Aaron Boone has disinterested response to Isiah Kiner-Falefa’s ‘surprising’ Yankees dig

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Yankees manager Aaron Boone talks to the media as pitchers and catchers report to spring training on Feb. 11, 2026, Image 2 shows Former Yankee and Blue Jay Isiah Kiner-Falefa is now a member of the Red Sox

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TAMPA — Et tu, IKF?

That was not exactly Aaron Boone’s response to Isiah Kiner-Falefa’s recent dig that the Blue Jays thought the Yankees were a better matchup for them than the Red Sox in last year’s ALDS.

But the manager was not overly interested in getting into a sparring match with his former player, either.

“I guess he was right,” Boone said Wednesday at Steinbrenner Field. “Little surprising to hear IKF say that, but whatever. That’s fine.”

Kiner-Falefa, who only started one of the four games in the ALDS for the Blue Jays as they whooped the Yankees, made the revelation Tuesday in his first day as a Red Sox player — following the lead of new teammates Sonny Gray and Willson Contreras, who also leaned into the rivalry in their first comments in Boston.

Yankees manager Aaron Boone talks to the media as pitchers and catchers report to spring training on Feb. 11, 2026. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

The Yankees beat the Red Sox in three games in the AL wild-card series, but Kiner-Falefa said the Blue Jays, who had a bye to face the winner of that series, had some rooting interest

“We thought it was a better matchup for us the other way [to face the Yankees],” Kiner-Falefa told reporters in Fort Myers, Fla., per The Athletic. “We were watching that [series], and we were watching [Garrett] Crochet just dice up.

“I think we had just lost two out of three [to Boston], and it put us behind the Yankees or tied us with them for the AL East lead [in late September]. We definitely felt [Boston] was a tougher matchup for us. Once we saw the other team, we were a lot happier. It was definitely a topic.”

Former Yankee and Blue Jay Isiah Kiner-Falefa is now a member of the Red Sox. Getty Images

Perhaps that should not be much of a surprise, as the Blue Jays had the Yankees’ number during the regular season, especially at Rogers Centre.

Asked if he was bothered by Kiner-Falefa’s comments, Boone insisted he was not, even if his tone suggested at least a hint of being perturbed.

“Not really, honestly,” Boone said. “You got to play who you play. Whatever.”


Paul Goldschmidt declined to reveal if he had any offers to start at first base with other teams, but said he was happy to be back with the Yankees in what is expected to be a reserve role behind first baseman Ben Rice.

“Honestly, when last year ended, I had such a good time here, I was hoping my time wasn’t done,” said Goldschmidt, who agreed to a one-year, $4 million deal that had not yet been made official as of Wednesday. “I think Benny’s definitely going to be planning to be getting the bulk of the playing time over there. I’m definitely fine with whatever role they need me [in]. Whenever I get an opportunity, I’ll be ready to go.

Boone said he believed that all pitchers, catchers and WBC participants reported as scheduled Wednesday, with position players set to join them Sunday.

Netflix interested in hiring Barry Bonds for MLB Opening Day coverage

Barry Bonds in a black jacket waving with a smile.
Former San Francisco Giants player Barry Bonds waves as he arrives at a ceremony honoring Hunter Pence on the team’s Wall of Fame before a baseball game between the Giants...

Netflix is targeting the all-time home run king. 

The streaming giant is pursuing Barry Bonds for its historic Opening Day game broadcast between the Giants and Yankees at Oracle Park in San Francisco on March 25, according to The Athletic.  

Bonds would likely “be on site for the pregame and postgame” if the two sides come to a deal, per the report.

Netflix is also reportedly trying to bring in CC Sabathia, who would provide a Yankees tie-in to counter Bonds, who played 15 years with the Giants. 

Former San Francisco Giants player Barry Bonds waves as he arrives at a ceremony honoring Hunter Pence on the team’s Wall of Fame before a baseball game between the Giants and the Los Angeles Dodgers in San Francisco, Saturday, Sept. 17, 2022. AP

The Athletic added that it’s likely Elle Duncan, who left ESPN in November to become the new face of Netflix’s sports programming, will be the top presenter for the game. 

Beginning this year, Netflix will air a standalone, prime-time game to kick off the season as part of a three-year deal with MLB. 

The deal also gives them exclusive rights to the Home Run Derby and the “Field of Dreams” game on Aug. 13 in Dyersville, Iowa, between the Phillies and Twins. 

