Parquet Plays : Nikola Vučević played his best game in green

Nikola Vučević delivered his most complete performance as a Celtic against a familiar opponent—his former team. 

Heading into the All-Star break, Vuc ensured he left a lasting impression, finishing with 19 points, 11 rebounds, three assists, and two blocks in a poised, controlled outing. It was a performance that reflected both rhythm and growing comfort within Boston’s system. 

Head coach Joe Mazzulla noted postgame that Vuc “looked much more comfortable tonight,” elaborating on the specific elements that stood out to him. 

Let’s break down those specifics from Mazzulla and the film that shows them.  

The first thing coach mentioned was Vuc’s “pick-and-roll positioning defensively.” According to Mazzulla, it “was good, really good.” In my preview of what Vuc could potentially bring to Beantown, I noted that he has obvious defensive shortcomings, but that I didn’t see a player incapable of moving his feet and at least being neutral on that end. Tonight, Vuc consistently placed himself in the right spots, maintaining proper depth in coverage, containing the ball handler, and recovering efficiently to his assignment. His discipline in those moments prevented driving lanes from opening and disrupted the timing of the Bulls offense.  

Here, he gets close to the level of the screen touching the screener for just a moment before sinking into drop coverage. While Payton Pritchard chases back into the play, Vuc positions himself perfectly in between the ball handler (Matas Buzelis) and the roller (Nick Richards) as Buzelis drives. Vuc stays patient and when Buzelis goes to the Pinoy step, he just puts his hands up and forces a miss.  

Next, Richards shows impressive quickness, getting out of the screen faster than Vuc expected. After that, Vuc displays his own foot speed, swiftly backpedaling into proper positioning. This allows him to meet Rob Dillingham at the rim, forcing a low pass that is ultimately bobbled. Vuc then plays solid post defense leading to a miss and a Mazzulla clap of approval.  

Vuc also did a nice job understanding what proper “pick-and-roll positioning defensively” meant for different players. Former Celtic Anfernee Simons is a much more dangerous three-point threat than his teammates, and the Celtics played him like it.  

The last two clips we saw him playing drop coverage, but you see the difference in aggression here when Simons is the handler. Vuc being up so high takes away the pullup three which forces a drive. Simons ends up having to pass and a good contest by Hugo ends the possession 

Vuc showing up near the arc again negates the threat of a pullup three and impedes Simon’s path. He then picks up his dribble and throws a turnover.  

Vuc had more solid defensive possessions than just a few in this game. 

Immediately after highlighting Vuc’s pick and roll defense, Mazzulla said, “Then offensively the reads were good,” and I totally agree. Since Vuc has been in green, his passing has really flashed. His ability to process the floor quickly, whether operating from the top of the key, short roll, or post, has added a connective element to the offense. His willingness to make the extra read has helped maintain rhythm within the half-court sets. 

In fact, third-year wing Jordan Walsh has already expressed how much he enjoys playing alongside Vuc, a testament to the big man’s feel and unselfish approach. 

“Like Vuc? I love playing with Vuc, it’s great. Every time he catches the ball I’m just cutting and he’s looking every time so it’s like great,” Walsh explained.  

It’s easy to see why Walsh thinks this way to say the least.  

Here Vuc’s unselfishness is rewarded. Derrick White rejects his screen forcing two on the ball starting perfect Mazzulla Ball. Walsh smartly cuts even before Vuc gets the ball to make the defender at the top of the key choose who to step to. Walsh doing that then creates another 2-on-1 with him and Jaylen Brown in the corner. Vuc hits Walsh on the cut and the ball just pops all the way back to the big man for the open three.  

After setting the screen, Vuc kicks it out to Walsh for an open look, though the shot doesn’t fall. The possession stays alive, and when the ball finds him again, he immediately threads another pass to Walsh, this time setting him up for an and-one finish. These two seem like they like each other.  

Next on the list is the “early offense reads,” Vuc seems to be understanding more, according to Mazzulla.  

I’ve covered at length the screening actions that have fueled Boston’s early offense success this season, most notably their “Veer,” “Flare,” and “Wide” screens. Those concepts have become foundational to how the Celtics generate advantages before the defense knows what hits them.  

Given the contrast in skillset and play style between Vuc and bigs like Neemias Queta and Luka Garza, I wondered if this aspect would take a hit when he joined.  

Queta and Garza rank among the league’s most effective screeners, and unlike Vuc, their primary offensive responsibility is to generate advantages for others. Vuc has traditionally been a focal point scorer, so I was just curious of how he would blend his style with the style of our bigs. This game was the best I’ve seen that blend.  

Here he starts the Wide action setting that screen for Brown allowing him to stop and pop for the midrange.  

Then he sets the Veer for Brown, getting him a mismatch in the post and delivering it to him for a bucket. You can see the learning curve still being there as he was going to set the on-ball screen until White pointed him in the right direction.  

All of those elements came together on multiple possessions as Vuc has some really good sequences.  

Lastly, the spacing and scoring he provides really adds a new wrinkle to an already great offense. He shot 4/5 from three and drew four fouls due to switches.  

Nikola Vucevic’s performance against his former team was more than just stats; it was a showcase of how he is evolving within the Celtics’ system. From disciplined pick-and-roll defense to court vision that elevates his teammates, Vuc demonstrated a seamless balance between his natural scoring ability and the team-oriented style that Boston demands from its bigs. 

The chemistry he’s already building with teammates hints at the kind of impact he can have as Boston pushes forward after the All-Star break. 

