Feb 7, 2026; Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA; North Carolina Tar Heels forward Caleb Wilson (8) with the ball as Duke Blue Devils forward Cameron Boozer (12) defends in the second half at Dean E. Smith Center. Mandatory Credit: Bob Donnan-Imagn Images | Bob Donnan-Imagn Images
If he stays he would be trouble (for the opponents).
If he goes it might be double (carrying the UNC torch brightly into the NBA).
First off: this is not a question about what’s best for Caleb. Everyone has him as a top five pick in the NBA, and I genuinely believe he could rise as high as #2. Darius Acuff brings serious defensive concerns. Darryn Peterson has created mental health concerns. Cameron Boozer has NBA execs wondering about his positional versatility and inability to play above the rim. AJ Dybantsa seems the clear #1 at this point, but Wilson’s combination of size, athleticism, basketball IQ, and intangibles has GMs salivating. What does the 2nd pick in the NBA draft deliver? $25,000,000 guaranteed over the first two years with another $30,000,000 in the following two years, which are team optional. It’s best for Caleb to go to the draft right now.
But let’s get selfish for a moment and think about this in terms of what’s best for UNC.
If Caleb comes back, he brings star power and an on-court presence UNC could build a champion around. He’d probably be one of the headline players all off-season, the projected top pick in next year’s draft. He’d be taking a legit shot at “legend” both at UNC and within the college game. On the flip side, he’d also consume a massive amount of NIL on next season’s roster, and he’d risk the dreaded sophomore slump. Can you imagine UNC fans ranting about Coach Malone if Wilson wasn’t going for 25 and 12 every game? I can.
If Caleb goes to the NBA, he’d be the first Tar Heel to go in the top 5 since Marvin Harrison and Raymond Felton in 2005. Caleb oozes UNC positivity and can’t stop talking about how much he loves Chapel Hill and Tar Heel basketball. Carrying that energy into the draft and his rookie season would be proof of concept that UNC basketball can nurture an exceptional talent and propel them to the game’s heights, while also delivering an authentic college experience beyond the court. Caleb didn’t live in a basketball bubble at UNC, divorced from real student life. He soaked it all in.
What a walking, talking billboard for UNC in the pro game, something it’s lacked for awhile now.
So, how do you see it? Let us know in the comments below.
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA - APRIL 03: (L-R) Morez Johnson Jr. #21 and Aday Mara #15 of the Michigan Wolverines speak to media at a player breakout session during a 2026 NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament Final Four practice day at Lucas Oil Stadium on April 03, 2026 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Aaron J. Thornton/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Morez Johnson Jr. and Aday Mara played a pivotal role in head coach Dusty May and the Michigan Wolverines winning the national championship this season. Now, after successful first years in Ann Arbor, both big men have important decisions to make in the next month or so.
Mara and Johnson — along with fellow Wolverine Yaxel Lendeborg — are projected to be first-round picks in this summer’s NBA Draft. Mara is projected to be selected in the late portion of the lottery, while Johnson is expected to go in the late part of the first round.
The goal for all guys that enter the NBA Draft is to receive a guaranteed contract. If you are selected in the first round, you will receive a guaranteed contract for two years; the remaining two years after that are controlled by the team. The higher you get picked, the more money you make.
Turning down the NBA isn’t easy, but Johnson recently told NBC5 in Chicago he wouldn’t mind doing it if that’s what’s best for him.
“There’s no rush because if I can’t get (a guaranteed contract) this year, I know I can get it next year, and I have no issue coming back to Michigan and trying to repeat,” Johnson said.
#Michigan PF Morez Johnson and his decision to either stay or go to the NBA via NBC Chicago:
“There’s no rush because if I can’t get a (guarantee NBA contract this year), I know I can get it next year. I have no issue with coming back to Michigan and trying to repeat.” pic.twitter.com/7KVZO6af5l
Johnson is ESPN’s No. 27 overall prospect on their big board this year. Just for the sake of example, let’s say 27 overall is exactly where he goes in this year’s draft. The 27th overall pick last year was former Wolverine Danny Wolf. According to Spotrac, Wolf is making $2,801,280 as a first-year NBA player. Let’s say the number goes up slightly this year and is right at $2.9 million.
With all that information in mind, the question then becomes whether or not Michigan would be able to match or exceed the $2.9 million, bring Johnson back for one more year and help raise his draft stock. Michigan isn’t a poor program by any means, so it wouldn’t be surprising if that scenario were to be reality. I’m sure May and his staff wouldn’t mind having a veteran big man that has experience in the system back in Ann Arbor.
Meanwhile, in a separate interview with a Spanish media outlet, Mara was speaking as if he already had his mind made up as far as declaring for the draft. But it also sounds like he will retain his collegiate eligibility just in case.
“There’s still the whole summer ahead, during which I have to prepare for the draft, talk to teams, train with teams, and see what position I’ll play,” Mara said. “I’m lucky enough to be able to decide what to do; both options are good, whether I stay or leave.”
May already has an insurance policy in the event that one or both big men leave for the draft, as the Wolverines acquired the commitment of former Tennessee center J.P. Estrella on Thursday. However, getting one or both of Johnson and Mara to come back would be incredible for Michigan’s chances of going back-to-back.
At this point, I expect both of them to declare for the draft while retaining their college eligibility. Mara seems more likely than Johnson to stay in the draft, but both of them very well could be ready to move on regardless of where they end up getting selected. The deadline to withdraw from the draft is May 27, so there is a lot of time between now and then for the Michigan big men to finalize their plans.
What do you think Mara and Johnson will do? Go to the NBA? Return to Michigan? Let me know what you think down in the comments section below!
The New York Islanders woke up Saturday morning sitting one point behind the Philadelphia Flyers for third place in the Metropolitan Division and three points behind the Ottawa Senators for the final wild card spot.
Those are the only two realistic paths remaining for the Islanders into the postseason.
