Meet Cameron Carr, Lakers rookie acquired in Knicks draft-day deal

Follow along for every pick of the first round of the 2026 NBA Draft.

The Los Angeles Lakers acquired Baylor guard Cameron Carr, who was initially drafted by the New York Knicks with the 24th overall pick in the 2026 NBA Draft at the Barclays Center.

The 6-foot-5, 185-pound guard averaged 18.9 points, 5.8 rebounds and 2.6 assists last season.

Carr spent the first two years of his college career with the Tennessee Volunteers, playing in 18 games. He transferred to the Baylor Bears as a junior and was named a third-team All-Big 12 player. He is the son of former NBA player Chris Carr, who played for six different teams in six seasons.

The Lakers moved up one spot, sending the 25th overall pick and cash considerations to the Knicks. Los Angeles picked Spain guard Sergio De Larrea, the Spanish Super Tournament MVP for New York.

The Lakers have not drafted in the first round since 2024. They drafted Lachlan Olbrich in the second round last year, but he was sent to the Chicago Bulls.

Rob Pelinka, the team's president of basketball operations, and the front office will still have other decisions to make to push the organization forward.

It will be the first time since 1979 that the Buss family was not the majority owner of the team, after the first full offseason under Mark Walter. Walter obtained majority ownership for $10 billion. The Buss family still owns 15% of the franchise. The sale was officially approved by the NBA Board of Governors in October 2025.

The Lakers must construct a winning strategy in order for the team to take another step forward and back on the path to a championship with Luka Doncic as the focal point.

The Lakers finished the regular season with a 53-29 record and the fourth seed in the Western Conference. They got the best of the Houston Rockets in the first round, winning the first three games of the series before closing it out in Game 6. Then they were swept in the conference semifinals by the Oklahoma City Thunder without Doncic available due to injury.

Los Angeles Lakers general manager Rob Pelinka, left, speaks during a press conference to preview the 2025-26 season at UCLA Health Training Center in El Segundo, California, on Sept. 25, 2025.

The order in which the Lakers make moves this offseason will be telling for the direction in which the franchise is trying to go.

Here’s what’s left for the Lakers to do this offseason:

Will the Lakers sign LeBron James?

LeBron James is set to become a free agent when the league year ends on June 30. He will have one of a handful of options to make regarding his basketball future.

If James decides he wants to continue playing and return for his 24th season in the NBA, the Lakers will have to explore the option of whether they want to keep him in Los Angeles. He would immediately become priority No. 1.

The Lakers retain the rights to their own free agents, but the NBA does place a placeholder salary (known as a cap hold) against the team's salary cap to prevent other teams, such as L.A. in this case, from signing any other free agents before re-signing their own to avoid going over the cap.

James is expected to have a $57.75 million cap hold.

Will Austin Reaves return to Lakers?

Reaves has been featured as a star player on the team’s roster, but he will be an unrestricted free agent this summer and could potentially get $40 million annually. 

Reporter Dan Woike of The Athletic was told that Reaves could have interest from the Brooklyn Nets and is expected to receive a four-year deal worth $178.5 million. The Detroit Pistons and the Atlanta Hawks are expected to be among the other teams interested in acquiring Reaves. 

Both teams could create space to make competitive offers for the 6-foot-5 shooting guard.

Rui Hachimura, Luke Kennard, Jaxson Hayes and Maxi Kleber will also be unrestricted free agents. Deandre Ayton has a player option and could opt into another year on his contract with Los Angeles. He could also decide to become an unrestricted free agent.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Who is Cameron Carr? Meet Lakers rookie after trade with Knicks

MLB clears Dodgers' Dr. Neal ElAttrache after link to Conor McGregor steroids report

Dr. Neal ElAttrache sits with the 2020 World Series ring presented to him by the Dodgers in his office on Dec. 13, 2023.
Dr. Neal ElAttrache, shown with the 2020 World Series ring given to him by the Dodgers, was cleared by MLB to continue treating players. (Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times)

Major League Baseball says it has no concerns about Dodgers and Rams head team physician Dr. Neal ElAttrache working with players.

ElAttrache was questioned by MLB on June 12 following a detailed report by the New York Times that the renowned surgeon and sports medicine expert supported the therapeutic use of performance-enhancing drugs by UFC star Conor McGregor.

“MLB took our responsibility to conduct due diligence in this matter seriously. We interviewed Dr. Neal ElAttrache last week, covering multiple topics, and he answered our questions thoroughly,” MLB said in a statement obtained by The Times Tuesday night.

“Based on our interview, the review of relevant records, Dr. ElAttrache’s long history of support for and cooperation with the Joint Drug Program and the fact that no Therapeutic Use Exemption requests of this nature have been submitted by Dr. ElAttrache or anyone else, we do not have any concerns regarding Dr. ElAttrache’s treatment of MLB players, or his adherence to the Joint Drug Programs and related rules.

“We consider this matter closed.”

Read more:Dodgers, Rams physician Neal ElAttrache explains referring UFC star Conor McGregor to steroids specialist

ElAttrache performed surgery on McGregor in July 2021, inserting a rod, plates and screws into his left leg after the fighter broke his tibia and fibula during a mixed martial arts bout against Dustin Poirier in Las Vegas.

McGregor’s recovery was lengthy and arduous. ElAttrache told the New York Times that while he did not prescribe steroids for McGregor, he referred him to a specialist who did. Furthermore, ElAttrache wrote a letter supporting McGregor’s request for a therapeutic use exemption from UFC drug policies.

“I felt it would be appropriate to consult other physicians with expertise in bone healing/bone metabolism,” ElAttrache told the New York Times via text. “I recommended the consultations but not the course of treatment.”

ElAttrache said he told McGregor to check with UFC drug testers about prescriptions the consultant gave him. “I purposely wasn’t involved with his evaluation by the consultant nor with prescribing medication,” ElAttrache said.

Read more:Surgeon Neal ElAttrache helps Rams and Dodgers get back on the field after injuries

The exemption request was denied by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency, the drug testing organization the UFC used at the time, triggering a split between the two organizations. McGregor withdrew from the UFC anti-doping program shortly thereafter and no longer was required to undergo testing for banned substances.

The report prompted MLB to talk with ElAttrache about his approach to treating players.

