Travis Kelce, Taylor Swift take in Knicks-Cavaliers Game 3 courtside in Cleveland

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift celebrating during an NBA game, Image 2 shows Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce sitting courtside at a basketball game, Image 3 shows Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce attending Game Three between the New York Knicks and the Cleveland Cavaliers
Travis Kelce, Taylor Swift take in Knicks-Cavaliers Game 3 courtside in Cleveland

The Knicks have Celebrity Row at the Garden, and now the Cavaliers have Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift.

As Cleveland hosted the Knicks at Rocket Arena for Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals on Saturday, the Chiefs tight end and Swift — who have been a couple since 2023 and set to get married in less than two months — sat courtside, with Kelce.

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce sit court side during the first quarter on Saturday night. Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce are pictured at the Cavaliers’ May 23 game. Getty Images

The broadcast captured the couple with just over eight minutes remaining in the first quarter, with Kelce wearing a backwards hat and Swift handing him a piece of gum from her purse, and Kelce later chugged a beer during the second of the Knicks’ eventual 121-108 win — and was pictured looking devastated at the scene unfolding around him on the court.

Swift has become a fixture at Chiefs games since they started dating, and the pair have also attended Game 1 of the 2024 ALCS and the U.S. Open together, along with also attending the Cincinnati-Nebraska college football game last season at Arrowhead Stadium.

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce are pictured during the Cavaliers’ Game 3 against the Knicks. es Wenzelberg/New York Post
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce are pictured during Game 3 of the Eastern Conference Finals. es Wenzelberg/New York Post

But this time, they went to watch the sport that Kelce recently revealed he almost played in college, as he discussed on an episode of the “New Heights” podcast that he nearly went to West Virginia before opting to attend Cincinnati for college football before a conversation with his father, Ed.

“[Ed] looked at me and said, ‘You are a man of your word. You wanna be like these kids that commit to a university and de-commit and now the integrity of your word doesn’t mean anything?’” Kelce said during the episode with Cincinnati basketball coach Jerrod Calhoun, who was part of the Bob Huggins-led staff recruiting Kelce to West Virginia.

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce are pictured at Rocket Arena. Charles Wenzelberg/New York Post
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce are pictured at the Cavaliers’ game against the Knicks on May 23. AP Photo

Kelce continued with his football career and ended up becoming one of the greatest tight ends in NFL history, recording seven seasons with over 1,000 receiving yards, winning three Super Bowls and becoming Patrick Mahomes’ most consistent target across the rise and fall of the Kansas City dynasty.

Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce play with a Cavaliers doll during the game. Getty Images

Back in 2024, the Cavaliers also honored the Cavaliers brothers with a bobblehead night.

Swift and Kelce watched as the Cavaliers trailed the Knicks, 60-54, at halftime, with OG Anunoby recording 13 points to lead the Knicks while James Harden collected 14 points for Cleveland.

Travis Kelce and Taylor Swift celebrate. NBAE via Getty Images

Mets lifeless for second straight game as offensive woes return in Miami

One step forward, two steps back. 

The Mets’ offense appeared to have found their footing in recent games, but they’ve quickly returned to their feeble ways down in Miami. 

New York struck against Marlins righty Eury Perez on a Juan Soto homer in the first inning of Friday’s series opener, but managed just three baserunners the rest of the way. 

They followed that with an even worse showing on Saturday. 

Max Meyer had just about everything working as he held the Mets to three walks and a 64 mph opposite-field single across his seven shutout innings of work. 

New York was held to only that hit until a Tyrone Taylor pinch-hit double in the ninth, followed by a Mark Vientos RBI single that finally got them on the board. 

That was the Mets’ first at-bat with a runner in scoring position over the first 18 innings of this weekend set, and it was quickly wasted as A.J. Ewing grounded out to end the game

They now have just two runs on six hits and four walks in the pair of losses. 

“We’re better, we’ve seen that,” Carlos Mendoza said. “We’ve ran into two pretty good arms the past couple of days.”

“Obviously we haven’t done what we’ve wanted at the plate, but you gotta give credit where credit is due,” Vientos added. “The pitchers we’ve faced have been doing their thing.”

Both Perez and Meyer were certainly at their best, but this continues a season-long skid in which the Mets have managed to score one run or less in a league-worst 14 games.

With these last two, they’ve now dropped four of their last five. 