Bonds, whose career ended after the 2007 season, hasn’t had a national broadcasting job since his playing days. 

The legendary slugger was most recently in the news in December, when he was once again held out of the Baseball Hall of Fame, falling short of Cooperstown due to ties to steroids. 

CC Sabathia is also being eyed by Netflix for its Opening Day game. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

Bonds works as a special advisor for the Giants and previously served as the Marlins’ hitting coach during the 2016 season.

Sabathia, who was part of the 2025 Hall of Fame class, has worked in various media ventures since retiring from baseball, including frequent appearances on MLB Network and hosting the “R2C2 Podcast” with Ryan Ruocco.

Orioles sign Chris Bassitt in long-awaited free agency move

The Baltimore Orioles finally added a free agent pitcher to their rotation, agreeing to a one-year, $18.5 million contract with right-hander Chris Bassitt, ESPN first reported.

Bassitt, who turns 37 Feb. 22, was a reliable cog in the Toronto Blue Jays’ rotation the past three seasons, posting a 3.89 ERA and pitching at least 170 innings each season.

That reliability was certainly attractive to the Orioles, who will be relying on a trio of starters who underwent elbow surgery over the past three years.

Bassitt will slide somewhere between Kyle Bradish, lefty Trevor Rogers and trade acquisition Shane Baz in the Orioles rotation. Innings eater Dean Kremer moves to the fifth spot.

Bassitt also performed well out of the bullpen in the Blue Jays’ run to Game 7 of the World Series, giving up just one earned run in seven postseason appearances. He also reached the playoffs with Oakland and the New York Mets.

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This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Orioles, Chris Bassitt contract agreement reached: What we know

Latrell Wrightsell Jr. hits 7 3-pointers, scores 21 as Alabama beats Ole Miss 93-74

OXFORD, Miss. (AP) — Latrell Wrightsell Jr. tied his career high with seven 3-pointers and finished with 21 points, Labaron Philon scored 18, and Alabama overcame a cold-shooting start to beat Mississippi 93-74 on Wednesday night and extended the Rebels' losing streak to six games.

Charles Bediako did not play for the Crimson Tide after his motion for a preliminary injunction was denied in circuit court. The 7-foot center played two years at Alabama before he went undrafted in 2023 and appeared in 37 games across three seasons in the NBA G League.

Aiden Sherrell scored 15 points and Amari Allen had 13 points, eight rebounds and six assists for Alabama (17-7, 7-4 SEC). Aden Holloway added 12 points and six assists.

AJ Storr led Ole Miss (11-13, 3-8) with 27 points on 10-of-17 shooting. Eduardo Klafke had 12 points and a career-high nine rebounds. Klafke, a 6-foot-5 sophomore guard, scored 10 points or more for the third consecutive game and the fourth of his career.

Sherrell scored the first seven points while Wrightsell, Allen and Holloway each hit a 3 in a 19-6 run that gave Alabama a 51-38 lead with 13:38 left in the game, and it was at least a two-possession game the rest of the way.

Storr scored 13 points — including the Rebels' first 11 — in a 15-5 run that gave them a nine-point lead with 9:10 left in the first half. Alabama scored 11 of the next 13 before Allen and Philon made back-to-back 3-pointers and Holloway added a layup to give the Crimson Tide a 32-30 lead in the intermission — their lowest-scoring first half this season. Ole Miss went 0 for 10 from the field over a span of about 6 1/2 minutes in the first half.

The Crimson Tide shot 53% from the field, made 12 of their 22 3-pointers and scored 61 points in second half.

Up next

Alabama: Hosts South Carolina on Saturday.

Ole Miss: Hosts Mississippi State on Saturday.

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Kodai Senga is out to prove he can stay healthy and be a key Mets option

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Kodai Senga works on a fielding drill during Mets' spring training practice on Feb. 11, 2026 in Port St. Lucie, Image 2 shows Mets starter Kodai Senga throws during a team workout on Feb. 11, 2026 in Port St. Lucie

PORT ST. LUCIE — Kodai Senga is still taking the approach he can pitch like an ace for the Mets — even as the organization has pushed him toward a back burner.

“These past two years have been frustrating and tough mentally,” the right-hander said through his interpreter Wednesday on the reporting date for pitchers and catchers to spring training. “At some point maybe I started to lose confidence. But in this world, you either do it or you don’t, and I’m here to do it.”