ElAttrache, operating primarily out of the Cedars-Sinai Kerlan-Jobe Orthopaedic Clinic in Los Angeles, has performed elbow or shoulder surgeries on prominent Dodgers past and present, including Shohei Ohtani, Clayton Kershaw, Tony Gonsolin and Walker Buehler as well as former Rams stars Cooper Kupp and Cam Akers.

Among the hundreds of surgeries performed over three decades by ElAttrache, his patients include the four 2024 MLB most valuable player and Cy Young Award winners — Ohtani, Aaron Judge, Chris Sale and Tarik Skubal. ElAttrache’s patients include 18 of 29 players who won the MVP or Cy Young awards over the past 10 years.

“I have spoken with MLB and I am very comfortable with the process that the league and I will complete to assure the public that I have followed every rule and regulation in my medical treatment of athletes without exception,” ElAttrache said in a statement to the Los Angeles Times earlier this month. “My record is completely clean, including in this case.”

Times staff writers Steve Henson, Bill Shaikin, Sam Farmer and Gary Klein contributed to this report.

Sign up for more Dodgers news with Dodgers Dugout. Delivered at the start of each series.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

31-49 chart

DENVER, CO - JUNE 23: Mickey Moniak #22 of the Colorado Rockies reacts after striking out in the seventh inning against the Boston Red Sox at Coors Field on June 23, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Justin Edmonds/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Red Sox 5, Rockies 2

Leverage index and box score

Graphics via FanGraphs.

Sonny Skies: Sonny Gray, +0.34 WPA

Nothing’s Free, man: Tyler Freeman, -0.18 WPA 

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Celtics draft elite rebounder with 27th overall pick

CHICAGO, IL - MAY 11: Chris Cenac Jr. looks on during the 2026 NBA Draft Combine on May 11, 2026 at Wintrust Arena in Chicago, Illinois. 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 Melissa Tamez/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Celtics have selected forward Chris Cenac Jr. with the 27th pick in the draft. Cenac is a 6’11 forward who averaged 9.5 points and 7.9 rebounds per game in his freshman season at Houston. He’ll immediately bolster the team’s frontcourt depth, which is currently headlined by Neemias Queta, Luka Garza, and last year’s second-round selection, Amari Williams.

Cenac, who is 19 years old, was widely seen as one of the frontcourt players with the highest ceilings in this draft class, albeit a more developmental prospect. He has a 7’5 wingspan and is particularly known for his prowess on the glass.

“He’s just a good young player, energetic, plays hard, excellent athlete, long, fits a position of need,” Brad Stevens said shortly after the pick was made. “[He brings] some things that we were a little short on this year from an athletic perspective, I think, with his size and his length.”

Cenac shot 48.5% from the field and 33.3% from three last year. ESPN’s Malika Andrews noted on the broadcast that his college coach, Kalvin Sampson, routinely praised his body language and work ethic.

“When you play in the program he’s played for, he’s been taught well and been held to a high standard,” Stevens said. “And so I like that, and he will undoubtedly come here and be eager to jump into it. He’s a good worker, he’s a good person, and he’s got a lot to learn, but we’re excited about starting that process with him.”

Stevens also noted that he doesn’t necessarily expect Cenac to see much on-court action during his rookie season, but that he felt the same about Hugo Gonzalez last year, who went on to average nearly 15 minutes per game.

“When I watched him play live several times this year, he didn’t always play well, but I never walked out of the gym thinking he didn’t play hard, and he didn’t really, really, really go after it, and so I think that’s a good place to start,” Stevens said.

Chris Cenac Jr. joins a Celtics program that is known for player development

The Celtics have Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, Derrick White, Payton Pritchard, Sam Hauser, Hugo Gonzalez, Luka Garza, and Baylor Scheierman under contract next season (though trades could certainly be made between now and Opening Night).

Neemias Queta, Jordan Walsh, Ron Harper Jr., Amari Williams, and Max Shulga all have team options and are extension eligible. Pritchard (October) and Brown (July) are also both extension eligible.

The Celtics also have the 40th overall pick, which they’ll select on Wednesday night on night two of the NBA Draft.

Dodgers rack up hits in unusual win over Twins

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Dodgers player Freddie Freeman high-fiving teammates, Image 2 shows A Dodgers baseball player pitching during a game, Image 3 shows Two Dodgers baseball players, one wearing number 23 and the other number 84, on the field

MINNEAPOLIS — They don’t homer, they don’t win.

That’s normally the case for the Dodgers.

Tuesday was an exception.

In their 12-3 victory over the Minnesota Twins, the Dodgers built their lead in unorthodox fashion.

They piled up hits.

Tommy Edman celebrates his RBI single with Chris Woodward. AP Photo/Matt Krohn

Of their 17 hits, only one was a home run and it didn’t come until the ninth inning when Alex Call launched a sinker by reliever Taylor Rogers over the left-field wall at Target Field.

How unusual was this?

The Dodgers are 7-17 in games in which they don’t homer.

In games they do?

They’re 44-12.

Freddie Freeman led the Dodgers’ balanced attack, as he was 3-for-4 with a walk and was involved in the team scoring in three separate innings.

Freddie Freeman celebrates after scoring on an error by Minnesota Twins second baseman Luke Keaschall during the third inning. AP Photo/Matt Krohn

Freeman doubled in the third inning and scored when Tommy Edman reached base on a throwing error by Twins second baseman Luke Keaschall. The run tied the game at 2-2.

A single by Freeman drove in the second of the three runs the Dodgers scored in the fourth inning to move in front, 5-2.

Freeman doubled again in the sixth inning to drive in Andy Pages and extend the Dodgers’ lead to 6-2.

Justin Wrobleski provided the majority of the pitching, limiting the Twins to two runs and five hits over seven innings. Wrobleski improved his record to a team-best 9-2 and lowered his earned-run average to 2.71.

Justin Wrobleski winds up to deliver against the Minnesota Twins. AP Photo/Matt Krohn

What it means

The Dodgers’ record of 51-29 is the best record in baseball.

Last year, the Dodgers finished the regular season with the third-best record in the NL, which complicated their World Series title defense.

