Game No. 49 Preview: Flyers vs. Mammoth

The Philadelphia Flyers left Las Vegas on Monday night with more than just two points. What they carried was something just as useful at this point in the season: evidence.

Evidence that the slide they’d been stuck in was not structural. Evidence that their habits, when honored, still hold up against good teams. Evidence that belief, once cracked, can be repaired faster than it was broken.

As Philadelphia heads to Utah to face the Mammoth, there are plenty of things to consider. The Olympic break is inching closer. The standings are tight. And momentum, fragile as it can be, is once again available to be claimed.


1. Sam Ersson and the Value of Continuity.

Rick Tocchet’s decision to give Sam Ersson back-to-back starts is not just a reward for his performance in Vegas, but a vote for stability.

After a stretch in which goaltending became entangled with the Flyers’ broader struggles, Ersson’s commendable outing against the Golden Knights felt like a reset of sorts. He simplified his game, trusted his positioning, and resisted the urge to overmanage moments of chaos. The Flyers, in turn, played like a team that trusted what was happening behind them.

Going right back to Ersson signals a desire to let that rhythm breathe. There’s a psychological component here, too: when a goaltender finds clarity, changing the equation too quickly can reintroduce noise. Tocchet appears content to let Ersson sit in the crease with that confidence intact, particularly against a Utah team that thrives on quick strikes and opportunistic offense.

If the Flyers are serious about turning one good night into a stretch of good hockey, continuity in net is a logical place to start.

Sam Ersson (33). (Megan DeRuchie-The Hockey News)
Sam Ersson (33). (Megan DeRuchie-The Hockey News)

2. Proving Vegas Was Not a Fluke.

The Flyers were careful not to oversell their win in Vegas, but internally, it mattered. Not because it snapped a losing streak—those end eventually—but because it validated their process.

Against Utah, the test becomes replication. Can they manage the puck with the same discipline? Can they defend without overextending? Can they avoid the temptation to cheat offensively when the game tightens?

Vegas forced Philadelphia to play honest hockey. Utah will challenge them differently. The Flyers’ recent funk was fueled in part by mental lapses and impatience. The way out of it is consistency, because that is where good teams separate themselves


3. Rolling Confidence Into Structure.

One of the more subtle takeaways from the Golden Knights game was how the Flyers’ confidence manifested.

Breakouts were cleaner. Defense was tighter. Risk was taken selectively rather than compulsively. That kind of confidence is harder to maintain than the adrenaline-fueled variety, and it’s exactly what Utah will test.

The Mammoth are dangerous when opponents lose their shape, when defenders get caught puck-watching or forwards start pressing for offense that isn’t there. Philadelphia’s challenge is to keep its identity intact even if the scoreboard doesn’t immediately cooperate.

The Flyers don’t need to play faster; they need to play calmer. That’s the version of their game that resurfaced in Vegas, and it’s the one that gives them the best chance to build real momentum heading into the break.


4. The Clock Is Starting to Matter.

The Olympic break looms as January begins to close out, and with it comes a natural psychological checkpoint. Teams want to arrive there feeling secure, not scrambling.

For the Flyers, this stretch is about more than individual games—it’s about trajectory. The standings remain crowded, and recent history has made them acutely aware of how quickly a season can tilt if a slump lingers too long. The Vegas win stopped the bleeding. Utah offers a chance to heal further.

There’s also a subtle urgency in the room now. Not panic—the Flyers have done well to avoid overreacting—but awareness. Awareness that they’ve seen what happens when habits slip, and what it feels like when they’re restored. Few teams have done better than the Flyers this season to avoid prolonged downturns. This is the moment to prove that trend holds.


Projected Lines

Philadelphia Flyers

Forwards:

Trevor Zegras - Christian Dvorak - Travis Konecny

Denver Barkey - Sean Couturier - Owen Tippett

Matvei Michkov - Noah Cates - Bobby Brink

Nikita Grebenkin - Lane Pederson - Garnet Hathaway

Defense:

Travis Sanheim - Cam York

Emil Andrae - Jamie Drysdale

Nick Seeler - Noah Juulsen

Goalies:

Sam Ersson 

Aleksei Kolosov

Utah Mammoth

Forwards:

Clayton Keller - Nick Schmaltz - Lawson Crouse

JJ Peterka - Barrett Hayton - Daniil But

Michael Carcone - Jack McBain - Dylan Guenther

Brandon Tanev - Kevin Stenlund - Liam O'Brien

Defense:

Mikhail Sergachev - Sean Durzi

Nate Schmidt - John Marino 

Ian Cole - Nick Desimone

Goalies:

Karel Vejmelka 

Vitek Vanecek 

Bellinger stays with Yanks on $162.5M deal

MLB Rumors: Cody Bellinger and the New York Yankees have agreed to terms on a 5 year, $162.5 million deal, per multiple reports. The deal includes opt outs for Bellinger after 2027 and 2028, as well as a full no-trade clause.

