO. 17 ARKANSAS 108, SOUTH CAROLINA 74
FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. (AP) — Darius Acuff Jr. had 18 points and 13 assists as Arkansas routed South Carolina.
Meleek Thomas led six Razorbacks in double figures with 21 points off the bench. Reserve forward Malique Ewin scored 18, Trevon Brazile had 13 and D.J. Wagner added 12.
Nick Pringle, who spent last season at South Carolina, set a season high with 15 points and grabbed seven rebounds.
Acuff, a freshman, posted his third double-double and set a career best for assists. He’s scored in double figures in every game for Arkansas (13-4, 3-1 Southeastern Conference) this season.
Meechie Johnson paced the Gamecocks (10-7, 1-3) with 29 points.
MISSISSIPPI 97, NO. 21 GEORGIA 95, OT
ATHENS, Ga. (AP) — Patton Pinkins sank a follow-up shot with 1 second remaining in overtime and Mississippi beat Georgia despite Jeremiah Wilkinson’s season-high 32 points for the Bulldogs.
Marcus “Smurf” Millender made one of two free throws for Georgia (14-3, 2-2 Southeastern Conference) with 10.2 seconds remaining in overtime to tie the game at 95.
Following a miss by AJ Storr, who led Ole Miss (10-7, 2-2) with 27 points, Pinkins grabbed the rebound and sank the winning shot to finish with 18 points.
Kanon Catchings scored 17 points for Georgia, including a 3-pointer for a 94-91 lead.
Senators 8 NY Rangers 4: Senators Put Up First Eight-Goal Performance Of Season
After scoring two goals or fewer in each of their previous four games, the Senators’ offence finally erupted on Wednesday night. Brady Tkachuk had a four-point night and scored his 200th career goal as the Senators defeated the New York Rangers 8–4 at Madison Square Garden.
The win was Ottawa’s second in as many nights and marked the first time all season the Senators have hit the eight-goal mark in a game. Ridly Greig chipped in with three assists, and Leevi Meriläinen made 18 saves in his ninth straight start.
It looked like it was going to be another night for the 23-year-old goaltender to improve his statistics. However, with Ottawa nursing a 6–1 lead, the Rangers scored three times in the third period, and suddenly, allowing four goals on 22 shots didn’t look quite so flattering.
The Senators came out hard, grabbing a 4–0 lead after 20 minutes on goals from Drake Batherson, Nick Jensen, Brady Tkachuk, and Dylan Cozens. Rangers fans responded by booing their club off the ice at intermission. The home side then gave up two more goals in the second period to make it 6–0, thanks to tallies from Jake Sanderson and Thomas Chabot. That ended the night for Rangers veteran goaltender Jonathan Quick, who allowed six goals on 17 shots.
Gabe Perreault scored twice, once late in the second period and again early in the third, to cut Ottawa’s lead to four. David Perron made it 7–2, scoring from a sharp angle. Noah Laba and Alexis Lafrenière got the Rangers to within three before Tim Stützle put it away with an empty-net goal. The goal was Stützle’s 20th of the season, marking the fourth time in the last five seasons he has reached that milestone.
The Rangers continue to struggle at home. The loss was their 17th in 22 games at Madison Square Garden, dropping their home record to 5-13-4 and leaving them in last place in the Eastern Conference.
The Senators still have a long way to go to climb back into playoff relevance in the East. They stand five points (and six teams) behind the second wild card spot. They'll look to make it three straight wins when they host the Montreal Canadiens (and a lot of their fan base) on Saturday at 7:00 pm, then they'll play in Detroit against the Red Wings on Sunday at 5:00 p.m.
Those will be big divisional games, but based on the position the Senators have put themselves in, they're all big games now.
Steve Warne
The Hockey News - Ottawa
This story is from The Hockey News Ottawa. You can visit the site here or click on one of their latest articles below:
Former Senators Head Coach Comes Out Of Retirement To Take Over Bench In Columbus
Ottawa Senators Officially Sign James Reimer To One-Way NHL Contract
Senators Handled Social Media Controversy The Best Way They Could
Why The Senators' Biggest Rival Right Now Might Be Social Media
Staios Condemns 'Fabricated And False Stories' Circulating On Social Media
Nets drop fifth straight game after 116-113 loss to Pelicans
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Trey Murphy III scored 34 points, Saddiq Bey made a tying 3-pointer, converted an offensive rebound into a dunk and hit two free throws in the final 1:04, and the New Orleans Pelicans edged the Brooklyn Nets 116-113 on Wednesday night.
