Vanessa Bryant posted a photograph of her daughter, Gianna, on Instagram Friday on what would have been Gianna's 20th birthday.
“Happy birthday to my sweet baby angel, Gianna," Vanessa said in the post. "Words can’t express how much I love and miss you mamacita. Mommy loves you so much!"
Gianna Bryant was killed in a helicopter crash six years ago along with eight other passengers, including her father, Kobe Bryant.
The crash happened en route to Kobe Bryant's Mamba Sports Academy in Newbury Park, California, where he was scheduled to coach his daughter's team.
— Kobe Bryant Stories & Motivation (@kobehighlight) May 1, 2026
Vanessa Bryant's post had comments with heart emojis from basketball players such as Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James and New York Liberty star Sabrina Ionescu.
Other notable names such as Olivia Munn, Ciara and Kelly Rowland also left comments of support.
Kobe and Gianna have been honored with a statue that sits in front of Crypto.com Arena, which was unveiled in August 2024.
TORONTO, ON - APRIL 24: Angel Martínez #1 of the Cleveland Guardians celebrates with Rhys Hoskins #8 at home plate after hitting a two-run home run in the third inning during the game between the Cleveland Guardians and the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre on Friday, April 24, 2026 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Colton Hall/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images
NEW YORK — Walks are up 7.3% as pitches in the strike zone dropped markedly and the average time of games increased by 5 minutes through the first full month of Major League Baseball’s initial season with robot umpires.
Average attendance increased 2.8% and the big-league batting average went up by one percentage point to .243. Home runs are being hit at the same rate as last year and stolen bases and success rate dipped.
The Automatic Ball/Strike System has upheld 53.4% of challenges (1,030 of 1,928), with catchers far more successful than batters.
Walks are up from 6.8 per game through April of last year. Over a full season, the average would be the highest since 2000 and the ninth highest in major league history, but walks have declined since the season’s start and averaged 6.98 per game from April 21-30.
“I think it’s the same thing that happened in the minor leagues. So I don’t think this is unexpected at all,” Chicago Cubs president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer said Friday. “I think it’s our job to make those adjustments.”
Pitches in the strike zone were 47.3% of offerings according to MLB Statcast, down from a record high 50.6% last year. Since tracking began, the previous low of 47.5% was in 2019 and 2020.
This year is down from 50.1% through April 30 last year and the second lowest through the first full month, above only 47.2% in 2010. Statcast switched its measurement to the ABS version of the strike zone this year.
“The strike zone was always the umpire behind home plate, his representation or judgment of the strike,” Baltimore Orioles manager Craig Albernaz said. “I think now is the first time ever we actually have a clear strike zone.”
Instead of using the cube strike zone in the rule book, ABS calls strikes solely based on where the ball crosses the midpoint of the plate, 8.5 inches from the front and the back. The top of the strike zone is 53.5% of batter height and the bottom 27% rather than the rule book definition of the top as the midpoint between the top of the shoulders and the top of the uniform pants, and the bottom as the hollow beneath the kneecap.
Strikeouts have increased slightly to an average of 16.9 per game from 16.6 through April last year and scoring is up slightly to 9 runs per game from 8.7.
Hitters have succeeded on 46% of challenges (409 of 890), catchers on 60.6% (605 of 997) and pitchers on 41.5% (17 of 41), leaving the fielding team at 59.8% (621 of 1,038).
“I do think that the catchers have a better vantage point just because they’re directly behind the zone,” Tampa Bay catcher Nick Fortes said.
Arizona manager Torey Lovullo, a former infielder, anticipated catchers’ success.
“I think emotion gets involved on every level with every player. I think the catcher probably has the least emotion,” Lovullo said. “I think with the pitcher, there’s a head jerk, the body’s moving, you don’t get a great look at it.”
Teoscar Hernández of the Los Angeles Dodgers is 4 for 4, the most successful challenges among batters who are at 100%. Miami’s Agustín Ramírez is 0 for 5, the most misses among batters with no successes.
Catchers with the best success rate among those with at least 10 challenges are Seattle’s Mitch Garver (10 of 11), Detroit’s Dillon Dingler (13 of 15) and the Chicago Cubs’ Carson Kelly (12 of 14). Kansas City’s Carter Jensen (3 of 10) and Houston’s Christian Vázquez (4 of 13) are the lowest.
Among umpires who have worked more than two games behind the plate, Willie Traynor (95.3%) and Edwin Moscoso (95.2%) had the best accuracy rate, according to taptochallenge.com. Paul Clemens (91%), Chris Segal (91.1%) and Dan Iassogna (91.1%) were the lowest.
“I think you just see the umpires being really cognizant of the challenges,” Albernaz said, “because I don’t think anyone wants to be embarrassed at their job and get posted up there and see if it’s a ball of a strike.”
The average time of a nine-inning game has crept up to 2 hours, 42 minutes, up from 2:37 through April last year. MLB said it attributes 64 seconds of the increase to the ABS system.