Now 1.5 games back in the basement of the NL East, though, they know they have to turn the page quickly. 

“You can’t sit here and feel sorry for yourself,” Mendoza said. “You gotta keep going.”

“Once 12 o’clock hits tomorrow, it’s a new day,” Vientos added. “Today is in the past and we have to focus on tomorrow and come back and win the game tomorrow.”

Oklahoma City Thunder vs. San Antonio Spurs Game 4 preview: Gilgeous-Alexander is controlling this series

This is a sentence I never thought I'd write (and may never write again), but it's true about this Western Conference Finals:
The team with Victor Wembanyama is not the one forcing the most adjustments.

At least not heading into a critical Game 4 at home for San Antonio. Mathematically, Game 4 is not "must win" for the Spurs, already in these playoffs we have seen two teams come from 3-1 down to win a series. Realistically, that is not going to happen against Oklahoma City. Victor Wembanyama understands that.

"We're going to see what we're made of," he said after a Game 3 loss at home where he and the Spurs raced out to a 15-0 lead at the start but ended up losing by 15 when the final buzzer sounded.

Here are three things to look for in Game 4, which will take place at 8 p.m. ET Sunday in San Antonio, a showdown you can watch on NBC or stream on Peacock.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is controlling series

If you just look at the counting stats, you might argue MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is struggling this series: 26.7 points a game on just 39.1% shooting and 28.6% from 3.

You'd be wrong. Gilgeous-Alexander is controlling this series and dictated the last two Thunder wins by his ability to read and process defenses so quickly, then make the right play. The Thunder are getting the shots they want, shots they like.

SGA has been drawing defenders, seeing how the Spurs are bringing a third defender to his side of the court (usually at the nail), then picking San Antonio's defense apart, setting up teammates for big games. It was evident in Game 3 when he had 12 assists to just two turnovers, and for the series he's averaging 11 assists to 2.3 turnovers per game.
Part of the problem for San Antonio is that they want to force the ball to Oklahoma City's worst shooters, but then Alex Caruso turns around and hits eight 3-pointers in Game 1. The Spurs don't roll out terrible shooters, and if you let guys like Jaylin Williams (five 3-pointers in Game 3) or Lu Dort or anyone else on their roster set their feet, they'll knock it down.
And SGA is finding the open players who have time to set their feet and shoot in rhythm.

I'd say the Spurs need to find a way to throw Gilgeous-Alexander off his game, but good luck with that. He's the two-time MVP for a reason.

Non-Wembanyama minutes

San Antonio was +4 in the 39 minutes Wembanyama played in Game 3, but lost the nine minutes he was out by 19 points.
That's been the trend all series: San Antonio is +21 in 125 minutes with Wembanyama on the court, and -38 in the 29 minutes he is off the court.

That was not much of a problem in the regular season because the three-guard attack of Stephon Castle, De'Aaron Fox and Dylan Harper could get downhill and score or create opportunities for others. However, now they are going against the best defense in the league and doing it with two of those guards playing through injuries.

The second that Wembanyama goes to the bench, you can see the level of aggression and attacking the rim from the Thunder. Thunder coach Mark Daigneault has made sure to keep Gilgeous-Alexander on the court when Wembanyama is off, which allows him to attack the rim without consequence (all due respect to Luke Kornet).
Spurs coach Mitch Johnson doesn't have a lot of options — maybe going small with Carter Bryant at center? — but San Antonio has to find a way not to lose the non-Wembanyama minutes by so much, because OKC is not a team they can beat so badly when he is on the court they can get away with it.

Who is still healthy?

The injury report for this series has too many key players on it, but here is where things stand.

• Thunder guard Ajay Mitchell is out with a calf strain, which he appeared to injure on the play where he picked up a flagrant foul trying to stop a Stephon Castle transition bucket (then Devin Vassell stepped in, and both he and Mitchell picked up technical fouls).
• The Thunder's Jalen Williams is officially questionable for Game 4 with a left hamstring issue. He did not play in Game 3, and it would be a surprise to see him back this quickly.
• San Antonio has nobody on their injury report for Sunday.
• Spurs' coach Johnson said he expects both Fox and Harper will be "ready to go" in Game 4.

Giants too big for the White Sox by a touchdown, 10-3

White Sox announcers got so bored with the game they spent the last several innings talking about Alcatraz and going kayaking. | (wikipedia.com)

Apparently, if the sun is out, all you have to do to beat the White Sox is hit pop-ups. Or hope they bring in Jordan Leasure.