Twins Acquire LHP Anthony Banda from Dodgers

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - NOVEMBER 03: Anthony Banda of the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrates on a bus during the Dodgers 2025 World Series Championship parade on November 03, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Luke Hales/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Twins have acquired left-handed reliever Anthony Banda from the Dodgers in exchange for international bonus pool space. Banda was designated for assignment by the Dodgers earlier this week, essentially meaning the Twins gave the Dodgers a bit of cash to jump the waiver line. RHP Jackson Kowar, picked up off the waiver wire last week, was DFA’d to make room on the 40-man roster. The minor trade was reported by Bobby Nightengale of the Star Tribune.

Over the past two seasons in LA, Banda has a 3.14 ERA/4.52 FIP with 111 strikeouts in 114.2 innings. The FIP is quite a bit higher due to his walk rate, which was one of the worst in MLB among relievers last season. Like most lefties, he’s significantly better against left-handed batters and will likely be deployed as more of a true lefty-specialist. Fellow left-hander Kody Funderburk actually struggles more against lefties, making him and Banda a good pair in the middle innings for the Twins.

Banda will make a very modest $1.625M in 2026 and is controllable next season as well via arbitration. I would expect the Twins to still be pretty active on the waiver and trade market over the next two months as they look to beef up their bullpen. They have three solid left-handed options now with Banda, Funderburk, and Taylor Rogers, but could still use a more established right-handed reliever to go with Cole Sands and Justin Topa.

What are your thoughts on Banda? Can the Twins help get his walk rate under control and make him a more effective reliever?

Better Know Your Blue Jays 40-man: Chase Lee

PITTSBURGH, PA - JULY 21: Chase Lee #53 of the Detroit Tigers delivers a pitch during an MLB game against the Pittsburgh Pirates on July 21, 2025 at PNC Park in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Chase Lee is a 27-year-old, side-arm, right-handed reliever we picked up in trade from the Tigers in December. The Tigers needed a spot on the 40-man roster. And I had totally forgotten he was on the 40-man. I think this is the first one I totally forgot about. I’m not sure if this is true, but I’ve always felt that side-arm pitchers can continue to be effective into their late-30s.

The Jays sent Johan Simon to the Tigers, a 24-year-old left-handed pitcher who spent most of 2025 with Vancouver. He throws a 94 MPH fastball and gets a lot of ground balls. He had a 3.42 ERA across three levels last year. Not a big prospect but could make it as a lefty reliever.

Lee has two option years left, which gives him more value to the Jays. He pitched in 32 games as a reliever for the Tigers, with a 4.10 ERA, 9 walks, 36 strikeouts in 37.1 innings with 7 home runs against. Batters hit .239/.291/.478 against him. Statcast says he averaged 89.1 on his fastball.

He throws a sinker, sweeper, 4-seem and an occasion change up.

He also had 32 innings in Toledo with a 6.75 ERA in 32 innings, with 38 strikeouts, 10 walks and 4 home runs.

FanGraphs had Lee at #29 on their top 39 Tigers’ prospect list (39 seems a strange number). They said:

Lee, who came to Detroit from Texas in the Andrew Chafin deal, is a pretty standard sinker/slider sidearmer who has posted strikeout rates up around 30% his entire minor league career while maintaining a below-average walk rate. He doesn’t have precise fastball control — he lives in the zone, but not always on the edge of it — and that might be a problem against big leaguers when you’re only sitting 88. But both Lee’s sinker and slider live in the bottom of the zone consistently enough to consider him a high-probability up/down look reliever.

Bless You Boys had him #37 on their list:

Lee is a sidearm reliever who rarely tops 91 mph, but his mix of fastball types and sweeper-slider combination makes him a tricky at-bat, especially for right-handed hitters. The Rangers certainly thought so when they spent the second pick of the sixth round of the 2021 draft on the reliever out of Alabama. He racked up a ton of strikeouts in their farm system and limited home runs, but trouble with walks kept him from breaking through at the major league level.

Against right-handers, Lee will also use a heavy volume of sweepers. Against lefties he’ll mix his slider in almost as much as the sweeper. The sweeper is typically around 80-81 mph, with a lot of horizontal movement out of that low, side arm slot. Right-handers are consistently seeing the sweeper start in their hot zones, beginning their swing, and then flailing as the pitch bends all the way across the strike zone to be buried down and away. He’s racked up a solid but unspectacular whiff rate of 28.3 percent with it at the Triple-A level going back to the beginning of the 2024 season. The slider has more depth and is typically 84 mph. He uses it a little more when he needs to throw something that’s a change of pace for a strike.

As Lee is likely to be used as right-handed hitter specialist for the most part at the major league level, it’s the sinker-sweeper combination that you’re likely to see most from him. However, the slider and fourseamer give him extra weapons to work with against lefties, and he’s handled them pretty well too. He’s just more home run prone against southpaws and not the guy you want facing Shohei Ohtani and Freddie Freeman in an outing, as an extreme example.

For the Jays, I think a lot of his value is the arm angle and the options. You can see the arm angle here:

Steamer thinks he’ll pitch 30 games, 30 innings, with a 3.92 ERA, 29 Ks, and 10 walks.

Brewers, William Contreras avoid arbitration hearing

MILWAUKEE, WI - OCTOBER 11: William Contreras #24 of the Milwaukee Brewers celebrates at home plate after hitting a solo home run in the first inning during Game Five of the National League Division Series presented by Booking.com between the Chicago Cubs and the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field on Saturday, October 11, 2025 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Mary DeCicco/MLB Photos via Getty Images) | MLB Photos via Getty Images

People who closely follow the Brewers have been wondering: when is William Contreras’ arbitration hearing? In January, the two sides were separated by $1.35 million and did not come to an agreement. We’ve been waiting for news since then, especially in the last two weeks, as the remaining arbitration cases have been heard.