Because they weren’t one of the two NL teams to receive a first-round bye, they had to play the Cincinnati Reds in a best-of-three wild-card round. In each of the next three rounds of the postseason, including the World Series, their opponents had home-field advantage.

This year, they could do what they did in 2024 when they enjoyed a first-round bye and home-field advantage throughout the postseason.

Who’s hot

Journeyman Chuckie Robinson started at catcher in place of Dalton Rushing, who was tested before the game to rule out a concussion.

Robinson entered the game 0 for 11 on the season.

Chuckie Robinson tags out Minnesota Twins’ Austin Martin at home plate during the third inning. AP Photo/Matt Krohn

His fourth-inning single was his first hit in the major leagues since Sept. 14, 2024. He finished the game 2 for 4 with a run scored and a run batted in, making this his first multi-hit game since Oct. 4, 2022. 

The series marks a homecoming for outfielder Alex Call, who grew up about 40 minutes away in River Falls, Wisc.

With Kyle Tucker sidelined with back spasms, Call was 2-for-4 with a homer, two walks and three runs. In the series opener on Monday, Call pinch-ran for Tucker in the second inning and went on to collect two hits in that game.

Who’s not

The Twins remain within striking distance of a wild-card spot, but they might as well be sellers at the trade deadline. Even if they reach the postseason by some miracle, they simply don’t have the team to compete in October. Their bullpen is terrible, and based on their performance so far in this series, their lineup can’t do anything against half-decent pitching. In their two games against the Dodgers, the Twins have scored only three runs.

Up next

The Dodgers will close out their three-game series against the Twins on Wednesday. Shohei Ohtani (7-2, 1.47 ERA) will start for the Dodgers and take on All-Star Joe Ryan (5-3, 2.99 ERA). who had his start pushed back by a day because of illness.

Lakers swap picks with Knicks, select wing Cameron Carr

Cameron Carr arrives for the first round of the NBA basketball draft Tuesday at Barclays Center in Brooklyn.
Cameron Carr arrives for the first round of the NBA basketball draft Tuesday at Barclays Center in Brooklyn. (Adam Hunger / Associated Press)

In the first round of Tuesday night’s NBA draft, the Lakers made a trade with the New York Knicks, acquiring Cameron Carr, who the Knicks had selected with the 24th overall pick in the first round.

The Lakers then took guard Sergio De Larrea from Spain with the 25th pick and traded him to the NBA champion Knicks, along with cash considerations. The Lakers went to Spain recently to watch De Larrea work out.

Lakers president of basketball operations Rob Pelinka didn’t talk about the trade because the NBA had not made it official as of late Tuesday night. Carr was in New York at the draft, but he also didn’t speak with the media.

In need of athletic wing players on a team that could have up to nine free agents, the Lakers got one with 21-year-old Carr.

Read more:NBA draft 2026 live coverage: First-round recap

The 6-foot-5 Carr averaged 18.9 points per game at Baylor, 5.8 rebounds and 2.6 assists. Carr shot 49.4% from the field and 37.4% from three-point range.

Most NBA draft boards had projected Carr to be selected between 15th and 21st in the first round. But he slipped to the Lakers, who like the idea that Carr is so athletic, is a three-and-D player with a 7-2 wingspan and has a 42.5-inch vertical.

He set a record at Baylor during his sophomore year with 642 points during the 2025-26 season. That ranked him fifth in program history, regardless of class.

Carr has been compared to Knicks wing player Mikal Bridges, a two-way player who just won the championship with New York.

The draft will continue Wednesday with the second round, but the Lakers don’t have a pick.

The Lakers needed to add a player such as Carr because they have so many roles to fill.

Read more:NBA draft: Clippers select Keaton Wagler at No. 5; AJ Dybantsa goes No. 1

LeBron James is a free agent and is looking for a contract from the Lakers. Austin Reaves is expected to opt out of his deal that will pay him $14.8 million. The Lakers can pay Reaves the most, a five-year deal for $241 million. Marcus Smart, the best defender on the Lakers, has a player option for $5.3 million. People around the NBA expect him to opt out and sign a deal for more money. Rui Hachimura is an unrestricted free agent and will have many teams after him. Luke Kennard is a free agent and will have a few teams after him because of his three-point shooting.

So, essentially, the Lakers need players on their roster and Carr is a player that the Lakers felt fell to them when so many draft boards had him going earlier.

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This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

Dodgers 12, Twins 3: The Dodgers are good

Jun 23, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani (17) hits a RBI sacrifice fly against the Minnesota Twins in the fourth inning at Target Field. Mandatory Credit: Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images | Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images

Kendry Rojas got the start tonight in lieu of Joe Ryan who was sick (he’ll pitch tomorrow, it sounds like), and immediately walked the first two Dodgers. Then, after a couple strikeouts, Tommy Edman hit a liner up the middle, past the glove of Luke Keaschall, to score LA’s first run.

It was a fairly clean, scoreless inning for Rojas in the 2nd, with Victor Caratini hitting a solo HR for the Twins first run in the bottom half.

Newly called up Austin Voth took over for Rojas and allowed a 1-out double to Freddie Freeman. Edman hit a grounder to 2nd and despite Keashcall, Voth, and Lewis converging at first base, no out was recorded, allowing Freeman to score on the error.

In the bottom of the 3rd, Byron Buxton hit a double to left-center with Austin Martin at 1st, who was thrown out at home. However, Josh Bell was able to tie the game up at 2 with a bloop single to center, scoring Buxton.

It did not stay tied for very long, as Alex Call singled, then Chuckie Robinson singled and moved Call to 3rd, then Shohei Ohtani hit a sac fly RBI, then 3 more singles scored 2 more after that, putting the Dodgers up 5-2.

Meanwhile, the Twins bats started faltering against the lefty Justin Wrobleski, earning just a single and a walk in innings 4 through 7. The Dodgers did not stop scoring, with single runs in the 6th and 7th, as well as 5 in the 9th against Taylor Rogers, making this one not even close.

Oh, Brooks Lee hit a solo homer in the 9th, cool. 12-3 is your final.

