Dodgers crush a trio of home runs in win vs. Reds

Mar 12, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Teoscar Hernandez against the Cincinnati Reds during a spring training game at Camelback Ranch-Glendale. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images | Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

The Dodgers didn’t have to worry about being in an another offensive onslaught in their second matchup of the spring against the Cincinnati Reds, as they struck early and kept their foot on the gas pedal in a 9-5 victory on Thursday.

The Dodgers pounced early against left-hander Nick Lodolo, as Andy Pages rocketed a one-out single in the bottom of the first inning, later scoring on an RBI double from Teoscar Hernández. Freddie Freeman’s ninth hit of the spring drove home Hernández for his ninth RBI of the spring with an opposite field single, and Santiago Espinal continued to torment his old team by smacking a two-run double down the left field line to cap off a four-run first inning. In two games against the Reds this spring, Espinal now has two home runs and eight RBI while boasting a .600 batting average (3-5).

Cole Irvin was given the start for the Dodgers, and although he received an abundance of run support, he struggled mightily with his command, allowing four free passes over two innings of work while tossing 57 pitches (29 for strikes). Irvin walked Rece Hinds with the bases loaded to put Cincinnati on the board, but managed to get two consecutive outs to keep the potential go-ahead run off base.

The Reds tacked on a pair of runs against Myles Caba in the top of the third inning, but Max Muncy got those two runs right back in the bottom half of the inning with a home run to right-center field that left the bat at 106.9 miles per hour.

Teoscar Hernández added to the lead in the bottom of the fifth with his first home run of the spring to increase the Dodger lead to five.

Kyle Hurt struck out the side in a scoreless inning of work, before right-hander Paul Gervase retired all five hitters he faced. Alex Vesia came in for one batter in relief of Gervase, as he struck out Hinds to end the top of the sixth inning.

Although the Dodgers defense failed Tanner Scott in the top of the seventh inning which allowed a pair of runs to score, both runs were unearned and Scott still carries a 0.00 ERA this spring. Kyle Nevin added an insurance run with a home run to left field in the bottom half to bring the Dodger lead back to four.

Both Antoine Kelly and Antonio Knowles combined to record a scoreless eighth inning, leaving a pair of Reds on base. Knowles came back out for the ninth inning, closing out Thursday’s contest with a perfect 10-pitch frame.

UP NEXT

The Dodgers are back on the road to take on the Seattle Mariners at Peoria Stadium on Friday (6:10 p.m. PT, SportsNet LA). Landon Knack makes his fourth start this spring for the Dodgers, while left-hander Kade Anderson gets the nod for Seattle.

McDavid And Oilers Stand Up Physically, But Lose Stinker to Stars

The Edmonton Oilers followed up two solid performances against the Vegas Golden Knights and Colorado Avalanche with a dud. Playing the Dallas Stars on Thursday night, Edmonton allowed a goal in the first few seconds of the game, then allowed six more to lose 7-2 in a feisty affair.

Zach Hyman, "We didn't have the greatest puck play tonight. We gave them a lot of free offense." 

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When it was clear Edmonton didn't have it offensively, and they weren't about to stop the Stars from scoring, the game got physical. There were several dust-ups and altercations. The closest thing to a fight was Connor McDavid, who got into a near-scrap with Justin Hryckowia. 

When asked about McDavid standing up and throwing hands, "He's the last guy who should be doing that, to be honest," said Hyman. He added, "You saw him trying to pull our group back into the fight, Leon as well. We can do a better job as a team to push back... Obviously, when it's like that, you're frustrated.... We just got to be a lot better."

McDavid gets into it physically vs Dallas on Thursday Photo by: 

© Jerome Miron Imagn Images
McDavid gets into it physically vs Dallas on Thursday Photo by:  © Jerome Miron Imagn Images

Knoblauch said McDavid was frustrated, and the Oilers' captain didn't like the slap shot taken at Draisaitl. The Oilers didn't love that McDavid felt the need to step up, and a few players made sure to back him up. Things really got interesting when Josh Samanski made a dangerous trip in a corner battle, and that got things going again.

The officials pulled players from both sides whenever the dust-ups broke out, probably saving the game from getting out of hand.  

The Oilers Were Not Ready To Play

The Oilers weren’t ready to play, a fact reflected in the 10–4 shot advantage Dallas held in the first period. Edmonton’s early plays were riddled with mistakes and led to preventable goals against. The opening 20 minutes were an embarrassment for a team that looked completely unprepared.

Some will point the finger at Tristan Jarry, and it’s understandable given how poor his numbers look. You could even argue they’re atrocious. At the same time, blaming Jarry for the loss alone and the early deficit isn’t a fair assessment of the opening frame either.

The combination of Jarry allowing goals he probably could have stopped and not being ready to go, just like his teammates, is why Dallas took control early, and any thoughts the Oilers might stage a comeback were fleeting. Edmonton leaked scoring chance after scoring chance. 

It started when Miro Heiskanen fired a point shot that ricocheted off the end boards, and Jarry couldn't find it in front before Jamie Benn, stashed it backhand for an early 1-0 lead. The second goal was a great pass by Duchene to Sam Steel. The third goal bounced off the post, then off the back of Jarry and in. 

It was a quick three goals against, and things never really got better outside of a brief moment where the Oilers made it 5-2. That was as close as things got. 

The reality is it was a combination of both. Jarry allowed goals he likely should have stopped and, like the rest of his teammates, didn’t look ready to start the game. That mix is exactly why Dallas seized control early and why any hope of an Oilers comeback quickly faded.

Was This Loss to the Stars A Minor Setback?

As far as the second of a back-to-back against St. Louis, Hyman said they played two good games, but tonight was an off one. He hinted that things would be different on Friday night. 