Bellinger, 30, has been a curious free agent case in two of the past three seasons. The 2017 Rookie of the Year and 2019 Most Valuable Player was non-tendered by the Los Angeles Dodgers after the 2022 season, having put up a 542 OPS in 2021 and a 654 OPS in 2022. Bellinger signed a one year deal with the Cubs for 2023 that guaranteed him $17.5 million.

Bellinger had a terrific bounceback season, putting up an 881 OPS and 4.8 bWAR. A tepid free agent market for Bellinger after the 2023 season resulted in him not signing until after the 2024 spring training camps had opened up, ultimately entering into a three year, $80 million deal with the Cubs at the end of February that featured opt-outs after years one and two.

Bellinger disappointed in 2024 for Chicago, slashing .266/.325/.426, and the Cubs traded him to the New York Yankees after the season and subsidized some of his salary, ultimately paying $5 million for him to go away in return for pitcher Cody Poteet.

Bellinger excelled once again in 2025, slashing .272/.334/.480 in 152 games while putting up a 5.1 bWAR. Bellinger’s lefty swing benefitted from playing half his games in Yankee Stadium — he put up a 909 OPS at home, compared to a 715 OPS on the road.

Because of that split, a return to New York always seemed to make the most sense for Bellinger. Meanwhile, Bellinger’s good fit in their home park, as well as his defensive versatility, meant that bringing him back made sense for New York, as well. This move technically puts Jasson Dominguez out of the starting lineup, but given the injury histories of Giancarlo Stanton and Aaron Judge, as well as Trent Grisham and Ben Rice not having a long history of hitting well in the majors, Bellinger’s ability to play quality defense at all three outfield spots as well as first base provides the Yankees with valuable defensive flexibility.

‘Raps literally can’t miss’ — Warriors fans react to Jonathan Kuminga’s return, Buddy Hield’s big night vs. Raptors

Buddy Hield and Scottie Barnes embracing at half court after a game.

The Golden State Warriors lost on Tuesday night, ending their extended home stand with a 145-127 loss to the Toronto Raptors. It was a bizarre game … the Raptors are the worst-shooting team in the league, but had one of the best-shooting games in the NBA this year, paced by a career game from Immanuel Quickley. The Warriors, meanwhile, played decently but couldn’t score much beyond tremendous contributions from Buddy Hield and Jonathan Kuminga.

Here’s a look at how Dub Nation viewed the action in real time, as seen through comments from the Golden State of Mind game thread.

First quarter: ‘Kuminga should be starting’

It was a brutal opening act, as the Warriors fell behind 10-0 and later 28-10. The Raptors couldn’t miss, and led 41-28 after one.

NorthStateWarrior530
Let’s get this win!!!
OaklandDubs
Kuminga should be starting over Richard.
jazzbo251
I would expect a very big emotional letdown today. It’s a back to back after losing Jimmy. Hard to see the player’s being emotionally in this game.
REYKONG
Why do i feel like its gonna be a phone it in kind of game tonight

Second quarter: ‘JK sighting’

Kuminga entered to start the second quarter, playing for the first time in over a month. The deficit would balloon to 28, with the Warriors trailing 70-50 at halftime.

EastBayHoops
JK sighting … hnmmmm
Brytonball
They playing like it’s the end of the world.
CaptainKlay
Jk gonna take over after half time
sameba
So Toronto, the worst 3pt shooting team in the NBA, shooting 54% from 3? Something is very wrong with the Warriors D today.

Third quarter: ‘JK coming back to life’

It was very ugly for much of the third quarter, with the Raptors’ lead expanding to 30 points. But they ended with a bunch of energy and highlights, primarily from Hield and Kuminga, who were fantastic. They got back into the game, trailing 108-94 entering the fourth.

SolidSnakeGod
Might as well sit Steph at this point
sameba
It appears the team is not ready to play tonight, nor it is worth to watch the game…
BruceNa
Quickly is a 34.6% shooter from 3. Tonight he is 6-6 so far. The whole TOR team is shooting near 60% from 3 (58%). TOR has 91 points 6 min into 3rd Q. Yikes.
Brytonball
They getting physical with Post. It’s killing him on the boards. At least JK coming back to life. They definitely guarding Melton close.
Fanforever
Glad JK is showing other teams what he can do so he can go where he is valued.

Fourth quarter: ‘Making it a game!