Studs:

Brooks Lee: 1-4, HR (13)

Victor Caratini: 1-4, HR (6)

Travis Adams: 2 IP, 0 H, 0 R, BB, 4 K

Duds:

Austin Voth: 4 IP, 11 H, 6 R, 5 ER, BB, 2 K

Taylor Rogers: 1 IP, 5 H, 5 ER, 2 BB, HR

Luke Keaschall: 0-2, BB, Error

Dodgers right on Target in latest win over Twins

MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA - JUNE 23: Freddie Freeman #5 of the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrates his double against the Minnesota Twins in the third inning at Target Field on June 23, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by David Berding/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dodgers scored early and often to beat the Minnesota Twins 12-3, picking up a second victory in as many days at Target Field in Minneapolis.

After the start of the game was delayed 28 minutes, the first two Dodgers hitters were walking in the rain against rookie reliever Kendry Rojas. Two outs later, Tommy Edman pushed a single off the glove of second baseman Luke Keaschall for the game’s first run, the third straight game the Dodgers have scored in the first inning.

Rojas was the opener for the Twins bullpen and needed 50 pitches to get through his two innings, only half of them for strikes, with three total walks. But the Dodgers scored just once off of him.

Justin Wrobleski was much more economical, keeping with his theme this season, including three flyouts to right field in a perfect first inning — 9, 9, 9 in your scorecard — on just nine pitches.

Minnesota evened things up in a second inning reminiscent of Monday night’s game, with a solo home run, this one by catcher Victor Caratini.

The Dodgers tapped the Edman-to-Keaschall pipeline for another run in the third, on an easy-peasy would-be inning-ending groundout, but Keaschall’s underhand toss toward first base was way offline, allowing Freddie Freeman to scamper home with a gift run after his 18th double of the season.

Call and response continued with Mookie Betts make an error of his own to open the bottom of the third. Byron Buxton nearly cashed it in with a double to the left center field gap, but Andy Pages cut the ball off quickly then started an 8-6-2 putout with Betts that erased Austin Martin at the plate.

Pages has eight outfield assists this season, most in the majors. This one briefly kept the Dodgers ahead, but Josh Bell quickly singled home Buxton to keep the back-and-forth going.

First things first

Three runs in the fourth inning broke the game open, thanks to five singles — three with two outs — and a sacrifice fly off Austin Voth. The second of those five singles was by Chuckie Robinson, forced into a heavier workload with Will Smith on the injured list and Dalton Rushing exiting Monday to enter concussion protocol. The single was Robinson’s first time reaching base in 16 plate appearances as a Dodger over the last two seasons, and the first major league hit for the 31-year-old since September 21, 2024 while with the Chicago White Sox (off then-Padre Tanner Scott).

For good measure, Robinson singled again in the fifth for the second two-hit game of his career. He also had two hits, including a home run as a Cincinnati Reds rookie on October 4, 2022. Robinson even added a squeeze bunt in the seventh inning for his first major league RBI since that 2022 game.


Wrobleski, who nearly allowed three more runs of his own in the third inning on a Brooks Lee drive with home run distance but maybe a few feet foul down the left field line. Lee, who bat-flipped that near-home run, instead flew out later in the at-bat to end the frame and strand a pair of runners on base.

Staked to a three-run lead, Wrobleski retired 10 his final 12 batters faced, and threw 92 pitches in his seven innings, the fifth time he’s pitched at least that long this season. Ten of his 13 starts have lasted at least six frames.

Five runs in the ninth inning doubled the Dodgers’ lead, an inning that saw Alex Call’s first home run of the season and a two-run double by Max Muncy.

Notes

  • Freeman tied his season high with three hits, including another RBI double in the sixth inning. Freeman’s 566 career doubles passed Carlos Beltrán for 29th-most in MLB history.
  • Austin Voth was the second Twins pitcher of the game and took the brunt of the damage, allowing six runs while recording 12 outs. His 11 hits allowed tied Mike Mikolas on April 3 in Washington D.C. for most Dodgers hits against one pitcher in a game this season.
  • Brock Stewart, activated off the injured list on Monday, appeared in his first game for the Dodgers since May 8. He allowed a solo home run, the only tally against him in the ninth inning.
  • The Dodgers have won 18 of their last 21 games against the Twins, dating back to 2014, including 9-1 at Target Field during that span.

Tuesday particulars

Home run: Alex Call (1); Victor Caratini (6), Brooks Lee (13)

WP — Justin Wrobleski (9-2): 7 IP, 5 hits, 2 runs, 2 walks, 3 strikeouts

LP — Austin Voth (0-1): 4+ IP, 11 hits, 6 runs (5 earned), 1 walk, 2 strikeouts

Up next

The Dodgers go for the sweep in the series finale (4:40 p.m. PT, SportsNet LA), with Shohei Ohtani making his seventh consecutive Wednesday pitching start, against Twins ace Joe Ryan.

Kodai Senga pounded again, Juan Soto exits with back injury as spiraling Mets fall to Cubs

An image collage containing 3 images, Image 1 shows Kodai Senga reacts after giving up a two-run homer to Dansby Swanson in the fourth inning of the Mets' 9-3 blowout loss to the Cubs on June 23, 2026 at Citi Field, Image 2 shows Juan Soto, who exited the game with back tightness, looks on from the dugout during the Mets' loss to the Cubs, Image 3 shows Pete Crow-Armstrong belts a three-run homer off Kodia Senga during the second inning of the Mets' blowout loss to the Cubs

The Mets’ nightmare of a season somehow got worse Tuesday night, and not just because they lost another game at Citi Field or got another bad start from Kodai Senga that might cost him his spot in the rotation.

Juan Soto left their 9-6 loss to the Cubs prior to the top of the fifth with what the team called left-side back tightness.

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Carlos Mendoza said the left fielder was day to day after being removed from their third straight defeat because his back locked up and he was in discomfort.

The game itself was no better, as Senga took another step toward potentially pitching himself out of the rotation, as he allowed seven runs in 3 ²/₃ innings in his second start back from the IL.

Mendoza indicated he would speak with team president David Stearns about how they would handle his spot.

“David [Stearns] was pretty clear before the game that performance matters and having outings like this is not gonna cut it,” the manager said. “You get to a point where you have to go out and earn it.”

So much for Francisco Lindor coming to save the day.

The shortstop played perhaps his final minor league rehab game with Triple-A Syracuse on Tuesday, having been sidelined since April with a strained left calf.