The Giants took a 3-0 lead in the fourth thanks to Jarred Kelenic misplaying a Luis Arraez fly ball into a triple, which a sac fly and four singles followed, all off sorta starter (after a Bryan Hudson opening performance), Erick Fedde. Kelenic tried to atone by leading off the fifth with a double, which was followed by singles by Tristan Peters and Drew Romo and a shot by Sam Antonacci that drove in a run on a fielder’s choice, but it would have been more were it not for a great play by Willy Adames.

That made it 3-2. Munetaka Murakami then K’ed, but Miguel Vargas doubled Antonacci home to tie the game.

That would be the last point of the game where Vargas didn’t want to bury his head in the warning track.

In the bottom of the fifth, Arraez singled, and Casey Schmitt went deep to make it 5-3. Then with two outs Matt Chapman popped out behind third to end the inning, only Colson Montgomery didn’t chase it and Vargas lost it in the sun, so it went for a double. Fedde then walked the bases loaded, bringing up the only batter he’d had no trouble with, Harrison Bader.

Naturally, after Fedde proved he could handle Bader, Will Venable went to the freshly recalled Jordan Leasure, who served up a gopher ball after Miguel Vargas lost yet another pop-up — this one foul. The grand slam made it 9-3 and sent John Schriffen, Gordon Beckham, and Connor McKnight spiraling into an extended riff on Alcatraz, sharks, seals, kayaks, and just about anything besides baseball. Hard to blame them.

That was about it for anything interesting, except when Rafael Devers hit a pop-up, the wind blew fair in front of the plate, and Devers just stood and watched while Murakami lost that one in the sun and dropped it and ended up thrown out thanks to a nice stretch by Chase Meidroth.

Adames hit a homer in the eighth to make the final 10-3, but by then, the announcers were scheduling their kayaking for tomorrow. Again, can’t blame them.

Eight of the Giant runs were on Fedde’s tab, with Leasure only charged with Bader himself and not the guys Fedde put on the bases, and Trevor Richards tagged for the last run. In true hyper-inefficient White Sox fashion, despite only walking three and striking out six, the four pitchers needed 161 pitches to get through eight innings — Giants pitchers only needed 147 for nine, and they struck out 12 Sox, which takes more throws.

The Sox did have 10 hits, two each by Peters and Vargas, who were probably only about a net minus-five runs for the day.

The loss puts the Sox record at 26-25, with the series by the bay wrapping up tomorrow at 3:05 Central, Noah Schultz matching up against veteran lefty Robbie Ray, who’s fresh off being absolutely clobbered by the Diamondbacks.

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Dodgers on Deck: Sunday, May 24 at Brewers

Oct 14, 2025; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto (18) reacts after game two of the NLCS round against the Milwaukee Brewers for the 2025 MLB playoffs at American Family Field. Mandatory Credit: Benny Sieu-Imagn Images | Benny Sieu-Imagn Images

The Dodgers and Brewers finish off their weekend series in Milwaukee with Yoshinobu Yamamoto on the mound on Sunday.

Yamamoto is coming off a tough-luck loss on Monday in San Diego, in which he allowed a solo home run in the first inning and otherwise mostly nothing else in his seven innings. This is the right-hander’s third career start against the Brewers, all of which will have been in Milwaukee. The first two were on opposite extremes of results.

Last July 7, Yamamoto didn’t get out of the first inning and allowed five runs (three earned), in his only truly bad start of 2025. He made up for that and then some with a complete-game win in Game 2 of the National League Championship Series, the Dodgers’ first postseason complete game in 21 years.

Right-hander Brandon Sproat starts Sunday for the Brewers.

Sunday game info
  • Teams: Dodgers at Brewers
  • Ballpark: American Family Field, Milwaukee
  • Time: 11:10 a.m. PT
  • TV: SportsNet LA
  • Radio: AM 570 (English), KTNQ 1020 AM (Spanish)

Washington Nationals shutout the Braves with brilliant performances from Jake Irvin and Brad Lord

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - MAY 23: Jake Irvin #27 of the Washington Nationals pitches against the Atlanta Braves in the first inning at Truist Park on May 23, 2026 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Brett Davis/Getty Images) | Getty Images

In this series, pitching has mostly ruled the day despite the two highest scoring teams in the league squaring off. That was especially true today. The Nats and Braves were locked in a pitchers duel. In the end, two solo home runs from Dylan Crews and Jorbit Vivas proved to be the difference. 