The Warriors made things interesting, but couldn’t maintain it. Toronto was just too hot, and coasted to a blowout win.

8livesleft
JK getting hot, kerr should be benching him soon lol
CaptainKlay
its the same team which was on a streak, we just got jk now instead of jimmy
OhCoolStoryBruh
Dubs making it a game!
OhCoolStoryBruh
Raps literally can’t miss, that’s really why the Dubs are gonna drop this one
8livesleft
Hield and JK both seem like players who thrive when they have nothing to lose. Just playing freely on instinct.

Right when they’re pressured to perform “the right way” that’s it – consider their beds shat.
OhCoolStoryBruh
I’m not too bothered by this loss, it was closer than than the final score suggests. Raps players just shot lights out while Curry had an off night, but they still cut it to single digits after being down 30. The team isn’t giving up. At least JK looked good out there tonight

Dodgers designate Michael Siani for assignment to make room for Kyle Tucker

LOS ANGELES — The Dodgers finalized their four-year, $240 million contract for Kyle Tucker on Wednesday, introducing the All-Star outfielder in a press conference at Dodger Stadium. But they needed to make space on the 40-man roster for the addition of Tucker, so Los Angeles designated outfielder Michael Siani for assignment.

Siani was claimed off waivers on December 12 from the Atlanta Braves, who had claimed the outfielder from the St. Louis Cardinals in November.

A defense-first center fielder, Siani has played parts of the last four seasons in the majors with the Cardinals and Cincinnati Reds. He hit .221/.277/.270 with a 58 wRC+ in 160 career games and 383 plate appearances. He played in 19 games in 2025, none of them starts, with four singles in 17 at-bats plus two walks.

Siani in Triple-A Memphis last season hit .209/.307/.329 with a 71 wRC+ and 24 extra-base hits in 101 games. Between the majors and minors, 641 of Siani’s 673 career defensive starts have come in center field.

This is similar to another recent waiver claim by the Dodgers. Utility man Ryan Fitzgerald was claimed off waivers on January 9, designated for assignment on January 13 with the signing of infielder Andy Ibáñez, then after he cleared waivers on Monday was sent outright to Triple-A Oklahoma City, still in the organization as depth but now off the 40-man roster.

We’ll find out in the next week or so what fate awaits Siani, either claimed or traded elsewhere or possibly sticking around if he clears waivers. With one year, 63 days of service time and as someone who has not previously been sent outright to the minors, Siani wouldn’t be able to refuse an outright assignment should it come to that.

"Found A Way": Red Wings Lean on Close Game Success Vs. Maple Leafs

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It's a clash of longtime Original Six rivals, as the Detroit Red Wings take their show on the road for their fourth and final meeting this season against the Toronto Maple Leafs.

The Red Wings are already guaranteed a season-series win over Toronto, having already won the first three meetings. 

Not only did Detroit beat Toronto by a 6-3 final on Oct. 11, but they followed that up with a 3-2 win two days later thanks to Mason Appleton's goal late in regulation. 

In their most recent matchup on Dec. 28, Simon Edvinsson's skilled tally in overtime gave Detroit a 3-2 win at Little Caesars Arena. 

The ability to eventually come out on top in closely-contested contests, like the most recently played two games against the Maple Leafs, has been key to the Red Wings' success. 

"I do know Talbs (Cam Talbot) stole the game in Toronto," Andrew Copp said of Detroit's 3-2 win on Oct. 13. "It's always a combination of things, I don't know if there is any one secret recipe. They have a lot of good players over there, and they're playing pretty good right now, I think they've been on a good streak like the whole Atlantic Division." 

"We're focused on playing well, and we'll make some little changes to whatever system or whatever they're running," Copp continued. 

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Goaltender Cam Talbot essentially stole the game for Detroit in Toronto, making 38 saves, while Appleton played the role of late-game hero by scoring the game-winning goal with 44.1 seconds left in regulation to break a 2–2 tie.

Appleton also factored into Detroit's overtime win in late December, scoring the game-tying goal in the third period only seconds after Toronto had taken the lead. 

The maturity Detroit has shown is one of the major reasons why they've reached 30 wins through their first 50 games for the first time since 2011-12. 

"We've won close games, right? That's the biggest thing when I look back at the second game of the year, we were down a couple and came back," Patrick Kane said. "That game in Toronto, Apps (Appleton) scored a big goal late to give us a 3-2 lead, so I think we've found a way to come out on top of those close games." 

Currently, the Red Wings occupy the second overall spot in the Atlantic Division (64 points) behind the red-hot Tampa Bay Lightning, who are 9-0-1 in their last 10 games.