Zion Williamson had 25 points for New Orleans, which won for just the second time in 13 games. Yves Missi contributed 12 points and 12 rebounds, nine on the offensive end to help the Pelicans finish with 33 second-chance points.
Egor Demin scored 17 points and hit five 3s, the last of them giving the Nets a 110-107 lead with 1:28 to go. Bey responded with his 3 to tie it as the shot clock was about to expire. His dunk came after he grabbed a long rebound on Murphy’s missed deep 3, and his free throws came with 5 seconds left after he was fouled intentionally.
Bey finished with 12 points.
Michael Porter Jr., who scored 20 points for the Nets, gained possession in the final seconds after a scramble for a loose ball near midcourt and let go a desperation heave that missed as the horn sounded.
Drake Powell had 16 points while Day’Ron Sharpe added 15 points and nine rebounds for Brooklyn, which lost for the eighth time in nine games.
Demin hit four of his first five 3-point shots and the Nets led by 12 early.
New Orleans chipped away and trailed just 55-54 after Williamson’s layup closed out the scoring in the first half. The game was tied at 87 through three quarters.
The Pelicans entered with an NBA-worst opponent shooting percentage of 50.5 in the fourth quarter. The Nets scored the first seven points of the final period on their first three shots, prompting New Orleans coach James Borrego to call a timeout.
New Orleans responded soon after with an 15-4 run, during which Murphy scored nine points and assisted on Karlo Matkovic’s dunk, setting up the tight finish.
Up next
Nets: Host the Chicago Bulls on Friday.
Pelicans: Visit the Indiana Pacers on Friday.
No. 3 UCLA beats Minnesota 76-58 for 10th straight win
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Kiki Rice had 25 points on 8-for-9 shooting and Lauren Betts posted her third straight double-double, leading No. 3 UCLA past Minnesota 76-58 on Wednesday night.
Betts staved off early foul trouble to finish with 17 points and 10 rebounds as the Bruins (16-1, 6-0) stayed unbeaten in Big Ten play and pushed their winning streak to 10 straight games. Their only loss was to No. 4 Texas in Las Vegas on Nov. 26.
Rice hit all three of her 3-point attempts to make the Gophers pay for packing the paint, as the Bruins shot 60% from the floor (27 for 45) against the top defensive team in the nation. UCLA had by far the highest final score in a regulation game this season against Minnesota, which was allowing an average of 51.8 points per game entering the night.
The Gophers lost 100-99 in double overtime to then-No. 7 Maryland on Dec. 7. They beat then-No. 21 USC 63-62 on Sunday for the program’s first win over a ranked team since 2019.
Amaya Battle scored 16 points and Mara Braun added 15 points for the Gophers (12-5, 3-3), who forced 17 turnovers but managed only three fast-break points.
NO. 10 TCU, WEST VIRGINIA
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) — Marta Suarez hit a 3-pointer as time expired to lift TCU to a win over West Virginia.
Suarez, who had missed her first five tries from beyond the arc, took an inbounds pass from Donovyn Hunter, set her feet and sank the winner to cap off an otherwise sloppy effort from the Horned Frogs (17-1, 5-1 Big 12).
Olivia Miles led TCU with 14 points and Suarez finished with 11 points and nine rebounds.
Jordan Harrison led West Virginia (14-4, 4-2) with 19 points.
NO. 14 OHIO STATE 108, PENN STATE 84
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Jaloni Cambridge scored 33 points, Chance Gray had 23 points and seven 3-pointers, and Ohio State made a season-high 17 3-pointers in a victory over Penn State for its fifth straight victory.
Elsa Lemmilä added 21 points for Ohio State (16-2, 6-1 Big Ten). Cambridge, the Big Ten player of the week, also had four 3-pointers.
Moriah Murray scored 25 points, Gracie Merkle had 21 points and 11 rebounds, and Kiyomi McMiller added 20 points for Penn State (7-11, 0-7), which has lost seven straight games. Tea Cleante came off the bench to score 10 points.
NO. 18 BAYLOR 61, UTAH 45
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Taliah Scott scored 14 points to lead Baylor to a victory over Utah.