While the game started on time, there was an absolute downpour in the second inning, which led to a half hour delay. Both Grant Holmes and Jake Irvin seemed unaffected by the delay, and were absolutely dealing. Irvin was the better of the two though. He threw five scoreless innings, retiring 15 of the 16 batters he faced.

This was the best Irvin has looked all season. His fastball was sitting at 94 MPH and the curveball was absolutely dancing. Irvin’s curve has been a great offering for him all season, and this was the best it has looked all year. He got 11 of his 14 whiffs on the big hook.

Unfortunately, Irvin seemed to have tweaked something at the end of his fifth inning of work. He tried to give it a go in the 6th, but he could not even make it through his warm up pitches. It would be a real shame if Irvin was hurt after this dominant outing. The results have not always been there for Irvin, but he has been one of the most dependable starters in the big leagues the last few years. I do not believe he has missed a start in his career to this point.

While Irvin was dealing, the Nats offense was mostly quiet. They had a tough time dealing with Grant Holmes’ breaking balls. The slider and the curve were both there for the mustachioed right hander. However, Holmes did make a couple mistakes and the Nats made him pay.

The first one came on an 0-2 count to Dylan Crews, who looked all out of sorts on the first two pitches. However, Holmes gave him a hanging slider, and the former LSU star did not miss it. Crews hammered his first home run of the season into left field, and gave the Nats a 1-0 lead.

Crews has been up and down since coming back from the minors, but seeing him homer was nice. It does feel like he falls into 0-2 counts far too often though. Hopefully this homer can be the start of something for Crews. It would be amazing if the Nats could get him going.

The Nats other home run also came from an unlikely character. Jorbit Vivas had really been struggling at the plate, especially with runners in scoring position. However, with nobody on, Vivas ambushed a Grant Holmes fastball on the first pitch that just left Truist Park. It was a huge homer that gave the Nats much needed insurance.

The pitching is what ruled the day though. After Irvin departed, Brad Lord came in and delivered three scoreless innings. He was able to navigate a Vivas error to strand two Braves in the 7th. As usual, Lord was fantastic in his bulk relief role and helped the Nats save their bullpen. He is such a key piece to this Nats pitching staff and is a true glue guy.

In the 9th, Richard Lovelady came in the game to face the middle of the Braves lineup. The fiery lefty retired Michael Harris, Matt Olson and Ozzie Albies without incident to secure the Nats a 2-0 win. It was a pitchers duel in Atlanta, and the Nats got the upper hand. The 3 Nats pitchers only allowed one hit and dominated a very good lineup. That sets up a rubber match tomorrow, weather permitting of course. 

Cavs vs. Knicks Game 3 open gamethread

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MAY 19: Evan Mobley #4 of the Cleveland Cavaliers reacts during the third quarter of a game against the New York Knicks in Game One of the NBA Eastern Conference Finals at Madison Square Garden on May 19, 2026 in New York City. 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 Sarah Stier/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Cleveland Cavaliers will look to even their Eastern Conference Finals series against the New York Knicks.

Share your thoughts as the game unfolds. If you aren’t a member of the community, sign up so you can talk to your fellow Cavalier fans and make your voice heard!

Go Cavs!

Twins 4, Red Sox 2: Mostly lackluster, though it got interesting in the ninth

May 23, 2026; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Red Sox first baseman Willson Contreras (40) is restrained by players after a confrontation after being tagged out at home plate during the fourth inning against the Minnesota Twins at Fenway Park. Mandatory Credit: Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images | Bob DeChiara-Imagn Images

Recap

Jovani Moran had the responsibility to keep the Twins in check for the first inning in order to provide a soft landing for Brayan Bello in his bulk-pitching era. Well, today wasn’t that day: Moran allowed hits to the first three Twins batters, then a run-scoring sacrifice fly immediately after that. Despite needing all the help he could get, Bello entered the game with a 2-0 deficit.

Bello twice got into a bases loaded jam and threw 20+ pitches.

The Sox bats were silent until the fourth. This inning also featured a clearing of the benches as the inning ended, after Willson Contreras ran through Twins catcher Victor Caratini but didn’t beat the throw.