Well, Contreras and the Brewers did not require a hearing, after all. They’ve agreed to a one-year deal with a club option for 2027. While terms haven’t yet been disclosed, that’s similar to the 1+1 deal he signed before the 2025 season. Contreras made $6.1 million in 2025, but the Brewers declined their 2026 club option (reportedly worth $12 million), instead preferring to negotiate his arbitration salary again. That move saved them a few million dollars, as Contreras filed at $9.9 million and the Brewers countered at $8.55 million.

Whether the Brewers decline Contreras’ option after this season or choose to pick it up, they’ll still have his rights through the 2027 season.

We’ll update this article when we hear the terms of Contreras’s contract. His was the last outstanding case, and all Brewers currently on the team are now signed.

Update: Jon Heyman has the terms:

So, depending if Contreras doesn’t reach any of those mysterious Awards Bonuses, the Brewers will have saved $2.6 million by declining the club option for 2026.

Mavericks vs Lakers Prediction, Picks & Best Bets for Tonight’s NBA Game

The final game before the All-Star break goes tonight at Crypto.com Arena, where the Los Angeles Lakers play host to the Dallas Mavericks. 

Both teams enter this one shorthanded, but as my Mavericks vs. Lakers predictions and NBA picks explain, the Lakers still have enough depth to pick up the win on Thursday, February 12. 

Mavericks vs Lakers prediction

Mavericks vs Lakers best bet: Lakers -7 (-110)

The Los Angeles Lakers have covered the spread in their last three games against the Dallas Mavericks

Continuing this will not tie to Luka Doncic, who is sidelined with a hamstring worry, but Cooper Flagg’s absence looms even larger, robbing Dallas of its best and sometimes only offensive option.

The Mavericks should be broadly doubted for the rest of the season. As well as Flagg has played this season, Dallas has little else it can rely on.

Mavericks vs Lakers same-game parlay

Dallas’s greatest weakness is its backcourt’s defense, something Austin Reaves should exploit so readily that the fourth quarter becomes a bit of a plod amid a blowout.

Mavericks vs Lakers SGP

  • Lakers -7
  • Austin Reaves Over 24.5 points
  • Under 236.5

Our "from downtown" SGP: Luka-less 

DeAndre Ayton needs Doncic throwing him lobs to excel, particularly against Dallas’s decent defensive frontline.

Mavericks vs Lakers SGP

  • Lakers -7
  • Austin Reaves Over 24.5 points
  • DeAndre Ayton Under 12.5 points
  • Under 236.5

Mavericks vs Lakers odds

  • Spread: Mavericks +7 (-110) | Lakers -7 (-110)
  • Moneyline: Mavericks +240 | Lakers -300
  • Over/Under: Over 236.5 (-110) | Under 236.5 (-110)

Mavericks vs Lakers betting trend to know

Dallas is 0-4 against the spread in its last four games. Find more NBA betting trends for Mavericks vs. Lakers.

How to watch Mavericks vs Lakers

LocationCrypto.com Arena, Los Angeles, CA
DateThursday, February 12, 2026
Tip-off10:00 p.m. ET
TVPrime Video

Mavericks vs Lakers latest injuries

Not intended for use in MA.
Affiliate Disclosure: Our team of experts has thoroughly researched and handpicked each product that appears on our website. We may receive compensation if you sign up through our links.

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

Dodgers trade Anthony Banda to Twins for international bonus pool space

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 31: Anthony Banda of the Los Angeles Dodgers at Dodger Stadium on January 31, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by John McCoy/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The Dodgers found a new home for Anthony Banda, trading the veteran left-handed reliever to the Minnesota Twins on Thursday for international bonus pool space, the teams announced.

The amount of bonus pool space traded is reportedly $500,000, per Francys Romero. By rule, teams can trade space in increments of $250,000 unless trading the entirety of its remaining bonus pool space.

Banda was designated for assignment on Friday when the Dodgers claimed catcher Ben Rortvedt off waivers, a product of a crowded bullpen depth chart that also includes fellow left-handers Alex Vesia, Tanner Scott, Jack Dreyer, and possibly Justin Wrobleski.

Acquired in a minor league trade from the Guardians in the 2024 season, Banda put up a 3.14 ERA and 3.46 xERA with 111 strikeouts and 40 unintentional walks in 114 2/3 innings. The southpaw held left-handed batters to hit just .182/.259/.261 with a 26.1-percent strikeout rate.

Banda was a reliable workhorse in his two years in the Dodgers bullpen. He didn’t join the team in 2024 until May 19, but from then through the end of 2025 Banda led the Dodgers by appearing in 119 games, four more than Alex Vesia and tied for 15th-most in baseball during that time. Banda also appeared in 17 of the Dodgers’ 33 postseason games over the last two years.

“The way I look at it is, whoever is in the bullpen, whoever’s name is called, they’re going to be ready to take on whatever they need to do. That’s kind of the environment they’ve created down there,” Banda said late in 2024. “I focus on feeling good every single day, being ready, and if my number is called, then just go out and do my job and be ready for the next day.”

Banda had the best two seasons of his career in Los Angeles. Now entering his 15th professional season, the 32-year-old is onto his 12th major league organization with the Twins.

With four years, 135 days of major league service time, Banda was eligible for salary arbitration for a second time this offseason. He avoided a hearing in January with a one-year deal worth $1.625 million.

Rangers lose top prospect, infielder Sebastian Walcott, to UCL injury and surgery

SURPRISE, Ariz. (AP) — Top prospect Sebastian Walcott of the Texas Rangers is having elbow surgery, and the infielder is expected to miss most of the season.