Scott was 5-of-21 shooting and 3 of 9 from behind the arc for the Bears (16-3, 5-1 Big 12) Darianna Littlepage-Buggs had 11 points and nine rebounds. Jana Van Gytenbeek had 10 points and six assists. Kiersten Johnson added nine rebounds.
Chyra Evans posted a 14-point, 11-rebound double-double for the Utes (13-5, 4-2), while Lani White had 14 points and eight rebounds.
COLORADO 68, NO. 19 IOWA STATE 62
BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — Desiree Wooten scored a season-high 24 points, and Jade Masogayo added 15 as Colorado held off Iowa State.
Zyanna Walker added 10 for the Buffaloes (11-6, 3-3 Big 12). Anaelle Dutat had 12 rebounds to go with nine points. It was the first time Colorado has beaten Iowa State since rejoining the Big 12.
Colorado took it first lead with 1:55 left to play in the third quarter off a 6-0 run, 40-37. Iowa State tied it 42-all heading into the final frame, where another 6-0 run for the Buffaloes set them up with their biggest lead of the night, 48-42, forcing the Cyclones to call a timeout.
Iowa State tied the game at 52, but a foul sent Dutat to the line, where she sank both shots. Back-to-back 3-pointers by Tabitha Betson put the Buffs up 60-55. Wooten hit a shot from beyond the arc with 46 seconds left to seal the victory.
Audi Crooks had 17 points and 15 rebounds for Iowa State (14-3, 2-4), which has lost four straight. Sydney Harris added 16 points for the Cyclones, who scored a season-low 62 points. Their previous low was 63, which came earlier this month in their loss to Cincinnati.
Rangers' defensive woes continue in 8-4 loss to Senators
NEW YORK (AP) — Brady Tkachuk scored his 200th regular-season NHL goal and had three assists, and the Ottawa Senators handed the New York Rangers a fifth consecutive loss, beating them 8-4 on Wednesday night.
Tkachuk, a St. Louis native who is set to play for the U.S. at the Milan Cortina Olympics, helped set up Drake Batherson’s goal on the power play 2:18 in and Dylan Cozens’ with 5.7 seconds left in the first period. Adding goals from Nick Jensen and Tkachuk in between, the Senators scored four in a period at Madison Square Garden for the first time in their 33-season franchise history.
Home fans booed their team off the ice at the first intermission after a lackluster 20 minutes, and it did not get much better until long after the outcome had been determined. The Rangers lost for the 17th time in 22 games at the Garden and are now in last place in the Eastern Conference.
Jonathan Quick allowed six goals on 17 shots before getting the mercy pull and relieved by Spencer Martin a little past the midway point of the second. Quick was hardly to blame for New York’s eighth defeat in nine games, with mistakes by teammates in front of him putting the veteran goaltender in all sorts of difficult positions.At the other end of the rink, Leevi Merilainen, making his ninth consecutive start in Linus Ullmark’s absence, had 18 saves and allowed two goals to Gabe Perreault and one apiece to Noah Laba and Alexis Lafrenière.
Jake Sanderson, Thomas Chabot and David Perron also scored and Tim Stutzle had an empty-net goal as the Senators won on back-to-back nights, following up on beating Vancouver at home on Tuesday to snap their losing streak at four.
Up next
Senators: Host the rival Montreal Canadiens on Saturday night.
Rangers: Visit Philadelphia on Saturday.
Amateur stuns pros to win Australian Open’s One Point Slam and A$1m – video
Jordan Smith, a 29-year-old tennis coach from Sydney, has won the inaugural One Point Slam at the Australian Open and its A$1m prize on Wednesday, after upstaging a field that included Jannik Sinner, Carlos Alcaraz, Iga Swiatek and Coco Gauff. It is Tennis Australia, however, which won the jackpot, after the new concept – despite its near three-hour duration, often confusing format and awkward exchanges between players – attracted a full house to Rod Laver Arena during opening week as organisers look at non‑traditional ways to attract fans to Melbourne Park
Continue reading...Canucks, Jets Veterans Should Be On Sabres' Trade Target List
The Buffalo Sabres have 23 days before the NHL’s trade deadline arrives on March 6. And other than goaltending (which has the most depth), the Sabres can make trades to address their two areas of need – at forward, and on ‘D’.