The fifth inning featured Contreras’ first error of the season, and an extremely close play at the plate that was challenged but ultimately didn’t go the Sox way. Bello didn’t do himself any favors in the inning either, loading the bases for the second time (albeit with help from Contreras’ E) in another high-pitch inning. He also thoughtlessly deflected a ball in play, which looked like it was headed toward being cleanly fielded by Mayer, but scored a run instead. Two more runs crossed the plate, 4-1 Twins.

Though Bello didn’t melt down, it wasn’t a good outing. That will probably be classified as progress for him, but it’s not enough, friends. Not enough.

The Sox were unable to capitalize on an error and walk that opened the seventh inning.

But wait! Things got interesting in the bottom of the ninth. Chad Tracy pulled all the levers, leaving just one player on the bench. Caleb Durbin came in as a pinch runner and took second on “defensive indifference.” This said a lot about this game, I thought, but some drama arrived in the form of three walks, including one that brought in a run. With the bases still loaded, it was very close to happening again, but Jarren Duran ultimately struck out to end the game. He threw a Hail Mary ABS challenge at the problem, but lost the challenge…and the Sox, the game.

This last-minute flurry of excitement masked what was a really lackluster game overall.

Studs

Relief pitching not named Brayan Bello

In their three combined innings of work, Tyler Samaniego and Ryan Watson gave up one hit and no runs, with three strikeouts thrown in (all Watson). This may look more like damning them with faint praise rather than covering them with glory, but this was the high-water mark today. They needed to stabilize after Bello and offer the offense the opportunity to wake up. They did their part, but the offense didn’t come through.

Fenway First

A woman—Jen Pawol—umpired home plate for the first time.

Duds

Offense

The common refrain for the 2026 season. There was nothing particularly egregious, simply not enough base runners or movement on the basepaths. 5H, 11 SO, 6 BB on the night—and the Sox got lucky in the ninth with some big nerves by the Twins relievers. Blah.

Play of the Game

The Twins’ Larnach scored on a sacrifice fly. Connor Wong thought he had him at the plate but none of the camera angles definitively cleared up the mystery, and the challenge was unsuccessful. Why is this the play of the game? Because it provides a glimpse of the frustration of this game; there were no heroics, nothing to truly admire…just several screwy moments that might have gone a different way, and this is one.

Usyk rescues gruelling victory against Verhoeven with last-gasp stoppage

  • Ukrainian keeps unbeaten record with 11th-round TKO

  • Dutch kickboxing great threatened to cause huge upset

Oleksandr Usyk, Ukraine’s unbeaten heavyweight world champion, stopped the Dutch former kickboxer Rico Verhoeven with one second remaining in the penultimate round to avoid what would have been one of the greatest boxing upsets of all time on Saturday.

The WBC title fight at the Pyramids of Giza was considered a mismatch but Verhoeven, whose sole previous professional boxing fight was 12 years ago, tore up the script in mind-boggling fashion from the opening bell and had looked set to win.

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Red Sox’s Willson Contreras sets off another benches-clearing incident after home plate collision

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows A baseball player in a yellow jersey and blue helmet collides with a catcher wearing a black jersey with

Willson Contreras was at the center of yet another on-field dust-up Saturday.

During the sixth inning against the Twins at Fenway Park, the Red Sox first baseman attempted to score from first base on a hit by Ceddanne Rafaela.

The throw beat Contreras to the plate, leading to a collision between him and Minnesota catcher Victor Caratini.

Caratini held onto the ball for the out, but the fireworks didn’t stop there.

The backstop followed Contreras, who ran straight through Caratini rather than pulling up before the tag or sliding, toward the Red Sox dugout, and the pair exchanged words as both benches cleared.

After a short delay, the two teams returned to their dugouts without any punches thrown.

Contreras, who was acquired by Boston in a trade with the Cardinals in December, has been no stranger to in-game altercations since arriving in Beantown.

Earlier this season, the three-time All-Star appeared to exchange words with Brewers right-hander Brandon Woodruff after being hit by a pitch.

Willson Contreras took out catcher Victor Caratini rather than sliding into home. Getty Images
As pitcher Taj Bradley #26 of the Minnesota Twins looks on, catcher Victor Caratini #37 exchanges words with Willson Contreras #40 of the Boston Red Sox after Contreras ran into him while being tagged out during the fourth inning at Fenway Park on May 23, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. Getty Images

After the game, Contreras — who has a history of getting plunked by Milwaukee pitchers, having been hit by pitches 24 times against the franchise, including six by Woodruff — issued a stern warning to the Brew Crew.