Rangers president of baseball operations Chris Young said Thursday that Walcott has a UCL injury and was experiencing elbow discomfort. He could be back by the end of the season but it's too early to tell.

The 19-year-old Walcott is the No. 7 prospect in baseball, according to MLB Pipeline. He hit .255 with 13 home runs, 59 RBIs and 32 stolen bases at Double-A Frisco last year.

Walcott received a non-roster invite to spring training.

___

AP MLB: https://apnews.com/mlb

Dodgers re-sign Kiké Hernández on $4.5 million contract

Men and children on a double-decker bus during a parade with blue and white confetti falling.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by JILL CONNELLY/EPA/Shutterstock Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Kike Hernandez and shortstop Miguel Rojas celebrates during the Los Angeles Dodgers World Series championship parade in Los Angeles, California, USA, 03 November 2025. The Dodgers rallied in game 7 to win their second consecutive World Series championship.

All offseason, it’d been a fait accompli that Kiké Hernández would re-sign with the Dodgers.

On Thursday, it was Hernández himself who broke the news that the reunion was official.

In an Instagram post, Hernández announced he was re-signing with the club where he has spent most of his career and won three World Series titles, posting a picture of himself at last year’s Dodgers’ World Series parade with the caption: “What else did you expect?!!! 3 in a row has a nice ring to it! #WeBack.”

Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Kike Hernandez and shortstop Miguel Rojas celebrates during the Los Angeles Dodgers World Series championship parade in Los Angeles, California, USA. JILL CONNELLY/EPA/Shutterstock

According to a source, the deal will be for one year and $4.5 million.

Hernández’s return to Los Angeles had been expected for most of this winter –– in which the 34-year-old entered free agency, and ultimately signed with the Dodgers, for a third-consecutive offseason.

A longtime fan favorite and standout postseason performer, the only reason Hernández wasn’t officially re-signed sooner was because of roster logistics.

The utilityman underwent elbow surgery this offseason that will likely sideline him for the first few months of the campaign. Because of that, the Dodgers seemingly waited to bring him back until spring training opened this week, when they could place him on the 60-day injured list and preserve a 40-man roster spot.

Hernández is coming off a down regular season in 2025, having hit just .203 (albeit with 10 home runs) in 92 games while dealing with his lingering elbow issue. 

In October, however, he once again played a crucial role, replacing Michael Conforto as the Dodgers’ primary left fielder and batting .250 with seven RBIs in 17 postseason games. 

Newcomers add stuff, fearlessness to Texas pitching staff

AUSTIN, TEXAS - JANUARY 7: Brett Crossland #88 of the Texas Longhorns poses for a portrait on Texas baseball media day on January 7, 2026 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by The University of Texas Athletics/University Images via Getty Images)

From doing more with less to doing more with more.

Texas Longhorns head coach Jim Schlossnagle and Max Weiner are beginning to build the pitching staff on the Forty Acres in their desired image, buoyed by pitcher-heavy 2025 recruiting class that ranked No. 1 nationally by Baseball America and several important additions from the NCAA transfer portal.

“All of our freshmen are disgusting. They’re big, a lot of stuff behind them. We’ve got a lot of pitches to throw. I wouldn’t be surprised if a lot of freshmen have important roles this year,” Texas sophomore left-hander Dylan Volantis said last month.

One of the biggest additions, literally and figuratively, is 6’5, 255-pound Brett Crossland out of Phoenix (Ariz.) Corona Del Sol. Because Crossland was ranked as a top-100 prospect by ESPN heading into the 2025 MLB Draft, it was a major coup to get the hard-throwing right-hander to the Forty Acres.

With a fastball that typically sits at 94 miles per hour but can reach 97, Crossland also features three secondary pitches with his curveball serving as his most valuable breaking ball. The key for Weiner is to ensure that Crossland that repeat his delivery consistent to avoid breakdowns in command.

“Stuff’s nasty, confident guy. Totally see him being in one of the biggest roles,” Volantis said of Crossland.

Schlossnagle also noted Crossland’s confidence, as well as his improvement under Weiner.

Crossland isn’t even the biggest pitcher signed by the Longhorns in the 2025 class — that’s North Carolina product Sam Cozart, a 6’6, 260-pounder whose full beard belies his youth. Cozart hails from a family of talented athletes, as his parents met at UCF where his father played baseball and his mother played volleyball, and both older brothers played college baseball with his older brother Jacob now in the Cleveland Guardians organization.

Ranked as the No. 47 player nationally by Perfect Game, Cozart was formerly committed to Mississippi State as well as to Schlossnagle when he was at Texas A&M. Considered an advanced strike thrower with a fastball up to 96 mph, Cozart has three other pitches he can throw strikes, including a cutter, changeup, and curveball.

Pitching for the Alumni team two weeks ago, Cozart threw four hitless innings, striking out five and allowing just three baserunners with his fastball typically sitting between 93 and 94 mph.

“Sam Cozart is a strike thrower, super serious,” Schlossnagle said, noting Cozart’s fearlessness in another interview.

Put 6’5, 240-pound right-hander Michael Winter into the same category of power arms. A late-rising prospect out of Kansas who was committed to Dartmouth before seeing his stock explode during the spring, Winter ranked as the No. 274 player overall and the No. 77 right-handed pitcher by Perfect Game.

Winter features a fastball that reaches up to 95 miles per hour with arm-side run and has a natural ability to shape a four-pitch mix that includes the type of cutter that Weiner likes to teach his proteges. Winter uses a slider with a high spin rate to finish at bats with strikeouts.