Meanwhile, the Maple Leafs, who have gone 6-2-2 in their last 10 games, are in the sixth spot (56 points). 

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Yankees get their man, save their offseason with Cody Bellinger deal

The New York Yankees got their man, and yes, at their price, too.

The Yankees signed free-agent outfielder/first baseman Cody Bellinger to a five-year, $162.5 million contract Wednesday morning, two officials with direct knowledge told USA TODAY Sports. The officials spoke on the condition of anonymity because the deal won’t become official until Bellinger passes his physical.

The deal includes opt-outs after the second and third years of the contract, a full no-trade clause and a $20 million signing bonus. If Bellinger opts out after the second year of the contract, he will have earned a nifty $85 million the first two years.

The average $42.5 million salary the first two years is $500,000 higher than Bo Bichette’s three-year, $126 million deal with the Mets, that includes an opt-out after each season.

It was actually during Bichette’s news conference in New York that the Yankees and agent Scott Boras agreed to Bellinger’s deal, setting off a frenzy in New York.

The Yankees, who refused to budge off their five-year proposal, insisted they would not get into a bidding war. They believed all along that no one would outbid them and provide Bellinger the seven-year deal he was seeking.

They proved to be right.

They never believed the rumors that the Mets were in on Bellinger, and once the Mets traded Tuesday night for Chicago White Sox center fielder Luis Robert, it only confirmed their belief.

The Philadelphia Phillies offered Bichette a seven-year, $200 million contract last week, but they had no interest in pivoting to Bellinger. It was the same with the Blue Jays, who offered Kyle Tucker a 10-year, $350 million contract before he went to the Dodgers, but weren’t going to give the same deal to Bellinger.

So, the Yankees waited, and waited, tweaked their five-year, $160 million offer little by little with opt-outs, a no-trade clause and then bumped up it by $5 million, before reaching their agreement.

Really, this is a deal that made sense all along.

Bellinger loved his season in New York, and the Yankees loved him right back.

The reality is that the Yankees had to have him.

They needed someone to protect Aaron Judge in the lineup with Juan Soto’s departure a year ago.

They needed his defense, his versatility, his left-handed bat and his ability to handle the pressure of New York.

If the Yankees didn’t sign re-sign Bellinger, their offseason could have been an unmitigated disaster. They had a few backup plans, but nothing that could have come close to replacing Bellinger.

Bellinger was the ideal fit, hitting .272 with 29 homers and 98 RBI in 152 games last season. In his last three seasons, he’s accumulated a 12 WAR, hitting .281 with an .818 OPS, averaging 24.3 homers and 91 RBI a year.

He’s also still just 30 years old, just 1 1/2 years older than Tucker, which is why he was seeking at least a seven-year contract in free agency.

It was a huge signing for the Yankees, who weren’t shy in telling the world that bringing Bellinger back was their No. 1 priority the entire winter.

Now, the question is what the Yankees do next?

They acquired Ryan Weathers from the Miami Marlins last week, but still need another starter. And with Bellinger in left field, Trent Grisham in center and Judge in right, they have a surplus of outfielders. They could use young outfielder Jasson Dominguez, their former No. 1 prospect, as trade bait.

They are one of the teams that have been in contact with the Milwaukee Brewers about ace Freddy Peralta, who earns just $8 million and is in the final year of his contract. They’re talking to other teams, too, and plenty of starters like Framber Valdez and Zac Gallen remain on the market.

Three weeks remain before spring training, but the Yankees, after watching the Toronto Blue Jays and Baltimore Orioles get better, are finally back in business.

The Yankees still may not be the team to beat in the AL East, but they can finally exhale.

They got the man they wanted, and most of all, needed all along.

Bellinger is back.

So are the Yankees’ World Series hopes.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Cody Bellinger deal saves New York Yankees' offseason

Rockets finding right role for Amen Thompson

Everyone loves a linear narrative.

OK, fine – not everyone. If you’re some kind of wacky postmodernist, you prefer a strange metanarrative. You love yourself some Twin Peaks.

Good for you.

The rest of us love a linear narrative. We also love a linear NBA career. When a player becomes the player they were projected to be, it’s satisfying. Their predraft profile is a clearly defined premise, and their NBA career is a tidy, logical conclusion.

It might not go that way for Amen Thompson.

When he was drafted, he was either the mythological 6’7″ point guard or a bust. Thompson was going to be prime Russell Westbrook – oh, but also the best wing defender in the NBA. Alternatively, he was Michael Kidd-Gilchist only someone a worse shooter. His supporters countered that it wouldn’t matter that he couldn’t shoot – why would that matter in 2026?