Pitch clock violations through 468 games averaged 0.20 per game, up from 0.19. Of the violations, 0.16 were on the defensive team and 0.04 on batters.
Attendance has averaged 28,545 per game, up from 27,744 through April last year, when the final figure was 29,471 in the third straight season of increase.
Stolen bases have slid to 1.4 per game from 1.6 through April last season and the success rate decreased to 76.6% from 78.4.%.
Even a Sox Park Vienna beef is no match for White Sox ace-in-ascendance Noah Schultz. | Patrick Gorski-Imagn Images
Welcome to Noah Schultz Night!
And quite a late night it is, with the White Sox back on the West Coast, taking on the high-flying Padres.
Basically beyond his first inning in the major leagues, Schultz has been spectacular, certainly better than advertised for a 22-year-old whose 2025 wasn’t terribly impressive/marred by injury. A new ace southpaw on the South Side has been born:
Drew Romo is looking more and more like the platoon starter at catcher, or perhaps even the starter outright; the question may be whether Edgar Quero is sent back to Triple-A if and when Kyle Teel returns.
Andrew Benintendi as leadoff staple won’t ever be something the eyes adjust to, but thank Will Venable for at least installing the subdefender at DH instead of left field tonight.
Check out tonight’s game at CHSN or listen in at WMVP-AM 1000, beginning at 8:40 p.m. CT. I’ll be your host tonight, so seeya postgame!
There are nights in the NBA when the game feels secondary to the star power sitting courtside on celebrity row.
Like a kid walking through a museum of modern pop culture, the faces you grew up watching on stage and screen are suddenly right in front of your eyes arguing with referees like it’s a Game 7 of their own lives.
And there’s no stage bigger when it comes to celebrity row than Los Angeles and New York.
Crypto.com Arena, formerly Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, is where the top celebrities in movies, television, music, sports, tech and more flock to watch Luka Doncic, LeBron James and the Lake Show in action.
At Madison Square Garden, the celebrities aren’t scattered around like they are in LA. They’re seated shoulder to shoulder like a front-row orchestra that never misses a note.
So, what would happen if we turned those courtside legends into two separate teams based on their fandom?
Let’s build it and find out.
The Lakers
The head coach of the celebrity Lakers team is easy. Jack Nicholson, the godfather of purple and gold since the Showtime era at the Great Western Forum. He still looms over the franchise like a patron saint. He doesn’t come to games as regularly anymore, but his courtside seats have been passed on to his son, Ray.
Lou Adler (L) and actor Jack Nicholson attend Game 1 of the NBA Finals between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Boston Celtics at Staples Center on June 3, 2010 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Michael Buckner/Getty Images) Getty Images
Here’s the Lakers’ roster of celebrities to choose from:
Snoop Dogg, Flea (but the entire Red Hot Chili Peppers band), Leonardo DiCaprio, Tobey Maguire, Dyan Cannon, Will Ferrell, Denzel Washington, Jack Black, Lou Adler, Michael B. Jordan, Kendrick Lamar, Jimmy Iovine, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Martin Lawrence, Andy Garcia, Dr. Dre, Ice Cube, Dustin Hoffman, Paula Abdul, Justin Timberlake, Jay-Z, Beyonce, David Arquette, Magic Johnson, Matthew Stafford, Mookie Betts, Odell Beckham Jr., Puka Nacua, Dan Reynolds of Imagine Dragons, Justin and Hailey Bieber, George Lopez, Salma Hayek, Jeffrey Katzenberg, Halsey, Tom Cruise, Anze Kopitar, Bill Maher, Adam Sandler, Bad Bunny, Emily Ratajkowski, Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis, Steven Spielberg, Eddie Murphy, Lily Collins, Lil Wayne, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Nicholas Hoult, Brenda Song and Macaulay Culkin, Kate Hudson, Arsenio Hall, Nicholas Braun, Adele, Will.i.Am., Adam Levine and Maroon 5, Sarah Silverman, Jimmy Kimmel, Pat Sajak, Jonah Hill, David Spade, Chris Rock, David Beckham, Robert Downey Jr., Jon Favreau, Two Chainz, Kid Cudi, The Weeknd, Brian Grazer, Ron Howard, Courteney Cox, Steve Carell, Laura Dern, Chris Ivery, Jay Mohr, Jason Sudeikis, Saweetie, David Harbour, Hailee Steinfeld, Kendall Jenner, Kim Kardashian, Corey Gamble, Kris Kardashian, Khloe Kardashian, Simon Baker, Lamar Odom, Kourtney Kardashian, Travis Barker, Aaron Donald, Cooper Kupp, Brie Larson, Charlize Theron, Usher, Jamie Foxx, Terrell Owens, Josh Brolin, Cameron Diaz, Antonio Banderas, Kylian Mbappé, Tyga, John Legend and Chrissy Teigen — and so many more.