Two other freshman pitchers have joined the three big right-handers in separating themselves from the rest of the class — right-hander Brody Walls and left-hander Jack McKernan, who combined with Crossland to pitch six innings of one-run baseball in the Alumni game.

Walls is smaller physically at 6’0, 200 pounds, but he’s on the Forty Acres because he gets plenty of juice out of that frame, working 90 to 96 mph with his fastball, which is complemented by a power slider with good spin metrics. In assessing the potential durability of Walls, it’s a positive that his delivery is not just repeatable, but also smooth and low-effort.

At 5’11, 205 pounds, McKernan has a similar build from the left side, and similar juice with a fastball from 92 to 94 mph with arm-side life. McKernan also features a sweeping slider and a changeup he can throw for strikes in any count.

Late in the preseason, right-hander Cooper Rummel came on strong before suffering a setback with a sprained ankle. The 6’2, 235-pounder from Dripping Springs is another elite prospect ranked No. 82 nationally by Perfect Game thanks to a heavy fastball with carry up to 96 mph, a sweeping slider, and a curveball with adequate depth.

Last month, right-hander Kaleb Rogers had a standout performance that drew praise from Schlossnagle. The 5’11, 200-pounder from San Antonio Reagan ranked No. 169 in the 2025 class by Perfect Game.

Through the transfer portal, Texas lost former Mississippi State left-hander Luke Dotson to the 2025 MLB Draft, but kept physical Western Kentucky transfer left-hander Cal Higgins, who profiles as a back-end bullpen piece.

In 2025, the Nebraska product was working his fastball up to 96 miles per hour, earning second-team All-Conference USA recognition for recording a 1.87 ERA with a 3-2 record and six saves. Opponents only hit .190 against Higgins as he struck out 52 batters in 43.1 innings. In addition to the power arm from the left side, Higgins dominated the zone in 2025, allowing only 11 walks and 28 hits for a WHIP of 0.90.

The other portal piece for Weiner’s staff is Wake Forest transfer Haiden Leffew, another left-handed pitcher who made a team-leading 27 appearances for the Demon Deacons in 2025, posting 4-1 mark with a 4.46 ERA and four saves while totaling 18 walks and 59 strikeouts across 34.1 innings.

The 6’1, 235-pounder fits the mold of the additions to the staff because his fastball reached 97 miles per hour as a sophomore in Winston-Salem, though it more typically sat around 93 to 94 miles per hour, earning a ranking as the No. 14 player in the portal by 64 Analytics.

“At the end of the day, strength wins,” Schlossnagle said. “You can be tall or short, but you can’t be weak and short, especially on the mound. When I think of the University of Texas, they should have big, athletic, physical pitchers.”

Now they do.

How to watch the 2026 NBA All-Star Game: Stream info, time, teams, format explained, preview

The timing could not have been more perfect.

While on the other side of the globe some of the world's best athletes in their sports represent their countries at the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics, this year the best of the NBA will take on that international format:

USA vs. the world.

The pride in representing your country could bring the most competitive All-Star Games we have seen in years. Remember, each of the last seven MVP awards have been won by players born outside the USA — and they are coming to compete.

"I'm never stepping onto the court to lose, you know, or not caring," said the Spurs Victor Wembanyama, who was voted a World starter by the fans. "Just like at home, I'm never stepping into a board game, not caring or thinking I'm gonna lose, or I'm thinking it's okay to lose.

"So I'll be out there, might as well win."

Here's all you need to know about the 2026 NBA All-Star Game and how not to miss a moment of the action/

How to watch the 2026 NBA All-Star Game:

  • When: Sunday, February 15
  • Where: Intuit Dome, Inglewood, CA
  • Time: 5:00 PM ET
  • Live Stream: NBC andPeacock

All-Star Game format

This year, the NBA All-Star Game returns to NBC and debuts on Peacock — and it falls right in the middle of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics. That was a perfect setup for the first-of-its-kind All-Star Game format, a USA vs. World showdown that fans and players have been asking for.

The 24 All-Star players have been divided into three teams, two USA teams — USA Stripes and USA Stars — and one World Team. Those three teams will compete in a round-robin tournament of four 12-minute games, each team playing at least two games.

At the end of the round-robin, the two top teams will play a championship game (the fourth 12-minute game of the day) for the title. (If there is a tie, it comes down to point differential.)

The 75th NBA All-Star Game will take place on Sunday, Feb. 15, at 5 p.m. Eastern, an earlier time than in previous years, leading into more coverage of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics.

USA vs. World Rosters

There are two USA teams — Stars and Stripes — and one World team. Fans voted for five starters from each of the Western and Eastern Conferences, and the NBA coaches voted in the 14 reserve players (plus NBA Commissioner Adam Silver added one more USA player to balance the rosters, and also picked the injury replacements). The league divided up the teams.

Here are the rosters:

World Team

• Giannis Antetokounmpo (Milwaukee/Greece)
• Luka Doncic (Los Angeles Lakers/Slovenia)
• Nikola Jokic (Denver/Serbia)
• Victor Wembanyama (San Antonio/France)
• Karl-Anthony Towns (New York/Dominican Rep.)
• Pascal Siakam (Indiana/Cameroon)
• Deni Avdija (Portland/Israel)
• Jamal Murray (Denver/Canada)
• Alperen Sengun (Houston/Turkiye)
Coach: Toronto's Darko Rajakovic (Serbia)

USA Stars

• Cade Cunningham (Detroit)
• Tyrese Maxey (Philadelphia)
• Anthony Edwards (Minnesota)
• Chet Holmgren (Oklahoma City)
• Jalen Duren (Detroit)
• Devin Booker (Phoenix)
• Scottie Barnes (Toronto)
• Jalen Johnson (Atlanta)
Coach: Detroit's J.B. Bickerstaff

USA Stripes

• Jalen Brunson (New York)
• Jaylen Brown (Boston)
• LeBron James (Los Angeles Lakers)
• Kevin Durant (Houston)
• Donovan Mitchell (Cleveland)
• Kawhi Leonard (LA Clippers)
• Norman Powell (Miami)
• Brandon Ingram (Toronto)
Coach: San Antonio's Mitch Johnson

Voted in as starters but not playing due to injury

• Stephen Curry (Golden State)
• Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (Oklahoma City/Canada)
• Both Luka Doncic and Giannis Antetokounmpo have missed games this week with injuries, but neither has been officially ruled out yet. The World team currently has nine players; if one drops out, there will be no need for Adam Silver to name a replacement.