I was guilty. I evoked the specter of Ben Simmons. Perhaps that trajectory is still on the table, but it isn’t necessary. Fortunately, he’s also had too much success to entertain a future “bust” label. Most of that career success has come as an off-ball cutter who conserves most of his energy for the defensive end.

Lately, it seems like he’s transitioning back into that role.

Rockets’ Amen Thompson is moving off the ball

On the season, Thompson has a 20.3% Usage Rate. Over the Rockets’ last five games, he’s at 18.8%.

Some will cry sample size. To be sure, it’s not a huge sample. It may be noise.

Yet, it has felt like a concerted effort. When Thompson shares the floor with Reed Sheppard, it’s Sheppard initiating the offense. Alperen Sengun typically feels like the primary hub. They’re both more natural half-court playmakers than Thompson.

“Half-court” is (are?) the operative word(s) there. The qualities that screamed “point guard” pre-draft are still present in Thompson. He has the floor vision, and it’s evident in transition. Thompson’s processing speed seems causally tied to the speed of the game itself. When it’s fast, he’s fast.

But when it’s slow…

Thompson seems uncertain about what type of half-court initiator he wants to be. There’s selflessness in his DNA, but he’s also aggressive. Wires get crossed. Thompson is capable of making utterly absurd drive-and-kick passes, but he sometimes drives when he should have kicked, or kicks when he’s too far into his drive.

None of which means Thompson should never have the ball. He’s in the 56.1st percentile league-wide in Points Per Possession (PPP) as a pick-and-roll ball-handler. He’s in the 61.6th percentile in isolation PPP. Neither of those marks is necessarily good, but neither is bad.

Thompson can attack closeouts. He can drive later in the clock if the Rockets have exhausted their other options. He’s not a point guard yet, and he may never be one:

But he is a point forward.

Rockets still searching for Thompson’s role

Last year, Thompson had a 4.1 Box Plus/Minus (BPM). For context’s sake, that put him in the same ballpark as James Harden, Damian Lillard, Cade Cunningham, and others. This year’s 1.9 BPM has Thompson sharing company with Alex Sarr, Payton Pritchard, Immanuel Quickley…

You get the picture.

There’s a counterargument to be made. You could say that regression was always to be expected as Thompson learned a new position.

Perhaps. A 2.2 drop in BPM feels like a bit more than “regression”. It seems sensible to conclude that if Thompson looked elite as an off-ball guy, and mediocre with more on-ball reps, he’s likely got a brighter future as an off-ball weapon. Call me crazy.

It’s not that the Rockets should have already concluded. It’s not to knock them for experimenting with him at the 1 this year. If his career does take the route I’m outlining here, he’ll still benefit from having handled the ball in his third season.

All I’m saying is this: the safe money suggests that Thompson is more Andrei Kirilenko than Penny Hardaway*. If the Rockets concur, they might as well set his course accordingly. His usage rate over the last 5 games is likely more indicative of what his future holds than his season-long number:

Unless his development takes an unexpected turn.

*Please forgive the imperfect analogy. Thompson is a singular athlete even in NBA history. It’s hard to find a comparison.

P.S. Does the asterisk at the end of the article subvert the expected linearity of the article ironically? If not, how about the postscript? Is this meta?  

World Series Odds: A Dodgers Three-Peat is Already at +220, But It's Far From a Sure Thing

The Los Angeles Dodgers made another big splash by signing Kyle Tucker to a four-year, $240-million contract, and have also been linked to Milwaukee Brewers right-hander Freddy Peralta on the trade front.

Consider that the reigning World Series champs also signed closer Edwin Diaz and may not be done improving their roster this offseason.

This has resulted in their 2026 World Series odds reaching one of the shortest preseason numbers in recent history. Below, we'll look at those odds and compare them to similar teams that breathed the same rarefied air.

2026 World Series odds

Crown the Dodgers, already

The Los Angeles Dodgers opened the offseason at +350 to win the 2026 World Series, according to Sports Odds History. The New York Yankees were closest at +800, and every other team was +1200 or longer.

Things haven't changed drastically since then, for the most part. The Yankees are +850, and the Seattle Mariners are now third on the board at +1200.

However, the Dodgers' odds have shrunk to between +240 (DraftKings, bet365) and +220 (FanDuel), giving them an implied probability of around 29-31% to win a third consecutive Fall Classic. While this is rare, it's not unheard of, and even Los Angeles itself has been here before. Just last winter, the Dodgers went from +400 after winning the 2024 World Series to +350 in December and later +240 by the end of March.

Roki Sasaki and Tanner Scott were their belwether free-agent acquisitions, and this offseason's crop certainly outclasses that, so another trip to the World Series certainly seems a given, particularly for L.A. fans and the "Dodgers are ruining baseball" contingent.