Senga entered a free fall in the second half of last season — after returning from a stint on the injured list with a hamstring strain — that culminated with him accepting an assignment to Triple-A Syracuse in September.

Kodai Senga works on a fielding drill during Mets’ spring training practice on Feb. 11, 2026 in Port St. Lucie. Corey Sipkin / New York Post

He finished with a 3.02 ERA overall, a testament to a strong first half in which he often resembled an ace.

It followed a year in which Senga pitched only once in the 2024 regular season due to various ailments.

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Does Senga have to regain the organization’s trust?

“Before showing the organization anything I think I need to prove it to myself that I can go out there and pitch a full season,” Senga said. “And then once I prove it to myself I think then comes the third party, how everybody else sees me, so first I need to be out there for myself.”

The Mets saw the best of Senga in 2023, when he pitched to a 2.98 ERA over 29 starts with 202 strikeouts over 166 ¹/₃ innings.

But he’s started only 23 games since that rookie season.

Freddy Peralta and Nolan McLean have moved ahead of Senga atop the Mets rotation, leaving Senga in a mix that includes Sean Manaea, Clay Holmes and David Peterson.

Mets starter Kodai Senga throws during a team workout on Feb. 11, 2026 in Port St. Lucie. Corey Sipkin / New York Post

As an indicator of how much his stock has fallen, the Mets this offseason entertained trade proposals for Senga, who still has $30 million remaining on his contract over the next two years.

Senga communicated to club officials that he wanted to remain with the Mets.

“I control only what I can control,” Senga said. “At that point I hadn’t gotten traded yet so I just wanted to do whatever I could in the moment and be back out there for the Mets and play hard.”

Orioles reportedly adding Chris Bassitt to rotation as camp opens

TORONTO, ON - NOVEMBER 01: Chris Bassitt #40 of the Toronto Blue Jays pitches during Game Seven of the 2025 World Series presented by Capital One between the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre on Saturday, November 1, 2025 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. (Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

The Orioles completely struck out when it came to the top end of the free agent starting pitching market this year. With camp opening up, they made a move to try to shore up the back end with an established veteran, bringing recent Blue Jay Chris Bassitt in on a one-year contract worth a reported $18.5 million. ESPN’s Jeff Passan broke the news of the deal on Wednesday night.

Bassitt brings some unexciting dependability into the picture. The 37-year-old has pitched in 11 big league seasons and in his most recent campaign with the Jays, he pitched 32 games, plus another seven in the postseason. He has started at least 30 games in each of the past four seasons.

In 2025, Bassitt had a 3.96 ERA in the regular season with peripherals to roughly match that. On the off chance that he can turn back the clock a little bit, he might be able to descend into more the mid-3 ERA range like he had in his mid-30s. That’s cope talking, because this guy had a 1.327 WHIP in the past season and I just don’t see that the Orioles needed to fit another guy like that into the mix. You’ve got Dean Kremer around already to post a slightly better WHIP but slightly worse ERA.

Adding Bassitt also apparently gives the Orioles six people lined up for their starting rotation. This will resolve between now and Opening Day in some way that I can’t currently foresee. But if all of Kyle Bradish, Trevor Rogers, Shane Baz, Eflin, and Kremer are healthy, Bassitt is bumping somebody out and it’s hard to imagine Kremer losing his spot.

One possibility is that this gives the Orioles some freedom to bring along Eflin a little more slowly after he works his way back into shape following last year’s back surgery. That’s the injury that was apparently causing him to pitch poorly. When Mike Elias updated the injury situation on his roster earlier on Wednesday, he didn’t indicate anything was amiss with Eflin, and perhaps nothing is amiss. Still, Eflin’s Opening Day readiness hinges on the most optimistic surgery recovery timeline and if they don’t have to push it, why do it?

Perhaps Bassitt himself will come along slowly. He pitched his final game of the 2025 season on November 1, the last game of the World Series. That’s more than a month less of rest than anybody who wasn’t in the postseason got. Presumably, Elias will talk a little more about his plan once this signing becomes official.

This is not the exciting starting pitching addition that any Orioles fan wanted when the offseason began. It is the starting pitching addition that we are getting as spring training opens.

Spurs cut ties with forward Jeremy Sochan after trade talks fall short

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The San Antonio Spurs waived forward Jeremy Sochan after being unable to find a trade partner before last week's deadline.

The Spurs announced the move to cut ties with Sochan on Thursday before playing the Golden State Warriors in their final game before the All-Star break.