What other NBA events are on NBC and Peacock for All-Star Weekend?

Friday

Saturday

How to watch NBA on NBC and Peacock:

Every moment of All-Star Weekend — the Rising Stars challenge on Friday. (Feb. 13), All-Star Saturday Night with the 3-Point Contest and Dunk Contest (Feb. 14), as well as the All-Star Game on Sunday, Feb. 15 — will be broadcast on NBC and Peacock.

The 75th NBA All-Star Game will take place on Sunday, Feb. 15, at 5 p.m. Eastern, a time earlier than in previous years, leading into more coverage of the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics.

Peacock NBA Monday will stream up to three Monday night games each week throughout the regular season. Coast 2 Coast Tuesday presents doubleheaders on Tuesday nights throughout the regular season on NBC and Peacock. On most Tuesdays, an 8 p.m. ET game will be on NBC stations in the Eastern and Central time zones, and an 8 p.m. PT game on NBC stations in the Pacific and often Mountain time zones.

Check local listings each week. Both games will stream live nationwide on Peacock. NBC Sports will launch Sunday Night Basketball across NBC and Peacock on Feb. 1, 2026. For a full schedule of the NBA on NBC and Peacock, click here.

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 & Bravo hits—Peacock is here for whatever you're in the mood for.

NBA on NBC 2025-26 Schedule

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

What devices does Peacock support?

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

‘Dynamic’ Blaine Brown poised for big season with Tennessee

Jun 24, 2024; Omaha, NE, USA; A Tennessee Volunteers hat and glove lay on the field after defeating the Texas A&M Aggies in the championship at Charles Schwab Field Omaha. Mandatory Credit: Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

One of Tennessee’s biggest pick-ups in the transfer portal over the offseason was Blaine Brown, a 6-5 lefty two-way player. Brown is coming off of a freshman All-American season at Rice — a season that opened the door for him to transfer to a school like Tennessee, but also a season that put him on the MLB’s radar.

Brown currently ranks as a top five overall prospect for the 2027 MLB Draft, according to Over-Slot Baseball. The 19-year-old hit .292 last season at Rice, hitting ten home runs and driving in 38 runs. Oh, and he can touch upper-90s on the mound on top of all that.

“He’s just such a dynamic talent,” Josh Elander said this week of Brown. “I mean, you could argue he had the best weekend swinging the bat. I mean, the guy hits the ball regularly over 110 miles per hour. And then, you know, one thing we talked to him about is — that was a big part of his recruitment process — what does the schedule look like? And how am I in a position to have success on both sides of the ball?”

Brown’s bat figures to be an everyday presence in Tennessee’s 2026 lineup, but figuring out his plan on the mound is something Elander is going to have to work through, perhaps a bit on the fly.

“We spent a ton of time kind of outlining different options,” Elander said. “Because, again, do you start? Do you come out of the pen? Does he go from left field and then come in? So what we went with yesterday was a pretty good little trial, we went with the pitcher-DH. So he opened up the game and he was 93-95 (mph) with over seven foot of extension, really kind of cutting it loose.

“Then that gives him the freedom to then kind of just go to DH, so take focus, go get us some outs. So there’s some opener capabilities there. Full confidence in him being able to start. But then also, I like the idea of, hey, maybe he comes in out of left field at one point.”

Brown appeared in seven games for Rice last season, making four starts. Those outings didn’t go well though, with Brown giving up ten earned runs in just 4.1 innings pitched. He walked 12 batters in that span, highlighting some potential control issues. Scouts think his bat will eventually win out as he looks ahead to his professional career, but he will give Tennessee another option on the mound this spring.

“There’s a lot of options we can do there, but a lot of that with Blaine will just be communicating with him on how he’s feeling,” Elander said. “It’s just dynamic talent on both sides of the ball.”

Brown’s athletic pedigree is certainly there. His father, Chris Brown, was a third-round pick of the Tennessee Titans, where he went on to spend several seasons. Brown did get some action last year against the Volunteers, smacking a double in an early-season game in Houston.

He now joins a loaded Tennessee lineup ready to usher in a new era in Knoxville. Based on the early buzz Brown has generated so far? You’ll be hearing a lot more about him in the coming weeks.

Recent losses expose Sixers’ roster depth issue

WILMINGTON, DE - OCTOBER 20: Head Coach Nick Nurse and Daryl Morey of the Philadelphia 76ers look on during an open practice on October 20, 2024 at Chase Fieldhouse in Wilmington, Delaware. 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 2024 NBAE (Photo byJesse D. Garrabranty/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The Philadelphia 76ers head into the NBA All-Star break at 30-24, good for sixth place in the Eastern Conference. On the surface, that’s perfectly fine, a modest overperformance relative to our preseason expectations. However, the team’s current two-game losing streak is a flashing warning sign for danger ahead.