Hold your horses!

While it's true the Dodgers won the World Series, they were pushed to the brink by the Toronto Blue Jays over seven games and even needed a comeback victory to take Game 7.

The Dodgers also saw their World Series odds drop to +350 in September and +500 at the onset of the postseason. The supposed behemoths went 35-30 in the second half, and players like Mookie Betts played below their usual standard. The rotation battled injuries, the bullpen was a real weakness into October, and the outfield was a revolving door. The Edwin Diaz and Kyle Tucker additions shore some of those areas up, but is it premature to consider the World Series all wrapped up in January?

It should. Despite the Dodgers ultimately going wire-to-wire despite some concerns popping up along the way, it's been a minute since we've seen a preseason favorite at +300 or shorter.

The 2005 and 2007 Yankees each peaked at +300 before Opening Day. Neither won the World Series.

And to those decrying the Dodgers' practices as detrimental to the sheer fabric of America's Pastime, the Yankees were +260 or shorter every preseason from 1999 through 2004. While New York won the first two, it didn't claim another title until 2009.

The Yankees did win the 1998 World Series, but they were +600 to do so on April 1. Meanwhile, the Atlanta Braves were +200 and lost to the San Diego Padres in the NLCS. 

The Braves were also shorter than +300 in the 1993 preseason, but lost to the Philadelphia Phillies in the NLCS.

Ultimately, dating back to 1990, 14 teams have had preseason odds at +300 or shorter, and three have gone on to win the World Series. So while itmay be frustrating as a non-Dodgers fan to watch Los Angeles pluck up even more top names while flexing financial fortitude, it doesn't always work out. In fact, it may be more likely that it doesn't. 

That's not to say I'd suggest wagering against them! Until a different team can rise and prove it's got what it takes, the Dodgers are clearly the class of MLB entering the 2026 regular season.

World Series winners' preseason odds

Let's look back at where World Series winners were in the odds board during the preseason.

YearWinning teamPreseason odds
2025Dodgers Dodgers+240
2024Dodgers Dodgers+350
2023Rangers Rangers+5000
2022Astros Astros+1000
2021Braves Braves+1000
2020Dodgers Dodgers+385
2019Nationals Nationals+1600
2018Red Sox Red Sox+1150
2017Astros Astros+1175
2016Cubs Cubs+660
2015Royals Royals+3300
2014Giants Giants+2500
2013Red Sox Red Sox+2800
2012Giants Giants+2000
2011Cardinals Cardinals+2500
2010Giants Giants+2500
2009Yankees Yankees+500
2008Phillies Phillies+2000
2007Red Sox Red Sox+700
2006Cardinals Cardinals+700
2005White Sox White Sox+2200
2004Red Sox Red Sox+400
2003Marlins Marlins+7500
2002Angels Angels+4000
2001Diamondbacks Diamondbacks+1000
2000Yankees Yankees+250
1999Yankees Yankees+200
1998Yankees Yankees+600
1997Marlins Marlins+1000
1996Yankees Yankees+700
1995Braves Braves+400
1993Blue Jays Blue Jays+600
1992Blue Jays Blue Jays+700
1991Twins Twins+8000
1990Reds Reds+1600

Odds courtesy Sports Odds History

This article originally appeared on Covers.com, read the full article here

Mets News: Mets sign RHP Luis Garcia to one-year deal

The Mets have signed reliever Luis García to a one-year deal, according to Joel Sherman. The deal is pending a physical and is reportedly worth $1.75 million, with the right-hander able to earn $1.25 million in incentives.

García, who turns 39 later this month, split last season between the Dodgers, Nationals, and Angels and pitched to a 3.42 ERA, a 3.28 FIP, and a 1.46 WHIP, with 48 strikeouts in 55 1/3 innings. He finished the year with a 0.8 bWAR and posted a career-best 0.3 HR/9 while striking out 8.7 batters and walking 4.2 batters per nine innings. For his career, he owns a 4.07 ERA, a 3.92 FIP, and a 1.42 WHIP, and has struck out 547 batters in 583 1/3 innings. The Mets will be his ninth team, as he has previously suited up for the Phillies, Padres, Cardinals, Red Sox, and Rangers, in addition to the three clubs that he played for last season.

García is the latest addition to a revamped relief corps for the Mets, joining Luke Weaver and Devin Williams. In addition, A.J. Minter and Brooks Raley will be returning following injury-shortened seasons in 2025, which gives Carlos Mendoza a pretty good group of relievers to rely upon. The remaining spots, pending any additional bullpen moves this winter, will belong to guys like Huascar Brazobán, Richard Lovelady, and a prospects like Dylan Ross.