The Lakers’ Starting Five
Denzel Washington attends the Los Angeles Lakers and Oklahoma City Thunder Game in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Noel Vasquez/Getty Images) Getty Images
Denzel Washington
Denzel would be your floor general. His voice in the huddle would command attention. Remember his performance in “Training Day”?
Leonardo DiCaprio attends a game between the Denver Nuggets and the Los Angeles Lakers. (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images) Getty Images
Leonardo DiCaprio
We came to learn recently that DiCaprio has struck up a secret friendship with LeBron James. The A-lister actor who is regularly seen courtside at Lakers games would be the silent assassin. Black hat and glasses, he’ll show up when you least expect it.
Will Ferrell attends a game between the Oklahoma City Thunder and the Los Angeles Lakers (Photo by Ronald Martinez/Getty Images) Getty Images
Will Ferrell
Every team needs chaos, and Ferrell brings it in waves. He’s the emotional spark plug, the guy who takes a charge, dives into the stands and somehow makes it funny and heroic at the same time.
Flea, of the Red Hot Chili Peppers, attends a basketball game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Oklahoma City Thunder. (Photo by Allen Berezovsky/Getty Images) Getty Images
Flea
Flea and Ferrell are your energy guys. All motion and all heart. Flea could be a defensive menace, like Marcus Smart on the current roster.
Justin Bieber (R) reacts to a play while attending an NBA game between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Orlando Magic at Crypto.com Arena on February 24, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Katelyn Mulcahy/Getty Images) Getty Images
Justin Bieber
Bieber is your 3-point shooter and ball handler. He’s not afraid of the big moment or of the spotlight in Los Angeles.
Getty ImagesGetty ImagesLos Angeles Times via Getty ImagesNBAE via Getty ImagesNBAE via Getty ImagesGetty ImagesGetty ImagesLos Angeles Times via Getty ImagesGetty ImagesLondon Entertainment / SplashNews.comCharles Wenzelberg/New York PostNBAE via Getty ImagesGetty ImagesGetty ImagesGetty ImagesGetty ImagesGetty ImagesNBAE via Getty ImagesGetty ImagesNBAE via Getty ImagesGetty ImagesGetty ImagesGetty ImagesGetty ImagesGetty Images
Bench mob: Mookie Betts, Eddie Murphy, Tobey Maguire, Dyan Cannon, Andy Garcia, Halsey and Dustin Hoffman.
The Knicks
At the Garden, the head coach of the celebrity Knicks is Spike Lee. There’s nobody else. No debate. No discussion. He’s the pulse, the historian, the heartbeat stitched into every era.
Spike Lee attends game six of the Eastern Conference first round playoffs between the New York Knicks and the Atlanta Hawks on April 30, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Paras Griffin/Getty Images) Getty Images
Here’s the Knicks’ roster of celebrities to choose from:
Ben Stiller, Adam Horovitz, Chris Rock, Howard Stern, Jon Stewart, Taylor Swift, Jimmy Fallon, Kal Penn, Ricky Gervais, Paul Simon, Liam Neeson, Katie Holmes, David Duchovny, Judd Hirsch, Norman Reedus, Adam Sandler, Niall Horan, Al Roker, Timothee Chalamet and Kylie Jenner, Alan Alda, John Mulaney, Drew Barrymore, John McEnroe, Vince Vaughn, Chris Pratt, Jay-Z and Beyonce, John Turturro, Ed Sheeran, Nicholas Turturro, Henrik Lundqvist, Martha Stewart, Mariska Hargitay, Ray Romano, Jeff Garlin, Christopher Meloni, Larry David, Susie Essman, Lorne Michaels, Leon Robinson, Kevin Bacon, Kevin Connolly, Fat Joe, Bette Midler, Maria Menounos, Whoopi Goldberg, Patrick Ewing, John Starks, John Hamm, Edie Falco, Christine Taylor, Tina Fey, Tracy Morgan, Michael J. Fox, Pete Davidson, Anne Hathaway, Carmelo Anthony, 50 Cent, Emmy Rossum, Bill Murray, Julianne Moore, Alicia Keys, Swizz Beatz, Cardi B, Jerry Seinfeld, Leslie Jones, JB Smoove, Stephen A. Smith and more.
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Actor Ben Stiller attends game two of the Eastern Conference first round NBA playoffs at Madison Square Garden on April 20, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images) Getty Images
Ben Stiller
Stiller is the glue guy every team needs. No Knicks fan wears wins and losses quite like him.
Timothee Chalamet and Kylie Jenner look on during the fourth quarter Game Six of the Eastern Conference Finals of the 2025 NBA Playoffs between the New York Knicks and the Indiana Pacers. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images) Getty Images
Timothee Chalamet
Chalamet is the new wave, the bridge between generations. On the court, he’s young, flashy and effortlessly cool. He’s the player you build a franchise around.
Actor Tracy Morgan sits on celebrity row during the first quarter of a Knicks game. (Photo by Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post) Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post
Tracy Morgan
Morgan brings heart to this team. He’s real, unfiltered and isn’t afraid to tell his teammates how it is. He’s the kinda player the city will wrap its arms around.