Jason Strudwick said on the Got Yer’ Back podcast after the game that he doesn’t think the Oilers are trying as hard as they can. “I think they’ve got their governor on,” he said. He admitted that might be an optimistic view, and that it gives what has looked like a mediocre team a lot of credit. Oilers fans are certainly hoping he’s right.

If Edmonton can rebound and beat the Blues, this loss to Dallas might look like a blip in an otherwise solid week. However, if Edmonton loses to St. Louis and fails to show up again, the two games against Vegas and Colorado might be seen as the outliers. 

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Mets’ Jorge Polanco goes deep again as he heats up after slow start

Jorge Polanco #11 of the New York Mets bats during the game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the New York Mets at Clover Park on Tuesday, March 10, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida.
Jorge Polanco of the New York Mets bats during the game between the St. Louis Cardinals and the New York Mets at Clover Park on Tuesday, March 10, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Florida.

Observations from Mets spring training on Thursday:

Power surge

Jorge Polanco blasted his second homer in as many games, giving the Mets their only run in a 3-1 exhibition loss to the Cardinals in Jupiter, Fla.

Polanco has boosted his OPS to 1.300 this spring after a slow start. 

Jorge Polanco hits during the Mets’ 3-1 spring training loss to the Cardinals on March 10, 2026 in Port St. Lucie. MLB Photos via Getty Images

Fumble

Brett Baty misplayed a ball in right field, turning a double into a triple. Baty is learning the position this spring as he increases his versatility following his displacement from third base.

Caught my eye

Tyrone Taylor had a strong throw from left field to nail Victor Scott II attempting to reach third base.

Tyrone Taylor catches a sacrifice fly hit by Andres Chaparro in the fourth inning of the Mets’ spring training win over the Nationals on Clover Field on Feb. 28, 2026. Corey Sipkin for the NY POST

Friday’s schedule

Kodai Senga and Clay Holmes are scheduled to face the Nationals at Clover Park.

Chychrun’s late winner lifts Capitals, snaps Sabres’ 8-game win streak

BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) — Jakob Chychrun scored with 1:33 left to play, Charlie Lindgren made 29 saves, and the Washington Capitals beat Buffalo 2-1 on Thursday night to snap the Sabres’ eight-game win streak.

Chychrun’s goal came when forward Aliaksei Protas passed to the defenseman in the circle and he fired it past Ukko-Pekka Luukkonen for his 23rd goal of the year.

Ryan Leonard also scored for the Capitals, who won for the second time in the past three games.

Sam Carrick scored for the Sabres and Luukkonen made 20 saves.

Carrick’s second goal in three games gave the Sabres a 1-0 lead at 6:02 of the first period after a no-look backhand pass from Beck Malenstyn.

Leonard tied the game at 2:14 of the second period when he fired a shot past Luukkonen while on a two-on-one.

Chychrun won it for the Capitals at 18:27 of the third.

BLUES 3, HURRICANES 1

RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Jimmy Snuggerud scored twice to lead St. Louis to a win over Eastern Conference-leading Carolina.

Snuggerud scored a tying goal in the second period and added a go-ahead score in third for the Blues, who were coming off an overtime loss to the New York Islanders on Tuesday.

Jordan Binnington starred for St. Louis, stopping 31 of the 32 shots he faced. Pavel Buchnevich scored his 15th of the season into an empty net in the final minute and Dylan Holloway assisted on both goals by Snuggerud, who has been on a offensive tear recently as the Blues won for the sixth time in eight games.

Snuggerud had his fourth straight multi-point game and scored in his fourth straight. The 21-year-old forward had a goal and two assists against the Islanders after recording a goal and assist in wins over Anaheim and San Jose. He has 15 goals and 19 assists in 53 games.

Mark Jankowski scored for the Hurricanes, who had their 12-game home points streak halted. Brandon Bussi made 14 saves.

SHARKS 4, BRUINS 2

BOSTON (AP) — Colin Graf scored a short-handed goal and Alex Nedeljkovic stopped 38 shots to help San Jose win and hand the Bruins their first loss in Boston since Christmas.

Tyler Toffoli assisted on Michael Misa’s goal in the first period and was credited with their second when Macklin Celebrini’s shot bounced off Jeremy Swayman’s blocker, off Toffoli and into the net. Graf made it 3-0 at 3:13 of the third period when Alexander Wennberg led him through the neutral zone for the breakaway.

William Eklund gave the Sharks a 4-0 lead with 12 minutes left, batting his own rebound out of the air and past Swayman. Fraser Minten’s goal 10 seconds later spoiled Nedeljkovic’s shutout, and David Pastrnak cut the deficit to 4-2 with Swayman pulled for an extra skater in the final minute.

Swayman stopped 24 shots for Boston, which had won 13 straight at the TD Garden since their last loss on Dec. 23.

LIGHTNING 4, RED WINGS 1

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Jake Guentzel and Gage Goncalves each scored twice, Andrei Vasilevskiy made 23 saves and Tampa Bay beat Detroit.

Tampa Bay won for just the third time in the past nine games since the Olympic break to move within two points of Buffalo for the Atlantic Division lead. Brayden Point and Nikita Kucherov each had two assists.

J.T. Compher scored for the Red Wings, and John Gibson stopped 24 shots. Detroit has just one win the past five games (1-3-1), but remained in the No. 1 wild-card spot in the Eastern Conference standings.

Tampa Bay started the second period on a carryover power play and wasted little time taking advantage of it when Guentzel took a backhand pass from Kucherov and had a lane toward the net. Guentzel got to the middle of the zone and beat Gibson at 49 seconds.

PANTHERS 2, BLUE JACKETS 1, OT

SUNRISE, Fla. (AP) — Sam Reinhart scored 2:20 into overtime to lift Florida over Columbus.

Sam Bennett also scored for the Panthers. His power-play wrist shot 1:28 into the third period sent the game to overtime. Sergei Bobrovsky made 30 saves in the win for the Panthers.