The math alone tells you catching Philadelphia is significantly easier and is preferable to the task of catching Ottawa.
If the Islanders win in regulation on Saturday against the Senators, they'll move one point back of Ottawa.
Still, the Detroit Red Wings could then leapfrog the Islanders again with a regulation win, based on the regulation wins tiebreaker.
It's not the most inspiring run of opponents to hope to beat Ottawa to even give the Islanders a chance to pass the Senators.
There's a reason the odds give Ottawa around a 92% chance to make the playoffs.
Meanwhile, the odds have the Islanders and Flyers within a few ticks of one another. Not only is this thanks to the Islanders being just one point back, but the Islanders also clinched the tiebreaker over the Flyers.
In the event of a tie in point, the Islanders finish above Philly, no matter what happens.
The Flyers also have a tougher schedule than Ottawa.
The Flyers go on the road Saturday to face the Winnipeg Jets in a game with huge playoff ramifications for both sides.
Ironically, that's also how the Islanders finish the year. The Islanders might need to win every game remaining, a very tall task for them and new head coach Peter DeBoer.
The odds of Philadelphia winning out are rather low, and compared to that of Ottawa, the window of opportunity for the Islanders to claim third place in the Metropolitan Division is significantly larger.
With just three games to go, it's almost the only path ahead. All the Islanders can do is win and drive up the pressure on the Flyers.
We have a busy Saturday across the majors, and that means lots of opportunities for long balls.
My MLB player props and home run analysis will highlight Pete Crow-Armstrong, Shea Langeliers, and Aaron Judge.
Read more in my MLB picks for April 11.
UPDATE: Added another HR pick + parlay.
Best MLB home run props today
Player to hit a HR
Odds
Pete Crow-Armstrong
+980
Shea Langeliers
+430
Aaron Judge
+225
💲Today's HR parlay
+18503
Pete Crow-Armstrong (+980)
Pete Crow-Armstrong is such a versatile weapon for the Chicago Cubs, and he showed last season that he has serious pop in his bat for a small guy, going deep 31 times.
Although he’s only clubbed one homer so far this season, it’s only a matter of time until he gets going, and today’s matchup could be the perfect matchup for him to find a rhythm.
The Cubbies take on the rival Pirates, who hand Braxton Ashcroft the baseball. Crow-Armstrong has swung it well against him, going 3-for-4 with a pair of doubles.
Time: 2:20 p.m. ET
Where to watch: SNP, MARQ
Shea Langeliers (+430)
Shea Langeliers has been one of the top power hitters in the big leagues so far.
The Athletics slugger has clubbed five home runs. While he’s failed to go deep in his last six games, there’s reason to believe No. 6 of the campaign could be coming today.
The 28-year-old has three hits across his last two games, and more importantly, he’s had a bit of success against New York Mets starter Kodai Senga.
In five at-bats, Langeliers has smacked one bomb. Also, the A’s are on the road, and all of his homers have been away from home.
Time: 4:10 p.m. ET
Where to watch: NBCSCA, SNY
Aaron Judge (+225)
Aaron Judge is the reigning MVP for a reason. He’s still one of the most feared hitters in the sport, and Judge is up to three home runs so far.
The Rays send Nick Martinez to the mound today, and Judge is 2-for-5 against him with a long ball.
The slugger has two homers on the road, and one of his three bombs has been against right-handed hurlers.
While Martinez has a solid 2.25 ERA through two outings, he’s already allowed two dingers.
Time: 6:10 p.m. ET
Where to watch: YES, Rays.TV
Quinn Allen's 2026 Transparency Record
HR picks: 4-14, +1.32 units
Today’s HR parlay
Crow-Armstrong
Bet Now +18503
Langeliers
Judge
Odds are correct at the time of publishing and are subject to change. Not intended for use in MA. Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.
LOS ANGELES — Max Muncy was in Dave Roberts’ ear in Toronto this week, telling the Los Angeles Dodgers manager that he was getting close to producing hits.
He delivered in a big way.
The 35-year-old third baseman hit three home runs in a game for the second time in his career, including a walk-off shot in the ninth inning, rallying the Dodgers past the Texas Rangers 8-7 Friday night.
“I still think about the first time I did it,” Muncy said. “To get the win on top of it, it’s great.”
Muncy’s power display came on a night when Shohei Ohtani’s bobblehead paid homage to the four-time MVP’s three-homer outing in Game 4 of last year’s NL Championship Series.
“He’s just playing the heck out of third base, he’s taking good at-bats and right now he’s had a good start,” Roberts said.
Muncy’s first homer in the second inning was his 211th as a Dodger. He overtook Steve Garvey for sole possession of third place on Los Angeles’ career list with his second shot in the fourth. He trails only Ron Cey (228) and Eric Karros (270).
“Garvey is kind of a Dodger icon, the way he carried himself, the way he played the game, just a model of consistency,” Muncy said. “He really embodied what being a Dodger was and so to pass him, it’s something that’s really, really special to me. Hopefully, I can keep climbing.”
Muncy is the first player with three home runs, including a walk-off, since Jack Suwinski on June 19, 2022, and the second Dodger since Don Demeter in 1959.
He finished 4-for-5 with five runs and three RBIs in his 20th career multihomer game. His walk-off homer was his sixth such hit and seventh walk-off RBI with the Dodgers. Now in his ninth season, he’s the longest-tenured current player on the roster.
The Dodgers gave Muncy a one-year contract extension in the offseason that keeps him under team control through 2028, which Roberts believes freed his mind and allowed him to focus on playing.
“He knows that we believe in him and we’ve showed that many times over, so I think there’s some peace with that,” Roberts said.
In 2021, Muncy suffered a torn ulnar collateral ligament and a dislocated left elbow on the last day of the regular season in a collision at first base. It caused him to miss the entire postseason and required a slow rehab process into the start of 2022.