Tina Fey attends Game Five of the Eastern Conference First Round NBA Playoffs between the Atlanta Hawks and the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden on April 28, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Sarah Stier/Getty Images) Atlanta Hawks v New York Knicks – Game Five Getty Images
Tina Fey
Fey is the strategist on the court. She has a sharp mind and even sharper instincts. She’s the player/coach every great team needs.
Jon Stewart looks on in Game Six of the Eastern Conference Second Round NBA Playoffs between the New York Knicks and the Boston Celtics at Madison Square Garden on May 16, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Al Bello/Getty Images) Getty Images
Jon Stewart
Stewart is the passion and the vocal leader of the team. He’d be the one taking charges and demanding more from his teammates. He’s the grit NYC is built on.
Bench mob: John McEnroe, Mariska Hargitay, Larry David, Chris Rock, Adam Sandler, Fat Joe, Michael J. Fox.
Two cities. Two identities. But they both live courtside.
Charles Wenzelberg / New York PostCorey Sipkin for the NY POSTCharles Wenzelberg / New York PostJason Szenes / New York PostCharles Wenzelberg / New York PostGetty ImagesGetty ImagesGetty ImagesCharles Wenzelberg / New York PostBrad Penner-Imagn ImagesCharles Wenzelberg / New York PostUrbanxDivinity / BACKGRIDCharles Wenzelberg / New York PostNBAE via Getty ImagesGetty ImagesRobert Sabo for NY PostCharles Wenzelberg / New York PostCharles Wenzelberg / New York PostCharles Wenzelberg / New York PostJASON SZENES/ NY POSTCharles Wenzelberg / New York PostCarlos Toro/ NY POSTNBAE via Getty ImagesCharles Wenzelberg / New York PostCharles Wenzelberg / New York PostCorey SipkinNBAE via Getty ImagesRobert Sabo for NY PostGetty Images
These lists were composed of more recent celebrities who are seen consistently at games the past few seasons.
KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI - APRIL 25: Starting pitcher Cole Ragans #55 of the Kansas City Royals pitches during the 1st inning of the game against the Los Angeles Angelsat Kauffman Stadium on April 25, 2026 in Kansas City, Missouri. (Photo by Jamie Squire/Getty Images) | Getty Images
The Royals obviously had a very rough month of April, finishing 12-19. They’re still only 3.5 games back of their division leader, though, so if April showers bring May Flowers and the Royals’ talent that many expected would carry them to a competitive season started blossoming, now would be a great time for that to start. Believe it or not, it was a road trip to Seattle at the start of July last year that got them going on their significantly improved second half. They lost the first game on April 30, but won two of the next three in Seattle to split the series before going 15-9 in July. Now, this isn’t July, but it is a road trip to Seattle. So let’s do some positive thinking.
Cole Ragans gets the start in this one for the Royals, and he had one of his most impressive starts ever his last time out, striking out 11 and walking none in a win over the Angels. Now the Angels are a worse team than the Mariners, and they have a worse run differential, but they’ve scored more runs than their Pacific Northwest rivals. So it’s not out of the realm of possibility that he could somewhat duplicate his efforts. Though, like most of his teammates, he’s been significantly worse on the road than at home this year. But maybe that’s just because he still wasn’t completely right in Detroit and New York after getting hit by a comebacker in Cleveland.
He has started against Cleveland twice in his career, once was a 6-inning, 9-strikeout performance in 2024, and the other was during his return-to-the-big-leagues party late last season. That was his first game back from the IL, and he struck out 4 and walked 2 in a 3.2-inning start against Seattle’s finest.
The Mariners will send out Bryan Woo. Woo was one of the 20 best starters in MLB last year, but he seems to have forgotten how to strike people out this year. He’s also giving up a lot more contact in the air and not stranding as many runners. He’s as vulnerable as he’s ever been, meaning that both he and the Royals offense are looking at this like a get-right opportunity.
Lineups
The bottom of the Mariners’ order is unlikely to scare anyone, but that could be said about practically the entire Royals lineup, I guess.
Vinnie Pasquantino makes his return to the lineup after missing the last two games with back tightness. He was taking some really good at-bats before he left Tuesday night’s game, so hopefully he’ll be able to continue that. Jac Caglianone has been promoted above both Isaac Collins and Michael Massey for the night. It might be really fun to watch him and Carter Jensen batting back-to-back, especially if they take some better at-bats than they did in the Athletics series.
Don’t forget that tonight’s game is an Apple.TV Friday Night game, so you won’t be able to watch it without a subscription. There are tons of free trial offers out there, so pick one and then cancel it after the game. But while it’s active, I recommend you give Ted Lasso, Shrinking, Schmigadoon, Slow Horses, and/or The Silo a try. I promise no one is paying me to say that, it really does have a lot of high-quality TV shows!