Adam Fantilli scored for the Blue Jackets, and Elvis Merzlikins had 19 saves.

The Blue Jackets dominated the first two periods, outshooting the Panthers 24-10. Florida came back strong in the third period and dominated in overtime.

Reinhart scored his team-leading 29th goal of the season on the power play. Matthew Tkachuk assisted on Reinhart’s goal, giving him three goals and four assists over his last four games.

The Panthers played without Brad Marchand, Anton Lundell and Carter Verhaeghe.

FLAMES 5, DEVILS 4

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — John Beecher scored his first two goals for Calgary, and Mikael Backlund recorded his 600th career NHL point with a third-period goal in the Flames’ 5-4 win over New Jersey.

Former Devils Kevin Bahl and Yegor Sharangovich each also scored for Calgary. Dustin Wolf made 26 saves, and the Flames blocked 21 shots, claiming just their second win in their past eight games.

Luke Hughes had one goal and one assist, and Jack Hughes, Maxim Tsyplakov and Simon Nemec each scored for New Jersey. Jacob Markstrom made 24 saves and had an assist.

Beecher, who was a healthy scratch the past two games, had his first career short-handed goal less than one minute into the second period.

With Calgary up 2-1, he stole the puck from Jack Hughes in the neutral zone then banked his rebound in off Markstrom after the Devils goalie stopped Beecher’s initial shot.

MAPLE LEAFS 6, DUCKS 4

TORONTO (AP) — William Nylander broke a tie on a power play 36 seconds into the third period and Toronto beat Anaheim to end an eight-game losing streak.

The victory was tempered by the loss of captain Auston Matthews on a knee-on-knee hit from Ducks defenseman Radko Gudas with four minutes left in the second period. Matthews stayed down favoring his left leg before being helped to the locker room. Gudas was assessed a major penalty and game misconduct.

Matthews scored earlier to end a 12-game goal drought.

Matias Maccell had a goal and two assists, and John Tavares and Benoit-Olivier Groulx also scored. Matthew Knies had three assists to go along with an empty-net goal, and Nylander added two assists. Joseph Woll made 36 saves.

Cutter Gauthier, Ian Moore, Pavel Mintyukov and Alex Killorn scored for Pacific Division-leading Anaheim. Lukas Dostal stopped 22 shots.

STARS 7, OILERS 2

DALLAS (AP) — Jason Robertson had two goals and two assists to tie a career high in points and Jamie Benn also scored twice as surging Dallas beat Edmonton.

The Stars are 13-0-1 in their last 14 games. The franchise’s only longer point streak is a 15-game run during the 1998-99 season (12 wins, three ties).

Wyatt Johnston had a power-play goal and two assists, and Sam Steel had a goal and an assist. Matt Duchene closed the scoring for Dallas with 1:03 left.

Jake Oettinger stopped 30 shots for his 27th win, third most among NHL goaltenders.

Johnston’s goal was his NHL-best 22nd power-play score, tying Dino Ciccarelli’s franchise-record total for the 1986-87 Minnesota North Stars.

Robertson has 36 goals and Johnston 35, both among the NHL’s top 10. They scored 33 seconds apart early in the second period for a 5-0 lead.

FLYERS 3, WILD 2, SO

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — Travis Konecny scored the lone goal in a shootout to give Philadelphia a victory over Minnesota.

After Flyers goalie Dan Vladar stopped all three Wild attempts, Konecny ended it with a wrister over Jesper Wallstedt’s shoulder.

Emil Andrade and Owen Tippett scored in regulation, and Vladar made 21 saves for the Flyers. They’ve have won six of eight.

Matt Boldy and Kirill Kaprizov scored for Minnesota. Quinn Hughes had two assists, and Wallstedt made 24 saves. The Wild are 3-0-2 in their last five.

Philadelphia outshot Minnesota 10-2 in the first period and scored the first goal when Andrae took a feed from Trevor Zegras in the high slot, skated in and fired a wrister that slipped between Wallstedt’s pads with 1:24 to go in the period.

RANGERS 6, JETS 3

WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP) — Alexis Lafreniere had a goal and an assist to lead New York to a victory over Winnipeg.

Adam Edstrom, Gabe Perreault, Tye Kartye and Adam Fox also scored, and Noah Laba added an empty-net goal for New York, which scored five goals on only 16 shots. Igor Shersterkin stopped 24 shots.

Gabriel Vilardi, Kyle Connor and Isak Rosen scored for Winnipeg. Connor Hellebuyck made 11 saves as the Jets slipped to 3-2 on their eight-game homestand.

The Rangers scored goals 4:11 apart in the third to take a 5-3 lead. Perreault gave New York the edge when he shoveled the puck past Hellebuyck at 6:57. Edstrom beat Hellebuyck from in front at 11:08.

The Rangers led 1-0, 2-1, 3-2 and 4-3. Every time Winnipeg tied the score, New York re-took the lead, taking advantage of getting players in front of the net.

Stats Rundown: 5 numbers to know from the Mavericks’ 120-112 win at the Memphis Grizzlies

MEMPHIS, TN - MARCH 12: Taylor Hendricks #22 of the Memphis Grizzlies plays defense during the game against the Dallas Mavericks on March 12, 2026 at FedExForum in Memphis, Tennessee. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Someone was legally required to win the alleged basketball game between the Dallas Mavericks (22-44) and the Memphis Grizzlies (23-42) at the FedEx Forum on Thursday. Simply by being able to field a team of greater than eight glorified G-Leaguers, the Mavericks were that team, earning a win if only by default, 120-112, in the Home of the Blues.

The Mavericks built a double-digit lead early, which is notable because they came into Thursday’s game having only built a double-digit lead in 22 games this year, the second-worst mark in the league. Dallas tried to give it all back with a lazy third quarter, but beat the Grizzlies for the first time this year in the fourth and final meeting between the two teams.