“I just feel healthy, that’s kind of the most important thing right now,” he said. “I feel like I’m moving really well, I feel like I’m getting good reads on the ball. Most important, my feet are moving on every ground ball and that’s something I’ve always struggled with in the past. I just get stuck a little bit and that puts me in bad position on certain hops.”
Muncy came into spring training 17 pounds lighter after watching his diet in the offseason. His biggest sacrifice was cutting back on bread.
“That’s a hard thing in our family,” he said. “We really love bread.”
Instead of focusing on strength training, he emphasized mobility and running to improve his range.
“I’ve always said when I can drive the ball to left-center, that’s when my swing is at my best,” he said. “That’s telling me what I’m doing is in a really good spot.”
The Hens lost an early lead in the middle innings, and a late push fell short on Friday night.
After a quiet start to this one, Ben Malgeri singled with one out in the bottom of the third, and Max Clark followed by drawing a walk. Hao-Yu Lee banged a single up the middle to plate Malgeri, and Jace Jung smoked a drive to the wall in right field for an RBI double, scoring Clark. 2-0 Hens.
Unfortunately, that lead didn’t hold up in the middle innings as starter RHP Dylan File and RHP Cole Waites each allowed a pair of runs in the fourth and fifth innings. It could have been worse for Waites, but Max Clark cut down Alan Roden at home plate to save that run and get the second out before Waites escaped the inning.
Eric Wagaman hits an RBI single to center but Max Clark throws Alan Roden out at home. It’s Clark’s 5th outfield assist of the season. pic.twitter.com/0ZCaQnaCrk
RHP Tanner Rainey and LHP Konnor Pilkington each gave the Hens two good innings of work to set up a comeback. They got runners on base in the sixth, but Malgeri flew out to end the inning. In the seventh, the Loons bid to prevent Max Clark from getting a hit failed as he led off with a single. Lee took a called strike three, but Clark stole second for his sixth steal of the season. Unfortunately, Jung popped out and Eduardo Valencia struck out.
The Loons got the first two outs of the ninth, but Clark got a 1-0 curveball down and smoked it to right center field for a triple. The relay went awry, and Clark scored on the play to make it 4-3, but Lee flew out to end it.
Max Clark rips a triple into the right-center gap and then comes home on the errant throw to pull the Mud Hens within one run with 2 outs in the 9th. pic.twitter.com/zCnUUyjU1d
Kenny Serwa took another beating in this one, and the bats were pretty quiet as the Baysox took a 3-1 lead in the series.
Serwa gave up a leadoff homer in the second, and that led into a five run inning for Chesapeake against the knuckleballer.
Joe Campagna walked to lead off the third, and he would eventually score on a John Peck groundout to make it 5-1 early in this one, but Serwa allowed another run in the third before finishing his outing with a clean fourth.
In the fifth, Campagna doubled and eventually scored on a Seth Stephenson grounder that went from an error as they desperately tried to rush to get the lightning fast outfielder at first.
In the sixth, Andrew Jenkins and Izaac Pacheco walked before scoring on a Justice Bigbie double to make it 6-4 Baysox.
John Stankiewicz took over in the seventh, but he got in trouble with a wild pitch and a Peck error before giving up a three-run blast in a four-run inning for the Baysox that made it 10-4.
Tanner Kohlhepp allowed a run in the eighth. In the ninth, Campagna hit a two-run shot to make the score a little more respectable. The 29-year-old shortstop bounced around Indy ball for years, occasionally playing in the minor leagues before the Tigers signed him for some depth this offseason.
Congratulations to Joe Campagna on his first home run in affiliated ball. It’s a 2-run shot that pulls Erie back within five. pic.twitter.com/0EIg0Gifnb
Coming Up Next: It’s a 6:35 p.m. ET start on Saturday, with the Baysox leading the series 3-1.
Great Lakes Loons 3, West Michigan Whitecaps 2 (box)
Lucas Ellisalt wasn’t particularly sharp on Friday night, and the Whitecaps bats were very quiet as the Loons took a 3-1 series lead.
Both offenses were quiet out of the gate, but in the third, a one-out single from the Loons’ Jose Izarra got them started. Elissalt got a fly out, but four straight singles made it 3-0 before he got out of the inning.
Woody Hadeen got a run back in the bottom half as he walked with one out and advanced to second on a wild pitch. Jackson Strong struck out, but Garrett Pennington walked as well, and Richardo Hurtado singled in Hadeen to make it 3-1.
Elissalt spun a 1-2-3 fourth, and Patrick Lee immediately crushed a solo shot to dead center to make it 3-2. Patrick Lee has 70 speed, a 70 arm, and at least 60 power. Please, oh baseball gods, let this man hit. Unlikely, as Lee had to find a path through Indy Ball just to reach the minor leagues, but it would sure be fun.
Lefty Ethan Sloan, along with Carlos Lequerica and Logan Berrier, shut down the Tortugas offense entirely the rest of the way, but the Whitecaps weren’t not swinging a hot bat either. They never threatened again.
Lee: 1-4, R, RBI, HR, K
Hadeen: 1-3, R, BB, K
Elissalt (L, 0-1): 4.0 IP, 3 ER, 5 H, BB, 5 K
Coming Up Next: The Whitecaps and Loons play at 2:00 p.m. ET on Saturday and Sunday. No respect for the Masters at all, smdh.
The Flying Tigers cannot be contained right now. They moved to 7-0 on the young season behind another strong outing from 2025 second rounder, Malachi Witherspoon, and the longest home run I can ever remember a Tigers prospect hitting off the bat of shortstop Bryce Rainer.
Witherspoon have come right out throwing gas as hoped, and he was an easy 96 mph in the first inning, carving up two Tortugas swinging with some good cutters in the mix. He was up over 97 mph in a quick 1-2-3 second inning. In the third, he got the first out but walked Ichiro Cano and hit Drew Davies to push a runner into scoring position. He got a one-hopper back to himself and recorded the second out, but a single followed for a 1-0 Daytona lead. That was the only blemish on Witherspoon’s card as he breezed through the fourth and the Tigers called it a day as they slowly build up his pitch count.