4/30/26 – NBA Playoffs Game 6, New York Knicks vs. Atlanta Hawks at State Farm Arena in Atlanta, Georgia – New York Knicks center Mitchell Robinson #23, fighting with Atlanta...
Mitchell Robinson was not suspended, but his wallet is a little bit lighter.
“The amount of Robinson’s fine takes into account his inappropriate post on social media in reference to the incident postgame,” the league said in a statement.
Mitchell Robinson (23) is pictured during a fracas April 30 when the Knicks faced the Hawks. Charles Wenzelberg
As OG Anunoby took a free throw with the Knicks leading by 50 points with just under five minutes left in the second quarter, Daniels yanked Robinson’s arm.
The alternate angle of this Knicks-Hawks fight is WILD.
A.J. Minter pitches against the Miami Marlins at Citi Field on April 08, 2025 in New York City. The Mets defeated the Marlins 10-5.
ANAHEIM, Calif. — A.J. Minter returned to Queens during the Mets’ last homestand to work out in front of team officials. The next time his teammates see him, he is expected to be an active player.
The lefty reliever’s minor league rehab assignment is set to expire Thursday, so Minter will join the team on this road trip no later than the series that begins in Arizona next Friday, barring a physical setback.
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Minter, who is rehabbing from surgery to repair a lat tear, was scheduled to pitch Friday for Triple-A Syracuse and may then be utilized pitching twice in three days as the final test before his return.
The Mets will welcome that presence to a unit that has underperformed lately.
Most notably, Luke Weaver and Devin Williams — the team’s two biggest offseason relief acquisitions — have struggled in big spots.
Minter arrived before last season on a two-year contract worth $22 million, but appeared in only 13 games before tearing the lat. His velocity has sat in the low 90s in his rehab outings.
A.J. Minter pitches against the Miami Marlins at Citi Field on April 8, 2025. Getty Images
“I feel for the guys here and I want to do my part, whatever that role may be,” Minter said during his visit to Citi Field. “I am confident with myself and know I can get big league hitters out. I just might have to pitch a little bit more rather than throw 97 down the middle and get swings and misses.
“I am confident I can help this team.”
A.J. Minter walks off the field after an injury during the game against the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park on April 26, 2025 in Washington, DC. Getty Images
Infielder Andy Ibanez reported to the Mets and was activated Friday. Eric Wagaman was optioned to Syracuse. Ibanez was claimed off waivers from the Athletics.
Juan Soto had reached base in 16 straight games entering play. It was his longest streak reaching base to begin the season in his career.
WASHINGTON — Jacob Misiorowski did not realize he had a no-hitter intact. Only that he was finding his groove against the Washington Nationals − just as his right hamstring began to grab in the sixth inning.
Misiorowski, perhaps the premium fireballer in this era of unprecedented velocity in Major League Baseball, exited his Friday, May 1 start at Nationals Park with a right hamstring cramp, a malady the Milwaukee Brewers hope is just a mild detour during what's shaping up to be a special season.
Misiorowski struck out eight Nationals in 5⅓ shutout innings of their 6-1 victory, a night that took a very dark turn for Brewers fans when The Miz paused his dominant outing and motioned for head athletic trainer Brad Epstein to come to the mound.
Misiorowski had just struck out the last four batters − needing only 11 pitches to punch out the side in the fifth − and was sitting on a reasonable 85 pitches when he was removed. His season high was 101 pitches, so a solo no-hitter was possibly out of the question at that point.
So a night that was undeniably dominant teetered on a spectrum between historic and disastrous for Milwaukee. And in the end, the diagnosis felt like a sigh of relief.
#Brewers Jacob Misiorowski threw this pitch (slowest of the night at 98.9 mph)
"We feel pretty good about it," said Brewers manager Pat Murphy, who lost starter Brandon Woodruff to the injured list with shoulder inflammation earlier Friday. "We’re not going to test it right now, because we’re afraid he might cramp again. We’re very hopeful. He feels good about it. Hopefully that’s all it was.
"If it’s more than that? We’ve had a few of those the last few days."
Misiorowski, who leads the major leagues in strikeouts (59 in 38 innings), strikeout percentage (37.2%) and whiff percentage (39.5%), had just elicited a swinging strike from Nationals leadoff batter James Wood on a 98.9 mph fastball when Epstein and Murphy visited the mound.
After conferring, Misiorowski was removed from the game and replaced by Aaron Ashby, who an inning earlier knew a no-hitter was brewing, yet had forgotten amid the rush to enter the game.
Misiorowski did not learn he'd just departed a no-hit bid until he was receiving treatment in the training room and heard mention of it on the broadcast.
Ashby retired the final two batters in the sixth, but Daylen Lile broke up the combined no-hitter with a one-out double in the bottom of the seventh.
At 24, Misiorowski is just beginning. And Ashby figures there will be many more nights like this.
"He’s truthfully got the stuff and the opportunity to do that every night, which is pretty special," says Ashby. "There’s not a lot of guys who basically have the chance to do what he does every night. If he can be efficient, his stuff is so good."