Khris Middleton was a man on fire in the fourth to bring home the win that snapped the Mavericks’ eight-game losing streak. More on that below, as we’ve got five stats that tell the tale of Thursday’s feel-good(?) win for the Mavs.

3-of-3: Khris Middleton first-quarter 3-point shooting

Khris Middleton came in off the bench with 6:48 left in the first and hit his first 3-pointer of the game from the left corner just two possessions later, extending the Mavs’ lead to 14-9. He stepped back along the left wing for his second of the game two minutes later as part of a little 9-0 Dallas run to make it 20-9. His third came in the final minute of the first quarter from nearly the same spot and put the Mavericks ahead 32-17.

Middleton went 3-of-3 from distance in the first quarter to lead the Mavericks with nine points at the end of one. Dallas led 34-22 with one quarter in the books. Max Christie was the only other Maverick to make a 3-pointer in the first.

Middleton finished with 35 points on 10-of-17 shooting and 8-of-10 shooting from 3-point range in the win at Memphis.

5:58: Grizzlies’ second-quarter stretch without a field goal

The Mavericks held Memphis without a field goal for 5:58 of the second quarter, starting at the 8:28 mark. Already up 10, a 12-2 Dallas run fed the advantage and pushed the lead to 57-37 on Naji Marshall’s driving score with 4:38 remaining in the first half.

At one point, the hapless Grizzlies’ offense missed nine straight field goal attempts in the second. Memphis responded with its first signs of life of the game, a 14-3 run to pull within 61-50 on Taylor Hendricks’ first make of the game, a 3-pointer from near the top of the key with 1:38 left in the half.

The Mavericks led 65-54 at the break.

4: Consecutive double-doubles for Daniel Gafford

Daniel Gafford feasted inside against the smaller Memphis front line, racing to 17 points and eight rebounds in the first half. He finished with 22 and 14 in the win. His free throw with just under nine minutes to play broke his previous season-high mark, which came just five days ago in the Mavericks’ 122-92 loss at the Toronto Raptors.

The win over the Grizzlies was Gafford’s fourth straight double-double, a good sign after injuries and the absence of a certain Slovenian superstar in the lineup have pushed his production into the commode this season. He grabbed his 10th rebound with 9:30 remaining in the third quarter and consistently showed more lift to his game, albeit against a diminutive set of bigs opposite him.

3:56: Mavericks’ scoreless stretch late in the third

Marvin Bagley III drove for a score with 3:58 remaining in the third to put Dallas ahead 84-74, and the Mavericks did not hit another shot from the field for the rest of the quarter. They wouldn’t have scored any points at all were it not for a bail-out foul with Middleton in the air attempting a 3-pointer with two seconds remaining.

Middleton made 2-of-3 at the line for the Mavs’ first points in nearly four minutes to give Dallas a slim 86-84 lead going into the fourth. Memphis outscored the Mavericks 30-21 in the frame, as Dallas went 1-of-8 from deep after halftime.

22: Middleton’s fourth-quarter scoring

Those two free throws were part of Middleton’s personal 11-0 run, as the trade deadline acquisition scored the first nine points of the fourth quarter. He nailed two more 3-pointers from the top of the key to extend the Mavs’ lead to 92-84 with 11:20 to play. Then, he was fouled on another 3-point attempt by Memphis rookie Javon Small the next time down.

His baseline jumper two possessions later gave him 13 straight points for the Mavericks and 24 for the game, singlehandedly pulling Dallas out of a tailspin in the process. His mid-range fadeaway with 8:15 left gave Middleton a new season-high 26 points, and he finished with 35.

When his seventh 3-pointer of the game fell despite a hand in his face from the left corner with two minutes to play, his 19 fourth-quarter points became the most of any Mavs player this year in the final frame. He hit his eighth the next time down for good measure to give him 22 in the fourth and 35 for the game. At 34 years of age, it was the highest scoring quarter of Middleton’s career. He hadn’t had a 30-point game in nearly three years.

He was, as they say, on one as Dallas went home with the 120-112 win.

Lafreniere's goal and assist help Rangers beat the Jets 6-3

WINNIPEG, Manitoba (AP) — Alexis Lafreniere had a goal and an assist to lead the New York Rangers to a 6-3 victory over the Winnipeg Jets on Thursday night.

Adam Edstrom, Gabe Perreault, Tye Kartye and Adam Fox also scored, and Noah Laba added an empty-net goal for New York, which scored five goals on only 16 shots. Igor Shersterkin stopped 24 shots.

Gabriel Vilardi, Kyle Connor and Isak Rosen scored for Winnipeg. Connor Hellebuyck made 11 saves as the Jets slipped to 3-2 on their eight-game homestand.

The Rangers scored goals 4:11 apart in the third to take a 5-3 lead. Perreault gave New York the edge when he shoveled the puck past Hellebuyck at 6:57. Edstrom beat Hellebuyck from in front at 11:08.

The Rangers led 1-0, 2-1, 3-2 and 4-3. Every time Winnipeg tied the score, New York re-took the lead, taking advantage of getting players in front of the net.

The Rangers opened the scoring 68 seconds into the game. Only nine seconds after Winnipeg’s Gabe Vilardi took a hooking penalty, Fox scored on a shot from the blue line.

Rosen tied it at 1 early in the second with his first goal as a member of the Jets, deflecting a shot from the point past Shesterkin.

Lafreniere gave New York a 2-1 lead when he deflected a point shot from Will Borgen past Hellebuyck.

Connor tied it at 2 late in the second, taking a pass from Mark Schiefele, then beating Fox and lifting the puck over Shesterkin.

New York took a 3-2 lead early in the third when Kartye deflected a pass from Matthew Robertson past Hellebuyck 1:15 into the period.

Vilardi made it 3-all about three minutes after New York had taken the lead, scoring on a backhanded shot off an Adam Lowry rebound.

Up next

Jets: Host Colorado on Saturday afternoon.