Now, having both Lindor and Soto in the lineup together again may be in jeopardy.

Soto flied out in both of his at-bats before leaving the game, with Jared Young moving from first base to take Soto’s spot in left, while Mark Vientos entered at first base.

Kodai Senga reacts after giving up a two-run homer to Dansby Swanson in the fourth inning of the Mets’ 9-3 blowout loss to the Cubs on June 23, 2026 at Citi Field. Robert Sabo for New York Post


By then, the Mets already trailed by five runs, thanks to another clunker from Senga.

Stearns said the rotation would be evaluated “turn by turn,” and Senga brought a 14.59 ERA over his past four starts into Tuesday.

The situation did not improve.

Pete Crow-Armstrong belts a three-run homer off Kodia Senga during the second inning of the Mets’ blowout loss to the Cubs. Robert Sabo for New York Post

Senga struck out the side in order in the first, dominating with his fastball, but fell back into poor habits in the second, walking Seiya Suzuki to open the inning.

A single by Ian Happ and a hit by pitch by Matt Shaw loaded the bases with no one out.

Senga whiffed Nico Hoerner before walking Carson Kelly to force in a run. Dansby Swanson followed with a sacrifice fly before former Mets prospect Pete Crow-Armstrong’s three-run homer made it 5-0.

Juan Soto, who exited the game with back tightness, looks on from the dugout during the Mets’ loss to the Cubs. Robert Sabo for New York Post

Afterward, Senga said through an interpreter, “I’ll continue to prepare to pitch in this league.”

But Mendoza was mystified by Senga falling apart in the second.

“That’s the frustrating part,” Mendoza said. “We were in the dugout saying, ‘What’s going on here?’ It’s hard to explain.”

They could get a boost this weekend, with Christian Scott expected to return from his IL stint, but Senga is part of a list that includes Freddy Peralta, David Peterson and Sean Manaea as significant disappointments.

With the rotation a mess and the Mets so far unable to fix it, they can hardly afford another blow to the lineup, especially involving Soto.

While the rest of the team has fallen apart, Soto recovered from the calf injury well enough to enter Tuesday leading the team in most offensive categories, with a .974 OPS — second only to the Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani in the National League.

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He’s been extremely durable throughout much of his career and missed just five games over the previous three seasons.

Now, the Mets are facing more time without Soto — and perhaps with Senga, despite his continued issues on the mound.

“I’ve never experienced something like this in my career,” Senga said.

Welcome to the 2026 Mets.

Morez Johnson Jr. Player Profile: What does the Michigan Man bring to Dallas?

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - JUNE 23: NBA commissioner Adam Silver shakes hands with Morez Johnson Jr. after he is drafted ninth overall by the Dallas Mavericks during Round One of the 2026 NBA Draft at Barclays Center on June 23, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Arturo Holmes/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Well, Morez Johnson Jr. is a Dallas Maverick. The 6’9”, 250-pound forward absolutely blew up at the NBA Combine, and that rise seemingly could not be stopped as the first round of the draft unfolded. Mavericks’ President Masai Ujiri has a history of taking large forwards in his past, and Morez certainly fits the bill. Knowing that, how does he fit in around Cooper Flagg and the rest of the Mavs?

The basics

Morez Johnson Jr. came to Michigan last year looking for a bigger role and the chance to develop into an NBA player. During his freshman year at Illinois, Morez averaged seven points, nearly seven boards and over a block per game in just 17 minutes per night. Suffice to say, he outplayed those numbers for Michigan this year. Johnson Jr. was able to average 13.1 points, over seven boards, an assist and a block per game. Morez earned second-team All-Big Ten team honors, was on the league’s all-defensive team and was elected to the NCAA All-Tournament team.

Coming into the draft, Johnson Jr. was in tier three at 11th overall on my board. At the time of the draft, I personally had Arizona’s Brayden Burries a tier above him, while slotting Nate Ament just ahead of him in that tier.

The good

When you think of a glue guy, you don’t often think of 6’9” 250-pound humans that move as Morez does. But perhaps Morez’s best attribute is just that he will do whatever it takes to win. You listen to coach Dusty May talk about him; the quote often used was “we have ‘Rez, and they don’t.” That’s quite the statement, but you often see it when they play. May never had to call plays to get Johnson going, and he never had to be cautious when it came to defensive assignments, and that’s because of Johnson’s competitive character and the motor that he plays with.

On the defensive end, the best possible outcome for Morez is as someone who can switch one through five. As noted above, Johnson Jr. is truly a top-tier athlete at that size, which allows him to guard down. But using his bulk, Johnson can also guard all the way up to the five with no issues. Even if he doesn’t quite reach that outcome, Johnson will have no issues guarding most off guards all the way through the center spot.

Johnson Jr. was a great finisher at the rim and really efficient overall, which speaks to his shot diet and knowing where he wants to get on the floor. He was second in the Big Ten in true shooting percentage at 67.7%, which was top 15 nationally. Even though he was not a prolific shooter from deep, he did shoot 17 for 25 at the combine on spot-up attempts from deep.

Areas of concern

While Johnson did shoot it well at the combine, the overwhelming evidence to date is that he is not only not a great shooter, but he also isn’t comfortable shooting a ton from the outside. Johnson shot just 35 threes on the season in 40 games, with a 3-point rate of just 11% per CBB Analytics. As good as the fit is defensively, the fit offensively with sub-30% 3-point shooter Cooper Flagg, roughly 30% shooter ]Johnson Jr. and potentially Dereck Lively, it’s going to be really hard to space the floor at a requisite level. Coach Dusty May is bullish on his ability to be a spot-up shooter in the NBA, and he’ll need to be proven correct.

For how efficient Johnson is in the paint, there isn’t a ton of craft in his finishes. In fairness, the bruising physicality that Morez brings to the table is often enough for the college game. But in the NBA, Morez is going to need to find some counters when physicality isn’t the answer. Additionally, the playmaking with Morez is just not there. Even when he draws two down low, the vision to pass is just inconsistent at best. That sort of stacks into the simplicity of his game.

Fit with the Mavericks

With Cooper Flagg as the centerpiece, you’re looking for guys who can be complements at the highest level. Guard was going to be one, but they eventually would need to backfill some of the older wings in PJ Washington, Naji Marshall and Klay Thompson. Johnson Jr. gives you a ton of optionality on the defensive end, with some potential on offense if he can continue to develop some counters down low and the three-point shot.