Misiorowski, a 6-foot-7, 200-pounder, threw 43 pitches between 100 and 103 mph against the Nationals, striking out eight and walking two. Fifty-four of his 85 pitches were at least 98 mph, including a slider clocked at 98.4 mph.
He came out of the gate firing, averaging 101.9 mph on his fastball in the first inning. That's the fastest average fastball velocity by a starting pitcher in any single inning of any game in the pitch tracking era (since 2008), according to the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel.
"It felt like one of the best nights of the year so far, so there’s that positive on the night," Misiorowski said. "Hopefully, that goes into the next start."
Misiorowski spent a stint on the injured list last August when he was diagnosed with a left tibia contusion, yet returned shortly thereafter and pitched through the playoffs for Milwaukee. And he was also removed from his major league debut with a no-hitter intact through five innings when he suffered a freak ankle injury throwing a pitch in the sixth.
He and Murphy both downplayed this malady, though any prognosis or assurance he'll make his next start won't come until he wakes up Saturday and tests out the hamstring.
Misiorowski lowered his ERA to 2.84 and his WHIP to 1.00, on a night he was actually more dominant the second time through the order, retiring the last 11 batters he faced.
"Everything right where I wanted it," he said.
At least until the hamstring barked. Even still, losing a no-hitter, but winning the game and apparently surviving an injury scare is a net positive for one of the game's most fascinating figures.
The NHL Coach of the Year finalists were announced on Friday.
Jon Cooper of the Tampa Bay Lightning, Dan Muse of the Pittsburgh Penguins and Lindy Ruff of the Buffalo Sabres are the three men who are up for the Jack Adams Award, presented to the head coach “adjudged to have contributed the most to his team’s success.
There was no shortage of analysts who believed that Ottawa's Travis Green should get some love for the award, and for the record, playoff performance has no bearing on the voting.
Steve Warne and Gregg Kennedy discuss what happened to the Senators in their first round elimination.
The award is voted on by members of the NHL Broadcasters’ Association at the end of the regular season, so the Senators' disappointing sweep at the hands of the Carolina Hurricanes had no bearing on anything.
Green surely got some votes after leading the Senators into the postseason with a 21-6-3 finish to the season, all while dealing with a rough first half, shaky goaltending, off-ice drama and one injury after another down the stretch, especially on his blue line.
The 55-year-old Creston, B.C. native consistently urged the Senators to ignore those outside distractions, which he billed as white noise, and to stick to the process, whether they win or lose. There was nothing particularly innovative about his message. The impressive part was Green being able to get what appeared to be complete buy-in from his players.
Green was probably never going to beat out Cooper, who, remarkably, has never won the award, or Ruff, who helped snap the Sabres' NHL record playoff drought by winning the Division.
But Muse, the rookie head coach of the Penguins, actually finished one point behind Green's Senators. Jack has a soft spot for rookies, though. Muse is the 19th first-year head coach to be voted as a Jack Adams Award finalist.
Only two Senators head coaches have ever won the award. Paul MacLean in 2012–13 and Jacques Martin in 1998-99. Green won't join them this year, but still deserves a ton of credit for keeping Ottawa's weird season on the rails.
Steve Warne The Hockey News
This article was first published at The Hockey News Ottawa. Check out more great Sens features from The Hockey News at the links below:
NEW YORK (AP) — Mitchell Robinson of the New York Knicks was fined $50,000 and Dyson Daniels of the Atlanta Hawks was fined $25,000, those penalties coming Friday for their roles in an on-court altercation during Game 6 of the teams' Eastern Conference first-round series.
The incident happened with 4:39 left in the second quarter of the Knicks' 140-89 series-clinching win on Thursday night. Both players were assessed technical fouls and ejected.
Robinson and Daniels “became entangled while battling for position during a free throw attempt," the NBA said, and the altercation escalated from there. Robinson merited the larger fine, the league said, because of “his inappropriate post on social media in reference to the incident postgame.”
The fine and ejection will not affect Robinson's availability for Game 1 of New York's Eastern Conference semifinal series against Boston or Philadelphia.
SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 28: Jacob Wilson #5 of the Athletics blows a bubble while playing shortstop in the top of the fourth inning against the Kansas City Royals at Sutter Health Park on April 28, 2026 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by Justine Willard/Athletics/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Ready for a brand new month and a brand new series? The team finished the month of April with a 17-14 record, and now thankfully the A’s don’t have to go anywhere as they swap out their opponents from the Royals to the Guardians, their second straight AL Central to visit Sacramento. Old friend Stephen Vogt has lead his squad to an even 16-16 record, which is good enough for a tie in their division. Should be a competitive series between two teams in first place. Three games this weekend, let’s go for the win.