Now, you might be thinking, ‘Two-game losing streak? Who on earth cares about that over the course of an 82-game season?“ And I hear you, particularly when Joel Embiid missed both games, the first loss in Portland was the end of a long West Coast trip, and Wednesday’s home defeat in New York came as players might have been readying their plans for their time off over the break. But let’s look at what has gone down recently.

The Sixers traded Jared McCain at the trade deadline. (I’m not going to rehash whether or not it was a good trade in a vacuum, but McCain sure seems to be taking to Oklahoma City like a duck to water). They also shipped out Eric Gordon in order to help with further luxury tax machinations. Conversely, Philadelphia brought in exactly zero fresh faces at the deadline (aside from forward Patrick Baldwin on a 10-day deal and Dalen Terry on a two-way — two players who are not likely to help the current roster).

We were told the McCain trade was, in part, due to the “glut of guards” on the roster.

By my count, the Sixers now have three useable guards on the roster: Tyrese Maxey, VJ Edgecombe and Quentin Grimes. I know there are sometimes funny names for groups of things — i.e. a group of crows is a murder and a group of rhinos is a crash — but are three guards a glut? So Quentin Grimes comes down with an illness and suddenly the Sixers are down to two guards. I haven’t presented at the MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference, but I’m confident in saying having two guards available is insufficient.

Philadelphia’s stopgap solutions are playing 6-foot-8 forward and minimum signing Trendon Watford in a guard role, having 39-year-old Kyle Lowry, who is more coach than player at this point, log 18 minutes in a game, and giving significant rotation minutes to recent two-way signing MarJon Beauchamp. Beauchamp has played well enough, and I like the idea of leaving no stone unturned, but we’re talking about him as the third guard on a team that should realistically be fighting for home court advantage in the first round of the playoffs.

Now, you might counter, ‘Grimes is only sick and they’ll be fine when he’s available’. We’re now counting on perfect health across the roster? For the Philadelphia 76ers? Additionally, maybe Maxey shouldn’t be leading the league in minutes by a significant margin? Maybe the rookie Edgecombe shouldn’t be ninth on that minutes list?

McCain trade aside, I still can’t believe Daryl Morey brought in no one at the trade deadline. I know he targeted some guys and those avenues didn’t pan out, and he ultimately didn’t see any deals available for ‘needle movers’. But Jose Alvarado just torched the Sixers and he came to New York for a couple of second-round picks. Luke Kennard, who is literally the most accurate three-point shooter in NBA history, went to Los Angeles for one second-round pick six years from now. Would it have crippled the franchise for Morey to part with a couple of the team’s more than a dozen second-round picks to bring in somebody to actually help this team compete this season?

I know this team probably doesn’t meet his five percent chance of winning a title threshold, so Morey is thinking why reduce the asset chest by even a smidge in that scenario. But these players are taking the floor every night with one hand tied behind their backs. It has to be frustrating for them knowing management didn’t think it was worth acquiring a replacement-level wing or something. It’s certainly frustrating as someone watching from home.

Which Guardians’ reunion most warms your heart?

Sep 27, 2025; Cleveland, Ohio, USA; Cleveland Guardians catcher Austin Hedges (27) celebrates after the Guardians beat the Texas Rangers to secure a playoff berth at Progressive Field. Mandatory Credit: Ken Blaze-Imagn Images | Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

The Guardians have brought back some familiar faces for 2026 – which brings the most joy to you as a fan to imagine seeing in a Guardians’ uniform this season?

Austin Hedges – the heart of the Guardians’ clubhouse and an elite defender (let’s not talk about his bat)?

Pedro Avila – the lovable Teddy Bear and ravenous innings eater?

Ben Lively – fierce mound competitor and innings-eating fifth starter?

Shawn Armstrong – former useful organization arm turned effective high leverage reliever in the meantime?

Still time to add Yandy Diaz to this list, Guards!

Kiké Hernández says he’s back with Dodgers

Dodgers player Kike Hernandez fires up crowd during the 2025 World Series championship celebration at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles on Monday, Nov. 3, 2025. | JOE LUMAYA/SPECIAL TO THE STAR / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

It’s time for the annual tradition of fan favorite and postseason stalwart Kiké Hernández returning to the Dodgers. The veteran utility player says he’s back in Los Angeles for a fifth time, posting on Instagram on Thursday that he’s returning to the Dodgers for 2026.

From Hernández on Instagram: “What else did you expect?!!! 3 in a row has a nice ring to it! #WeBack”

Hernández’s deal with the Dodgers is for $4.5 million, per Fabian Ardaya at The Athletic and Jack Harris of The California Post.

The Dodgers, who have a full 40-man roster, haven’t yet announced a new deal for Hernández. They can start using the 60-day injured list on the date pitchers and catchers officially report to camp to open up a roster spot. That’s no later than Friday, when the Dodgers will hold their first official workout at Camelback Ranch.

Hernández had an injury-plagued 2025 regular season, sidelined for seven weeks with left elbow inflammation in July and August. He hit .203/.255/.366 with 10 home run in 92 games, and per usual started at five different positions.

He got healthy by October and started all 17 postseason games, but even that period was affected by the injury. Through the first eight games of the postseason, Hernández was hitting .379/.455/.517 with four doubles. But after an ill-advised dive in left field in Game 3 of the NLCS, in which he landed on his left elbow, Hernández had just five hits in 35 at-bats (.143/.139/.229).

In November, Hernández had surgery on his left elbow that will prevent him from playing for Puerto Rico in the World Baseball Classic in March, and could affect his readiness at the beginning of the regular season.

During Dodgers Fest on January 31 at Dodger Stadium, Miguel Rojas said he expected Hernández to return to Los Angeles.