Rangers: At Minnesota on Saturday.

___

AP NHL: https://apnews.com/NHL

Rangers beat Jets to continue winning ways at worst possible time

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Gabe Perreault, who scored the game-winning goal later in the game, watches Adam Fox's shot get past Connor Hellebuyck during the Rangers' 6-3 road loss to the Jets on March 12, 2026

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tRY IT NOW

WINNIPEG, Manitoba — The Rangers are playing some of their best hockey at the worst time. 

Development and draft lottery odds should be the name of the Rangers’ game with just 17 contests remaining on the 2025-26 season schedule, but the meaningless matchups — like their 6-3 win over the Jets Thursday night — have seemingly done wonders for the team psyche. 

Despite a tight 60-minute affair at Canada Life Centre, the Rangers pulled away with a three-goal third period to pick up their fifth win in their last seven games and their third in a row for the first time since November. 

Gabe Perreault extended his point streak to three games with the game-winning goal. 

Adam Edstrom scored his first goal since returning from a 33-game absence due to injury to add insurance.

Gabe Perreault, who scored the game-winning goal later in the game, watches Adam Fox’s shot get past Connor Hellebuyck during the Rangers’ 6-3 road win over the Jets on March 12, 2026. AP

The Rangers haven’t felt this good about their game maybe all season long.  

For the second time in the last three games, the Rangers were the team to strike early. 

A hooking call on Jets forward Gabriel Vilardi brought a relatively hot Rangers power play out onto the ice less than a minute into the game.

Igor Shesterkin makes a shoulder save during the Rangers’ road win over the Jets. Getty Images

Adam Fox then opened the scoring with a shot from the top of the zone, marking his first power-play goal since Dec. 31. 

The Rangers went on to finish 1-for-2 with the man-advantage on the night. 

One of the newest Jets players, Isak Rosen, responded for Winnipeg early in the second period. 

After landing in Winnipeg as part of the deal that sent Luke Schenn to the Sabres, Rosen scored his first as a Jet on Thursday to even up the score against the Rangers. 

Alexis Lafrenière continued on the heater he’s been on since Artemi Panarin was first scratched before his eventual trade to Los Angeles.

Tipping in a Will Borgen shot for the 2-1 lead, Lafrenière notched his sixth goal in the last five games, as well as his ninth in the last 10. 

The Rangers had a third one-goal lead squandered early in the third period. 

Tye Kartye redirected a feed from Matthew Robertson for his fifth goal of the season and second as a Ranger, but the advantage only lasted just over three minutes.  

Vilardi made up for the power-play goal that was scored on his team when he was in the box earlier in the game, burying a rebound past Rangers goalie Igor Shesterkin for the 3-3 score. 

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander breaks Wilt Chamberlain's streak for 20-point games

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander stands alone.

The reigning NBA Most Valuable Player has surpassed Hall of Fame icon Wilt Chamberlain for consecutive games with at least 20 points scored, with 127. Gilgeous-Alexander set the mark Thursday, March 12 with a jumper from near the top of the key midway through the third quarter of the Oklahoma City Thunder’s game against the Boston Celtics, an eventual 104-102 Thunder victory.

Playing in front of his home crowd, the fans in attendance anticipated the record when Gilgeous-Alexander caught the ball before erupting in cheers when he swished it. The public address announcer at the Paycom Center announced the record, and a graphic on the Jumbotron commemorated the moment.

“None of the things I accomplish would matter if we weren’t winning,” Gilgeous-Alexander told reporters after the game. “I probably wouldn’t have the streak if we weren’t winning. I know that and I understand that. It’s why you play the game. I was crying when I was nine years old because I lost an (Ontario Basketball Association) championship. You don’t want to lose.

“The streak is the streak. The awards are the awards. But the thing I’m most proud of is winning.”

He finished the game with 35 points on an extremely efficient 13-of-18 shooting night, adding 9 assists, 6 rebounds, 3 blocks and 2 steals.

Gilgeous-Alexander got off to a somewhat slow start early in the first quarter, though he did finish the period with 10 points after he attacked the rim and got to the line. He shot 2-of-3 from the field in the period, converting 5-of-6 free throws in the first. He added 7 points in the second period as Oklahoma City tried to cut Boston’s lead before the end of the first half.

Gilgeous-Alexander scored just 4 points in the third quarter, as the Celtics continued to blitz him with double-teams to try to force the ball out of his hands. His 8 assists through three quarters led all players.

He came alive in the fourth, adding 14 points in the period to close out what was a tightly-contested, back-and-forth game. Gilgeous-Alexander scored six of Oklahoma City's final eight points to help put Boston away.

“I’ve reflected on it,” Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said after the game. “You get lost in the season and you take for granted what you’re watching every night, but No. 1: he’s surgical at his craft — no one is more precise with their craft than he is. And No. 2: the whole life of the streak has not prevented us from having a ton of team success and hasn’t prevented his teammates from having success, either. …

“And then, great father, great husband, great teammate. Treats everybody in the building, from top to bottom, with dignity. So, obviously, he’s a great basketball player. But he’s the kind of person you couldn’t be happier for.”

A four-time All-Star, Gilgeous-Alexander, 27, entered the night ranked second in the NBA in scoring with 31.7 points per game, trailing only Lakers guard Luka Dončić.

One of the more consistent players in the NBA, Gilgeous-Alexander tied Chamberlain on March 9 when the Thunder topped the Denver Nuggets. In that game, he dropped 35 points, 15 assists and 9 rebounds and laced the eventual game-winning 3-pointer in the final seconds.

The record signals both Gilgeous-Alexander’s availability and steady production; the last time he failed to surpass 20 points in a game came early last season, on Oct. 30, 2024, when he scored 18 in a victory against the Spurs.