Kicking things off for the good guys tonight will be right-hander J.T. Ginn. Since joining the rotation the 26-year-old has done nothing but impress as he’s solidified the backend of the rotation. In four starts this year Ginn has a 2.50 ERA. The strikeouts (15) could be higher but he’s also not hurting himself with free passes (7). He’ll hope to keep up his hot streak this evening against a Guardians lineup that as a team is in the bottom third in most statistical categories across the league. An excellent matchup for Ginn as long as he’s careful pitching to Cleveland leader Jose Ramirez.
The Athletics’ lineup for the first game of this weekend series looks like this:
The team is surprisingly with catcher Shea Langeliers tonight, though he remains on baby watch as his wife should be due any minute now. If he leaves mid-game, now you know why.
He’ll be slotted between leadoff man Jacob Wilson and the big stick in Nick Kurtz, with Brent Rooker back in the lineup in his usual DH spot. This is more of the type of the top of the order that fans envisioned coming into the season.
Elsewhere in the A’s starting lineup Darell Hernaiz draws another start at the hot corner and also remains in the five-hole after his three-hit performance yesterday. The team also welcomes back left fielder Tyler Soderstrom after a two-game absence due to what the team called “whiplash”. Whatever it was it’s good to get his left-handed bat back in the order.
Colby Thomas remains in the lineup in right field, and Zack Gelof is in there as well but lining up in center field instead of second base, which will be handled by Jeff McNeil after his off day yesterday. One noticable name missing from the batting order this evening is Carlos Cortes, who finished the month of April with a .400 batting average. But with a southpaw on the opposing mound, tonight was as good as any to get the rookie outfielder a breather.
Speaking of lefties. That lineup will be facing Cleveland left-hander Joey Cantillo. The former 16th-round pick worked in both a starter’s role and a relief capacity last year to excellent results but has been a full-time member of the starting rotation this year. He’s taken well to his permanent transition to starting as he’ll bring a 2.97 ERA over six starts into tonight’s contest. This will be the first time that he’s ever faced the A’s so it’ll be a new experience for everyone on both sides of the ball in this one.
The big name is obviously Ramirez, but we will also be getting our first close look at top prospect Travis Bazzana, who just got The Call to the big leagues a few days ago. If you’ll remember, the A’s had a big chance to get the first overall pick in the 2024 Draft but got stuck with the fourth overall pick instead. That pick? Your reigning AL ROTY Nick Kurtz. I’d say things worked out as well as hoped for the A’s, but now the first overall pick is in The Show and he’ll be facing Kurtz for the first time tonight. These two players’ futures will be compared to each other for a long, long time.
One hour to go until first pitch. Who’s ready for a Friday night win? Let’s go A’s!
Joel Embiid is sick of losing to Boston — he has been eliminated from the playoffs three times by them.
He's not as sick of it as 76ers fans, who have seen their team lose six straight playoff series to the Celtics, and Philly hasn't beaten its Boston rivals in the playoffs since "E.T. the Extraterrestrial" was in theaters and Commodore 64s were the hottest home computer on the market (1982).
"I've been playing these guys for so long, I'm tired of losing to them…," Embiid said after he and the 76ers took Game 6 fairly comfortably and forced a Game 7 on Sunday. "We have a chance to accomplish something special."
Boston was in control of the 2026 version of this rivalry, but Joel Embiid's return from an appendectomy, combined with a defensive shift from Philadelphia, changed everything. Now Philadelphia is on the doorstep of becoming just the 15th team to come from 3-1 down to win a series, and the first since Denver in the bubble in 2020.
What should fans look for in this Game 7? Here's everything you need to know.
When is 76ers vs. Celtics Game 7?
Tip-off is set for 7:30 p.m. Eastern at the TD Garden in Boston. You can watch the game on NBC or Peacock, it will air just after the coverage of the 152nd Kentucky Derby on NBC.
History of 76ers vs. Celtics Game 7s
Sunday will be a record ninth Game 7 between these franchises, with Boston leading 6-2 heading into this season. For a more detailed look at those Game 7s and the rivalry, follow this link to our story on the history.
Joel Embiid
Embiid's return earlier than expected from an appendectomy — despite complications he was willing to talk about — changed this series. Mostly because Boston has nobody who can cover him when he's playing like the MVP version of himself — and he's pretty close to that.
Embiid is averaging 26 points, 8 rebounds and 7.3 assists per game in his three games this series.
Embiid's return was not perfectly smooth. In his first game back, Game 4, the 76ers' offense was off balance as they tried to feed Embiid and find a comfort level playing off him. It was to be expected. The combination of Embiid, Paul George and Tyrese Maxey played just 21 games together this season due to injuries and George's 25-game suspension.
However, by Game 5, Nick Nurse had a plan in place, and Philadelphia executed it. They let Embiid go to work in isolation more, regardless of who was guarding him, because Boston has nobody who can. When Boston adjusted and started bringing hard doubles at Embiid in Game 6, he found open teammates, and the offense flowed.