Here’s a little Zach MacDonald highlight along the way.
After Witherspoon departed, the Tigers third ranked prospect, Bryce Rainer stepped in looking for his first home run of the young season. Rainer has been fine, but after missing the best part of a year to shoulder surgery, he’s been working his way back into things slowly and drawing a ton of walks. He didn’t walk this time, destroying a 96.7 mph fastball and hitting it 477 feet beyond the center field wall. That ball left the bat at 116.2 mph, which few even in the majors can match. With the Artemis II crew splashing down off the coast of Florida at around the same time, the jokes wrote themselves.
Tyler Owens took over from Witherspoon to continue his rehab work, and he collected the next five outs, allowing just one hit. Eliseo Mota did better, spinning 2 1/3 perfect innings with four strikeouts.
The score was knotted at 1-1 until the bottom of the 8th, when Nolan McCarthy drew a walk. He promptly stole second base and took third as the throw sailed into center field. Anibal Salas struck out, and Jack Goodman waked and stole second as Rainer was called out on strikes. The run was then balked in anyway to give Lakeland a 2-1 lead.
Xiomer Guacache, what a great name btw, came on in the top of the ninth and quickly racked up three outs, the last a swinging strike three, to end it and earn his first save of the season.
Rainer: 1-4, R, RBI, HR, 2 SO
McCarthy: 0-1, R, 2 BB, SB
Witherspoon: 4.0 IPO, ER, H, BB, 4 K
Coming Up Next: It’s a 6:00 p.m. ET start in Lakeland on Saturday as the Flying Tigers look to make it 8-0.
Editor’s note: We just wrote about Teixeira a couple months ago as part of our “50 Most Notable Yankees Free Agent Signings in 50 Years” series. Seeing no need to reinvent the wheel and with no better Yankees candidates for April 11th (apologies to Pete Kozma and Wally Whitehurst), this is an oh-so-slightly edited rerun.
The 2009 season marked a transitional year for the Yankees, coming off the final season in the original Yankee Stadium and the team’s first season without a postseason appearance since 1995. The team’s aging core was still producing, but veteran slugger Jason Giambi’s contract expired after the season, leaving a hole at the cold corner.
Thankfully, there was a marquee first baseman available on the market: Mark Teixeira. The switch-hitting slugger and Gold Glover was coming off an MVP-caliber season — he had been traded from the Braves to the Angels at the trade deadline, which wiped out his vote share because of the change in leagues. Several teams attempted to woo Teixeira, but the Yankees were ultimately successful, inking him to an eight-year pact. Tex would be one of the most important contributors to the 2009 team which baptized the new Yankee Stadium with the franchise’s 27th championship. While he struggled with injuries on the back half of the deal, he was a fearsome presence in the heart of the Yankee lineup for most of those eight years.
Mark Charles Teixeira Born: April 11, 1980 (Annapolis, MD) Yankees Tenure: 2009-16
Teixeira was born 46 years ago today in Annapolis and attended Mount St. Joseph High School in Baltimore. He excelled enough there for the Red Sox to take a flyer on him with a ninth-round pick in the 1998 Draft, but he chose to honor his commitment to Georgia Tech, where he became one of the top college hitters in the country.
Now a consensus first-round talent, Teixeira was selected fifth overall in 2001 by the rebuilding Texas Rangers. It wouldn’t take long for him to blossom in the bigs. He made the Rangers’ roster out of spring training in 2003 and from that point forward was a lock to slug at least 25 home runs a season. By 2005, he had already exceeded 100 career homers, reached the All-Star Game, and taken home a pair of Silver Sluggers as well as a Gold Glove. But he wouldn’t reach the postseason until 2008, at which point Teixeira had been traded at the deadline twice in as many seasons; first from the Rangers to the Braves for a king’s ransom, then from Atlanta to the Angels.
That offseason, Teixeira entered free agency as the best hitter on the market. The Angels were interested in bringing him back, but several other teams made big offers. The Red Sox, who had drafted him back in high school, were in the mix — though Teixeira had vocally criticized Boston in the past for their pre-draft negotiations with him. The Nationals and Orioles both tried for the Marylander who grew up close to both Baltimore and DC.
Eventually, the Angels and Red Sox got cold feet, providing an opening for the Yankees. Teixeira, who idolized Don Mattingly growing up, ultimately chose the Bronx as the place to continue his career. The eight-year, $180 million agreement, announced right before the holidays, was made official on January 6th. Teixeira joined starting pitchers CC Sabathia and AJ Burnett as part of a gargantuan free agent haul as the team awaited the grand opening of the brand new Yankee Stadium.
Teixeira proved a perfect fit in the Bronx, providing a strong baseline of production at the plate with sterling first-base defense, but also capable of entering incendiary stretches in which he was impossible to pitch to. Like the rest of the team, Teixiera took a bit to get going in April, but was the AL’s best hitter in May, smashing 13 home runs with a .330/.391/.748 slash line. He made the All-Star Game and then was an even better hitter in the second half, finishing the year with 39 homers and 122 RBI. He finished second in MVP voting behind Minnesota’s Joe Mauer.
Mauer and the Twins, of course, would meet Teixeira and the Bombers in the ALDS. The Yankees took Game 1, but Game 2 would be a battle requiring extra innings. In the bottom of the 11th, Teixeira smashed a line drive down the left field line and over the wall for a walk-off home run to put New York in the driver’s seat.