LeBron James taunts ex-teammate with nearly vulgar gesture

LeBron James taunted one of his former teammates Tuesday night with a gesture that almost turned PG-13 in a hurry.

Just prior to tip-off of the Lakers’ road matchup with the Nuggets, James made his way toward Denver’s bench to have some fun with assistant coach Jared Dudley.

The two guys were on the 2020 Lakers team that won an NBA title, and in a unique way of acknowledging his old buddy’s presence, James made a motion with his right hand that nearly turned vulgar.

The 41-year-old pretended to wind up his middle finger like a jack in the box, but thankfully for all the young eyes in attendance, James stopped just short of flipping Dudley the bird.

LeBron James was seen having fun with Jared Dudley prior to the Lakers vs. Nuggets game Tuesday night. Denver Post via Getty Images

The two then shared a big laugh, before James hit the floor to try to lead his Lakers to a win.

The 21-time All-Star ended up having a great night against Dudley’s Nuggets, scoring 19 points while recording nine rebounds and eight assists. L.A. went on to pull out the victory, 115-107.

Jared Dudley and LeBron James won a championship together while on the Los Angeles Lakers. NBAE via Getty Images

James didn’t address the pregame giggle with Dudley following the tilt, though he did tell reporters why he felt it was necessary to share a mid-game moment with Nikola Jokic, who sat out the contest while still battling a knee injury.

“Jokic is one of the greatest players to ever play this game,” James said. “And for me to see him, just go over and pay my respect, that’s easy. That’s easy.”

James and the Lakers play next in a matchup with the Clippers on Thursday night at Intuit Dome.

Canadiens’ St-Louis Knows There’s A Big Price To Pay

In Tuesday night’s game against the Minnesota Wild, Montreal Canadiens’ coach Martin St-Louis decided to use Jayden Struble over Arber Xhekaj. As a result, he was once again asked what went into that decision. It’s a question he’s been asked often over the last few years, but last night, he gave a bit of a different answer.

Of course, he highlighted the fact that Struble hadn’t played a lot in the last month, and the coach wants to keep his guys “fresh”, but he also explained:

Being a leader means knowing you’ll have to make decisions that will negatively affect people you care about. But that’s the role, it comes with the territory. The role comes with a price; you have to pay the price. Those are not easy conversations, but they start with the truth. Of course, the easiest thing for a coach is six defensemen who don’t get injured for 82 games, 12 forwards who don’t get injured for 82 games, and two goaltenders who don’t get injured for 82 games. Then there’s zero conversation, but that’s impossible. That’s the price that comes with the job; it’s an important job, and I take it to heart. It’s not easy; there’s not a single player who likes being told he’s not playing, but it’s the NHL.
- Martin St-Louis on the tough decisions

Canadiens Grab A Much-Needed Win By Finally Taming The Wild
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Canadiens Facing Big Patrik Laine Decision

St-Louis has been there as a player, he has been a healthy scratch, he knows how that feels, but he also knows that as a coach, he needs to make those kinds of calls despite how it will make the players affected feel. Much has been written about the fact that he will soon have to make some of those tough calls, and no one knows it better than him.

So far, he has been spared from cutting someone to insert Kirby Dach because Alexandre Texier is day-to-day, but when the Frenchman is ready to return, he’ll have to do it, and that’s not a responsibility he takes lightly.

However, when it’s a routine decision like inserting Struble to keep him fresh, it seems like there’s not much of a conversation, according to Arpon Basu, who reported on TSN that it was actually Juraj Slafkovsky who informed Xhekaj that he would have a night off when he joined him in the hot tub, shortly after the lineup was posted.


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Yadier Molina Hired by Cardinals as Special Assistant to Chaim Bloom

The St. Louis Cardinals are bringing back a legend, but not in the way that many thought it might happen. The team has announced they have hired Yadier Molina as a Special Assistant to President of Baseball Operations Chaim Bloom.

Here’s the statement shared by the St. Louis Cardinals today about Yadi’s return to the team:

“We are happy to welcome Yadi back to the Cardinals organization,” stated Bloom. “He is an elite competitor, a consistent winner, and one of the greatest ever at his position, and we look forward to many contributions during his visits with us in this new role, both in and out of uniform. Yadi will provide input on our catching program, will advise our staff on catching and game planning strategy, and will give me and our front office valuable perspective from his unique vantage point. Perhaps most important, he will help us nurture in our players the high standards, attention to detail, and championship mindset that are so critical to winning.”