Gilgeous-Alexander and Chamberlain are the only two players in NBA history to have a 20-point scoring streak of at least 100 games. The following players on the list are Chamberlain again (92), Oscar Robertson (79), Michael Jordan and Kevin Durant (72) and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar (71).

Chamberlain, however, was pouring in the points during his best streak. Over those 126 games, he averaged 49.2 points per game. The streak began Oct. 19, 1961 and ended Jan. 19, 1963, after Chamberlain was ejected just four minutes into a game.

Another area where Gilgeous-Alexander has surpassed Chamberlain during their respective streaks is in the win-loss column. After Thursday night’s game against Boston, the Thunder have gone 103-24 in games when Gilgeous-Alexander reached at least 20 points; Chamberlain’s Warriors went just 66-60 during his streak.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander breaks Wilt Chamberlain NBA points record

Dent's triple-double helps UCLA beat Rutgers 72-59 at Big Ten Conference Tournament

CHICAGO (AP) — Donovan Dent had 12 points, 12 assists and a career-high 10 rebounds — the first triple-double in the history of the Big Ten Conference Tournament — to help sixth-seeded UCLA beat No. 14 seed Rutgers 72-59 on Thursday night in the third round.

Dent became the fifth player in program history to record a triple-double, joining Bill Walton, Toby Bailey, Jelani McCoy and Kyle Anderson.

UCLA (22-10) plays No. 11 and second-seeded Nebraska in the quarterfinals Friday.

Tyler Bilodeau led the Bruins with 21 points, Trent Perry scored 12 and Eric Dailey Jr. 10.

Dailey hit a jumper and then threw down a fast-break dunk before Bilodeau made a 3-pointer to spark a 14-2 run that made it 46-31 with 15:18 left in the game and UCLA led by at least nine the rest of the way.

Lino Mark led Rutgers (14-19) with 17 points, five rebounds and five assists. Tariq Francis, who set a the program record for points in a Big Ten Tournament game with 29 as the Scarlet Knights beat Minnesota 72-67 in the second round, finished with six points on 2-of-11 shooting against the Bruins.

The Bruins beat Rutgers 98-66 at home Feb. 3.

Up next

UCLA: Plays Nebraska, which the Bruins beat 72-52 on March 3, on Friday.

Rutgers: Season complete.

___

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Mavericks vs Grizzlies Recap: Dallas snaps skid with 120-112 win in Memphis

The Dallas Mavericks beat the Memphis Grizzlies 120-112 Thursday night in Memphis, snapping the Mavericks eight-game losing streak.

Khris Middleton had a career night, with 35 points off the bench, 22 of those coming in the fourth quarter. It was the highest scoring quarter of Middleton’s career and nearly a Mavericks team record for points in a quarter, which Dirk Nowitzki holds with 29.

It was a very wild game, which is part for the course for this Mavericks team. Memphis was extremely interested in losing this game by any means necessary, dressing only eight players and their starting lineup featuring mostly G-League-tier players. GG Jackson, Jaylen Wells, and Olivier-Maxence Prosper were the only credible NBA players that played for the Grizzlies tonight, and Hendricks inexplicably came off the bench and only played 24 minutes, despite scoring 17 points. Memphis wanted to lose this game.

The Mavericks, to their credit (or discredit, depending on what side of the tanking coin you fall on), did what they always do: play hard as hell. Dallas opened up a double-digit lead in the first quarter, before extending it to 20 before halftime.

Turnovers and sloppy play doomed the Mavericks in the third, where Memphis actually tied the game late in the quarter before the Mavericks got some late free throws to take a lead into the fourth.

From there it was the Middleton show, and Dallas comfortably one what was once a nail-bitter. Here’s what we noticed.

Khris Middleton was insane

The numbers don’t do Middleton’s night justice, although the numbers themselves are great: 35 points on 10-of-17 shooting, and 8-of-10 from three. Middleton didn’t rack up a lot of assists, but that’s because he was letting it rip as soon as he had the ball, and you can’t blame him.

Middleton scored 16 of the Mavericks first 20 points of the fourth quarter. He started with catch-and-shoot threes, then worked the mid-range with some post-ups, and by then it was over: he started raining down heat-check threes and desperation, bail-out long twos at the end of the shot clock. The Grizzlies did nothing to disrupt his rhythm and once Middleton was locked in, the game felt done and dusted.

There will be a segment of the Mavericks fan base dismayed that a 34-year-old veteran that doesn’t figure into the Mavericks long-term plans costing the team a crucial tank loss, but who cares. Yes, it would be cooler if the Mavericks won games behind their youth, especially Cooper Flagg, but Dallas lost eight in a row before this. Middleton can have a career-game, as a treat.

Paint points, again

Dallas is a top-five team in scoring in the paint, and they did it again against Memphis. The Mavericks went 24-of-34 in the restricted area and 8-of-15 in the “floater range” (in the paint, outside the restricted area.

Daniel Gafford was the biggest reason, with a monster 22-point, 14-rebound effort. Gafford had six offensive rebounds, and the Mavericks as a team had a ridiculous 21 offensive rebounds. All those second opportunities led to some easy putbacks and paint finishes. Dallas’ size was a clear advantage all game.

Cooper Flagg is still rusty

Cooper Flagg hasn’t really had a good game yet since coming back from his foot injury that sidelined him for three weeks. He struggled again tonight with 13 points on 16 shots.

His jumper is kind of broken again. Flagg was a decent 6-of-11 in the paint, but missed every single jumper he took, going 0-for-5 on jumpers. He just doesn’t look the same before the injury and surely part of that is timing, conditioning, and natural rust from such a long layoff.

There’s nothing too much to fret here, Flagg is the future and is allowed to have a bad week of games. But it is a bummer when he was skyrocketing upward right before his injury. It feels like Flagg got knocked back into November 2025, and it’s like his development just hit rewind. That’s not the real story, and Flagg will be fine. These games have just been a bummer for him.