Sochan was drafted ninth overall in 2022 by San Antonio. Sochan averaged double digits in each of his first three seasons, but averaged just 4.1 points in 28 games this season. Sochan was playing only 12.8 minutes per game — less than half of his playing time for his first three seasons — and hadn't started once after starting 149 of his 184 games before this season.

Coach Mitch Johnson praised Sochan's energy and wished him the best.

“We were all very aware of his desire to be in the rotation, given more of an opportunity than he had, especially recently,” Johnson said. "We wanted to do right by him and make sure that he had that opportunity before the year was over.”

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Riley Makalusky, Kierra Wheeler set the pace and No. 19 West Virginia women rout UCF 106-56

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (AP) — Riley Makalusky scored 20 points in 20 minutes off the bench, Kierra Wheeler scored 18 points, and No. 19 West Virginia blew out UCF 106-56 on Wednesday night for the Mountaineers' fourth straight win.

Makalusky, a junior forward, had her highest scoring game since she was a freshman playing for Butler. She made 7 of 10 shots overall, 3 of 4 3-pointers and went 3 for 3 at the free-throw line.

Sydney Woodley scored 16 points off the bench, Jordan Harrison and Gia Cooke 12 each and Sydney Shaw 10. Wheeler and Shaw grabbed nine rebounds each. Harrison, who had at least 14 points and five steals in her past four games, had four steals and eight assists.

West Virginia had a 41-0 advantage in points after turnovers. The Mountaineers had only seven turnovers to 23 for UCF.

West Virginia (21-5, 11-3 Big 12) led 13-4 after 5 1/2 minutes of play, then extended the lead to 24-6 thanks to an 11-0 run. The Mountaineers led 24-8 after one quarter and the lead reached 25 points after back-to-back 3-pointers by Makalusky, who scored 12 points in the first half. West Virginia led 45-22 at halftime.

The Mountaineers shot 68% (13 for 19) in the third quarter and scored 31 points for their biggest scoring quarter of the game. They led 76-38 heading to the fourth quarter and scored another 30 points.

Mahogany Chandler-Roberts scored 12 points to lead the Knights (10-14, 2-11).

Central Florida has lost six in a row.

Up next

West Virginia: The Mountaineers hit the road to face No. 17 TCU on Sunday.

UCF: The Knights return home to play No. 12 Baylor on Sunday. ___

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Chris Bassitt signs one-year, $18.5 million contract with Orioles

Chris Bassitt #40 of the Toronto Blue Jays throws a pitch during the first inning.
Chris Bassitt of the Toronto Blue Jays throws a pitch against the Yankees last season.

In an American League East that looks competitive top to bottom, the Orioles made another move to solidify an area of need.

Baltimore and right-handed pitcher Chris Bassitt agreed to a one-year, $18.5 million contract, The Post’s Jon Heyman confirmed on Wednesday.

Bassitt gets $500,000 in incentives as part of the deal.

Chris Bassitt of the Blue Jays throws a pitch against the Yankees last season. Jason Szenes / New York Post

The Braves were among the teams thought to be interested in Bassitt, Heyman reported in January.

The soon-to-be 37-year-old stays in the AL East after spending the last three seasons with the Blue Jays following a one-year stint with the Mets.

He continued to be an innings eater in 2025, throwing at least 170 frames for the fourth straight season.

Bassitt held a 3.96 ERA (and 4.01 FIP) with 166 strikeouts as the Blue Jays won the division and came two outs shy of their third World Series crown.

He pitched 8²/₃ innings — all in relief — in the playoffs and yielded just one earned run.

An All-Star in 2021 with the A’s, Bassitt has a 3.64 ERA and a 1.246 WHIP across 11 big league seasons.

Chris Bassitt pitched the last three seasons with the Blue Jays after one year with the Mets. JASON SZENES/ NY POST

Baltimore has been active this offseason, especially in the pitching market by re-signing Zach Eflin, trading for Shane Baz and bringing in hard-throwing reliever Ryan Helsley on a two-year deal.

Ex-Mets slugger Pete Alonso came over on a five-year pact to bolster the offense.

The Orioles, with a combination of injuries and inconsistencies, finished last season with the fifth-worst pitching staff ERA at 4.60.

As of Wednesday, Fangraphs projected Baltimore to win 83.7 games — nearly three behind the Yankees — with a 53.7 percent chance to make the playoffs.