“They always say, ‘I’m not trying to hit you,’” Contreras said. “That gets old. So next time they hit me again, I’m going to take one of them out. That’s the message. That’s the message.

Both dugouts cleared during the dust up on Saturday. X/Tyler Milliken

“I took exception to it. I knew my brother was behind me [as he went to first base]. I was like, ‘OK, you hit me … see what happens next.’”

Last August, Contreras had to be restrained by coaches and was ejected from a game after being called out on strikes by home plate umpire Derek Thomas.

That tirade continued into the dugout, where he tossed a bucket of Hi-Chew candy onto the field.

A month before that, Contreras sparked a dugout-clearing incident after the Padres’ Nick Pivetta hit him with a pitch.

ECF Game Thread: Knicks at Cavaliers, Game 3, May 23, 2026

May 21, 2026; New York, New York, USA; New York Knicks head coach Mike Brown reacts during the fourth quarter of game two of the eastern conference finals of the 2026 NBA playoffs against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images | Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

The Knicks head to Cleveland tonight after taking the first two games of the Eastern Conference Finals at Madison Square Garden. Game One featured a historic comeback fueled by Captain Clutch, while Game Two showcased New York’s depth and Brunson in the facilitator role. Back on their home court, Cleveland—desperate to avoid falling behind by three—should respond with more energy and better shooting from its role players. The Knicks are locked, though, playing with the focus and urgency of a team methodically pursuing a bigger goal.

Tip off is at 8 PM EST on ABC. This is your game thread. This is Fear the Sword. Please don’t post large photos, GIFs, or links to illegal streams in the thread. Be good citizens. And go Knicks!

Despite a solid Holmes start, Braves get shutout by Nationals in game two

ATLANTA, GA - MAY 23: Starting pitcher Grant Holmes (66) of the Atlanta Braves delivers a pitch during the Saturday afternoon MLB game between the Atlanta Braves and the Washington Nationals on May 23, 2026 at Truist Park in Atlanta, GA. (Photo by David J. Griffin/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

It’s an understatement to say the Atlanta Braves’ run support didn’t show up in today’s matchup against the Washington Nationals. Falling 2-0, they just couldn’t find a way to rally late and get on the board with only one hit managed.

Coming off a rain delay in the middle of the second inning, both teams remained scoreless until the top of the fourth inning, where Nationals’ Dylan Crews hit a homer, followed by Jorbit Vivas in the fifth with one of his own.

On the bright note, Grant Holmes delivered a quality performance, getting nine of his 10 strikeouts through the first four innings and accumulating 18 whiffs off his five-pitch arsenal. He pitched for a total of five innings and gave up those two solo shots as his only earned runs, six hits and two walks with a total of 87 pitches. The Braves’ bullpen helped carry out their end on defense by limiting any more runs from Washington.

Not the result Holmes wanted from his offense, but today was his best outing of the year so far, with his highest number of strikeouts recorded since July 2025.

An overall disappointing ending for game two, not because the Nationals’ offense was that good, but because the Braves couldn’t find a good pitch against Jake Irvin, who’s now boasting a 5.23 ERA.

The Nationals responded to being walked off by the Braves in game one, but didn’t have to dominate the game to do so.

You know what that means: time for the Braves to bounce back in the finale with Martín Pérez on the mound.

Stay tuned to see if they’ll finish the job tomorrow.

Former Sharks Defenseman Signs Extension With Capitals

Earlier this week, the Washington Capitals announced that they have signed former San Jose Sharks defenseman Timothy Liljegren to a two-year contract extension. Liljegren's new contract carries an average annual value of $3.25 million, which is a $250,000 raise from his prior contract. 

Liljegren's time in San Jose began when he was acquired from the Toronto Maple Leafs, who selected him in the first round of the 2017 NHL Draft, in exchange for Matt Benning and two draft picks in October 2024. 

Across two partial seasons in San Jose, Liljegren appeared in 110 games for the Sharks. During that time, he scored seven goals and registered a total of 28 points while being a -32. 