Why this spring training homer meant more to Yankees’ Jasson Dominguez

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Jasson Dominguez belts a homer off Justin Verlander in the fourth inning of the Yankees' spring training loss to the Tigers at Joker Marchant Stadium on March 12, 2026

Observations from Yankees spring training on Thursday:

Déjà vu

Jasson Domínguez blasted a homer off Justin Verlander from the left side.

It brought up memories of Domínguez’s first major league homer, which came off Verlander in Houston on Sept. 1, 2023.

Domínguez said he “of course” was thinking of that shot when he went up against Verlander again Thursday.

Jasson Dominguez belts a homer off Justin Verlander in the fourth inning of the Yankees’ spring training loss to the Tigers at Joker Marchant Stadium on March 12, 2026. Mike Watters-Imagn Images

Ben a long time

Ben Rice is 0-for-8 with four strikeouts and a walk in his past three games.

Defensively, however, he has looked fine so far at first base, which is the Yankees’ main concern for him this spring.

New York Yankees first baseman Ben Rice (22) prepares to take batting practice before a game against the Philadelphia Phillies during spring training at BayCare Ballpark. Jonathan Dyer-Imagn Images

Caught my eye

Max Schuemann, looking to compete for a backup infielder spot, didn’t help his case when he was picked off first base by Kenley Jansen.

Friday’s schedule

Look for Cody Bellinger at first base, Ryan McMahon at shortstop and Ryan Weathers on the mound when the Yankees visit the Braves in North Port, Fla., at 1:05 p.m.

Julio Rodriguez loves Mariners, but says winning WBC is at top of his baseball list

Dominican Republic center fielder Julio Rodriguez (44) returns to the dugout against the Netherlands during the sixth inning.
Dominican Republic center fielder Julio Rodriguez (44) returns to the dugout against the Netherlands during the sixth inning at loanDepot Park.

For Mariners outfielder Julio Rodriguez, it’s country pride over everything else.

When speaking to reporters during a World Baseball Classic practice on Thursday, Rodriguez, who plays for the Dominican Republic, said that a tournament championship would just mean more to him.

“I love the Mariners,” Rodriguez said, according to Foul Territory. “They know I give my best for them every single time I step on the field, but winning the World Baseball Classic is at the top of the list.”

Center fielder Julio Rodriguez returns to the dugout during the Dominican Republic’s blowout win over the Netherlands in the World Baseball Classic at loanDepot Park on March 8, 2026. Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

This year is Rodriguez’s second appearance in the WBC, as he represented the D.R. ahead of his sophomore season in 2023, when the team did not advance from pool play.

“This is for my country, this is for my town, this is for the people in my neighborhood,” Rodriguez added. “It’s for everybody in the Dominican Republic.”

The D.R. went undefeated in pool play this time around, outscoring opponents 41-10 in four games, with some fiery performances in the opening round.

Rodriguez spoke on the intense atmosphere, saying Thursday’s win over Venezuela was the “most electric game” that he’s played in.

“The atmosphere was definitely the most electric game that I’ve ever been a part of,” he said. “The way that the Dominican fans just showed up it was amazing. I’ve been in some crazy [MLB] playoff atmospheres, but the way that the Dominicans bring it is completely different.

Ketel Marte (right) celebrates with teammate Julio Rodriguez after hitting a home run during the third inning of the Dominican Republic’s win over Venezuela in the World Baseball Classic game on March 11, 2026, in Miami. AP

“I think that was the rowdiest game I have been a part of. Just the two Latin cultures clashing last night I think was amazing and the biggest part of it.”

Teammate Juan Soto echoed Rodriguez’s aspirations, saying that bringing home a title for the D.R. would be a “dream.”

“It’s a dream for me to come here and try to win it for the Dominican Republic,” he said.

The country has won the WBC once before, defeating Puerto Rico in 2013.

Brooklyn Nets fade away against Atlanta Hawks, lose 108-97

Todd Kirkland/Getty Images

We’ve finally hit the home stretch. Brooklyn Nets games are feeling more and more like exhibitions. Players that are merely passing through see big minutes, only to be remembered by the most die-hard fans.

On Thursday afternoon, the Nets shut down Day’Ron Sharpe for the season. Sharpe, with a torn ligament in his thumb, joined #8 overall pick Egor Dëmin as the first Nets to skip ahead to the offseason. They may not be the last.

On Thursday night, the Nets faced the Atlanta Hawks, who won the previous matchup in Barclays Center on February 22. The Hawks had not lost a game since, beating up on a bunch of bad and/or injured teams for seven in a row. With Michael Porter Jr., Ziaire Williams, and Nolan Traore also missing action, the Hawks had a golden opportunity to make it eight.

The Nets played their part early on, starting three rookies next to Nic Claxton and Noah Clowney, who largely struggled…

Ben Saraf scored ten points for the second consecutive game, the first time in his career he’s done so, shooting 4-of-7 with four assists and five turnovers. Drake Powell and Danny Wolf combined to shoot 6-of-20 with five turnovers, occasionally dribbling into traffic without a plan, overwhelmed by Atlanta’s gaggle of feisty defenders. Much to Jordi Fernández’s dismay, the Nets turned it over 20 times.

So, a blowout with no bright spots, eh? Not quite. A second unit seemingly designed to maximize the tank…

…actually outperformed the starters. Fernández even expanded the rotation to 11 players, as E.J. Liddell earned 12 second-half minutes. That means all three two-way players touched the court — not to mention Josh Minott, who has spent some time with Long Island lately — and they all held their own.

Tyson Etienne fouled out but hit two 3-pointers, and his lineup kept the game close in the first half. Same for Chaney Johnson, who played hard and finished with a 3/3/3 statline. Liddell scored four points with six boards, but may have had the sequence of the night for Brooklyn…

Alas, it was Josh Minott who turned in the night’s most important performance. If the rest of his season is an audition — as Brooklyn has a team-option on his contract for next year — he certainly aced Thursday night. The 3-and-D wing was everywhere, doing more than just sitting in the corner and talking on defense.