Teixeira struggled in the playoffs despite the early highlight, but the Yankees took down his former team, the Angels, in the ALCS, and hosted the Phillies in the World Series. After Philadelphia snatched the series lead in Game 1, a homer from Teixeira off Pedro Martinez tied Game 2 and lit the spark for an eventual Yankee win. Finally in Game 6, Tex provided an RBI single in the fifth to help bring the Commissioner’s Trophy back to the Bronx.
The Yankees would not return to the Fall Classic again during Teixeira’s tenure, but his presence at the heart of the order helped extend a window which appeared to be closing before his arrival. In 2010, he registered another strong season, with an .856 OPS, 33 home runs, and his second Gold Glove in as many seasons at first base. Unfortunately, Teixeira struggled again in the playoffs before a hamstring injury put him on the shelf. The Rangers, the franchise which had drafted him nine years before and was now a powerhouse, kicked the Yankees out in the ALCS in six games.
In 2012, Teixeira began to struggle with injuries. He suffered from a persistent cough that plagued him throughout the early part of the season, then endured a pair of DL stints for calf injuries late in the season. He returned in time for the postseason and hit well, but with no home runs, and the Yankees were swept by the Tigers in a demoralizing ALCS.
That marked the final postseason run of Teixeira’s career. The Yankees entered a somnambulant period after 2012, overloaded with veterans who couldn’t stay on the field. Teixeira was one of them, only playing 15 games in 2013 after injuring his wrist during the World Baseball Classic. In 2014, Teixeira’s production dropped as he again dealt with hamstring and wrist injuries. New York missed the postseason both years.
Entering the 2015 season, it appeared Tex’s halcyon days had come to an end. But in his age-35 campaign, the embattled first baseman authored a terrific comeback campaign, returning to the All-Star Game for the first time since ‘09. He finished the year with 31 home runs, a total which would have been even higher had it not been for August 17th. That night, with the Twins in town, Teixeira fouled a ball off his leg and staggered out of the box. He left the game and was diagnosed with a bone bruise, but after several weeks of tests and negative X-rays, was finally found to have suffered a shin fracture. That would spell the end of what had been a stirring resurgence.
Then, at last, came 2016, the final year of Teixeira’s deal. His final ride was an unproductive slog, in which his average hovered around .200 and his formerly prodigious power wilted, even as he slugged his 400th career homer on July 4th in San Diego. In August, he announced in a press conference that he would retire at the end of the season. But he did have one last magical moment in him: a walk-off grand slam against the Red Sox in one of the final games of his career.
The main objective for Teixeira in coming to New York was to win. He did, right away, playing an instrumental role on a championship team. Despite failing to return to the mountaintop in his successive years in the Bronx, Teixeira provided high-quality play on offense and defense for as long as his body would allow him to do so. He retired as an accomplished and dedicated 14-year major leaguer with nothing left to prove.
See more of the “Yankees Birthday of the Day” series here.
— Podziemski’s Gravity (@currysnotafraud) April 11, 2026
The viral social media account @currysnotafraud has been inactive since Nov. 24, 2024, due to Podziemski’s inability to score 30 points. That all changed Friday night.
— Podziemski’s Gravity (@currysnotafraud) April 11, 2026
Social media has been giving Podziemski a hard time all season, and it snowballed to seemingly being booed at Oracle Park in early April.
Fans have been reluctant to appreciate the efforts Podziemski has contributed this season, having played in all 81 games so far.
The third-year guard out of Santa Clara reached his career-high during garbage time of a 124-118 loss to the Kings, but Podziemski has been close to the 30-point mark on several occasions.
Reaching 25 or more points eight times this season, Podziemski picked up the slack with superstar Steph Curry out for a chunk of the season.
Curry was sidelined with runner’s knee for 27 consecutive games, but is now back just in time for the NBA play-in.
In order for the Warriors to make some noise in the playoffs, Podziemski is going to have to continue posting quality numbers with another 30-point game possibly on the horizon.
Apr 10, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets pitcher Clay Holmes (35) delivers a pitch against the Athletics during the first inning at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Gregory Fisher-Imagn Images | Gregory Fisher-Imagn Images
En route to a 4-0 loss to the City-less Athletics, Mets’ starter Clay Holmes left the game in the sixth inning with ‘left hamstring tightness.’ Holmes expressed optimism after the game that he could make his next scheduled start, calling the injury “nothing major.” Manager Carlos Mendoza said that how Holmes feels today will determine their course of action going forward.
Even with last night’s abbreviated start, Holmes has looked quite good in his second year as a starer. Over 18 innings thrown, he’s allowed just three earned runs on 12 hits striking out 12 and walking eight. While his 3.87 FIP is showing that his 1.50 ERA might be a bit of a fluke, Holmes has been the third most effective Mets’ starter thus far after Nolan McLean and Kodai Senga.
The only blemish against Holmes in last night’s start was a Shea Langeliers RBI single in the third inning. Holmes was pulled in the top of the sixth with one out after 81 pitches.
The Mets have been bit by the injury bug already this season, with Juan Soto currently on the Injured List with a calf injury and Jorge Polanco missing time with a hamstring injury.
If Holmes does go on the IL, the Mets will have an interesting decision to make. With Sean Manaea and last night’s goat Tobias Myers both acting as long men right now, one of them would likely be called upon to start. However, Manaea’s diminished velocity and walk rate are huge red flags, and the Mets may not want to put him in that role. Christian Scott and Jonah Tong are both available from Triple-A, but the Mets likely wouldn’t want to disrupt their progress for a spot start or two. Hopefully, this is a moot point and Holmes makes his next scheduled start.
Senga takes the hill for the Mets this afternoon against Jacob Lopez for the A’s.
24 September 2014: Dodgers third base coach Davey Lopes consoles with Los Angeles Dodgers Second base Dee Gordon (9) [7422] after being pulled from the game during a Major League Baseball game between the San Francisco Giants and the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles, CA. (Photo by Chris Williams/Icon Sportswire/Corbis/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Davey Lopes, the Dodgers infield fixture who spent over 50 years in baseball, died on Wednesday at age 80. Here are a few more remembrances of his life and career.