The Sharks then traded Liljegren to the Capitals ahead of the NHL Trade Deadline this spring, receiving a fourth round draft pick in return for the 27-year-old defenseman. 

After being traded to Washington, the Kristianstad, Sweden native played in just four games for the Capitals often serving as a spare player in case of injury. Moving forward, he is expected to play a much more important role for the Capitals though. At this time, Liljegren is one of just three NHL-caliber right-handed defensemen under contract with the Capitals for next season, with Matt Roy and Dylan McIlrath being the others. 

Texas Rangers lineup for May 23, 2026

DETROIT, MI - MAY 01: Texas Rangers Alejandro Osuna (19) takes a strike during the game between Texas Rangers and Detroit Tigers on May 1, 2026 at Comerica Park in Detroit, MI (Photo by Allan Dranberg/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Texas Rangers lineup for May 23, 2026 against the Anaheim Angels: starting pitchers are Nathan Eovaldi for the Rangers and WWalbert Urena for the Angels.

The Rangers look to rebound from yesterday’s disappointing outing. Alejandro Osuna is the cleanup hitter today, which is interesting.

The lineup:

Pederson — DH

Nimmo — RF

Jung — 3B

Osuna — LF

Burger — 1B

Carter — CF

Duran — SS

Foscue — 2B

Higashioka — C

9:05 p.m. Central start time. Rangers are -142 favorites.

How to watch the Rangers vs Angels: Live stream info, schedule, preview

The MLB action continues this Sunday on NBCSN and Peacock, starting at 12:00 PM ET, with a Sunday Leadoff showdown featuring the Pittsburgh Pirates vs Toronto Blue Jays. Then, at 7:00 PM ET, the Texas Rangers take on the Los Angeles Angels in this week's Sunday Night Baseball thriller. See below for additional information on how to stream both games.

Click here to sign up for Peacock!

World Series champion pitcher Mark Gubicza and 10-year MLB outfielder David Murphy will join play-by-play voice Jason Benetti on NBC Sports’ Sunday Night Baseball broadcast team this week.

Former relief pitcher Adam Ottavino will provide analysis on Sunday night and offer unique “Inside the Pitch” insights. John Fanta will host the Rangers vs Angels pregame show.

How to watch Texas Rangers vs Los Angeles Angels:

  • Where: Angel Stadium, Anaheim, CA
  • When: Sunday, May 24
  • Time: 7:00 PM ET
  • TV Channel: NBCSN
  • Live Stream:Peacock
MLB: Chicago White Sox at Seattle Mariners
A weekly look at lineup trends around MLB and how it impacts fantasy lineups.

What other MLB games are on Peacock this Sunday?

Pittsburgh Pirates vs Toronto Blue Jays - 12:00 PM ET on Peacock and NBCSN

How to watch MLB on NBC and Peacock:

MLB Sunday Leadoff is a weekly Major League Baseball showcase featuring live Sunday daytime games. It highlights marquee matchups throughout the regular season and streams primarily on Peacock, with some games also airing across NBC Sports and NBC.

MLB Sunday Night Baseball is a weekly primetime Major League Baseball showcase, featuring marquee matchups each Sunday night during the regular season. The games air on NBC and Peacock and anchor NBC Sports’ Sunday night programming lineup.

On Sunday, July 5, all 15 MLB games will be presented nationally across Peacock and NBC as part of a special all-day “Star-Spangled Sunday” showcase.

NBC Sports will also stream one out-of-market game each day of the 2026 MLB season nationally on Peacock. Telemundo Deportes will present all NBCUniversal-produced MLB games in Spanish, with Universo televising all games broadcast on NBC.

How to sign up for Peacock:

Sign up here to watch all of our LIVE sports, sports shows, documentaries, classic matches, and more. You’ll also get tons of hit movies and TV shows, Originals, news, 24/7 channels, and current NBC and Bravo hits for whatever suits your mood.

MLB on NBC 2026 schedule:

Click here to see the full list of MLB games that will air on NBC and Peacock this season.

Why are some MLB games unavailable to stream on Peacock?

Due to territorial blackout restrictions, select regular season, special event, and Postseason games may be unavailable on Peacock. Television territory blackout restrictions apply regardless of whether a Club is home or away and regardless of whether a game is televised in that Club's home television territory. For more information visit, Peacock’s Help Center.

What devices does Peacock support?

You can enjoy Peacock on a variety of devices. View the full list of supported devices here.

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