There’s no need to document Yadi Molina’s many career accomplishments. As St. Louis Cardinals fans, most of us can recite them by memory without Google. The big question that immediately comes to my mind is how involved will Yadi really be with the Cardinals. You likely recall back in December of 2023, Yadi was hired by then President of Baseball Operations John Mozeliak as a special assistant, but few of us really saw much of Yadi or his involvement. Based on the behavior of the new St. Louis Cardinals front office, I have confidence that we’ll see a more tangible result from Yadi Molina being a part of the team again. Or, at least that is my huge hope.

Report: Cody Bellinger stays with the Yankees, agrees to 5-year, $162.5 million contract

Cody Bellinger became the last of the top free-agent hitters to reach a deal, agreeing to stay with the New York Yankees for a five-year, $162.5 million contract, a person familiar with the negotiations told The Associated Press.

The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the agreement was subject to a successful physical.

Bellinger gets a $20 million signing bonus payable on April 1, $32.5 million in the first two seasons, $25.8 million in the next two and $25.9 million in 2030. He also has a full no-trade provision.

Bellinger has the right to opt out after the 2027 or 2028 seasons to become a free agent again, but if there is a work stoppage that leads to no games being played in 2027, the agreement specifies the opt outs will shift to after the 2027 and 2028 seasons.

A two-time All-Star acquired by the Yankees from the Chicago Cubs in December 2024, Bellinger hit .272 with 29 homers and 98 RBIs last year — including .302 with 18 homers and 55 RBIs at Yankee Stadium. A left-handed hitter, he played in 149 games in the outfield and seven at first base in his first season since 2022 without a stint on the injured list.

He is a son of former Yankee Clay Bellinger.

Voted the 2017 National League Rookie of the Year and 2019 NL MVP, Bellinger has a .261 average with 225 homers and 695 RBIs in eight seasons with the Los Angeles Dodgers (2018-22), Cubs (2023-24) and the Yankees.

He earned $57.5 million from the three-year, $80 million contract he reached with the Cubs before the 2024 season. Bellinger declined a $25 million option for 2026 in favor of a $5 million buyout.

VOTE: Do you approve of the Yankees bringing back Cody Bellinger?

Welcome to SB Nation Reacts, a survey of fans across Major League Baseball. Throughout the year we ask questions of the most plugged-in Yankees fans and fans across the country. Sign up here to participate in the weekly emailed surveys.

He was a left-handed hitting outfielder.
They were a Bronx-based baseball team.
Can I make it any more obvious?

The offseason began with Cody Bellinger exercising his opt-out and hitting the free agent market a year early, eager to take advantage of arguably his best season since he won the 2019 National League MVP. From the beginning, though, it seemed inevitable that he would return to the Bronx and continue to don the same uniform his father wore. Bellinger hyped up the organization. The front office hyped up the player. Like two high school students who broke up due to circumstances but still clearly had a thing for each other, it seemed inevitable that the two would get back together once the dust cleared.

Well, it took long enough. After three months of Scott Boras looking at Cashman, and Cashman looking at Bellinger, the outfielder finally blinked, signing a still-generous, five-year deal worth $162.5 million. And the crowd went wild.

Oh, yeah, the crowd didn’t go wild because it’s Bellinger. Don’t get me wrong, I like the guy, think he’s a solid player, and am glad he’s back. But, much like these two commenters (and many others), I’m simply happy that I won’t be writing up any more Around the Empire posts trying to come up with yet another pun saying that the Yankees are still daring Bellinger to accept their contract.

When it came to the deal itself, our lovely PSA comments’ section could be broken down into three categories. First up, we have the “We’re a better team with him, so I’m happy he’s back” group, who mostly expressed satisfaction — but perhaps not the overenthusiastic excitement that would have followed, say, a Kyle Tucker signing.

Others, however, were not quite as thrilled with the contract, arguing that he does not move the needle enough in what is expected to be a viciously tight American League East in 2026.

Still others, in classic Pinstripe Alley fashion, have already put Bellinger in the rearview mirror and have begun to ask the Bartletian question, “What’s next?”

Oh, and one commenter directly expressed joy that Scott Boras failed to get his client a seven-year deal, although I argue with their notion that Boras rarely loses these days. See, for example: Gerrit Cole’s opt-out last winter, Jordan Montgomery’s failed free agent market, Alex Bregman’s free agency last year, Carlos Correa’s free agency a few years back; basically, anybody not at the extreme top of the market has had a more difficult free agency that they anticipated.

And so, after all this, I return the question to you, dear readers. What are your thoughts on the Yankees’ decision to finally get down on one knee and ask Bellinger to be their left fielder for 2026 — or perhaps, more accurately, on Bellinger finally saying yes?

Vote in our poll, and let us know your thoughts in the comments’ section below!