Lopes’ former teammates and fellow members of The Infield that played together for 8 1/2 seasons Ron Cey and Steve Garvey talked with Jack Harris at the California Post: “He controlled the game at times with his base-stealing capabilities,” Cey said. “He wreaked havoc on defenses … His contributions were immense.”
From former Dodgers general manager Ned Colletti, who hired Lopes to coach first base in Los Angeles: “Davey was a winner in life & on the field. After an outstanding playing career, he became a coach – the best 1st base coach I ever saw: secondary leads, pitch tips, cutting your steps 1st to 3rd…he looked and taught players to look for every advantage. 1 of 1.”
From former Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner: “Such a straight shooter and a great baseball mind. I’ll never forget being on 1st base for 3 or 4 pitches and him looking right at me and saying, ‘What the hell are you waiting for? Go!’”
From former Dodgers outfielder Matt Kemp: “Thank you Davey for being one of the best mentors ever. I can still hear him saying ‘If you don’t steal this base right now, I’m gonna kick your ass!!’ Rest easy.”
From Tim Kurkjian’s article on baserunning at ESPN: “[Johnny] Bench said the best baserunner he ever saw was ex-Dodger Davey Lopes, who was adept at getting a good lead and reading the pitcher.”
Of the 82 major league players born in Rhode Island, Lopes has the fourth-highest Baseball Reference WAR (42.4), behind only Hall of Famers Nap Lajoie, Gabby Hartnett, and Hugh Duffy. Stephen Rosa for the Boston Globe wrote, “For many of us, Davey Lopes was more than a great athlete. He was an example. He was an inspiration. And for a lot of us, he was one of the first people who made success feel real.”
When it comes to Lopes, his impact on the team’s running game was undeniable. During his tenure with the team, the Phillies were the best baserunning team in baseball. It showed up in the traditional stats like stolen bases, where Lopes’ expertise in analyzing the opposing pitchers made them the most efficient team around (84% success rate). It also showed up in the other things that make baserunners good. Fangraphs tracks different advanced baserunning stats with their publicly available information. The Phillies of 2007-2010 were the best in several of these categories, including wSB (stolen bases and caught stealing runs above average – 43.8), speed score (5.3) and baserunning runs (77.5).
LOS ANGELES, CA - APRIL 10: LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers dribbles the ball during the game against the Phoenix Suns on April 10, 2026 at Crypto.Com Arena in Los Angeles, California. 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 Adam Pantozzi/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
The Suns took on the Lakers on Friday night, and the result was not surprising. Los Angeles came in banged up, but Phoenix essentially waved the white flag with neither Devin Booker nor Jalen Green available. Would it have mattered? We will never know.
What we did see was a heavy dose of the youth movement. Plenty of minutes, plenty of opportunity. The return was modest. These are players stepping into roles they are not used to, and while it looked functional in the first half, once the shots stopped falling in the second half, it unraveled in a way that felt predictable. The offense got clunky. It lost its edge. And the Suns were handled by a 41-year-old LeBron James.
You try to walk away from a game like this asking what you learned. The answer felt simple. LeBron James is still a beast at 41. It is unfair. I have never been the biggest LeBron supporter, but there has always been respect for what he is as a player and how he has carried himself. That part remains. He delivered on Friday night, in a game the Lakers needed to help secure the fourth seed and home court in the first round. That showed.
As for the Suns, the takeaway is clear. The youth is youthful. There is growth ahead before it becomes part of something cohesive. And that is fine.
You pack this one up and move on. People talk about the grind of an 82-game season, but this one felt different. For the Suns, it felt like an 80-game season.
Bright Side Baller Season Standings
Booker’s Bright Side Baller count is officially old enough to snag a tasty beverage at the bar. That’s right, with his 37-pointer against the Mavs on Wednesday, and the graciousness of your votes, Booker now has 21 BSB’s on the season.
Bright Side Baller Nominees
Game 81 against the Lakers. Here are your nominees:
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 7: Daniel Susac #6 of the San Francisco Giants gets high fives in the dugout after scoring a run against the Philadelphia Phillies at Oracle Park on April 7, 2026 in San Francisco, California. (Photo by Suzanna Mitchell/San Francisco Giants/Getty Images) | Getty Images
Good morning, baseball fans!
It’s another weekend of San Francisco Giants baseball, which means it’s time to figure out who was this week’s Player of the Week!
Personally, I’ve got to give this week’s honors to Daniel Susac! Not only did Susac have a three-hit game in last Thursday’s 7-2 win over the New York Mets, but he went and did it AGAIN in Tuesday’s 6-0 win over the Philadelphia Phillies!
Those are great numbers for an individual game no matter who you are, but to do it twice in a week as a rookie? Yeah, people are definitely paying attention.
Way to go, Daniel!
Who is your pick for Player of the Week?
What time do the Giants play today?
The Giants continue their series against the Baltimore Orioles this afternoon at 4:15 p.m. PT.
MESA, ARIZONA - MARCH 06: Charlie Condon #66 of the Colorado Rockies looks on from his dugout at Hohokam Stadium prior to a game against the Athletics on March 06, 2026 in Mesa, Arizona. (Photo by Kyle Cooper/Colorado Rockies/Getty Images)
Less than a week later, the Pirates — hardly a perennial contender — announced a nine-year extension that keeps him under contract through 2034.
That’s not just a prospect promotion. That’s a team deciding to be aggressive.
For an organization searching for relevance, the Pittsburgh Pirates are acting like a club that wants to compete now — trusting talent, accelerating timelines, and building around players as they prove ready.
And early on, it’s translating.
They’ve opened the season playing winning baseball — getting contributions from their young rotation (having Paul Skenes helps a lot) with just enough offense. It’s a small sample, and by June this could look very different.
But the intent is clear.