Trading one of Alex Lyon or Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen would clear up the logjam between the pipes, but goalie depth is important, so Sabres GM Jarmo Kekalainen might decide to hold on to his netminding depth.
But Kekalain has to add a strong, experienced and capable defenseman. For instance, would Winnipeg Jets blueliner Luke Schenn be an option? It says here he absolutely should. Schenn is a no-nonsense, physical defenseman who still has stuff left in the tank. There could be other options on ‘D’, but Schenn fits the mold of the type of player Sabres coach Lindy Ruff likes. Oh, and he won’t cost an arm and a leg to trade for.
Meanwhile, up front, there’s also a need Kekalainen should address on the trade market. A veteran winger for Buffalo’s second line would be ideal. And given that Buffalo will have $8.5-million in salary cap space, Kekalainen can and should be able to pluck someone to give his team a different look.
For instance, would Vancouver Canucks winger Jake DeBrusk be a target for the Sabres? DeBrusk does have a full no-trade clause in his contract, but it’s not working out for him in Vancouver, and he looks like a change of scenery will do him good.
Or what about taking a run at another Canuck – winger Kiefer Sherwood? He’s a far less-expensive gamble at $1.5 million, and he’s a UFA at the end of the season, so he could be a pure rental, or you could sign him to an extension.
In any case, we use these examples to show you there’s plenty of talent out there to bid on if you’re Kekalainen. And the boost the Sabres would get from adding one or two of these players would make it worth whatever Buffalo had to give up to get them.
The Sabres are far from a perfect team, and they’ll still have their issues regardless of what happens to them trade-wise. But Kekalainen can send his group of players a message – that message being, “I believe in you, and here’s a gift of a talented player to make the team even better.”
Kekalainen has to act soon, lest he miss out on trades he should’ve been in on. Being proactive is going to get Buffalo the experienced hands they need to make a Stanley Cup playoff push. And if Kekalainen can pull that off, he’s going to get the gratitude of Sabres fans desperate to see this team make it to the post-season.
Evgeni Malkin Ties Former Penguin On NHL's All-Time Goals List
Pittsburgh Penguins forward Evgeni Malkin continued to climb the NHL's all-time goals list on Tuesday night.
His tying goal against the Tampa Bay Lightning was the 524th goal of his career, good for 38th all-time alongside Bryan Trottier, who won back-to-back Stanley Cups with the Penguins in 1991 and 1992.
Malkin's goal was a perfect shot and it came after a lot of hard work in the offensive zone with the goaltender pulled. The goal secured the Penguins a point before they lost 2-1 in a shootout.
GENO IN BEAST MODE 😤 pic.twitter.com/b5RtIUhKzO
— Pittsburgh Penguins (@penguins) January 14, 2026
Malkin's next goal would be his 525th and would put him in a tie with Marian Hossa for 37th on the NHL's all-time goals list. Malkin has two goals in his last four games, so it won't be long until he passes Hossa on this list.
Malkin also has three points in his last four games and will try to help the Penguins break their three-game losing streak on Thursday against the Philadelphia Flyers.
Bookmark THN - Pittsburgh Penguins on your Google News tab to follow the latest Penguins news, roster moves, player features, and more!
Flyers Goalie Exits Sabres Matchup With Injury
The Philadelphia Flyers have announced that goaltender Dan Vladar is out for the remainder of the club's matchup against the Buffalo Sabres due to an injury.
The Flyers also shared that Vladar will be re-evaluated following the team's contest against the Sabres.
Vladar exiting early due to injury against the Sabres is undoubtedly concerning for the Flyers. The 28-year-old netminder has been a notable reason for the Flyers' success so far this season, as he has proven to be an excellent addition to their roster. As a result of this, the Flyers will be hoping that Vladar's injury is not serious.
Vladar has appeared in 27 games so far this season with the Flyers, where he has recorded a 16-7-4 record, a 2.42 goals-against average, and a .907 save percentage. With numbers like these, he has given the Flyers some much-needed stability between the pipes this campaign.
In 132 career NHL games split between the Boston Bruins, Calgary Flames, and Flyers, Vladar has a 65-41-20 record, a 2.88 goals-against average, a .897 save percentage, and four shutouts.
Injury update: Flyers goaltender Dan Vladar will not return to tonight’s #PHIvsBUF game due to injury. He will be re-evaluated after the game.
— Philadelphia Flyers (@NHLFlyers) January 15, 2026