While Bassitt might not go 200 innings again as he did five years ago, he should be a stabilizing force for a rotation that needs it.

Thornton's 21 points lead Ohio State over USC 89-82

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Bruce Thornton scored 21 points and hit two late throws to help Ohio State secure an 89-82 win over USC on Wednesday.

Ohio State (16-6, 8-6 Big Ten) trailed 43-40 at halftime after opening 2 of 13 at the free-throw line, but Thornton steadied the Buckeyes in the second half. He became the fifth player in program history to reach 1,935 career points and moved into fifth all-time in Ohio State scoring.

The Buckeyes grabbed their largest lead at 67-60 with eight minutes left after a Devin Royal layup and a John Mobley Jr. 3-pointer. USC (18-7, 7-7) answered with a 7-0 run capped by a Jordan Marsh 3 to cut it to 70-69, but Christoph Tilly scored inside, and Royal added a jumper to push the margin back to five.

Alijah Arenas hit a 3-pointer with 1:09 remaining to pull USC within 82-81, but Thornton responded with a driving layup and converted the free throw to make it 85-81. USC missed two shots in the final 30 seconds, and Thornton closed it out at the line.

Royal scored 19 points and grabbed seven rebounds for Ohio State, and Mobley added 13. Thornton reached double figures for the 23rd time this season.

Arenas scored 25 points for USC, Kam Woods added 14 and Ezra Ausar finished with 13 points and nine rebounds before fouling out. The Trojans have played eight consecutive games decided by seven points or fewer.

Up Next

USC hosts No. 8 Illinois next Wednesday.

Ohio State faces No. 15 Virginia on Saturday.

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Spurs agree to waive Jeremy Sochan, making forward a free agent

Tuesday night, in a blowout Spurs win over the Lakers, where essentially the entire second half was garbage time, Jeremy Sochan still never touched the court for San Antonio.

One day later, the Spurs agreed to waive Sochan, making the forward a free agent, reports Shams Charania of ESPN.

This is not a big surprise. San Antonio held on to him through the trade deadline, but gave his representatives the chance to find a trade for the former No. 9 pick, reported Marc Stein of The Stein Line. Sochan is making $7.1 million this season on an expiring contract and would have been a restricted free agent this coming summer if a team acquired him and picked up his qualifying offer. However, teams interested in him (the Knicks were mentioned) knew they could sign Sochan to a minimum contract off the buyout market and decided to wait rather than trade for him.

Sochan was part of the Spurs rotation alongside Victor Wembanyama for a couple of years. However, as the team added depth — Harrison Barnes, Carter Bryant, Julian Champagnie, Kelly Olynyk, Dylan Harper — Sochan was squeezed out of coach Mitch Johnson's rotation. Sochan is a solid defender, but he never developed the ball-handling or shooting the Spurs had hoped for (25.7% from 3-point range this season).

Once he clears waivers (no team is picking up his current salary), some team will likely take a chance on the athletic forward and see if he can fit in its system.

Maryland beats Iowa 77-70 to snap the Hawkeyes' 6-game win streak

COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) — Andre Mills scored 24 points, David Coit added 19 off the bench and Maryland beat Iowa 77-70 on Wednesday night to snap the Hawkeyes' six-game win streak.

Mills scored 10 straight Maryland points to take a 57-56 lead with 8:03 remaining and then Coit scored the next five points overall for a six-point advantage.

Bennett Stirtz twice got Iowa within three points in the final 20 seconds, but Elijah Saunders made four straight free throws and Coit added two more to seal it.

Maryland won despite going 19 of 28 from the free-throw line and committing 14 turnovers. Iowa could not take advantage due to missing 10 straight 3-pointers over the final 10 minutes of the game.

Saunders finished with 12 points and eight rebounds for Maryland (10-14, 3-10 Big Ten). Darius Adams added 11 points and Solomon Washington had 10 points and eight rebounds to help the Terrapins hold a 34-25 advantage on the glass.

Stirtz finished with 32 points, six assists and no turnovers for Iowa (18-6, 8-5). He was 13 of 21 from the field, including 4 of 10 behind the arc, to reach 30-plus points for the third time in four games. Tavion Banks had 13 points and eight rebounds.

Brendan Hausen made a 3-pointer with 11:42 remaining in the game to give Iowa the lead, 48-47, for the first time since there was 4:36 left before halftime.

On Dec. 6, Iowa eased to an 83-64 victory over Maryland for coach Ben McCollum’s first Big Ten victory.