“I’m in constant communication with Kiké. I feel like, all my mind, I have no doubt that he’s gonna be back,” Rojas said. “It has something to do with his injury and the stuff that he’s going through right now, he’s not going to be ready until maybe a couple of months into the season. I’m crossing my fingers and keeping the hope that we’re going to have Kiké, because we all know how important he is for the clubhouse, the organization, for the fans, for the city of LA. He deserves to be with us, too.”

During the World Series, Hernández broke Justin Turner’s record for most postseason games played in Dodgers history, now at 92 games for Hernández.

“This is not just any franchise, man. This is the LA Dodgers. They’ve been around for a long time, and they have a lot of history,” Hernández said in October. “And for a guy like me from Puerto Rico, kind of swam against the current my entire life, to be sitting in this position is pretty special.”

The Dodgers acquired Hernández from the Marlins at the 2014 winter meetings in the Dee Strange-Gordon trade, then acquired him from the Red Sox at the 2023 trade deadline. This is now the third straight offseason Hernández has returned to the Dodgers in free agency.

Including 2026, Hernández will have played for the Dodgers in 10 of his 13 major league seasons.

Three Subtle Phillies Predictions

PHOENIX, ARIZONA - SEPTEMBER 21: Bryce Harper #3 of the Philadelphia Phillies bats during the fifth inning against the Arizona Diamondbacks at Chase Field on September 21, 2025 in Phoenix, Arizona. The Diamondbacks defeated the Phillies 9-2. (Photo by Chris Coduto/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Spring training is the time to hear about who is in the best shape of their life, which teams might be cursed with injuries (not a great start for the Braves), and potential adjustments players make.

While the narrative is that the Phillies are “running it back” and that everything will remain static year to year, it is important to point out that players and teams make adjustments. In 2025, Trea Turner became a much better defensive shortstop, Brandon Marsh cut his strikeout rate by more than six percent, and Jesús Luzardo started throwing a sweeper.

Here is an attempt to predict what adjustments we see from Phillies players in 2026 and why they’re making them.

Bryce Harper’s First Pitch Swing% drops to 40%

Since his second MVP season in 2021, Bryce Harper has become more and more aggressive early in counts because of how pitchers were pitching him. Harper’s best chance at getting a fastball came early in counts and he was seeing less and less of them as time went on.

In 2021, Harper saw four-seam fastballs 36.2% of the time, that number dropped to 32.6 the following season as pitchers made adjustments.

So he made his counter adjustments by being more aggressive early in counts. After swinging at the first pitch 40.2% of the time in 2021, here are his first pitch swing rates the next four seasons:

2022: 50.4%

2023: 47.5%

2024: 47.4%

2025: 54.1%

This all led to more chase outside of the strike zone and fewer fastballs over time. Harper only saw four-seam fastballs 28.4% of the time in 2025, the lowest since Baseballsavant has tracked back in 2017. It was probably the first time in Harper’s professional career he saw four-seam fastballs less than 30% of the time.

The goal for 2026 is to get pitchers to throw more of them. Maybe moving Harper to the two-hole or Schwarber down to the cleanup position might help but if Harper is keeping a similar approach, it might not make much of a difference.

Instead, Harper will course-correct all the way back and become way more patient at the plate early in counts as pitchers have adjusted. With a first-pitch swing rate of roughly 40%, he will also have his lowest chase rate since 2021, and get into more favorable counts. Eventually, pitchers will have to come in the zone, throw him slightly more fastballs, and Bryce Harper will magically put him elite numbers again because there is nothing to show he’s physically declining as a player.

Brad Keller’s go-to secondary pitch will not be his slider

Since Brad Keller entered the majors in 2018, his primary non-fastball pitch was his hard-slider but that will change in 2026 under the Phillies major league pitching department. Keller has already talked about some of the new ideas the Phillies might be bringing to the table with his arsenal.

“He kinda brought up some ideas of things that we feel like would be fun things to try,” Keller said. “Like, throwing sweepers to lefties, changeups to righties, things like that that’s kind of a little unorthodox.

Keller’s 2025 changed the entire trajectory of his career. He went from a starter that sat roughly 93-95 and mostly three pitches to a hard throwing reliever with 4 or 5 pitches he can use to anyone.

I wrote about some of the tweaks the Phillies could make but there was nothing definitive about how he will attack hitters in 2026.

What I am predicting is that he will throw more sweepers to right handed hitters and more changeups to lefties and what pitch will he throw less of in 2026? His traditional slider.

For the first time in Brad Keller’s major league career, and probably his entire life, his go-to secondary pitch won’t be the hard-slider.

Adolis García’s opposite-field flyball rate will be at least 25%

The Phillies signed Adolis García and hope to get his swing to stay in the strike zone more consistently in 2026. He had a chase rate of 35.8% and 31.1% of the fastballs he saw were outside of the strike zone.

The best place to start with making slight approach changes is to stay back on fastballs and use the opposite field. With Garcia’s plus raw power, going the other way could help his overall numbers if he is making more contact.

Another reason he could be using the entire field is because of physical decline he is facing as an aging player. García turns 33 in March and has carried league average bat speed the past two seasons, a decline over what it was back in 2023. It could get even worse as he ages.

Part of using the entire field could be by design to stay within the strike zone slightly more often but also could be aging-related if he is not able to catch up to velocity and spin like he used to.

García is a strange bet for the Phillies to make in general. He’s 33, has shown some signs as an aging athlete already but could be inclined for bigger issues in 2026. He is considered a power hitter but has a sub .400 slugging over the past two seasons. He is a good defensive right fielder, a massive upgrade over Nick Castellanos, but his range could slip with natural physical decline.