NBA Comparison

There’s some difficulty with finding a real NBA comp here. He’s such a glue guy who impacts winning, and yet there’s not a huge, quantifiable box-score comparison. ESPN’s Tim MacMahon reported right after the pick that the comps he heard were Bam Adebayo and Al Horford.

I think the physicality and defensive ability of Isaiah Stewart is a good comparison, while I also think that could be a bit disrespectful to him if he hits the top end. He had a very similar statistical profile to Armando Bacot, Christian Koloko and, ironically enough, Hannes Steinbach, per CBB Analytics. I think he can overachieve those comparisons, but much of what Johnson Jr. will bring to the Mavericks will come outside of the box score.

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Knicks, Lakers swap picks in NBA Draft; New York takes, then flips, Sergio De Larrea

Feb 1, 2026; New York, New York, USA; Los Angeles Lakers forward LeBron James (23) controls the ball against New York Knicks guard Landry Shamet (44) during the third quarter at Madison Square Garden. Mandatory Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images | Brad Penner-Imagn Images

UPDATE: That didn’t last long. . . .

The New York Knicks came into the draft with the 24th overall pick, but they made a small swap with the Los Angeles Lakers, who held the selection directly after them.

The Lakers were eyeing Baylor guard Cameron Carr, whom they asked the Knicks to select with their pick. Carr is the son of former NBA player Chris, who was in the 1997 NBA Slam Dunk Contest, but lost to a rookie Kobe Bryant.

Carr is one of the best shooters in the draft, so it’s a bit of a disappointment to see him not in orange and blue. However, the Knicks were willing to move one pick knowing Carr could have been the Lakers’ target.

With the Knicks’ pick, they selected Sergio De Larrea, who has played in Valencia since 2021. De Larrea is 20 years old with a lot of EuroLeague experience, but it remains to be seen if he will join the Knicks this season.

De Larrea led Valencia to the Spanish Supercup title and won MVP honors, so he is definitely a talented player. He stands 6-5, which means he could play multiple positions on the floor. He made over 40 percent of his shots from beyond the arc this past season, proving that he can be a force on the perimeter.

The Knicks may have made this move to try and keep the core together and run it back, but it remains to be seen what they are thinking.

Posting and Toasting community, what do you make of the decision to select De Larrea. Let us know in the comments section below.

Rays Got Jac’d Up: Rays 5, Royals 12

ST PETERSBURG, FLORIDA - JUNE 23: Jac Caglianone #14 of the Kansas City Royals runs the bases on a solo home run off of Shane McClanahan #18 of the Tampa Bay Rays in the first inning at Tropicana Field on June 23, 2026 in St Petersburg, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Sometimes past results do not predict today’s performance.

Shane McClanahan came into the night having allowed only two home runs over his last 56.0 innings pitched. Six pitches into Tuesday night’s game, he allowed two more.

The game didn’t immediately start with doom and gloom. Taylor Walls made a diving play on a grounder from Lane Thomas to open the game. Then Nick Loftin hit a solo homer to left. Then, Tampa native, Jac Caglianone followed with one to right. Two swings, two runs, and suddenly the Royals had a 2-0 lead. McClanahan recovered enough to strike out Salvador Perez and get Carter Jensen to fly out, but the damage was immediate and jarring. Tropicana Field has been kind to McLanahan lately, winning his previous five starts. This inning, an ultimately game, was not.

The Rays didn’t just concede defeat; they tried to fight back. Yandy Díaz was hit by a pitch, Jonathan Aranda singled, and Junior Caminero lined a run-scoring single to center to make it 2-1. It started to feel like the Rays were on a path to tie the game or maybe even take a lead. Instead, Richie Palacios got caught stealing to end the frame.

Building momentum and losing it became a theme of the night.

In the second, Jonny DeLuca and Chandler Simpson were walked, and after a Taylor Walls flyout and a Simpson stolen base, the Rays had runners at second and third with just one out. A tie game felt right there, practically waving from 90 feet away. Then Hunter Feduccia and Diaz struck out and took the hope back into the dugout with them.

In the third, Cedric Mullins drew a walk, but Caminero lined into a double play.

The disappointment continued in the fourth, the Royals tried to give the game away again, or at least leave the door cracked. DeLuca reached on a little pop-up single that would have been a foul ball, but the Royals touched it while it was bouncing foul. Simpson reached on a fielder’s choice, and Walls walked once again, putting runners on base. Feduccia struck out again, and it was still a 2-1 game.

McClanahan, meanwhile, had steadied himself after the strange first inning, but the fifth turned the game from frustrating to decisive. Michael Massey opened with a double, and Tyler Tolbert’s sacrifice bunt became a run when McClanahan threw it away, literally. The throwing error made it 3-1. McClanahan nearly limited it from there. Kameron Misner struck out. Thomas lined out. One more out and the Rays are still within two.

They did not get that out cleanly. Loftin, already responsible for the first homer of the night, singled home Tolbert. Then Caglianone launched his second homer of the game, a two-run shot to left-center. Just like that, 3-1 became 6-1, and the chances of the Rays winning were floating away like a helium balloon unintentionally released.

The Rays’ offense did little to change the course of the game. They went down in order in the fifth, got a Palacios single in the sixth but nothing around it, and wasted a Díaz walk in the seventh. Steven Cruz and Matt Strahm did exactly what Kansas City needed from the bullpen to keep the Rays’ bats cool.

Steven Matz gave Tampa Bay a clean seventh, but the eighth got away from him in a hurry. Loftin singled, Caglianone singled, and Perez doubled both of them in. Jensen singled, Starling Marte added a sacrifice fly, Misner doubled home another run, and a wild pitch brought in one more. It was 11-1 by the end of the inning after the entire Royals lineup came to the plate.

Caminero gave the Rays a small spark in the bottom of the eighth with a solo homer off the catwalk, his 16th, and the ninth inning brought a little late pride and surrender.