Up next

Iowa: Returns home to face No. 13 Purdue on Saturday.

Maryland: Goes on the road to play Rutgers on Sunday.

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Yankees know ‘running it back’ means nothing if it doesn’t lead to World Series title

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Paul Goldschmidt arriving to camp this morning as pitchers and catchers reported to spring training on Feb. 11, 2026 at Steinbrenner Field, Image 2 shows Jazz Chisholm is all smiles during a workout as pitchers and catchers report to Yankees' spring training

TAMPA — Some first days of spring training can double as meet and greets.

But Wednesday at Steinbrenner Field might as well have been a big family reunion — and that’s even with most of the position players still across the street at the player development complex before they report this weekend.

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Though the Yankees roster continuity from 2025 to 2026 has much of the fan base up in arms over a lack of change, the players themselves do not seem to share the same worries about running it back with mostly the same group intact from their 94-win team.

“We’re running it back, because at the halfway point [last season], we thought we built a team that was going to go to the World Series and we still believe that wholeheartedly,” Jazz Chisholm Jr. said Wednesday as pitchers, catchers and WBC participants reported to camp.

“So for me, I don’t see a problem with running it back with four MVPs on your team.”

Some might argue that the problem is that those MVPs — Aaron Judge, Cody Bellinger, Giancarlo Stanton and Paul Goldschmidt — will play this season at the ages of 34, 30, 36 and 38, respectively.

And while Judge has won the MVP in three of the past four seasons, the only other MVP to come this decade from that group was Goldschmidt’s in 2022.

Paul Goldschmidt arriving to camp this morning as pitchers and catchers reported to spring training on Feb. 11, 2026 at Steinbrenner Field. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

That said, the Yankees are banking on more than just that quartet to fuel another strong season that ends with a chance to play for a championship in October.

They are returning 24 of the 26 players who were on their ALDS roster last year when they got their lunch handed to them by the Blue Jays, who later came within inches of winning the World Series.

“If we play well, it’ll be a good thing,” Goldschmidt said of running it back. “If we don’t, it’ll probably be the reason that it’s said we don’t play well. For me, the expectations of this organization, whatever players are here, are to win a championship. That needs to be the mindset.

Jazz Chisholm is all smiles during a workout as pitchers and catchers report to Yankees’ spring training. Charles Wenzelberg / New York Post

“Camp hasn’t even started yet, but everyone knows what the Yankees are about. Everyone knows the expectations the fan base has, ownership, front office, the players — this is an organization where it’s championship or bust every year. That’s not going to change whether it’s a similar group to last year or a completely new group.

“We got to prepare, we got to put in the work and that’s the No. 1 thing. What we did last year, even though it is a similar group, doesn’t matter. None of those wins carry over, none of those losses. So we’ll start from scratch and try to build a team that is going to play very well and hopefully win a championship.”

Of course, the team that walks into Steinbrenner Field this week is much different from the one that was here this time last year.

That one had Marcus Stroman and Carlos Carrasco about to make a combined 15 starts for it, Gerrit Cole about to make none, Cam Schlittler headed for Double-A, Stanton dealing with double elbow issues and Ben Rice still largely unproven as a middle-of-the-order threat.

It did not have the group of trade deadline additions — Ryan McMahon, José Caballero, Amed Rosario, David Bednar, Camilo Doval and Jake Bird — who are now back with their feet underneath them and more ingrained in the organization.

It also had what looked like a more established bullpen, even if it did not always lead to better results.

But Goldschmidt’s comments about a fresh start echoed those of Aaron Boone, who will likely repeat some version of that message when he addresses the whole team ahead of its first full-squad workout Monday.

“You’re starting anew, so there’s nothing you’re taking with you ultimately from last year,” Boone said. “It’s all a blank slate.”

The WBC truth behind ex-MLB pitcher-turned-farmer Phillippe Aumont’s ‘unretirement’

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Phillippe Aumont #50 of the Toronto Blue Jays posing in uniform, Image 2 shows Phillipe Aumont, wearing a Toronto Blue Jays shirt, holds two white chickens

Former MLB pitcher Phillipe Aumont is not pursuing a farm-to-fable return to the majors after all.

Aumont’s name appeared in the Blue Jays’ transactions log on Tuesday, indicating he had signed a minor league deal with the Blue Jays – six years after he retired from baseball to become a full-time farmer.