Minott posted a ravishing 24/3/1/3/3 line, the 24 points a new career-high. He shot 4-of-7 from deep and took ten free-throws while bringing the athleticism and physicality that Brooklyn has long missed from their wings…

Fernández made sure to point out that he thought Chaney Johnson was “awesome” defensively, before praising Minott: “It was great. He was aggressive, I mean, you see the line … a little bit more rebounding, maybe, because that’s where we struggle and he provides size.”

Thanks to a cold shooting night from Atlanta and the energy of the Brooklyn bench, the grabbed a lead in the fourth quarter. Somehow. Sure, they got killed on the glass (22-4 in second-chance points) and in the turnover department again, but they fought, and Atlanta seemed stunned.

Then it was tanking time. Claxton and Clowney did not return in the fourth quarter. Nor did Terance Mann. Nope; the most experience Net on the court for winning (losing) time was Minott, and even then, he was subbed out for a couple minutes midway through the quarter. The magic finally ran out. Atlanta used an 11-0 run to seal the deal, quickly shaking off the embarrassment of a potential nail-biting end to a contest against benchwarmers and two-way players.

The Nets, meanwhile, did what they’ve long been reluctant to do and got shameless with it. Noah Clowney and Nic Claxton (combined 18 points on 8-of-15 shooting) weren’t lighting the world on fire, but relegating them to cheerleader-status in the closing minutes certainly didn’t help Brooklyn’s chances of winning.

Jalen Johnson went right at his overmatched competition to score nine of his 21 points in the final frame while CJ McCollum played a supporting role, and the Hawks handled business. So did the Nets, for that matter.

Said Fernández: “I thought everybody played the right way, even though I put them in different spots … We had a group that was very physical right there, [Atlanta] got a little stagnant because we switched a little bit. So I thought that all that was very positive.”

It was. The Nets really went for the tank, and it worked. It wasn’t even that much of an eyesore Though Drake Powell shot just 4-of-13, it marked the first time he’s taken more than ten shots in a game, while Minott gave fans real hope that he indeed may be a steal. Will this behavior continue for the final 16 games? I can’t wait to find out.

Final Score: Atlanta Hawks 108, Brooklyn Nets 97

Milestone Watch

  • For Minott, three steals tied a season-high, accomplished with both Boston and Brooklyn. His 24 points, four triples, and eight free-throws are all career-highs.

Tankathon Standings

The Nets, sadly, did not gain any ground in the tank-off. The Washington Wizards took the Orlando Magic to overtime but did not pull off the upset on Thursday night, while the Indiana Pacers lost regular style. The Sacramento Kings were off. Here’s the standings, courtesy of Tankathon…

Next Up

<p>Chris Schwegler/NBAE via Getty Images</p><br>

Brooklyn wraps up their brief two-game road trip by visiting the Philadelphia 76ers. Tip-off is scheduled for 1:00 p.m. ET.

Rapid Recap: Heat 112, Bucks 105

Mar 11, 2026; Miami, FL, United States; Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo (34) drives to the basket against Miami Heat center Bam Adebayo (13) during the first quarter at loanDepot Park. Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images | Sam Navarro-Imagn Images

The Milwaukee Bucks battled, but were unable to extinguish the Miami Heat, losing 112-105 as the Heat won their seventh straight game. Despite not having Tyler Herro, the Heat pulled through because of Pelle Larson, who had a career-high 28 points. Giannis Antetokounmpo’s 31 points were not enough.

NBA.com Box Score

Game Recap

A new starting lineup was rolled out for Milwaukee: Kevin Porter Jr. returned and started in place of Ryan Rollins. The Bucks began the game sluggishly on offense, unable to get any easy looks near the rim. Miami slowly extended its lead as the quarter progressed, while Milwaukee continued to struggle to generate any good offense, dribbling the ball excessively, which resulted in turnovers. Bobby Portis did his bit to come in and provide something on that end, but the Heat had an answer at every turn. Milwaukee trailed 31-21 after the first quarter

The second quarter was much better for Milwaukee, as they found their rhythm on both ends (the Heat went four minutes without a field goal). Bobby Portis hit some jumpers, and Taurean Prince scored his first points since returning from neck surgery. Giannis found a breakthrough too, throwing down some dunks and asserting his will. The Bucks’ three-ball was falling (primarily from Rollins and Turner), which helped them come back to tie the game at 51. However, Miami would end the final two minutes on an 8-0 run, taking a 59-51 lead into halftime.

Milwaukee continued its trend of starting the third quarter flat-footed as Miami scored a quick five points. The Bucks didn’t score a field goal for the first four and a half minutes—and 7 minutes of game time between the second and third quarters—before Giannis finally broke the drought. Milwaukee’s bench reduced the deficit somewhat, going on an 11-2 run in a three-minute stretch, but the Bucks still ended the third quarter trailing 85-77.

The bench (plus Giannis) continued to slowly chip away at the Heat’s lead to open the fourth. After not scoring for the first three quarters, Kyle Kuzma scored five straight points to get the visitors within just two points halfway through the fourth as the Bucks went on a 10-2 run, forcing a Miami timeout halfway through the frame. Milwaukee kept it close throughout the fourth quarter—getting back to that two-point margin later after a Jericho Sims and-one—but the Heat kept getting to the charity stripe and extending the lead. Still, the Bucks had a shot with less than a minute remaining to tie the game with a three; the problem was… it was Giannis who shot it (with heaps of time left on the shot clock, I might add). The Heat got the rebound, came down, and kicked it out to Pelle Larsson, who made his three. Game over.

Stat That Stood Out

The only reason the Bucks were even in this game was because of their bench. Milwaukee’s bench scored 56 points—led by Bobby Portis with 19—and outscored all the non-Giannis starters combined.