Ben Williamson gave us a position player pitching appearance and allowed an RBI double to Josh Rojas in the top half of the ninth. Then the Rays put together their best rally of the night, just a little too late. Simpson walked, Walls singled, and after two strikeouts, Aranda, Mullins, and Caminero delivered three straight RBI singles. That trimmed it to 12-5 and at least made the final score look somewhat more respectable. Palacios flew out to end it, sealing a 12-5 Royals win.

The visiting team has now won the last nine games in this Rays-Royals series, dating back to July 4, 2024. We will see if that streak continues tomorrow when Griffin Jax takes the mound for the Rays.

David Stearns know his Mets confidence has an expiration date

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Mets pitcher Freddy Peralta (51) walking off the mound while Cardinals first baseman Alec Burleson (41) runs in the background, Image 2 shows David Stearns, President of Baseball Operations for the New York Mets, speaks at a press conference

By the end of this week, the Mets will have played more than half their schedule and they still carry the worst record in the NL East.

But if you’ve been waiting for them to blow up the roster and start over, you’re going to have to wait a while longer.

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Still, while Francisco Lindor’s impending return from the calf strain that’s sidelined him since April figures to help an ailing offense, it won’t do anything for what’s been a hugely disappointing rotation or get other injured high-profile players back on the field.

But David Stearns said that with the Aug. 3 trade deadline nearly six weeks away, Lindor and the rest of the cellar-dwelling team will get a chance to show that what they’ve done over the first nearly three months of the season isn’t who they really are.

“We have a period of time here before we have to make a finite decision about the trade deadline,” the team’s president of baseball operations said Tuesday at Citi Field. “We’re also in a period of time where we’ve got to start playing better baseball.”

That’s putting it mildly.

Despite their awful record (34-44), Stearns said, “We’re going to continue to give this team time to prove that we can get back in this in a very legitimate sense.”

But then Juan Soto left Tuesday’s 9-6 loss to the Cubs with what was termed left side back tightness.

David Stearns, President of Baseball Operations for the New York Mets, speaks at a press conference. Robert Sabo for NY Post

Stearns, speaking at his usual homestand availability — which he has kept up even as the season is crumbling around him — noted that it’s impossible to blame their poor play on any one part of the team.

At different times in the press conference, he pointed to the starting rotation’s inability to stay healthy or pitch deep into games, the lineup’s failure to produce runs and the organization so far not being able to get many of their players to play to their potential.

Asked about the disappointing rotation, Stearns said, “We clearly have been inconsistent in that facet of the game. We’ve been inconsistent at various times in all segments of the team. It’s why we have the record we have.”

They’ve resorted to using openers on a frighteningly regular basis and high-profile addition Freddy Peralta has had a nightmarish season, which Stearns blamed in part on mechanical issues that might be impacting his location.

The acquisitions on offense haven’t been much better, with Bo Bichette still waiting to get going and Jorge Polanco and Luis Robert Jr. not close to returning from injuries.

And more inexperienced players haven’t developed, outside of Carson Benge and A.J. Ewing.

Mets pitcher Freddy Peralta (51) gives up a 2-run home run to St. Louis Cardinals first baseman Alec Burleson. Robert Sabo for NY Post

“Both run-scoring and the starting rotation have to be more consistent going forward to go on the type of run of prolonged quality play we need to have,” Stearns said.

But he remains confident in the group he put together.

Asked if he could “fix” the roster during the season, Stearns said, “The word ‘fix’ is not something I’m thinking about. I think it’s about how to get players to play up to their potential. For a large segment of the roster, I don’t think we’ve seen that this year.”

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Even with that lack of progress, Stearns said he was “pleased” with the processes of the coaching staff, much of which was overhauled during the offseason.

The Mets entered Tuesday six games out of the final wild-card spot in the National League and 14 ½ games behind Atlanta atop the NL East. All this from a team that owner Steve Cohen said during the spring needed to make the postseason this year.

“I think Steve wants us to, certainly, be better than we are,” Stearns said. “He’s frustrated. We’re all frustrated. Steve expects us to do better than this. I expect us to be better than this.”He, like me, is gonna withhold judgment on a trade deadline strategy til have to make a decision closer to that time.”

The clock is ticking.

Prince of Pittsburgh: Cole Young delivers go-ahead homer in 3-2 Mariners win

Jun 23, 2026; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Seattle Mariners second baseman Cole Young (2) reacts as he circles the bases on a two run home run against the Pittsburgh Pirates during the seventh inning at PNC Park. Mandatory Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images | Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

There’s a running joke in one of my group chats that Cole Young looks like a Disney prince who decided to play baseball instead (show me the lie). In tonight’s series opener against the Pirates, Young Prince Cole had a game fit for a golden era Disney film. Making his first-ever appearance as a big-leaguer in PNC Park, where the Pittsburgh-born Young grew up attending games, and in front of a host of friends, family, and former coaches – including his coach at North Allegheny High, Andrew Heck – Young had a go-ahead homer that would be the game-winner for the Mariners in a narrow 3-2 victory over the Pirates.

The Mariners scored all their runs via the longball tonight, even though only two made it over the fence: they made 11 outs in the air, along with a pair of hard-hit lineouts, but the balls consistently died at the warning track. Meanwhile, the Pirates managed to scrape out a lead on George Kirby, first going up 1-0 in the second on a combination of an Endy Rodríguez double and a Marcell Ozuna RBI single, both hits coming on four-seamers that caught too much plate.

Pittsburgh would add on another run in the bottom of the third, although this wasn’t as much Kirby’s fault. Brandon Lowe singled on a curveball that was well-located, and then would come around to score on a weakly-hit ball off the bat of Nick Gonzales that J.P. Crawford couldn’t field cleanly. Today was the first day Crawford has looked shaky at third after being impressive in his first few turns at the position, but he was far from the only one performing some shaky defense, as even the normally sure-handed Colt Emerson threw one away, and Josh Naylor struggled to corral some of those wilder throws.

To his credit, Kirby was able to navigate around those hiccups and also some self-inflicted traffic. He and Cal Raleigh made a good adjustment after the first couple of innings, realizing the Pirates were keyed in on his fastball, and Kirby found the command over his sweeper, which had been somewhat all over the place in the early innings. Kirby leaned heavily on the sweeper over the rest of his outing, throwing it 46% of the time – normally he uses the pitch under 30% of the time, while halving the use of his fastball. All five of his strikeouts today came on the sweeper.