As it turns out, the 37-year-old’s “unretirement” was merely an administrative move so he could participate in this year’s World Baseball Classic for Team Canada.

Aumont is not pursuing an MLB comeback with the Blue Jays. MLB Photos via Getty Images

Since Aumont voluntarily retired after spending the 2020 campaign in the Blue Jays organization, he needed to be activated from that list and released to be eligible for the WBC, according to The Athletic.

The 2026 WBC will mark the Gatineau, Quebec, native’s fourth time in the tournament after appearing in 2009, 2013 and 2023.

And while his fastball still hit 92 mph during the 2023 tournament, Aumont – who totaled three innings over two appearances – insisted at the time he was not pursuing a comeback.

“After this, I want to keep it where I can still throw a baseball a little bit and then if I get another call [for the national team], it won’t be as big of a mountain to climb to get back to it,” Aumont told SportsNet in March 2023.

“So I definitely want to keep throwing. I don’t feel interested in going anywhere else than that. But I think I have enough in the tank to come back here and help out somehow and bring some experience.”

Aumont became a full-time farmer after he retired from baseball. Phillipe Aumont/Instagram

Taken 11th overall by the Mariners in the 2007 Draft, the highly-touted prospect was later dealt to the Phillies as part of a blockbuster trade that brought Cliff Lee to Seattle.

The 6-foot-7, 265-pound right-hander appeared in parts of four seasons with the Phillies, tallying a career 6.80 ERA in 46 appearances.

Aumont bounced around baseball after the 2015 season, including stints with the Blue Jays, Tigers and White Sox organizations.

In 2020, Aumont joined Toronto on a minor league deal – his second stint with the organization.

However, after COVID wiped out the entire minor league season, he hung up his spikes to focus on crop production instead of run prevention.

“There’s a meaning to it. I want to touch nature. I want to learn about animals, and growing vegetables and fruit crops,” Aumont said during an interview with CBC’s “Ottawa Morning” about his decision to leave the game. “Just the endless possibilities for me on a farm are priceless.

“Baseball has been great. Baseball allowed me to do a lot of things in life, and I’m very thankful. But when the pandemic hit you saw what it caused in our cities. I just felt a need to start something, to just go back to nature and get away from negative stuff.”

Kenny Atkinson is stealing plays from James Harden’s previous teams

CLEVELAND, OHIO - FEBRUARY 11: James Harden #1 of the Cleveland Cavaliers warms up prior to a game against the Washington Wizards at Rocket Arena on February 11, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. 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 Nick Cammett/Getty Images) | Getty Images

CLEVELAND — Trading for James Harden two-thirds of the way through the season presents some challenges for Cleveland Cavaliers head coach Kenny Atkinson.

Harden has had success playing an isolation-heavy style where he knows where everyone is on the court. Atkinson has been known for a heavy ball and player movement offense. Those opposites can’t co-exist, at least not in how they’ve looked in previous itterations.

After Harden’s debut, Atkinson said that “players win, not systems.” By the looks of it, Harden’s style will win out for at least this season and rightfully so. The Cavs are already taking steps to make sure that they put him in the best position to succeed.

“I’ve looked at all the Houston stuff, and looked at Clippers stuff, looked at Sixers stuff,” Atkinson said, “I think that’s part of your job as a coach is to see what’s worked. Heck, we ran two ATOs (after timeout plays) the other night I stole from [Mike] D’Antoni. Houston stuff. Nothing particularly new or innovative. But it’s, how do we get an advantage for him type stuff?”

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Atkinson admitted that he talked with D’Antoni about Harden after the trade went down. Atkinson served as an assistant under D’Antoni when they were both with the New York Knicks.

It’s important to remember that D’Antoni was the architect of the seven seconds or less Phoenix Suns. They were a high octane, revolutionary offense that was built on playing fast and having ample ball and player movement. It’s not too dissimilar to the systems that Atkinson has run as a head coach.

But D’Antoni didn’t try to force Harden into that system in Houston. Instead, he created an environment for Harden to thrive in, because he knew that particular systems don’t matter if it’s not what fits your players.

So far, Atkinson is doing his part to make sure the Cavs fit around Harden and not the necessarily the other way around. When you have a player as good as Harden who can make his teammates better — especially the bigs — it would be foolish to not take advantage of that.

“We’d be dumb not to,” Atkinson said about borrowing stuff from Harden’s previous stops. “I’m looking forward to over the All-Star break to dive in deeper on how we can use him even better.”