Still not sure how Joel Embiid saw Kelly Oubre Jr. AND made a perfect behind-the-back pass. pic.twitter.com/vQQtHbTwBp
Philadelphia has been led this series by All-Star Tyrese Maxey, who is averaging 26.3 points and 6.5 assists per game through six games. Paul George has played like the All-Star version of himself, averaging 18.2 points and seven rebounds a night while playing stellar defense. Rookie VJ Edgecombe is pitching in 13.8 points a night and is making plays.
VJ Edgecombe can reach a DIFFERENT LEVEL of speed.
The rookie takes the court with his 76ers for Game 7 against the Celtics, Saturday 7:30pm ET on NBC and Peacock. pic.twitter.com/j9mtsB312u
Philadelphia has matchup advantages in this series, and, to its credit — unlike Boston — the 76ers are exploiting them.
Boston 3-point Shooting
Sometimes it's just this simple: The Celtics shot 12-of-41 (29.3%) from 3-point range in Game 6. The Celtics are averaging 20 made 3-pointers per game in their three wins, compared to just 12 in their three losses, and in all three of those Celtics' losses they have shot under 30% from beyond the arc.
Give the 76ers perimeter defense credit for some of that. Starting in Game 5, Philadelphia made a point of emphasis taking away the 3-pointer (or at least strongly contesting every shot — Philly dared Boston to beat them any other way. That has not happened. No team is more reliant on the 3-point shot than Boston, and if those shots aren't falling Sunday, it's going to be a long day for the Celtics and their fans.
Which gets to the other thing Boston needs.
Can one of the Jays take over?
The last time these two teams met in a Game 7, it was 2023, and it was the Jayson Tatum game — he scored 51, the most ever in a Game 7.
Tatum was asked after Game 6 if he was "bummed" the Celtics could not close it out in six and now was headed to a Game 7.
"Bummed to say it's going to Game 7? No, I'm not bummed," Tatum said, then referenced the Achilles he tore last playoffs that kept him out most of this season. "I was out for 50 weeks. I wasn't able to play basketball. So I get another opportunity to play the game that I love."
For Boston's offense to thrive, one of Tatum or Jaylen Brown needs to get hot, drive and touch the paint, then either score (some midrange jumpers will work) or draw defenders and kick-out to open shooters at the arc.
Payton Pritchard has played well for Boston in this series, averaging 14.8 points per game. Derrick White has struggled with his shot, averaging 8.7 points a game on 30.9% shooting, and Boston could really use him to get going.
PEORIA, ARIZONA - FEBRUARY 27: Josh Simpson #37 of the Seattle Mariners pitches during the sixth inning of the spring training game against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Peoria Stadium on February 27, 2026 in Peoria, Arizona. (Photo by Mike Christy/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Just an hour after Mariners GM Justin Hollander gave his weekly injury update saying the team hadn’t made a determination about a Matt Brash IL stint, the Mariners announced they have placed Brash on the 15-day IL with right lat inflammation.
The injury designation isn’t entirely a surprise, despite Hollander’s optimism regarding the injury itself – and sure, a lat is preferable to an oblique injury, something the Mariners have seen enough of already, and certainly preferable to a shoulder or elbow injury. It’s early in the season and the Mariners are being hyper-vigilant about protecting their setup man, who missed all of 2024 and time in 2025 rehabbing from Tommy John surgery.
The bigger surprise is in who the Mariners are replacing Brash with. Many suspected the Mariners would turn to RHP Yosver Zulueta, who they acquired this off-season from the Reds in a minor-league swap. Zulueta has big stuff, a traditional fastball-slider reliever who has already racked up 14 strikeouts in 10 games at Tacoma. He also has the attendant command issues that caused me to label him “Carlos Vargas 2.0” this spring. Still, Zulueta seemed like the next logical choice after the Mariners had already pulled on their depth at Tacoma, selecting both Cole Wilcox and Alex Hoppe, both of whom saw similar amounts of time with the big-league club this spring as Zulueta.
But the Mariners instead opted to recall lefty Josh Simpson, acquired from the Marlins for cash considerations this spring. Simpson has less-loud stuff but similar strikeout numbers in Tacoma: 12 Ks in 9.1 innings. He also has similar command issues to Zulueta, although coming from the left side this time. The difference between the two, other than handedness: Simpson has about ten more big-league games under his belt, and has spent more consecutive time in the bigs than Zulueta, whose experience is sprinkled across two seasons. Simpson also has some shinier ERA numbers than Zulueta, and the best WHIP among Tacoma’s remaining relievers.
Josh Simpson comes in & strikes out Bryce Eldridge stranding the tying run at 3rd. Rainiers win! pic.twitter.com/WaLVgwd5Qz
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 29: Fernando Tatis Jr. #23 connects for a sacrifice fly scoring Nick Castellanos #21 of the San Diego Padres during the eighth inning of a game against the Chicago Cubs at Petco Park on April 29, 2026 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Sean M. Haffey/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Chicago White Sox (14-17) at San Diego Padres (19-11), May 1, 2026, 6:40 p.m. PST
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