The Rockies are operating in a similar space: more competitive than projected, treading water behind just enough pitching and solid defense.
But where Pittsburgh had Griffin and pulled the trigger, Colorado has Charlie Condon (No. 1 PuRP) — and a lineup that still needs impact.
This lineup isn’t broken — but it’s still volatile
There are stretches where the Rockies’ offense looks competent — productive and capable of pressure.
Strikeouts persist. Walk rates are low. And a swing-first approach means consistency can disappear quickly. When the offense is on, it looks pesky. When it’s not, it stalls.
There have been bright spots, but production hasn’t been evenly distributed — and that’s where cracks show.
The outfield, in particular, has struggled.
Jordan Beck, Brenton Doyle and Jake McCarthy — the projected starting outfield heading into the season — have opened cold. The trio has gone a combined 13-93 (.139) with one home run and a 30% strike-out rate entering Friday’s game.
Troy Johnston and Tyler Freeman have hit, but much of their value comes from versatility and time spent in the infield, not as everyday outfield anchors. As a result, the outfield’s offense hasn’t stabilized and is still leaving a clear gap in production.
Mickey Moniak is the clear exception — but comes with a massive trade-off.
He’s off to a hot start at the plate, and his bat has been vital. But he shouldn’t be anywhere near a baseball glove. Moniak has struggled defensively throughout his career, and the metrics reflect it. If he’s a key offensive contributor from the grass, the Rockies are accepting defensive risk.
That’s not a sustainable equation.
Charlie Condon is ready for the next evaluation
Condon’s case doesn’t hinge on projection anymore.
He had a loud spring — driving the ball with authority — and has carried that into pro ball. He’s produced at every level, and the power stroke is showing up more consistently.
To begin the minor league season, Condon produced a two-homer, five-RBI game in Oklahoma City on March 29th. After a brief absence for a minor procedure to remove a cyst, he returned to Triple-A Albuquerque and picked up right where he left off:
The sample is small, but the takeaway is consistent: performance isn’t slowing his timeline. Condon is batting .286/.405/.976 through 35 at-bats.
And it’s not just the bat.
Condon offers real flexibility — capable of playing first base or right field, and even sliding into a right-handed DH role at times, potentially pairing with Mickey Moniak as part of a platoon. That kind of versatility makes it easier to find a path to at-bats, not harder.
Questions remain, sure. He struck out in 28% of his Double-A plate appearances in 2025, and evaluators still point to recognizing spin as the next hurdle. But those aren’t questions that get answered in Albuquerque. They get answered in the majors.
Condon may be the most immediate answer, but he’s not the only one pushing the Rockies toward a decision.
The next wave isn’t one player — it’s a mix
Zac Veen (No. 9 PuRP) feels like the incumbent, even after opening 2026 on the injured list (right knee contusion) and having a tepid start to his season. The version seen this spring looked stronger and more impactful, highlighted by a 468-foot walk-off — if that holds, he can change the lineup.
Cole Carrigg (No. 4 PuRP) offers a different profile; a versatile, high-energy contributor hitting .265 with eight stolen bases at Triple-A, with development centered on refining approach and reducing chase. He’s not the centerpiece. He’s a multiplier.
Timing still matters — even beyond incentives
This isn’t just about service time, but it’s not not about service time either.
MLB’s Prospect Promotion Incentive (PPI) rewards early promotions with a draft pick, but it comes with guardrails — Top 100 eligibility, award thresholds, and a one-pick-per-organization cap.
For Condon, the decision is likely more traditional: service time, where teams balance long-term control against present-day impact and development.
Some organizations still manage timelines carefully; others — like Pittsburgh with Griffin — are accelerating them. The Rockies are somewhere in between.
At some point, it’s about belief
The Rockies have taken real steps forward — they’re more competitive, the lineup has flashes, and there’s something worth building on.
But the next step is reinforcing that progress, not waiting on it. Development still matters, but the most important questions get answered against major league pitching.
If this team is going to reward the progress it’s already made, it starts by trusting the talent that can push it forward.
The Isotopes (6-7) fell 8-10 in El Paso, but the offense continued to show life. Blaine Crim led the way with three hits, including a home run, while Nicky Lopez stayed scorching hot with another three-hit game—pushing his line to .375 with a .929 OPS. Braxton Fulford also chipped in, going 2-for-2 with a home run after entering as a defensive sub in the sixth.
On the mound, Gabriel Hughes had a tough outing, throwing 84 pitches and allowing five runs over 4.1 innings.
The Yard Goats (3-4) couldn’t keep up in Reading, falling to the Fightin Phils 6-9. Connor Capel provided one of the few highlights, going deep to supply some early offense, but pitching told the story. Konner Eaton battled through 5.1 innings and was tagged for five earned runs, while Davison Palermo surrendered four more earned runs in just 1.2 innings of relief, putting the game out of reach.
The Indians (3-4) dropped a high-scoring game to the Hops. Jacob Humphrey led the way on offense with two hits and three RBIs, while Max Belyeu added two hits and two RBIs of his own — both staying hot early in the season. But despite the run support, pitching couldn’t hold up. Jackson Cox got the start and allowed four earned runs over four innings, though he did rack up eight strikeouts. The bullpen didn’t fare much better, with all three relievers surrendering multiple earned runs as the game got away.
Grizzlies (4-3) come up short against the Ports. Ethan Holliday went 2-for-5 and launched his first home run of the season, an encouraging sign as he looks to get going early in the year. On the mound, JB Middleton was excellent. He threw five innings of one-run ball with five strikeouts, continuing a strong start to his season — now allowing just two runs over his first nine innings
In this piece by the Denver Post, the Walton-Penner ownership group has purchased a significant minority stake in the Colorado Rockies, adding a powerful new financial partner to the franchise. While the Monfort family retains control, the move signals increased resources and potential organizational change. It’s a notable shift in ownership structure — and a clear sign of growing investment in the Rockies’ future.