“It seemed like they had a pretty good gameplan of swinging first pitch, and I don’t blame ’em,” said Kirby. “But I feel like I settled in pretty good once I got that slider working.”

The Mariners offense has been stingy with giving Kirby run support, but Cal Raleigh came through with his first homer after coming back from his stint on the IL, punishing a mistake slider Pirates starter Mitch Keller hung on the plate and finally getting a ball over the fence at PNC Park, a 393-footer to right center.

The Mariners would do just enough to get past the Pirates in the seventh inning, spurred on by the hometown kid, Cole Young. Luke Raley led off with a hustle double, lacing a sinker into center and running hard enough to beat Jake Mangum’s throw in. He needn’t have hustled quite so hard, though. With Young due up, 0-for-2 on the day so far with a pair of groundouts (including an inning-ending GIDP), the Pirates elected to leave in the righty Keller instead of going to the bullpen. Keller made a mistake pitch, leaving a sweeper right in Young’s lefty loop zone, and Young – who said he was just trying to hit a single into right to score the run – instead hit play on a highlight reel that will be replayed at every family gathering to come for years, crushing a go-ahead home run that went right past the section of his family and friends.

“I knew I got it good, so it had a chance,” said Young postgame. “t’s really special. I got my whole family, all my friends in the stands…It was a super surreal moment. It was great. I just kind of blacked out a little bit.”

“Just glad I got the job done,” he added, because once the son of a blue-collar rust belt city like Pittsburgh, always the lunchpail-toter.

The Mariners couldn’t add on after that despite some more traffic on the bases, leaving the back end of the bullpen just one measly run to work with. José A. Ferrer was terrific, putting down his assigned hitters in the seventh 1-2-3, Eduard Bazardo had to work a little harder, but was able to work around a single from lefty Ryan O’Hearn and a semi-intentional walk to Marcell Ozuna to keep the score intact. He might not have had a clean inning, but he did pick up a Pitching Ninja highlight:

Armed with that same one-run lead, Andrés Muñoz had the ninth and looked maybe the best he has all season: his fastball was up a full two ticks, averaging 100.7 and touching 102. He struck out the side, including Spencer Horwitz, who walks more than he strikes out, and ended his night on a filthy bit of sequencing to Brandon Lowe where he went down with a slider for a foul followed by high heat.

But tonight belongs to the Prince of Pittsburgh, Cole Young. In a season that’s been plagued by injuries, Young has been the Mariners’ iron man, playing every day. He’s been the steady lighthouse in an infield that’s been beset by injuries and mistakes both rookie and veteran, even flexing back to shortstop when needed despite the difficulties he experienced making the full-time shift to second base last year. Because of his availability and steady hand at the keystone, he’s essentially been unbenchable, meaning that as teams load up on lefties to serve the Mariners a bottomless buffet of southpaws, Young hasn’t been granted the day off, even as he’s gone through fallow periods with the bat.

Tonight, in front of friends and family and the high school baseball coaches who helped shape the player he is today, Young was rewarded with a fairy-tale moment. His high school coach even got the home run ball. Heck offered to give it back to Cole, but Cole told him to keep it, because what matters even more than the happily ever after are the people who helped you get there in the first place.

Lakers trade up to No. 24 pick, select Cameron Carr

WACO, TX - FEBRUARY 10: Guard Cameron Carr #43 of the Baylor Bears holds up a three point signal to celebrate a three point basket during the Big 12 college basketball game between Baylor Bears and BYU Cougars on February 10, 2026, at Foster Pavilion in Waco, TX. (Photo by David Buono/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

The Lakers made sure they got their player in the first round on Tuesday.

Los Angeles made a last-minute trade, moving up one spot to the No. 24 pick to select Cameron Carr, a guard out of Baylor.

It didn’t take much for the Lakers to complete the deal as all they had to do was send some cash to the Knicks for the pick. However, because of the wonderful new CBA, the Lakers will be hard-capped at the second apron by sending out cash in a deal.

Realistically, this was never going to be an issue.

Last season, Carr had a breakout campaign after transferring to Baylor, averaging 18.9 points, 5.8 rebounds and 2.6 assists per game. He shot 49.4% from the field and 37.4% 3-point line.

Carr had a number of big games early in the season with a 28-point game and two 27-point games in the first five games of the season. He had a couple of 26-point games late in the season and scored 25 points against Arizona State in the Big 12 tournament. In his last game at Baylor, he struggled from the field, shooting 4-18 from the field, but pulled down 12 rebounds, his third game of the season with double-digit rebounds.

Offense certainly is a strength for Carr. He can score at multiple levels and is a high-level athlete. Any highlight video Lakers fans watch of Carr in the coming hours and days will be full of highlight-reel plays.

An interesting nugget is that Carr and Dalton Knecht were teammates for one season at Tennessee. Carr only played 14 games that season, so he wasn’t much of a factor.

Here’s what Sam Vecenie of The Athletic had to say about Carr:

Offensively, Carr’s game looks like one that should blend perfectly into the NBA. He’s a legitimate 3-point shooter who can attack closeouts, plays well off the ball as a cutter and takes advantage of opportunities as a finisher because of his length. He has the physical height and length NBA teams canvass the globe to find.

The swing skill toward Carr being a positive NBA player is obvious. He needs to get stronger. He needs to play with more bend. He needs to be willing to get more physical. And once that happens, he needs to be much more active and engaged on defense. Some of these things are fixable, as Carr has already done good work on his frame as he has gotten older. He looks a lot like a late bloomer to be excited about, even though he’s already 21.

The Ringer was similarly high on Carr’s offensive ability. Here’s a snippet of their breakdown:

Carr has a few undeniable traits: the largest wingspan-to-height ratio among perimeter players in the draft, NBA-caliber leaping ability, and some of the deepest range in the class. That length and vertical pop could make him an elite weakside rim protector for his size, although his spindly frame and high center of gravity might limit his defensive upside as an on-ball defensive hound.

For a Lakers team that was at such an athleticism deficit last season, Carr is a huge upgrade in that respect. He will also provide the team scoring off the bench, something they lacked much of last season.

You can follow Jacob on Twitter at @JacobRude or on Bluesky at @jacobrude.bsky.social.