In this piece by Sports Illustrated, Paul DePodesta frames the Rockies’ surprising early start less as a signal of success and more as a data point in a long rebuild. He emphasizes that the early competitiveness is encouraging but not definitive, stressing that the organization is focused on long-term development rather than short-term results. The takeaway: the Rockies may be playing better now, but in DePodesta’s view, what matters is whether that progress is sustainable over a full season.
In this piece by MLB.com, the Rockies are highlighted alongside the Pirates and Marlins as teams off to better-than-expected starts in 2026. It points out that while the early results are encouraging, it’s still very early — and whether this kind of play can hold over a full season is the real question. For now, the Rockies are showing signs of life, but like the others, they still have to prove it’s more than just a hot start.
Bruce Levine reports that Matthew Boyd will make a rehab start this coming week. More when we know more. We’ll see if Dylan Carlson makes it back to Triple-A.
Shōta Imanaga on the hill versus Carmen Mlodzinski. Let’s hope Mike Imanaga takes the day off. Seiya Suzuki and Ian Happ were in the lineup, which was nicely balanced at the outset:
Nico Hoerner, 2B
Michael Busch, 1B
Alex Bregman, 3B
Ian Happ, LF
Seiya Suzuki, RF
Pete Crow-Armstrong, CF
Carson Kelly, C
Moisés Ballesteros, DH
Dansby Swanson, SS
Game Result:
Pirates 2, Cubs 0.
Shōta pitched well. He allowed the Pirates a big fat zero in 6.0 innings of work. Longtime Cubs nemesis Bryan Reynolds took Caleb Thielbar deep for a two-run homer in the sixth inning. That was it for scoring on this day.
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MIAMI, FLORIDA - OCTOBER 15: Jaime Jaquez Jr. #11 of the Miami Heat drives against Keldon Johnson #0 of the San Antonio Spurs during the first quarter of a preseason game at Kaseya Center on October 15, 2024 in Miami, Florida. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Megan Briggs/Getty Images) | Getty Images
This has been a fascinating NBA season in many aspects, but especially when it comes to the various awards races. Despite the regular season being almost complete, a handful of the biddings for these categories are coming down to the wire.
This year’s Sixth Man of the Year discussion is no exception. In most years, we usually have a pretty obvious candidate. However, this go around, injuries have forced some of the best bench guys to start too many games to qualify (i.e., Payton Pritchard).
With this said, the race has narrowed to two main candidates: Jaime Jaquez Jr. and Keldon Johnson. According to popular sportsbooks like FanDuel, they are the only two players with realistic odds of taking home the crown.
But which of these two gentlemen is most deserving of the award? Let’s take a look at the numbers.
The Box Score
Raw counting stats favor Jaquez. This season, he boasts a higher PPG, APG, and stocks (steals and blocks) per game, and his RPG (5.1) are nearly identical to that of Johnson (5.4). However, Jaime also plays nearly five more minutes per contest than Johnson, so it isn’t necessarily fair to compare these two without adjusting for playing time.
To do this, we will look at points per 75 possessions, rebounding rates (both offensive and defensive), assist rate, and stock rate. We also need to factor in efficiency. So, true shooting percentage is also included in the chart below:
When you look at it this way, Johnson is the superior scorer and rebounder, and he’s managing this higher scoring output on better efficiency. However, Jaquez’s role within the Miami Heat offense asks him to do a lot more creating for himself (his unassisted field goal rate is 14.7% higher than Johnson’s) and his teammates.
Jaquez’s steal/block rate is also higher than Johnson’s, but only by a slight margin, and that may be explained by the fact that the Heat tend to be a more aggressive defense than the San Antonio Spurs in general (Miami’s opponent turnover rate is 1.3% higher).
The Advanced Stats
As many of you know by now, the box score hardly ever tells the full story – even when you adjust for pace. A player’s numbers are only as good as their impact on winning, and history is littered with empty-calorie stat sheet stuffers (I’m looking at you Cam Thomas).
Dunks & Threes’ Estimated Plus-Minus is widely-viewed as the best publicly-available one-number metric because it incorporates tracking data. EPM gives Johnson the edge, as he ranks in the 73rd percentile leaguewide while Jaquez sits at just the 59th percentile.
But again, we need to add more context. One number metrics are limited to measuring how good a particular player is on their particular team. And as we’ve already established, Jaquez is generally asked to do more for the Heat than Johnson is for the Spurs, so he has more to live up to as far as impact metrics go.
So, we also need to point out how each team fares when these two wings are on the floor. When it comes to pure on-court rating, Johnson laps Jaquez (see chart below), which makes sense because Johnson plays on the far superior team (the Spurs have 20 more wins than the Heat).
That is why we also need to include on/off data (how well a team does when you are on the floor compared to when you are on the bench) to this analysis. Based on this, the Heat are better with Jaquez on the floor, while the Spurs are actually better when Johnson is on the bench.
History tells us that to win 6MOY of the year you absolutely need to be able to score the ball and you generally need to be on a good team. Since 2001-02, every player who has won the 6MOY award has averaged at least 13 PPG. In that same span of time, 19 of those 24 players (79.2%) played for teams that finished in the top four in their conference. The key exceptions to that last stipulation are Lou Williams (twice), Jason Terry (2008-09), Mike Miller (2005-06), and Antawn Jamison (2003-04), who all still played on teams that made the playoffs.
Both of these guys clear the 13 PPG threshold (although, in Johnson’s case, just barely). But Johnson has a clear edge as far as team success goes. His Spurs are one of the favorites to take home the NBA title, and they currently sit at second in the loaded Western Conference. Meanwhile, the Heat will need some play-in magic (maybe even against Orlando) to qualify for the postseason.
So, while they both are deserving of the recognition, it seems that history favors Johnson.
The stats in this story were updated before Friday’s games.